Vera Thomas is more than 60 years old and suffers from diabetic
neuropathy, "a degenerative condition that causes pain in her lower
extremities." Unemployed and suffering from a chronic illness, she filed
for bankruptcy in 2017 in the hope that she could discharge her student loans
in bankruptcy.
At the time of her
bankruptcy proceedings, Thomas was living in dire poverty. Her monthly income
was less than $200 a month and she was surviving on "a combination of
public assistance and private charity."
How much did Ms. Thomas owe on
her student loans? She borrowed $7,000 back in 2012 and she used her loan money
to attend community college for two semesters. Thomas didn't return for a third
semester, and she only paid loan payments totally less than $85.
Judge Harlin Hale, aTexas bankruptcy judge, applied the three-part Brunner test to determine whether
Thomas would suffer an "undue hardship" if forced to pay off her
student loans. Part one required her to show that she could not pay back her
student loans and maintain a minimal standard of living. Thomas clearly met this
part of the test.
Brunner's second part required Thomas to
establish that circumstances beyond her control made it unlikely that she would
ever be able to repay her student loans. The U.S. Department of Education
argued that Thomas could not meet this part of the Brunner test
and Judge Hale agreed. In spite of her debilitating illness, he concluded, Thomas could not show that she was "completely incapable
of employment now or in the future." Surely there was some sedentary work
she was capable of doing, Judge Hale reasoned.
In short, Judge Hale denied Thomas's request for bankruptcy relief from her student loans.
He expressed sympathy for Ms. Thomas's situation, but he said that
during his entire time on the bench, he had never granted student-loan
bankruptcy relief over the objection of the lender (the U.S. Department of
Education or its contracted debt collectors).
Thomas appealed to a U.S.
District Court, which affirmed Judge Hale's decision; and then she appealed to
the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. Two public interest groups came to her aid
by filing an amicus brief. The National Consumer Bankruptcy Rights Center and
the National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys argued that the Brunner test
was no longer an appropriate standard for determining whether a student-loan
debtor is entitled to bankruptcy relief and should be overruled.
But the Fifth Circuit refused to abandon the Brunner test or even to soften the way it is interpreted. Unless the Supreme Court or an en banc panel
of the Fifth Circuit overrules Brunner, the Fifth Circuit panel stated, it was
bound by that decision.
The Fifth Circuit decision implicitly acknowledged that the federal student-loan program poses an enormous public-policy problem, but in the court’s view, it was not the judiciary’s job to fix it: "[T]he fact that student loans are now mountainous in quantity poses systematic issues far beyond the capacity or authority of courts, which can only interpret the written law. . . Ultimate policy issues raised by Ms. Thomas and the amicus are for Congress, not the courts."
So what does the future hold for Vera Thomas? Her student-loan
debt is undoubtedly far larger today than it was when she initially borrowed $7,000
to enroll at a community college back in 2012. Over the years, interest has accrued and
perhaps penalties and fees. In the aftermath of the Fifth Circuit's decision, it seems likely that Vera Thomas’s only viable
option is to sign up for an income-driven repayment plan, which will terminate
when she is 85 years old.
References
Thomas v. U.S. Department of Education, No 18-11091 (5th Cir. July 30, 2019).
Thanks for posting.
ReplyDeleteIt is true that we need a clear new law about bankruptcy and student loans. Depending on the bias and whims of each judge is never going to work for debtors.
Hi, Bob. I once had hopes that the bankruptcy courts would gradually become more compassionate to student-loan debtors. But the 5th Circuit's decision in the Thomas case has convinced me that student debtors cannot look to the courts for relief. Still, the Seventh Circuit's Krieger decision and the Tenth Circuit's Polleys decision were compassionate rulings. I am very sorry the Fifth Circuit didn't rule as compassionately as courts in those two Circuits. Thanks for writing. Richard
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