Perris

San Diego Bankruptcy Lawyer....

Using Federal Law...

to stop foreclosures, garnishments, repossessions and lawsuits while helping you regain financial control. When the tempest of debt has paralyzed you, let Absolute Bankruptcy and Charles Andersen help you regain financial control using the Bankruptcy Code!

Bankruptcy Can Stop Foreclosure

Filing a Chapter 7 case will sidetrack a lender’s right to foreclose. Unless a lender can get permission to go forward with the foreclosure proceedings by requesting and receiving “relief from the automatic stay” from the court, you are "home free". That relief is not likely to be granted unless the lender  can demonstrate "lack of adequate protection" by showing depreciating collateral or one of several other means. The burden is always on the creditor in a lift stay proceeding to show special and unusual circumstances, and the lender must further demonstrate to the court that the property is not necessary to the debtors effective debt reorganization.

A Chapter 7 can permanently stop a foreclosure, if the creditor agrees or the homestead (exemption) laws stop the liquidation of the property.

If the conditions above that must be met in Chapter 7 cannot be met in order to permanently stop a foreclosure. The solution to that problem that then is to file under Chapter 13 bankruptcy. The A confirmed Chapter 13 plan can provide for continuing monthly payments on the mortgage and paying off the arrearages over the life of the plan (three to five years).
Bankruptcy
Bankruptcy
We work with you to help you keep as much of your property as possible while putting an immediate stop to:

Perris Bankruptcy Attorneys: Home foreclosures

Perris Bankruptcy Attorney: Car repossessions

Perris Bankruptcy Attorney: Garnishments

Perris Bankruptcy Attorney: Credit card debt

Perris Bankruptcy Attorneys: Creditor harassments

Perris Bankruptcy Lawyers: Lawsuits

For us, filing bankruptcy is about elimination of your problems and helping you move on.

Perris, California

Perris is a city in Riverside County, California, USA. At the 2000 census, the city population was 46,600. The city is named in honor of Fred T. Perris, chief engineer of the California Southern Railroad. The California Southern was built through the future town site in 1882 to build a rail connection between the present day cities of Barstow and San Diego. Due to a land title dispute at Pinacate, most of its citizens moved two miles north on the railroad and established Perris in 1885. The city was incorporated in 1911.

Perris Education

The city is served by three school districts: the Perris Elementary School District, Perris Union High School District and the Val Verde Unified School District, which also serves the southern part of Moreno Valley. Perris High School of the Perris district is the city's first public (grades 9-12) school. Established in 1887, the school was relocated in 1961, and the school's western annex on I-215 and Nuevo Road became a Continuation High School in 1993. Now, there are more high schools in the area including Rancho Verde of the Val Verde district.

Middle schools include Lakeside, Perris and Tomas Rivera. There are ten elementary (grades K-6) schools (two recently opened in 2007).