Thank you for the excellent information. My fear is that there seems to be a couple of interpretations, and I'm not willing to take even the slightest chance of something happening. If someone could GUARANTEE that this won't be an issue, I would file. But what happens if it becomes an issue?
Here's an odd question. Can I file ch7, and if this becomes an issue, cancel my filing? Has anyone ever retracted?
The thing is, me being on the deed has NO MONETARY VALUE whatsoever. Even if my mother went into long term care anytime over the next 4 years, Medicaid gets the house, so I wouldn't even be a recipient of any $ for the next 4 years, unless she passed away during that time and we inherited it. But with that in mind, there are many people filing bankruptcy that will receive an inheritance "sometime" in the future, and the trustee can't claim that unless it's within the alloted time period, correct?
I just don't see how this could be considered an asset, as it's not worth anything to me, I can't sell it, I'm not making any $ off it..., etc... Let me make it clear that I really don't care about my future interest in this property right now. I would gladly lose my interest in the house to be able to dig myself out of financial hell right now. Then again, I simply will not take a chance that my 70 year old mother will in any way be affected by this.
I will just be way to nervous about this. I need a definite answer, and will continue to research this issue throughout the day.
Thanks for the great info!
Here's an odd question. Can I file ch7, and if this becomes an issue, cancel my filing? Has anyone ever retracted?
The thing is, me being on the deed has NO MONETARY VALUE whatsoever. Even if my mother went into long term care anytime over the next 4 years, Medicaid gets the house, so I wouldn't even be a recipient of any $ for the next 4 years, unless she passed away during that time and we inherited it. But with that in mind, there are many people filing bankruptcy that will receive an inheritance "sometime" in the future, and the trustee can't claim that unless it's within the alloted time period, correct?
I just don't see how this could be considered an asset, as it's not worth anything to me, I can't sell it, I'm not making any $ off it..., etc... Let me make it clear that I really don't care about my future interest in this property right now. I would gladly lose my interest in the house to be able to dig myself out of financial hell right now. Then again, I simply will not take a chance that my 70 year old mother will in any way be affected by this.
I will just be way to nervous about this. I need a definite answer, and will continue to research this issue throughout the day.
Thanks for the great info!
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