United Student Aid Funds, Inc. v. Nascimento (In Re Nascimento)

241 B.R. 440, 99 Daily Journal DAR 11945, 99 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9375, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1429, 1999 WL 1067626
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 16, 1999
DocketBAP No. EC-98-1938-MeRBa. Bankruptcy No. 97-22098-C-7. Adversary No. 98-2369
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 241 B.R. 440 (United Student Aid Funds, Inc. v. Nascimento (In Re Nascimento)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Student Aid Funds, Inc. v. Nascimento (In Re Nascimento), 241 B.R. 440, 99 Daily Journal DAR 11945, 99 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9375, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1429, 1999 WL 1067626 (bap9 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

MEYERS, Bankruptcy Judge.

I

After a trial, the court entered judgment in favor of the Debtor and determined that the student loan obligation owing to the Appellant was not excepted from the discharge under § 523(a)(8).

We REVERSE AND REMAND.

II

FACTS

The Debtor is a 40 year old veterinarian. She consolidated several student loans in 1994, which totaled $85,855 by the time of trial. This sum included accrued interest but not collection costs. At the beginning of the trial, the lender irrevocably reduced the balance to $65,000 at 5% interest and then at closing argument further reduced the amount to $55,000 at 5% interest. The repayment period for the consolidation loan was 25 years, until the year 2020. The resulting payment is $362 per month to amortize the reduced loan amount over 20 years or $434 per month if amortized over 15 years.

Since the consolidation loan was funded in early 1995, the Debtor testified that she made two payments — one of “two hundred something” dollars and the other of “four hundred something” dollars.

The Debtor’s monthly income is $3,798. After taxes and health insurance, her net monthly income is $2,649. 2 The Debtor has been employed at an animal hospital for two years. She testified that she has been out of school for five years and she is an associate veterinarian. She expects to receive insignificant raises in the future, probably just enough to cover the increase in the cost of living. The court found that “the prospects for signifi *443 cant changes in that income are negligible, The nature of the veterinary business, as the debtor has testified, is such that that is basically the going rate of pay for veterinarians who are employees in the Sacramento geographic area. And I will note from my own experience in other cases that that is consistent with numbers that I have seen in other eases.”

Her monthly expenses, which the court determined to be reasonable, total $2,552, leaving her an excess of $97 per month ($197 if one excludes the payment on another student loan from her expenses). She itemized the following monthly expenses:

Rent: $500
Telephone: $100
Food: $250
Clothing: $120
Laundry/Dry Cleaner $ 80
Medical & Dental: $170
Transportation: $ 80
Recreation: $ 50
Life Insurance: $ 15
Cai* Insurance: $139
Car Payment: $325
Student Loan: $100
Child Support: $400
Prof. License $ 33
Prof. Dues $ 50
Continuing Ed. $ 75
Hairdresser $ 65
(including weekly visits to the chiropractor)
(University of Missouri)
(for the states of Mo.} Nv & Ut) (California)

The child support is for the Debtor’s 15 year old son. The Debtor raised him as a single parent for years without receiving or seeking support from her ex-husband. In September 1998, her son moved to Missouri with his father and plans to stay there. The Debtor’s ex-husband has no income other than an unidentified amount of state disability payments.

The brief trial took place on December 18, 1998, with the Debtor as the only witness. At the time of trial, the ex-husband had applied for payments through a program for Aid to Families with Dependant Children. The Debtor had been contacted by a representative of the program and informed that they intend to seek child support from her. The Debtor hoped to negotiate a payment of $400 per month with the state of Missouri, but provided evidence that under California law, she could be required to pay between $540 and $619 per month, depending on the amount of her ex-husband’s income. During opening statement, the Debtor’s attorney indicated that it may be as much as two years before the court actually sets the amount she will pay for support.

The Debtor testified that her son was an above average student and had planned for some time to go to college. As a result, she believes that her obligation to provide support for her son will not end after three years when he reaches the age of eighteen.

The Debtor admitted that she could repay $20,000 of the student loan, but not the entire amount sought by the creditor. The court concluded that it was left with a choice of discharging all of the obligation or none of it based on the holding of In re Taylor, 223 B.R. 747, 753 (9th Cir. BAP 1998). The court concluded that to require the Debtor to repay the entire reduced balance 3 of $55,000 at 5% per annum would constitute an undue hardship under § 523(a)(8). The court acknowledged that the precise amount of support would be determined by a court of competent jurisdiction, but that $400 was certainly a reasonable approximation of what a court would determine to be owed.

The rest of the court’s analysis and oral findings are:

And, in assessing the undue hardship issue, taking into account the income that is identified and the prospects of the debtor over the long term and adjustments to expenditures that may be expected over the long term, certainly there will come a point at which child support obligation is no longer accruing; nevertheless, there may still be an unpaid reimbursement obligation that is nondischargeable in any form of bankruptcy that the debtor will still owe and be stuck with the interstate collection procedures on its so-called AFDC reim *444 bursement obligation based on the assigned debt that I referred to at the outset. So it’s not altogether clear that all child support obligations will fall out of the picture to the extent that she is not actually paying $400 per month right now. She may, in the long run, have to pay over a period of eight or ten years to get that paid off. It’s conceivable that could happen.
So, with those factors in mind, the question that now is before me is whether $55,000 at five percent per annum is a debt that would constitute — the payment of which would impose an undue hardship for the debtor. In thinking about the analysis, there’s very little law that, frankly, is very helpful in how one considers it. I — what I do is: I project in my own mind what the debtor’s likely ability will be to make a significant dent in this debt over a period of 10 or 12 years.

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Bluebook (online)
241 B.R. 440, 99 Daily Journal DAR 11945, 99 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 9375, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1429, 1999 WL 1067626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-student-aid-funds-inc-v-nascimento-in-re-nascimento-bap9-1999.