| EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY |
CPAs NEED TO UNDERSTAND THE
IMPACT of the Bankruptcy Abuse
Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of
2005 so they can advise clients how their
relationships with or as debtors is
altered. The two most important changes
are the terms of access to Chapter 7 and
changes to the homestead exemption
provisions. IN CHAPTER 7 DEBTORS NOW HAVE
TO undergo financial counseling
and a budget analysis from a
court-approved, nonprofit agency. The
court appoints a trustee to accumulate
all assets and distribute monies. Paid
first are secured parties, administrative
costs, unpaid wages and pension
obligations, alimony, child support and
taxes; then general unsecured parties are
paid pro rata. Exempt assets vary by
state.
THE THREE MAIN BANKRUPTCY LAW
CHAPTERS are 7, 11 and 13. Under
the new law individual debtors have to
undergo a means test to qualify for
Chapter 7 relief but businesses do not.
Chapter 11 lets a business develop a
recovery plan and holds off creditors
while it is implemented. Chapter 13 lets
wage earners develop a recovery plan
without discharging much debt. Both 11
and 13 help debtors develop payment
plans, become financially stable and
repay their debt.
CHAPTER 13 ALLOWS FINANCIALLY
DISTRESSED individuals to create
a court-supervised five-year repayment
plan. Before debtors can complete either
a Chapter 7 or 13 bankruptcy action and
receive a discharge, they will be
required to complete a financial
management course.
DEBTORS CANT EVADE
RESPONSIBILITY by moving to a
state with a better homestead exemption;
they must live in the state for at least
two years before filing for bankruptcy.
|
| LAWRENCE S. CLARK, JD, LLM, is
dean of the Cameron School of Business at
the University of North Carolina (UNC) in
Wilmington and lead author of the
McGraw-Hill Law and Business textbook
series. His e-mail address is clarkl@uncw.edu. RANDALL HANSON, JD, LLM,
chairman of the department of accountancy
and business law at UNC, has practiced
law and has written more than 70
articles. His e-mail address is hansonr@uncw.edu. JAMES K. SMITH, CPA, JD, PhD,
is an associate professor of accounting
at the University of San Diego. He has
practiced as a tax attorney and CPA and
has written more than 30 articles. His
e-mail address is smithj@sandiego.edu. |
he ease with which debtors have been able to walk
away from debt has frustrated creditors for
years. But all that changed last April when
President Bush signed the Bankruptcy Abuse
Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005
into law. Most provisions became effective last
month. The legislationin the works for
eight yearsis the result of intense
lobbying, mainly by banks and credit card
companies. Now debtors with severe financial
problems will find it harder to secure relief,
and many consumer-protection groups fear that
restricted access to Chapter 7 will unfairly hurt
individuals whose impoverishment results from
calamities like Katrina and Rita. CPAs need to
understand the changes so they can advise
clients. This article will bring them up to date.
THE
KEY CHAPTERS
To grasp the
impact of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and
Consumer Protection Act of 2005, it helps to
understand the characteristics of the three most
common forms of bankruptcy: Chapter 7
(liquidations), Chapter 11 (reorganizations) and
Chapter 13 (adjustments). Traditionally Chapter 7
discharged most debts completely, allowing
debtors to secure a fresh start. Many creditors
have viewed it as an invitation to abuse.
Chapters 11 and 13 essentially
are unchanged under the new law. Chapter 11 lets
a troubled business reorganize and develop a
recovery plan; it holds off creditors while the
plan is implemented. Chapter 13 lets wage earners
develop a recovery plan but doesnt
discharge significant debts. The goal of 11 and
13, which are more creditor-friendly than Chapter
7, has been to help troubled debtors develop
realistic payment plans, become financially
stable and repay their debt.
| Too Easy? About
1.6 million debtorsrepresenting 70%
of all
bankruptciesfiled for Chapter 7
relief last year.
They voided billions of dollars of
obligations.
Source:
American Bankruptcy Law Institute, www.abiworld.org.
|
THE CHAPTER 7 PROCESS
The primary
feature of the new legislation is that distressed
individuals no longer have free access to Chapter
7s easy discharge of debt. Now, debtors
must undergo a means test and credit
counseling to assess whether to permit them to
choose Chapter 7 relief. As a result, many
individual debtors likely will be funneled into
Chapter 13, which requires them to repay their
debt over time.
