You can wipe out federal income taxes in chapter 7 bankruptcy only if all of the following conditions are true:
The taxes must be strictly for taxes on income. Taxes such as payroll taxes, trust fund taxes, sales tax or fraud taxes cannot be eliminated in bankruptcy.
You cannot wipe out tax debt if you filed a false or fraudulent tax return or willfully attempted to evade paying taxes. For example, if you underreported income falsely, you cannot wipe out the debt after getting caught.
In order to wipe out the tax debt, the bankruptcy cannot be filed until three years after the original due date of the tax. For example, if a tax was due from a 2005 tax return, the due date of that tax liability would be April 15, 2006. In this example you would have to wait until April 15, 2009 to file the bankruptcy in order to be eligible to discharge the IRS tax debt. Many times, you must be careful to wait the appropriate time period in order to ensure that the tax debt will be wiped out.
To be eligible to wipe out the debt, you must have filed a tax return for the IRS debt you wish to discharge at least two years before filing for bankruptcy. Thus, even if the debt is over three years old, if you filed the return late and two years has not yet passed, then you cannot wipe out the Internal Revenue Service debt.
The IRS must have assessed the income tax debt at least 240 days before you file your bankruptcy petition, or must not have been assessed yet. The IRS can extend this time period due to suspended collection activity because of an offer in compromise or a previous bankruptcy filing.
A bankruptcy may relieve you of personal liability on a tax debt but will not discharge a properly filed tax lien. Stated otherwise, the IRS cannot chase you personally for the debt but the lien will remain on any assets of you so you will not be able to sell these assets without satisfying the outstanding lien.
The same five rules that render an IRS debt dischargeable in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy make the IRS debt general unsecured debt. This means that the IRS debt will be treated in the same way as general unsecured creditors such as credit cards. Therefore, in a chapter 13 bankruptcy if the 5 conditions are satisfied, then the debt is treated as general unsecured and will be paid out and treated the same as other general unsecured creditors. Accordingly, if the plan proposes to pay unsecured creditors only 5% of the outstanding amounts, then the general unsecured claim of the IRS for income tax will only be paid 5%.
You can also restructure the IRS debt over 60 months in a Chapter 13 bankruptcy. Furthermore, if you are fortunate enough, you may have an IRS debt that would not be dischargeable, but because the IRS does not properly file a proof of claim in your chapter 13 bankruptcy, it gets wiped out.
Contact a New Jersey lawyer for bankruptcy questions today.