Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
A release of a debtor from personal liability for certain dischargeable debts.
Gas lights were used later followed by dischargeable lamps.
Certain taxes owed to Federal, state or local government, student loans, and child support obligations are not dischargeable.
Under Federal law a court judgment based on the commission of an intentional tort is not dischargeable in bankruptcy.
Expanded the scope of student loans not dischargeable without undue hardship.
For example, not all debts are dischargeable.
This residuum either is or is not dischargeable to an object of planetary mass.
Thus, even loans from "for-profit" or "non-governmental" entities are not dischargeable.
- Is the claim dischargeable?
A trustee's or creditor's objection to the debtor being released from personal liability for certain dischargeable debts.
The question of whether punitive damage judgments stemming from fraud are dischargeable in a bankruptcy proceeding has divided the lower courts for years.
Debts owed for such things as alimony, child support, income taxes, student loans and certain other judgments and fines, however, are not dischargeable.
However, certain kinds of debt, such as debts incurred by way of fraud, may be dischargeable through the Chapter 13 super discharge.
"The bioemotional restriction on your MedRec prohibits you from carrying a dischargeable weapon."
The lighthouses at Chennai and Mamallapuram use dischargeable lamps, which rotate inside a bowl of mercury.
An essential concept is that when commentators say that a debt is "dischargeable," they are referring only to the debtor's personal liability on the debt.
That court had ruled that a criminal restitution order is a "debt" dischargeable in a proceeding brought under Chapter 13 of the Federal Bankruptcy Code.
On appeal, the D.C. Circuit held that the installment payments constituted dischargeable debts under the Bankruptcy Code.
(Guaranteed student loans are potentially dischargeable, however, if debtor prevails in a difficult-to-win adversary proceeding against the lender commenced by a complaint to determine dischargeability.
An agreement by a debtor to continue paying a dischargeable debt after the bankruptcy, usually for the purpose of keeping collateral or mortgaged property that would otherwise be subject to repossession.
Borrowers of privately subsidized student loans may face the same restrictions to bankruptcy discharge as for government based loans: New legislation makes clear that these loans are, like federal student loans, not dischargeable under bankruptcy.
A discharge releases a debtor from personal liability for certain debts known as dischargeable debts and prevents the creditors owed those debts from taking any action against the debtor or the debtor's property to collect the debts.
If you wish to reaffirm (agree to pay back) any particular debt, you must enter into a written agreement with the creditor, which legally obligates you to pay all or a portion of a dischargeable (wiped out by the bankruptcy) debt.
The design, featuring a parachuted cell (a dischargeable chair from an aircraft or other vehicle), was successfully tested on 25 August 1929 at the Paris-Orly Airport near Paris and in October 1929 at Băneasa, near Bucharest.
In "straight" bankruptcies filed under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code - which results in the permanent forgiveness of all of a debtor's dischargeable debts - the lender usually asks the court to lift the stay and allow the foreclosure to proceed.