In re Huber

Decision Date21 March 1994
Docket NumberBankruptcy No. 93-12782 K. Adv. No. 93-1306 K.
Citation169 BR 82
PartiesIn re William Dennis HUBER, Debtor. William Dennis HUBER, Plaintiff, v. MARINE MIDLAND BANK, N.A., and United States Department of Education, Defendants.
CourtU.S. Bankruptcy Court — Western District of New York

William Dennis Huber, pro se.

Michael T. Ryan and George L. Cownie, Buffalo, NY, for Marine Midland Bank.

DECISION AND ORDER GRANTING PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT TO DEFENDANT

MICHAEL J. KAPLAN, Chief Judge.

Before the Court are what it deems to be cross-motions for partial summary judgment on the Debtor's Complaint to Determine the Dischargeability of Certain Student Loans under 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8)(A).1 He asks that the loans be discharged because, he claims, the loans "first became due more than seven years (exclusive of any applicable suspension of the repayment period) before the date of the filing of the petition." This is a "core proceeding" under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(I).

A single issue is currently before the Court: When a debtor seeks and obtains deferments of student loan payments because he continued in school, are those deferments not to be treated as "applicable suspensions" if it is later determined that the debtor was not eligible under law for the deferments that he received?

This Debtor, who is apparently admitted to the Bar, has vigorously sought to establish in various courts that he was (and to establish that he still is) entitled to deferment of his student loans.2 However, he has failed in that effort. It is now res judicata that he was not entitled to the four and more years of "in-school" deferments he sought and received between 1986 and 1990. Had he prevailed in those courts, his student loans would be too "new" to be dischargeable in bankruptcy under § 523(a)(8) unless he could establish "undue hardship,"3 but payments on those loans might not yet have become required; and he might possibly defer them indefinitely, for he continues to go to school.

Now that it has been established that he was never entitled to deferment in the first place, he argues that those of his long series of loans that would have first come due more than seven years ago but for the deferments, are "old" loans; older than seven years and dischargeable as such under the statute.

The Debtor's prolix arguments rest on a single key element; that is his insistence that "applicable suspension" is a term of art meaning "deferment that is authorized by and in full accordance with applicable law." If he is right, then in light of the fact that his deferments have been found not to be authorized by law, his prayer is not without logic,4 albeit unappealing.

Were it not for the imprecise language used by some other courts, the present Court would think there to be no reason or authority supporting such a contrived view of a clear phrase that has a plain meaning, devoid of ambiguity as applied to deferments — "exclusive of any applicable suspension of the repayment period."5

"Applicable" means applying to these loans, as opposed to applying to others of the many loans any student might obtain in succession, over many years of schooling. "Suspension of the repayment period" means extending the term, such as by granting a period (by agreement, by court order, by operation of law, etc.) during which the Debtor is not obliged to make payments.

Although resort to the legislative history seems unnecessary in interpreting the phrase, such resort here simply "proves the pudding." On August 14, 1979, Congress enacted H.R. 2807 to close the so-called "student loan dischargeability gap" that had been created when Congress inadvertently repealed the applicable section of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (former 20 U.S.C. § 1087-3) before the new 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8) became effective. In Senate Report No. 96-230, To Accompany H.R. 2807, the Senate Judiciary Committee stated (on June 21, 1979): "Section 3(2) of the bill would also amend 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8) to exclude periods of deferment from the calculation of the first five years6 of the repayment period."7 Emphasis added. Yet the language of the amendment was that at issue here — "exclusive of any applicable suspension of the repayment period". Hence, a period of deferment — which is what is indisputably at issue here — is precisely what Congress had in mind when it used the phrase, "applicable suspension of the repayment period."

The cases that the Debtor cites are not as supportive of his arguments as he claims them to be; he attempts to make the language used in those decisions sweep more broadly than their holdings. Those cases recognize that deferments that the borrower did not seek might be "applicable" but ought not to be "chargeable" against the debtor. This notion, that not every deferment ought to be charged against the Debtor under § 528(a)(8), has been expressed in terms such as "authorized deferment," and "valid deferment." The Debtor at Bar argues that these cases mean that every statutory or regulatory infirmity tainting a deferment requires that the deferment not be chargeable against the debtor. That is not what those cases hold.

