OPINION
The bankruptcy court found that Brett Michael Carnduff (“Brett”) and Janeth Rey Carnduff (“Janeth”) (“Debtors”) will never be able to pay their student loan debt of over $350,000 unless one or both of them “wins the lottery.” Nevertheless, without deciding whether Debtors have made good faith efforts to repay their loans, the bankruptcy court held that it could not discharge any of their student loans under Section 523(a)(8) 1 because their earning capacity should improve in the future. We REVERSE and REMAND.
We publish to emphasize that the bankruptcy court has the power to grant a partial discharge of student loans even when the debtor’s earning capacity is expected to improve, if that improvement will be insufficient for the debtor to pay the full balance due without an undue hardship. However, in that event, the burden of proof remains with the debtor to establish undue hardship as to any portion of the debt to be discharged.
I. FACTS AND PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS
Each Debtor started off obtaining one degree and later switched fields and obtained one or more other degrees. Both attended Andrews University in Michigan, a private school (“Andrews”). Brett attended for about eight years and Janeth for nine, including some part-time enrollment.
In 2005, shortly after Brett obtained his last degree, Debtors filed their joint, voluntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition (Bk. No. 05-13455-SJS) and thereafter filed a “Complaint to Determine Dischargeability of A Debt (Student Loans)” (Adv. No. A05-01201-SJS) which named as defendants four private entities and the United States Department of Education (the “Government”). A default judgment was entered against all of the private entities
Debtors’ remaining student loans are owed to the Government. Brett owed $190,872.06 and Janeth owed $168,872.98 as of the date of trial on January 31, 2006. The bankruptcy court found that Debtors’ combined take-home pay is about $5,111 per month. It made no findings as to Debtors’ expenses, but the Government concedes that Brett and Janeth cannot make the payments under their current ten-year repayment plan, which Debtors calculate at $2,138.59 per month for Brett and $1,889.79 per month for Janeth.
The Government argues that Debtors’ financial difficulty is temporary. Debtors are “fresh out of school,” have not “even started repaying the debt,” have “25 years of working left, both of them,” and, the Government argues, it “should at least be given the benefit of looking at their earning capacity for a few years.” Transcript, January 31, 2006, pp. 155:10-12, 157:14, 157:23-24. Debtors testified that their earning capacity is limited in their chosen fields, that they cannot find more remunerative work in other fields, and that then-financial circumstances will worsen because they have recently divorced and because for family reasons Brett can no longer move around the country for contract work and must accept regular employment at lower pay. The Government responded at trial that Debtors are not presently maximizing their income, that their income will increase in the future, and that meanwhile Debtors can use deferments or forbearances and can make payments consistent with their financial circumstances under an income contingent repayment plan (“ICRP”). The Government’s interrogatory responses, admitted at trial, describe plans with monthly payments ranging from $823.03 to $2,141.66 depending on assumptions about Debtors’ future income, interest rates, and repayment periods which can range from the current 10 years up to 25 or 30 years. Debtors do not dispute that they may qualify for an ICRP or other repayment plan but their attorney argued that they cannot afford even $200 per month. He also argued that, although Debtors might be eligible for debt forgiveness at the end of an ICRP or other plan, that would result in “a huge tax bite.” Transcript, January 31, 2006, p. 149:17-21.
Brett is healthy and was 34 years old as of the date of trial. He has a bachelor’s degree in technology in computer imaging with an emphasis in business and communications. Brett testified that he has not been able to get a job using that degree because his degree was awarded in 1997 and the relevant software programs are now completely different.
In addition, Brett holds a master’s degree in developmental and educational psychology with an emphasis on school psychology. He intended to obtain a Ph.D. in that field but testified that as a result of a loan consolidation program he lost funding to complete his Ph.D. Instead he obtained an Educational Specialist Degree which he describes as between a master’s and a Ph.D. Brett testified that because he does not have a Ph.D. he is not qualified for any work other than being a school psychologist except for teaching at a community college which would pay “much less” than his current employment. As of the date of trial he was earning a salary of somewhere between $45,000 and $50,000 per year.
