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Why is my Schedule C showing two Schedule C's in a joint case?
Why is my Schedule C showing two Schedule C's in a joint case?

How to fix this if it happens.

Kelly Oldiges avatar
Written by Kelly Oldiges
Updated over a week ago

If you are working on a joint case and see two schedule C's but only want one, follow the instructions in this article to get one schedule C.

When you add an exemption in Personal Property to a joint debtor case, the Belongs To dropdown will automatically populate to Debtor 1 and Debtor 2 only.

If you scroll over the orange ?, you will see the following instructions:

Once you change that dropdown to Belongs to Debtor 1 Only or Belongs to Debtor 2 Only, you will see two schedule C's, which most people do not want. We have the option to change that because in some situations/districts it is needed, but majority of people will not want to change that.

Look through all tabs in Real Property and Personal Property and make sure every property with an exemption is showing "belongs to debtor 1 and debtor 2 only".

This question confuses some people because they are trying to mark who the actual piece of property belongs to, but in this case it is referring to the exemption, and if you want one schedule C you do not want to change who the exemption belongs to.

Tags: two schedule Cs, one schedule C, belongs to debtor 1 and debtor 2 only, 1 schedule c, 2 schedule c's

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