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Private Student Loans may be dischargeable in Chapter 7

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  • currerbell
    replied
    Well, yeah, you are correct - I forgot about the fed loans. Perhaps an argument that the new law compels the court to apply a different standard in APs heard after the passage so that all plaintiffs can avail themselves of the right without having to wait and file a second bankruptcy JUST to do so? And that it is contrary to public policy to force people to file BK a second time just to avail themselves of this single relief? I don't know. I'll have to noodle some more.

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  • KeithDoxen
    replied
    Originally posted by currerbell View Post
    I don't know why I vacillate on this when I *know* I am going to end up filing the dang AP. This passing would just make it all the more certain. But I think I could very reasonably argue that while the laws in effect at the time of my filing compel me to seek discharge via AP, Brunner is only the judiciary's attempt to determine legislative intent of "undue hardship," and that the passage of such a bill clearly shows that Congress intends a broader application of the term and effectively abrogates the unduly strict application dictated by the Court in Brunner. It isn't the greatest argument, but I've heard much worse.
    I don't think that's the best argument to use, given that the undue hardship jurisprudence is going to stay in place for federal student loans. It's not that Congress is broadening the undue hardship exception. It's that Congress is narrowing the types of debt to which that exception applies, and is putting private student loans back into the realm of regular, everyday unsecured debt, that is dischargeable in bankruptcy. What you're essentially telling the court is that because of this law, if you had just waited another six months to file, a ton of debt that wasn't dischargeable before would have been dischargeable, and so you're essentially getting shafted. Of course, putting that in the form of a legal argument is the challenge.

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  • currerbell
    replied
    I don't know why I vacillate on this when I *know* I am going to end up filing the dang AP. This passing would just make it all the more certain. But I think I could very reasonably argue that while the laws in effect at the time of my filing compel me to seek discharge via AP, Brunner is only the judiciary's attempt to determine legislative intent of "undue hardship," and that the passage of such a bill clearly shows that Congress intends a broader application of the term and effectively abrogates the unduly strict application dictated by the Court in Brunner. It isn't the greatest argument, but I've heard much worse.

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  • KeithDoxen
    replied
    Originally posted by currerbell View Post
    Yeah - my first impulse was to dismiss and refile. But I can't realistically do that. I wonder, though, what courts will do with APs filed AFTER the enactment of such a bill. I know the "right" to discharge wouldn't apply, but could courts still reasonably apply Brunner in light of such a clear expression of congressional intent?
    It sure as heck is worth a try.

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  • currerbell
    replied
    Yeah - my first impulse was to dismiss and refile. But I can't realistically do that. I wonder, though, what courts will do with APs filed AFTER the enactment of such a bill. I know the "right" to discharge wouldn't apply, but could courts still reasonably apply Brunner in light of such a clear expression of congressional intent?

    Leave a comment:


  • KeithDoxen
    replied
    Originally posted by currerbell View Post
    Is there ANY possible way I can avail myself of this - or set myself up to do so if it passes? I am already filed and past 341, discharge should come on Oct 25. My loans are listed. Do you think an AP would take this into account?
    We don't know what the text of the final bill will be exactly, given that it has to go to the full Judiciary Committee, the full House, and the Senate, all of which could add amendments and change the language. BUT what we do know is that right now, the bill expressly states that only cases commenced on or after the day the bill becomes law will be subject to the new law. In other words, if you file the day before Obama signs this bill into law, you're out of luck.

    You could dismiss your case and then file again once it becomes law. But it's a gamble, because what if it doesn't go through? It's a judgment call at this point I guess. I was discharged last December and my private loans are in default. I'm going to hope they don't sue me until either the SOL runs out, or if this is signed into law, until I am eligible to file again.

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  • currerbell
    replied
    Is there ANY possible way I can avail myself of this - or set myself up to do so if it passes? I am already filed and past 341, discharge should come on Oct 25. My loans are listed. Do you think an AP would take this into account?

    Leave a comment:


  • kartoons19
    replied
    Well good luck if it passes. I have federal loans, so I'm stuck with them. At least they have some programs to help out with payments.

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  • KeithDoxen
    replied
    There will be a lot of PO'd former senators this fall after the election who are about to be sent home. They'll have nothing to lose, and my guess is many of them will view this as the right thing to do.

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  • backtoschool
    replied
    I agree with biotechsolution. I don't think this bill has a chance of passing in the Senate.

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  • biotechsolution
    replied
    Never will pass the Senate.

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  • KeithDoxen
    replied
    My guess is that the Democrats will pass this bill during the lame duck session that follows November's election.

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  • Private Student Loans may be dischargeable in Chapter 7

    This just in....


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    Written by: Michelle Cormier
    Published: 09/16/2010
    House Panel Approves Bill to Allow Discharge of Private Loans in Bankruptcy

    On Wednesday, a panel of the House of Representatives Judiciary Committee approved a bill that would allow borrowers to discharge private student loans in bankruptcy.

    The legislation, which has been offered in several preceding congressional sessions, would restore provisions previously included in the bankruptcy code. In 2005, Congress voted to amend federal bankruptcy law to make private student loans unforgiveable debt in bankruptcy unless a borrower is able to demonstrate that loan repayment would be an "undue hardship."

    According to the Chronicle of Higher Education, the bill faces long odds for a final passage. Many Republicans oppose the measure, warning that it would drive up interest rates and further shrink the market for private loans. Additionally, the congressional legislative session has only four weeks before the House's target date to adjourn.

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