Brett does not expect his future pay to increase by much. According to the pay scale set by the State of Washington, Brett testified, “I’m looking at $58,000 after 20 years of experience.” Transcript, January 31, 2006, p. 37:24-25. He added that Washington is “one of the highest paying
Janeth is healthy and was 36 years old as of the date of trial. She has a bachelor of science degree with a major in medical technology but testified that she cannot be employed in that field because she never passed the test for certification as a medical technologist. She could have taken the test a third time within two years after graduation. If she failed again, though, she would have had to go back to school for about one and a half years. Even if she had passed the test she testified that she would only have earned $16 per hour as a medical technologist, which is less than what she makes now as an administrative assistant. Transcript, January 31, 2006, pp. 115:23-116:3, 119:9-120:14, 125:25-126:8. Instead of taking the test again Janeth stayed home with Debtors’ two children for three years without a paying job and then went back to graduate school on a part-time basis for four years.
Janeth earned a master’s degree in social work with an emphasis in community service. She testified, “I don’t have an internship, so that’s why I can’t get a job right now.” Transcript, January 31, 2006, p. 117:11-12. “[NJobody will hire me, because you need at least five years of experience” and “I don’t have any ... not even [an] internship.” Id. p. 128:1-7.
Janeth is presently employed as an administrative assistant earning $16.49 per hour. She works four days a week, typically for 32 hours, and takes Fridays off for religious reasons. She has the option to work for ten hours on the four days that she works but she chooses not to do so, both so that she can spend more time with her children and because the added child care expenses of working longer hours would exceed her added income. Transcript, January 31, 2006, pp. 109:5-110:15, 131:2-7,136:10-20.
Janeth testified that she is unable to “move up” at work and that she is not qualified to be an administrator because without an MBA degree she is only qualified to “work for a non-profit, like Red Cross Community Service.” Transcript, January 31, 2006, pp. 116:6-17, 127:14-18. At a non-profit she “can do grant writing, and it will be $3 less [per hour] than what I’m making now.” Id. p. 118:9-12. In 2005 she did some house cleaning for her sister to make some extra money. She has sent out about ten resumes to employers without having received any job offers.
Debtors have been divorced from each other once before and they divorced again after filing their bankruptcy petition. As of the date of trial they were living together but the bankruptcy court assumed that they would live separately at some point and that this will increase their expenses.
The Government did not put on any witnesses but argued that some expenses, such as the children’s private school and tithing to their church, are self-imposed and that Debtors are really just choosing to spend all of their take home pay. The Government added that Debtors had chosen to stay in college for eight years at a private institution with very high tuition and had then chosen to pay private lenders rather than the Government because Brett’s mother had co-signed many of those loans. The Government’s attorney also argued:
I know that the plaintiffs counsel has said, well, the Government hasn’t shown [that Debtors] will be making, you know, huge salaries. It’s not the Government’s burden. It’s the plaintiffs burden to show that there is some barrier on their path to recovery that’s more than just a current inability to make the payments. It appears that they have a current inability to make the payments.But they haven’t shown anything that’s going to make that persist for 25 years.
Transcript, January 31, 2006, p. 158:1-10.
Debtors’ attorney focused, both in his trial brief and in oral argument at trial, on obtaining a complete discharge of Debtors’ student loans but in the alternative he sought a partial discharge. At the end of trial the bankruptcy court asked the Government’s counsel, “What about the idea of a partial discharge?” She responded:
I’m aware that the Court can do it. I would ask that the Court not entertain that idea now, simply because the Government should be given the benefit of seeing at least some earning capacity. Right now we have nothing. We are just supposed to take it on their word that they’re not going to be able to make much more. But they just started. So if we get to a point where they’ve shown that they’ve tried and that they can’t do it, even given all the, you know, lenien-cies the [Department [of Education] is willing to do, then I’d say it’s something to consider for the Court. But we’d ask that you not consider it now, given the timing and how new this is.
Transcript, January 31, 2006, pp. 158:13-159:2.
The bankruptcy court announced its ruling orally at a hearing on March 16, 2006. It concluded that Debtors could never repay the full amount of their student loan debt to the Government but that they are not entitled to a full or partial discharge of the debt because, based on the bankruptcy court’s own experience, their earning ca-pacify should improve in the future. Transcript, March 16, 2006, pp. 6:16-8:1.
On May 19, 2006, the bankruptcy court entered a judgment that the entire amounts of Debtors’ student loan obligations to the Government are not dis-chargeable in bankruptcy. Debtors filed a timely notice of appeal.
