Berchtold v. Educational Credit Management Corp. (In Re Berchtold)

328 B.R. 808, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 1585, 2005 WL 2014437
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Idaho
DecidedJuly 26, 2005
Docket19-40175
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 328 B.R. 808 (Berchtold v. Educational Credit Management Corp. (In Re Berchtold)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Idaho primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berchtold v. Educational Credit Management Corp. (In Re Berchtold), 328 B.R. 808, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 1585, 2005 WL 2014437 (Idaho 2005).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

JIM D. PAPPAS, Bankruptcy Judge.

Plaintiff Robert Berchtold and his wife Sandra Berchtold are Chapter 7 debtors (hereafter jointly referred to as “Debtors”). In this adversary proceeding, Plaintiff seeks to discharge approximately $120,000 in student loan debt owed to Defendant Educational Credit Management Corporation. The central issue in the action is whether repaying this debt would represent an undue hardship for Debtors. 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8).

The Court conducted a trial on June 2, 2005. After considering the evidence and testimony presented; the arguments of the parties, including post-trial submissions; and the relevant legal authorities, this Memorandum of Decision constitutes the Court’s findings of fact, conclusions of law and disposition of the issues. Fed. R. Bankr.P. 7052.

FACTS 1

A. Mr. Berchtold’s background, employment history and health.

Robert Berchtold is fifty-two years old and lives in Idaho Falls, Idaho, with his wife Sandra Berchtold and their eleven year old daughter.

In 1995, at age forty-two, Mr. Berchtold retired from military service after having served almost twenty years. Ex. 1. Mr. Berchtold described his work in the military as being primarily combat related, involving the use of weapons and explosives. He feels he did not acquire any marketable job skills in the service, although he was able to obtain a college degree in general studies.

At the time of his discharge, Mr. Berch-told was stationed in Kentucky. He initially went to work in a factory but, six months later, decided to pursue a career as a chiropractor. Towards that end, he enrolled in a community college to take prerequisite courses. Then, in the summer of 1998, Mr. Berchtold enrolled at Palmer *812 College of Chiropractic in Iowa. Unfortunately, after three unsuccessful attempts to pass a required neuroanatomy course, the college declined to allow Mr. Berchtold to continue his studies beyond the winter term of 2002. Mr. Berchtold financed his chiropractic studies with student loans, with the balance now amounting to $120,171. Ex. A.

After leaving Palmer College, Mr. Berchtold worked as a pizza delivery driver and eventually started working in the home repair field. Despite some limited success, in the summer of 2003, Debtors decided to move from Iowa to Idaho Falls to be closer to their family. In Idaho, Mr. Berchtold applied for and worked at a variety of jobs. Exs. 10, 12. Between September 2003 and July 2004, he worked a few days on a production line, but experienced vertigo and nausea from the motion of the line; he temporarily replaced an ill driver at a transportation company, but did not continue after the regular driver returned to work; and he worked as a satellite dish installer until, after a few months, he felt that the work was too demanding given his physical ailments. After leaving his job installing satellite dishes, Mr. Berchtold returned to the home repair field, ultimately electing to start his own sheet rock installation business despite his health problems.

Regarding those health problems, in 2002, Mr. Berchtold submitted a disability claim to the Department of Veterans Affairs. The VA concluded that Mr. Berch-told had an aggregate 60% disability, Ex. 6, attributable to a degenerative disc disease of his spine (10%); recurrent left ankle problems (10%); tinnitus (a ringing in the ears) (10%); diabetes (20%); and peripheral neuropathy for each extremity (10%). In addition to these problems, Mr. Berchtold complains of asthma, bad memory and extreme physical fatigue if he performs manual labor for more than six hours per day, four days per week. Mr. Berchtold restricts his sheet rock installation work to accommodate his physical limitations.

B. Mrs. Berchtold’s background, employment history and health.

Mrs. Berchtold is forty-eight years old. She has been a registered nurse since 1987, and currently works as a supervising psychiatric nurse at the Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center. While Mrs. Berchtold testified she suffers from a few medical difficulties, she is being treated for those problems and they do not appear to affect her ability to work as a nurse.

C. Debtors’ income.

Mrs. Berchtold’s net monthly income is $3,076. She testified that she anticipates there will be no increases in her income other than occasional, small cost-of-living adjustments. 2

*813 Mr. Berchtold receives cash military-benefits and earns a modest amount installing sheet rock. He receives three separate monthly payments from the government for his military benefits, which total $1,322.72. 3

Mr. Berchtold testified that he generates net profits from his business of just over $500 per month. In his pre-trial brief, Docket No. 23, Mr. Berchtold again claims he earns net income of $556 per month. These representations are somewhat inconsistent with Debtors’ 2004 tax returns, Ex. K, which disclose that Mr. Berchtold earned only $3,000 in gross revenues from his sheet rock business for the approximately eight months that he operated that business in 2004. Mr. Berchtold also testified that his business is seasonal and that he will be busier during the summer months. Considering this disconso-nant evidence, the Court is persuaded that, more probably than not, Mr. Berchtold’s net monthly income from his business is $556. Therefore, the Court finds that Mr. Berchtold’s total net monthly income is $1,878.72, and Debtors’ combined net monthly income is $4,954.72. 4

D. Debtors’ expenses.

Debtors report monthly expenses of $4,448.04 via a revised Schedule J that they updated to reflect changes in their expenses occurring since they filed for bankruptcy. Defendant presented no persuasive evidence to contradict these figures, and so the Court accepts that Debtors’ actual monthly expenses are $4,448. But Defendant challenges the propriety of several expense items, and the Court has independent concerns regarding others. See Twitchell v. Educ. Credit Mgmt. Corp. (In re Twitchell), 04.2 I.B.C.R. 66, 68 (Bankr.D.Idaho 2004) (examining a debt- or’s expenses in a § 523(a)(8) action based upon the Court’s independent skepticism). The Court will address these issues below.

E. Mr. Berchtold’s efforts to pay the student loan debt.

Mr. Berchtold testified that immediately following his departure from Palmer College, he made a few payments towards his outstanding student loans. Defendant’s records confirm that Mr. Berchtold made two payments of approximately $500 in January and February of 2003, and one other payment of approximately $70 in April 2004. Ex. E. Mrs.

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328 B.R. 808, 2005 Bankr. LEXIS 1585, 2005 WL 2014437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berchtold-v-educational-credit-management-corp-in-re-berchtold-idb-2005.