Glossary
Bankruptcy
has its own language. Here is a brief definition of those terms used in
this site and in the Bankruptcy Code.
Adversary proceeding: A lawsuit filed in the bankruptcy court which is related to
the debtor's bankruptcy case. Examples are complaints to determine the
dischargeability of a debt and complaints to determine the extent and validity
of liens.
Assets: Assets are every form of property
that the debtor owns. They include such intangible things as business
goodwill; the right to sue someone; or stock options. The debtor must
disclose all of his assets in the bankruptcy schedules; exemptions remove the exempt assets from property
of the estate.
Automatic stay: The injunction issued automatically upon the filing of a
bankruptcy case which prohibits collection actions against the debtor, the
debtor's property or the property of the estate.
Avoidance:
The Bankruptcy Code permits the debtor to eliminate (avoid) some kinds of liens
that interfere with (or impair) an exemption claimed in the bankruptcy. Most judgment liens that
have attached to the debtor's home can be avoided if the total of the liens
(mortgages, judgment liens and statutory liens) is greater than the value of
the property in which the exemption is claimed. This is sometimes called
"lien stripping."
Avoidance powers: Rights given to the bankruptcy trustee (or the debtor in
possession in a Chapter 11) to recover certain transfers of property such
as preferences or fraudulent transfers or to
void liens created before the commencement of
a bankruptcy case. See our FAQ’s for more about preferences.
Bankruptcy Code: Title 11 of the United States Code governs bankruptcy
proceedings. Bankruptcy is a matter of federal law and is, with the exception
of exemptions, the same in every state. When federal bankruptcy law
conflicts with state law, federal law controls.
Bankruptcy estate: The estate is all of the legal and equitable interests of the
debtor as of the commencement of the case. From the estate, an individual
debtor can claim certain property exempt; the balance of the estate is liquidated in a Chapter 7 to
pay the administrative costs of the proceeding and the claims of creditors
according to their priority.
Chapter 7:
The most
common form of bankruptcy, a Chapter 7 case is a liquidation proceeding,
available to individuals, married couples, partnerships and corporations.
Chapter 11:
A reorganization proceeding in which the debtor may continue in business or in
possession of its property as a fiduciary. A confirmed Chapter 11 plan provides for the
manner in which the claims of creditors will be paid in whole or in part by the
debtor.
Chapter 12:
A simplified
reorganization plan for family farmers whose debts fall within certain
limits.
Chapter
13: A repayment plan for individuals
with debts falling below statutory levels which provides for repayment of some
or all of the debts out of future income over 3 to 5 years.
Confirmed:
A plan of
reorganization in Chapter 11, 12 or 13 approved by the court and binding on the
parties is said to be confirmed.
Charged Off: This is an accounting term that means the creditor does not
expect to collect on the debt. It relates to the creditor's taxes. It starts
time periods under the Fair Credit Reporting Act. It does not mean that the
debt is no longer legally enforceable.
Collateral: The property which is subject
to a lien. A creditor with rights
in collateral is a secured creditor and has additional protections in the
Bankruptcy Code for the claim secured by collateral. The measure of the
secured claim is the value of the collateral available to secure the
claim: it is possible to have a lien on property that is subject to a
senior lien or liens such that the security available to pay the claim is
really without value to the junior creditor. The general rule with
respect to liens is "First in time, first in right."
Confirmation: The court order which makes the terms of the plan for repayment
of debts in a Chapter 11, 12 or 13 binding. The terms of the confirmed plan
replace the prepetition rights of the debtor and creditor.
Consumer Debt Debts incurred by an individual for
personal, family or household purposes. Taxes are not consumer debts; neither
are business loans. The means
test
only applies to those with primarily consumer debt.
Contingent: Used to describe debts that are not
fixed in right at the time, but are dependent on some other event happening to
fix the liability.
Conversion: Cases under the Code may be
converted from one chapter to another chapter; for example, a Chapter 7 case
may be converted to a case under Chapter 13 if the debtor is eligible for
Chapter 13. Even though the chapter of the Code which governs it changes,
it remains the same case as originally filed.
Creditor:
The person or organization to whom the debtor owes money or has some other form
of legal obligation.
