Goodvin v. Department of Education

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas
DecidedSeptember 1, 2020
Docket19-05105
StatusUnknown

This text of Goodvin v. Department of Education (Goodvin v. Department of Education) 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
Goodvin v. Department of Education, (Kan. 2020).

Opinion

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Dale L. Somers Sttes Chief Bankruptcy Judge:

DESIGNATED FOR ONLINE PUBLICATION IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS

IN RE: Jeffrey Theron Goodvin, Case No. 19-10623 Chapter 7 Debtor.

Jeffrey Theron Goodvin, Plaintiff, Vv. Adv. No. 19-5105 United States Department of Education, Nelnet Inc., American Education Services a/k/a Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency, and Educational Credit Management Corporation, Defendants.

Memorandum Opinion Granting, in Part, Complaint to Discharge Student Loan Debt

This student loan case fits the definition of insanity.1 After consolidating his then-outstanding student loans in 1992 and later taking out six more student loans for further education between 2009-2013 in the combined principal amount of approximately $39,000, and making payments in excess of $28,000 on those loans, 56-year old Debtor-Plaintiff Jeffrey Goodvin finds himself in year 2020, seven years removed from his last educational stop, owing over $77,000. His payments of $19,527 on the

$12,077 consolidation loan did not even pay the monthly accrual of interest, leaving Goodvin owing nearly $50,000. Little will change if Goodvin consolidates all these loans and enrolls in the income-driven REPAYE plan for twenty years—at which time Goodvin will have been retired for about ten

years and be seventy-six years old. The REPAYE plan is the most “favorable” income-driven repayment plan available to Goodvin and the plan advocated by defendants for him to repay and discharge (by forgiveness) his student loan debt. Under the Brunner test,2 requiring Goodvin to continue paying on

his 1992 consolidation loan imposes an undue hardship on him and denies

1 “Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” Unknown. This quote is often misattributed to Albert Einstein. See https://quoteinvestigator.com/category/albert-einstein/page/2/, last viewed July 23, 2020, citing The Ultimate Quotable Einstein, Edited by Alice Calaprice, Section: Misattributed to Einstein, Quote Page 474 (Princeton University Press 2010). 2 Brunner v. New York State Higher Educ. Serv. Corp., 831 F.2d 395 (2d Cir. 1987). him a fresh start. A partial discharge of Goodvin’s student loan debt is granted under § 523(a)(8).3

I. Findings of Fact4 Goodvin filed this Chapter 7 bankruptcy on April 17, 2019. He is age 56, single, and has no dependents. He is healthy and suffers from no medical conditions that preclude or impact his ability to work. Goodvin will be eligible

to retire at full retirement age in about ten years. At the time of filing, Goodvin had been employed one year as a plumber/pipefitter apprentice with Waldinger Corporation, and was enrolled in the five-year local union apprentice program. He was laid off in late January 2020, but was re-hired in

June by Waldinger and remained employed on the date of trial. When he was laid off, Goodvin continued with the apprentice coursework, but switched to

3 Trial was held in this matter on July 15, 2020. Goodvin appeared in person and by his attorney January Bailey. Attorney N. Larry Bork appeared on behalf of defendant Educational Credit Management Corporation (ECMC). Assistant U.S. Attorney Brian D. Sheern appeared on behalf of defendant U.S. Department of Education (DOE). 4 The Court’s recitation of the facts is based upon Goodvin’s trial testimony, the trial exhibits (including Goodvin’s deposition testimony given on March 31, 2020 (Trial Ex. 11), and interrogatory answers attached as deposition exhibit), and extensive stipulations of fact by the parties regarding the student loans incurred, payments made by Goodvin, and Income-Driven Repayment (IDR) plan options for which Goodvin’s loans would qualify. See Adv. Doc. 57 (Stipulations of fact regarding the ECMC loans) and Adv. Doc. 58-1 [also DOE Trial Ex. A] (Stipulations of fact regarding the DOE loans based on the declaration of Cristin Bulman, a Loan Analyst for the DOE in the Office of Federal Student Aid). the HVAC apprentice program to enhance his employment prospects and move up the union list of apprentices.

