Carnduff v. United States Department of Education (In Re Carnduff)

367 B.R. 120, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 1249, 2007 WL 1119902
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 30, 2007
DocketBAP No. WW-06-1200-MoSPa. Bankruptcy No. 05-13455-SJS. Adversary No. A05-01201-SJS
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 367 B.R. 120 (Carnduff v. United States Department of Education (In Re Carnduff)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carnduff v. United States Department of Education (In Re Carnduff), 367 B.R. 120, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 1249, 2007 WL 1119902 (bap9 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

MONTALI, Bankruptcy Judge.

The bankruptcy court found that Brett Michael Carnduff (“Brett”) and Janeth Rey Carnduff (“Janeth”) (“Debtors”) will never be able to pay their student loan debt of over $350,000 unless one or both of them “wins the lottery.” Nevertheless, without deciding whether Debtors have made good faith efforts to repay their loans, the bankruptcy court held that it could not discharge any of their student loans under Section 523(a)(8) 1 because their earning capacity should improve in the future. We REVERSE and REMAND.

We publish to emphasize that the bankruptcy court has the power to grant a partial discharge of student loans even when the debtor’s earning capacity is expected to improve, if that improvement will be insufficient for the debtor to pay the full balance due without an undue hardship. However, in that event, the burden of proof remains with the debtor to establish undue hardship as to any portion of the debt to be discharged.

I. FACTS AND PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS

Each Debtor started off obtaining one degree and later switched fields and obtained one or more other degrees. Both attended Andrews University in Michigan, a private school (“Andrews”). Brett attended for about eight years and Janeth for nine, including some part-time enrollment.

In 2005, shortly after Brett obtained his last degree, Debtors filed their joint, voluntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition (Bk. No. 05-13455-SJS) and thereafter filed a “Complaint to Determine Dischargeability of A Debt (Student Loans)” (Adv. No. A05-01201-SJS) which named as defendants four private entities and the United States Department of Education (the “Government”). A default judgment was entered against all of the private entities *124 discharging over $215,000 of Debtors’ student loan debt.

Debtors’ remaining student loans are owed to the Government. Brett owed $190,872.06 and Janeth owed $168,872.98 as of the date of trial on January 31, 2006. The bankruptcy court found that Debtors’ combined take-home pay is about $5,111 per month. It made no findings as to Debtors’ expenses, but the Government concedes that Brett and Janeth cannot make the payments under their current ten-year repayment plan, which Debtors calculate at $2,138.59 per month for Brett and $1,889.79 per month for Janeth.

The Government argues that Debtors’ financial difficulty is temporary. Debtors are “fresh out of school,” have not “even started repaying the debt,” have “25 years of working left, both of them,” and, the Government argues, it “should at least be given the benefit of looking at their earning capacity for a few years.” Transcript, January 31, 2006, pp. 155:10-12, 157:14, 157:23-24. Debtors testified that their earning capacity is limited in their chosen fields, that they cannot find more remunerative work in other fields, and that then-financial circumstances will worsen because they have recently divorced and because for family reasons Brett can no longer move around the country for contract work and must accept regular employment at lower pay. The Government responded at trial that Debtors are not presently maximizing their income, that their income will increase in the future, and that meanwhile Debtors can use deferments or forbearances and can make payments consistent with their financial circumstances under an income contingent repayment plan (“ICRP”). The Government’s interrogatory responses, admitted at trial, describe plans with monthly payments ranging from $823.03 to $2,141.66 depending on assumptions about Debtors’ future income, interest rates, and repayment periods which can range from the current 10 years up to 25 or 30 years. Debtors do not dispute that they may qualify for an ICRP or other repayment plan but their attorney argued that they cannot afford even $200 per month. He also argued that, although Debtors might be eligible for debt forgiveness at the end of an ICRP or other plan, that would result in “a huge tax bite.” Transcript, January 31, 2006, p. 149:17-21.

Brett is healthy and was 34 years old as of the date of trial. He has a bachelor’s degree in technology in computer imaging with an emphasis in business and communications. Brett testified that he has not been able to get a job using that degree because his degree was awarded in 1997 and the relevant software programs are now completely different.

In addition, Brett holds a master’s degree in developmental and educational psychology with an emphasis on school psychology. He intended to obtain a Ph.D. in that field but testified that as a result of a loan consolidation program he lost funding to complete his Ph.D. Instead he obtained an Educational Specialist Degree which he describes as between a master’s and a Ph.D. Brett testified that because he does not have a Ph.D. he is not qualified for any work other than being a school psychologist except for teaching at a community college which would pay “much less” than his current employment. As of the date of trial he was earning a salary of somewhere between $45,000 and $50,000 per year.

Brett does not expect his future pay to increase by much. According to the pay scale set by the State of Washington, Brett testified, “I’m looking at $58,000 after 20 years of experience.” Transcript, January 31, 2006, p. 37:24-25. He added that Washington is “one of the highest paying *125 states in the United States for my job.” Id. p. 89:14-15.

Janeth is healthy and was 36 years old as of the date of trial. She has a bachelor of science degree with a major in medical technology but testified that she cannot be employed in that field because she never passed the test for certification as a medical technologist. She could have taken the test a third time within two years after graduation. If she failed again, though, she would have had to go back to school for about one and a half years. Even if she had passed the test she testified that she would only have earned $16 per hour as a medical technologist, which is less than what she makes now as an administrative assistant. Transcript, January 31, 2006, pp. 115:23-116:3, 119:9-120:14, 125:25-126:8. Instead of taking the test again Janeth stayed home with Debtors’ two children for three years without a paying job and then went back to graduate school on a part-time basis for four years.

Janeth earned a master’s degree in social work with an emphasis in community service. She testified, “I don’t have an internship, so that’s why I can’t get a job right now.” Transcript, January 31, 2006, p. 117:11-12. “[NJobody will hire me, because you need at least five years of experience” and “I don’t have any ... not even [an] internship.” Id. p. 128:1-7.

Janeth is presently employed as an administrative assistant earning $16.49 per hour. She works four days a week, typically for 32 hours, and takes Fridays off for religious reasons. She has the option to work for ten hours on the four days that she works but she chooses not to do so, both so that she can spend more time with her children and because the added child care expenses of working longer hours would exceed her added income. Transcript, January 31, 2006, pp. 109:5-110:15, 131:2-7,136:10-20.

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367 B.R. 120, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 1249, 2007 WL 1119902, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carnduff-v-united-states-department-of-education-in-re-carnduff-bap9-2007.