| The Various Chapters
Chapter
7, entitled Liquidation, contemplates an orderly, court-supervised
procedure by which a trustee collects the assets of the debtor’s
estate, reduces them to cash, and makes distributions to creditors,
subject to the debtor’s right to retain certain exempt
property and the rights of secured creditors.
Because there is usually little or no nonexempt
property in most chapter 7 cases, there may not be an actual
liquidation of the debtor’s assets. These cases are
called “no-asset cases.” A creditor holding an
unsecured claim will get a distribution from the bankruptcy
estate only if the case is an asset case and the creditor
files a proof of claim with the bankruptcy court. In most
chapter 7 cases, the debtor receives a discharge that releases
the debtor from personal liability for certain dischargeable
debts. The debtor normally receives a discharge just a few
months after the petition is filed.
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