Kephart v. United States (In Re Kephart)

167 B.R. 767, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 794, 1994 WL 237006
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 11, 1994
Docket1-19-10395
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 167 B.R. 767 (Kephart v. United States (In Re Kephart)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kephart v. United States (In Re Kephart), 167 B.R. 767, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 794, 1994 WL 237006 (N.Y. 1994).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER

JOHN C. NINFO, II, Bankruptcy Judge.

BACKGROUND

On April 16, 1992 the Debtor, Phyllis A. Kephart, M.D. (The “Debtor”), filed a petition initiating a Chapter 7 case. The only debts listed on the Debtor’s schedules were a first mortgage on her residence, a $12,000 personal loan with Marine Midland Bank, a student loan of less than $2,000 due to the Massachusetts Higher Education Assistance Corporation and an indebtedness to the United States of America, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Health Service Corps (The “Service Corps”) as part of its Scholarship Program in an amount estimated to be in excess of $625,000. A Section 341 Meeting of Creditors was held and closed on May 29, 1992; a No-Asset Report was filed by the Debtor’s trustee; and a Discharge Order was entered on August 7, 1992. Prior to the entry of her discharge, the Debtor commenced an Adversary Proceeding to have the Court determine the dischargeability of her debt to the Service Corps pursuant to the provisions of 42 U.S.C. § 2540(d)(3)(A). 1

After several pre-trial conferences and attempts by the parties to negotiate a settlement of this matter, a trial of the issues was held before the Court on February 22, 1993, and after additional submissions by the parties on the issue, a further hearing was held at the insistence of the Court on December 10, 1993 to determine the disposable income of the Debtor’s household.

The Facts, as established by the pleadings and the testimony and documentary evidence introduced at the trial on February 22, 1993 and the hearing on December 10, 1993, are as follows:

1. The Debtor, at the age of 37, after having raised four children, entered Boston University Medical School in the Fall of 1978.

2. In order to finance her medical school education, the Debtor applied for and was granted a scholarship award by the Service Corps Scholarship Program.

3. Prior to executing the Service Corps Contract, the Debtor discussed the service requirement with her then husband, a career military officer. They determined that the service requirement would not be a problem, since it was anticipated that by the time the Debtor graduated from medical school and completed an internship the Debtor’s husband would be retired and their children would be fully grown and independent. As a result, they could be flexible with regard to a service site. Also, because of their experiences with the Debtor’s husband being moved by the Air Force on several occasions, the Debtor and her husband felt that they were familiar with the process of negotiating with the Government to settle on service locations which would be mutually beneficial to all of the parties.

4. The Service Corps Contract entered into by the Debtor and the Service Corps (PL’s Exhibit 1) requires that for each year of a scholarship award the recipient serve one year in a health manpower shortage area or unit of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare as designated by the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare (The “Secretary”).

5. The Service Corps Contract also provides that should the scholarship recipient,. after successfully completing the educational training for which the scholarship was given, fail to begin or complete the period of obligated service, the United States would be entitled to recover an amount equal to three times the scholarship funds awarded plus *769 interest pursuant to a detailed formula set forth in the Contract.

6. The Service Corps Contract further provides that the Secretary may waive or suspend the service or payment obligations under the contract if compliance by the scholarship recipient would involve extreme hardship and the enforcement of such obligation would be unconscionable.

7. Between September, 1978 and June, 1982 while completing medical school, the Debtor received four scholarship awards in the total principal amount of $67,953.

8. In 1981 during her third year of medical school, the Debtor’s then husband advised her that he wanted a divorce and moved out. There ensued difficult and severe matrimonial problems and a split up of the family, which ultimately ended in a divorce and had serious negative psychological effects on the Debtor. In September of 1981, the Debtor was hospitalized for ten days and treated for major depression having attempted suicide.

9. Following her graduation from medical school in 1982, the Debtor applied for and received from the Service Corps a two year deferment of the service requirement in order to complete a year of training in family medicine and a year of residency in internal medicine.

10. In August of 1984, after completing her year of training in family medicine and a residency in internal medicine in California, the Debtor requested an additional one year deferment for further training in infectious diseases. The Debtor believed that she needed this additional year of training to be eligible to be board certified in internal medicine, because she had been orally advised by the American Board of Internal Medicine that her year of training in family medicine would not count toward eligibility. The Debtor was granted a conditional deferment, subject to the Service Corps obtaining additional information regarding her ability to be board certified as a result of the further training in infectious diseases. (Pl.’s Exhibit 3). In September, 1984, even though the requested deferment was not yet finalized, the Debtor went to Boston, Massachusetts and began an additional year of residency specializing in infectious diseases.

11. Due to some apparent confusion with the American Board of Internal Medicine, the Debtor was not able to obtain the anticipated confirmation that the additional year at the Boston Veterans Administration Medical Center would be necessary for her to be eligible to become board certified in internal medicine.

12. As a result, in the Fall of 1984 the Service Corps denied her additional one year deferment from service. On November 1, 1984, the Debtor participated in a telephone site selection interview to determine her placement for service. The Debtor testified that she believed that this was only an initial step to a final mutually agreeable service site which the Debtor would report to at the conclusion of her training in the Summer of 1985. However, the Service Corps considered and intended this to be a final site selection interview, since prior mailings to the Debtor concerning site selection and an Early Decision Alternative had not been responded to by the Debtor. (An extensive placement package was mailed certified mail to Debtor in July, 1984 and receipted for by an individual other than the Debtor. (Pl.’s Exhibit 10). The Debtor testified she never received the package.)

13. In the Fall of 1984, the Debtor’s mother was very ill (she had suffered a stroke in April, 1984 and later died in February, 1985), and the Debtor was still undergoing psychiatric treatment, was taking medication for depression, was working twelve to fourteen hour days at the Boston Veterans Administration Medical Center and was anorexic.

14.

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Related

United States v. Ascue (In Re Ascue)
268 B.R. 739 (W.D. Virginia, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
167 B.R. 767, 1994 Bankr. LEXIS 794, 1994 WL 237006, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kephart-v-united-states-in-re-kephart-nywb-1994.