Below Tran Bankruptcy Law provide a bankruptcy glossary of the most common terms used during a bankruptcy case.
341 Meeting:
The meeting of creditors required by section 341 of the Bankruptcy Code, at which the debtor is questioned under oath by creditors, a trustee, examiner, or the U.S. trustee about his/her financial affairs. Also called “creditors’ meeting”.
Adversary Proceeding:
A lawsuit within a bankruptcy proceeding, where one party files a complaint with the bankruptcy court against another regarding issues surrounding the bankruptcy case.
Automatic Stay:
An restriction on creditors that automatically stops lawsuits, foreclosures, garnishments, and all collection activity against a debtor when a bankruptcy petition is filed.
Bankruptcy:
A legal proceeding involving a person or business that is unable to repay outstanding debts. The bankruptcy process begins with a petition filed by the debtor (most common) or on behalf of creditors (less common). All of the debtor’s assets are measured and evaluated, whereupon the assets are used to repay a portion of outstanding debt. Upon the successful completion of bankruptcy proceedings, the debtor is relieved of the debt obligations incurred prior to filing for bankruptcy.
Bankruptcy Code:
The informal name for title 11 of the United States Code (11 U.S.C. sections 101-1330), the federal bankruptcy law.
Bankruptcy Court:
A separate federal court with bankruptcy judges in regular active service in each federal judicial district; a unit of the district court.
Bankruptcy Estate:
The legal property of a debtor who is in bankruptcy and that is available to pay his or her creditors. This estate can consist of the debtor’s interest in jointly held property, however it does not include any assets that are held in ERISA qualified retirement plans and any 401(k) retirement plans.
Bankruptcy Judge:
A judicial officer of the United States district court who is the court official with decision-making power over federal bankruptcy cases.
Bankruptcy Petition:
Application by a debtor (or his or her creditors) to a court to declare the debtor bankrupt. On courts approval, the debtor’s assets are sold off (liquidated) and the proceeds are equitably distributed among the creditors.
Chapter 7:
Chapter 7 of the Title 11 of the United States Code (Bankruptcy Code) governs the process of liquidation under the bankruptcy laws of the United States.
Chapter 11:
A chapter of the United States Bankruptcy Code, which permits reorganization under the bankruptcy laws of the United States. Chapter 11 bankruptcy is available to every business, whether organized as a corporation or sole proprietorship, and to individuals, although it is most prominently used by corporate entities. In contrast, Chapter 7 governs the process of a liquidation bankruptcy (although liquidation can go under this chapter), while Chapter 13 provides a reorganization process for the majority of private individuals.
Chapter 13:
Chapter 13 of the United States Bankruptcy Code, codified under Title 11 of the United States Code, governs a form of bankruptcy in the United States that allows individuals to undergo a financial reorganization supervised by a federal bankruptcy court. The goal of Chapter 13 is to enable income-receiving debtors a debtor rehabilitation provided they fulfill a court-approved plan. This is in contrast to the goals of Chapter 7, which offers immediate and complete relief of many oppressive debts. It is a form of debt consolidation.
Claim:
A creditor’s assertion of a right to payment from the bankruptcy debtor or the debtor’s property.
Confirmation:
Bankruptcy judge’s approval of a plan of reorganization or liquidation in chapter 11, or payment plan in chapter 13.
Consumer Debtor:
A debtor whose debts are primarily consumer debts.
Consumer Debts:
Debts incurred for personal (as opposed to business) needs.
Contested Matter:
Those matters, other than objections to claims, that are disputed but are not within the definition of adversary proceeding contained in Rule 7001.
Contingent Claim:
A claim that may be owed by the debtor under certain circumstances, e.g., where the debtor is a cosigner on another person’s loan and that person fails to pay.
Creditor:
One to whom the debtor owes money or who claims to be owed money by the debtor.
Credit Counseling:
Generally refers to two events in individual bankruptcy cases: (1) the “individual or group briefing” from a nonprofit budget and credit counseling agency that individual debtors must attend prior to filing under any chapter of the Bankruptcy Code; and (2) the “instructional course in personal financial management” in chapters 7 and 13 that an individual debtor must complete before a discharge is entered. There are exceptions to both requirements for certain categories of debtors, exigent circumstances, or if the U.S. trustee or bankruptcy administrator have determined that there are insufficient approved credit counseling agencies available to provide the necessary counseling.
Creditors’ Meeting:
see 341 meeting
Current Monthly Income:
The average monthly income received by the debtor over the six calendar months before commencement of the bankruptcy case, including regular contributions to household expenses from nondebtors and income from the debtor’s spouse if the petition is a joint petition, but not including social security income and certain other payments made because the debtor is the victim of certain crimes.
Debtor:
A person who has filed a petition for relief under the Bankruptcy Code.
Debtor Education:
see credit counseling
Defendant:
An individual (or business) against whom a lawsuit is filed.
