OPINION
Plaintiff-appellee Patricia Miller sought full discharge of her student loan debt by filing an adversary complaint in bankruptcy court notwithstanding that over ninety-nine percent of her outstanding student loan obligations remained unpaid. The bankruptcy court relied on 11 U.S.C. § 105(a) to grant Miller a partial discharge by dismissing more than half of her student loan debt. The district court upheld this discharge. The guarantor of Miller’s student loans appealed, arguing that discharge of student loan debt is only available upon a finding of “undue hardship” pursuant to the bankruptcy code, 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8). For the reasons set forth below, we reverse the decision of the district court, which affirmed the order of the bankruptcy court, and remand this case for a determination of whether Miller has shown undue hardship with respect to the portion of her student loans that the court discharged.
I.
Miller received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Juniata College in 1988, a Masters of Arts in Philosophy from the University of Tennessee-Knoxville (“UT”) in 1992, and worked towards a Doctorate of Philosophy at UT from 1992 to 1997. She failed to complete the requirements for the doctoral degree. To pay for her education, Miller received various student loans that are presently guaranteed by the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency (“PHEAA”). After leaving UT, she requested and received forbearances and deferments on her student loans.
On May 30, 2001, Miller filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition. Shortly thereafter, she filed an adversary action in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee against PHEAA seeking discharge of all of her outstanding student loan debt, which totaled $89,832.16, as of April 26, 2002. At the time that she filed the adversary action, Miller had made payments of only $368.00 towards her student loans, an amount that represented less than half of one percent of her student loan obligations. Miller described her monthly expenses as follows:
rent: $395.00;
utility payments: $75.00;
cable television: $45.00;
telephone charges: $90.00;
cell phone expenses: $40.00;
internet service expenses: $25.00;
food: $275.00;
clothes: $75.00;
laundry: $30.00;
prescriptions, herbs, medical expenses: $65.00;
magazines/books: $15.00;
transportation (not including auto payments or repair work): $110.00;
auto payment with insurance: $250.00;
auto repairs and maintenance: $100.00; and
other expenses: $115.10.
Miller is single аnd has no dependents. As of 2001, her gross annual income was $26,464.00. In that same year, she received a gift of $3,000.00 from a friend and a $300.00 adjustment from the Internal Revenue Service. At the time of her adversary action, Miller was employed full-time as an administrative assistant at a construction company and part-time as a call center representative.
The bankruptcy court held a trial оn April 30, 2002. The court found that all of Miller’s student loan debts were not dis-chargeable pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8) because the full amount of the debts did not impose an undue hardship upon her. Notwithstanding- this finding, the bankruptcy court granted Miller a partial discharge of her student loan indebtedness. The court decided that Miller’s non-dischargeable student loan obligation was $34,200.00 and accordingly dismissed the balance оf her student loans, an amount of approximately $55,000.00. PHEAA appealed the judgment of the bankruptcy court to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee. Miller cross-appealed. The district court adopted the opinion of the bankruptcy court and dismissed the appeals of both parties. PHEAA then filed a timely notice of appeal of the district court’s decision.
II.
A discharge in Chapter 7 bankruptcy does not discharge an individual debtor’s student loan obligations “unless excepting such debt from discharge ... will impose an undue hardship on the debtor and the debtor’s dependents.” 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8). In this case, the bankruptcy court found that Miller had not made a showing of undue hardship. Nevertheless, the court relied on 11 U.S.C. § 105(a), which provides that a court “may issue any ordеr, process, or judgment that is necessary or appropriate to carry out the provisions of this title,” to grant Miller a partial discharge of her student loan obligations.
