How Bankruptcy Stops Your Creditors: The Automatic Stay
After you file for bankruptcy, the automatic stay
offers potent legal protection against bill collectors.
When you file for bankruptcy, something called the automatic stay immediately
stops any lawsuit filed against you and most actions against your property by a
creditor, collection agency, or government entity. Especially if you are at risk
of being evicted, being foreclosed on, being found in contempt for failure to
pay child support, or losing such basic resources as utility services, welfare,
unemployment benefits, or your job (because of a raft of wage garnishments), the
automatic stay may provide a powerful reason to file for bankruptcy.
What the Automatic Stay Can Prevent
Here is how the automatic stay affects some common emergencies:
- Utility disconnections. If you're behind on a utility bill and
the company is threatening to disconnect your water, electric, gas, or
telephone service, the automatic stay will prevent the disconnection for at
least 20 days. Although the amount of a utility bill itself rarely justifies
a bankruptcy filing, preventing electrical service cutoff in January in New
England might be justification enough.
- Foreclosure. If your home mortgage is being foreclosed on, the
automatic stay temporarily stops the proceedings, but the creditor will
often be able to proceed with the foreclosure sooner or later. If you are
facing foreclosure, Chapter 13 bankruptcy is usually a better remedy than
Chapter 7 bankruptcy, if you want to keep your house.
- Eviction. If you are being evicted from your home, the automatic
stay may provide some help -- but the new bankruptcy law makes it easier for
landlords to proceed with evictions. If your landlord already has a judgment
of possession against you when you file, the automatic stay won't affect
these eviction proceedings; the landlord can continue just as if you hadn't
filed for bankruptcy. And if the landlord alleges that you've been
endangering the property or using controlled substances there, the automatic
stay won't do you much good, either. In other cases, the automatic stay
might buy you a few days or weeks, but the landlord will probably ask the
court to lift the stay and allow the eviction -- and the court will probably
agree to do so.
- Collection of overpayments of public benefits. If you receive
public benefits and were overpaid, normally the agency is entitled to
collect the overpayment out of your future checks. The automatic stay
prevents this collection. However, if you become ineligible for benefits,
the automatic stay doesn't prevent the agency from denying or terminating
benefits for that reason.
- Multiple wage garnishments. Filing for bankruptcy stops
garnishments dead in their tracks. (And not only will you take home a full
salary, but you also may be able to discharge the debt in bankruptcy.)
Although no more than 25% of your wages may be taken to satisfy court
judgments (up to 50% for child support and alimony), many people file for
bankruptcy if more than one wage garnishment is threatened.
What the Automatic Stay Cannot Prevent
In a few instances, the automatic stay won't help you.
- Certain tax proceedings. The IRS can still audit you, issue a tax
deficiency notice, demand a tax return (which often leads to an audit),
issue a tax assessment, or demand payment of such an assessment. However,
the automatic stay does stop the IRS from issuing a tax lien or seizing your
property or income.
- Support actions. A lawsuit against you seeking to establish
paternity or to establish, modify, or collect child support or alimony isn't
stopped by your filing for bankruptcy.
- Criminal proceedings. A criminal proceeding that can be broken
down into criminal and debt components will be divided, and the criminal
component won't be stopped by the automatic stay. For example, if you were
convicted of writing a bad check, sentenced to community service, and
ordered to pay a fine, your obligation to do community service won't be
stopped by your filing for bankruptcy.
- Loans from a pension. Despite the automatic stay, money
can be withheld from your income to repay a loan from certain types of
pensions (including most job-related pensions and IRAs).
- Multiple filings. If you had a bankruptcy case pending
during the previous year, then the stay will automatically terminate after
30 days unless you, the trustee, the U.S. Trustee, or a creditor asks for
the stay to continue and proves that the current case was filed in good
faith. If a creditor had a motion to lift the stay pending during the
previous case, the court will presume that you acted in bad faith, and
you'll have to overcome this presumption to get the protection of the stay
in your current case.
How Creditors Can Get Around the Automatic Stay
Usually, a creditor can get around the automatic stay by asking the
bankruptcy court to remove ("lift") the stay, if it is not serving its intended
purpose. For example, say you file for bankruptcy the day before your house is
to be sold in foreclosure. You have no equity in the house, you can't pay your
mortgage arrears, and you have no way of keeping the property. The foreclosing
creditor is apt to go to court soon after you file for bankruptcy and ask for
permission to proceed with the foreclosure -- and that permission is likely to
be granted.