To obtain Chapter 7 relief, a
debtor files a petition with the bankruptcy
court. For eligible debtors (formerly both
businesses and individuals, now businesses and
some individuals) the process is not much
changed. The court appoints a trustee to
represent creditors and act as an independent
party responsible to the court. The debtor is
required to turn over all nonexempt assets to the
trustee and to list all creditors so they can be
notified of the bankruptcy filing (see No Privacy in
Bankruptcy). The
creditors have to file a claim for the amount
they are owed.
Trustees have a number of
powers to protect creditors. They can request the
return of preferential payments to favored
vendors and can set aside fraudulent transfers
intended to hide assets. Trustees also can seize
inheritances to which the debtor becomes entitled
within 180 days of a Chapter 7 filing. After
accumulating all assets, trustees distribute any
monies obtained according to
priority-distribution rules. Paid first are
secured parties, administrative costs, unpaid
wages and pension obligations, alimony and child
support and taxes; finally, general unsecured
parties are paid pro rata.
Debtors are allowed to keep
exempt assets to help them start over. The
exemptions vary from state to state, but
generally include a homestead exemption and an
exemption for a car, tools and specified personal
property.
CHAPTER
11 RELIEF
Businesses undergoing hard times can file under
Chapter 7 or 11. While Chapter 7 provides for a
liquidation Chapter 11 is designed to protect
businesses whose distress can be corrected. It
assumes a business can be rehabilitated given a
viable recovery plan and a modified payment
schedule.
Once a business files for
Chapter 11 with the bankruptcy court creditors
must temporarily refrain from attempting to
collect debts. For the first 120 days after
filing, the business has the right to work out a
viable recovery plan proposal. If it does not
succeed, the creditors step in to submit one. The
bankruptcy judge has the authority to approve a
plan. Typically the court wont appoint a
trustee to manage the business, and the same
people continue under the new plan except that
the bankruptcy judge supervises and approves
certain expenditures and business decisions. The
judge has the power to convert to a Chapter 7
bankruptcy if there is no hope of saving the
business. Many large entities have gone into
Chapter 11 and come out strong vibrant
businesses.
CHAPTER
13 RELIEF
Chapter 13 allows financially distressed
individual debtors to create a court-supervised
five-year repayment plan (formerly a three- to
five-year program). During the specified period
the debtor pays a portion of his or her
disposable income to the trustee, who then pays
the creditors. Payment schedules can be modified
under Chapter 13, and some obligations can be
fully discharged. Debtors get to keep some
property rather than turning it all over to a
trustee. Creditors have always preferred Chapter
13 since the debtor strives to repay a
significant portion of his or her obligations.
Chapter 13 is better for creditors than Chapter
7, but almost two out of three Chapter 13 filers
ultimately fail to fulfill their plan according
to the American Bankruptcy Institute.
NEW
LEGISLATION: CONSUMER BANKRUPTCIES
The two most important changes to the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code are the terms of access to
Chapter 7 and changes to the homestead exemption
provisions.
Access to Chapter
7. Under the new legislation
businesses still can seek Chapter 7 relief
without undergoing a means test; individual
debtors must undergo a means test to qualify.
People who dont qualify go into Chapter 13
plans, and most will have a five-year period to
repay debts. Only a limited group of debtors can
obtain a discharge and a fresh start as easily as
before.
A person in financial trouble
now has to undergo financial counseling and a
budget analysis from a court-approved nonprofit
agency within six months of filing for bankruptcy
protection. In some cases counseling may enable
debtors to develop their own informal
rehabilitation plan. If debtors still wish to
proceed into bankruptcy court, the next step is
determining whether their income exceeds the
state median. Debtors with income below the
median for their home state can proceed to
Chapter 7 (assuming creditors dont
challenge and there are no existing issues or
actions regarding potential fraud).
Previously debtors and
bankruptcy judges could choose the chapter of the
code under which to file. Now if a debtor has an
above-median income, he or she must proceed to a
means test. The law presumes abuse is
likely if a debtors current monthly income
(as determined by the previous six-month average)
less secured payments divided by 60, less
priority debts divided by 60, less the allowed
expenses per region permitted by the IRS, less
certain other allowed expenses is greater than
$100 a month.