Debtor:
The debtor is the entity (person, partnership or corporation) who is liable for
debts, and who is the subject of a bankruptcy case.
Debtor in Possession: In a Chapter
11 case, the debtor usually remains in possession of its assets and assumes the
duties of a trustee. The debtor in possession is a fiduciary for the creditors of the estate,
and owes them the highest duty of care and loyalty.
Denial
of discharge:
Penalty for debtor misconduct with respect to the bankruptcy case or
creditors as a whole. The grounds on which the debtor's discharge may be
denied are found in 11
U.S.C. 727.
When the debtor's discharge is denied, the debts that could have been
discharged in that case cannot be discharged in any subsequent bankruptcy.
The administration of the case, the liquidation of assets and the recovery
of avoidable transfers, continues for the benefit of creditors.
Discharge: The legal elimination of debt through a bankruptcy case.
When a debt is discharged, it is no longer legally enforceable against the
debtor, though any lien which secures the debt may survive
the bankruptcy case.
Dischargeable: Debts that can be eliminated in
bankruptcy. Certain debts are not dischargeable; that is, they may not be
discharged through bankruptcy or may only be
discharged through Chapter 13. Family support and criminal restitution are
examples of debts which cannot be discharged. Debts incurred by fraud can only be discharged
in Chapter 13.
Dismissal: The termination of the case without
either the entry of a discharge
or
a denial of discharge; after a case is dismissed, the debtor and the creditors
have the same rights as they had before the bankruptcy case was commenced.
Dismissal is the penalty for many essentially minor infractions of bankruptcy
procedures under the 2005 amendments.
Domestic
Support Obligation: Debts for alimony, maintenance or support owed to child,
spouse or governmental entity that paid for the support of the child or spouse.
This is a new term introduced by the bankruptcy amendments of 2005.
Exempt:
Property that is exempt is removed from the bankruptcy
estate and is not available to pay the claims of creditors. The debtor
selects the property to be exempted from the statutory lists of exemptions
available under the law of his state. The debtor gets to keep exempt
property for use in making a fresh start after bankruptcy. More on Personal
Property Exemptions
and Real
Property Exemptions.
Exemptions: Exemptions are the lists of
the kinds and values of property that is legally beyond the reach of creditors
or the bankruptcy trustee. The debtor in bankruptcy keeps the exempt
property. What property may be exempted is determined by state and federal
statutes, and varies from state to state. More on Personal
Property Exemptions
and Real
Property Exemptions.
Fiduciary:
one who is entrusted with duties on behalf of another. The law requires
the highest level of good faith, loyalty and diligence of a fiduciary,
higher than the common duty of care that we all owe one another. The
debtor in possession in a Chapter 11 is a fiduciary for the creditors, owing
loyalty to the creditors and not the shareholders of the debtor.
General, unsecured claim: Creditor's claim without a priority for payment for which the creditor holds no security (or collateral). If the available
funds in the estate extend to payment of unsecured claims, the claims are paid
in proportion to the size of the claim relative to the total of claims in the
class of unsecured claims.
Indemnify: to guarantee against any loss which another might suffer. In
bankruptcy, it is used to describe the undertaking of one spouse in a divorce
to assume certain debts of the marriage and to see that the other spouse is not
forced to pay. Also called a "hold harmless" clause.
Lien: An interest in real or personal property which secures a debt; the lien may be voluntary, such as a
mortgage in real property, or involuntary, such as a judgment lien or tax lien.
Liquidated: A
debt that is for a known number of dollars is liquidated. An unliquidated
debt is one where the debtor has liability, but the exact monetary measure of
that liability is unknown. Tort claims are usually unliquidated until a
trial fixes the amount of the liability of the tort feasor.
Means Test: Added to the Code in 2005, the means test is intended to
screen out those filing Chapter 7 who supposedly may be able to repay some part
of their debts. The test is found in Official Form B22a. Debtors who fail the means test
may convert their case to another chapter of bankruptcy.
Meeting of Creditors: The debtor must appear at a meeting with the trustee to be
examined under oath about assets and liabilities. Creditors are invited
but seldom attend. The meeting is sometimes called the 341 meeting, after
the section of the Bankruptcy Code that requires it.
