OPINION
FITZWATER, District Judge.
A former wife appeals from an adverse bankruptcy court judgment which held that certain periodic payments to be made by her former husband, a chapter 7 debtor, were not in the nature of alimony, maintenance, or support and were thus discharge-able under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(5)(B). The principal question presented is whether the bankruptcy court erred in considering extrinsic evidence to interpret the parties’ unambiguous written agreement. Because the bankruptcy court correctly admitted the evidence in question and because its unchallenged factual findings support the judgment, the judgment is AFFIRMED.
I.
BACKGROUND FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW
Plaintiff-appellant, Sandra L. Roberts (“Sandra”), and defendant-appellee, Edward Wayne Poole (“Wayne”), were divorced in 1981. In order to settle the distribution of their property, Sandra and Wayne entered into a written agreement incident to divorce (the “Agreement”), which was incorporated in the divorce decree. The Agreement contained the usual provisions which set forth the purpose of the Agreement, divided the parties’ property, apportioned their respective liabilities, prescribed the conservatorship for their daughter, provided for child support, prescribed how federal income taxes would be paid, required that Wayne purchase an annuity for the benefit of Sandra, and contained remedial and technical clauses, including a merger clause and a clause making the Agreement subject to Texas law. The Agreement also contained a section entitled, “Support of Spouse,” which required Wayne to make “periodic payments” to Sandra in the amount of $3,000 per month for a period of ten years.
In 1982 Sandra filed suit in Texas state court to enforce the periodic payments obligation undertaken by Wayne and to obtain a restraining order and receivership over his assets. The suit was still pending when, in 1983, Wayne filed a voluntary chapter 7 petition in the bankruptcy court. In 1984 Sandra filed a complaint in the bankruptcy court to determine whether the periodic payments were dischargeable; after trial, the bankruptcy court held that the payments were dischargeable.
The bankruptcy court found that, after Wayne had made eight $3,000 periodic payments, he was unable to make further payments because his businesses had suffered irreversible setbacks which chopped his income from $40,000 or so per month in 1981 (in company profits) to $18,000 to $20,000 per year in 1982 and that he would have continued making the payments but for the business reversals. The bankruptcy court noted that the Agreement stated on its face that the periodic payments “are intended for maintenance and support and that they constitute no part of the property division in the divorce[.]” The court nevertheless
concluded that it had both the jurisdiction and obligation to conduct an inquiry concerning the indebtedness, which inquiry could look behind or extend beyond the four corners of the document in question, to determine whether the periodic payments “were truly in the nature of alimony, maintenance, and/or support or whether such payments were, in fact, in the nature of property settlement[.]”
The bankruptcy court relied on the following evidence to conclude that the payments were intended as a division of the parties’ property: first, in Sandra’s state court suit to enforce the Agreement she alleged under oath that company stock and corporate assets which Wayne received under the Agreement formed the basis for the periodic payments; second, the divorce attorneys and Wayne’s bookkeeper arrived at an agreement, based upon Sandra’s divorce lawyer’s request and suggestion, that the periodic payments be denominated as alimony and for the support of Sandra because Sandra’s lawyer believed the Agreement so structured would yield overall tax savings because of perceived probable differences in future marginal tax brackets for Sandra and Wayne; third, the Agreement did not provide for a cessation of payments in the event of Sandra’s death or remarriage, which strongly indicated that the parties intended the payments to be consideration for property division rather than alimony, maintenance, and/or support; fourth, at divorce, Sandra took from the estate cash and property valued at approximately $125,000 which, together with $360,000 in anticipated payments, equaled approximately $400,000 to $500,000, and Wayne took personal property and stock in then-successful companies which at the time of the divorce “approximated the value of money and property to which [Sandra] became entitled under the Agreement Incident to Divorce;” and fifth, at the time of the Agreement, Wayne did not have the liquidity to pay Sandra a lump sum settlement and such lack of liquidity was another factor in the parties’ decision “to structure the Agreement in the form of a payout[.]”
After the bankruptcy court entered a take nothing judgment against Sandra, she timely filed a motion for new trial and a motion to alter or amend final judgment. The bankruptcy court
denied the motions and made these additional findings and conclusions: the Agreement clearly and unambiguously provides that the periodic payments are to be made for Sandra’s support, and not as a part of any property division incident to divorce; the parol evidence rule is inapplicable to a § 523(a)(5) proceeding; and, the terms of the Agreement, even if clear and unambiguous, are subject to contradiction by evidence of prior or contemporaneous agreements or understandings of the parties as to the nature of the periodic payments. Sandra appeals.
