Turretto v. United States (In Re Turretto)

255 B.R. 884, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 1484, 2000 WL 1818388
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California
DecidedOctober 12, 2000
Docket15-40675
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 255 B.R. 884 (Turretto v. United States (In Re Turretto)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turretto v. United States (In Re Turretto), 255 B.R. 884, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 1484, 2000 WL 1818388 (Cal. 2000).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION HOLDING STUDENT LOAN DIS-CHARGEABLE PURSUANT TO § 523(a)(8)

ARTHUR S. WEISSBRODT, Bankruptcy Judge.

Chapter 7 Debtor Jennifer Turretto (“Debtor”) initiated this adversary proceeding, seeking discharge of a government-insured student loan (“loan”) under § 523(a)(8)’s “undue hardship” exception. 1 This matter came before the Court for trial. Debtor appeared in propria persona and Marc Fisher, Esq. represented Creditor United States of America (“Creditor”). Debtor was the sole witness at trial, testifying on her own behalf and submitting to cross examination.

At the close of the trial, this Court issued a tentative ruling finding the loan dischargeable, but requested that Creditor furnish an accounting of amounts paid under the loan and the exact amount owing as of the date of the trial. Debtor was given an opportunity to respond to the accounting within one week from its receipt. The Court received Creditor’s accounting. Debtor did not respond to it. This Court finds that: (1) the failure to discharge the loan would constitute an “undue hardship” upon Debtor and Debt- or’s dependents under § 523(a)(8); and (2) the loan must be discharged in full rather than in part.

The following constitutes this Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Rule 7052 of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

The following facts are undisputed.

Debtor is a physically healthy, 35 year old mother of three children, ages 9, 11 and 15 — the youngest two live with their father; the oldest with Debtor. Debtor regularly visits her two younger children on alternate weekends and holidays; for six weeks each summer, they temporarily live with Debtor.

Debtor’s monthly expenses, none of which were challenged by Creditor 2 , are:

Food . $ 400.00
Car Payment. 280.00
Rent. 650.00
Child Support. 500.00 3
*887 Automobile Insurance . 60.00
Minimum Credit Card Payment. 25.00
Telephone. 40.00
P.G. & E. (approximate) . 120.00 4
Water and sewer . 22.00
Medical Insurance (for Debtor and children, but no dental plan). 175.00
Gasoline (approximate) (driving to and from work; to visit younger children in Los Banos). 150.00 5
Household Necessities ..:. 60.00
Clothing for her eldest son. 41.67
Dental for her eldest son. 7.50
Miscellaneous (15 yr old’s school activities, plus bus fare to school [.60/day, 4 days/ week], etc.). 55.00
Loan ($2,000) (from current employer for down payment to purchase vehicle). 215.00 6
Therapy Sessions (for depression). 43.00 7
TOTAL. $ 2,844.17

Debtor’s total monthly expenses at the current rate of child support she pays for her two younger children ($188) are $2,532.17.

Debtor left school at the age of 14 without completing the eighth grade. Since that time, Debtor has received no formal schooling or vocational training, except for completing Lawton Business School’s six-month program in basic computer skills in approximately 1987. The loan at issue in this case paid for Debtor to take that course. Debtor testified that, by the time she completed this basic computer course, the skills she had learned had already become obsolete in the market place. 8

Debtor was on public assistance (“welfare”) during all or most of the period 1984 through 1986. She testified that she took the Lawton Business courses to “get off welfare”. Since taking the course, Debtor has held a succession of jobs, bridged by several periods during which she received unemployment compensation and/or other forms of public assistance.

Debtor’s first job began in 1986 as a customer service representative in a brokerage firm. This position lasted for two years, at which time Debtor left to establish a day care center in her home. When that enterprise failed, Debtor was forced to go on public assistance. She testified that, for a period of some four years after-wards, from 1991 though 1994, “jobs came and went”; Debtor estimated that she held about six different jobs during this period and also received unemployment benefits between jobs.

In 1995, Debtor went to work for an organization providing social services, *888 where she remained for three years until she was terminated due to lack of funding for the organization’s programs. For an unspecified period of time after her termination, Debtor was unemployed and received unemployment benefits. However, during 1999, Debtor, through personal contacts in her church, obtained employment as an assistant in a paralegal firm for a brief period of time. Her primary duties there were answering the telephone and scheduling appointments. Debtor’s salary for all of her previous jobs ranged from a low of $7 per hour to a high of $9 per hour. That is, in her lifetime, Debtor had never earned more than $9 an hour — until five and one-half months prior to the trial in this case. Debtor’s gross annual income for the year before trial, a substantial portion of which was from unemployment benefits, was approximately $9,000.

In October of 1999, Debtor obtained her current position, which she testified was based on the recommendation of a friend of her ex-husband. Debtor believed she would not otherwise have qualified for this job because of her lack of education and training. In her current position, Debtor’s duties include some typing, entering and paying bills using a straightforward computer system, answering the telephone, putting work job packets together, receiving and processing in-coming mail, and other light secretarial tasks. Debtor is now earning the highest wage she has ever earned: $15 an hour, with an average of 36-38 hours a week, for a gross weekly income of $555 (37 times $15). Multiplying $555 times 4.3 weeks per month equals a gross monthly income of $2,386.50. Assuming Debtor maintains her current employment, and is paid for 52 weeks, she will earn a maximum annual income of approximately $28,638 for the current year (12 times $2,386.50). 9

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Related

Chime v. Suntech Student Loan (In Re Chime)
296 B.R. 439 (N.D. Ohio, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
255 B.R. 884, 2000 Bankr. LEXIS 1484, 2000 WL 1818388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turretto-v-united-states-in-re-turretto-canb-2000.