Non dischargeable: A debt that cannot be eliminated in
bankruptcy. Non dischargeable debts remain legally enforceable despite
the bankruptcy discharge. The Code's list of non dischargeable debts is
found at 11 U.S.C. 523. The scope of the discharge in Chapter 13 differs from the
discharge in Chapter 7. Discharges compared.
Perfection: When a secured creditor has
taken the required steps to perfect his lien, the lien is senior to any liens
that arise after perfection. A mortgage is perfected by recording it with
the county recorder; a lien in personal property is perfected by filing a
financing statement with the secretary of state. An unperfected lien is
valid between the debtor and the secured creditor, but may be behind liens
created later in time, but perfected earlier than the lien in question.
An unperfected lien can be avoided by the trustee.
Personal property: Assets, such as cars, stock, furniture, etc., that is not
real estate or affixed to real property,
Petition:
The document that initiates a bankruptcy case. The filing of the petition
constitutes an order for relief and institutes the automatic stay. Events are frequently
described as "prepetition", happening before the bankruptcy petition
was filed, and "post petition", after the bankruptcy was initiated.
Preference: A transfer to a creditor in payment
of an existing debt made within certain time periods before the commencement of
the case. Preferences may be recovered by the trustee for the benefit of all creditors of the estate.
Pre-petition: Claims or events arising before the commencement of the
bankruptcy case, that is, before the filing of the bankruptcy petition.
Generally only pre petition debts may be discharged in a bankruptcy proceeding.
Priority: The
Bankruptcy Code establishes the order in which claims are paid from the
bankruptcy estate. All claims in a higher priority must be paid in full
before claims with a lower priority receive anything. All claims with the
same priority share pro rata. Claims are paid in this order: 1)
costs of administration; 2) priority
claims;
and 3) general unsecured claims. Secured claims are paid from the
proceeds of liquidating the collateral which secured the claim.
Priority claims: Certain debts, such as unpaid wages, spousal or child
support, and taxes are elevated in the payment hierarchy under the Code.
Priority claims must be paid in full before general unsecured claims are paid. Priorities listed.
Proof of claim:
The form filed
with the court establishing the creditor's claim against the debtor.
Property of the estate: The property that is not exempt and belongs to the
bankruptcy estate. Property of the estate is usually sold by the trustee
and the claims of creditors paid from the proceeds.
Reaffirm:
The debtor can chose to waive the discharge as to a debt that is reaffirmed.
Generally, the parties to the reaffirmed debt have the same rights and
liabilities that each had prior to the bankruptcy filing: the debtor is
obligated to pay and the creditor can sue or repossess if the debtor doesn't
pay.
Relief from stay: A creditor can ask the judge to lift the automatic stay and permit some action against the
debtor or the property of the estate. If the motion is granted, the
moving party (but no one else) is free to take whatever action the court
permits. Relief can be absolute, for example, permitting the creditor to
foreclose on property, or limited, as for example, allowing the recordation of
a notice of default.
Schedules: The
debtor must file the required lists of assets and liabilities to commence a
bankruptcy case, collectively called the schedules.
Secured debt: A claim secured by a lien in the debtor's property by reason
of the debtor's agreement or an involuntary lien such as a judgment
or tax lien. The creditor's claim may be divided into a secured claim, to the
extent of the value of the collateral, and an unsecured claim equal to the remainder of the total
debt. Generally a secured claim must be perfected under applicable state law to be treated as a secured claim
in the bankruptcy.
Trustee: the court appoints a trustee in
every Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 case to review the debtor's schedules and
represent the interests of the creditors in the bankruptcy case. The role
of the trustee is different under the different chapters. The Chapter 7
trustee is appointed to oversee the case on behalf of the unsecured
creditors. The Trustee’s duty is to
reduce all non-exempt assets to cash and distribute the proceeds according to
the priority scheme set up by the Code. More on trustees.
Unsecured: A claim or debt is unsecured
if there is no collateral that is security for the
debt. Most consumer debts are unsecured.
Further
definitions are found in Section 101 of the Bankruptcy
Code.