II.
ANALYSIS
Sandra principally challenges the bankruptcy court’s determination that the parol evidence rule is inapplicable to a § 523(a)(5)(B) proceeding and that the clear and unambiguous terms of a written agreement incident to divorce may be contradicted by evidence of prior or contemporaneous agreements or understandings of the parties as to the nature of the periodic payments. Sandra does not challenge the bankruptcy court’s factual finding that the payments are properly characterized as a property settlement rather than support. Instead, Sandra urges that the bankruptcy court should never have made such a finding because the Agreement itself unambiguously provides that the periodic payments constitute support and the language of the Agreement properly should have been found to have been determinative.
The Bankruptcy Code excepts from chapter 7 discharge any debt to a former spouse for alimony, maintenance, or
support of the spouse in connection with a separation agreement, divorce decree, or other court order, governmental unit determination, or property settlement agreement. 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(5). However, a debt liability designated as alimony, maintenance, or support is not exempt from discharge unless the liability is actually in the nature of alimony, maintenance, or support. 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(5)(B).
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OPINION
FITZWATER, District Judge.
A former wife appeals from an adverse bankruptcy court judgment which held that certain periodic payments to be made by her former husband, a chapter 7 debtor, were not in the nature of alimony, maintenance, or support and were thus discharge-able under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(5)(B). The principal question presented is whether the bankruptcy court erred in considering extrinsic evidence to interpret the parties’ unambiguous written agreement. Because the bankruptcy court correctly admitted the evidence in question and because its unchallenged factual findings support the judgment, the judgment is AFFIRMED.
I.
BACKGROUND FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW
Plaintiff-appellant, Sandra L. Roberts (“Sandra”), and defendant-appellee, Edward Wayne Poole (“Wayne”), were divorced in 1981. In order to settle the distribution of their property, Sandra and Wayne entered into a written agreement incident to divorce (the “Agreement”), which was incorporated in the divorce decree. The Agreement contained the usual provisions which set forth the purpose of the Agreement, divided the parties’ property, apportioned their respective liabilities, prescribed the conservatorship for their daughter, provided for child support, prescribed how federal income taxes would be paid, required that Wayne purchase an annuity for the benefit of Sandra, and contained remedial and technical clauses, including a merger clause and a clause making the Agreement subject to Texas law. The Agreement also contained a section entitled, “Support of Spouse,” which required Wayne to make “periodic payments” to Sandra in the amount of $3,000 per month for a period of ten years.
In 1982 Sandra filed suit in Texas state court to enforce the periodic payments obligation undertaken by Wayne and to obtain a restraining order and receivership over his assets. The suit was still pending when, in 1983, Wayne filed a voluntary chapter 7 petition in the bankruptcy court. In 1984 Sandra filed a complaint in the bankruptcy court to determine whether the periodic payments were dischargeable; after trial, the bankruptcy court held that the payments were dischargeable.
The bankruptcy court found that, after Wayne had made eight $3,000 periodic payments, he was unable to make further payments because his businesses had suffered irreversible setbacks which chopped his income from $40,000 or so per month in 1981 (in company profits) to $18,000 to $20,000 per year in 1982 and that he would have continued making the payments but for the business reversals. The bankruptcy court noted that the Agreement stated on its face that the periodic payments “are intended for maintenance and support and that they constitute no part of the property division in the divorce[.]” The court nevertheless
concluded that it had both the jurisdiction and obligation to conduct an inquiry concerning the indebtedness, which inquiry could look behind or extend beyond the four corners of the document in question, to determine whether the periodic payments “were truly in the nature of alimony, maintenance, and/or support or whether such payments were, in fact, in the nature of property settlement[.]”
The bankruptcy court relied on the following evidence to conclude that the payments were intended as a division of the parties’ property: first, in Sandra’s state court suit to enforce the Agreement she alleged under oath that company stock and corporate assets which Wayne received under the Agreement formed the basis for the periodic payments; second, the divorce attorneys and Wayne’s bookkeeper arrived at an agreement, based upon Sandra’s divorce lawyer’s request and suggestion, that the periodic payments be denominated as alimony and for the support of Sandra because Sandra’s lawyer believed the Agreement so structured would yield overall tax savings because of perceived probable differences in future marginal tax brackets for Sandra and Wayne; third, the Agreement did not provide for a cessation of payments in the event of Sandra’s death or remarriage, which strongly indicated that the parties intended the payments to be consideration for property division rather than alimony, maintenance, and/or support; fourth, at divorce, Sandra took from the estate cash and property valued at approximately $125,000 which, together with $360,000 in anticipated payments, equaled approximately $400,000 to $500,000, and Wayne took personal property and stock in then-successful companies which at the time of the divorce “approximated the value of money and property to which [Sandra] became entitled under the Agreement Incident to Divorce;” and fifth, at the time of the Agreement, Wayne did not have the liquidity to pay Sandra a lump sum settlement and such lack of liquidity was another factor in the parties’ decision “to structure the Agreement in the form of a payout[.]”