The means test, which takes
place under the supervision of the debtors
attorney, deducts standardized living and housing
payments from the debtors monthly income;
then transportation costs based on IRS tables;
then monthly health insurance costs; then secured
payments on automobiles over 60 months. If the
gross monthly income minus those deductions
leaves $100 or more, the debtor will be denied
Chapter 7 relief. That is, if debtors can pay
$6,000 over five years toward creditors
claims they must set up a payment schedule under
Chapter 13.
Debtors can rebut the
presumption of abuse only by demonstrating
special circumstances that justify expenditure or
income adjustments. The legislation doesnt
define those special circumstances, so it
isnt clear how much latitude courts will
give debtors to challenge a monthly income
calculation that is skewed or in which ongoing
catastrophic health expenses have in effect
become usual.
In calculating a debtors
secured debt obligations, bankruptcy courts
formerly divided the debt so that only the fair
value (generally the depreciated value) was
considered secured; the remainder was considered
unsecured. Under the new law, all loans secured
by property within one year before bankruptcy and
for vehicles in the 910 days before bankruptcy
must be paid in their entirety. This may have the
unintended consequence of leaving the debtor
insufficient income to proceed under Chapter 13.
Before debtors can complete
either a Chapter 7 or 13 bankruptcy action and
receive a discharge, they have to complete a
financial management course.
Homestead exemption
changes. Exemptions are very
important; under Chapter 7 debtors can keep
exempt property but must turn over all nonexempt
property to the trustee. Although bankruptcy law
is federal, each state is allowed to specify
exemptions. The most important exemption is the
homestead because typically it is the
debtors biggest asset. Debtors under
Chapter 7 can keep their home, subject to the
size of the state homestead exemption, which can
vary dramatically. For example, the homestead
exemption is $5,000 in Alabama, but its
unlimited in Florida and Texas. A $5 million
Florida home is fully protected from creditor
claims, while an Alabama home is protected only
up to $5,000. Debtors must keep mortgages on the
homestead current or the lender will foreclose.
Under the new law debtors
cant evade obligations by moving to a state
with a better homestead exemption. A person is
eligible for a state homestead exemption only if
he or she has lived in that state for at least
two years before claiming bankruptcy; if not, the
former states exemption likely will apply.
If the debtor has engaged in specified criminal
acts, the exemption will be capped at $125,000
even if the state homestead exemption is higher.
Longer Chapter 13
plans. Previously Chapter 13
debt-repayment plans ranged from a three-year
minimum to five years; now they are a mandatory
five years. Debtors prepare and submit their
payment schedules to the judge, who reviews and
approves them. The new system takes longer and is
more cumbersome to administer. It may require
significant new resources such as appointment of
more bankruptcy judges to handle the increased
caseload and additional supervision.
New documentation
requirements. Debtors need to
provide a certificate of credit counseling,
evidence of recent wages, a statement of monthly
net income and expenses, a tax return for the
most recent year and a photo ID. A controversial
new requirement of the act is that attorneys must
verify debtor information is correct and
grounded in fact. Because there are
liability implications in this requirement, some
practitioners think many attorneys will cease to
represent individual debtors and that those who
do will raise fees substantially. Attorneys also
are required to generate additional notices to
clients about bankruptcy procedures and
recordkeeping responsibilities.
Longer Chapter 7
filing interval. Under the old law
a person was permitted to file for Chapter 7
relief every six full years. The interval under
the new act is eight.
More
nondischargeable debts. The debts
that could not be discharged formerly were child
support/alimony, some tax obligations, debts
incurred by fraud or malicious activities, most
student loans, judgments incurred due to driving
under the influence of alcohol and government
fines. New provisions expand the list. Included
are student loans from private as well as
government bodies; last-minute debts incurred
right before filing for bankruptcy; credit
purchases of $500 or more for luxury goods or
services made within 90 days of filing; and loans
of more than $750 taken within 70 days before
filing.
Evictions of
residential tenants in bankruptcy. The
new act affects clients who are landlords. Under
the old law, a bankruptcy petition stopped
eviction proceedings. Now a landlord may be able
to evict tenants who are not in compliance with
the rental agreement even if the tenant files for
bankruptcy. Eviction proceedings can continue if
the landlord obtained a judgment of eviction
prior to the debtors bankruptcy filing. A
landlord that doesnt have a prior eviction
judgment may evict if the property is endangered
or if drug activities occurred on the premises
within 30 days before the debtor filed for
bankruptcy.
