Long story short,...... CC's were used to supplement living expenses. Medical bills, car repairs, and such. We are not talking fur coats and expensive vacations. Refinanced house to pay off CC's but bigger house payment required use of CC's for medical bills, car repairs, and such. 18 months ago, hubby lost his job. Got severence. Decided to COBRA medical from the company, luckily as we had a couple rather unexpected medical events arise. Hubby found another job after 7 months that was out of state for less pay with more expensive benefits. He moved first and the family followed 6 months later. Last spring, we cashed out hubby's 401K to pay off the 2nd on the house since we knew we were going to sell. While getting the house ready to sell, we found out we had to replace some rotten windows in addition to a fresh paint job and desperately needed new carpet. The house out of state is still on the market and hasn't sold so we've been supporting 2 households for a year now.
Contacted Consumer Credit Counseling (Linked from the DOJ Approved website) last week for a professional opinion of our situation. 3 recommendations and DMP proposal. Contact the mortgage lender. Contact our auto loan lender. Seek legal counsel. The DMP payments were $100/mo more than our minimums now, for 5 years. We've about run thru the last of the "savings" keeping up the minimums and 2 house payments. Tried the "Hardship" department of our mortgage lender and discovered the phone number was really a collections company. Needless to say we did not enter our loan number into their automated system.
We don't have a lot of property, but we do have some assets that are specifically mentioned in the BK Law.
We "own" 4 vehicles. Really only 2 are ours. The other 2 belong to our children, but we hold the titles for the reduction in insurance rates for our kids. If the kids owned the cars themselves they could not afford the insurance to drive. Three vehicles are paid for and one has a loan on it. I read the under the new BK law, the Trustee will value the vehicles at Fair Market Value, and not "fire sale" pricing under the old law. I went to the Kelly Blue Book website and guestimated all of the older vehicles to be in "Good" condition. One of the kids' cars has a Kelly Blue Book of $2600 retail. The other has a KBB retail of about $4400. One of ours is older, and paid for. KBB retail for that one is about $5K. And we have an 'O4 worth about $24K with a $12K loan on it.
What will happen with the vehicles?? Will the Trustee really apply the KBB Fair Market assessment to them?? From looking at newspaper ads, even the '04 doesn't retail on Dealer's lots here for the KBB FMV. I haven't even seen ads for the 2 oldest ones the kids drive. A 1989 and a 1993. Regardless of the value assessed, we way exceed our old state's limit of $1000 each equity ($2K total joint filing). Because we recently moved and haven't lived here long enough we fall under the old state's exemptions. And, we don't have the funds to "buy them back" from the Court.
Also, the house for sale out of state. What are the possibilities with regards to that?? We originally listed the house for $10K less than the Real Estate Agents said we could ask hoping for a quick sale. But that has not been the case. We dropped the price a little bit after a couple of months and recently dropped the price $20K more hoping to sell. We don't have much buffer between our costs to sell (REA fee, taxes, documentation, etc.) and our loan at this point. Obviously we don't want to keep the house, but what do we do now?? Do we continue to try to sell the house or pull if from the market and let it go in the BK?? I ran the new Means Test and with our house payment we clearly qualify for Chap 7. Without the house payment, it might be a Chap 13.
Beyond the vehicles, we don't have much else in the way of assets. Our furniture is old. We left the refridgerator with the house to be included in the sale because we knew we wouldn't have room for it in a rental situation. The cooktop and oven were built-in so taking them was not really an option. We do have an old freezer that we kept and moved with us. I had a couple of nice pieces of jewelry, but I sold those a couple of months ago to keep us solvent until now. (I can prove that money went straight into the checking acct and straight back out to pay bills.) We do have a cheap stereo, an old TV, a not quite bottom of the line DVD player, and an older computer purchased with a computer purchase allowance from Hubby's former employer several years ago. We have musical instruments from when the kids played in band. Our old state's exemption for personal property is only $1K. I don't know if that doubles in a joint filing or not.
At this time, we are current on all our payments. But I've read on here in a couple of places each month's payment extends the time limit on the debt. We might be able to make January's payments on everything and the last of the money is gone. Major payments are:
$3200 rent and mortgage
$250 car payment
$2900 CC minimums on about $115K of debt
plus there's utilities on 2 households because the water and electric are still on at the house, phone, food, etc. Or, do we just contact an attorney and call our CC companies about our situation??