PHEAA argues that a showing of undue hardship — -as provided by § 523(a)(8) — is the only means by which a court can discharge student loan indebtedness. According to PHEAA, since Miller has not made a showing of undue hardship, none of her educational loan debt is dis-chargeable. The central issues of this appeal are, therefore, whether a bankruptcy court can rely on § 105(a) to grant a partial discharge of student loan indebtedness and whether, before a bankruptcy court grants such a discharge, it must first find that the portion being discharged satisfies the “undue hardship” requirement of 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8). In reviewing a bankruptcy case appealed from a district court, this court reviews the bankruptcy court’s findings of fact for clear error and conclusions of law
de novo. City of White Plains v. A & S Galleria Real Estate, Inc. (In re Federated Dep’t Stores, Inc.),
Although the bankruptcy court found that Miller was not entitled to a complete discharge of her educational loans, the court utilized its § 105(a) powers to partially discharge her student loans. This сourt has sanctioned such a procedure.
Our holding in Hornsby was that, “pursuant to its powers codified in § 105(a), the bankruptcy court ... may fashion a remedy allowing the Hornsbys ultimately to satisfy their obligations to [their loan guarantor] while at the same time providing them some of the benefits that bankruptcy brings in the form of relief from oppressive financial circumstances.” Id. at 440. While the Hornsby decision did not direct the bankruptcy court as to what precise remedy should be provided to the debtors in that case, the decision did explain how bankruptcy courts provide debtors with' the “benefit of a fresh start”:
Where a debtor’s circumstances do not cоnstitute undue hardship, some bankruptcy courts have thus given a debtor the benefit of a “fresh start” by partially discharging loans, whether by discharging an arbitrary amount of the principal, interest accrued, or attorney’s fees; by instituting a repayment schedule; by deferring the debtor’s repayment of the student loans; or by simply acknowledging that a debtor may reopen bankruptcy proceedings to revisit the question of undue hardship.
Id. Hornsby also explained the need for taking action short of full discharge of a debtor’s student loans in this way: “In a student-loan discharge case where undue hardship does not exist, but where facts and circumstances require intervention in the financial burden on the debtor, an all- or-nothing treatment thwarts the purpose of the Bankruptcy Act.” Id. at 439.
We construe the language оf these passages as providing guidance to bankruptcy courts in circumstances where granting a
full
discharge of student loan indebtedness is unwarranted because the debtor cannot show that excepting the entire balance of her student loans from discharge would impose undue hardship but where some form of - relief seemed warranted — the precise factual conclusiоn reached about the Hornsbys. Therefore, when a debtor does not make a showing of undue hardship with respect to the entirety of her student loans, a bankruptcy court may — pursuant to its § 105(a) powers— contemplate granting the various forms of relief discussed in
Hornsby,
including granting a partial discharge of the debtor’s student loans.
See DeMatteis v. Case W. Reserve Univ. (In re DeMatteis),
While
Hornsby
contemplated the grant of a partial discharge of student loan debt pursuant to § 105(a), our decision did not clearly address whether, in accordance with § 523(a)(8), the debtor must show that the portion of her student loan debt being discharged would impose an- undue
Furthermore, we point out that, in leading up to its holding, Hornsby framed its discussion of how bankruptcy courts grant a partial discharge in these terms:
Where a debtor’s circumstances do not constitute undue hardship as to part of the debt but repayment of the entire debt would be an undue hardship, some bankruptcy courts have partially discharged student loans even while finding the student loans nondischargeable. See, e.g., Griffin v. Eduserv (In re Griffin),197 B.R. 144 , 147 (Bankr.E.D.Okla.1996) (“[I]t would be an ‘undue hardship’ for the Debtors to pay any of the accrued interest and attorneys’ fees associated with ... student loans.”); Bakkum v. Great Lakes Higher Educ. Corp. (In re Bakkum),139 B.R. 680 , 684 (Bankr.N.D.Ohio 1992) (“The Court, at its discretion, may excuse any portion of the Debtor’s student loan obligation which would create an undue hardship.”).
