In Re McBurney
This text of 357 B.R. 536 (In Re McBurney) 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.
Opinion
In re Betty A. McBURNEY, Debtor.
Educational Credit Management Corporation, Appellant,
v.
Betty A. McBurney, Appellee.
United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel of the Ninth Circuit.
Madeleine C. Wanslee, Gust Rosenfeld P.L.C., Phoenix, AZ, for appellant.
*537 Betty A. McBurney, Prescott Valley, AZ, for appellee.
Before: DUNN, KLEIN, and PAPPAS, Bankruptcy Judges.
OPINION
DUNN, Bankruptcy Judge:
This is an interlocutory appeal in which a student loan creditor appeals from an order denying its motion to dismiss an adversary proceeding brought by the debtor, seeking a determination that her student loan debts were dischargeable in her 1999 chapter 7[1] bankruptcy case. Because we conclude that the consolidation loan made postpetition extinguished the debtor's liability on prepetition student loans and is not vulnerable to "undue hardship" attack under § 523(a)(8) in a pre-consolidation bankruptcy case, we REVERSE.
FACTS
The debtor, Betty A. McBurney, acting pro se, filed her chapter 7 bankruptcy case on August 9, 1999. Ms. McBurney received her chapter 7 discharge on December 6, 1999, and her case was closed on January 24, 2000.
On March 14, 2000, at Ms. McBurney's request, Sallie Mae Servicing Corporation ("Sallie Mae"), on behalf of guarantor United Student Aid Funds, disbursed funds (the "Consolidation Loan") totaling $32,390.59 to consolidate three prepetition student loans ("Student Loans") owed by Ms. McBurney. Of this amount, $2,846.62 was paid to "DEVRY," and $29,543.67 was paid to "SALLIE MAE UNIPAC." No funds were disbursed to Ms. McBurney from the Consolidation Loan proceeds.
Ms. McBurney reopened her 1999 chapter 7 case and commenced an adversary proceeding against the United States Department of Education on April 8, 2004, seeking a hardship discharge of the Consolidation Loan pursuant to § 523(a)(8). Sallie Mae was substituted as the defendant on June 10, 2005, and moved to dismiss the adversary proceeding pursuant to Rule 7012 on the basis that the Consolidation Loan was not a prepetition debt, and that the complaint therefore failed to state a claim as to which, relief could be granted. Educational Credit Management Corporation ("ECMC") was substituted as the defendant in place of Sallie Mae on September 21, 2005. By Minute Order dated November 28, 2005, the bankruptcy court denied the motion to dismiss.[2]
On December 9, 2005, ECMC filed its Notice of Appeal. We granted leave to appeal the bankruptcy court's interlocutory order.
JURISDICTION
The bankruptcy court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334 and 157(b)(2)(I). We have jurisdiction over this interlocutory appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(a)(3).
ISSUES
Whether the Consolidation Loan is a postpetition debt to which § 523(a)(8) does not apply.
*538 Whether the bankruptcy court erred in denying ECMC's motion to dismiss the adversary proceeding for failure to state a claim.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a bankruptcy court's conclusions of law de novo. Fireman's Fund Ins. Co. v. Grover (In re Woodson Co.), 813 F.2d 266, 270 (9th Cir.1987).
DISCUSSION
I. The Consolidation Loan is a Postpetition Debt.
Subchapter IV, Part B of the Higher Education Act of 1965[3] facilitates the availability of federally insured student loans to eligible borrowers. Eligible borrowers may consolidate their student loan obligations. 20 U.S.C. § 1078-3. The issue as to whether a consolidation student loan is dischargeable in bankruptcy arose with some frequency under the version of § 523(a)(8) in effect for cases filed prior to October 7, 1998. As a condition precedent to discharge without a showing of undue hardship, under former § 523(a)(8)(A), a student loan must have come due more than seven years prior to the petition date (the "Nondischargeability Period").[4]
The majority of reported decisions were consistent with Hiatt v. Ind. State Student Assistance Comm'n, 36 F.3d 21 (7th Cir. 1994), which held that a consolidation student loan represented a new, distinct debt, the proceeds of which were used to cancel the original student loan notes and to pay the underlying debt. In the reported decisions consistent with the Hiatt holding, courts determined that the Nondischargeability Period was governed by the date a consolidation student loan first became due, even if the original student loan had first become due at an earlier date, and even where a debtor had been paying on the student loan debt from that earlier date. We cited Hiatt with approval in Drysdale v. Educ. Credit Mgmt. Corp. (In re Drysdale), 248 B.R. 386, 390-91 (9th Cir. BAP 2000), aff'd, 2 Fed.Appx. 776, 777 (9th Cir.2001).
ECMC contends that our decision in Drysdale regarding the nature of a consolidation student loan remains applicable notwithstanding the change to § 523(a)(8),[5] which eliminated the Nondischargeability Period and left undue hardship as the only cause for discharging a student loan debt. As a result, ECMC asserts the student loan debt Ms. McBurney owed when she filed her adversary complaint is the Consolidation Loan, a postpetition debt, not the Student Loans, which existed as prepetition debts until satisfied by the proceeds of the Consolidation Loan.
In Drysdale, we explicitly adopted the interpretation of § 523(a)(8)(A) set forth both in Hiatt and in Rudnicki v. So. Coll. of Optometry (In re Rudnicki), 228 B.R. 179, 181 (6th Cir. BAP 1999). In doing so, we implicitly adopted the underlying premise in Hiatt and in Rudnicki that a consolidation student loan is a new, distinct loan, the proceeds of which are applied to extinguish the original student loan debt. Since it is based on an interpretation of relevant provisions of the Higher Education Act of 1965, which remain applicable, that premise holds true notwithstanding *539 that § 523(a)(8)(A) no longer exists.[6]
For example, a consolidation student loan lender is obligated to pay the proceeds of the consolidation student loan to holders of the loans being consolidated to "discharge the liability on such loans." 20 U.S.C. § 1078-3(b)(1)(D). Also, the commencement of the repayment obligation for a consolidation student loan is set relative to the time when the holders of the loans being consolidated have "discharged the liability of the borrower" on those loans. 20 U.S.C. § 1078-3(c)(4).
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