Zigner
Senior Member, Non-Attorney
I don't believe that it's proper to help you avoid paying an amount that you have been found to owe by the court. Pay (towards) your debt.5 is better than 0, but now my concern is on 403(b)
I don't believe that it's proper to help you avoid paying an amount that you have been found to owe by the court. Pay (towards) your debt.5 is better than 0, but now my concern is on 403(b)
Again, it is perfectly legitimate to increase your contribution to your 403(b). That would not be a fraudulent transfer."Why can't you spend it all? " the issue is not on this matter. There is no rule or proof that states that I must or I will spend it!!
"The money will not be in your bank account because you used it to make a contribution to your 403(b). That is no different than spending the money in your account on things you need or want before it hits the six month mark. " can I give all that money to someone else and claim that I would have spent it if it is in my account therefore I did not do any fraudulent transfer by giving it to someone else? Obviously the answer is NO. My question is: whetehr 403(b) will provide any protection to me from fraudulent transfer claims.
Zig, I understand that you feel strongly about this sort of thing, but that is not a legal answer, its a moralistic, somewhat judgmental answer based on your own values. The legal answer is that the OP is perfectly free to increase his retirement contributions.I don't believe that it's proper to help you avoid paying an amount that you have been found to owe by the court. Pay (towards) your debt.
It is a legal answer. The court has determined that the amount is owed, so there is nothing wrong with expecting the OP to pay (towards) that amount, as opposed to hiding the money.Zig, I understand that you feel strongly about this sort of thing, but that is not a legal answer, its a moralistic, somewhat judgmental answer based on your own values. The legal answer is that the OP is perfectly free to increase his retirement contributions.
Legally, making a contribution to your retirement account is NOT hiding the money. Just like paying your utility bills, your insurance bills, buying groceries and sundries and your house payment or rent, are not hiding the money.It is a legal answer. The court has determined that the amount is owed, so there is nothing wrong with expecting the OP to pay (towards) that amount, as opposed to hiding the money.
I disagree with you, and that is ok.Legally, making a contribution to your retirement account is NOT hiding the money. Just like paying your utility bills, your insurance bills, buying groceries and sundries and your house payment or rent, are not hiding the money.
If your wages are exempt from attachment as head of household then using that exempt asset to fund another exempt asset is generally not a fraudulent conveyance under Florida law as there is no intent in that case to hinder or delay a creditor. For example, a Florida federal bankruptcy court held:Thank you. However, I am already head of household therefore I am not worried about wage garnishment as I can prove this if my wage is garnished. I wish to increase my contribution in my 403(b) which would be the only source of my income after I retire. I am concerned if this increase will be considered as fraudulent transfer.
Using nonexempt assets and transferring them to exempt assets (other than a homestead protected by the Florida Constitution) may well be a transfer that can be set aside under Florida's fraudulent transfer statute, assuming the other requirements of the fraudulent transfer law are met. The case law suggests as much.Legally, making a contribution to your retirement account is NOT hiding the money. Just like paying your utility bills, your insurance bills, buying groceries and sundries and your house payment or rent, are not hiding the money.
That is a moral judgment, though, not a legal one.I don't believe that it's proper to help you avoid paying an amount that you have been found to owe by the court. Pay (towards) your debt.
I took his word for it that he was not subject to garnishment of his wages. If he was subject to garnishment then it really wouldn't matter how much he put in his 403(b), because they would include that amount of money in the garnishment percentage anyway.Using nonexempt assets and transferring them to exempt assets (other than a homestead protected by the Florida Constitution) may well be a transfer that can be set aside under Florida's fraudulent transfer statute, assuming the other requirements of the fraudulent transfer law are met. The case law suggests as much.
I don't think it's so clear-cut. Legally, he should be paying his debt.That is a moral judgment, though, not a legal one.
Legally, it is pretty clear cut. A judgment is NOT an order to pay (unlike a child support order, which is an order to pay). As a result, a judgment does not confer any legal obligation on the defendant to whip out his check book and write a check to pay the judgment. Of course, a judgment does give the judgment creditor the right to attach nonexempt income and and assets of the judgment debtor. Thus, if the judgment debtor does not want that to happen and he/she has the money to pay it then it is often prudent to whip out that checkbook.I don't think it's so clear-cut. Legally, he should be paying his debt.
It would matter to the extent that nonexempt wages were put into the 403(b) prior to the creditor serving the wage garnishment order.I took his word for it that he was not subject to garnishment of his wages. If he was subject to garnishment then it really wouldn't matter how much he put in his 403(b), because they would include that amount of money in the garnishment percentage anyway.
I can see that.It would matter to the extent that nonexempt wages were put into the 403(b) prior to the creditor serving the wage garnishment order.