We are looking for all points of view. All pros and cons so we can weigh our options to make some decisions. Feel free to suggest other bases we may need to cover or issues we may need to consider. This is a very difficult decision and we are by no means making it lightly.
Contacted Consumer Credit Counseling (Linked from the DOJ Approved website) last week for a professional opinion of our situation. 3 recommendations and DMP proposal. Contact the mortgage lender. Contact our auto loan lender. Seek legal counsel. The DMP payments were $100/mo more than our minimums now, for 5 years. We've about run thru the last of the "savings" keeping up the minimums and 2 house payments. Tried the "Hardship" department of our mortgage lender and discovered the phone number was really a collections company. Needless to say we did not enter our loan number into their automated system.
We don't have a lot of property, but we do have some assets that are specifically mentioned in the BK Law.
We "own" 4 vehicles. Really only 2 are ours. The other 2 belong to our children, but we hold the titles for the reduction in insurance rates for our kids. If the kids owned the cars themselves they could not afford the insurance to drive. Three vehicles are paid for and one has a loan on it. I read the under the new BK law, the Trustee will value the vehicles at Fair Market Value, and not "fire sale" pricing under the old law. I went to the Kelly Blue Book website and guestimated all of the older vehicles to be in "Good" condition. One of the kids' cars has a Kelly Blue Book of $2600 retail. The other has a KBB retail of about $4400. One of ours is older, and paid for. KBB retail for that one is about $5K. And we have an 'O4 worth about $24K with a $12K loan on it.
What will happen with the vehicles?? Will the Trustee really apply the KBB Fair Market assessment to them?? From looking at newspaper ads, even the '04 doesn't retail on Dealer's lots here for the KBB FMV. I haven't even seen ads for the 2 oldest ones the kids drive. A 1989 and a 1993. Regardless of the value assessed, we way exceed our old state's limit of $1000 each equity ($2K total joint filing). Because we recently moved and haven't lived here long enough we fall under the old state's exemptions. And, we don't have the funds to "buy them back" from the Court.
Also, the house for sale out of state. What are the possibilities with regards to that?? We originally listed the house for $10K less than the Real Estate Agents said we could ask hoping for a quick sale. But that has not been the case. We dropped the price a little bit after a couple of months and recently dropped the price $20K more hoping to sell. We don't have much buffer between our costs to sell (REA fee, taxes, documentation, etc.) and our loan at this point. Obviously we don't want to keep the house, but what do we do now?? Do we continue to try to sell the house or pull if from the market and let it go in the BK?? I ran the new Means Test and with our house payment we clearly qualify for Chap 7. Without the house payment, it might be a Chap 13.
Beyond the vehicles, we don't have much else in the way of assets. Our furniture is old. We left the refridgerator with the house to be included in the sale because we knew we wouldn't have room for it in a rental situation. The cooktop and oven were built-in so taking them was not really an option. We do have an old freezer that we kept and moved with us. I had a couple of nice pieces of jewelry, but I sold those a couple of months ago to keep us solvent until now. (I can prove that money went straight into the checking acct and straight back out to pay bills.) We do have a cheap stereo, an old TV, a not quite bottom of the line DVD player, and an older computer purchased with a computer purchase allowance from Hubby's former employer several years ago. We have musical instruments from when the kids played in band. Our old state's exemption for personal property is only $1K. I don't know if that doubles in a joint filing or not.
At this time, we are current on all our payments. But I've read on here in a couple of places each month's payment extends the time limit on the debt. We might be able to make January's payments on everything and the last of the money is gone. Major payments are:
$3200 rent and mortgage
$250 car payment
$2900 CC minimums on about $115K of debt
plus there's utilities on 2 households because the water and electric are still on at the house, phone, food, etc. Or, do we just contact an attorney and call our CC companies about our situation??
We are looking for all points of view. All pros and cons so we can weigh our options to make some decisions. Feel free to suggest other bases we may need to cover or issues we may need to consider. This is a very difficult decision and we are by no means making it lightly.
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