II.ISSUE
Are Debtors entitled to a full or partial discharge of their student loan debt to the Government? 2
III.STANDARDS OF REVIEW
“We review de novo the bankruptcy court’s application of the legal standard in determining whether a student loan debt is dischargeable as an undue hardship.”
In re Rifino,
IV.DISCUSSION
Section 523(a)(8) provides in full:
§ 523. Exceptions to discharge
(a) A discharge under section 727, 1141, 1228(a), 1228(b), or 1328(b) of this title does not discharge an individual debtor from any debt—
(8) for an educational benefit overpayment or loan made, insured or guaranteed by a governmental unit, or made under any program funded in whole or in part by a governmental unit ornonprofit institution, or for an obligation to repay funds received as an educational benefit, scholarship or stipend, unless excepting such debt from discharge under this paragraph will impose an undue hardship on the debtor and the debtor’s dependents^]
11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8) (emphasis added).
Neither the Bankruptcy Code nor the legislative history of Section 523(a)(8) defines “undue hardship.”
3
Case law has held that it is something more than “garden-variety hardship.”
Pena,
First, the debtor must establish “that she cannot maintain, based on current income and expenses, a ‘minimal’ standard of living for herself and her dependents if forced to repay the loans.” Brunner,831 F.2d at 396 ....
Second, the debtor must show “that additional circumstances exist indicating that this state of affairs is likely to persist for a significant portion of the repayment period of the student loans.” Brunner,831 F.2d at 396 . This second prong is intended to effect “the clear congressional intent exhibited in section 523(a)(8) to make the discharge of student loans more difficult than that of other nonexcepted debt.” Id.
The third prong requires “that the debtor has made good faith efforts to repay the loans.... ” Brunner,831 F.2d at 396 . The “good faith” requirement fulfills the purpose behind the adoption of section 523(a)(8).... Section 523(a)(8) was a response to “a ‘rising incidence of consumer bankruptcies of former students motivated primarily to avoid payment of education loan debts.’ ” Id .... This section was intended to “forestall students ... from abusing the bankruptcy system.” Id.
Pena,
The debtor has the burden to prove all three prongs of the
Brunner
test. If the debtor fails to prove any one of the three prongs then the loan will not be discharged.
In re Nys,
In measuring income and expenses the test is whether it would be “ ‘unconscionable’ to require the debtor to take steps to earn more income or reduce her expenses” in order to make payments under a given repayment schedule.
In re Birrane,
A. The first prong of Brunner
Debtors have the burden to prove that they “cannot maintain, based on
current
income and expenses, a ‘minimal’ standard of living for [themselves] and [their] dependents if forced to repay the loans.”
Brunner,
We need not resolve these disputes. Even with every adjustment in the Government’s favor there would be only a few hundred dollars left over every month after deducting Debtors’ current expenses from their current income. The evidence does not show that such a modest increase in Debtors’ income would be adequate to fully amortize the entire amount of their student loan debt.
B. The second prong of Brunner
This prong, which examines future finances, has generated some confusion. Its purpose, according to the Second Circuit in
Brunner,
is to test whether the hardship presented is truly “undue.”
Brunner,
Another confusing aspect of the second prong is the standard of proof required. The district court in
Brunner
required a
“certainty
of hopelessness, not simply a present inability to fulfill financial commitment.”
In re Brunner,
Applying the above standards, Brunner’s second prong sets a high but not impossible bar. To discharge any of their student loan debt to the Government, Debtors must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that, for a substantial portion of the loan repayment period, they would not be able to maintain even a “minimal” standard of living if forced to pay that debt.
In this case the bankruptcy court held that Debtors did not meet their burden to prove Brunner’s second prong:
As to the second Brunner test, that is, in effect, whether the dire financial circumstances will continue throughout the repayment period of the loan, this is obviously the main issue of the case. The Government points [out] that both debtors are in their early 30’s; they are healthy and well educated; their financially productive years are ahead of them; that there is no reason for the two of them to be forever stuck in a financial backwater; and that their earning capacity should improve in the future, particularly if they make the effort.
On this issue, in large part, I agree with the Government. I get the impression that these debtors are resigned to their present circumstances. I see no reason why they should be. As has been pointed out, they are young, they are healthy, they are well educated, and there is no reason why their financial circumstances should not improve, particularly when their children become of age, and provided they make the effort.
