Hi all.
An associate and I are bumping heads on an issue. We are both new to bankruptcy and practice in California. I am worried that he is doing something absolutely wrong and I am hoping someone here knows the answer.
Before I state the issue, I want to be clear that I am less asking for opinions (although for the sake of interesting discussions, it is welcome) and more hoping that someone could actually know the answer and preferably the code section or case. Additionally, I have researched it myself for quite a bit, but not found anything precisely on point. I am assuming this is because it is 1) obvious; 2) obscure; 3) routinely done incorrectly.
Facts: Married debtor filing chapter 7 without spouse. Non-filing spouse has credit cards in her name only. Non-filing spouse has a second mortgage on jointly-deeded home in her name only.
Issue: My associate believes that because we are in a community property state that non-filings spouse's personal liability, because community property would be liable for any claims, should be included in the filing spouses petition and subject to discharge (there is no separate property in this case so any discharge would cover them both). I disagree. I believe that until her personal liabilities are in default, and some type of claim is filed against her (and therefore against the community property), that they are not included.
My Reasoning: In California, it is quite often for one spouse to file for BK7 alone. The discharge will protect the community property of both spouses and any separate property of the non-filing spouse is only liable where the non-filing spouse actually had personal liability as well. This also serves to leave intact the credit of one of the spouses. If we were to follow the logic of my associate to its inevitable conclusion, the non-filing spouse would need to include all of his/her credit cards and any other liabilities (you don't get to pick and choose) thus destroying their credit as well. This can't be the way it works.
I would really appreciate any input anyone has, even if it just steers me in the right direction.
Alex
An associate and I are bumping heads on an issue. We are both new to bankruptcy and practice in California. I am worried that he is doing something absolutely wrong and I am hoping someone here knows the answer.
Before I state the issue, I want to be clear that I am less asking for opinions (although for the sake of interesting discussions, it is welcome) and more hoping that someone could actually know the answer and preferably the code section or case. Additionally, I have researched it myself for quite a bit, but not found anything precisely on point. I am assuming this is because it is 1) obvious; 2) obscure; 3) routinely done incorrectly.
Facts: Married debtor filing chapter 7 without spouse. Non-filing spouse has credit cards in her name only. Non-filing spouse has a second mortgage on jointly-deeded home in her name only.
Issue: My associate believes that because we are in a community property state that non-filings spouse's personal liability, because community property would be liable for any claims, should be included in the filing spouses petition and subject to discharge (there is no separate property in this case so any discharge would cover them both). I disagree. I believe that until her personal liabilities are in default, and some type of claim is filed against her (and therefore against the community property), that they are not included.
My Reasoning: In California, it is quite often for one spouse to file for BK7 alone. The discharge will protect the community property of both spouses and any separate property of the non-filing spouse is only liable where the non-filing spouse actually had personal liability as well. This also serves to leave intact the credit of one of the spouses. If we were to follow the logic of my associate to its inevitable conclusion, the non-filing spouse would need to include all of his/her credit cards and any other liabilities (you don't get to pick and choose) thus destroying their credit as well. This can't be the way it works.
I would really appreciate any input anyone has, even if it just steers me in the right direction.
Alex
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