I am confused on how to account for an asset sold before the 6 month period prior to filing for purposes of form 122a-1.
Lets assume filing date is 1-1-2022
6 months from that is 7-1-2021
Lets say during 7-1-2021 -> 1-1-2022, the debtor gets 'income' from
- gifts from friends and family
- selling assets on ebay, that produce cash to pay bills
I guess thats seen as 'income' in form 122a-1 correct? First, its ridiculous to establish a 'current' monthly income from a one time assset sale that produce some income once. So why are assets sold treated as income?
Secondly what about transactions prior to the 6 months, ie. June 30?
- debtor sells an asset on June 10, and has cash that is used all throughout July expenses
Is that cash-from-asset-sale-before-6-month included as income in the 122a-1 calculation?
It seems unfair that if someone was selling their last belongings to survive, this calculation algorithm treats this as income going forward.
Do i understand this all wrong?
Lets assume filing date is 1-1-2022
6 months from that is 7-1-2021
Lets say during 7-1-2021 -> 1-1-2022, the debtor gets 'income' from
- gifts from friends and family
- selling assets on ebay, that produce cash to pay bills
I guess thats seen as 'income' in form 122a-1 correct? First, its ridiculous to establish a 'current' monthly income from a one time assset sale that produce some income once. So why are assets sold treated as income?
Secondly what about transactions prior to the 6 months, ie. June 30?
- debtor sells an asset on June 10, and has cash that is used all throughout July expenses
Is that cash-from-asset-sale-before-6-month included as income in the 122a-1 calculation?
It seems unfair that if someone was selling their last belongings to survive, this calculation algorithm treats this as income going forward.
Do i understand this all wrong?
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