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Brunner v. NY HESC
Marie Brunner v. New York State Higher Education Services Corp. (October 14,
1987, #41, Docket 87-5013) set a precedent for the
definition of "undue hardship" in bankruptcy discharges of student
loans. While the courts ultimately reversed the decision to discharge
the loans, the discussion by the district and appellate courts
established the three-part test (highlighted below) for undue hardship.
Appeals Court Affirms District Court
831 F.2d 395
42 Ed. Law Rep. 535, Bankr. L. Rep. P 72,025
United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
Marie BRUNNER, Appellant,
v.
NEW YORK STATE HIGHER EDUCATION SERVICES CORP., Appellee.
No. 41, Docket 87-5013.
Argued Sept. 22, 1987.
Decided Oct. 14, 1987.
Before LUMBARD, OAKES and KEARSE, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
[1] Marie Brunner, pro se, appeals from a decision of the United States
District Court for the Southern District of New York, Charles
S. Haight, Judge, which held that it was error for the bankruptcy
court to discharge her student loans based on "undue hardship," 46
B.R. 752 (Bankr.D.C.N.Y.1985). We affirm.
[2] While this court is obliged to accept the bankruptcy court's
undisturbed findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous, it is
not required to accept its conclusions as to the legal effect of those
findings. Montco, Inc. v. Glatzer (In re Emergency Beacon Corp.), 665
F.2d 36, 40 (2d Cir.1981) (citing Queens Blvd. Wine & Liquor
Corp. v. Blum, 503 F.2d 202 (2d Cir.1974); R.Bankr.P. 810 (current
version, see R.Bankr.P. 8013); Bank of Pa. v. Adlman, 541 F.2d 999,
1005 (2d Cir.1976)). Whether not discharging Brunner's student loans
would impose on her "undue hardship" under 11 USC 523(a)(8)(B)
requires a conclusion regarding the legal effect of the bankruptcy
court's findings as to her circumstances. Therefore, the bankruptcy
court's conclusion of "undue hardship" properly was reviewed by the
district court.
[3] As noted by the district court, there is very little appellate
authority on the definition of "undue hardship" in the context of 11
USC 523(a)(8)(B).
Based on legislative history
and the decisions of
other district and bankruptcy courts, the district court adopted a
standard for "undue hardship" requiring a three-part showing: (1) that
the debtor cannot maintain, based on current income and expenses, a
"minimal" standard of living for herself and her dependents if forced
to repay the loans; (2) that additional circumstances exist indicating
that this state of affairs is likely to persist for a significant
portion of the repayment period of the student loans; and (3) that the
debtor has made good faith efforts to repay the loans. For the reasons
set forth in the district court's order, we adopt this analysis. The
first part of this test has been applied frequently as the minimum
necessary to establish "undue hardship." See, e.g., Bryant
v. Pennsylvania Higher Educ. Assistance Agency (In re Bryant), 72
B.R. 913, 915 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1987); North Dakota State Bd. of Higher
Educ. v. Frech (In re Frech), 62 B.R. 235 (Bankr.D.Minn.1986); Marion
v. Pennsylvania Higher Educ. Assistance Agency (In re Marion), 61
B.R. 815 (Bankr.W.D.Pa.1986). Requiring such a showing comports with
common sense as well.
The further showing required by part two of the test is also
reasonable in light of the clear congressional intent exhibited in
section 523(a)(8) to make the discharge of student loans more
difficult than that of other nonexcepted debt. Predicting future
income is, as the district court noted, problematic. Requiring
evidence not only of current inability to pay but also of additional,
exceptional circumstances, strongly suggestive of continuing inability
to repay over an extended period of time, more reliably guarantees
that the hardship presented is "undue."
[4] Under the test proposed by the district court, Brunner has not
established her eligibility for a discharge of her student loans based
on "undue hardship." The record demonstrates no "additional
circumstances" indicating a likelihood that her current inability to
find any work will extend for a significant portion of the loan
repayment period. She is not disabled, nor elderly, and she has
-- so far as the record discloses -- no dependents. No evidence
was presented indicating a total foreclosure of job prospects in
her area of training. In fact, at the time of the hearing, only ten
months had elapsed since Brunner's graduation from her Master's
program. Finally, as noted by the district court, Brunner filed for
the discharge within a month of the date the first payment of her
loans came due. Moreover, she did so without first requesting a
deferment of payment, a less drastic remedy available to those unable
to pay because of prolonged unemployment. Such conduct does not
evidence a good faith attempt to repay her student loans.
