In August 1994, CBI Holding Company, Inc. and all but one of its subsidiaries (collectively, “CBI”) filed voluntary petitions for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. Ernst & Young and Ernst & Young LLP (together, “E
&
Y”), the pre-bankruptcy accountants for CBI and Defendants-Appellees in this action, filed a Proof of Claim against CBI in those proceedings for allegedly unpaid auditing and consulting services. On August 23, 1995, the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York (Lifland,
J.)
confirmed a Plan of Reorganization (“the Plan”) and appointed Bankruptcy Services, Inc. (“BSI”), the Plaintiff-Appellant in this action, the disbursing agent of the Plan. On October 16, 1996, BSI filed a complaint in the bankruptcy court, followed by an amended report on October 25, 1996, pressing seven claims against E & Y concerning the professional services E
&
Y rendered to CBI from 1992 to 1994. BSI brought each of the seven claims as the successor to the claims of CBI under the Plan (collectively, “the CBI claims”). Pursuant to a settlement contained in the Plan, BSI also brought four of these claims as the assignee of the claims that Trust Company of the West (“TCW”) acquired as a pre-bankruptcy creditor of CBI (collectively, “the TCW claims”). Finally, BSI also brought one claim — for expungement of E & Y’s Proof of Claim — as the assignee of an objection
*438
to E & Y’s Proof of Claim filed by the Official Unsecured Creditors’ Committee (“Creditors’ Committee”). On April 5, 2000, the bankruptcy court granted judgment for BSI on six of its seven claims,
see Bankr. Servs., Inc. v. Ernst & Young (In re CBI Holding Co.), (“CBI
7” or “Bankruptcy Opinion”),
We hold that BSI has standing to assert the CBI claims under the so-called “adverse interest” exception to the normal rule that a claim against a third party for defrauding a corporation with the cooperation of its management accrues to creditors rather than to the guilty corporation. The bankruptcy court’s finding that CBI’s management “was acting for its own interest and not that of CBI” is not clearly erroneous and constitutes the “total abandonment” of a corporation’s interests necessary to satisfy the adverse interest exception. We also hold that BSI has standing to assert the TCW claims because revisions to the bankruptcy laws have undermined the rationale of
Barnes
for the reasons set forth in
Semi-Tech Litigation, L.L.C. v. Ting,
Because we reverse, we must reach the two arguments that E
&
Y raises in its cross-appeal: (1) BSI’s claims are not “core proceedings” that may be adjudicated by a bankruptcy judge; and (2) E & Y is entitled to a jury trial on all of BSI’s claims. We reject both arguments. We hold that all of the claims pressed by BSI — both the CBI claims and the TCW claims — are “core proceedings,” because they are covered by the language of 28 U.S.C. § 157(b) and are integrally related to the Proof of Claim that E & Y voluntarily submitted against the estate. Similarly, we hold that while both parties now agree that E & Y is entitled to a jury trial on the TCW claims, E & Y waived its right to a jury trial on the CBI claims when it submitted its Proof of Claim against the estate and subjected itself to the equitable powers of the bankruptcy court. Moreover, under the rule announced by the Supreme Court in
Katchen v. Landy,
BACKGROUND
I. 2
The parties. CBI was a large wholesale distributor of pharmaceutical products. *439 Its business consisted primarily of purchasing pharmaceutical products from manufacturers and warehousing those products for delivery to entities such as retail pharmacies and hospitals, which in turn sold the products to end users. CBI’s President and Chairman was Robert Castello. Castello had an employment agreement with CBI in which he was eligible for an annual bonus in an amount tied to the company’s net earnings.
To remain competitive, CBI undertook in the early 1990s a strategy of growth by acquisition. It financed these acquisitions in two ways. First, it borrowed capital from a bank syndicate through a series of lending agreements. These agreements included specific financial targets — including an earnings to fixed charge ratio, a net worth ratio and other standard covenants — that CBI had to meet in order to be eligible for additional credit and to avoid default on its existing loans. Moreover, the agreements limited the credit available to each subsidiary of CBI in terms of actual dollars and as a fixed percentage of inventory and accounts receivable. To monitor attainment of the specified targets, the banks required CBI to provide an array of monthly, quarterly, semiannual and annual reports detailing the company’s earnings, inventory and receivables, and to certify in connection therewith its compliance with the agreements’ various covenants. Second, it acquired capital from TCW, which invested in CBI in May 1991 and again in April 1993. In May 1991, TCW invested $20 million in exchange for $5 million in CBI common stock and $15 million in corporate notes. As a result of this investment, TCW acquired 48% of CBI, while Castello retained 52% of the company. In April 1993, TCW invested an additional $750,000 in CBI in exchange for a note with a face value of $750,000 and $250,000 worth of CBI common stock.
