Loftus v. Sallie Mae Servicing (In Re Loftus)

371 B.R. 402, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 2247, 2007 WL 1891889
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Iowa
DecidedJune 29, 2007
Docket19-00183
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 371 B.R. 402 (Loftus v. Sallie Mae Servicing (In Re Loftus)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loftus v. Sallie Mae Servicing (In Re Loftus), 371 B.R. 402, 2007 Bankr. LEXIS 2247, 2007 WL 1891889 (Iowa 2007).

Opinion

ORDER RE COMPLAINT TO DETERMINE DISCHARGEABILITY

WILLIAM L. EDMONDS, Chief Bankruptcy Judge.

The matter before the court is the final trial of plaintiffs’ complaint to determine the dischargeability of student loan obligations pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8). Trial was held April 4, 2007 in Sioux City. Attorney Wil L. Forker appeared for plaintiffs, Timothy J. Loftus and Rita L. Loftus. Attorney Marty L. Rowlet appeared on behalf of defendant Texas Guaranteed Student Loan Corporation (“Texas Guaranteed”). Attorney Christopher C. Foy appeared for intervenor-defendant Educational Credit Management Corporation (“Educational Credit”). This is a core proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(I).

Timothy and Rita Loftus filed a joint Chapter 7 petition on September 3, 2004. The Loftuses were separated at the time of their filing and are now divorced. Timothy, age 43, lives in Lawton, Iowa. Rita, 34, lives in Sioux City. The Loftuses share physical and legal custody of their three sons, ages 11, 6 and 4. Neither of them is obligated to pay child support to the other.

In 1987, Timothy Loftus received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Mass Communication from Morningside College in Sioux City. After graduation, he worked for approximately two years at KTIV television station in Sioux City as a film director. He estimated his gross earnings were less than $10,000 per year.

Loftus believed he would have better earning capacity with a master’s degree, and in 1989 he began attending Northeast Louisiana University, now known as the University of Louisiana at Monroe. 1 In 1991 he obtained a Master of Arts degree in communication in radio, television and film. While working on this degree, Lof-tus had three jobs. He was a teaching assistant, he taught continuing education classes at a computer learning center, and he also worked at a Red Roof Inn.

Loftus enjoyed teaching and aspired to teach at the university level. He learned that he could obtain a second master’s degree for half the number of credit hours required for the first. He continued taking classes and in 1992 received a Master of Education degree in educational media. He also continued working as a teaching assistant. Loftus then began working toward an educational specialist degree, a two-year program. In 1994 he left the University before completing the program.

The Loftuses met while they were students at the university. They married in 1994, and their first child was born in 1996. Rita Loftus obtained a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in graphic design in 1997. While in school she had work-study jobs with the university yearbook and newspaper. In 1996, she worked part time at a Wal-Mart store in Monroe. For approximately a year and a half, Timothy was employed as an instructor in the computer science department of the university. He taught students to use basic applications such as spreadsheet programs.

In 1997, shortly after Rita’s graduation, the Loftuses moved to Lawton. Timothy’s parents and other of his family members live in the Sioux City area. The Loftuses rented a four-bedroom house from Timothy’s parents.

*405 From about August 1997 to early summer 1998, Timothy worked for Excel Connect, a firm in Bettendorf. His pay rate was between $36,000 and $38,000 per year. He worked on-site for MidAmerican Energy Company in Sioux City, training its employees to use computer applications in the Windows operating system. When the contract with MidAmerican was completed, Loftus was laid off. Excel Connect did not have other jobs in the Sioux City area, and it did not make a firm offer of employment in Bettendorf.

In about September 1998, Timothy began working in Sergeant Bluff for MCI WorldCom as a news station coordinator, which involved updating information' on an in-house television system. His salary was about $30,000 per year. Loftus was laid off in early 2002.

Sometime in 1998, Rita began working 32.5 hours a week as a secretary for Au-gustana Lutheran Church. Rita’s beginning pay rate at Augustana was $7.00 per hour. When she left the job in 2004, she was earning $9.00 per hour. Currently, she is the manager of the Linens & Things store in Sioux City, working 47.5 hours per week for $10.00 per hour.

The Loftuses had combined wage income of $44,941 in 1999, $41,911 in 2000 and $41,383 in 2001.

Timothy currently designs advertising for the Sergeant Bluff Advocate, a weekly newspaper. The paper has about 900 subscribers and employs four people. In February 2006, he began working also as an independent contractor for Siouxland Sports Authority, a monthly tabloid. He receives $650 per issue, although he has earned more by doing extra work. He uses desktop publishing and graphics editing computer software to design the publication.

Timothy has had irregular income from an art gallery business in Lawton known as Loftus Gallery. When the Loftuses moved to Iowa from Louisiana, they rented a house from Timothy’s parents for $525 per month. His parents later allowed him to use a commercial building that they own for no additional rent. The commercial building and the residence are separate properties and are not in close proximity to each other.

Timothy converted the commercial building into a pottery studio and art gallery. The property is a large square building with an addition on the back. There is a 10-by 12-foot room for the gallery, another room containing a pottery kiln, a kitchenette, and a pottery workshop in the addition. Timothy’s parents own the pottery equipment. He keeps a desk and computer in the pottery workshop area. He uses the computer for newspaper design work, but he could also do this work at home.

The gallery business has been in existence at least since 1999. For about eight months, perhaps after being laid off from MCI WorldCom, Timothy attempted a more stable business activity making wheel-thrown pottery for sale to art shops. Rita did not receive a salary from Loftus Gallery. The gallery sold one of her paintings, and she used the money to purchase art supplies.

It appears that the Loftus Gallery was used merely for tax advantages. The Lof-tuses’ joint income tax returns from 1999 through 2003 and Timothy’s individual returns from 2004 through 2006 reported business loss as follows:

Gross Income Rent Utilities Total Net Expenses Loss

1999 190 6,300 270 10,165 9,975

2000 487 6,300 822 7,293 6,806

2001 353 6,300 1,109 7,707 7,354

2002 1,794 6,300 628 11,154 9,360

2003 9,921 -O- 3,590 14,001 4,080

2005 7,558

2006 7,850 6,300 2,502 9,350 1,500

*406 Exhibits C, D, E, F, G, 7, 8, 10. Timothy’s income tax; returns for 2004 did not show either income or loss from a business.

Timothy’s Iowa and federal returns for 2005, Exhibit 8, show a deduction of $7,558 for business loss that year. The exhibit did not include the Form 1040 Schedule C, Profit or Loss from Business.

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