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Keywords: iRS standards . means test .

Topic #38:: Local Standards: Health Care Expenditures

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Means Test > IRS Allowances

Local Standards: Health Care Expenditures

1 Cases , IssueID 38

Ch 7 Means Test
Form 22A, Line 21B
Ch 13 Means Test
Form 22C Line 24B

Topic Description:

Can debtor take expense allowance regardless of lower actual expenses.

Lines of Cases:

A:

Debtor allowed to claim IRS allowance in chapter 13 plan, regardless of actual health expenses

  • Type A = Debtor allowed to claim IRS allowance in chapter 13 plan, regardless of actual health expenses
  • Type E = "Everything Else"
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Cases for Zip , California Northern District Bankruptcy Court

Ninth Circuit Cases

No Ninth Circuit cases in database on this topic

Other Circuits

� In re Melancon

Bankr. M.D. La. - 400 B.R. 521 - 2009-02-19 - 13 , Above

Google ID#: 12761458443638907374
(Type A : Debtor allowed to claim IRS allowance in chapter 13 plan, regardless of actual health expenses )

� In re Melancon

Bankr. M.D. La. - 400 B.R. 521 - 2009-02-19 - 13 , Above

Google ID#: 12761458443638907374
(Type A : Debtor allowed to claim IRS allowance in chapter 13 plan, regardless of actual health expenses )

All Cases A to Z

  • In re Melancon, 400 B.R. 521 , (Bankr. M.D. La. ) 2009-02-19, #12761458443638907374

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When you read a case, check to make sure that the case's decision applies to your local district. Do this by looking at which court has decided the case -- either the U.S. Supreme Court, a court of appeal (listed here in large type), or a district court (listed in small type).  Your local district court judge is not bound to follow the opinion of judges from other district courts, but often they look to these cases for advice. Your local district, however, is bound  to follow decisions in cases from it governing circuit court. You'll see fairly few Supreme Court case here, but those cases are also binding on all districts."

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This database does not contain every relevant case in every district on the topics covered; there are high priced services for that. This is free. It is offered to the public "as is" as an adjunct to the Nolo books, How to File Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, and Chapter 13 Bankruptcy: Keep Your Property and Repay Your Debts Over Time (10th Edition, 2010): which I co-author with attorney Stephen Elias.

This database is updated as time permits. Do not assume that it has the latest case in your district. We are still filling holes in the database -- and will always be. Use it as a place to start your reasearch, rather than the final answer to your question.

Some of these issues involve the discretion of the judge which can vary from judge to judge. So, even if you find a case just like yours where a judge went your way, as they say in the car biz, "your mileage may vary..."

If you're not familiar with what "case law" is, and how to use it, check out Chapter 7 of Nolo's LegalResearch: How to Find and Understand the Law for a guide to how to read through a case to get the parts that matter.

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