Heard this sad story from a US-returned friend through
this club I have joined. If you have any legal advice,
pls help Shakit, your fellow Nepali mate. I want to keep
his name and other identifications anonymous, but pls
this is a true story.
Background Info:
Call him Shakti (name changed), 27 years old. Shakti did
his undergraduate schooling in the American midwest from
a four-year liberal arts college - where he took out USD
3000 per year as student loans against a promisory note
which he had to sign at the beginning of each year. The
rest of his costs were in the form of scholarship, except
for that loan part. He graduated in 1999...didn't work in
USA, and returned to Nepal, by which time he owed the
college USD 12,000, with an 8% interest rate. Now the
loan has ballooned owing to compounded interest rates.
He's from a lower middle class family, and with average
Nepali salary (NRs 15,000/month) he is unable to back all
those loans. And this is where his worry starts. He posed
me the following questions, to which I have no straight
answers. If you can help him ease his mind, pls answer
the following so that I can forward this to him.
Key questions:
1) When Shakti applied for financial aid, he had to
declare his family assets, and the form was signed by his
father. His home address is also on the form...which
means he is still traceable. When he signed the promisory
note to take student loans, he was already an adult, and
for the best of his knowledge the promisory note was not
signed with his family assets as collateral. Besides,
since he doesn't own those family assets (his parents own
them), he can't put them as collateral. It was probably
signed with the understanding that he would eventually
pay back the loan from his own earnings - but with his
salaries in Nepal (NRs 12,000/month) that is not
possible. He has only saved up to six lakhs till now -
less than the outstanding loans. Now the question is: can
the loan collection agency based in US (assuming that the
College sold his debt to the agency) come after his
family assets? His father's signature is not on the
promisory note - but only on the financial aid form. His
family assets are under his parents' name - basically
some land and house - and he has four other siblings who
will some day inherit those. Can the loan collection
agency claim the family assets - even though they are not
under Shakti's name and the promisory note was not signed
against the family assets as collaterall? More
importantly, can the loan collection agency through their
contact with local bank in Nepal penalise his parents
(who own the assets), and his siblings (who will divvy up
the assets as inheritance pies) for the fault (default)
that is solely his doing????? His parents do not work -
but live off the rent by renting their only house. They
are old, and may be rendered homeless and incomeless in
their old age.
2) Although based in Nepal, can he file personal
bankruptcy in the US or Nepal so as to keep the wolves at
bay? Would declaring bankruptcy save his family assets?
If so, what would be the procedures?
3) If the collection agency sells the debt to a bank in
his hometown - and the latter decides to foreclose on his
parents' home, can they legally do it?
4) Has any US-or-West-returned Nepali student had this
problem or how has he or she dealt with it? The reality
is if you take out loans, and do not decide to work in
USA, it is almost impossible (like running to stand still
or going a little backward) to pay back the loans. As
this could happen, has it happened?
5) Can you recommend any American-Nepali lawyers based in
USA or good trustworthy Nepali lawyers based in Kathmandu
that he can consult?
6) Do colleges grant debt-forgiveness?
Shakti today is going through tough times - this is
affecting his social life, professional life, and
everything.
What would be the best course for Shakti to follow - to
protect his parents' property, which is not legally his
yet?
Helping him a bit in my own way as a Good Samaritan.
This could affect any Nepali students studying in USA on
student loans, so I thought this was the best place to
post the above queries.
Thanks,
Karmapa
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Pls post your responses in this thread and I will share
these with him. I am not a legal pundit - and when it
comes to legal matters, I'm zero, zilch.