In re Metz

589 B.R. 750
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Kansas
DecidedSeptember 25, 2018
DocketCase No. 12-13120; Adv. No. 17-5119
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 589 B.R. 750 (In re Metz) 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
In re Metz, 589 B.R. 750 (Kan. 2018).

Opinion

Robert E. Nugent, United States Bankruptcy Judge

A student loan may be discharged in bankruptcy only if the payment of such loan would impose an undue hardship on the debtor.1 Determining whether the hardship the student loan payment would impose is undue involves deciding three things: (1) is the debtor unable to make her student loan payments while maintaining a minimal standard of living; (2) is the debtor's present impecunious condition likely to persist during the loan repayment period; and (3) has the debtor made a good faith effort to pay? If the answers are yes, yes, and yes, the Court may discharge the loan. Vicki Metz borrowed $16,613 in student loans from 1989 to 1991. Though her lifestyle is, with a few exceptions, spartan, she has managed to make some payments. But with capitalized and accrued interest, she now owes over $67,277.88. Her earning power will likely remain static for now and when she reaches retirement age, it will diminish. Her payments have mostly come through a succession of three chapter 13 plans. She has not participated in the income-based payment programs offered by the Department of Education. Considering all the facts of Ms. Metz's case, the Court concludes that she can afford to repay the principal balance of the loan within a reasonable time, but she cannot hope to repay the capitalized interest and the new interest that would accrue on her student loan debt, and requiring her to remain liable for those consequences would be an undue hardship. Therefore, the principal balance of this claim, $16,613.73, is excepted from discharge, but the remainder of the debt is declared discharged.2

Facts

From 1989 through 1991, Vicki Metz was a community college student, earning 50 credits, but no degree.3 Over that time, she borrowed $16,613.73 in various types *754of student loans.4 She consolidated those loans, signing an agreement with Student Loan Marketing Association, also known as "Sallie Mae," on March 28, 1994.5 United Student Aid Funds, Inc., "USA Funds," guarantied her repayment of those loans and defendant Navient Education Loan Corporation serviced them. When this action was filed, USA Funds paid its guaranty obligation and was assigned the consolidated loans which it, in turn, assigned to defendant Educational Credit Management Corporation, or "ECMC."6 Navient did not answer and apparently no longer has any interest in the loans or this proceeding. ECMC's declaration reflects that since 1994, Ms. Metz has paid a total of $14,789.02 toward the loan; $13,060.75 through chapter 13 administration. Despite that, Ms. Metz's student loan balance has only increased, ballooning to $67,277.88 as of July 1, 2018.7

Ms. Metz works as a community health worker for Sunflower Health Services, a subsidiary of Centene Management Corporation. Centene is a contractor for the State of Kansas, providing various services to the State concerning aging and disability services. She previously worked for the Kansas Department of Aging and Disability Services as a senior care administrator and, before that, spent 19 years working at the Kansas Department of Transportation. Over the past three years, Ms. Metz received gross annual pay ranging between $40,000 and $43,000. She expects to receive a merit raise this year and has received several in prior years. Ms. Metz is single, has no dependents, and was 59 at the time of trial. She doesn't believe her income potential will dramatically increase and I agree.

Ms. Metz's fortunes improved only marginally during her most recent chapter 13 case. When she filed in 2012, her scheduled gross monthly income was $3,500. That has grown to $3,800. She added vision and dental coverage, however, that increased her insurance premiums from $89 to $213. She borrowed from her 401(k) plan and, between repayment of that loan and regular retirement contributions, she contributes about $310 monthly toward retirement. Her monthly take home pay is presently $2,430 compared to what she scheduled in 2012, $2,230.8 Ms. Metz's expenses have increased from the $2,076 she stated on Schedule J in 2012 to $2,323. Most of the increase can be explained by higher cable bills (+$91 for DirecTV), slightly higher car payments, and car and renter's insurance premiums. Ms. Metz currently withholds $772 each month for income taxes-she formerly withheld only $206. Last year she received a federal tax refund of $939. She received refunds in 2015 and 2016 of $1,067 and $1,135. Ms. Metz's checking account statements reflect that her pay is directly deposited. She makes most of her expenditures using a debit card or cash. Reviewing the two most recent account statements placed in evidence, I note that in the November 2017 and February 2018 statements, food expenses (which I take to subsume groceries, dining out, liquor store, and pet food charges) exceed her $400 monthly budgeted amounts. The statements also reflect *755charges at fast food restaurants and a rare local casino visit. Her bank account is occasionally overdrawn. Her rent and car payments appear reasonable.

This is Ms. Metz's third chapter 13 case. Her first, in 2001, was filed as a chapter 13, but converted to chapter 7 in 2006, and she received a chapter 7 discharge.9 She filed a second case shortly after that and I confirmed her chapter 13 plan. She completed it in December of 2011 and received a chapter 13 discharge.10 Neither discharge affected ECMC's debt. She filed this case in 2012, completing her third chapter 13 plan in 2017 and again received a discharge. In her first case in 2001, Ms. Metz proposed a $100 monthly payment to ECMC's predecessor and the student loan creditor received $4,717. In the last two cases, she proposed that her student loan debt be paid pro rata with other unsecured creditors. In the second case, ECMC received $4,112 and, in the third, $4,230. In the 2001 case, Ms. Metz scheduled several secured and unsecured claims. Her second case included some priority tax debt. In the third and final case, this student loan was the only debt treated in the plan. Ms. Metz appears to have done a reasonable job of not incurring other debt.

ECMC states that Ms. Metz could have participated in a variety of income-based repayment plans and that she has chosen none of them. Those plans provide for a range of repayment options that would permit her to make monthly payments from $203 to $508 a month. As the applicable regulations provide, she could make payments in an amount that would vary based upon the program she chose, her adjusted gross income, and whether her income was above or below the federal poverty level. She would be required to make payments for a maximum of 25 years (starting now-until she is 84) and whatever amount remained unpaid at the end would be forgiven.11 I calculate that, at 9%, ECMC's claim accrues about $6,055 a year or $504 a month in accrued interest. A 25-year amortization of $67,277.88 at 9% yields a monthly payment of $564.60. If Ms. Metz could make the highest income-based payment ($508), that would not pay the loan in full within 25 years.12 If she qualified for and agreed to pay the lowest available payment of $203, that would result in negative amortization of -$301 a month.

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Bluebook (online)
589 B.R. 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-metz-ksb-2018.