Mobile Homes

Bankruptcy Lawyer Serving Individuals in Los Angeles

If you live in a mobile home and need to file for bankruptcy, you may be wondering what will happen to your home during this process. Whether you can protect a mobile home depends on several factors, including the type of bankruptcy you file and whether you owe any money on your residence. If you are burdened by heavy debt and collections harassment and need to file for bankruptcy, experienced Los Angeles attorney Devin Sawdayi can help you try to keep as much of your property as possible while pursuing the greatest possible discharge.

The Homestead Exemption and Mobile Homes in California

When you file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, you can use one of two California exemption systems. These procedures allow you to protect a certain amount of equity in various property. Some states allow residents to use the federal bankruptcy exemption system, but this is not allowed in California.

Under the first California system, you can exempt up to $75,000 of equity in your home under the homestead exemption, and this includes a mobile home, if that is where you live. The homestead exemption also includes other real or personal property where people live, such as a boat or a planned development or a community apartment. This exemption can be applied to the proceeds of a forced sale of your mobile home six months before bankruptcy. The amount you can exempt may be higher depending on various other factors, such as whether you live with another person, whether you are 65 or over, whether you earn less than $25,000 per year as a single person, or whether you have mental disabilities.

Under the second exemption system, you can exempt $25,575 of the equity in your home, whether it is a mobile home or any other personal property that you or your dependent uses as a residence. The reason some people choose System 2 is because it has a wild card exemption, with which you can exempt up to $1,350 of any piece of property plus the unused amount of the homestead exemption. There is no wild card exemption under System 2. Those who do not own their homes outright, or do not want to keep their homes, often choose System 2.

What if you are filing for Chapter 13 bankruptcy? In this process, you can usually keep all your property, including your mobile home, but you must develop a workable debt repayment plan and stick to it. In some cases, you can use the cramdown tool to save your mobile home from a secured creditor intending to repossess it.

A cramdown is so named because it allows you to reduce or “cram down” the principal balance of a debt to the value of the property that the loan is secured by. While cramdowns are not used for home mortgages, you can use a cramdown for a loan that is for a mobile home considered to be personal property. For example, if you bought a mobile home for $30,000, and now it is only worth $20,000, but you still owe $25,000 on it, you can cram down the loan to $20,000, but you must pay off the loan through the repayment plan.

If the mobile home is your primary residence and you still owe a mortgage on the real property it sits on, it may be more appropriate to try to renegotiate your loan terms to reduce your debt under Chapter 13. A mobile home can be repossessed in some Chapter 13 bankruptcies, if a debtor does not include payment of arrearages, as well as current payments, within the debt repayment plan.

Consult a Los Angeles Attorney for Guidance in Reorganizing Your Finances

Bankruptcy is a complex and challenging process. Many things can go wrong when you file for Chapter 7 or Chapter 13, such as failing to use the right exemption system, forgetting to list all of your debts so that you can obtain a full discharge, or developing a Chapter 13 plan that does not adequately address the repayment of your debts. Knowledgeable bankruptcy lawyer Devin Sawdayi can help Los Angeles residents filing for Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 try to protect a mobile home or other property. Contact us at 310-475-9399 or via our online form to set up a free consultation.

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Having been referred to you by my cousin, I wish to thank you for the extremely seamless handling of my Bankruptcy. You answered all my questions professionally and I really appreciate the understanding and care taken with my case. I would definitely refer you to anyone asking me for a good bankruptcy lawyer. 

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I just want to thank you for the great job that you did helping me get my life back together! I’m not sure what I would have done had I not been given your contact! Not only did you make it possible for me to start fresh but you took care of all the details! And if that wasn’t enough you followed up with me when I needed your help after the fact. Please feel free to post this message as I never miss a chance to say what a great job you have done and are still doing! Thanks Devin for helping me start over! 

– Patricia Scanlan

 
10866 Wilshire Blvd. #810

Los Angeles, CA 90024

Toll Free: 800.474.6050Phone: 310.475.9399

We are a debt relief agency. We help people file for bankruptcy and have been proudly doing so since 1997.
 
 
 
We serve the following localities: Los Angeles County including Bell Gardens, Beverly Hills, Burbank, Carson, Compton, Culver City, East Los Angeles, El Segundo, Encino, Gardena, Hawthorne, Huntington Park, Lawndale, Los Angeles, Marina del Rey, Playa del Rey, Reseda, San Fernando, Santa Monica, Studio City, Tarzana, Van Nuys, Venice, and Woodland Hills.

 

Devin Sawdayi | Los Angeles Bankruptcy Lawyer Devin Sawdayi