1. Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Procedures and Debt Discharge Standards
Chapter 7 cases proceed under 11 U.S.C. §§ 701-784 with filing of a petition, schedules of assets and liabilities, statement of financial affairs, and means test under Section 707(b). The automatic stay under Section 362 takes effect on filing, halting collection actions including foreclosure sales, wage garnishments, repossessions, and creditor lawsuits. The trustee gathers non-exempt assets, sells them, and distributes proceeds under Section 507 priority, after which the court grants discharge under Section 727.
| Debt Type | Dischargeability | Common Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Unsecured Consumer | Generally dischargeable | Credit cards, medical bills |
| Secured | Lien survives; balance discharged | Mortgages, car loans |
| Tax and Priority | Conditional | Recent taxes, domestic support |
| Fraud or Misconduct | Non-dischargeable under § 523 | Intentional fraud, willful injury |
How Is a Chapter 7 Petition Filed and Processed?
Filing requires completion of credit counseling within 180 days, payment of the filing fee or fee waiver application, and submission of detailed schedules, statements, and tax returns. The petition triggers immediate stay protection while the case proceeds toward the Section 341 meeting and ultimately discharge or dismissal. Effective bankruptcy filing practice prepares accurate schedules, anticipates trustee questions, and coordinates pre-filing planning to maximize exempt asset retention.
Which Debts Survive a Chapter 7 Discharge?
Most unsecured consumer debts including credit cards, medical bills, and personal loans receive discharge, while Section 523 carves out specific categories of non-dischargeable debt. Student loans require a separate adversary proceeding under the Brunner undue hardship test, and post-Bartenwerfer v. Buckley the discharge does not reach debts from a partner's fraud. Strategic debt settlement and discharge work classifies every debt against Section 523 categories before filing.
2. Asset Liquidation, Exemptions, and Creditor Collection Issues
The trustee identifies estate property under Section 541, applies exemptions under Section 522 or state law, and liquidates non-exempt assets to fund creditor distributions. Federal exemptions cover homestead, motor vehicle, household goods, retirement accounts, and a wildcard, while many states use state-specific exemption schedules. The automatic stay operates as a powerful injunction against creditor collection, with violations punishable by sanctions.
How Are Bankruptcy Exemptions Maximized?
Exemption planning examines whether federal or state exemptions produce a better outcome for the debtor's asset profile. Pre-bankruptcy conversion of non-exempt to exempt assets faces scrutiny under Section 522(o) and fraudulent transfer doctrine. Sound asset protection planning identifies the optimal exemption strategy while avoiding conduct the trustee can challenge as bad-faith conversion.
How Does the Stay Stop Garnishment and Foreclosure?
Section 362(a) immediately stops wage garnishment, bank levies, foreclosure sales, repossessions, and most civil lawsuits the moment the petition is filed. Creditors must obtain relief from stay under Section 362(d) before resuming collection, with secured creditors typically arguing lack of adequate protection. Vigorous wage garnishment defense uses the stay to recover post-filing garnished funds and pursue sanctions for willful violations.
3. Means Tests, Trustee Reviews, and Financial Compliance Risks
The means test under Section 707(b) compares current monthly income to the state median; below-median debtors qualify automatically, while above-median must complete the disposable-income calculation to rebut the presumption of abuse. Trustees and the United States Trustee Program scrutinize prior transfers, undisclosed assets, business interests, and lifestyle inconsistencies suggesting concealment. Pre-filing transfers within the two-year lookback under Section 548 face avoidance, with state-law transfers reaching back four years.
How Does the Means Test Determine Eligibility?
The means test uses prior six months of income, deducts allowed expenses based on IRS standards, and produces a monthly disposable-income figure determining abuse presumption. Above-median debtors with substantial disposable income face conversion to Chapter 13 or dismissal under Section 707(b)(2), while special circumstances can rebut the presumption. Detailed expense documentation, accurate income reporting, and locality-specific IRS allowances shape the outcome.
What Triggers a Trustee Investigation?
Trustee investigations follow red flags such as large transfers to relatives, undisclosed bank accounts, business interests omitted from schedules, or tax-return income exceeding the petition. The trustee may pursue avoidance under Sections 547 and 548, and the United States Trustee can move to dismiss for abuse. Counsel familiar with bankruptcy and insolvency practice prepares for the 341 meeting with documentary support and proactive disclosure.
4. Chapter 7 Litigation, Discharge Disputes, and Court Proceedings
Adversary proceedings under Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 7001 resolve disputes over dischargeability, Section 523 non-dischargeable debts, Section 727 denial of overall discharge, and pre-petition transfer avoidance. Contested matters address motions to lift stay, objections to exemptions, and reaffirmation disputes. Discharge typically issues 60 to 90 days after the 341 meeting if no objections are filed, producing a permanent injunction against creditor collection.
How Are Discharge Disputes Litigated?
Discharge disputes proceed as adversary proceedings with pleadings, discovery, and trial under bankruptcy court procedure adapted from the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Section 523(a) actions target debts incurred by fraud, willful injury, or domestic support, while Section 727(a) actions target the discharge itself for debtor misconduct. A focused bankruptcy litigation defense isolates the subsection, contests intent evidence, and develops affirmative defenses.
How Does Chapter 7 Interact with Foreclosure Proceedings?
The automatic stay halts a pending foreclosure sale, but secured lenders typically obtain stay relief within weeks absent equity or a cure plan. Chapter 7 generally does not provide long-term cure for mortgage arrears, leading many homeowners to convert to Chapter 13. Effective foreclosure defense coordination with bankruptcy counsel determines whether reaffirmation, redemption, surrender, or Chapter 13 conversion best fits the debtor's situation.
21 Jan, 2026









