Hello,
I am legally married although have lived physically separated from my spouse for the past three years. He is active duty military and our home of record, or domicile, is a common law property state (Florida) -- our cars are titled and registered there.
He is assigned to duty in a community property state. I have just moved to a separate community property state (Nevada). I cannot file here until after 91 days of residency but at that time I'm still outside of the window to file using Nevada's exemptions (that would be triggered at six months of residency). So, instead I would file using the exemption scheme of my domicile state (the common law state -- Florida).
Does anybody know if the lens through which I should/could interpret a Chapter 7 bankruptcy is the Florida law in its entirety (the common law interpretation of property/assets/debts), or am I only to use the exemption scheme from Florida and the rest of the filing should reflect Nevada's community property perspective (spousal liability for debts, assets, etc)?
We do not have, nor ever had, joint debts (credit cards, loans, etc) or assets (property, bank accounts, etc). We do not have children. He does file our taxes as "married filing jointly" but he keeps the tax refund (with my approval). He receives a housing allowance from the military for being married and he gives me a portion of it each month ($600.00). These are the only two "joint" activities that we have engaged in. In Florida there is no "legal separation" so I do not have any legal document showing that we are separated although I can prove through rental history that I have lived on my own for the past three years (we've been married for four).
I am $40k+ in credit card debt. I own my car -- a 2003 model with 262,000 miles on it, wear and tear and some body damage, rear seats missing. I rent a small studio apartment. I do not have any savings accounts or retirement accounts. I am unemployed, in trauma counseling for a sexual assault that has rendered me reclusive. I'm on the mend but used my credit cards and loans from family to exist for the past two years. I'm finally able to process the specifics of my reality, the mess I've made of my life, and am using this clarity to discern how best to fix it.
Chapter 7 would be a fresh start for me and he will be supportive of my decision but I hope not to have to entangle him in this process.
I will schedule some free consults with attorneys but ultimately I would need to file pro se as I cannot afford attorney's fees.
I'm sorry that this is such a convoluted tale. No doubt I made it more complicated than it has to be. Any ideas out there?
I am legally married although have lived physically separated from my spouse for the past three years. He is active duty military and our home of record, or domicile, is a common law property state (Florida) -- our cars are titled and registered there.
He is assigned to duty in a community property state. I have just moved to a separate community property state (Nevada). I cannot file here until after 91 days of residency but at that time I'm still outside of the window to file using Nevada's exemptions (that would be triggered at six months of residency). So, instead I would file using the exemption scheme of my domicile state (the common law state -- Florida).
Does anybody know if the lens through which I should/could interpret a Chapter 7 bankruptcy is the Florida law in its entirety (the common law interpretation of property/assets/debts), or am I only to use the exemption scheme from Florida and the rest of the filing should reflect Nevada's community property perspective (spousal liability for debts, assets, etc)?
We do not have, nor ever had, joint debts (credit cards, loans, etc) or assets (property, bank accounts, etc). We do not have children. He does file our taxes as "married filing jointly" but he keeps the tax refund (with my approval). He receives a housing allowance from the military for being married and he gives me a portion of it each month ($600.00). These are the only two "joint" activities that we have engaged in. In Florida there is no "legal separation" so I do not have any legal document showing that we are separated although I can prove through rental history that I have lived on my own for the past three years (we've been married for four).
I am $40k+ in credit card debt. I own my car -- a 2003 model with 262,000 miles on it, wear and tear and some body damage, rear seats missing. I rent a small studio apartment. I do not have any savings accounts or retirement accounts. I am unemployed, in trauma counseling for a sexual assault that has rendered me reclusive. I'm on the mend but used my credit cards and loans from family to exist for the past two years. I'm finally able to process the specifics of my reality, the mess I've made of my life, and am using this clarity to discern how best to fix it.
Chapter 7 would be a fresh start for me and he will be supportive of my decision but I hope not to have to entangle him in this process.
I will schedule some free consults with attorneys but ultimately I would need to file pro se as I cannot afford attorney's fees.
I'm sorry that this is such a convoluted tale. No doubt I made it more complicated than it has to be. Any ideas out there?
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