Just a week shy of the cutoff for objections my main creditor has filed an objection to the discharge on several grounds.
1. They claim I did not report all the income from my tax return on the bankruptcy schedules for prior years. I think they may be referring to the business income that flowed through from the company I used to have. My attorney and I reported the gross income that I actually took in salary. Should the business net income or loss also have been reported? I submitted my tax returns so it is not as though I had anything to hide. In terms of this years income from the business it is actually a net loss of $10,000.00 so again I am not hiding anything.
2. I recently moved back to my home country in order to try to get a fresh start. Prior to moving I transferred all my funds to an account in that country. Because you have to be there in person to open an account I transferred them into an account belonging to my father and then when I got there I opened my own account and moved the funds into that account. The final account actually had an overdrawn balance by the time of filing and therefore was not reported on the schedules at the instruction of my attorney. The creditor is claiming the transfer should have been reported and the account should have been reported on the bankruptcy schedules. My attorney tells me that because I was moving that the transfer was in the "ordinary course of my financial affairs" and therefore did not need to be reported. In addition the funds were not transferred to another person permanently, only temporarily.
Does anyone have any thoughts on this? Their objection makes me look really bad and they are claiming that the transfer was with the intent to defraud them. In actual fact the funds were from the equity in my house which was an asset that was exempt from their judgment. All the funds have since been used to pay my mortgage, taxes and the remainder have funded my living expenses while I have been unable to work.
1. They claim I did not report all the income from my tax return on the bankruptcy schedules for prior years. I think they may be referring to the business income that flowed through from the company I used to have. My attorney and I reported the gross income that I actually took in salary. Should the business net income or loss also have been reported? I submitted my tax returns so it is not as though I had anything to hide. In terms of this years income from the business it is actually a net loss of $10,000.00 so again I am not hiding anything.
2. I recently moved back to my home country in order to try to get a fresh start. Prior to moving I transferred all my funds to an account in that country. Because you have to be there in person to open an account I transferred them into an account belonging to my father and then when I got there I opened my own account and moved the funds into that account. The final account actually had an overdrawn balance by the time of filing and therefore was not reported on the schedules at the instruction of my attorney. The creditor is claiming the transfer should have been reported and the account should have been reported on the bankruptcy schedules. My attorney tells me that because I was moving that the transfer was in the "ordinary course of my financial affairs" and therefore did not need to be reported. In addition the funds were not transferred to another person permanently, only temporarily.
Does anyone have any thoughts on this? Their objection makes me look really bad and they are claiming that the transfer was with the intent to defraud them. In actual fact the funds were from the equity in my house which was an asset that was exempt from their judgment. All the funds have since been used to pay my mortgage, taxes and the remainder have funded my living expenses while I have been unable to work.
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