Accordingly, I conclude that the debtors have not satisfied the second prong of Brunner and that the student loans are not dischargeable.
Transcript, March 16, 2006, pp. 6:16-7:13 (emphasis added).
Debtors argue persuasively that the bankruptcy court applied an incorrect legal test. The issue is not whether Debtors’ financial circumstances are likely to improve
at all
but whether Debtors can rebut the presumption that their income “will increase
to a point where [they] can make payments
and maintain a minimal standard of living.”
Nys,
The bankruptcy court itself found that there is no way that Debtors can pay their student loan debts in full. After stating that Debtors’ earning capacity and financial circumstances should improve in the future it stated:
Now, having said all that, as a practical matter, it appears to me that unless one or both of these debtors wins the lottery, receives a substantial inheritance, finds a gold mine or a treasure trove in the backyard or somehow achieves wealth in some other way, that there is simply no way in which these loans will ever be repaid in full.
Transcript, March 16, 2006, pp. 7:16-7:22.
Therefore, Debtors have shown that their future income and expenses will not permit them to pay their entire student loan debt without undue hardship.
C. The third prong of Brunner
As stated at the beginning of this opinion the bankruptcy court did not find whether Debtors have made good faith efforts to repay their loans. The bankruptcy court treated Debtors’ obligations to the Government as nondischargeable regardless of whether they could prove good faith.
Debtors imply that we should go further and decide the good faith issue, but we cannot engage in factfinding. That is for the bankruptcy court on remand.
See generally In re Dolph,
D. Partial discharge
This case seems to cry out for a partial discharge. Debtors owe the Government over $350,000 and from Debtors’ evidence the bankruptcy court found that there is “no way in which these loans will ever be repaid in full.” Transcript, March 16, 2006, pp. 6:16-7:22. By definition, then, forcing them to try paying over $350,000 would seem to be an undue hardship (assuming Debtors’ good faith, for purposes of discussion only). On the other hand, the bankruptcy court found that Debtors’ finances “should improve in the future,” id., which implies that it thought Debtors will be able eventually to pay some meaningful portion of their student loan debt. If so, then Debtors might be unjustly rewarded and the Government unjustly punished if the entire student loan debt were to be discharged simply because it is so large that Debtors cannot pay it in full. The middle ground is a partial discharge.
The bankruptcy court nevertheless believed that it was prohibited from granting a partial discharge in this case:
I seriously considered granting a partial discharge. However, as I said from the start, in In re Pena, which adopts Brun-ner, that is the law in this circuit, and I am bound to follow it.
Transcript, March 16, 2006, pp. 7:22-8:1.
We do not interpret
Pena
and
Brunner
as prohibiting a partial discharge in this case. The Ninth Circuit has rejected the view that Section 523(a)(8) mandates an “all-or-nothing” approach to non-dischargeability of student loan debt.
Saxman
held that bankruptcy courts have the equitable power to grant a partial discharge.
Saxman
required that all three prongs of
Brunner
be satisfied in partial discharge cases, as a curb on unbounded equitable powers. The Ninth Circuit rejected authority that “even if a debtor fails to establish his or her burden under § 523(a)(8) of showing undue hardship, bankruptcy courts can still partially discharge educational loans pursuant to § 105(a).”
Saxman,
A debtor who wishes to obtain a discharge of his student loans must therefore meet the requirements of § 523(a)(8) as to the portion of the debt to be discharged before that portion of his or her debt can be discharged.
Saxman,
1. Burden of proof
As we read the emphasized language just quoted, the burden of proof remains with the student loan debtor in partial discharge cases. It is the debtor’s burden to establish the portion of the debt to be discharged&emdash;“the portion that results in undue hardship.” Id. at 1175 (quoting lower court).
Undue hardship is tested by the three prongs of
Brunner,
regardless whether at the end of trial the bankruptcy court is considering a full or a partial discharge. On the first prong the debtor presents evidence of “current income and expenses” and the bankruptcy court determines whether, consistent with a “minimal” standard of living, the debtor currently can pay some, all, or none of the student loan debt.
Pena,
There is some contrary authority. Stewarts Johnson holds that burden of proof shifts to the creditor when partial discharge is at issue:
At most, Saxman and the procedural reforms of the Bankruptcy Code [which generally removed judges from administrative functions and limited them to resolving disputes] mean that if a creditor seeks a partial discharge, it should take a position asserting exactly what amount of debt it contends would not pose an undue hardship.... The court would then merely need to determine whether the creditor has carried the burden of proof that that amount of debt does not impose an undue hardship.
