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My nephew (who suffered brain damage in an accident & is partialy paralyzed now) filed bancruptcy. It was contested by
one creditor, so he had to hire a b'rupcy trial lawyer. That guy
has now bailed (cause I, can't come up with more money at
the moment)..ques is how does my nephew inform the bank'rcy
court of this and ask for a postponement of the trial ?

2007-08-13 03:50:04 · 2 answers · asked by evensout 3 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

2 answers

A creditor contests a bankruptcy? Odd. Then again, the creditor figures that your nephew must have some money stashed somewhere to afford an attorney.
In any case if the lawyer doesn't want to represent the client, the lawyer has to notify the court that he no longer is representing your nephew, so that your nephew can be given time to look for another lawyer.
Still, the case is shaky with the hiring of a lawyer. You should go to a credit counseling agency to make arrangements to pay back the creditors with a lower fee.

2007-08-13 04:04:41 · answer #1 · answered by My Final Answer 3 · 0 0

You should visit FINANCE-SOLUTION.US I am sure here you can find the best option for you

RE Any armchair Perry Mason's or Alan Shore's out there?

My nephew (who suffered brain damage in an accident & is partialy paralyzed now) filed bancruptcy. It was contested by
one creditor, so he had to hire a b'rupcy trial lawyer. That guy
has now bailed (cause I, can't come up with more money at
the moment)..ques is how does my nephew inform the bank'rcy
court of this and ask for a postponement of the trial ?

2014-10-10 16:59:21 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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