Just an FYI for anyone who is thinking about using a BPP anytime soon:
For over a month I have been looking at cases in PACER to prepare for filing pro se, and now that I have filed I am very interested to see what other pro se filings look like. There is a local business paper that publishes all the bk notices, so if I see a pro se filer I'll generally go look up the petition if I have time.
What I have noticed is that, without exception, every single petition filed by a BPP after December 1 that I have seen has gotten a deficiency notice, usually more than one, for filing "forms" that are not the official forms and are so far off the mark the court is rejecting the entire filing in one deficiency notice. Many pre-Dec 1 BPP filers were getting dinged too, but ALL of the post-Dec 1 BPP filers seem to be, at least the ones I have seen, and the court is apparently getting tired of it.
For instance, today I saw a case that was filed pro se the day I did mine, and he only got one deficiency notice:
"The debtor shall file amended petition, schedules, statement of Financial Affairs and/or any other required documentation on corresponding Official Bankruptcy Forms B1 through B24 (Revised 12/07) within (7) seven days."
In other words, he has to redo every single form in his petition, using the new (Dec 1) forms, and do it within 7 days or he faces automatic dismissal. (I should add that for the privilege of having his petition kicked back, he paid the BPP $325.00.)
Until now, the deficiency notices have been for the same reasons, but less drastic, such as:
"The Application and Order to Pay Filing Fee in Installments which you filed on August 5, 2007, does not have a proper caption pursuant to Local Rule 9004−2. Also this application should be filed using Official Form 3A(10/5). You will need to file an amended application with a proper caption on Official Form 3A(10/05)."
Basically, this means: we don't like your format, redo it. (This is text from an actual case; I saw the doc in question and though it had similar wording, it was definitely NOT anything like the official forms. This wasn't the court being picky; it really was not good.)
There was another one I saw a couple weeks ago (I'd quote it if I remembered the specific case, but I don't) where a pro se filer used a BPP, and the forms -- specifically the schedules -- looked NOTHING like the official forms. And of course it got kicked back. How could these BPPs not know?
If I were to guess, I would have to say that these BPPs are just cruising right along with whatever software they were using before the forms changed, either unaware that the filings would be rejected or just not caring. They are definitely notified after the fact, though: each deficiency notice gets mailed to the BPP as well as the debtor, usually the same day the case is filed.
So caveat emptor, folks. Until and unless you know for sure that the BPP you're thinking of using has tools that conform to the latest set of official forms, your filing may very well be kicked back to you with only seven days to correct it and refile. If you are going to use a BPP, you would do well to look through some attorney-filed cases in your area as well as the official forms, so that you at least have a sense of what they should look like.
I've been kind of disgusted with this for a while now, but now that I am seeing EVERY BPP bk I look at kicked out for forms violations (and it's the *entire filing*) I thought I'd let y'all know. Caveat emptor, folks.
For over a month I have been looking at cases in PACER to prepare for filing pro se, and now that I have filed I am very interested to see what other pro se filings look like. There is a local business paper that publishes all the bk notices, so if I see a pro se filer I'll generally go look up the petition if I have time.
What I have noticed is that, without exception, every single petition filed by a BPP after December 1 that I have seen has gotten a deficiency notice, usually more than one, for filing "forms" that are not the official forms and are so far off the mark the court is rejecting the entire filing in one deficiency notice. Many pre-Dec 1 BPP filers were getting dinged too, but ALL of the post-Dec 1 BPP filers seem to be, at least the ones I have seen, and the court is apparently getting tired of it.
For instance, today I saw a case that was filed pro se the day I did mine, and he only got one deficiency notice:
"The debtor shall file amended petition, schedules, statement of Financial Affairs and/or any other required documentation on corresponding Official Bankruptcy Forms B1 through B24 (Revised 12/07) within (7) seven days."
In other words, he has to redo every single form in his petition, using the new (Dec 1) forms, and do it within 7 days or he faces automatic dismissal. (I should add that for the privilege of having his petition kicked back, he paid the BPP $325.00.)
Until now, the deficiency notices have been for the same reasons, but less drastic, such as:
"The Application and Order to Pay Filing Fee in Installments which you filed on August 5, 2007, does not have a proper caption pursuant to Local Rule 9004−2. Also this application should be filed using Official Form 3A(10/5). You will need to file an amended application with a proper caption on Official Form 3A(10/05)."
Basically, this means: we don't like your format, redo it. (This is text from an actual case; I saw the doc in question and though it had similar wording, it was definitely NOT anything like the official forms. This wasn't the court being picky; it really was not good.)
There was another one I saw a couple weeks ago (I'd quote it if I remembered the specific case, but I don't) where a pro se filer used a BPP, and the forms -- specifically the schedules -- looked NOTHING like the official forms. And of course it got kicked back. How could these BPPs not know?
If I were to guess, I would have to say that these BPPs are just cruising right along with whatever software they were using before the forms changed, either unaware that the filings would be rejected or just not caring. They are definitely notified after the fact, though: each deficiency notice gets mailed to the BPP as well as the debtor, usually the same day the case is filed.
So caveat emptor, folks. Until and unless you know for sure that the BPP you're thinking of using has tools that conform to the latest set of official forms, your filing may very well be kicked back to you with only seven days to correct it and refile. If you are going to use a BPP, you would do well to look through some attorney-filed cases in your area as well as the official forms, so that you at least have a sense of what they should look like.
I've been kind of disgusted with this for a while now, but now that I am seeing EVERY BPP bk I look at kicked out for forms violations (and it's the *entire filing*) I thought I'd let y'all know. Caveat emptor, folks.
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