We filed Chapter 7 yesterday. We couldn't afford an attorney, so we did it ourselves. DH is employed FT, and I'm self-employed. Our case is no asset, and we have no reaffirmation agreements or anything like that. It should be reasonably straightforward. I hope.
The clerk complimented me on the neatness of my paperwork, so maybe I did something right. Of course, I won't know if I goofed up on something until the 341 meeting.
Idaho does it differently than I expected. All cases have to be electronically filed, so the clerk scanned in our papers. We had to wait about 30 minutes for her to do that, but when she'd finished, she gave us our case number, the contact info for our assigned trustee, our judge, and even our 341 meeting--Sept. 25th.
I just hope everything goes smoothly at the 341. I'm a little concerned I might have done something wrong on the Schedule D. We had a personal loan with a finance company, secured by a DVD player and a TV. Those items are typically exempt, but since they secured the loan, I'm not sure if they'll qualify as exempt. I marked the box that they were exempt on our Statement of Intentions, but I don't know if that's right. If not, we have no problem surrendering the items.
I did find out something that might help other pro se filers. I'm not certain if it's just Idaho, but here you have to file the Statement of Domestic Obligations even if you have $0 obligations. We hadn't included it, because it was n/a, but the clerk gave us the paper, and we filled it out right there.
I'm nervous about the amount of debt we had--$240K, and no house--but $99,999 of that is for a wire transfer our bank authorized from our account. We had nothing to do with it, but they wouldn't remove the charge or even investigate. We marked that as disputed. Another $45K is student loan, so that might put us below the theoretical $100K threshold that could trigger the involvement of a US Trustee. I know it's not the end of the world to get a US Trustee, but I am not looking forward to finding all that paperwork if he requests months or years of items. We were honest and will continue to be, so it should be okay, even if something comes up.
The clerk complimented me on the neatness of my paperwork, so maybe I did something right. Of course, I won't know if I goofed up on something until the 341 meeting.
Idaho does it differently than I expected. All cases have to be electronically filed, so the clerk scanned in our papers. We had to wait about 30 minutes for her to do that, but when she'd finished, she gave us our case number, the contact info for our assigned trustee, our judge, and even our 341 meeting--Sept. 25th.
I just hope everything goes smoothly at the 341. I'm a little concerned I might have done something wrong on the Schedule D. We had a personal loan with a finance company, secured by a DVD player and a TV. Those items are typically exempt, but since they secured the loan, I'm not sure if they'll qualify as exempt. I marked the box that they were exempt on our Statement of Intentions, but I don't know if that's right. If not, we have no problem surrendering the items.
I did find out something that might help other pro se filers. I'm not certain if it's just Idaho, but here you have to file the Statement of Domestic Obligations even if you have $0 obligations. We hadn't included it, because it was n/a, but the clerk gave us the paper, and we filled it out right there.
I'm nervous about the amount of debt we had--$240K, and no house--but $99,999 of that is for a wire transfer our bank authorized from our account. We had nothing to do with it, but they wouldn't remove the charge or even investigate. We marked that as disputed. Another $45K is student loan, so that might put us below the theoretical $100K threshold that could trigger the involvement of a US Trustee. I know it's not the end of the world to get a US Trustee, but I am not looking forward to finding all that paperwork if he requests months or years of items. We were honest and will continue to be, so it should be okay, even if something comes up.
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