Firing Your Bankruptcy Attorney: 3 Things You Need to Learn First
Firing Your Bankruptcy Attorney: 3 Things You Need to Learn First
Getting rid of your bankruptcy attorney is not unheard of. In fact, it may be a good decision. However, there are many risks you are taking in doing so--and some that could negatively affect your case. Ideally, you should pick the right attorney from the start.However, sometimes these things cannot be helped and the action must be taken. What facts should you be aware of before you say goodbye to your current attorney?- Changing bankruptcy attorneys may not change your case. If something has come up in your case that you don't like, you may be hoping that a new attorney will be able to get you the results you want. Though you may not like what is happening, it may not be any fault of your bankruptcy attorney. For instance, if you are facing a dismissal because plan payments haven't been made, getting a new attorney won't get you off the dismissal docket. With that being said, there are behaviors that are under an attorney's control like not returning phone calls, not coming to important meetings, or making a mistake when filing your case for which an attorney can (and maybe should) be fired.- Your attorney is your attorney, not your friend. A bankruptcy lawyer is not helping you at all by glossing over the bad parts. You've got to know the truth of your situation, no matter how ugly it may be, in order to fix it. Thought it may feel good to have someone tell you whatever you want to hear, it may do damage to your case.- Don't do damage to your case by changing attorneys. There are things that happen during your case that an attorney needs to actively participate in. If you switch your attorney right before a hearing date, for example, you may be putting your discharge at risk and thusly the protection from foreclosure, credit card debt help, and relief from creditors that your family needs. Don't get rid of your current attorney unless you've got another one ready to jump into your case.You aren't wrong for wanting to get rid of an attorney who is doing a poor job on your case. Just make sure you've got all your bases covered before you make the switch.
Bankruptcy Information - Know Your Facts Before Filing Bankruptcy Debt Relief Options - Credit Counseling as a Bankruptcy Alternative The Bankruptcy Attorney – Do You Need An Attorney For Debt Relief? Bankruptcy Facts - Is This The Best Debt Reduction Strategy For You? New Bankruptcy Laws - Know Your Facts Before Filing Bankruptcy Do You Need A Bankruptcy Lawyer To Get Debt Releif? Credit Card Debt and Bankruptcy - Adjustments in Credit Policies May Help Consumers Eliminate Debt Bankruptcy Vs Credit Counseling - How Americans Can Find Legitimate Debt Relief Bankruptcy and Debts - How to Avoid Filing Bankruptcy and Eliminate Unsecured Debts Debt Relief - Getting a Fresh Start with a Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Debt Relief Using a Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Avoid Bankruptcy And Elimiante Debt - When To Get A Credit Card Debt Settlement Getting Out of Debts - Is Debt Settlement a Legitimate Alternative to Filing Bankruptcy?
www.yloan.com
guest:
register
|
login
|
search
IP(216.73.216.63) California / Anaheim
Processed in 0.017298 second(s), 7 queries
,
Gzip enabled
, discuz 5.5 through PHP 8.3.9 ,
debug code: 2 , 2173, 170,