Pre-Bankruptcy Planning in Mississippi: Legal Ways to Protect Your Assets (and Mistakes That Could Backfire)
Deciding to file for bankruptcy is rarely quick or comfortable. You may be worried about losing your home, car, or the basic things you use. Mississippi law does offer generous exemptions, but planning the wrong way can undo those protections and give a bankruptcy trustee reasons to question your case.
What Can Backfire Before Filing
One of the biggest missteps is transferring property to friends or family right before filing. Under Mississippi’s version of the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act, a transfer can be considered fraudulent if it is done to delay or dodge creditors or if “badges of fraud” are present, such as moving assets to an insider or keeping control after the transfer. In real cases, this might look like signing your truck over to a cousin while you still drive it to work.
Running up credit cards or taking cash advances when you already plan to file creates a similar problem. Courts may decide those debts were never meant to be repaid and refuse to wipe them out. The same goes for paying back a relative or close friend while other creditors get nothing; a trustee can usually claw those payments back and treat them as unfair “favorites.”
Picture someone who, a month before filing, pays off a $4,000 loan to a sibling but leaves medical and credit card bills unpaid. That payment is likely to draw extra scrutiny.
Legal Ways to Protect Property
On the other hand, there are lawful steps that often help. Mississippi exemptions allow you to protect up to $10,000 of personal property and up to $75,000 of equity in your primary residence, along with certain insurance and disability benefits. A person who uses extra savings to catch up on an exempt car loan is usually increasing equity in something they are allowed to keep, instead of leaving that cash exposed.
Spending extra money on urgent home repairs, medical needs, or groceries is generally fine before filing since these fall under common exemptions. For example, if you patch a roof or pay off a hospital bill, those choices typically hold up.
At O’Brien Law Firm, we help clients think through these decisions under Mississippi law. To speak confidentially, call us at 866-934-8148 or 662-672-7619. You don’t have to figure it out alone.