I have a 26 year old son who has $80K in unsecured debt. He has been sued by all of the creditors and all of them have, of course, been granted default judgments.
My son has no job, no money, no bank accounts, and lives at home with his mother. This means that he also has no expenses except for liability insurance on the old clunker that he cannot afford to put gas into.
All of the attorneys he has spoken with want approximately $2000, give or take a few hundred, to file a no-asset Chapter 7 petition. This is an absolutely airtight, clear-cut, unambiguous situation where the filing could not possibly be denied. It seems absurd to have to pay that much money to have an attorney fill out paperwork, which is all it would amount to. Of course, many confusing roadblocks have been put up to discourage pro se filing of bankruptcy petitions. Yet I hear that it can actually be done (the US Constitution ostensibly guarantees that).
Where can guidance be found as to the bottom-line requirements of pro se filing, especially In New Jersey? There are specifics with respect to items as trivial as the font type, margin settings and spacing used on the forms and schedules that are submitted. Does a request for waiver of the filing fee have to be submitted and approved prior to filing?
Niggling little technicalities such as this are seemingly designed to discourage the attempt to file pro se.
Any help at all out there?
WR
My son has no job, no money, no bank accounts, and lives at home with his mother. This means that he also has no expenses except for liability insurance on the old clunker that he cannot afford to put gas into.
All of the attorneys he has spoken with want approximately $2000, give or take a few hundred, to file a no-asset Chapter 7 petition. This is an absolutely airtight, clear-cut, unambiguous situation where the filing could not possibly be denied. It seems absurd to have to pay that much money to have an attorney fill out paperwork, which is all it would amount to. Of course, many confusing roadblocks have been put up to discourage pro se filing of bankruptcy petitions. Yet I hear that it can actually be done (the US Constitution ostensibly guarantees that).
Where can guidance be found as to the bottom-line requirements of pro se filing, especially In New Jersey? There are specifics with respect to items as trivial as the font type, margin settings and spacing used on the forms and schedules that are submitted. Does a request for waiver of the filing fee have to be submitted and approved prior to filing?
Niggling little technicalities such as this are seemingly designed to discourage the attempt to file pro se.
Any help at all out there?
WR
Comment