Ok, so I live in CA. It is a community property state. I spoke with a new BK attorney, and in regards to credit card debt, and he said LEGALLY, credit card debt BELONGS to the person who SIGNED the CC application. I asked "what if it was done online?" (the cc application) and he said it depends on the wording of the CC agreement (or something like that). When I asked how I could find this out for sure, "who's debt is it/who signed up for the card", he said I could call the CC company (Don't say BK to them!), tell them I am doing estate planning & ask for agreement you signed. When I questioned this, since I have ALWAYS heard '2 names on CC, both are responsible' it seemed that he said, TECHNICALLY that was right but wrong, Hunh? So, he explained that I could have a CC, add someone as an authorized user, then I file BK. I, and I ONLY am LEGALLY responsible for that debt. Yes, the CC company could sue both people on the card, but legally could only get the money for the person who signed up for the card, and if the person who signed for the card filed BK, the debt would be discharged. ...Ok, At least this is how "I" understood him. Can anyone verify if this is correct, or not...or partially :-)
I thought that if you had 'joint' cc debt with a spouse, (in CA at least) you both could be sued individually for the WHOLE debt. If one of us filed BK, the other could still be held liable for the CC debt that was discharged, unless we filed joint BK or both of us filed individually. Is this wrong?
Clarification would be wonderful!
JJ
I thought that if you had 'joint' cc debt with a spouse, (in CA at least) you both could be sued individually for the WHOLE debt. If one of us filed BK, the other could still be held liable for the CC debt that was discharged, unless we filed joint BK or both of us filed individually. Is this wrong?
Clarification would be wonderful!
JJ
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