Discharge:
A release of a debtor from personal liability for certain dischargeable debts identified in the Bankruptcy Code. A discharge releases a debtor from personal liability for certain debts known as dischargeable debts and prevents the creditors owed those debts from taking any action against the debtor to collect the debts. The discharge also prohibits creditors from communicating with the debtor regarding the debt, including telephone calls, letters, and personal contact.
Dischargeable Debt:
A debt for which the Bankruptcy Code allows the debtor’s personal liability to be eliminated.
Disclosure Statement:
A written document prepared by a chapter 11 debtor or other plan proponent designed to provide “adequate information” to creditors to enable them to evaluate the chapter 11 plan of reorganization.
Equity:
The value of a debtor’s interest in property that remains after liens and other creditors’ interests are considered. (Example: If a house valued at $100,000 is subject to a $80,000 mortgage, there is $20,000 of equity.)
Executory Contract or Lease:
Generally includes contracts or leases under which both parties to the agreement have duties remaining to be performed. (If a contract or lease is executory, a debtor may assume it or reject it.)
Exemptions, Exempt Property:
Certain property owned by an individual debtor that the Bankruptcy Code or applicable state law permits the debtor to keep from unsecured creditors. For example, in some states the debtor may be able to exempt all or a portion of the equity in the debtor’s primary residence (homestead exemption), or some or all “tools of the trade” used by the debtor to make a living (i.e., auto tools for an auto mechanic or dental tools for a dentist). The availability and amount of property the debtor may exempt depends on the state the debtor lives in.
Family Farmer or Family Fisherman:
An individual, individual and spouse, corporation, or partnership engaged in a farming or fishing operation that meets certain debt limits and other statutory criteria for filing a bankruptcy petition under chapter 12.
Fraudulent Transfer:
A transfer of a debtor’s property made with intent to defraud or for which the debtor receives less than the transferred property’s value.
Fresh Start:
The characterization of a debtor’s status after bankruptcy, i.e., free of most debts. (Giving debtors a fresh start is one purpose of the Bankruptcy Code.)
Insider (of an Individual Debtor):
Any relative of the debtor or of a general partner of the debtor; partnership in which the debtor is a general partner; general partner of the debtor; or a corporation of which the debtor is a director, officer, or person in control.
Insider (of a Corporate Debtor):
A director, officer, or person in control of the debtor; a partnership in which the debtor is a general partner; a general partner of the debtor; or a relative of a general partner, director, officer, or person in control of the debtor.
Joint Administration:
A court-approved mechanism under which two or more cases can be administered together. (Assuming no conflicts of interest, these separate businesses or individuals can pool their resources, hire the same professionals, etc.)
Joint Petition:
One bankruptcy petition filed by a husband and wife together.
Lien:
The right to take and hold or sell the property of a debtor as security or payment for a debt or duty.
Liquidation:
A sale of a debtor’s property with the proceeds to be used for the benefit of creditors.
Liquidated Claim:
A creditor’s claim for a fixed amount of money.
Means Test:
Section 707(b)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code applies a “means test” to determine whether an individual debtor’s chapter 7 filing is presumed to be an abuse of the Bankruptcy Code requiring dismissal or conversion of the case (generally to chapter 13). Abuse is presumed if the debtor’s aggregate current monthly income (see definition above) over 5 years, net of certain statutorily allowed expenses, is more than (i) $10,000, or (ii) 25% of the debtor’s nonpriority unsecured debt, as long as that amount is at least $6,000. The debtor may rebut a presumption of abuse only by a showing of special circumstances that justify additional expenses or adjustments of current monthly income.
Motion to Lift the Automatic Stay:
A request by a creditor to allow the creditor to take action against the debtor or the debtor’s property that would otherwise be prohibited by the automatic stay.
No-Asset Case:
A chapter 7 case where there are no assets available to satisfy any portion of the creditors’ unsecured claims.
Nondischargeable Debt:
A debt that cannot be eliminated in bankruptcy. Examples include a home mortgage, debts for alimony or child support, certain taxes, debts for most government funded or guaranteed educational loans or benefit overpayments, debts arising from death or personal injury caused by driving while intoxicated or under the influence of drugs, and debts for restitution or a criminal fine included in a sentence on the debtor’s conviction of a crime. Some debts, such as debts for money or property obtained by false pretenses and debts for fraud or defalcation while acting in a fiduciary capacity may be declared nondischargeable only if a creditor timely files and prevails in a nondischargeability action.
Objection to Dischargeability:
A trustee’s or creditor’s objection to the debtor being released from personal liability for certain dischargeable debts. Common reasons include allegations that the debt to be discharged was incurred by false pretenses or that debt arose because of the debtor’s fraud while acting as a fiduciary.
Objection to Exemptions:
A trustee’s or creditor’s objection to the debtor’s attempt to claim certain property as exempt from liquidation by the trustee to creditors.
Party in Interest:
A party who has standing to be heard by the court in a matter to be decided in the bankruptcy case. The debtor, the U.S. trustee or bankruptcy administrator, the case trustee and creditors are parties in interest for most matters.
Petition Preparer:
A business not authorized to practice law that prepares bankruptcy petitions.
Plan:
A debtor’s detailed description of how the debtor proposes to pay creditors’ claims over a fixed period of time.
