United States Court of Appeals
FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
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No. 97-3883
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In re: John A. Scott; In re: Marilyn *
V. Scott, *
*
Debtors. *
*
*
U.S. Department of Education, *
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Objector/Appellant, * Appeal from the United States
* District Court for the District
v. * of Nebraska.
*
John A. Scott; Marilyn V. Scott, *
*
Debtors/Appellees. *
*
Patricia Dugan, *
*
Trustee. *
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Submitted: May 11, 1998
Filed: July 7, 1998
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Before BEAM and MURPHY, Circuit Judges, and MELLOY,1 District Judge.
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1
The Honorable Michael J. Melloy, Chief United States District Judge for the
Northern District of Iowa, sitting by designation.
BEAM, Circuit Judge.
John A. Scott took out a student loan on January 30, 1982, which was insured
by the Department of Education under the Federal Family Education Loan program
(FFEL), 20 U.S.C. §§ 1071 et seq. (34 C.F.R. §§ 682.100 et seq.). On May 28, 1984,
Scott ended his academic career. At the end of the six-month grace period, the holder
of the note sought repayment from Scott. When no payments were forthcoming, the
note was assigned to the guaranty agency, Higher Education Assistance Foundation
(HEAF), who, in turn, on October 28, 1991, assigned the note to the Department of
Education. The Department received no voluntary payments from Scott after
assignment of the note.
On December 21, 1989, Scott and his spouse filed for relief under Chapter 7 of
the Bankruptcy Code. At that time, the student loan was nondischargeable in
bankruptcy unless the loan first became due more than five years before the filing date
of the bankruptcy petition. See 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8)(A) (1988) (amended 1990).
Thus, the crucial issue is the date upon which the loan first became due. If more than
five years before December 21, 1989, Scott is entitled to discharge; otherwise, the
obligation survives the completion of the bankruptcy proceeding.
The bankruptcy court and the district court embraced the longer period of time
and discharged the debt. The government disagrees with this conclusion and so do we.
Thus, we reverse.
At the time the Scotts filed their bankruptcy petition, the applicable statute
provided for discharge of an educational loan if:
such loan first became due before five years (exclusive of any applicable
suspension of the repayment period) before the date of the filing of the
petition.
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11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(8)(A) (1988) (amended 1990). As noted by the bankruptcy court,
the student loan promissory note, signed by Scott on January 30, 1982, provides as
follows:
I will begin repayment of this loan, in periodic installments, after the
completion of the grace period. The grace period begins when I leave
school or cease to be at least a half-time student. The payments may begin
at an earlier time if I agree.
Jt. App. at 36 (emphasis added).
The bankruptcy and district courts concluded that the loan "became due" at the
end of the grace period, a date more than five years prior to December 21, 1989.
However, the note also provided:
I [Scott] must contact the lender prior to expiration of my grace period to
negotiate the terms of repayment. If I neglect to do so, I hereby authorize
the lender to establish repayment terms within the guidelines as set forth
in Paragraph 2 of this section, without my further approval. However, the
lender must inform me of these terms in writing.
Id.
In full compliance with Paragraph 2 and all other terms of the note, the first
installment due date was set for December 28, 1984, a point in time less than five years
prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition. To recapitulate, Scott last attended school
on May 28, 1984. The grace period ended on November 27, 1984. The payment due
date established by the government as authorized by Scott was December 28, 1984, and
the bankruptcy petition was filed on December 21, 1989. This created an intervening
period between the first payment date and the bankruptcy filing date of four
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years, eleven months, and twenty-three days. The first payment due date therefore falls
eight days short of meeting the statutory requirement for discharge.
There is no case precedent directly on point. The bankruptcy court cites Brinzer
v. Pennsylvania State Univ. (In re Brinzer), 45 B.R. 831 (S.D. W. Va. 1984), as being
"almost directly on point." However, in Brinzer, unlike here, the lender, Pennsylvania
State University, had no contractual right to establish a repayment schedule. The
Brinzer district court noted that "it is undisputed that the promissory note specified that
the repayment period was to commence nine months after the borrower ceased studies."