It is true, however, that considerable time has elapsed since the
original filing of Chapter 7 proceedings, and even since the hearing
before the bankruptcy judge. We note that Judge Haight's order was
without prejudice to Brunner's seeking relief pursuant to
R.Bankr.P. 4007(a), (b).
Judgment affirmed.
District Court Reverses Lower Court
46 B.R. 752
12 Collier Bankr.Cas.2d 137, 23 Ed. Law Rep. 573, Bankr. L. Rep. P 70,278
United States District Court,
S.D. New York.
In re Marie BRUNNER, Debtor.
Marie BRUNNER, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
NEW YORK STATE HIGHER EDUCATION SERVICES
CORPORATION, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 83 Civ. 4588-CSH.
February 21, 1985
Debtor sought discharge of guaranteed student loans. The
Bankruptcy Court, Howard Schwartzberg, J., entered oral
decision discharging the loans, and New York State Higher
Education Services Corporation appealed. The District
Court, Haight, J., held that evidence was insufficient to
support finding that failure to discharge debtor's student
loans would impose "undue hardship," and thus, it was error
for Bankruptcy Court to discharge the loans.
Reversed.
Barbara C. North, Albany, N.Y., for defendant-appellant.
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
HAIGHT, District Judge:
This is an appeal from an April 12, 1983 oral decision of Hon. Howard
Schwartzberg, Bankruptcy Judge, discharging appellee Marie Brunner's
student loans pursuant to 11 USC 523(a)(8)(B). Section 523(a)(8)(A) of
the Bankruptcy Code, 11 USC 523(a)(8)(A), declares such loans
nondischargeable for five years after they first come due, but
523(a)(8)(B) creates an exception to the general rule if the failure
to discharge would "impose an undue hardship on the debtor and the
debtor's dependents." Judge Schwartzberg found such undue hardship and
discharged appellee's student loans. Appellant New York State Higher
Education Services Corp. ("HESC"), guarantor of the loans, contends
that this was error.
Appellee received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1979 and a
Master's degree in Social Work in May, 1982.
Approximately seven months after receiving her Master's
degree appellee filed for personal bankruptcy, and her
outstanding debts, exclusive of approximately $9,000 in
student loans, were discharged. Two months later, upon
expiration of the nine month grace period suspending
repayment of the student loans incurred during her
undergraduate and graduate education, appellee filed this
adversary action seeking discharge of her accumulated
student loans. Following a brief oral hearing at which
appellee described her shaky finances and her unsuccessful
efforts to find work following her graduation, Judge
Schwartzberg issued a decision from the bench discharging
the loans. HESC, which had assumed the loans from Anchor
Savings Bank following appellee's default, takes this appeal
from that finding. Appellee's counsel below has apparently
deserted her, for no responsive brief was filed on her behalf.
It is assumed that she opposes the appeal.
I.
[1] "Undue hardship" is undefined in the Bankruptcy Code. The
existence of the adjective "undue" indicates that Congress viewed
garden-variety hardship as insufficient excuse for a discharge of
student loans, but the statute otherwise gives no hint of the phrase's
intended meaning. The question has produced a daunting proliferation
of decisions in the Bankruptcy Courts, but there is little appellate
authority.[FN1] The statutory history has thus provided the lodestone
for most interpretations.
FN1. The sole authority from the Courts of
Appeals appears to be In re Andrews, 661 F.2d 702
(8th Cir.1981); the only published decision from
the district courts is a summary affirmance, In re
Wells v. People ex rel. Illinois State Scholarship
Commission, 37 B.R. 687 (N.D.Ill.1984).
