Arthur B. Federman, Chief Bankruptcy Judge.
Debtor Michael Kevin Abney seeks a determination that repayment of his student loans will impose an undue hardship upon him and his dependents and that the loans should therefore be discharged pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8). The following constitutes my Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law in accordance with Rule 7052 of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure. For the reasons that follow, the Court finds that the Debtor has met his burden under § 523(a)(8) and that judgment should be entered in his favor, discharging his student loans.
The Debtor incurred his student loans while attending school at Missouri Southern State University from the spring of 1994 to the fall of 1998. He incurred a total of approximately $25,000 in student loans, which are now consolidated. He did not graduate. He testified that the monthly payment at the time he left school was about $210 per month, and that he defaulted early in the loan history. However, in about 2001, he brought the loans out of default by paying $1,600 and then began to make the $210 monthly payments. He had at least one deferment after 2001, but made a total of about $11,000 in payments before he defaulted again in January 2008. As of August 2015, the Debtor owed $37,243.28 in principal and interest on the consolidated student loans.
Section 523(a)(8) provides an exception to discharge for student loans unless the debtor is able to prove that excepting such debt from discharge would impose an undue hardship on the debtor
The Debtor (who appeared pro se) is forty years old and is unmarried. He is currently employed as a delivery driver, but at times in the past, he has worked as an over-the-road truck driver. He currently earns gross regular income of $2,420 per month, plus overtime in the approximate amount of $643 per month, for a total gross monthly income of approximately $3,063 per month. After payroll deductions for taxes, a modest retirement contribution, insurance, and child support, discussed below, his net take-home pay is approximately $1,183.
Based on the evidence and testimony, I find that the Debtor is maximizing his
The Debtor has two children: an eleven-year-old son, and a seven-year-old daughter. He pays child support to the mother of his son (his former wife) in the amount of $450 per month, and to the mother of his daughter in the amount of $350 per month. He is also paying an additional $288.46 per month to cure child support arrearages, for total child support payments of $1,038.46 per month, which is being deducted from his paycheck, as mentioned above. He expects to cure the arrearage by the end of the year, which will reduce the total monthly child support deduction to the original $750 amount. The Debtor testified that he has been involved in protracted litigation with the mothers of his children over visitation and custody issues and expects that litigation to continue in the future. It was readily evident at the hearing that the Debtor wishes to have meaningful relationships with his children and that he is making every effort to make his child support payments, discussed more fully below.
In December 2008, the Debtor lost his home to foreclosure, at which time he moved into his parents' home, where he lived until December of 2009.
The Debtor's other expenses are modest. In addition to the $640 in rent for the studio apartment (which apparently includes utilities), he lists $50 for telephone; $221 for food and housekeeping supplies; $5 for childcare and children's education costs; $54 for clothing, laundry, and dry cleaning; $260 for medical and dental expenses; $30 for transportation; $35 for charitable donations; and $86 for a gym membership and storage unit.
With regard to the medical expenses, the Debtor was hospitalized at the Mercy Marian Center for Behavioral Health for seven days, from June 6, 2013 through June 12, 2013.
The Debtor testified that he spends about $41 per month for a gym membership, which he requires because his job involves the loading and unloading of a delivery truck and he must be in a physical condition necessary for that kind of work. He spends about $45 per month on a storage unit because his studio apartment is too small to hold many of his belongings.
The Debtor claims only $30 in transportation expenses. He testified that he does not own a car. Because busses do not run during the middle of the night in Springfield, Missouri, he rides a bicycle four-and-a-half miles to work at 3:00 a.m., regardless of the weather. He understandably would like to buy a car, but he cannot afford to do so and pay his child support.
After paying his expenses, the Debtor's monthly budget is negative $203.
"To be reasonable and necessary, an expense must be `modest and commensurate with the debtor's resources.'"
Courts in the Eighth Circuit have looked to a number of other facts and circumstances — besides present and future income and expenses — to assist them in determining undue hardship. Such factors include:
I find that those factors weigh heavily in favor of a finding of undue hardship. The Debtor has made substantial payments, in the amount of approximately $11,000, on the original loans totaling approximately $25,000. He was able to negotiate a deferment of payment, and complied in good faith with the terms of that deferment. He was not able to complete the deferred payments because, he testified, he could not afford to pay for the litigation and child support, while also maintaining his student loan payments.
As seen, the Debtor has made a good faith effort to maximize income and minimize expenses. The Debtor did not specifically testify as to whether discharge of the student loans was a dominant purpose in filing the bankruptcy case. However, his Schedule F lists unsecured nonpriority debts totaling $116,617, which does not include the student loan debt, plus an additional $16,879 owed to a bank (apparently mistakenly listed as a priority debt in Schedule E). These debts include significant medical debts, and a deficiency owed to Bank of America, as well as attorneys' fees, apparently owed for the ongoing child support and visitation litigation the Debtor testified to. I find that the student loans were not a dominant purpose of the Debtor's bankruptcy filing.
