Evidence continues to mount that Chapter 7 will not be a friendly place for debtors who end up in the means test. As you know, you can only qualify for Chapter 7 if (1) their household income falls below the average income for a similarly sized family in your State, or (2) if your household income exceeds the average income, but you pass the "means test."
The means test sets out a budget using expense numbers that the IRS has deemed "reasonable." If your actual expense for a particular category exceeds the IRS number, too bad.
For example, if the IRS budget says that a family of 4 in Fulton County, Georgia may spend $1,529 for housing and utilities. If that family of 4 actually spends $2,000 for housing and utilities, they can only use the $1,529 in the housing/utilities column. For bankruptcy calculation purposes, this family has $471 "left over" and available to pay creditors in a Chapter 13.
Now, we learn that 401(k) loan repayments cannot be included in a means test budget. If you are paying back a 401(k) loan at $200 per month, for example, the Bankruptcy Court says that this $200 is actually "disposable" and available for creditors in a Chapter 13. The Court does not care that if you defaulted on a 401(k) loan you would face tax problems and possibly lose your retirement investment. Thanks to my colleague, attorney Bernd Stittleburg, who forwarded to me an email about the Lenton case from Pennsylvania and the Nockerts case from Wisconsin.
Bernd Stittleburg and I have both noticed that every Chapter 7 case that involves a means test inevitably results in an objection from the U.S. Trustee. I am therefore much less inclined to pursue Chapter 7 relief for a debtor whose income exceeds the means test numbers, and if I do take a "means test" case, I have no choice but to charge a substantially higher fee.
Congress created this means test to limit access to Chapter 7, and that goal is certainly being met. Unfortunately, honest but unfortunate debtors now have very little place to turn since bankruptcy relief is become less and less available.
[tags] means test, 401(k) loan repayment in bankruptcy, median income test, Bernd Stittleburg [/tags]