Brown v. USA Group Loan Services (In Re Brown)

234 B.R. 104, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 631, 1999 WL 343634
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedMay 26, 1999
Docket18-21078
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 234 B.R. 104 (Brown v. USA Group Loan Services (In Re Brown)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. USA Group Loan Services (In Re Brown), 234 B.R. 104, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 631, 1999 WL 343634 (Mo. 1999).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

JERRY VENTERS, Bankruptcy Judge.

Kimberly M. Brown, the Debtor in these Chapter 7 proceedings, filed a Complaint seeking a discharge, on the basis of undue hardship, of a consolidated student loan that has a balance of more than $54,000.00. United Student Aid Funds, Inc., the holder of the consolidated student loan, opposed the discharge and filed a Counterclaim seeking judgment against Brown for the balance owed. For the reasons set out below, the Court finds that excepting the consolidated student loan from discharge would place an undue hardship on the Debtor and her three minor children and therefore will grant the Debtor a discharge on the basis of her Complaint and will deny United Student Aid Funds the relief requested in its Counterclaim.

This Memorandum Opinion and Order constitutes the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law. Bankruptcy Rule 7052.

FACTS

While attending college at National College in Kansas City between September 1988 and June 1992, Ms. Brown (“Brown” or “Debtor”) obtained a series of small student loans that enabled her to attend college and obtain a bachelors degree in business administration. Just before graduating from college in 1992, on the advice of a financial counselor at the college, Brown consolidated all of her student loans into a single loan of $30,772.00, because she was advised that it would be easier for her to repay a single consolidated loan than it would be to repay several smaller loans. The parties stipulated that the amount now owed on the student loan debt is $54,048.84 (as of February 28, *106 1999) and that interest is accruing on the balance at the rate of $13.30 per day.

Brown had two small children when she began college in 1988, and a third child was born in 1991. Brown worked approximately 20 hours per week while she was attending college, in addition to caring for her children. Her husband (the father of the third child) abandoned her in early 1993, but Brown has not filed for a divorce.

Brown works as a secretary at the Kansas University Medical' Center in Kansas City, Kansas, where she does typing, filing, and other secretarial tasks. She began working at the Medical Center part-time in late 1987 and became a full-time employee in June 1992 after graduating from college. Over the years, Brown has had various part-time jobs at different times during the year, but she is not working part-time now because working part-time puts too much stress on her.

In 1997, Brown earned gross wages from the Medical Center of $18,327.23, and also earned about $1,400.00 working at two part-time jobs. In 1998, she had gross wages of $19,129.23 from the Medical Center and earned about $3,500.00 from her part-time jobs.

The Debtor has three sons, who were 6, 11, and 14 years old when the Debtor filed her bankruptcy petition on October 2, 1998. The monthly living expenses for Brown and her three sons were listed in Schedule J of the bankruptcy schedules as follows:

Rent or home mortgage payment $277.00
Utilities: Electricity and heating fuel 150.00
Water and sewer 40.00
Telephone 50.00
Cable TV 60.00
Food 450.00
Clothing 60.00
Laundry and dry cleaning 30.00
Medical and dental expenses 50.00
Transportation • 100.00
Recreation 40.00
Taxes: Personal Property License 25.00
Hair cuts, postage, mise. 50.00
Children’s school supplies, lunches, and activities 150.00
$1,532.00

Brown lives in government subsidized housing, and since the bankruptcy was filed, her rent has increased to $304.00 per month. She has also purchased a vehicle, a 1990 Ford Taurus, and she must pay $135.00 a month in a car payment and $50.00 a month for insurance on the car. Brown obtained a $3,000.00 loan at 8% interest to purchase the car. She drives the car back and forth to work and uses it to take her children to their activities and for other purposes.

Each of Brown’s three children has a different father. All of the fathers have been ordered to pay child support but have not been doing so. One father was ordered to pay child support of $83.00 per month, another father was ordered to pay child support of $150.00 a month, and the third father was ordered to pay $210.00 a month in child support. The Debtor admits that she is owed thousands of dollars in past-due child support, and she testified that she has tried to collect the child support through the Child Support Enforcement Unit and by taking action on her own, but has never been able to collect any significant amount of child support because the fathers usually quit their jobs when they are found and garnishments or executions are run.

One of Brown’s sons has been diagnosed as having attention deficit disorder, but he does not presently require medication. The children’s medical expenses are covered by Medicaid, and Brown has health insurance coverage through her employment, for which she pays at least a part of the premium. If Brown’s income were to increase significantly, she would possibly lose the Medicaid coverage for her children, and the amount of her subsidized rent would likely increase.

The Debtor testified that she has no prospects of promotion at her present employment and that, as a state employee, she receives only minimal pay increases each year, depending on state appropria *107 tions. Brown testified that she has applied for numerous jobs and has placed her resume on the Internet, but that she has never found any other jobs that would pay her significantly more than the job she presently has. She intends to sit for a Postal Service entry examination in June 1999, but she is not overly optimistic that she will obtain a Postal Service job. She has taken the examination once previously and scored in the 80s, but never received a call from the Postal Service about a job, and she believes that she would have to score above 90 before she would even be considered for employment there.

Brown tried once to repay her student loans, in 1993 or 1994, when she was living with her parents, but was unable to continue the payments. Brown testified that she had never been advised by USAF or anyone else holding the student loan that she might be eligible for a 25-year payment program because of her income and financial circumstances, and counsel for USAF acknowledged that it was most likely that USAF and other agencies or entities holding the loans had never advised the Debtor of such a repayment program.

DISCUSSION

Section 523(a)(8) of the Bankruptcy Code (11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8)) provides that educational or student loans are excepted from the general discharge provisions of the Code “unless excepting such debt from discharge ...

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234 B.R. 104, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 631, 1999 WL 343634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-usa-group-loan-services-in-re-brown-mowb-1999.