Commonly Asked Questions About Priority Debt

Posted by William Kain on December 15, 2017 at 11:19 AM
William Kain

unsecured priority debt in bankruptcy.pngOver the last month, I’ve tried to answer one of the questions most often posed to me by prospective clients: which bankruptcy chapter is best for me?  What’s the difference between the two chapters.  And since this is the fourth week that I’ve spent writing on this question, the answer to those questions is obviously a bit involved.  This week I’ll write some more about the differences in the way chapter 7 and chapter 13 operate - and this week we’ll look at the differences as they apply to priority unsecured debt.

What is a priority debt?

In bankruptcy, debts are divided into three groups: secured (such as home mortgage and car loans), general unsecured (such as credit cards and medical bills) and priority unsecured debts.  There are four “main” groups of priority debt set out in section 507 of the Bankruptcy Code. There are other categories of priority debt; the four I will discuss are simply the most common.  Priority debts are the types of debts that Congress has determined should be paid first before any other type of creditor is paid.  The four main types of priority unsecured debts are: recently incurred state and federal income taxes (as well as sales, excise and withholding taxes for people or corporations that own businesses), domestic support obligations (child support and alimony), unpaid wages owed to employees or independent contractors (up to $12,850 for each employee or independent contractor owed within the six months immediately prior to the bankruptcy filing), and deposits paid by individuals in the hands of the debtor that are unpaid at the time the bankruptcy case is filed, up to $2850.

So these are four types of debt that Congress determined should be paid if there are funds available to do so in the bankruptcy estate.  Let’s look at how chapter 7 deals with these priority debts.

Priority Debt in Chapter 7 cases

I’ve written before that most chapter 7 cases do not have assets that are non-exempt. If the assets a debtor owes are totally exempt from creditors (we call these types of chapter 7 cases “no-asset” cases), then there is nothing for the bankruptcy trustee to collect, and no payment will be made by the chapter 7 trustee to creditors.  In no-asset cases, the next question needs to be whether the priority debts will be discharged - and that answer is mixed.

Income tax obligations for which the return was due more than three years prior to the bankruptcy case filing, for which the return was filed at least two years before the date the bankruptcy case was filed, and for which the liability has been assessed, either by the taxpayer or the taxing authority, can be discharged.  Income tax obligations that do not satisfy all three of these criteria are not discharged when a chapter 7 discharge is entered.  All other taxes - sales, withholding, excise, etc. for which the debtor is personally liable are also not discharged.

No past-due domestic support obligation is discharged by a chapter 7 discharge.

The obligation to pay employees and independent contractors unpaid wages is discharged in chapter 7.

The obligation to refund deposits received but not retained prior to filing a bankruptcy case is discharged in chapter 7.  So there’s a mixed-bag as to what priority debts are discharged, and what priority debts are not discharged in a chapter 7 case.  

But what happens when there are assets available to pay priority creditors in a chapter 7 case? The answer is that priority creditors have priority in relation to each other, as well as the general unsecured creditors.  In a case where there are assets to distribute to priority creditors, there is a hierarchy of creditors, and the chapter 7 trustee will pay the first priority creditor in full before paying the second priority creditor anything, and so on.

The hierarch of priority creditors, for the four types of priority debt we’ve identified is: domestic support obligations, then unpaid wages, then un-refunded deposits, and last, priority tax obligations.  So in a chapter 7 case where the debtor owes $4000 in back child support, $2000 in unpaid wages, $1000 in un-refunded deposits and $500 in taxes, and where there are, say, $5000 in non-exempt assets, the chapter 7 trustee would pay all of the back child support obligation and $1000 of the $2000 owed to unpaid employees, and nothing to depositors and nothing to the taxing authority.  The balance of the unpaid wages, and the obligation to pay depositors would be discharged when this hypothetical debtor receives a chapter 7 discharge; the debtor’s priority tax obligation would remain as an unpaid obligation, not affected by the discharge.

For an individual with financial problems who has priority debt, the best advice I can give is to consult with an experienced bankruptcy lawyer to be certain that the debtor understands what would happen with priority debt in a chapter 7 case - the experienced attorneys at Kain & Scott can help you navigate questions about priority creditors.  So what about chapter 13?

Priority Debt in Chapter 13 cases

A chapter 7 debtor with priority debt needs to have a fairly thorough analysis done of both the assets the debtor owns as well as the nature of the priority debt the debtor owes to make a decision as to whether to file a chapter 7 bankruptcy case.  Chapter 13 is much simpler, in terms of analysis.  In chapter 13 cases, the debtor must propose to pay all priority debt in full in order to get the chapter 13 repayment plan confirmed.  It doesn’t matter what the order of priority is; it doesn’t matter whether the underlying debt is subject to a discharge if it remains unpaid at the end of a chapter 7 case.  In chapter 13 cases, all priority debt must be paid in full in order for the debtor to receive a chapter 13 discharge.  So in the example I wrote about in a hypothetical chapter 7 case, above, in the same case, but using chapter 13 as the vehicle to obtain a bankruptcy discharge, the chapter 13 debtor will need to pay $7500 over the lifetime of the chapter 13 plan in order to pay all unsecured debt and obtain a discharge.  

So what do we know about priority debt? We know that navigating priority and dischargeability can be complicated in a chapter 7 case - but not so much in a chapter 13 case.

In either case, speaking to one of our attorneys at Kain & Scott is a smart thing to do if you are looking at priority obligations.

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