Id. at 833. Pennsylvania State University had no authority to modify unilaterally the
specified repayment date.
Here, of course, Scott was to begin his repayment through "periodic
installments," either agreed upon through negotiations or as set by the lender under the
terms of the note if Scott neglected to "contact the lender." Scott admittedly made no
contact with the lender.
We believe that, if at all applicable, Brinzer supports the government's position
in this appeal. Under the undisputed terms of the Scott note, the lender was authorized
to establish unilaterally the periodic installment date for the commencement of
repayment of the loan. Such was done and in an expeditious manner, the initial
installment being due one month and one day after the end of the grace period. Given
these circumstances, we believe the debt is not dischargeable under the statute.
Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the district court and remand with
directions to remand to the bankruptcy court for further proceedings in compliance with
this opinion.
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Melloy, Chief District Judge, dissenting.
The Court holds that John A. Scott’s loan became due for purposes of
determining eligibility for bankruptcy discharge on the date that Scott’s first installment
payment was due. Because I disagree with this interpretation of Scott’s student loan
promissory note and would find that Scott’s loan became due on the date his grace
period expired, I respectfully dissent.
When interpreting the promissory note, the Court highlights that Scott promised
to “begin repayment of this loan, in periodic installments, after the completion of the
grace period.” The Court then emphasizes that Scott promised to contact the lender
before his grace period expired in order to negotiate the terms of repayment, and that
if he failed to do so, he authorized “the lender to establish repayment terms . . . without
my further approval.” Because Scott agreed to repay his loan in periodic installments,
and because he did not contact the lender before his grace period expired, the Court
concludes that Scott’s loan became due on the date that the lender established that his
first installment payment was due: December 28, 1984.
I respectfully disagree with this interpretation of the terms of the promissory note.
Even though Scott agreed to begin repayment of his loan “in periodic installments,” that
phrase does not mean that his loan became due on the date that the first installment was
due. Rather than establishing the date that the loan first became due, the phrase “in
periodic installments” simply specified the method by which Scott was to repay his
loan: instead of repaying his loan in one lump sum, he could repay it in installments.
Scott’s ability to repay his loan in installments did not alter the fact that his loan
became due “after the completion of the grace period.” Similarly, Scott’s failure to
contact the lender prior to the expiration of the grace period did not alter the fact that
his loan became due when the grace period expired. Just as Scott had a right to repay
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his loan in installments, so the lender had a right to establish a repayment schedule after
Scott failed to contact the lender before the grace period had expired. The lender’s
unilateral right to establish a repayment schedule did not alter the fact that Scott’s loan
became due when the grace period expired.
In Brinzer, neither party in that case disputed that “the promissory note specified
that the repayment period was to commence nine months after the borrower ceased
studies.” 45 B.R. at 832. The Brinzer court also stated that the “note by its terms
established when repayment obligations would start and there is no evidence or
indication that [the lender] had the contractual right to unilaterally suspend the
repayment for a period of time.” Id. This Court interprets Brinzer to mean that when
a promissory note gives a lender a unilateral contractual right to establish a repayment
schedule, the date that the lender decides the first installment is due is the date that the
loan first becomes due for purposes of bankruptcy discharge eligibility. I disagree with
this interpretation and would find that Brinzer simply stands for the proposition that if
a promissory note establishes when repayment obligations are to begin, that is the date
when the loan first becomes due. In Brinzer’s case, the note established that repayment
obligations would start nine months after the borrower ceased studies. 45 B.R. at 832.
In Scott’s case, the note specified that Scott must begin repayment of his loan “after the
completion of the grace period.” Scott’s loan therefore became due on the date his
grace period expired.
I would therefore affirm the judgment of the bankruptcy court and the district
court.
A true copy.
Attest:
CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
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