Glad to find the forum! I have to say that I've been more fortunate than a lot of people that I read about on the forum and I'm thankful for that. What brings me here is that I was notified recently that I am being sued by the person who we sold our last house to. We sold the house for about $400,000 and they are suing us for a couple million for alleged undisclosed defects, mental anguish, anxiety, etc.
I'd rather not go into the details, but the lawsuit is frivolous and was started because the people who bought the house are going into pre-foreclosure. I think that it's unlikely they would ever get a judgment in their favor, but I'm a worrier and like to prepare for things. A few questions:
1. Let's say they get a judgement for $2,000,000. My assets are nowhere near that. Does that mean Chapter 7?
2. We have substantial assets in retirement funds (401k, Rollover IRA, Roth IRA, SEP IRA). Are these untouchable?
3. We have substantial assets in 529 accounts that have been there for some time. Are these likewise untouchable?
4. We have substantial equity in our house. Living in PA, they have no homestead exclusion which I think would push me into opting for Federal exemptions of $43,250 between me and my wife.
5. For equity in our house above the federal exemption, can they force us to sell the house? If so, how does that work? That is, does it look like a standard sale where we live in the house until it sells, fill out a seller's disclosure form, etc?
6. My wife and I own two cars that were paid off. Before we were notified of the lawsuit, I refinanced my car to take advantage of great rate at my credit union. I planned to do the same thing with my wife's car but then we were notified of the lawsuit. Would it be inadvisable to get a loan on my wife's car at this point now that we're aware of the lawsuit?
7. Between the court date set for a year from now and any inevitable appeals of a large verdict, I probably have 18-24 months to prepare. What things should I be doing now? I read the "bk pre-planning" and saw some good advice in there. Is there anything specific to my situation that might be different?
Thank you for all your help!
I'd rather not go into the details, but the lawsuit is frivolous and was started because the people who bought the house are going into pre-foreclosure. I think that it's unlikely they would ever get a judgment in their favor, but I'm a worrier and like to prepare for things. A few questions:
1. Let's say they get a judgement for $2,000,000. My assets are nowhere near that. Does that mean Chapter 7?
2. We have substantial assets in retirement funds (401k, Rollover IRA, Roth IRA, SEP IRA). Are these untouchable?
3. We have substantial assets in 529 accounts that have been there for some time. Are these likewise untouchable?
4. We have substantial equity in our house. Living in PA, they have no homestead exclusion which I think would push me into opting for Federal exemptions of $43,250 between me and my wife.
5. For equity in our house above the federal exemption, can they force us to sell the house? If so, how does that work? That is, does it look like a standard sale where we live in the house until it sells, fill out a seller's disclosure form, etc?
6. My wife and I own two cars that were paid off. Before we were notified of the lawsuit, I refinanced my car to take advantage of great rate at my credit union. I planned to do the same thing with my wife's car but then we were notified of the lawsuit. Would it be inadvisable to get a loan on my wife's car at this point now that we're aware of the lawsuit?
7. Between the court date set for a year from now and any inevitable appeals of a large verdict, I probably have 18-24 months to prepare. What things should I be doing now? I read the "bk pre-planning" and saw some good advice in there. Is there anything specific to my situation that might be different?
Thank you for all your help!
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