NEW
LEGISLATION: BUSINESS BANKRUPTCIES
The new law also creates a number of changes for
businesses seeking bankruptcy protection.
Nonresidential real
property leases. Old rules gave
businesses 60 days after commencing a bankruptcy
to assume or reject nonresidential property
leases. The new legislation changes the time
limit for the debtors decision:
Nonresidential property leases must be assumed or
rejected within 120 days after commencement of
the case. An extension of 90 days is permitted,
but further extensions require the written
consent of the landlord. The net result is that
businesses have only 210 days to decide whether
to retain leased nonresidential real property.
Retail businesses will be severely affected by
this change.
Exclusivity period.
The new rules place a limit on the
time period during which a debtor has exclusive
rights to propose a Chapter 11 bankruptcy plan.
Old rules had no limitations on the number of
extensions a court could grant a debtor. Under
the new rules the exclusivity period may not
extend beyond 18 months from the date of the
bankruptcy petition. After that any interested
parties may propose a bankruptcy plan, which
could give creditor committees more power to
dictate terms as the 18-month time limit
approaches.
Executive
compensation. The new bankruptcy
rules attempt to curtail a business debtors
ability to pay key employees retention bonuses,
severance payments and other payments that could
be construed as unethical. Retention payments to
insiders (officers and directors) of the debtor
are subject to a number of constraints, including
the requirement that theyre needed to
retain people who have received a bona fide job
offer. Businesses need to check the rules before
committing to any payment promise to executives
and other key insiders.
Utilities. The
new rules increase the likelihood that utility
companies will be paid for services provided
after a business files for bankruptcy. The old
rules prevented a utility from discontinuing
service to a business in bankruptcy protection.
The business had to provide only adequate
assurance that it would pay utility bills,
a phrase courts liberally interpreted in favor of
the debtor. The new rules limit adequate
assurance to cash deposits and letters of
credit or a form of assurance upon which both the
utility and debtor agree. Businesses will have to
budget for their postpetition utility bills.
REMEDIAL
ACTION
The new bankruptcy reform legislation changes the
psychology of debt in addition to the law. About
1.6 million people filed for Chapter 7 relief
last year, and it will be interesting to see
whether legal reforms bring that number down when
debtors no longer can easily access Chapter 7 and
its discharge of debts. Consumer protection
groups say the reform legislation is slanted in
favor of the credit industry and doesnt
protect consumers. The credit industry shares
blame, they say, for unsolicited marketing of
preapproved credit that may lure people into
living beyond their means. Many are concerned
that vulnerable groups such as the poor, the
elderly and the sick no longer will be able to
obtain bankruptcy protection. Additional changes
are likely if the reforms prove unjustly
burdensome and the cure turns out to be worse
than the condition it was meant to correct. 
| RESOURCES |
Publications
AICPA Professional
Standards, paperback, # 005105JA;
loose-leaf, # PS_XX12JA; CD-ROM, #
DPSXX12JA; online, # WPS-XXJA.
Bankruptcy and
Insolvency Accounting: 2 Volume Set
by Grant W. Newton and Gilbert D. Bloom,
John Wiley & Sons, 2000 (#
WI331449P0000DJA).
Bankruptcy and
Insolvency Taxation (3rd ed.) by
Grant W. Newton and Robert Liquerman,
John Wiley & Sons, 2005 (#
WI228087JA).
Consulting Services
Practice Aid 02-1, Business Valuation
in Bankruptcy (# 055296JA).
Consulting Services
Special Report 03-1, Litigation
Services and Applicable Professional
Standards, 2002 (# 055297JA).
For more information or to order, call
the Institute at 888-777-7077 or go to www.cpa2biz.com.
Publications
Bankruptcy
Code, Rules and Official Forms (2005
edition), West Publishing, 2005.
Understanding
Bankruptcy Reform 2005: What Consumer
Bankruptcy Attorneys Need to Know About
the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and
Consumer Protection Act of 2005, LRP
Publications, 2005.
Web
sites
www.abiworld.org.
The American Bankruptcy Institute home
page links to news and forms.
www.bankruptcyaction.com.
This site lists bankruptcy lawyers by
state and city and offers general
information on chapters 7 and 13.
General
bankruptcy information
www.findlaw.com/01topics/03bankruptcy/index.html.
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