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About Mark J. Markus- California Bankruptcy Attorney
Expertise
Mark J. Markus is a Los Angeles attorney who has practiced exclusively bankruptcy law in California since 1991 and is rated A+ by the Better Business Bureau. He represents debtors, creditors, and Trustees in Chapter 7, Chapter 11, and Chapter 13 of the bankruptcy code throughout California.


Experience
Visit http://www.bklaw.com for more information on bankruptcy in general and Mark J. Markus in particular. Many questions are answered on the web page (hint, hint).
The Markus webpage also contains more information on
  • business bankruptcy,
  • chapter 7 bankruptcy,
  • chapter 11 bankruptcy,
  • chapter 13 bankruptcy,
  • Frequently Asked Bankruptcy Questions

    Also visit our new bankruptcy blog for interesting articles and much more.



    Education/Credentials
    J.D., University of Arizona 1990. B.A. Economics, California State University, Northridge 1986. For more details please click here

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    You are here:  Experts > Business > Corporate Law > Bankruptcy Law > bank accounts and chapter 7

    Bankruptcy Law - bank accounts and chapter 7


    Expert: Mark J. Markus- California Bankruptcy Attorney - 8/24/2009

    Question
    Hello,

    My husband and I are considering BK due to overwhelming credit card debt and job losses.  He is on SSDI and I will lose my job (layoff) on Oct. 30th.

    I am scheduled to receive a lump sum severance that should total between $8K and $10K after taxes.

    We were planning to file chapter 7, which I believe we qualify for based on my research, but my concern now is that our creditors, the trustee or the bank will freeze or seize our joint checking account when we file, even if the severance has not been paid out when we file.  It will likely be there by the time of the 341 meeting.  Can you give us insight into whether the money in our account is safe from seizure?  I read somewhere that anything over $4000 can and will be seized, but I can't find any actual law on this.  We live in CA.  

    Thank you for your help.  

    Answer
    You're mixing up a lot of different issues here, so I'll try my best to answer.  What creditors can do depends on whether you're talking about pre-bankruptcy filing, or post-bankruptcy filing.  

    If you owe money to a bank, they can set-off the funds in your account against what you owe them at ANY time before you file a bankruptcy case.  Otherwise, a creditor needs to obtain a judgment lien against your bank account in order to seize it.

    If you have the right to receive a severance, then that is an asset which may or may not be exempt after a bankruptcy case is filed depending on what other assets you have to exempt.  To see more on exemptions, visit http://www.bklaw.com/exemptions.html

    You have a further potential problem that you haven't alluded to, and that is that the severance income will factor in to the means test analysis on your eligibility to file a Chapter 7 case, if it is received within 6 calendar months prior to filing your case.  How it affects things in your case depends, of course, on the specifics of your situation.

    http://www.bklaw.com/  

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