Edwards v. Navient Solutions, Inc. (In re Edwards)

561 B.R. 848
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas
DecidedNovember 22, 2016
DocketCase No. 15-22113-7; Adversary No. 15-6100
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 561 B.R. 848 (Edwards v. Navient Solutions, Inc. (In re Edwards)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards v. Navient Solutions, Inc. (In re Edwards), 561 B.R. 848 (Kan. 2016).

Opinion

Memorandum and Opinion Discharging Non-Stafford Portion of Navient Solutions, Inc. Student Loans

Janice Miller Karlin, United States Chief Bankruptcy Judge

This adversary proceeding is before the Court on Plaintiff/Debtor Paula Maxine Edwards’ complaint to discharge a portion of the student loans she owes Navient Solutions, Inc. (Navient) under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8).1 That statute generally states that educational loans are excepted from a Chapter 7 discharge unless the debt imposes “an undue hardship on the debtor and the debtor’s dependents.”

The Court conducted a trial and is now prepared to rule. Because the Court finds that Debtor has carried her burden to show repayment of the loans would create an undue hardship on her and her family, as required by § 523(a)(8), the Court grants judgment to Debtor, discharging the non-Stafford portion of the loans she owes Navient.

1. Background and Findings of Fact

Debtor filed her Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition in October 2015, and received her discharge in March 2016. At the time of filing, she had no secured debt, but scheduled nearly $188,000 of unsecured debt. Of this total, she claims about $151,000 in student loans. Prior to the trial on the claim against Navient, the Court granted summary judgment to the U.S. Department of Education (“DoEd”) on Debtor’s § 523(a)(8) claim against it, deciding for several reasons that the almost $72,000 of Debtor’s student loans owed to the DoEd were not dischargeable. One of the key reasons for this finding was. that DoEd offers a repayment plan (with a debt forgiveness component). The plan requires very small monthly payments, based on income, and Debtor agreed she could make the small payments.2

Debtor admitted at trial that she has very recently been accepted into an income based repayment program for those loans, and understands her monthly payment will be .somewhere between $20 and $115; the precise amount has not been determined. [852]*852The DoEd represented to the Court in its summary judgment motion—unopposed on this point—that Debtor would likely need to only pay approximately $21 a month so long as her current income and household size remained constant. The payment would increase, after the annually required certification, if her income increases or her expenses decrease as a result of a reduction of family size or for any other reason.3

Debtor is a thirty six year old single mother of two daughters who are fifteen and six years old. Neither Debtor nor her children suffer from any physical or mental disability or illness. She receives some child support from the father of her older child when he is working (about $200 a month), but receives none from the father of her younger child and does not expect to receive any. In an attempt to maximize her income, she has supplied information to child support collection personnel to aide in collecting support from him, but her efforts have been unsuccessful.

At the time she filed her bankruptcy, Debtor was driving a twelve year old car and had no car payment. Recently, however, the struts and transmission went out on that car and she needed to replace it. She apparently did not have the money for a down payment, as her parents both cosigned the note and loaned her the $1500 down payment required to purchase the used 2013 Nissan Altima. The car cost $14,700, and her monthly payments are $237.

In addition to now having a car payment, her car insurance increased; she testified it went from $53 per month to $119 per month.4 Because she had not predicted this increase in her vehicle insurance, Debtor tried to lower her monthly car payment by dropping the extended warranty she purchased with the car. When she learned it would not lower her payments (instead merely shortening the length of her loan), she did not pursue that option.

Debtor is in her fourth year as an elementary school teacher. She incurred her student loans while pursuing a bachelor’s degree in education from Newman University. She chose Newman University, a private college, despite its higher cost of attendance, because it offered a program with evening classes that allowed her to complete her degree while working full time so she could support her (then only) child. She used her student loans for tuition, books, and to pay living expenses not paid with her earnings as a paraprofessional. She did not study abroad or take any classes unnecessary to her degree.

Debtor’s annual salary is $35,300 for work performed during all but approximately 2 months a year. The income and expense schedules she filed with her petition indicate that she nets $2699.77 in income each month (consisting of $2085.69 net salary, $183 child support, and $431.08 in amortized tax refunds5) and $2698.33 in [853]*853expenses, leaving a net balance of $1.44. Her expenses include $500 a month for rent, $170 a month for cable, cell phones, and internet, $950 a month for food and housekeeping supplies for her household of three, and $150 a month for entertainment.

Regarding her food and housekeeping budget, Debtor testified that she and her daughters used to eat out two to three times a week, depending on her older child’s sports schedule. But she has already had to reduce this expense due to the added car and insurance expenses, and due to increased gas and maintenance expenses she now incurs due to her daughter borrowing her grandfather’s old pickup truck since recently reaching driving age.

Regarding her entertainment budget, Debtor testified that she takes only one vacation a year—an annual vacation to Branson with her extended family, which has been a family tradition since her childhood. Although her parents pay for all lodging and food, she estimates her expenses are approximately $500 to $700 for tickets to a show and an amusement park. This appears to be the only real luxury for this family.

Another exhibit admitted at trial showed that she actually has higher expenses in some categories than she included on her expense schedule. The largest discrepancy (besides those related to the car purchase) is for medical/dental expenses. She estimated $0 for medical/dental on Schedule J, but Exhibit 4 showed she had actually spent $2,106 for health related expenses in 2015 (in addition to the cost of health insurance). That would equal approximately $175/month in expenses for which she budgeted zero. This appears a reasonable expense for a family of this size (while the $30/month cost of health insurance reflected on Schedule J appears quite low).

Prior to filing her bankruptcy petition, Debtor’s wages were being garnished (or threatened by garnishment) by two creditors, including the DoEd6 and Discover Bank, and two other creditors had recently taken judgment against her—Asset Acceptance LLC, Bank of America, and Capital One Bank. Those garnishments stopped upon filing of her bankruptcy, and Debt- or’s monthly income and expenses are now fairly stable, at least while collection on her student loans remains at bay.

As noted above, Debtor testified to some changes to her income and expenses since filing. First, her annual salary increased by $200, due to the lock-step pay scale for teachers in her district.7

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Bluebook (online)
561 B.R. 848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-navient-solutions-inc-in-re-edwards-ksb-2016.