Congress itself had little to say on the subject. The initial House
bill deleted any reference to student loans, while the Senate bill
included language similar to that present in the final bill. See
H.R. 8200, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. (1977), reprinted in Collier on
Bankruptcy, Appendix 3 (15th Ed.1979), at III-1 (hereafter "Collier");
S. 2266, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. (1978), reprinted in Collier, supra,
Appendix 3, at VII-1, 417. The Senate Report which accompanied the
bill, however, is mute on the issue of undue hardship, noting merely
that the bill "follows generally current law and excepts from
discharge student loans until such loans have been due and owing for
five years." The final compromise bill accepted the Senate's language,
but the report of the compromise committee -- printed only as the
remarks of the two Congressional sponsors of the bill -- again ignores
undue hardship. See, e.g., 124 Cong.Rec.H. 11096, 95th Cong., 2d
Sess. (daily ed. Sept. 28, 1978), reprinted in Collier,supra, Appendix
3, at IX-101.
The phrase "undue hardship" was lifted verbatim from the draft bill
proposed by the Commission on the Bankruptcy Laws of the United States
("the Commission"). The Commission's report provides some inkling of
its intent in creating the exception, intent which in the absence of
any contrary indication courts have imputed to Congress. The
Commission noted the reason for the Code provision: a "rising
incidence of consumer bankruptcies of former students motivated
primarily to avoid payment of educational loan debts." Report of the
Commission on the Bankruptcy Laws of the United States, House
Doc. No. 93- 137, Pt. I, 93d Cong., 1st Sess. (1973) at 140 n. 14,
reprinted in Collier, supra, Appendix 2, at PI-i. This "rising
incidence" contravened the general policy that "a loan ... that
enables a person to earn substantially greater income over his working
life should not as a matter of policy be dischargeable before he has
demonstrated that for any reason he is unable to earn sufficient
income to maintain himself and his dependents and to repay the
educational debt." Id. at 140, n. 15. The Commission implemented this
policy by delaying dischargeability for five years, a time period
which, it was anticipated, "gives the debtor an opportunity to try to
meet his payment obligation." After five years, the exception is
lifted in recognition of the fact that "in some circumstances the debtor, because of factors beyond
his reasonable control, may be unable to earn an income adequate both
to meet the living costs of himself and his dependents and to make the
educational debt payments." Id. at 140, n. 16. As a calculation
of "undue hardship," the Commission envisioned a determination of whether the
amount and reliability of income and other wealth which the debtor
could reasonably be expected to receive in the future could maintain
the debtor and his or her dependents at a minimal standard of living
as well as pay off the student loans. Id. at 140-41, n. 17.
Most courts have accepted that
a debtor must at least satisfy the "minimal standard of living" test
before a discharge of his or her student loans will be granted.
See, e.g., In re Johnson, 5 B.C.D. 532, 537 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1979); In re
Andrews, 661 F.2d 702, 704 (8th Cir.1981). That is, before receiving a
discharge of student loans the debtor is required to demonstrate that,
given his or her current income and expenses, the necessity of making
the monthly loan payment will cause his or her standard of living to
fall below a "minimal" level. Indeed, if the calculation of
future earnings and expenses were an exact science, a similar showing
extended into the future might be all that would be necessary to
justify discharge. After all, it is not unreasonable to hold that committing the debtor to
a life of poverty for the term of the loan -- generally ten years --
imposes "undue" hardship.
Predicting the future, however, is never so easy. Minimum necessary
future expenses may be ascertained with some precision from an
extrapolation of present needs, but unpredictable changes in
circumstances such as illness, marriage, or childbirth may quickly
wreak havoc with such a budget. Even more problematic is the
calculation of future income. It is the nature of 523(a)(8)(B) applications that they are
made by individuals who have only recently ended their
education. Their earning potential is substantially untested, and
because they are inexperienced they are in all likelihood at the nadir
of their earning power. They may, like appellee, have had difficulty
in securing employment immediately after graduation. Extrapolation of
their current earnings is likely to underestimate substantially their
earning power over the whole term of loan repayment.
It is no doubt for this reason that many courts have required more
than a showing on the basis of current finances that loan repayment
will be difficult or impossible. Perhaps the best articulation of this
doctrine is that of Judge Lifland of the Bankruptcy Court of this
district, who wrote that "dischargeability of student loans should be based upon the
certainty of hopelessness, not simply a present inability to fulfill
financial commitment." In re Briscoe, 16 B.R. 128, 131
(Bankr.S.D.N.Y.1981).[FN2] Stated otherwise, the debtor has been
required to demonstrate not
only a current inability to pay but additional circumstances which
strongly suggest that the current inability to pay will extend for a
significant portion of the repayment period of the loan.