Stewartr-Johnson,
We disagree. Steward-Johnson does not distinguish the language that we have quoted from Saxman, which we interpret as placing the ultimate burden of proof squarely on the debtor. Shifting the burden of proof would also cause the very problem that Saxman sought to avoid. It would reward debtors with larger student loan debts. Debtors in this case were able to prove that they could never pay their full debt because it is so large — over $350,-000 — so they would have the benefit of shifting the burden of proof whereas a debtor who borrowed less would not have that benefit.
We are mindful of, but not persuaded by, the countervailing problems that Stewart-Johnson sought to avoid:
It is one thing for a Court to determine that payment of a certain amount of debt would or would not impose an undue hardship. It is entirely another matter to ask the Court to establish exactly how much debt could be paid without creating an undue hardship. This would put the Court into the position of micro-managing the debtor’s lifestyle, determining precisely the amount that should be spent each month on variables such as food, clothing, cable television, recreation, subscriptions, retirement savings and grooming. Indeed, the Court could even become involved in adjusting what might normally be considered fixed expenses, such as by requiring the debtor to move to a less expensive home....
Such determinations would impose on the court a much more intrusive role than the court necessarily plays in resolving disposable income disputes for purposes of § 1325(b). Such disposable income determinations are usually made only when the Chapter 13 trustee objects .... Chapter 13 trustees have far more experience with family lifestyle spending decisions than do bankruptcy judges.... [Bankruptcy courts should not supplant the trustees’ business judgments, but rather merely should determine whether the trustee has exercised appropriate business judgment. Yet if bankruptcy courts were required to determine how much of a partial discharge should be granted, they have to exercise a kind of family business judgment in an adversary context without even the recommendation of a neutral third party such as a trustee. Such a role would be contrary to one of the principal reforms accomplished by the Bankruptcy Code, which was to remove bankruptcy judges from administrative functions and limit them to the proper judicial role of resolving disputes.
Stewartr-Johnson,
Although these are legitimate concerns, the bankruptcy court faces the same potential problem of micro-management regardless who has the burden of proof. Congress has not defined “undue hardship” so the courts must determine how much hardship is undue. Perhaps the bankruptcy court can obtain guidance from
Another reason advanced by Stewarb-Johnson for shifting the burden of proof is based on its reading of Section 523(a)(8):
Because the partial discharge is in effect a case-law exception to the undue hardship provision of Code § 523(a)(8) (which is already an exception to an exception), it seems appropriate that the burden of proof should be placed on the party who seeks to demonstrate an exception from statutory language.
Stewart-Johnson,
We disagree with the premise that Section 523(a)(8) favors an all-or-nothing approach and that a partial discharge is therefore an “exception” to the statutory language. As we interpret
Saxman,
it held the opposite. It held that “such debt” in Section 523(a)(8) should not be “interpreted as evincing a congressional intent that student debt either be completely discharged or not at all.”
Section 523(a)(8) places the burden on debtors to prove that they cannot pay all of their student loan debt, or at least some portion of it, without undue hardship. Debtors have the burden to prove all three prongs of
Brunner
“as to the
portion
of the debt to be discharged.”
Saxman,
2. Application of the burden of proof in this case
Debtors attempted to show that they could not pay any of their student loan debt without undue hardship. They argued in the alternative that they could pay only part of their student loan debt. Brett testified that he would earn no more than $58,000 after 20 years of experience as a school psychologist and Janeth testified that for various reasons her degrees in medical technology and social work would not generate income above her current earnings. The bankruptcy court appears to have accepted that Debtors’ income potential is limited within their chosen fields, at least for the sake of argument. See Transcript, January 31, 2006, p. 153:17-19. If the bankruptcy court had no other concerns then it might have used Debtors’ evidence to project their future income, deduct future expenses, calculate how much student loan debt Debtors could pay without undue hardship, and discharge the excess. That is not what happened. The bankruptcy court asked Debtors’ counsel:
What I want to know from you is this. Both [Debtors] seem to think their onlyemployment opportunities are in the field for which they have this extensive education. Why couldn’t they look for employment with a better future in other fields? I mean, let’s say Boeing starts hiring. Maybe you could get a good job at Boeing. Let’s say that there might be an opening at Microsoft. Aren’t they limiting themselves just by saying, well, I’m just trained as a school psychologist, so that’s all I’m ever going to do?
