storybookjim
Member
State of Washington.
Here's a creditor story that may be entertaining.
I agreed to sell a house in 1999 on a zero-down real estate contract to couple with two previous bankruptcies on the pretense that they really wanted to turn things around and re-establish their credit reputation. So we agreed to a deal that put them in the house but required them to vacate the property if they fell behind on their payments by even one month. It was a fair price and the interest charged to them was the prime rate. I made a really fair deal with these folks. But now, I feel like an idiot because I was conned for sure.
Within two years, and after lots of warnings, they fell behind big-time (4 months). In 2003, I notified them that they needed to vacate by a certain date. They declared chapter 13 a few days before that deadline and asked the bk court not only to stop that procedure, but to force me to finance their $7000 arrearage @ 0%. That angered me some and I sought to get that plan dismissed. With some research, I found out that they declared a chapter 7 in 2001 (after they signed the contract with me) and concealed that bankruptcy from me. And they also concealed their real estate ownership from the bk court. They got their unsecured debts discharged in that 7 and then they returned to the same court, with the same attorney, to reap the benefit of that concealment: real estate equity.
And they got away with it. I notified the chapter 7 trustee of what they had done but the judge wouldn't consider her argument because the fraud wasn't discovered within a year after the 7 was discharged. I was pro se and personally witnessed this ruling, sitting right next to that trustee at the hearing. But the judge dismissed the case anyway because they weren't making their plan payments.
So what. Nine days after the judge dismissed this 13 (March, 2004), they filed another 13. But this time they excluded me from plan payments. Same court. Same judge. Different attorney. Dismissed as frivolous? Nope. Behind on their payments to me still? Yup. Ex parte motion for relief from automatic stay? Trying that now. Judge seems to be in no hurry to sign that order.
Apparently, at least from my experience, the United States Bankruptcy Court's pity for such unfortunate debtors, like these folks, is unshakable even if a creditor and former chapter 7 trustee are able to supply irrefutable proof of outright bankruptcy fraud.
Comments anyone?
Here's a creditor story that may be entertaining.
I agreed to sell a house in 1999 on a zero-down real estate contract to couple with two previous bankruptcies on the pretense that they really wanted to turn things around and re-establish their credit reputation. So we agreed to a deal that put them in the house but required them to vacate the property if they fell behind on their payments by even one month. It was a fair price and the interest charged to them was the prime rate. I made a really fair deal with these folks. But now, I feel like an idiot because I was conned for sure.
Within two years, and after lots of warnings, they fell behind big-time (4 months). In 2003, I notified them that they needed to vacate by a certain date. They declared chapter 13 a few days before that deadline and asked the bk court not only to stop that procedure, but to force me to finance their $7000 arrearage @ 0%. That angered me some and I sought to get that plan dismissed. With some research, I found out that they declared a chapter 7 in 2001 (after they signed the contract with me) and concealed that bankruptcy from me. And they also concealed their real estate ownership from the bk court. They got their unsecured debts discharged in that 7 and then they returned to the same court, with the same attorney, to reap the benefit of that concealment: real estate equity.
And they got away with it. I notified the chapter 7 trustee of what they had done but the judge wouldn't consider her argument because the fraud wasn't discovered within a year after the 7 was discharged. I was pro se and personally witnessed this ruling, sitting right next to that trustee at the hearing. But the judge dismissed the case anyway because they weren't making their plan payments.
So what. Nine days after the judge dismissed this 13 (March, 2004), they filed another 13. But this time they excluded me from plan payments. Same court. Same judge. Different attorney. Dismissed as frivolous? Nope. Behind on their payments to me still? Yup. Ex parte motion for relief from automatic stay? Trying that now. Judge seems to be in no hurry to sign that order.
Apparently, at least from my experience, the United States Bankruptcy Court's pity for such unfortunate debtors, like these folks, is unshakable even if a creditor and former chapter 7 trustee are able to supply irrefutable proof of outright bankruptcy fraud.
Comments anyone?