FN2. This position has gained a number of
adherents. See, e.g., In re Moorman, 44 B.R. 135,
137 (Bankr.W.D.Ky.1984); In re Reid, 39 B.R. 24,
26 (Bankr.E.D.Tenn.1984); In re Love, 33 B.R.
753, 755 (Bankr.E.D.Va.1983); In re Holzer, 33
B.R. 627, 632 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.1983) (Berk, B.J.);
In re Lezer, 21 B.R. 783, 788
(Bankr.N.D.N.Y.1982).
In addition to Judge Lifland's language, this test has been formulated as the
necessity of showing of "unique" or "exceptional"
circumstances. See, e.g., In re Densmore, 8 B.R. 308, 309
(Bankr.N.D.Ga.1979); In re Rappaport, 16 B.R. 615, 617
(Bankr.D.N.J.1981). Such circumstances have been found most frequently
as a result of illness,
e.g., In re Norman, 25 B.R. 545, 550 (Bankr.S.D.Cal.1982), a lack of usable job skills,
e.g., In re Seibert, 10 B.R. 704 (Bankr.S.D.Ohio 1981), the existence of a large number of
dependents, In re Clay, 12 B.R. 251 (Bankr.N.D.Iowa 1981), or a
combination of these. In re Diaz, 5 B.R. 253 (Bankr.W.D.N.Y.1980);
Shoberg v. Minnesota Higher Education Coordinating Council, 41
B.R. 684, 687 (Bankr.D.Minn.1984); In re Dresser, 33 B.R. 63
(Bankr.D.Me.1983).
[2][3] Some courts, following the lead of In re Johnson, supra, 5
B.C.D. at 740, have required a showing of "good faith" prior to
discharge. There is no specific authority for this requirement, but
the need for some showing of this type may be inferred from comments
of the Commission report. In discussing the discharge of loans after
five years, when a showing of undue hardship is no longer required,
the Commission noted that such
discharge is fair because the debtor may be unable to repay his or her
debts due to "factors beyond his reasonable control." Report,
supra, at 140 n. 16. If
external circumstances were seen as justifying discharge after five
years, it is likely that only such circumstances should be permitted
to justify discharge prior to that time. The propriety of a
requirement of good faith is further emphasized by the stated purpose
for 523(a)(8): to forestall students, who frequently have a large
excess of liabilities over assets solely because of their student
loans, from abusing the bankruptcy system to shed these loans.
Id. at 140, n. 14.[FN3] Thus
it is proper to require a debtor to show that he or she has made good
faith efforts to repay the loan and that the forces preventing
repayment are truly beyond his or her reasonable control. See
In re Rappaport, supra, 16 B.R. at 617.
FN3. In connection with the showing of good faith and circumstances
beyond the control of the debtor several courts have permitted debtors
to discharge their loans upon a showing that the education for which
the loans paid has been of little use to them. See, e.g., In re
Littell, 6 B.R. 85 (Bankr.D.Or.1980); In re Connolly, 29 B.R. 978, 982
(Bankr.D.Fla.1983); In re Powelson, 25 B.R. 274, 276
(Bankr.D.Neb.1982). Consideration of this factor is not only improper,
it is antithetical to the spirit of the guaranteed loan program. As
described in more detail infra, the loan program grants aid regardless
of the financial stability of the debtor or the wisdom of his or her
individual choice to pursue further education. Consideration of the
"value" of the education in making a decision to discharge turns the
government into an insurer of educational value. Those students who
make wise choices prosper; those who do not seek to discharge their
loans in bankruptcy. This is wholly improper.
The courts which consider this factor seem to view it as a way to
punish institutions for forcing on students loans which are not in
their best interests. See, e.g., In re Powelson, supra, 25 B.R. at
275. Regardless of whether such an attitude is proper, the courts'
chosen remedy is ineffectual. The burden is borne not by the
institution but by taxpayers, who absorb the cost of the default. As
noted in Powelson, a student loan is an investment, but it is for the
borrower, not the taxpayers, to evaluate the wisdom of the investment
and bear the risks and burden if the investment proves improvident.