This determination in DeMatteis suggests that the grant of a partiаl discharge of student loan indebtedness pursuant to § 105(a) need not be made upon a showing of undue hardship with regard to the amount discharged. We cannot accept this conclusion. First, we believe that the plain text of the bankruptcy code as well as the language of Hornsby, as already discussed, point to a contrary conclusion. Second, besides ignoring that § 523(a)(8) specifically governs discharges of student indebtedness, relying on § 105(a) independently provides no rubric with which bankruptcy courts are able to evaluate whether to grant a partial discharge of student loan indebtedness to a debtor in bankruptcy. Pursuant to the reading of Hornsby given in DeMatteis, bankruptcy 'courts may grant a full discharge of student loan debt only when the debtor shows that excepting her entire student loan burden would impose an undue hardship, but a court may grant a partial discharge' — including a discharge in excess of fifty percent of outstanding student loan obligations — for whatever reason it views as being encompassed by the court’s equitable authority under § 105(a).
In sum, we stress that the requirement of undue hardship must always apply to the discharge of student loans in bankruptcy — regardless of whether a court is discharging а debtor’s student loans in full or only partially. The parties have not cited any authority from our sister circuits that embraces the idea that a partial discharge of student loan debt can be granted without a finding of undue hardship, and indeed we were unable to locate any such case law. In fact, the weight of authority fits squarely with our conclusion.
See Saxman v. Educ. Credit Mgmt. Corp. (In re Saxman),
While the undue hardship requirement applies to any discharge of student loan indebtedness, the bankruptcy code itself does not define “undue hardship.” As a result, this court has looked to the test enunciated by the Second Circuit in
Brunner v. New York State Higher Education Services Corp.,
(1) that the debtor cannot maintain, based on current income and expenses, a “minimal” standard of living for herself and her dependents if forced to repay the loans;
(2) 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; and
(3)that the debtor has made good faith efforts to repay the loans.
Brunner,
In considering whether to discharge Miller’s student lоans, the bankruptcy court first analyzed whether Miller had shown by a preponderance of the evidence that she satisfied all three
Brunner
factors. The court found that Miller did not satisfy the second and third factors of the
Brunner
test. According to the bankruptcy court, Miller did not show that her financial situation was more than temporary because she is intelligent and well-spoken, albeit underemployed. The court also concluded that Miller had not satisfied
Brunner’s
good faith prong because in the five years since she had left school, she had contributed only $368.00 towards repayment of her student loans, which totaled almost $90,000, while using such “non-essentials” as personal internet ser
Despite not meeting the Brunner factors for undue hardship, the court relied on its “§ 105(a) powers” to partially discharge her student loans:
The Debtor, for the most part, leads a modest lifestyle. PHEAA’s sought-after reduction of the Debtor’s phone expenses and the total elimination of her cable and internet services would barely generate a third of the funds necessary to meet even the most basic loan consolidation schedule. Further, earnings from additional hours worked at the Debtor’s second job are not a permanent solution to this dilemma. The court will not require the Debtor to work 56 hours per week for the next 25 years in order to repay her student loans. To do so would make her a slave to the loans and would deprive her of any future hope for financial independence. The court also cannot place total reliance on the funds freed up by the discharge of the Debt- or’s credit card bills. Those funds, while substantial, are partially offset by automobile payments and the inevitable maintenance and replacement costs associated with an older used ear.
Consequently, when determining whether Miller’s student loans should be partially discharged, the court did not apply the Brunner factors, or any other factors relied upon by this court in making a finding of undue hardship, but rather constructed its own framework for granting a partial discharge.
In so doing, the bankruptcy court im-permissibly used its equitable authority. Section 523(a)(8) permits the discharge of student loans only upon a finding that denying such discharge would impose undue hardship on the debtor. 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8). Relying on § 105 to discharge student loan indebtedness for reasons other than undue hardship impermis-sibly contravenes the express language of the bankruptcy code.
See Ray v. City Bank & Trust Co. (In re C-L Cartage Co.),
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the decision of the district court affirming the order of the bankruptcy court аnd remand this case to the district court with instructions to remand to the bankruptcy court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. In fact, other courts have read
Hornsby
in this fashion.
See Nary
v.
Complete Source (In re Nary),
. As we noted in
Hornsby, Rice
concerned the standard governing discharge of Health Education Assistance Loans, but these factors are nonetheless relevant to evaluate the discharge of ordinary student loans.
Hornsby,
