business chapter 7
An officer can sign the petition if so authorized by the Board of
Directors. There must be a meeting of the Board authorizing the
bankruptcy and a resolution authorizing the bankruptcy. The
secretary must certify the resolution. These documents must be
signed by the applicable board members and filed with the petition.
If you need sample copies of these documents, let me know and I can
e-mail you off list.
As for the credit report, I don't know of any such option.
*************************
Mark J. Markus
Law Office of Mark J. Markus
11684 Ventura Blvd. PMB #403
Studio City, CA 91604-2652
(818)509-1173 (818)509-1460 (fax)
web: http://www.bklaw.com/
This Firm is a Qualified Federal Debt Relief Agency (see what this
means at
The post was migrated from Yahoo.
Kirk;
1.) Not in a way that will show all the debts like a personal
bankruptcy
2.) President or the board
3.) Yes and I believe they need to be filed with the Court. This is
really more important than #2 above-it's what authorizes the filing.
There must be a meeting of the board of directors authorizing the
filing. Make sure it is in accordance with the by-laws. You wouldn't
file a case with just an officer's authority.
Steven B. Lever
The post was migrated from Yahoo.
My first business chapter 7. It is a small incorporated business with few
assets. I have determined that the ch 7 bk makes sense for the business
and all shareholders (2) are in agreement.
I have a couple questions:
1.) Is there a way to pull a business credit report?
2.) Who must sign the client services agreement hiring the attorney? All
shareholders? Just the President?
3.) Does the attorney need to see corporate documents such as a
shareholder meeting report authorizing the chapter 7?
4.) anyone willing to share a legal services agreement for a business
chapter 7?
Thank you,
Kirk Brennan, esq.
California Law Office, P.C.
calibankrutpcysite.com
CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This e-mail and any attachments are for the
exclusive and confidential use of the intended recipient. If you are not
the intended recipient, please do not read, distribute or take action in
reliance on this message. If you have received this message in error,
please notify us immediately by return e-mail and promptly delete this
message and its attachments from your computer system. We do not waive
attorney-client or work product privilege by the transmission of this
message.
TAX ADVICE NOTICE: Tax advice, if any, contained in this e-mail does not
constitute a "reliance opinion" as defined in IRS Circular 230 and may not
be used to establish reasonable reliance on the opinion of counsel for the
purpose of avoiding the penalty imposed by Section 6662A of the Internal
Revenue Code. The firm provides reliance opinions only in formal opinion
letters containing the signature of a director.
My first business chapter 7. It is a small incorporated business with
few assets. I have determined that the ch 7 bk makes sense for the
business and all shareholders (2) are in agreement.I have a couple questions:
1.) Is there a way to pull a business credit report?2.) Who must sign the client services agreement hiring the attorney? All shareholders? Just the President?3.) Does the attorney need to see corporate documents such as a shareholder meeting report authorizing the chapter 7?
4.) anyone willing to share a legal services agreement for a business chapter 7?Thank you,-- Kirk Brennan, esq.California Law Office, P.C.calibankrutpcysite.com
CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This e-mail and any attachments are for the exclusive and confidential use of the intended recipient. If you are not the intended recipient, please do not read, distribute or take action in reliance on this message. If you have received this message in error, please notify us immediately by return e-mail and promptly delete this message and its attachments from your computer system. We do not waive attorney-client or work product privilege by the transmission of this message.
TAX ADVICE NOTICE: Tax advice, if any, contained in this e-mail does not constitute a "reliance opinion" as defined in IRS Circular 230 and may not be used to establish reasonable reliance on the opinion of counsel for the purpose of avoiding the penalty imposed by Section 6662A of the Internal Revenue Code. The firm provides reliance opinions only in formal opinion letters containing the signature of a director.
The post was migrated from Yahoo.