The effect of these requirements is to make student loans a very
difficult burden to shake without actually paying them off. While this
result may seem draconian, it plainly serves the purposes of the
guaranteed student loan program. When making such loans, the
government (as guarantor) is unable to behave like ordinary commercial
lenders, who may, after investigating their borrowers' financial
status and prospects, choose to deny as well as grant credit and may
adjust the interest rate which they charge according to their judgment
as to the likelihood of repayment. The government has no such
luxury. It offers loans at a fixed rate of interest, and it does so
almost without regard for creditworthiness. Indeed, because it bases
its loan decisions in part on student need, it arguably offers loans
selectively to the worst credit risks.
Because of this enlightened social policy, those whose past work or
credit record might foreclose them from the commercial loan market are
able to obtain credit at subsidized rates to advance their
education. Those who might obtain loans only at exhorbitant rates are
similarly able to obtain low cost, deferred loans. In return for this
largesse -- and it is undeniable that guaranteed student loans have
extended higher education to thousands who would otherwise have been
forced to forego college or vocational training -- the government
exacts a quid pro quo. Through 523(a)(8) it commits the student to
repayment regardless of his or her subsequent economic
circumstances. In return for giving aid to individuals who represent
poor credit risks, it strips these individuals of the refuge of
bankruptcy in all but extreme circumstances. See Johnson v. Edinboro
State College, 728 F.2d 163, 164 (3d Cir.1984) (Section 523(a)(8)
represents a conscious Congressional choice to override the normal
"fresh start" goal of bankruptcy). This is a bargain each student loan
borrower strikes with the government. Like all bargains, it entails
risk. It is for each student individually to decide whether the risks
of future hardship outweigh the potential benefits of a
deferred-payment education. [FN4]
FN4. The government is not out to make life as
unpleasant as possible for borrowers who suffer
financial difficulties. Deferment and cancellation
are available under appropriate circumstances. See
34 C.F.R. 674.34, 674.34a, 674.51-59 (1984)
(National Direct Student Loan program).
[4] In conclusion, obtaining a discharge of student loans in
bankruptcy prior to five years after they first come due requires
a three-part showing: 1) that
the debtor cannot, based on current income and expenses, maintain a
"minimal" standard of living for himself or herself and his or her
dependents if forced to repay the loans, 2) that this state of affairs
is likely to persist for a significant portion of the repayment period
of the student loan, and 3) that the debtor has made good faith
efforts to repay the loans.
II.
It remains to apply these principles of law in review of the
decision at hand. Under Bankruptcy Rule 8013, the "clearly
erroneous" standard of review is applicable to findings of
fact by a Bankruptcy Judge, but "the district court is not
bound by the clearly erroneous standard when reviewing the
bankruptcy court's application of a legal standard to facts
reasonably found." In re Penn-Dixie Industries, Inc., 9 B.R.
936, 938 (S.D.N.Y.1981).
The debtor's testimony at the hearing below revealed the
following. Appellee gained a Bachelor's degree in
Psychology in 1979 and a Master's degree in Social Work in
1982. Her age was not specified, but she first entered
college in 1972. She has supported herself since that time
through a variety of full- and part-time jobs, student loans,
and educational stipends. She has no dependents. During the
decade prior to the hearing, her greatest annual income was
$9,000.
No specific testimony about appellee's annual expenses was elicited
other than that her rent is $200 per month. At the time of the hearing
she was receiving $258 per month in public assistance, $49 per month
in food stamps, and Medicaid. She had been receiving this aid for
approximately four months prior to the hearing. Her testimony as to
her source of support prior to that time was vague. At the time of the
hearing, she possessed a bank account holding $200, but two months
prior to the hearing she withdrew $2,400 from her savings to purchase
a used car. Upon her filing for bankruptcy four months prior to the
hearing, her student loans constituted 80% of her total indebtedness.
