I am a physician who is being forced into Chapter 7 due to tax issues.
While the equity in my house is tied up with a tax lien, I still have some assets in jewlery and antiques.
My worry is that a trustee will come in and bring an auctioneer or estate liquidator and take everything not exempt. I will value everything low, but many items would appraise higher if the trustee wanted to be diligent; this would mean going to an appraiser for a true evaluation.
I am talking about a wholesale value of about $50-60,000 overall.
Can anyone give me a clue about how these trustees work? Will they go to your homeowners policy to see if you have listed high-priced items? What about going to your credit card records and bank records to see your record of cashed checks? To do due dilligence it would take them months. Or, are they really interested only in cash, land and easily saleable items?
I assume some are knowledgeable, but how many of them can discern value in different art/jewelery categories?
Also, if you have a small item of considerable value, why not just keep it in your pocket?
I know the lawyers tell you to be completely honest in declaring everything of value, but you cannot tell me that some people haven't been burying stuff in their backyards long before they filed.
While the equity in my house is tied up with a tax lien, I still have some assets in jewlery and antiques.
My worry is that a trustee will come in and bring an auctioneer or estate liquidator and take everything not exempt. I will value everything low, but many items would appraise higher if the trustee wanted to be diligent; this would mean going to an appraiser for a true evaluation.
I am talking about a wholesale value of about $50-60,000 overall.
Can anyone give me a clue about how these trustees work? Will they go to your homeowners policy to see if you have listed high-priced items? What about going to your credit card records and bank records to see your record of cashed checks? To do due dilligence it would take them months. Or, are they really interested only in cash, land and easily saleable items?
I assume some are knowledgeable, but how many of them can discern value in different art/jewelery categories?
Also, if you have a small item of considerable value, why not just keep it in your pocket?
I know the lawyers tell you to be completely honest in declaring everything of value, but you cannot tell me that some people haven't been burying stuff in their backyards long before they filed.
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