The liabilities exceed the assets.
I am in a situation where I might get a settlement from a lawsuit and it might be more than the chapter 7 saved me (about 100K). I am kicking myself in the head for this, as I wish that I would have waited to file until after the asset came to fruition.
Don't make the mistake I made. Using my Chapter 7 "bullet" when I did was not smart, and is going to cost me. Better move would have been to let the asset settle, and then see where I was at with everything. The money from the asset could have been used as leverage to negotiate with my creditors. And, if they were not reasonable, then I could have filed later on, if needed.
My point is to be careful when you are going to file, as you can only do so every 8 years in most states.
So, when will likely happen in my situation is that my creditors are going to get paid in full, and I will have a chapter 7 on my credit report for 10 years.
I am really upset about this decision I made, and hope others will consider their alternatives in these situations. In my case, I was just under a lot of stress, and made the decision because I just could not keep up with all the bills piling up. Regardless, I would say, I should have just let the bills pile to the heavens, and then just file with the assets cleared.
Did I miss anything here? Any feedback on this would be helpful. I just want to figure out what I could have done differently, or if my thinking was correct when I made the decision to file.
Thank you.
I am in a situation where I might get a settlement from a lawsuit and it might be more than the chapter 7 saved me (about 100K). I am kicking myself in the head for this, as I wish that I would have waited to file until after the asset came to fruition.
Don't make the mistake I made. Using my Chapter 7 "bullet" when I did was not smart, and is going to cost me. Better move would have been to let the asset settle, and then see where I was at with everything. The money from the asset could have been used as leverage to negotiate with my creditors. And, if they were not reasonable, then I could have filed later on, if needed.
My point is to be careful when you are going to file, as you can only do so every 8 years in most states.
So, when will likely happen in my situation is that my creditors are going to get paid in full, and I will have a chapter 7 on my credit report for 10 years.
I am really upset about this decision I made, and hope others will consider their alternatives in these situations. In my case, I was just under a lot of stress, and made the decision because I just could not keep up with all the bills piling up. Regardless, I would say, I should have just let the bills pile to the heavens, and then just file with the assets cleared.
Did I miss anything here? Any feedback on this would be helpful. I just want to figure out what I could have done differently, or if my thinking was correct when I made the decision to file.
Thank you.
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