You can look up the case conversion rates yourself. The Department of Justice and several other sources (I think including the Yale Law School), publish statistics.
I think we're talking past each other at this point. If you don't qualify for a Chapter 7, you don't qualify. Now, if you're borderline and want to fight with the United State's Trustee (UST), that's fine and I'm all for that.
However, I can't sit here and say that just because several attorney say that a debtor doesn't qualify for a Chapter 7 discharge, means that they are all lying and that the debtor does qualify. In most cases, qualification is subjective, not objective.
I think we're talking past each other at this point. If you don't qualify for a Chapter 7, you don't qualify. Now, if you're borderline and want to fight with the United State's Trustee (UST), that's fine and I'm all for that.
However, I can't sit here and say that just because several attorney say that a debtor doesn't qualify for a Chapter 7 discharge, means that they are all lying and that the debtor does qualify. In most cases, qualification is subjective, not objective.
Comment