Kline v. United States

155 B.R. 762
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedJune 22, 1993
Docket14-43011
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 155 B.R. 762 (Kline v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kline v. United States, 155 B.R. 762 (Mo. 1993).

Opinion

ORDER AND MEMORANDUM OPINION

KAREN M. SEE, Bankruptcy Judge.

Debtor filed this action to determine the dischargeability of her Health Education Assistance Loans (HEAL loans). The issue at trial was whether nondischarge of Debt- or’s HEAL loans would be unconscionable under 42 U.S.C. § 294%) due to Debtor’s mental and emotional disabilities which impair her ability to function and to earn a living. The court has jurisdiction over this matter and may enter final orders in this core proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334(b) and 157(b)(2)(I).

*764 FACTS

Debtor has had a traumatic life and suffers from longstanding, serious mental and emotional disorders, including chronic depression and anxiety and panic disorders. The following facts are undisputed.

Debtor grew up in a dysfunctional household. Her mother was alcoholic and her father physically abused her. Family Services once removed her younger sister from the abusive household. Debtor’s uncle sexually molested her when she was 12. After high school, Debtor enrolled in the University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Pharmacy and worked for her parents to help pay educational costs. At age 21, Debtor moved out of her parents’ house and attempted to pay for her education by working at medical centers and as a cocktail server. The employer at the disco where she worked raped her at gunpoint. She was unable to keep up payments on her mobile home and utilities were shut off. Her parents hired a man to follow her in order to surveil her. Debtor was aware she was being followed, but did not know why and it frightened her. Because of these events Debtor’s grades plummeted.

Debtor attempted suicide by overdosing on pills she obtained in pharmacy school. Consequently, the pharmacy school expelled her. She received neither an undergraduate nor a pharmacy degree. After expulsion from pharmacy school, Debtor was admitted to chiropractic college in 1979. In 1982-83, Debtor received three HEAL loans totalling $12,818. 1 In 1983 she married her husband and both graduated from chiropractic college.

The brief marriage was chaotic and marked by abuse. Debtor and her husband settled in New Orleans after moving nine times in two years. Debtor never practiced medicine, but instead acted as her husband’s office manager. Debtor was unable to gain admission to practice in Louisiana despite taking the examination three times. Louisiana finally licensed Debtor after she threatened to sue, but Debtor never practiced chiropractic medicine, and while Debt- or was in Louisiana, her Missouri license expired. Thus, since graduation 10 years ago, Debtor has never practiced chiropractic medicine and now is not licensed to.

Debtor’s husband physically abused Debtor and their infant son. He would not permit Debtor to carry identification or money or to drive. Debtor stated she was a “basket case” and left her husband to return to Kansas City. In 1985, Debtor was divorced. She receives $250 per month as child support.

After her divorce, Debtor worked several jobs, primarily near-minimum wage positions. She worked in food service, as a receptionist, a secretary, an employment recruiter, a dispatcher, and as a person who quoted insurance rates over the telephone for $5.00 per hour. At each job, she was fired after a short period. Debtor sometimes drew unemployment benefits. She returned to school to study data entry. At the time of trial Debtor had been employed for 10 months as a computer programmer for Jackson County, Missouri at a salary of approximately $21,700 annually. This position is the highest paying, longest-held position she has ever had. However, it appears she has lost this job also.

A supervisor required her to work nights and weekends and sexually harassed Debt- or until she was forced to enter the hospital for anxiety attacks. Debtor complained to the department director, who told Debtor she was a pretty girl and would have to live with harassment. The harassment ended after she filed a formal complaint, but Debtor suffered retaliation. After Debtor returned to work, the director reprimanded her, employees refused to speak to her and she suffered more anxiety attacks as a result. At the time of trial, Debtor had been on leave from her job, but leave time had run out and Debtor was uncertain whether she was still employed. She indicated she could not bear to return to the job. Debtor is seeking a new job but has not found one.

*765 The United States and Debtor jointly admitted various medical reports and records. Debtor’s uncontroverted testimony and the medical reports, including the diagnoses of treating physicians Loutzenhiser, Borman and Mouse, reveal that she suffers from depression, an anxiety disorder, and panic attacks. Dr. Mouse indicated Debtor also complained of “shaking, headaches, weakness, and fainting ... ‘episodes.’ ” Debtor has “episodes” where she becomes lightheaded or faints, sees stars, falls to the floor and has uncontrollable shaking and jerking similar to a seizure, has a severe headache, and feels as if she is dazed for several days afterward. These episodes have happened twice during the 10 months she has worked as a computer programmer. In addition, Dr. Mouse stated, “She said that she has a headache ‘all day, everyday,’ which feels like ‘a little tiny explosion in my head.’ ”

During trial Debtor appeared to suffer from uncontrollable shaking and jerking, nervous tics and episodes of heavy weeping. Debtor appeared extremely agitated throughout the trial.

Debtor’s testimony presented a litany of personal tragedies and traumas which are remarkable in number and severity. It could be argued that Debtor must have magnified the misfortunes in her life. After carefully observing Debtor, the court is convinced her mental and emotional disorders are real and not intentionally contrived. Debtor is without doubt one of the unhappiest persons with one of the most desolate views of the world and its relation to her that one could ever encounter. Even if there were an element of over-emphasis or magnification to Debtor’s recitation of facts, which the court does not find, it seems that such “slant” is indicative of Debtor’s chronic, severe depression and demonstrates the negative filter through which she views all her interactions with the world. The overall effect of debtor’s testimony is that she sincerely feels acutely victimized at every turn and by just about every person with whom she has had any degree of interaction. The despairing and almost paranoid sounding feelings have virtually paralyzed debtor and left her unable to function on a day-to-day basis or to hold down a job. The effect of her perception of events is the same, whether her recitation of events is precise or the result of some degree of magnification.

The court has no doubt that Debtor suffers from severe, chronic depression and anxiety and panic disorders, and the court has no expectation that Debtor’s condition will improve to any significant degree.

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Bluebook (online)
155 B.R. 762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kline-v-united-states-mowb-1993.