A lawyer called me with a question about a car lease in a Chapter 13 bankruptcy. His debtor filed Chapter 13 with a car lease that terminates in three years. His client’s bankruptcy plan is a five-year plan. Chapter 13 debtors cannot incur new debt (such as a new car loan or lease) without permission. The attorney and debtor are concerned that three years into the Chapter 13, at the end of the current car lease, the debtor be without a car. The attorney asked me if I knew of a way for a Chapter 13 plan to extend the term of an existing car lease.
The general rule is that Chapter 13 debtors can assume or reject leases and other contracts. This debtor will assume the car lease to keep the car for the balance of the lease term. Another general Chapter 13 rule is that debtors cannot modify the terms and conditions of existing contracts such as mortgages and leases. I don’t think this Chapter 13 debtor can extend the term of his car lease.
However, there is an easy solution. Three years into the bankruptcy plan the debtor can request permission from the Chapter 13 trustee to purchase a car when the car lease expires. The key will be to keep the debtor’s monthly payments for the next car at or below the amount of the debtor’s payments under the current lease. If the debtor does not increase his monthly car expenses the trustee will approve the purchase because the new car payment will not increase total monthly expenses and will not decrease the amount of money paid monthly to the debtor’s unsecured creditors under the bankruptcy plan. New car debt equal to or less than the current car payment does not negatively impact the debtor nor his creditors.
posted by Jonathan Alper, bankruptcy and asset protection lawyer, Orlando, Florida