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  Bankruptcy Automatic Stays Explained

According to 11 U.S.C. 362, when a person files a bankruptcy case under any chapter of the Bankruptcy Code, it will trigger an injunction (stay) against the person's creditors.  This means that the creditors will not be allowed to continue any action against the person in debt or the person's property.

Essentially, once the automatic stay is in place, a certain amount of protection is extended to the person that is in debt.  Additionally, all of the debtor's assets and creditors have a chance to get on the same page so issues can be resolved by the bankruptcy court.

After an automatic stay has been issued in a bankruptcy case, whether chapter 7 or chapter 13, creditors will not be allowed to:

§  begin or continue lawsuits

§  make collection calls

§  conduct repossessions

§  commence foreclosure proceedings

§  garnish wages or issue levies

Automatic stays remain in effect until:  a judge lifts the stay per a creditor's request, the debtor's debts are discharged or the item of property is no longer property of the estate.

If you have additional questions about bankruptcy or automatic stays, contact the Stone Law Firm and schedule a consultation with a Salt Lake City bankruptcy attorney.


Posted By Stone Law Firm on June 30, 2010 08:00 am | Permalink 
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