法院之友消费者破产和学生贷款学者支持上诉人的摘要

IF 0.6 3区 社会学 Q2 LAW American Bankruptcy Law Journal Pub Date : 2021-02-02 DOI:10.2139/ssrn.3854213
J. Hunt
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引用次数: 0

摘要

为了解释“过度困难”这一开放式短语,法院不仅必须孤立地关注不可免除条款的目标,还必须关注《高等教育法》(HEA)第四章的更广泛目的,这是管理联邦学生贷款的法定计划。超过90%的未偿还学生贷款是在第四章项目下发放的,不可免除性最初是作为高等教育机构的一项修正案而被采纳的,而布鲁纳测试本身据称是基于“担保学生贷款项目的目的”。代Brunner, B.R. 752, 756 (S.D.N.Y. 1985), aff, 831 f.d. 395(1987年第二期)。过度吝啬地应用不适当的困难条款破坏了联邦学生贷款项目明确表达的总体目标。对债务和学生债务的恐惧本身就阻碍了学生,尤其是低收入家庭的学生,开始和完成高等教育。无法管理的债务阻碍了借款人利用他们的教育为社会创造经济利益,因为他们的收入只会流向债权人。对经济困难的恐惧扭曲了学生的职业选择。许多学生贷款对借款人是有害的,他们如果不借钱接受高等教育的话会过得更好。通过拒绝借款人逃避他们无法偿还的债务,不可偿还性加剧了所有这些影响,每一个影响都破坏了第四章的目标。布伦纳案的决定设想了一种苛刻的“交换条件”,即联邦政府“索要”几乎完全不可偿还的代价,以换取学生贷款。Brunner, 46 B.R. at 756。尽管Brunner的观点声称这种安排促进了学生贷款项目的目的,但它没有引用项目目的的证据,也忽视了它们的真正目的。第五巡回法院采纳和适用布鲁纳案的决定也是如此。因此,这些决定从根本上是有缺陷的。可以肯定的是,国会确实限制了学生贷款的可免除性,尽管不可免除性与学生贷款项目的目标之间存在紧张关系。它认为这样做可以打击滥用,提高还款。但是,对可免除性的限制包含一个范围不确定的“过度困难”例外。在适用这一例外情况时,法院不仅应采取行动打击滥用行为和追回款项,而且应推动整个法定计划的教育促进目标。
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Brief of Amici Curiae Consumer Bankruptcy and Student Loan Academics in Support of Petitioner
To interpret the open-ended phrase “undue hardship,” courts must look not just to the goals of the nondischargeability provision in isolation, but also to the broader purposes of Title IV of the Higher Education Act (HEA), the statutory scheme governing federal student loans. Over 90 percent of outstanding student loans were made under Title IV programs, nondischargeability was originally adopted as an amendment to the HEA, and the Brunner test itself purports to be based on the “purposes of the guaranteed student loan program.” In re Brunner, 46 B.R. 752, 756 (S.D.N.Y. 1985), aff’d, 831 F.2d 395 (2d Cir. 1987). Overly stingy application of the undue-hardship provision undermines the expressly articulated overarching goals of the federal student loan programs. Fear of debt and student debt itself deter students, particularly low-income students, from starting and completing higher education. Unmanageable debt discourages borrowers from using their education for the economic benefit of society because their earnings simply go to creditors. Fear of financial distress distorts students’ career choices. Many student loans are harmful to borrowers, who would have been better off never borrowing for higher education. By denying borrowers escape from debts they cannot repay, nondischargeability exacerbates all these effects, each of which undermines a goal of Title IV. The Brunner decision imagines a harsh “quid pro quo” in which the federal government “exacts” a price of near-total nondischargeability in exchange for making student loans. Brunner, 46 B.R. at 756. Although the Brunner opinion asserts that this arrangement advances the purposes of the student loan programs, it cites no evidence of the programs’ aims and ignores their true goals. The same is true of the Fifth Circuit’s decisions adopting and applying Brunner. These decisions are thus fundamentally flawed. To be sure, Congress did limit the dischargeability of student loans, despite the tension between nondischargeability and the goals of the student loan programs. It thought doing so would combat abuse and enhance repayment. But the limit on dischargeability contains an “undue hardship” exception of uncertain scope. In applying that exception, courts should act not just to fight abuse and recover money but also to advance the education-promoting goals of the overall statutory scheme.
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