After the bankruptcy court entered a take nothing judgment against Sandra, she timely filed a motion for new trial and a motion to alter or amend final judgment. The bankruptcy court
denied the motions and made these additional findings and conclusions: the Agreement clearly and unambiguously provides that the periodic payments are to be made for Sandra’s support, and not as a part of any property division incident to divorce; the parol evidence rule is inapplicable to a § 523(a)(5) proceeding; and, the terms of the Agreement, even if clear and unambiguous, are subject to contradiction by evidence of prior or contemporaneous agreements or understandings of the parties as to the nature of the periodic payments. Sandra appeals.
II.
ANALYSIS
Sandra principally challenges the bankruptcy court’s determination that the parol evidence rule is inapplicable to a § 523(a)(5)(B) proceeding and that the clear and unambiguous terms of a written agreement incident to divorce may be contradicted by evidence of prior or contemporaneous agreements or understandings of the parties as to the nature of the periodic payments. Sandra does not challenge the bankruptcy court’s factual finding that the payments are properly characterized as a property settlement rather than support. Instead, Sandra urges that the bankruptcy court should never have made such a finding because the Agreement itself unambiguously provides that the periodic payments constitute support and the language of the Agreement properly should have been found to have been determinative.
The Bankruptcy Code excepts from chapter 7 discharge any debt to a former spouse for alimony, maintenance, or
support of the spouse in connection with a separation agreement, divorce decree, or other court order, governmental unit determination, or property settlement agreement. 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(5). However, a debt liability designated as alimony, maintenance, or support is not exempt from discharge unless the liability is actually in the nature of alimony, maintenance, or support. 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(5)(B).
The burden is on the person who asserts nondis-chargeability of a debt to prove its exemption from discharge,
Matter of Benich,
811 F.2d 943, 945 (5th Cir.1987), and the intention of the parties is the ultimate question,
id.
Sandra and Wayne do not disagree that § 523(a)(5)(B) establishes the controlling law or that the burden of proof is upon Sandra. They do disagree as to the evidence that may properly be considered by the trier of fact. Unfortunately for Sandra, her position that the parol evidence rule restricts the bankruptcy court in the case of an unambiguous written agreement is squarely rejected in this circuit.
In
Benich,
the Fifth Circuit held that the Bankruptcy Code requires the bankruptcy court to determine the true nature of the debt, regardless of the characterization placed on it by the parties’ agreement. 811 F.2d at 945 (citing
Brown v. Felsen,
442 U.S. 127, 138, 99 S.Ct. 2205, 2212-13, 60 L.Ed.2d 767 (1979), and Collier on Bankruptcy § 523.15(3) & (5) (15th ed. 1986)). Accordingly, the bankruptcy court may consider extrinsic evidence to determine the real nature of the underlying obligation in order to determine its dischargeability.
Benich,
811 F.2d at 945 (citing
In re Wright,
584 F.2d 83, 84 (5th Cir.1978)).
In her brief, Sandra’s analysis of
Benich
is somewhat inscrutable. Sandra comments that
“Benich
is helpful because it shows where the court’s initial concern with agreement interpretations evolved from” (Appellant Br. at 15), she asserts that
Benich
interprets Colorado law,
id.,
and she questions the
Benich
court’s reliance on
Brown v. Felsen,
the facts of which Sandra contends are distinguishable from
Benich, id.
at 15-16. At oral argument, however, her contentions concerning
Benich
were more developed. While acknowledging that
Benich
is the law of the circuit, and while refusing to assert that
Benich
was wrongly decided, Sandra sought to limit the reach of
Benich
to cases which involve contentions of deceit, fraud, and malicious conversion, or which seek to interpret the meaning of a state court decision (which Sandra contends was the case in
Benich).
Sandra argued that even
Benich
permits enforcement of the parol evidence rule where there are no such allegations and the parties have unambiguously set forth their intentions in an arms-length written agreement.
