My attorney tells me any accounts receivable will be claimed by the court.
I asked if billing for completed work could be delayed and he said it could not.
My business involves photography while on the road, and then I return home to work on the photographs before sending them to the customers who ordered them.
The work is mostly done in the photography stage, but all the images still need to be sorted, sometimes corrected for color, etc., and then printed or transferred to CDs.
So for example, if I did $10,000 of billable work the first two weeks of November, filed for Chapter 7 on November 15, and then finished processing the images and delivered and billed $10,000 to my customers on November 20th, am I doing anything wrong?
And just to further clarify, can work completed BUT NOT DELIVERED, be held until after filing for bankruptcy, and then delivered and billed?
For example, John agreed to do some custom work on Joe's car. Joe was in no hurry to get the car back, so there was no set delivery date.
Joe agreed that when the work was done, John would deliver the car to his house, and submit a bill for $20,000, and that he would pay the invoice 30 days after delivery.
By the end of November John was completely finished working on the the car, but he decided to file Chapter 7 on December 1st.
If he delivered the car on November 30th or before, he would have the $20,000 owed to him by John, and that would be considered an asset that the court could claim.
So John decides to keep the car in his garage and wait until after he files to deliever it and bill for it, thus not having to forfeit $20,000 to the court.
Is this ok in the eyes of the court?
I asked if billing for completed work could be delayed and he said it could not.
My business involves photography while on the road, and then I return home to work on the photographs before sending them to the customers who ordered them.
The work is mostly done in the photography stage, but all the images still need to be sorted, sometimes corrected for color, etc., and then printed or transferred to CDs.
So for example, if I did $10,000 of billable work the first two weeks of November, filed for Chapter 7 on November 15, and then finished processing the images and delivered and billed $10,000 to my customers on November 20th, am I doing anything wrong?
And just to further clarify, can work completed BUT NOT DELIVERED, be held until after filing for bankruptcy, and then delivered and billed?
For example, John agreed to do some custom work on Joe's car. Joe was in no hurry to get the car back, so there was no set delivery date.
Joe agreed that when the work was done, John would deliver the car to his house, and submit a bill for $20,000, and that he would pay the invoice 30 days after delivery.
By the end of November John was completely finished working on the the car, but he decided to file Chapter 7 on December 1st.
If he delivered the car on November 30th or before, he would have the $20,000 owed to him by John, and that would be considered an asset that the court could claim.
So John decides to keep the car in his garage and wait until after he files to deliever it and bill for it, thus not having to forfeit $20,000 to the court.
Is this ok in the eyes of the court?
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