The linchpin of the Department's argument is that the student loans should not be discharged because the Debtor is eligible for the Department's Income-Based Repayment Program for student loans (the "IBRP"). While the Department acknowledges that the Debtor's payment under such program would be zero based on his current income, it essentially argues that he should be required to participate in that program in the hope that his circumstances might change. The Eighth Circuit has held that "a student loan should not be discharged when the debtor has the ability to earn sufficient income to make student loan payments under the various special opportunities made available through the student loan program.'"
The representative from the Department of Education testified that, because the Debtor is in default on his student loans, he would first need to "rehabilitate" the loans in order to participate in the
The IBRP allows for forgiveness of student loans if the borrower makes monthly payments equal to 15% of discretionary income for a period of 25 years after acceptance into the program.
The Department acknowledges that the Debtor's payment under the IBRP at this time would be zero because his 2014 income tax return showed an AGI of $26,405, which is below the 150% poverty guideline. Based on the Debtor's work history and education, there is no basis to find that this situation is reasonably likely to change in the foreseeable future. Of course, the Debtor will not be required to pay child support forever, and that would free up some of his income, but the Debtor has no car or savings for retirement. At some point, he should be permitted to invest a modest amount in those things. Further, the Department's witness testified, interest continues to accrue on the loans, such that the balance will only increase over the next 25 years. Nevertheless, despite the fact that the Debtor is unlikely to make any meaningful dent in the debt, the Department argues that the mere availability of the IBRP negates any finding of undue hardship.
I disagree. Holding that eligibility for a program such as IBRP ipso facto leads to denial of an undue hardship discharge would deprive the Court of the discretion granted by § 523(a)(8).
In determining how much weight to give to eligibility for IBRP, a court, contrary to the Department's position, must be mindful of both the likelihood of a debtor making significant payments under the IBRP, and also of the additional hardships which may be imposed by these programs. As stated, interest and other charges would continue to accrue while the Debtor participated in IBRP, meaning that the total debt would be increasing. The overhang of such debt could well impact not only the Debtor's access to credit over the 25-year IBRP period, but could also affect future employment opportunities and access to housing.
Furthermore, borrowers who default while in an IBRP program lose eligibility.
And, even if the Debtor were able to navigate the 25-year program without a misstep, he could well then be faced with a significant tax debt when the debt is forgiven. To explain, discharge of a debt in bankruptcy is not itself a taxable event. However, forgiveness of a student loan at the end of the IBRP period is taxable in the same way as forgiveness of any other debt outside bankruptcy. That is, to the extent a debtor's assets exceed liabilities after the forgiveness, the forgiven debt is taxable income. Thus, if the Debtor were able over the next 25 years to timely pay his IBRP payments, as well as pay his child support and other expenses, and to somehow accumulate reserves to fall back on for retirement or otherwise, he would then be rewarded with a tax bill based on the amount of principal, interest and other charges owed to the Department at the time of forgiveness, when the Debtor is
Against these additional hardships from participation in IBRP, a court should consider the reasonable prospect that the borrower will be able to make "significant" payments while in the program.
Based on the foregoing, I find that the Debtor has proven, by a preponderance of the evidence, that not discharging his student loans would impose an undue hardship on him and his dependents. He is maximizing his earnings potential; indeed, the evidence was that he works as much overtime as regulations permit. I further find that his future financial resources are not likely to improve significantly, and he has essentially no savings for retirement. His expenses are exceptionally modest. I further find that, despite the fact that the child support payments will end at some point, the Debtor should be afforded the opportunity to buy a car and save at least something for retirement, something he would not likely be able to do if he is required to make student loan payments. Furthermore, the Debtor has made good faith efforts to defer his obligations, and to make payments under deferral agreements. And, based on the amount of other debt being discharged, he has good and sufficient reasons for filing bankruptcy apart from his student loans.
In sum, the Debtor has made every humanly-possible effort to pay his child support and student loans, to the point of riding a bicycle to work and living out of his employers' trucks and homeless shelters for periods of time. In addition, the mere availability of the IBRP is of no help to the Debtor's current or future situation but, rather, imposes additional burdens on him. Undue hardship should not be interpreted so harshly as to prevent this debtor — who is acting in good faith to fulfill his obligations — from ever getting the fresh start that the Bankruptcy Code is intended to provide.
As a result, the Debtor has met his burden of proving that the repayment of his student loans imposes an undue hardship on him, and that they should, therefore, be discharged pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8). An Order in accordance with this Memorandum Opinion will be entered this date.