This court does not read
Benich
as narrowly as does Sandra. In
Benich
the Fifth Circuit dealt with a Texas “property-settlement agreement” apparently of the type present in the instant case. The parties were divorced, the husband failed to make contractually prescribed payments to the former wife, the former wife filed suit in Texas state court for breach of the agreement, the husband filed bankruptcy, and the wife sought a declaration that the debt was nondischargeable. Noting that debts for maintenance or support of a wife or child are among those debts expressly exempt from discharge, the
Benich
court held:
The Bankruptcy Code requires the bankruptcy court, as that court properly held, to determine the true nature of the debt, regardless of the characterization placed on it by the parties’ agreement or the
state court proceeding. The bankruptcy court may, therefore, consider extrinsic evidence to determine the real nature of the underlying obligation in order to determine dischargeability.
811 F.2d at 945. (Footnotes omitted).
Benich
did cite
Brown v. Felsen,
among other authorities, in support of the foregoing holding, but
Benich
itself did not involve a claim of deceit, fraud, or malicious conversion, nor was the court required, as Sandra asserts, to interpret the meaning of a state court decision.
Moreover, assuming
arguendo
that
Benich
has abolished the parol evidence rule in a context that Congress did not intend, Sandra must convince the
en banc
Fifth Circuit or the Supreme Court of the error. This court is bound to follow the law of this circuit as set forth in the
Be-nich
panel opinion.
Sandra also urges this court to follow
In re Hodges,
4 B.C.D. 966, 969 (N.D.Tex.1978) (affirming and adopting bankruptcy court opinion). In
Hodges
the court held, in a Bankruptcy Act decision:
Naturally, where the decree, the agreement, or the record is clear and unambiguous in indicating whether the liability is or is not nondischargeable, then the Bankruptcy Court should stop at any such point.
To the extent, however, that
Hodges
is applicable in a case decided under the Bankruptcy Code, the court questions whether
Hodges
remains viable in light of
Benich,
and hence chooses not to follow
Hodges.
Moreover, it appears that every other court to decide the question has reached the same conclusion as did the
Benich
court.
See, e.g., In re Williams,
703 F.2d 1055, 1057 (8th Cir.1983) (“[Bankruptcy courts are not ... bound to accept a divorce decree’s characterization of an award as maintenance or a property settlement.”);
In re Miller,
34 B.R. 289, 292 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1983) (“It is well-established in § 523(a)(5) cases that, in determining the intention of the parties, extrinsic evidence of the parties’ intention regarding a particular obligation should be considered along with the document itself creating the obligation in question.”);
In re Smotherman,
30 B.R. 568, 570 (Bankr.N.D.Ohio 1983) (The “Court must look beyond the four corners of the [divorce] decree” to determine whether a debt is support or property settlement.);
see also
3 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 523.15[5] (15th ed. 1986) (“An agreement between husband and wife may expressly describe an obligation created therein as ‘alimony,’ but the label is insufficient to make the obligations nondischargeable unless the payment is actually for the support and maintenance of a spouse, former spouse, or child of the debtor.”).
Sandra also relies upon contract law principles holding that where a contractual provision is unambiguous, extrinsic evidence is irrelevant. Sandra’s reliance upon these rules is misplaced. The legislative history of § 523(a)(5) explicitly instructs that “[wjhat constitutes alimony, maintenance, or support, will be determined under the bankruptcy laws, not State law.” H.R. Rep. No. 595, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 364,
reprinted in
1978 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad. News 5963, 6320; S.Rep. No. 989, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. 79,
reprinted in
1978 U.S. Code Cong. & Ad.News 5787, 5865.
In sum, where a creditor seeks to have a debt declared nondischargeable on the grounds that it constitutes alimony, maintenance, or support, the bankruptcy court not only may, but it
must
independently determine the parties' intent and, in turn, the nature of the debt. In making this inquiry the bankruptcy court is not limited to cases involving claims of deceit, fraud, or malicious conversion, or to cases which require the interpretation of a state court decision. While the characterization placed upon the debt by a separation agreement or divorce decree has probative value and may be considered by the trier of fact to evidence the parties’ intent, that characterization is not determinative even where the characterization is unambiguous.
In the present case the bankruptcy court correctly considered extrinsic evi
dence that would arguably have been foreclosed by the parol evidence rule. Because Sandra does not question the factual findings made by the bankruptcy court and the findings support the judgment entered, no error is presented which requires reversal.
Accordingly, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.