Legal Question in Bankruptcy in California

Can you be sued for breach of contract after chpt 7 discharge

Can our second lender sue us after our chpt 7 discharge that included both our 1st & 2nd mortgage loans. The 1st foreclosed on the property now the 2nd has been sold. Does the 4year statute of limitations apply for this situation. Our attorney has not replied to our inquiries.


Asked on 3/19/08, 7:30 pm

2 Answers from Attorneys

Judith Deming Deming & Associates

Re: Can you be sued for breach of contract after chpt 7 discharge

It depends; if the second lien interest was still on the house and the house was not foreclosed on nor given back to lender during the bankruptcy and you did not seek to "avoid the lien" during the bankruptcy, then probably yes. Remember, in a chapter 7 you cannot just list SECURED debt and expect it to go away unless you give back the security during the bankruptcy proceeding. The only debt you can walk away from without doing anything affirmative is unsecured debt, like visa, mastercard, etc. It is the same thing as having a car loan--you can discharge the car loan if you give back the car but not if you keep the car.

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Answered on 3/19/08, 7:52 pm
Carl Starrett Law Offices of Carl H. Starrett II

Re: Can you be sued for breach of contract after chpt 7 discharge

If you listed the second mortgage properly on your bankruptcy petition, they should have received notice of the bankruptcy and the debt would have been discharged. Any subsequently loan purchaser would be bound by the discharge and could not legally collect this debt.

If the creditor insists on pressing forward, your bankruptcy attorney can initiate proceedings in the bankruptcy to holder the lender in contempt and seek sanctions. If your attorney isn't returning your calls, get a new attorney.

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Answered on 3/19/08, 8:03 pm


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