Transcript, January 31, 2006, pp. 137:17-138:2.
The bankruptcy court later gave an example of someone who went to work “years ago” for Boeing “in the most menial job they had there” and worked his way up to end up making “80, $85,000 a year.” Id. p. 143:14-22. Debtors essentially argue that this is speculation. We interpret it differently: the bankruptcy court was using an example to illustrate that it did not believe that Debtors’ future earning capacity was as limited as they claimed.
Debtors argue that the bankruptcy court was required to make actual projections in specific dollar amounts. We disagree. Debtors have the burden to show the portion of their student loan debt that they will be unable to pay without undue hardship. The bankruptcy court does not have the burden to show the opposite, let alone calculate precise dollar amounts. Debtors did attempt to meet their burden of proof but the bankruptcy court was entitled to disbelieve their evidence.
See Anderson v. City of Bessemer City, N.C.,
We could interpret the bankruptcy court’s refusal to grant a partial discharge as an implicit ruling that Debtors did not meet their burden of proof. If Debtors did not meet their burden to prove how much their student loan debt should be reduced then, it seems to us, they are not entitled to a partial discharge. The bankruptcy court would be left with only an all- or-nothing choice. Because discharging the entire debt would be inequitable to the Government, perhaps the only alternative was to discharge none of the debt.
Cf. Hornsby,
But we will not affirm on this basis. The bankruptcy court appears to have made its decision not because of the burden of proof but because it thought it had no discretion to consider a partial discharge, which is an error of law. We cannot defer to the exercise of discretion that the bankruptcy court seems to have believed it did not have.
We are also concerned that the way in which the bankruptcy court drew on its own experience and rejected Debtors’ contrary evidence may not have given Debtors a fair opportunity to rebut its concerns about alternative employment. The bankruptcy court first expressed its concerns
after
the close of evidence. The Government offered no evidence or even specific examples of alternative employment, although in closing argument its attorney did state, “as the Court pointed out, there are so many other things that these plaintiffs can do.” Transcript, January 31, 2006, p. 154:21-22. The bankruptcy court also may have overlooked some evidence. It stated, “I don’t have any evidence [that Debtors] ever tried anything out of their fields.”
Id.,
pp. 137:17-138:2, 144:9-11. Debtors’ counsel pointed out that Brett testified to having done some work in
We recognize that Debtors’ counsel could have asked the bankruptcy court to reopen the trial and reopen discovery so that he could find an expert witness to testify about Debtors’ lack of prospects for greater earning power outside of their chosen fields. From the excerpts of record, however, it seems to us that Debtors had little warning that the bankruptcy court was not satisfied with the answers to its questions and would override the only evidence before it based on its own view that Debtors could earn more outside of their fields. The bankruptcy court should consider on remand whether additional procedures are required to assure that Debtors have had a fair opportunity to present rebuttal evidence. 6
Whether or not the bankruptcy court permits the parties to present more evidence, it should articulate its reasoning regarding partial discharge. In particular it should address the burden of proof and how it has weighed the equities as permitted by Saxman.
E. Other issues
The parties argue that various issues are grounds for reversal or affirmance. We disagree that these issues are disposi-tive, but some of them may need to be addressed on remand.
Debtors argue that the bankruptcy court erred by assuming that their student loans would be restructured and the payment period extended. We disagree.
Debtors’ only authority is a decision by “[t]his very trial court judge.”
In re Hinkle,
2. Feasibility of alternative repayment plans
Debtors argue in the alternative that even if restructured payment plans are theoretically possible the bankruptcy court should not have assumed that such a plan is feasible in this case. Debtors argue that the ICRP could involve years of payments that would barely reduce principal or even be inadequate to pay accruing interest and this allegedly would ruin their credit ratings. Some repayment plans could result in debt forgiveness after 25 or 30 years, resulting in a large amount of imputed income for tax purposes. Debtors claim that the available restructuring plans would cripple them financially.
Debtors have not established that this is necessarily so. They cite three decisions in which student loans were discharged despite the debtors’ refusal to enter into alternative repayment plans, but Debtors fail to mention that two of those decisions were reversed.
