I have an attorney and will be filing a CH7 petition in 3 to 4 weeks. I am an under-median filer. There are a few complicating factors, all of which my attorney is aware of. My biggest concern is exempting my home equity and keeping my home.
I am in Michigan and so I have the option of using Federal or Michigan exemptions. Generally speaking, the Federal exemptions are more generous across the board, except for the homestead exemption, so I am going with my state exemptions. I lease my car and the only other assets I have to protect are my household items and furnishings. I purchased my house three years ago and, obviously, the value has went up considerably. The paperwork provided by my attorney asks for the "fair market value" of my house. I contacted my realtor from when I purchased my house and asked her to provide me with a CMA because the values I found on various online sites varied by thousands of dollars. For example, Redfin, Zillow and Trulia are all coming in around $230K but Bank of America comes in at $210K.
My realtor's CMA is coming back at $192K, which seemed low. I then asked what her listing price would be if she put my house on the market today and she said she would list for $205K or maybe a little more. She also said that she could adjust the CMA and increase the value closer to that number, but that $192K is the accurate CMA number based on comps over the last 6 months.
Correct me if I am wrong, but wouldn't the "fair market value" actually be $205K rather than the $192K from the CMA? Or, do I provide the CMA value to my attorney as being the fair market value? Should I ask my realtor to adjust the CMA value a little higher to get closer to her listing number, or would I be out of my mind to do that? I want to provide a fair, accurate number and I want it to be credible. I don't want to use an artificially low and unbelievable number on my petition/paperwork and cause a trustee to question how I value all of my assets.
Thanks for your help.
I am in Michigan and so I have the option of using Federal or Michigan exemptions. Generally speaking, the Federal exemptions are more generous across the board, except for the homestead exemption, so I am going with my state exemptions. I lease my car and the only other assets I have to protect are my household items and furnishings. I purchased my house three years ago and, obviously, the value has went up considerably. The paperwork provided by my attorney asks for the "fair market value" of my house. I contacted my realtor from when I purchased my house and asked her to provide me with a CMA because the values I found on various online sites varied by thousands of dollars. For example, Redfin, Zillow and Trulia are all coming in around $230K but Bank of America comes in at $210K.
My realtor's CMA is coming back at $192K, which seemed low. I then asked what her listing price would be if she put my house on the market today and she said she would list for $205K or maybe a little more. She also said that she could adjust the CMA and increase the value closer to that number, but that $192K is the accurate CMA number based on comps over the last 6 months.
Correct me if I am wrong, but wouldn't the "fair market value" actually be $205K rather than the $192K from the CMA? Or, do I provide the CMA value to my attorney as being the fair market value? Should I ask my realtor to adjust the CMA value a little higher to get closer to her listing number, or would I be out of my mind to do that? I want to provide a fair, accurate number and I want it to be credible. I don't want to use an artificially low and unbelievable number on my petition/paperwork and cause a trustee to question how I value all of my assets.
Thanks for your help.
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