Appellee testified that she had sent out "over a hundred" resumes in
search of employment in her chosen field of work but was
unsuccessful. She noted that many of her classmates found themselves
similarly unable to find such jobs. The extent to which she had
attempted to find work outside her field was unclear. In response to
her lawyer's inquiry as to whether she had sought clerical or other
jobs, she replied, "I don't have secretarial skills, but I have
applied for any position that I could find." She did not recount any
specific jobs which she had sought and been refused. On
cross-examination she conceded that she had done clerical work in the
past. Although appellee was seeing a therapist for treatment of
anxiety and depression due in part to her unemployment, she testified
that she was capable of working.
In a brief oral ruling, the bankruptcy judge found that "she is not
presently employed; prospects in the future do not look bright
... there does not appear to be any great demand for psychologists or
social workers, or at least ... there is not anything available. She
has a psychological impairment, as well as a lack of future employment
opportunity.... I find ... that the paucity of income that the debtor
receives from public assistance would not be available to her to
repay, and it would work an undue hardship upon her to have to dip
into those funds." As a consequence, the judge discharged the loans.
[5] At the outset, it appears that the judge's finding that appellee
possesses a "psychological impairment" is clearly erroneous. Although
appellee testified that she was consulting a therapist, there is no
evidence in the record that her depression and anxiety impair her
capacity to work. She has no "impairment" in any relevant sense of the
word.
[6] Even in the absence of this finding, appellee appears to be a
woman who is unlikely to find a job in her chosen field of work in the
near future. However, she is an apparently healthy, presumably
intelligent, and well-educated woman. Although she claimed to be
unable to find any other type of work, the evidence presented at the
hearing is too thin to support a finding that her chances of finding
any work at all are slim, and I do not read the bankruptcy judge's
decision as so finding. She has no dependents or any other
extraordinary burdens which would impair her finding other work, or,
once it is found, make it unlikely that she can both support herself
and pay off her student loans.
In short, appellee at most proved that she is currently -- or was at
the time of the hearing -- unable both to meet her minimal expenses
and pay off her loans. [FN5] This alone cannot support a finding that
the failure to discharge her loans will impose undue hardship. See,
e.g., In re Briscoe, supra, 16 B.R. at 131; In re Henry, 4 B.R. 495
(Bankr.S.D.N.Y.1980); Panteli v. New York State Higher Education
Services Corp., 41 B.R. 856, 858 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y.1984). Nothing in the
record supports a finding that it is likely that her current inability
to find any work will extend for a significant part of the repayment
period of the loan or that she has "a total incapacity now and in the
future to pay [her] debts for reasons not within [her] control." In re
Rappaport, supra, 16 B.R. at 617. She is skilled, apparently capable,
well, and without dependents. Nor has she adequately demonstrated
good faith in attempting to pay off her loans. She filed for discharge
within a month of the date the first payment of her loans came
due. She has made virtually no attempt to repay, nor has she requested
a deferment of payment, a remedy open to those unable to pay because
of prolonged unemployment. See, e.g., 34 C.F.R. 674.34(d)(2)
(1984). Inasmuch as this is her primary reason for requesting
discharge, initial resort to the less drastic remedy of deferment
would have been more appropriate than bankruptcy.
FN5. Even this is uncertain. The bankruptcy judge failed to require,
and appellee failed to submit, a statement of expenses and income. The
testimony at the hearing, accepted at face value, indicates that
appellee had been surviving for several months on monthly income of
$107 in food stamps and cash above the cost of her rent. From this
$107 appellee must have paid for food, clothing, utilities,
entertainment, and the costs of registering, insuring, and maintaining
a $2,400 car. It seems incredible that this sum could stretch so far,
indicating that appellee had sources of income which she failed to
reveal. It must be remembered that although appellee's budget was this
thin, she nevertheless felt financially secure enough to spend her
life savings on a car one to two months prior to the hearing.
It was error for the bankruptcy court to discharge appellee's student
loans. The decision of the bankruptcy judge is reversed. In compliance
with the suggestion of In re Andrews, supra, 661 F.2d at 705 n. 5, the
action is remanded with the direction that appellee's loans be
declared nondischargeable without prejudice to her seeking such relief
again pursuant to Rule 409(a)(1), R.Bankr.P.
It is SO ORDERED.
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