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Site: Charging Orders And Debtor Exemptions

Topic Exemption TopicsExemption




While § 503(g) provides that the D/M may take advantage of any exemption, there is no guidance on how or when the D/M may assert the exemption. This should be corrected; presumably, the D/M must assert or lose the exemption at the hearing on the charging order.

Note that most judgment enforcement remedies that take something from the debtor are accompanied by statutory warnings that the debtor must assert any exemption within X days or lose the exemption.

An unsettled issue is whether a D/M may assert the Federal Wage Garnishment Law ("FWGL"), 15 U.S.C. §§ 1671, et seq., should apply to limit the charging order to 25% of the D/M's net disposable income, where the D/M can demonstrate that the distribution, or a part of the distribution, derives from the D/M's labors. For an analogous situation, see U.S. v. Alexander, 2016 WL 2893406 (D.Ariz., 2016).

In the humble opinion of your author, the way this should shake out is as follows:


EXEMPTION ARTICLES


EXEMPTION OPINIONS


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Page last modified on March 27, 2022, at 05:27 PM