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    November 2009
    M T W T F S S
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What was discharged in my case?

Bankruptcy discharge, How bankruptcy works, Life after bankruptcy, Uncategorized

One of the most frustrating things after the debtor gets a discharge is establishing just what debt was affected by the discharge. Creditors and some debtors expect to find a single document telling them what is no longer enforceable and what survives the bankruptcy. No such luck.

The official form used by most bankruptcy courts merely states that the debtor is granted a discharge. The general information on the second page of the form suggests that you might need an attorney to understand the application of the discharge in a particular case.

That’s why Gene Melchionne’s article on saving your bankruptcy papers is so on point. In this era of debt buyers and zombie debt, most debtors can expect to get a collection letter on a debt that was discharged in their bankruptcy.

In California, where 9th Circuit decisions are controlling, the Beezley opinion (994 F.2d 1433 1993) tells us that even a creditor who wasn’t listed or didn’t get notice is discharged in a no asset bankruptcy. The caveat is that if the creditor has a claim to non dischargeability because of the debtor’s bad acts, the claim survives until the creditor has a chance to challenge the discharge of his debt.

Usually what it takes to make a zombie debt collector go away is a copy of the discharge order and a copy of the schedules showing that the original creditor was listed in the bankruptcy.

So, save your bankruptcy documents, and if copies of the schedules don’t make the creditor go away, contact a bankruptcy lawyer to pursue an action under the bankruptcy code for sanctions against the creditor.

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