Working With the Bankruptcy Trustee

 

Filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy means that you'll be dealing with a "bankruptcy trustee" who will be assigned to handle your case. The trustee's job is to gather all non-exempt property you own into the "bankruptcy estate" to determine what (if anything) can be sold and the proceeds distributed to your unsecured creditors. In most cases, there's nothing left — "no-asset" cases make up more than 90% of consumer chapter 7 cases — but the trustee will be looking.

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When you file for bankruptcy, a “Trustee” is appointed to your case.

It’s essential to understand the role of the trustee and who they “work” for.

Although the court appoints the trustee, the trustee’s job is to get as much property as possible to be sold and the proceeds distributed equitably to your unsecured creditors, according to “priority” rules — determining who gets paid first — under federal and state law.

Almost all of your dealings with the bankruptcy court will be with the trustee assigned to your administering your case, not the bankruptcy judge.

The bankruptcy judge is only there to rule on disputed legal issues and issue your “discharge” order — the piece of paper that officially cancels your debts upon completing a successful filing — which is the ultimate goal of bankruptcy.

What does the Trustee do in a Chapter 7 case?

Bankruptcy Code § 323 states that the trustee is the representative of the “bankruptcy estate” with the capacity to sue and be sued.

The Bankruptcy Code defines the trustee’s duties and obligations:

  • Section 704 defines the statutory duties of the trustee in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy case, and, under § 704, the primary task of the trustee is toreduce to money the property of the estate for which such trustee serves” that is: to “liquidate” the assets and distribute the proceeds to your creditors. (Note this the job in Chapter 7 (“liquidation”) bankruptcy is different than it is in Chapter 13 (“pay over five years”) bankruptcy. 
  • Other relevant duties include ensuring that the debtor performs their intention (regarding secured debts) as specified in § 521(a)(2)(B) (See debtor’s “statement of intention” as provided in Form ____),
  • investigate the financial affairs of the debtor (see, “What is a 341 meeting?”),
  • and “if advisable, oppose the discharge of the debtor.” (see “What kinds of debts can be discharged in bankruptcy?” and “Things that might make your bankruptcy case fail.")

How Are Trustees Paid?

Bankruptcy Code § 326 says that a trustee’s compensation is based upon a percentage of the property of the estate the trustee administers. As a result, a trustee has a financial incentive to maximize the property of the estate. Consequently, discussions or disputes with a Chapter 7 trustee will primarily focus on what is property of the estate.

How Trustees Can Increase the size of the “Bankruptcy Estate.”

The whole point of bankruptcy is ensuring everyone gets their rightful share of the “pie” when there’s not enough pie. Or, to put it a more legal way: to provide an orderly distribution of available assets (“the pie”) to all creditors based on the priority outlined in federal bankruptcy law. 

The trustee’s job is to make that “pie” as large as legally possible. What follows is a list of ways they can try to do that.

Undoing “Preferential Transfers” That You Made Before Filing

One tool the trustee has is the authority to undo any “preferential transfers.” That is, any money or property you transferred to someone else just before (generally up to 180 days before) filing bankruptcy.

Under this power, the trustee will be very interested in undoing any recent repayments of debts you made to your relatives or friends just before you filed for bankruptcy, as these are called a “preference.”

The trustee can reverse these transactions (i.e., claw the money back) and reclaim it for the “bankruptcy estate” because, by repaying these people before just going bankrupt, you have “preferred” some people you owe money to over others -- and bankruptcy does not allow this, because bankruptcy law has strict rules about who gets priority when it comes to claiming any available assets you may have.

Wiping out invalid liens on your property to increase equity to be distributed to creditors

Suppose you own a house with a second mortgage or have several liens on your property. In that case, the trustee may look to “void” some of those liens if doing so will increase your home equity to the point that it is no longer fully protected by applicable homestead exemption laws. 

Who Are the Trustees for New Jersey District Bankruptcy Court?

To find the contact information for trustees in your state who handle Chapter 7 cases:

Click here for a list of Chapter 7 trustees for New Jersey from the US Department of Justice.

Once you bring up this list, find the New Jersey trustees for the New Jersey District Bankruptcy Court.

NEW JERSEY

 

Note: The individuals listed are private parties, not government employees.

