MEMORANDUM ORDER
This matter comes before the Court on an interlocutory appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court.
In re TWI, Inc.,
Background
TWI, Inc. (TWI) involuntarily entered bankruptcy on January 11, 1983. H. Lee Addison, III, the bankruptcy trustee, filed an adversary рroceeding in the Bankruptcy Court against the O’Learys. The trustee asserted that the defendants, both former TWI officers and directors, improperly withdrew funds from the corporation in an attempt to defraud TWI’s creditors. The trustee sought to recover these funds by challenging the withdrawal аs a voidable preference, a fraudulent conveyance, and a voluntary conveyance.
In their answer, the defendants denied liability and challenged jurisdiction in light of Northern Pipeline. The Bankruptcy Court held sua sponte that the fraudulent and voluntary conveyance claims fell outside of its constitutional jurisdiction and that 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(H) violаted Article III. The voidable preference claim, the Bankruptcy Court held, could be heard within its core jurisdiction. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2403(a), the United States intervened and successfully moved for an interlocutory appeal. See 28 U.S.C. § 158(a).
Discussion
This appeal presents the question whether the Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgeship Act of 1984, Pub.L. No. 98-353, 98 Stat. 333 (1984), constitutionally characterizes fraudulent and voluntary conveyance actions as core bankruptcy proceedings. Because' this appeal implicates subject-matter jurisdiction, the Bankruptcy Court’s conclusions will bе reviewed
de novo. In re Castlerock Properties,
In
Northern Pipeline,
the United States Supreme Court held that the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978 vested overly broad jurisdiction in the non-Article III bankruptcy courts.
The conceptual basis for this holding rests on the elusive distinctions between matters of private rights and public rights. Separation-of-powers principles require that Article III courts — absent consent of the parties — must exercise
de novo
review of purely private right disputes. Public right disputes, however, can be finally adjudicated by a bankruptcy court with Article III court involvement limited to appellate review. Although this distinction evades a “doctrinaire reliance on formal categories,” a practical attention to substance suggest several general principles.
See Thomas,
Typically, private rights involve claims thаt (1) rely predominately on traditional state common-law rules of decision, and (2) have a weak nexus to any statutory scheme enacted by Congress pursuant to a specialized grant of constitutional authority. 1 Northern Pipeline demonstrates that *489 a common-law contract claim relies solely on traditional state rules of decision, and has a weak, even peripheral, nexus to Congress’s constitutional authority to enact uniform bankruptcy laws. As a result, the Supreme Court invalidated former 28 U.S.C. § 1471 which allowed non-Article III bankruptcy courts to enter final judgment in these claims.
On the other hand, public rights generally involve two classes of actions.
2
The first type of public right depends entirely on a
sui generis
federal rule of decision without any reliance on state law.
Northern Pipeline,
The second type of public right relies, in essence, on a federal right of action that (1) incorporates by reference state law rulеs of decision,
and
(2) has a strong nexus to a statutory scheme enacted by Congress pursuant to a specialized grant of constitutional authority.
5
In this context, Congress subsumes state law into a broader nationally uniform statutory framework. Examples of this type include many claims traditionally considered to be core bankruptcy proceedings. For instance, a typical unsecured creditor’s claim against the bankruptcy estate involves a straightforward application of common-law contract principles.
6
See
11 U.S.C. §§ 101(4), 102(2) (creditor claims); 11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(1) (disallows claims unenforceable under “applicable law”). In addition, the Bankruptcy Code allows the debtor to claim purely state law exemptions pursuant to the “opt-out” provision in 11 U.S.C. § 522(b). Although state law provides the rule of decision, these claims still qualify as public rights because of their strоng nexus to legislation enacted pursuant to the specialized congressional power to establish “uniform Laws on the subject of Bankruptcies_” U.S. Const. art. I, § 8;
see Thomas,
*490 In the present case, the Court finds that the trustee’s fraudulent and voluntary conveyance claims differ significantly from the contract claim in Northern Pipeline. Although both sets of claims involve state law, only the fraudulent and voluntary conveyance claims have a substantial relationship to the bankruptcy power of Article I § 8. Thus, Congress may constitutionally characterize these disputes as core proceedings and provide for final adjudication by the bankruptcy courts subject to the aрpellate review provisions of 28 U.S.C. § 158(a). 7 See 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(1).
A
Northern Pipeline
contract claim has a weak nexus to the integral bankruptcy function of “restructuring of debtor-creditor relations, which is at the core of the federal bankruptcy power.”
See Northern Pipeline,
Essentially, the contract action merely attempts to increase estate assets (thereby mutually benefiting debtors and creditors) by bringing a third party into the bankruptcy court and and alleging a claim for dаmages. The contract action, therefore, adjusts the relationships between nonbank-ruptcy parties and bankruptcy parties. Hence, these actions have an attenuated nexus to integral bankruptcy functions and must be characterized as private rights deserving of de novo Article III judicial review.
