Trustee Motions to Dismiss: Why They Happen and How to Respond
Why the trustee moves to dismiss, why it’s usually fixable, and how to respond fast.
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Routes: Caffeine Law · Bankruptcy (Sacramento · Stockton · Modesto)
The Kitchen-Table Hook
Late at the kitchen table is where families finally say the word bankruptcy out loud. So Ava did what a worried spouse does — she sat down across from her husband, attorney Michael Benavides, and asked him the questions Sacramento, Stockton, Modesto, and Northern California families actually lose sleep over. He answered each one straight, in plain English, with the California law.
Ava Asks, Michael Answers — Trustee Motions to Dismiss: Why They Happen and How to Respond
Ava: Can we talk about Trustee Motions to Dismiss? Where do we even start?
Michael, Esq.: Few things alarm a filer more than learning the trustee has moved to dismiss their case. It feels like the whole effort is about to collapse. In most cases it is fixable — a motion to dismiss is often a prompt for action rather than the end. Understanding why they happen tells you how to head them off and how to respond.
Ava: And the common reasons?
Michael, Esq.: Most trustee motions to dismiss trace to a handful of causes. Missing documents — failing to provide tax returns, pay stubs, or other required items. Missed plan payments in a Chapter 13 — falling behind on the monthly payment. Failure to complete required courses — the credit counseling or debtor education. Paperwork problems — incomplete or inaccurate schedules. And in Chapter 13, an unconfirmable or infeasible plan — one the numbers do not support. Less commonly, “bad faith" or means-test issues in Chapter 7. The theme: most dismissals are about compliance and follow-through, not some fatal flaw in your eligibility.
Ava: Can you explain why dismissal matters?
Michael, Esq.: A dismissal ends the case without a discharge — your debts come back, and the automatic stay disappears, freeing creditors to resume collection. Worse, a dismissal can limit the automatic stay if you refile within a year. So a motion to dismiss is worth taking seriously and responding to quickly.
Ava: Can you walk me through how to respond?
Michael, Esq.: The response usually matches the cause. Missing documents — provide them promptly, and the trustee often withdraws the motion. Missed Chapter 13 payments — cure the arrears or propose a plan modification to address the shortfall. Incomplete courses — complete them and file the certificates. Plan feasibility problems — amend the plan to fix the numbers. Most curable defaults can be resolved before the hearing if you act fast. The worst response is no response. Ignoring a motion to dismiss is how a fixable problem becomes a dismissed case.
Ava: Can you walk me through how to prevent them?
Michael, Esq.: Prevention is straightforward and mostly administrative: provide every requested document on time, make every plan payment, complete both required courses early, and keep your attorney informed of any change in circumstances. Cases that get dismissed are usually cases where someone stopped responding — so staying engaged is the best protection.
Ava: Walk me through when dismissal is the right outcome.
Michael, Esq.: Occasionally dismissal is actually the better path — for instance, if your circumstances changed and a different chapter or a refiling makes more sense, or if the plan is no longer feasible and a fresh approach is needed. In those cases the response may be a strategic conversion or a planned refiling rather than a fight to save the current case.
Ava: Okay — bottom line. What do we take away from all this?
Michael, Esq.: A trustee's motion to dismiss is usually triggered by missing documents, missed payments, incomplete courses, or an infeasible plan — compliance issues, not dead ends. Respond fast: provide the documents, cure the payments, finish the courses, or amend the plan, and most motions are withdrawn. The danger is ignoring it, which turns a curable problem into a lost case and a weakened stay. Stay engaged and most cases survive to discharge. One step at a time, health over stress — that's how we'll work through it.
What to Do
The thread through every answer is the same: California gives families more protection and more options than they think — but the relief turns on acting before a deadline (a sale date, a garnishment, a levy) closes the door. If this is the conversation at your kitchen table, a free consult turns the guessing into a plan. Bring the worst letter you got this week; we'll start there.
Caffeine Law — free bankruptcy consult | Michael Benavides, Esq., CA Bar No. 270714 | Sacramento, Stockton & Modesto | 707-362-4166 | attorneymichaelbenavides.com
ATTORNEY ADVERTISING. Caffeine Law is a trade name of the law practice of Michael Benavides, Esq., California State Bar No. 270714. Ava is an editorial brand voice, not an attorney; only Michael Benavides, Esq. provides legal analysis. General information only — not legal advice, and no attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this. We are a debt relief agency; we help people file for bankruptcy relief under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. Authority referenced (11 U.S.C. 707 / 1307 (dismissal); 11 U.S.C. 521 (debtor duties); 1325 (feasibility)) is current as of mid-2026 — verify before acting. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.