See In re Boykin,
The third decision cited by Debtors recognizes that repayment plans are “not
always
a feasible option” but the issue is when they are feasible and when they are not.
In re Korhonen,
Nevertheless, the bankruptcy court may need to consider on remand whether future tax liability, negative credit ratings, or any other consequences of the available repayment plans would impose an undue hardship that requires a partial discharge of the student loan debt.
See Birrane,
3. The Government’s arguments
The Government points out that Debtors incurred a very large amount of student loan debt&emdash;over $350,000 owed to the Government and what Brett’s own declaration describes as a total amount owed to all lenders of “approximately $600,000” before the private loans were discharged. The Government objects that because Debtors chose to pay other debts and took deferments for economic hardship and other reasons they have paid the Government only $52. This may bear on Debtors’ good faith, but as the bankruptcy court recognized the size of the debt cuts both ways:
In the first place, it is difficult to imagine these two debtors receiving advanced degrees as a result of student loans in the amounts of hundreds of thousands of dollars and not wanting to pay anything for their education. On the other hand, it is incredible that the various lenders here would advance to these debtors student loans in the amounts they did and at the same time expect to get paid in full.
Transcript, March 16, 2006, at 3:11-18.
See also Nys,
The Government argues that Brett could earn more by working on a contract basis but according to Brett that work rarely lasts more than one year, it does not include benefits, sick days, or paid holidays, and it would require him to move around the country which is disruptive to the children and Janeth’s ability to find work. A debtor has an obligation to maximize income, perhaps even by accepting part time work or work outside of a chosen field.
Birrane,
We do not mean to suggest that the bankruptcy court necessarily has to reach all of these issues, or is limited to these issues.
See also Nys,
V. CONCLUSION
Debtors incurred a huge amount of student debt. Having paid almost nothing on that debt they now seek to discharge it all, despite being young, healthy, and highly
Notes
. Unless otherwise indicated, all chapter, section and rule references are to the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 101-1330, and to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, Rules 1001-9036, as enacted and promulgated prior to the effective date of The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005, Pub.L. 109-8, 119 Stat. 23 (“BAPCPA”), because the case from which this appeal arises was filed before its effective date (generally October 17, 2005).
. Despite their separate outstanding student loans, we treat Debtors as a single unit, even though they have divorced, because they were living together at the time of trial. Further, the bankruptcy court considered at least their current income and expenses together, and the parties have not argued on appeal that this was error. We express no opinion whether the bankruptcy court should treat Debtors separately or together, should do so only for some purposes or for all purposes, or should consider any post-trial changes in Debtors’ living arrangements or other circumstances. Those issues can be addressed on remand as appropriate.
. Paragraph (8) of Section 523(a) has been amended by BAPCPA. As stated in footnote 1 above that amendment does not apply to this case, but we note that Congress has not included any definition of "undue hardship” in the amended statute:
(a) A discharge under section 727, 1141, 1228(a), 1228(b), or 1328(b) of this title does not discharge an individual debtor from any debt&emdash;
(8) unless excepting such debt from discharge under this paragraph would impose an undue hardship on the debtor and the debtor’s dependents, for&emdash;
(A)(i) an educational benefit overpayment or loan made, insured, or guaranteed by a governmental unit, or made under any program funded in whole or in part by a governmental unit or nonprofit institution; or (ii) an obligation to repay funds received as an educational benefit, scholarship, or stipend; or
(B) any other educational loan that is a qualified education loan, as defined in section 221(d)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, incurred by a debtor who is an individual]!]
11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8) (as amended by BAPC-PA).
. The prediction of future finances is not set in stone. Nondischargeability under Section 523(a)(8) has been held not to be preclusive in a later bankruptcy case.
See In re Nash,
. We express no view whether the disposable income test of Chapter 13 is either a permissible or a required method of assessing undue hardship under Section 523(a)(8).
Compare In re Seqneira,
. In the analogous context of fee applications, in which the bankruptcy court has a duty to raise issues even if no party in interest does so, the Ninth Circuit has cautioned that the bankruptcy court sometimes "simulates the role of an adversary, albeit to a circumscribed degree,” and it should apprise parties of "the particular questions and objections it harbors” and give them "an opportunity to rebut or contest the court’s conclusions.”
In re Eliapo,
