What Property
Can I Keep?
In a chapter 7 case, you can keep all property which the
law says is “exempt” from the claims of creditors. If you
have lived in North Carolina for at least the last two
years, then you will use the North Carolina state exemption
laws. If you have not lived here that long, your attorney
will help you figure out which state’s exemptions to use.
North Carolina state exemptions include:
* $18,500 in equity in your home;
* $3500 in equity in your car;
* $5000 in any household goods;
* $2000 in things you need for your job (tools, books,
etc.);
* $5000 in any property, provided you have not used up you
home equity exemption; and
* most retirement accounts, such as 401k accounts and IRAs.
The amounts of the exemptions are doubled when a married
couple files together.
In determining whether property is exempt, you must keep a
few things in mind. The value of property is not the amount
you paid for it, but what it is worth now. Especially for
furniture and cars, this may be a lot less than what you
paid or what it would cost to buy a replacement.
You also only need to look at your equity in property. This
means that you count your exemptions against the full value
minus any money that you owe on mortgages or liens. For
example, if you own a $50,000 house with a $40,000
mortgage, you count your exemptions against the $10,000
which is your equity if you sell it.
While your exemptions allow you to keep property even in a
chapter 7 case, your exemptions do not make any difference
to the right of a mortgage holder or car loan creditor to
take the property to cover the debt if you are behind. In a
chapter 13 case, you can keep all of your property if your
plan meets the requirements of the bankruptcy law. In most
cases you will have to pay the mortgages or liens as you
would if you didn’t file bankruptcy.
What Will
Happen to My Home and Car If I File Bankruptcy?
In most cases you will not lose your home or car during
your bankruptcy case as long as your equity in the property
is fully exempt. Even if your property is not fully exempt,
you will be able to keep it, if you pay its non-exempt
value to creditors in chapter 13.
However, some of your creditors may have a “security
interest” in your home, automobile or other personal
property. This means that you gave that creditor a mortgage
on the home or put your other property up as collateral for
the debt. Bankruptcy does not make these security interests
go away. If you don’t make your payments on that debt, the
creditor may be able to take and sell the home or the
property, during or after the bankruptcy case.
There are several ways that you can keep collateral or
mortgaged property after you file bankruptcy. You can agree
to keep making your payments on the debt until it is paid
in full. Or you can pay the creditor the amount that the
property you want to keep is worth. In some cases involving
fraud or other improper conduct by the creditor, you may be
able to challenge the debt. If you put up your household
goods as collateral for a loan (other than a loan to
purchase the goods), you can usually keep your property
without making any more payments on that debt.