Thus, in the case of In re Crumley, 21 B.R. 170 (Bankr.E.D.Tenn.1982) it was held that a student loan lender may not buy more time for itself to pursue the Debtor by granting a longer suspension of payments than the Debtor requested.8 The fact that that court stated that the lender "simply had no authority to defer repayment in excess of that requested by the plaintiff-debtor," Crumley at 172, does not mean that all deferments that are not "authorized" under law require a result favorable to the Debtor.

Similarly, the Debtor's reliance on In re Brinzer, 45 B.R. 831 (S.D.W.Va.1984) is misplaced. The deferments at issue there were found not to be within the scope of the phrase "applicable suspension" because the Debtor had not requested any deferment and because the lender had possessed no "contractual right to unilaterally suspend the repayment for a period of time." Id. at 833. That Court's discussion of the "grounds contained in the note for suspension or deferment of the repayment" pertained to whether there was a basis upon which the Debtor could request deferment, had the Debtor elected to do so. That discussion does not support the contention that a deferment granted at the debtor's request is not an "applicable suspension" if no appropriate grounds for deferment existed.

The only case cited by the Debtor that seems to stand for what he says it does is In re Keenan, 53 B.R. 913 (Bankr.Conn.1985). Two periods of deferment were involved there. As to one period the Court's holding was identical to that in Crumley, and was based on Crumley and Whitehead. The Debtor had not requested a deferment and therefore, said the Court, "the deferment was not valid." The Court then added, "An improper deferment does not suspend the time between the date an educational loan first comes due and the filing of a petition in bankruptcy," and it cited Crumley and Whitehead for that proposition. Id. at 917. (Neither of those cases swept so broadly.) Then, as to the other period of deferment the Court did not offer the facts, but merely found that the deferment was improper or invalid because it was an "unemployment deferment" and such deferments were not available under the applicable regulations during that period. Id. Assuming that the Debtor in that case had requested that particular deferment (which the Court referred to as "the first" deferment), that case is squarely in accord with the present Debtor's theory. But the Keenan court offered no explanation of its holding and if the debtor had requested the deferment, then I respectfully disagree with the holding. The present Court believes that although the validity of a deferment under law may well affect the lender's ability to recover from state or federal insurers, that fact should not result in a "free ride" for a debtor who requested the deferment and obtained it.

The Debtor attempts to distinguish the case of In re Kaufman, 9 B.R. 755 (Bankr. E.D.Pa.1981) wherein student loans were declared non-dischargeable. He seeks to do so on the grounds that the debtor in that case had discontinued his studies without informing the lender, while the Debtor here claims that he has never discontinued his studies. But the Debtor here has misread the Kaufman case. Mr. Kaufman sought a deferment while attending graduate school, and on the deferment request he had estimated that he would conclude his graduate studies in May of 1977; hence the lender granted a deferment to that date. In fact, he attended graduate school only for five months, from January, 1975 to May of 1975. He never told the bank he had dropped out of graduate school. As in the Crumley, Whitehead, and Keenan cases above, the Debtor had gotten exactly what he requested, a deferment for a particular period. If Mr. Kaufman no longer wished deferment after he dropped out of graduate school in May of 1975, it was held, he should have so advised the bank or resumed making payments. Instead he simply enjoyed the benefit of the excess deferment to which he was not entitled. He could not then claim that the "applicable suspension" for § 523(a)(8) purposes was only five months, rather than two years and five months. Like Mr. Kaufman, the Debtor presently at the Bar got precisely the deferments he requested. He cannot now claim that he may benefit twice — once from the deferment and a second time by discharge of the debts for "age."

Three other cases that the Debtor has not cited, contain dictum that should be addressed.

In In re Georgina, 124 B.R. 562 (Bankr. W.D.Mo.1991), the debtor sought and received nine forbearance periods, totalling 53 months during the 89 months between the time his loans first became due and the date he filed his petition under the Bankruptcy Code. The Court ruled that these periods of forbearance were "applicable suspensions" and...

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