 

Bunce D. Atkinson
1011 Highway 71, Suite 200
Spring Lake, NJ 07762
E-mail: bunceatkinson@aol.com
Phone: (732) 449-0525
Fax: (732) 449-0592

 

Karen E. Bezner
567 Park Avenue, Suite 103
Scotch Plains, NJ 07076
E-mail: kbez@bellatlantic.net
Phone: (908)322-8484
Fax: (908)322-0560

 

Donald V. Biase
P. O. Box 646
Essex Fells, NJ 07021
E-mail: dbiase4236@gmail.com
Phone: (973) 618-1008
Fax: (973) 379-7489

 

Andrea Dobin
427 Riverview Plaza
Trenton, NJ 08611
E-mail: adobin@msbnj.com
Phone: (609) 695-6070
Fax: (609) 695-6071

 

Andrew B. Finberg
525 Route 73 South, Suite 200
Marlton, NJ 08053
Phone: (856) 988-9055
Fax: (856) 988-9678

 

Charles M. Forman
365 W Passaic Street
Suite 400
Rochelle Park, NJ 07662
E-mail: cforman@formanlaw.com
Phone: (201) 845-1000

 

Ilissa C. Hook
1044 Route 23 North
Suite 100
Wayne, NJ 07470
Phone: (973) 686-3800
Fax: (973) 686-3801

 

Nancy Isaacson
75 Livingston Avenue
Roseland, NJ 07068
E-mail: nisaacson@greenbaumlaw.com
Phone: (973) 577-1930
Fax: (973)535-1698

 

Steven P. Kartzman
101 Gibraltar Drive, Suite 2F
Morris Plains, NJ 07950
E-mail: skartzman@msklaw.net
Phone: (973) 267-0220
Fax: (973)267-2402

 

Jeffrey A. Lester
374 Main Street
Hackensack, NJ 07601
E-mail: jlester@bllaw.com
Phone: (201)487-5544
Fax: (201)487-4026

 

Jay L. Lubetkin
293 Eisenhower Parkway, Suite 100
Livingston, NJ 07039
E-mail: jlubetkin@rltlawfirm.com
Phone: (973)597-9100
Fax: (973)597-9119

 

Joseph D. Marchand
117-119 West Broad St.
Bridgeton, NJ 08302

P.O. Box 298
Bridgeton, NJ 08302
E-mail: jdmarchand@comcast.net
Phone: (856)451-7600
Fax: (856)451-6535

 

John M. McDonnell, III
115 Maple Ave.
Suite 201
Red Bank, NJ 07701
E-mail: jmcdonnell@mchfirm.com
Phone: (732) 383.7233
Fax: (732) 383-7531

 

Thomas J. Orr
321 High St., 2nd Floor
Burlington, NJ 08016
E-mail: tom@torrlaw.com
Phone: (609)386-8700
Fax: (609)386-7765

 

Eric R. Perkins
40 West Ridgewood Avenue
Ridgewood, NJ 07450
E-mail: eperkins@mdmc-law.com
Phone: (201) 445-6722
Fax: (201) 445-5376

 

Andrew S. Sklar
20 Brace Road, Suite 205
Cherry Hill, NJ 08034
E-mail: andy@sklarlaw.com
Phone: (856) 258-4050
Fax: (856) 258-6941

 

Douglas S. Stanger
646 Ocean Heights Ave.
Linwood, NJ 08221
E-mail: doug.stanger@flastergreenberg.com
Phone: (609)645-1881
Fax: (609)645-9932

 

Benjamin A. Stanziale, Jr.
2839 Route 10, Suite 102
Morris Plains, NJ 07950
E-mail: ben@stanzialelaw.com
Phone: (973)731-9393
Fax: (973)731-9401

 

Maureen P. Steady
2 Kings Highway West
Suite 102
Haddonfield, NJ 08033
Phone: (856) 428-1060
Fax: (609) 482-8011

 

Daniel E. Straffi
670 Commons Way
Toms River, NJ 08755
E-mail: dstraffi@comcast.net
Phone: (732)341-3800
Fax: (732)341-3548

 

Thomas J. Subranni
1624 Pacific Avenue
Atlantic City, NJ 08401
E-mail: trustee@subranni.com
Phone: (609)347-7000
Fax: (609)345-4545

 

John W. Sywilok
51 Main Street
Hackensack, NJ 07601
E-mail: sywilokattorney@sywilok.com
Phone: (201)487-9390
Fax: (201)487-9393

 

Jeffrey T. Testa
4 Gateway Center
100 Mulberry Street
Newark, NJ 07102
Phone: (973) 639-7939
Fax: (973) 297-6230

 

Brian S. Thomas
327 Central Avenue, Suite 103
Linwood, NJ 08221
E-mail: brian@brianthomaslaw.com
Phone: (609)601-6066
Fax: (609)601-6061

 

David A. Wolff
396 Route 34
Matawan, NJ 07747
E-mail: dwtrustee@verizon.net
Phone: (732)566-1189
Fax: (732)566-1192

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Jurisdictional relevance: US

Legal Consumer - Essex County, NJLaw. The content of this article pertains to all US states and counties.