Adams v. First Financial Development Corp.

960 F.2d 23
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 17, 1992
DocketNo. 91-7041
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 960 F.2d 23 (Adams v. First Financial Development Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. First Financial Development Corp., 960 F.2d 23 (5th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

ON REHEARING

Before JONES, DUHÉ, and WIENER, Circuit Judges.

PER CURIAM:

Today we revisit the opinions we rendered in this case on February 12, 1992,1 and on March 20, 1992.2 We do so to consider whether, under the precedent of our opinion in In the Matter of Texas Ex[24]*24trusion Corp.,3 we had jurisdiction to entertain this appeal in the first place. On our own motion,4 we have granted rehearings and determined that indeed we lacked jurisdiction to hear this appeal. We therefore vacate our earlier opinions, dismiss this appeal, and remand the case to the district court that first heard the appeal from the bankruptcy court. In so doing we urge the district court to re-examine its own jurisdiction to hear its appeal of the bankruptcy court’s order affecting a disclosure statement when that order is granted prior to the bankruptcy court’s confirmation of the debtor’s plan of reorganization under Chapter 11.

I.

FACTS

In May of 1989, Janie Hughston obtained a Texas state court judgment against First Financial Development Corporation (First Financial) in the principal sum of $987,-396.90, together with ten percent post-judgment interest and court costs, none of which has been paid. That judgment is currently on appeal to the Texas Supreme Court.

In October of 1989, First Financial filed a voluntary Chapter 11 proceeding in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas. Shortly after the bankruptcy was filed, Janie Hughston died, and Appellant Helen R. Adams was appointed independent executrix of her estate.

Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1125, First Financial filed a disclosure statement with the bankruptcy court in anticipation of confirmation of its plan of reorganization. Adams made numerous objections to the disclosure statement including, inter alia, that the statement should contain information regarding suits currently pending against Robert E. Williams, the president, sole director, and a forty-five percent shareholder of First Financial.5 The suits referred to by Adams were filed by third parties against Mr. Williams personally, not in his capacity as a principal in First Financial, and none has been reduced to judgment.

The bankruptcy court overruled that particular objection to the disclosure statement, and declined to require First Financial to include information about Mr. Williams’s personal suits in the disclosure statement. We hasten to add that the bankruptcy court’s order was not an order approving the disclosure statement. The court merely overruled some of Appellant’s objections (including the one that forms the basis of this appeal) and sustained others, instructing First Financial to include other information in an amended disclosure statement in order to propitiate those of Adams’s objections that the court found meritorious.

Adams appealed the bankruptcy court’s decision to the district court insofar as that decision relates to the inclusion of personal information with respect to Mr. Williams. The district court heard the appeal and affirmed the bankruptcy court’s decision. Adams then filed a notice of appeal of the district court’s judgment.

II.

ANALYSIS

After this panel heard Adams’s appeal, filed an opinion, and disseminated the slip opinion, we revisited the issue of jurisdiction sua sponte. When we did so we discovered that indeed we did not have jurisdiction. We immediately ordered the mandate of our prior opinion held, and now [25]*25vacate that decision for the reasons set forth below.

In In re Delta Services Industries6 we observed that the limits of our jurisdiction to hear appeals from bankruptcy matters are described by the unique jurisdictional relationship between the bankruptcy court and the district court, and by 28 U.S.C. § 158(d), which provides that “courts of appeal shall have jurisdiction of appeals from all final decisions, judgments, orders, and decrees”7 of district courts or bankruptcy appellate panels. In Delta Services we concluded that it is not only the finality of the district court decision that constrains us but also that “we must focus on the nature of the underlying bankruptcy court order to determine whether we have jurisdiction. We have jurisdiction only if the underlying bankruptcy court order was final.”8 Therefore, under 28 U.S.C. § 158(d), interlocutory orders of the bankruptcy court cannot appropriately be reviewed by courts of appeals, notwithstanding the discretion afforded by the Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure to the district court to entertain review of non-final orders.9 Congress has granted the courts of appeals no such discretion, so we are authorized to review only final orders of the bankruptcy court.

Very recently, however, the Supreme Court in Connecticut National Bank v. Germain10 concluded that 28 U.S.C. § 158 is not the exclusive provision governing bankruptcy appellate jurisdiction. The Court reasoned that, notwithstanding § 158’s grant of jurisdiction to the courts of appeals for review only of final orders of the bankruptcy court, one who is dissatisfied with an interlocutory order of a bankruptcy court has available an alternative avenue of appeal of such an order: the same grant of jurisdiction afforded the federal courts of appeals in 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b),11 which allows a court of appeals to hear an appeal of any certified interlocutory order of a district court.

Recognizing now the import of ■ both § 158(d) and § 1292 and their applicability to the instant case, we nevertheless conclude that we have no jurisdiction to hear this appeal. In In the Matter of Texas Extrusion Corp.12 we reasoned that an order approving a disclosure statement is not a final, appealable order because it is

only one step in the process of the approval and confirmation of a plan of reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. By no stretch of the imagination does the approval of a disclosure statement resolve any discrete dispute among the various parties involved within the larger bankruptcy proceeding or determine the rights of the parties to secure their requested relief.13

In the instant case, the bankruptcy court order that was appealed to the district court and then to us is not one approving the disclosure statement, as was the order in Texas Extrusion. Rather, the order in question here is one overruling some objections and sustaining other objections made by Adams to the proposed disclosure statement. The subject order was issued even before there was any approval of a disclosure statement, much less a plan of

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
960 F.2d 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-first-financial-development-corp-ca5-1992.