Hi. First time poster here. Glad I found this site. I'm going to ask a long question, but please bear with me. I am freaking out and need some straight up answers that my lawyer won't give me.
Okay, my question. I just did an emergency chapter 7 filing last week and am just now completing my required stuff like Schedule I, J, etc. I'm freaking out though about whether my family will actually pass the means test because of our disposable income. Can someone give me an honest answer. My lawyer has me freaking out that we won't pass and be kicked into 13.
Here's our situation. I have a family of 7 (me, wife, five minor kids). Total debts of $115,000 (all non-priority, all unsecured, mostly consumer debts). The median income for a family our size in our state is $90,690. I run a small home based business and my total income (even before any business expenses) is $77,820 for the last year (with an annualized income of $75,281 used on the means test). So we are well below the median.
From what I read before I filed, our case was a slam dunk Chapter 7 because we were below the median. However, as I am filling out our expenses on Schedule J, we show about $1200/month dollars in disposable income. I looked at the IRS standards and my family is in fact living waaay more meagerly than the amounts allowed there (for example we fully own our one car - worth $4850) so we don't have a car payment, and we are renting a tiny 2 bedroom house for $700 a month and utilities are low. And we don't have health insurance.
So the gap between what we could be claiming if we went by the IRS expense standards and our ACTUAL expenses is pretty big. Therefore, we show a lot of disposable income. Most of this disposable income is eaten up by my small business expenses, but I'm nervous about including all my business expenses on Schedule J to offset this gap because I don't feel like getting my business audited. However I could report them if I absolutely need to.
So as it stands now, I am showing a disposable income of about $1200 per month between Schedule I and J, which would lead me to believe we'll be kicked into Chapter 13 (and my lawyer is also telling me I could be made to go 13). Is this true? Or does the fact that we are so far below median on form 22A mean that the trustee won't really look at the disposable income gap on Schedule I and J?
It doesn't seem fair that I would be kicked into a Chapter 13 when we're so far below median on form 22a and I basically have my family living in third-world conditions. Instead of my family being able to use our disposable income to improve our conditions (i.e. rent a bigger house, have a newer financed car, have health insurance), we would be forced to hand over all our disposable income money to our creditors each month when people with the same income, but living far fancier than us, are able to get away with Chapter 7.
So can someone please give me a straight up answer. Is there a chance that we will be forced into Chapter 13 when we are so far below the median on form 22a, but are living in squalor thus showing that we have $1200 disposable income on schedule I and J? And once again, I was thinking before we filed that when one passes the means test on form 22a that one was a guaranteed Chapter 7. If I knew there was any question of being forced into 13 anyway, I probably wouldn't have filed.
Someone help me out here. Thanks. And BTW, is it okay to just plug in the allowed IRS expense numbers for food, health care etc., on Schedule J? If I do, will I be busted and made to put my actual expenses? I'm freaking out. Also, if I do plug in my business expenses to offset my disposable income, will this automatiaclly trigger a busness audit and if so, is this audit as brutal as an IRS audit?
Okay, my question. I just did an emergency chapter 7 filing last week and am just now completing my required stuff like Schedule I, J, etc. I'm freaking out though about whether my family will actually pass the means test because of our disposable income. Can someone give me an honest answer. My lawyer has me freaking out that we won't pass and be kicked into 13.
Here's our situation. I have a family of 7 (me, wife, five minor kids). Total debts of $115,000 (all non-priority, all unsecured, mostly consumer debts). The median income for a family our size in our state is $90,690. I run a small home based business and my total income (even before any business expenses) is $77,820 for the last year (with an annualized income of $75,281 used on the means test). So we are well below the median.
From what I read before I filed, our case was a slam dunk Chapter 7 because we were below the median. However, as I am filling out our expenses on Schedule J, we show about $1200/month dollars in disposable income. I looked at the IRS standards and my family is in fact living waaay more meagerly than the amounts allowed there (for example we fully own our one car - worth $4850) so we don't have a car payment, and we are renting a tiny 2 bedroom house for $700 a month and utilities are low. And we don't have health insurance.
So the gap between what we could be claiming if we went by the IRS expense standards and our ACTUAL expenses is pretty big. Therefore, we show a lot of disposable income. Most of this disposable income is eaten up by my small business expenses, but I'm nervous about including all my business expenses on Schedule J to offset this gap because I don't feel like getting my business audited. However I could report them if I absolutely need to.
So as it stands now, I am showing a disposable income of about $1200 per month between Schedule I and J, which would lead me to believe we'll be kicked into Chapter 13 (and my lawyer is also telling me I could be made to go 13). Is this true? Or does the fact that we are so far below median on form 22A mean that the trustee won't really look at the disposable income gap on Schedule I and J?
It doesn't seem fair that I would be kicked into a Chapter 13 when we're so far below median on form 22a and I basically have my family living in third-world conditions. Instead of my family being able to use our disposable income to improve our conditions (i.e. rent a bigger house, have a newer financed car, have health insurance), we would be forced to hand over all our disposable income money to our creditors each month when people with the same income, but living far fancier than us, are able to get away with Chapter 7.
So can someone please give me a straight up answer. Is there a chance that we will be forced into Chapter 13 when we are so far below the median on form 22a, but are living in squalor thus showing that we have $1200 disposable income on schedule I and J? And once again, I was thinking before we filed that when one passes the means test on form 22a that one was a guaranteed Chapter 7. If I knew there was any question of being forced into 13 anyway, I probably wouldn't have filed.
Someone help me out here. Thanks. And BTW, is it okay to just plug in the allowed IRS expense numbers for food, health care etc., on Schedule J? If I do, will I be busted and made to put my actual expenses? I'm freaking out. Also, if I do plug in my business expenses to offset my disposable income, will this automatiaclly trigger a busness audit and if so, is this audit as brutal as an IRS audit?
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