Unlike the contract action in
Northern Pipeline,
fraudulent and voluntary conveyance actions closely relate to the bankruptcy function of adjusting the rights and liabilities between the debtor and his creditors. In an ordinary conveyance action, the trustee succeeds to the rights of unsecured creditors and asserts that thе debtor fraudulently transferred a previously owned asset in an attempt to thwart his creditors.
See In re Mortgageamerica Corp.,
Although the transferree is a party-defendant in the event the court imposes a constructive trust or enters a judgment for damages, the plaintiff asserts the principal allegations against the debtor. Essentially, the conveyance action adjusts debtor-creditor relations with the transferee participating only for the purposes of effecting a remedy. “In other words, federal law provides the
right
upon which the [equitable] remedy of the constructive trust sought ... is based.”
In re Kaiser,
Several other points support this result. First, although state rules of decision govern much of the conveyance claim, the Bankruptcy Code incorporates these principles by referencе.
8
Cf. Carlton v. BAWW, Inc.,
Second, the jurisdictional provisions of the 1984 Bankruptcy Amendments closely parallel the Emergency Reference Rule promulgatеd in the wake of
Northern Pipeline. See
1 King, Collier Bankruptcy Manual 113.01, at 3-23 (3rd ed. 1985). Every Court of Appeals to consider the question has held that the Emergency Rule satisfied the requirements of
Northern Pipeline. In re Thomas,
The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit faced a similar constitutional challenge to the Emergency Rule’s forerunner of 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(H).
In re Kaiser,
Finally, Congress enacted the 1984 Bankruptcy Amendments to remedy the constitutional objections raised by
Northern Pipeline.
Section 157(b)(2)(H) specifically lists conveyance аctions as core bankruptcy proceedings.
9
Congress’s analysis of
Northern Pipeline
and its conclusion that these claims are core proceedings “lends considerable constitutional weight to finding them to be exactly that.”
Matter of Baldwin-United Corp.,
Conclusion
The Bankruptcy Court’s holding that conveyance actions rely on state law and therefore cannot be core proceedings ignores Justice White’s observation that the entire Bankruptcy Code “is constantly enmeshed in state-law issues.”
Northern Pipeline,
The dispositive issue is whether the claim has a strong enough nexus to the integral bankruptcy function of adjusting debtor-creditor relations to qualify as a public
*492
right and thus constitutionally fall within the bankruрtcy court’s core jurisdiction. The Court holds that fraudulent and voluntary conveyance actions have a strong constitutional nexus and therefore can be properly characterized as core bankruptcy proceedings.
See In re Atlas Fire Apparatus, Inc.,
It is so ORDERED.
Notes
. The United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit applied this two-prong analysis in
In re 1616 Reminic Limited Partnership,
. The Supreme Court in
Thomas
rejected the argument that public rights disputes existed only between individuals and a government-entity litigant.
. 7 U.S.C. §§ 136
et seq.; Thomas,
. In
Thomas,
the Court stated that prior decisions "treated as a matter of ‘public right’ an essentially adversary proceeding to invoke tariff protections against a competitor, as well as an administrative proceeding to determine the rights of landlord and tenants.
See Atlas Roofing Co. v. Occupational Safety and Health Review Comm'n,
. Two significant limitations preclude Congress from providing for initial determinations in non-Article III courts of all federal rights. First, federal statutory rights enacted pursuant to a non-specialized Article I power may rеquire
de novo
Article III review.
See Northern Pipeline,
. “Aside from objections to form and time of filing, any other disputes concerning a proof of claim raised by objection are nоt matters of bankruptcy law. State law or nonbankruptcy federal law usually governs.” King, Jurisdiction and Procedure Under The Bankruptcy Amendments of 1984, 38 Vand.L.Rev. 675, 690 (1985).
. Even if the Bankruptcy Court’s
Northern Pipeline
analysis correctly determined that conveyance actions were not core proceedings, this Court would nevertheless be compelled to reverse. The Bankruptcy Court apparently dismissed these claims because of the "inescapable conclusion: a non-Article III judge may not adjudicate state law claims.”
In re TWI, Inc.,
. The defendant relies on the Supreme Court’s statement in
Thomas
that the federal action did not constitute a private right because it did not "depend on or replace" state law.
See Thomas,
. A trustee has two routes within the Bankruptcy Code to assert conveyance claims. See 11 U.S.C. §§ 544(b), 548. Although the plaintiffs complaint does not identify the statutory route chosen, neither choice would materially affect the constitutional analysis.