Plaintiff:
A person or business that files a formal complaint with the court.
Postpetition Transfer:
A transfer of the debtor’s property made after the commencement of the case.
Prebankruptcy Planning:
The arrangement (or rearrangement) of a debtor’s property to allow the debtor to take maximum advantage of exemptions. (Prebankruptcy planning typically includes converting nonexempt assets into exempt assets.)
Preference or Preferential Debt Payment:
A debt payment made to a creditor in the 90-day period before a debtor files bankruptcy (or within one year if the creditor was an insider) that gives the creditor more than the creditor would receive in the debtor’s chapter 7 case.
Presumption of Abuse:
see means test
Priority:
The Bankruptcy Code’s statutory ranking of unsecured claims that determines the order in which unsecured claims will be paid if there is not enough money to pay all unsecured claims in full. For example, under the Bankruptcy Code’s priority scheme, money owed to the case trustee or for prepetition alimony and/or child support must be paid in full before any general unsecured debt (i.e. trade debt or credit card debt) is paid.
Priority Claim:
An unsecured claim that is entitled to be paid ahead of other unsecured claims that are not entitled to priority status. Priority refers to the order in which these unsecured claims are to be paid.proof of claim A written statement and verifying documentation filed by a creditor that describes the reason the debtor owes the creditor money. (There is an official form for this purpose.)
Property of the Estate:
All legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property as of the commencement of the case.
Reaffirmation Agreement:
An agreement by a chapter 7 debtor to continue paying a dischargeable debt (such as an auto loan) after the bankruptcy, usually for the purpose of keeping collateral (i.e. the car) that would otherwise be subject to repossession.
Secured Creditor:
A creditor holding a claim against the debtor who has the right to take and hold or sell certain property of the debtor in satisfaction of some or all of the claim.
Secured Debt:
Debt backed by a mortgage, pledge of collateral, or other lien; debt for which the creditor has the right to pursue specific pledged property upon default. Examples include home mortgages, auto loans and tax liens.
Schedules:
Detailed lists filed by the debtor along with (or shortly after filing) the petition showing the debtor’s assets, liabilities, and other financial information. (There are official forms a debtor must use.)
Small Business Case:
A special type of chapter 11 case in which there is no creditors’ committee (or the creditors’ committee is deemed inactive by the court) and in which the debtor is subject to more oversight by the U.S. trustee than other chapter 11 debtors. The Bankruptcy Code contains certain provisions designed to reduce the time a small business debtor is in bankruptcy.
Statement of Financial Affairs:
A series of questions the debtor must answer in writing, concerning sources of income, transfers of property, lawsuits by creditors, etc. (There is an official form a debtor must use.)
Statement of Intention:
A declaration made by a chapter 7 debtor concerning plans for dealing with consumer debts that are secured by property of the estate.
Substantive Consolidation:
Putting the assets and liabilities of two or more related debtors into a single pool to pay creditors. (Courts are reluctant to allow substantive consolidation since the action must not only justify the benefit that one set of creditors receives, but also the harm that other creditors suffer as a result.)
341 Meeting:
The meeting of creditors required by section 341 of the Bankruptcy Code, at which the debtor is questioned under oath by creditors, a trustee, examiner, or the U.S. trustee about his/her financial affairs. Also called “creditors’ meeting”.
Transfer:
Any mode or means by which a debtor disposes of (or parts with) the debtor’s property.
Trustee:
The representative of the bankruptcy estate who exercises statutory powers, principally for the benefit of the unsecured creditors, under the general supervision of the court and the direct supervision of the U.S. trustee or bankruptcy administrator. The trustee is a private individual or corporation appointed in all chapter 7, chapter 12, and chapter 13 cases and some chapter 11 cases. The trustee’s responsibilities include reviewing the debtor’s petition and schedules and bringing actions against creditors or the debtor to recover property of the bankruptcy estate. In chapter 7, the trustee liquidates property of the estate, and makes distributions to creditors. Trustees in chapter 12 and 13 have similar duties to a chapter 7 trustee and the additional responsibilities of overseeing the debtor’s plan, receiving payments from debtors, and disbursing plan payments to creditors.
U.S. Trustee:
An officer of the Justice Department responsible for supervising the administration of bankruptcy cases, estates, and trustees; monitoring plans and disclosure statements; monitoring creditors’ committees; monitoring fee applications; and performing other statutory duties. Compare, bankruptcy administrator.
Undersecured Claim:
A debt secured by property that is worth less than the full amount of the debt.
Unliquidated Claim:
A claim for which a specific value has not been determined.
Unscheduled Debt:
A debt that should have been listed by the debtor in the schedules filed with the court but was not. (Depending on the circumstances, an unscheduled debt may or may not be discharged.)
Unsecured Claim:
A claim or debt for which a creditor holds no special assurance of payment, such as a mortgage or lien; a debt for which credit was extended based solely upon the creditor’s assessment of the debtor’s future ability to pay.
Voluntary Transfer:
A transfer of a debtor’s property with the debtor’s consent.