According to his schedules, Goodvin owns a modest home valued at about $50,000 and a 2014 Chevrolet Cruz valued at $7,900. Both are secured to Meritrust Credit Union; it holds an outstanding $42,000 mortgage on the home and has a $9,500 claim for the car loan. He pays $188 per month (for 56

months) for the car and $507 per month (for 163 months) for the home. The home and car are his only secured debts. Goodvin reaffirmed both of these debts. Goodvin scheduled general unsecured debt of about $93,000, of which some $73,000 is student loan debt, and the remaining balance is nearly all

credit card debt. At the time of trial, the student loan debt exceeded $77,000 due to the accrual of interest. A. Goodvin’s Education and Work History5 Goodvin first attended Wichita State University (WSU) for four years

(1982-1986), but earned no degree. None of the student loans at issue pertain to his time at WSU. He worked the following year, before returning to school full-time at the Brooks Institute of Photography (Brooks) in Santa Barbara, California from the spring of 1987 to the spring of 1990. He obtained a

Bachelor of Arts degree in Fine Arts, majoring in photography, film making

5 See Ex. 11, Answer to Interrogatory No. 13 at Goodvin 15-18. and videography. After obtaining his degree, Goodvin worked for various film production companies and freelanced in the film industry in California and

Chicago. When the film freelance work slowed in the mid-1990s, he freelanced as a camera technician for Panavision until the late-1990s. From there, Goodvin moved back to Wichita and worked for various television stations in news production and as a camera news photographer. He left

Wichita in 2004, accepting an offer in Santa Barbara with a news station as a news photographer where he worked for the next three years. When he became unemployed in 2007, Goodvin determined that he needed to improve his skills in digital media technology to attain better

employment. In the fall of 2007, he enrolled at Santa Barbara City College (SBCC). He attended SBCC until the spring of 2013, majoring in Media Arts.6 He received a certificate in Multimedia Studies in the spring of 2013, but was one 3-hour course shy of earning an associate’s degree. While in school,

Goodvin worked in the media department for the City of Santa Barbara. Upon leaving SBCC in 2013, he took a full-time job as a news producer with the same station he had worked for in 2004. When his contract ended in the spring of 2016, he left Santa Barbara and moved to Tulsa, Oklahoma,

working briefly for a local news station as a producer.

6 Goodvin briefly withdrew from classes in the spring of 2010, but re-enrolled a couple of months later. Goodvin returned to Wichita in the fall of 2016 where he worked at a news station until he was laid off in February of 2018. While on

unemployment Goodvin attended a job fair where he learned of the Plumbers and Pipefitters Local Union 441 and was offered an opportunity to join its apprentice program. By this time, Goodvin decided it was time for a career change with better pay and more stable employment; he started the

apprenticeship in May of 2018 and began working for Waldinger. In sum, Goodvin’s employment history from 1990 to the present has been marked by several relocations, intermittent job loss, layoffs, and periods of unemployment, through no apparent fault of his own.

B.

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Related

Local Loan Co. v. Hunt
292 U.S. 234 (Supreme Court, 1934)
Educational Credit Management Corp. v. Polleys
356 F.3d 1302 (Tenth Circuit, 2004)
Alderete v. Educational Credit Management Corp.
412 F.3d 1200 (Tenth Circuit, 2005)
Innes v. Kansas (In Re Innes)
284 B.R. 496 (D. Kansas, 2002)
Murray v. ECMC (In re Murray)
563 B.R. 52 (D. Kansas, 2016)
Reagan v. Educ. Credit Mgmt. Corp. (In re Reagan)
587 B.R. 296 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 2018)
In re Metz
589 B.R. 750 (D. Kansas, 2018)

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