Williams v. Educational Credit Management Corp. (In Re Williams)

301 B.R. 62, 2003 WL 22339199
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California
DecidedOctober 2, 2003
Docket19-50192
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 301 B.R. 62 (Williams v. Educational Credit Management Corp. (In Re Williams)) 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
Williams v. Educational Credit Management Corp. (In Re Williams), 301 B.R. 62, 2003 WL 22339199 (Cal. 2003).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION DETERMINING DEBTS TO BE DISCHARGEABLE

ARTHUR S. WEISSBRODT, Bankruptcy Judge.

Before the Court is an amended complaint by Larry Williams (“Husband”) and Sharon Williams (“Wife”), who are the debtors in this Chapter 7 1 ease (collectively, “Debtors”). The complaint is against Educational Credit Management Corporation (“Creditor”) 2 and seeks a determination that debts owed to Creditor for student loans taken by each of the Debtors are dischargeable in bankruptcy under § 523(a)(8), on the basis that payment of such debts would pose undue hardship.

*65 The Debtors are represented by Laurence J. McEvoy, Esq. of Clayton & McE-voy, P.C. Creditor is represented by Miriam Hiser, Esq. of the Law Offices of Miriam Hiser. The matter has been tried and submitted for decision after post-trial briefing. This Memorandum Decision constitutes the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law, pursuant to Rule 7052 of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure.

I.

FACTS

The Debtors filed a joint petition under Chapter 7 on October 26, 2001 and received a discharge of all dischargeable debts on January 22, 2002.

Husband was born in 1949 and Wife was born in 1950; they have been married since 1978. They are both licensed chiropractors and operate their own practice in San Jose.

After high school, Husband entered the Marine Corps, where he handled communications. He was discharged from the military in 1971 and worked at a variety of jobs while studying for an electronics engineering degree at several junior colleges from 1972 through 1980. During that period, he was employed as an electronics research and development engineering technician, a personnel and placement counselor, and a sales representative. He decided to change fields and enrolled at Palmer Chiropractic College (“Palmer”), graduating in 1984. He then worked as an examination doctor for a chiropractic practice until receiving his license in 1985, when he joined the practice as an associate chiropractor. He established his own practice in 1986 and has operated it since that time, incorporating it in November 2000 on the advice of his accountant.

Wife graduated from high school in 1969 and attended several junior colleges until 1976. She transferred to Sacramento State University in 1976, then to San Jose State University in 1978. In 1981, she enrolled at Palmer but was unable to complete the course and stayed only one and a half semesters. In 1986, she graduated from San Jose State University with a bachelor’s degree in psychology. She returned to Palmer in October 1986 and graduated in 1989. She became licensed in 1991 and has practiced with Husband since that time. Wife did secretarial and clerical work for several employers from 1970 to 1987, and she also did office work at Husband’s practice without pay.

Husband testified that, while “generally I feel fairly healthy”, he does have “muscu-loskeletal problems, degenerative neck problems, left shoulder dysfunctional problems, [and] lower back problems”. He said that these conditions cause some pain and weakness, which require chiropractic and physical therapy treatment “just about daily” — medical treatment is available under his health insurance plan but he has not sought it because he does not believe that it “really [has] a whole lot to offer” for these conditions at their current stages. Husband testified that these ailments “occasionally” interfere with his ability to work, sometimes for as much as “a few days”, and up to a week on “a few occasions over the years”, but preventive measures and the “conservative treatment” he receives do enable him to work productively for eight hours a day “most of the time”. Husband stated that chiropractic work is “very prone” to cause “repetitive trauma or stress type injuries”, due to “a lot of bending, manual work, leaning over quite a bit, [and] types of thrust involved”, such that there is a “high disability rate in the profession”. He said that “it seems to be rare” for chiropractors to practice beyond the age of 60 due to the physical demands *66 of the work, and he knows of only one who is older than he is and still practicing.

Husband testified that Debtors’ practice has the capacity of seeing approximately 100 patients per week, but the patient load dropped from that level during the “last year or so” to about 75 per week — the week before trial, 92 patients were seen. He said that the practice depends largely on referrals because that generates the “best type of case and the most repeat business”; developing referrals requires providing a “very high level of service” relative to the fee charged. The practice also performs two annual promotions with mailings and certificates that offer a “dramatically reduced entry cost”, and maintains an advertisement in the telephone directory. Husband testified that he does not attempt to generate business by such means as appearing at “storefronts” or sporting events to offer free “screenings”, since he is “absolutely terrible at actively promoting myself’ and has been unsuccessful as a salesman in the past because “it doesn’t work for me”. Debtors did acquire the practice of a retiring chiropractor in 2002, under an agreement whereby 50% of fees received from that practice’s patients were turned over to the retired chiropractor for one year. Husband said that Debtors did not expect to earn “a great deal of money” from those new patients, but “we were trying to expand our referral base for the future”, and he estimated that “it might work out to be maybe about a 10% increase over what we were doing before”. Husband testified that, when he began practicing, chiropractic practices typically could be sold for a price equal to twice the annual gross receipts, but it is now “very difficult” to sell one at all — he said that he knew of seven chiropractors who wanted to retire and tried for over a year to sell practices that were fifteen to twenty-five years old, but “finally just closed the doors and walked away”. Husband testified that Debtors’ practice is located in an office building in west San Jose, and requires equipment that must be replaced from time to time. He said that a “primary concern” now is sixteen year old x-ray equipment that will have to be replaced and could cost “about $30,000”.

Husband testified that the business aspect of a chiropractic practice has “changed a lot” since he graduated from Palmer, for various reasons. One cause is a general trend toward “managed care” insurance, under which “quite a restriction” was imposed on coverage for chiropractic services — Husband said that most plans now do not cover such services at all, and the rest provide only limited coverage. Another cause was “significant” reform of the workers’ compensation system in 1994. Husband testified that he “was looking around” for ways to increase income and had just become qualified as a medical evaluator to examine patients in connection with disability claims and dispute resolution; but the “big changes” permitted fewer patients to receive evaluations and caused the “fee structure” to be “pretty much cut in half’.

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301 B.R. 62, 2003 WL 22339199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-educational-credit-management-corp-in-re-williams-canb-2003.