Chase v. U.S. Department of Education

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maine
DecidedDecember 12, 2024
Docket23-01005
StatusUnknown

This text of Chase v. U.S. Department of Education (Chase v. U.S. Department of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chase v. U.S. Department of Education, (Me. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT DISTRICT OF MAINE In re: Chapter 7 Adam David Chase, Case No. 23-10093 Debtor

Adam David Chase,

Plaintiff v. Adv. Proc. No. 23-1005 U.S. Department of Education & Education Credit Management Corporation, Defendants

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION Citing 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8), Adam David Chase sought a determination that excepting his student loans from discharge would impose an undue hardship on him. The evidence adduced at trial was insufficient to meet Chase’s burden of proof. For that reason, a judgment on his complaint will enter in favor of the defendant, Education Credit Management Corporation. I. Procedural History Chase filed a chapter 7 petition in 2023, and then received a discharge a few months later. In the meantime, he commenced this adversary proceeding. AfterECMC was substituted as the real party in interest and two other parties were removed, ECMC and the U.S. Department of Education remained as defendants. [Dkt. No. 15]. Withthe consent of the DOE, the Court determined that excepting the debt to DOE from Chase’s chapter 7 discharge would impose an undue hardship on him. [Dkt. No. 25]. The court conducteda trial on Chase’s complaint against ECMC in September 2024. II. Findings of Fact The record in this proceeding consists of: (a) the stipulations in the parties’ joint pretrial memorandum [Dkt. No. 36]; (b) an oral stipulation read into the record at trial; (c) the exhibits

admitted at trial; and (d) the testimony of Chase and one other witness at trial. The following findings of fact are derived from that record. Chase is 46 years old and has two post-secondary degrees. The original principal balance of all of his student loans was $142,572. When he filed this proceeding, the principal and accrued interest totaled roughly $200,000. The balance previously owed to DOE was approximately $120,000. Now, only the ECMC student loan debt remains. As of June 5, 2024, the total amount of the four debts owed to ECMC was nearly $80,000, broken down as follows: (1) $40,671.75; (2) $1,800.45; (3) $13,503.42; and (4) $23,432.36. The largest loan carries an interest rate of $4.75%, while the others accrue interest at 6.8%.

Chase graduated from college with a degree in economics in 2006. He went to law school at the University of Maine School of Law in 2008 and graduated three years later. During law school, he had two unpaid internships, including one with the Maine District Court. Chase passed the bar exam in the summer of 2012. Before he obtained his license, Chase performed legal research on a contract basis for a firm in Brunswick, Maine. In January 2013, Chase was admitted to practice law in Maine. At some point that same year, Chase applied to work as a paralegal. He also obtained his certification to receive court-appointed cases through the Maine Commission on Indigent Legal Services. At that time, the rate for court-appointed work was $50 per hour. In February 2013, Chase created a partnership with another lawyer in Brunswick. They parted ways five months later after representing only a handful of clients. Chase then practiced law on his own in Auburn, Maine. This experience was extremely stressful and demandingfor him. At some point in 2014 or 2015, Chase decided to stop pursuing the practice of law. He found the work too stressful, and he was not making enough money. Over the course of his two years in practice, his “after-tax”income was approximately $10,000.1

In 2015, Chase moved to New York City to live near his brother, who was a producer in the fashion industry. Chase began working in that industry too, designing sets and later working as a project manager for a company that participated in New York Fashion Week. He lived in New York from 2015 to 2020. During that six-year period, he reports that his average annual “after-tax” income was $50,000. In one year, he made $92,000; another year, he made $77,000. Chase returned to Maine in March 2020. He currently lives in the small town of West Forks, and he intends to stay there for the long term. He has a community of many friends in the area and enjoys the recreational opportunities available to him there. Since Chase moved back to Maine, he has been working as a carpenter, remodeling

houses, and building them from scratch. Over the last four years in this line of work, his average annual “after-tax” income has been about $20,000 per year. In 2023, Chase reported gross receipts of $28,820 on Schedule C to his federal income tax return and deducted business expenses of $8,263, leaving him a net profit of $20,557. In 2022, he reported gross receipts of $23,585 and deducted business expenses of $9,818, leaving him a net profit of $13,767. And, in 2021, Chase reported gross receipts of $37,234 and deducted business expenses of $12,200,

1 When Chase described his income at trial, he clarified that the figures represented his disposable “after- tax” income. leaving him a net profit of $25,034. From 2021-2023, this net profit was the only income reported on Chase’s federal income tax returns. Chase has worked as a carpenter off and on since he graduated from high school. During college and law school, he worked in the construction industry part-time. In recent years, Chase has generally contracted with homeowners directly and tackled projects with clients who want to

be involved in building themselves. Chase charges $35 per hour for his time, and his clients buy the materials directly. Because he often works outside, Chase works more in the summer and less in the winter. He currently has six to twelve months of work lined up. Chase has no difficulty finding work where he lives. He does not advertise his services. In his chapter 7 case, Chase listed very few assets. He drives an older vehicle and has about $15,000 saved for retirement. He filed his chapter 7 petition hoping to discharge his student loans; he has no other debt. His schedules reveal that, as of the petition date, he had monthly income from operating a business of about $1,500. However, he reports that his monthly income averaged over 2021, 2022, and 2023 was closer to $1,650. Chase pays a

longtime friend $800 per month to rent a loft-style apartment on the banks of the Dead River. He has looked for other housing and found there are not many other rental properties in the area. His other expenses are relatively modest. He receives assistance from his parents in the amount of $350-$600 per month, leaving him with no monthly net income.2 He has no dependents. Chase is a competent outdoorsman, but he has not sought employment in that industry because he believes that the work would not be lucrative. He has never sought employment in

2 At trial, Chase offered an income and expense analysis that he created, as Plaintiff’s Exhibit 4A. ECMC objected to part of the exhibit, and the Court took that objection under advisement. Although the objection was vague, in context, it is best understood as an objection under Fed. R. Evid. 901(a). The objection is hereby overruled: there was sufficient evidence in the record from which the Court could find that the parts of Exhibit 4A that ECMC objected to were what Chase claimed they were. the economics field. Chase has never looked for legal work outside of Maine, and hehas not looked for work in that fieldsince he returned to Maine. He has never applied to work as a legal assistant or a title researcher. Chase is not currently licensed to practice law and has not been for ten years. To renew his license, he would need to take CLE courses and pay licensing dues. Chase finds that prospect daunting and is uncertain he would be marketable. He has

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