Hi all. I'm a longtime lurker and this is my first post.
My wife and I will likely be filing a joint Chapter 7 BK in Illinois before year end. We own (with no loans) 2 cars that are titled in both of our names as joint owners. They are both "clunkers", so I WAS pretty sure that we would be able to save them both as they would fall under our state exemption amounts (they are each worth about $2400). That is, until I read the Illinois automobile exemption statute, which exempts:
"The debtor's interest, not to exceed $2,400 in value, in any ONE motor vehicle" [emphasis added by me]
This is scaring me, because I am afraid the trustee might interpret the statute this way:
1. Each of us owns 50% of 2 cars, so we each have $1200 of equity in Car A and $1200 of equity in Car B.
2. We could both combine (double) our exemptions in Car A to protect it with no problem.
3. We would stand to lose Car B (or have to use our wild card exemption to save it) because we already protected ONE car.
By this analysis, we would be able to save both of our cars only if Car A was titled solely in my name and Car B was solely in my wife's name, thus giving each of us $2400 in equity in ONE car. But we can't just re-title the cars now because (I believe) the fraudulent transfer look-back period in Illinois is FOUR years(!)
Somebody please tell me that I am over-thinking this.
My wife and I will likely be filing a joint Chapter 7 BK in Illinois before year end. We own (with no loans) 2 cars that are titled in both of our names as joint owners. They are both "clunkers", so I WAS pretty sure that we would be able to save them both as they would fall under our state exemption amounts (they are each worth about $2400). That is, until I read the Illinois automobile exemption statute, which exempts:
"The debtor's interest, not to exceed $2,400 in value, in any ONE motor vehicle" [emphasis added by me]
This is scaring me, because I am afraid the trustee might interpret the statute this way:
1. Each of us owns 50% of 2 cars, so we each have $1200 of equity in Car A and $1200 of equity in Car B.
2. We could both combine (double) our exemptions in Car A to protect it with no problem.
3. We would stand to lose Car B (or have to use our wild card exemption to save it) because we already protected ONE car.
By this analysis, we would be able to save both of our cars only if Car A was titled solely in my name and Car B was solely in my wife's name, thus giving each of us $2400 in equity in ONE car. But we can't just re-title the cars now because (I believe) the fraudulent transfer look-back period in Illinois is FOUR years(!)
Somebody please tell me that I am over-thinking this.
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