Through its initial investment, TCW also acquired various rights set forth in a shareholders agreement (the “Shareholders Agreement”) and a securities purchase agreement (the “Securities Agreement”). Most importantly, TCW acquired the right to select two of the five members of CBI’s Board of Directors and one of the three members of the Board’s Audit Committee, while Castello retained the Presidency and Chairmanship of CBI as well as the right to select the Board’s and Audit Committee’s remaining members. TCW’s two seats on the Board were filled by Frank Pados and, by 1993, Brian Mahoney.
TCW also acquired the right to take control of CBI in the event of the occurrence of a “control triggering event.” The Shareholders Agreement defined control triggering events to include (1) a breach of the earnings to fixed charge ratio specified in the Securities Agreement, and (2) a failure to pay the principal on TCW’s corporate notes, whether such payment was due at maturity or by reason of acceleration. The Securities Agreement permitted TCW to accelerate CBI’s note payment schedule in the event of certain defaults, including the making of any unauthorized loan to a CBI officer (e.g., Castello).
E & Y became CBI’s independent auditors in June 1990. E & Y performed audits of CBI’s financial statements for fiscal years 1990 to 1993, and in 1994 began a re-audit of CBI’s 1993 financial statements. In addition to serving as independent auditors, E & Y also received substantial fees for performing supplemental mid-year reviews and due diligence procedures related to CBI’s acquisitions.
The fraud. It is undisputed that Castel-lo and certain other members of CBI’s management engaged in a scheme to deceive the company’s lenders, including TCW, as to CBI’s true financial condition *440 during fiscal years 1992 and 1993. The fraudulent scheme consisted primarily of inventory fraud, which took three principal forms.
First, CBI’s management delayed the recording of invoices — that is, CBI’s management intentionally failed to record invoices during the fiscal year in which purchases were made and/or goods were received. Since CBI had to continue to pay its vendors in order to continue to receive merchandise, management would round up the amounts owed as payments to the vendors and classify the amounts paid as “advance” payments. Advance payments are usually considered assets and recorded as such on the balance sheet, but E & Y’s work papers indicate that the advance payments were treated as reductions to “accounts payable.” Because the invoices were never recorded as accounts payable on CBI’s balance sheet, the scheme reduced accounts payable twice: once when the invoice was not added to accounts payable, and once when the amount actually paid was subtracted from accounts payable as an “advance.” Additionally, the inventory to which these invoices pertained was apparently included on the balance sheet as assets. It is undisputed that this aspect of the scheme helped CBI generate falsely inflated earnings, which, in turn, improved the company’s earnings to fixed charge ratio (preventing default on the bank loans and on the TCW loan) and inflated Castello’s bonus.
Second, CBI’s management created fictitious inventory, which was then included in the calculation of the company’s total assets. This aspect of the scheme increased the amount of inventory available as collateral for CBI’s bank loans, thus increasing the amount of money that CBI was able to borrow from the banks, and may also have affected the company’s earnings.
Third, CBI’s management engaged in “paper” transfers of inventory between subsidiaries — that is, when a subsidiary of CBI reached the borrowing limit on its bank loans given its actual inventory, CBI’s management would falsely indicate that inventory had been transferred from other subsidiaries which had more inventory, in order to allow the maxed out subsidiary to continue to borrow. This aspect of the fraud had no effect on CBI’s consolidated financial statements, but allowed CBI’s subsidiaries to skirt the loan agreements’ borrowing caps.
Castello also defrauded CBI with regard to his annual bonuses. He took a bonus based on CBI’s falsely inflated net earnings for fiscal year 1992, which he knew was greater than that to which he was entitled. He also took a portion of his falsely inflated bonus for fiscal year 1993 prior to entitlement.
The question at the heart of this appeal is whether the above-described fraudulent scheme was intended solely to benefit its perpetrators personally or whether those perpetrators also had CBI’s interests in mind.
The audits. E & Y issued unqualified audit opinions with respect to CBI’s financial statements for fiscal years 1992 and 1993 on August 6, 1992 and October 26, 1993, respectively. For both of those years, E & Y’s opinions stated that E & Y conducted its audit in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Standards (“GAAS”) and that, in the opinion of E & Y, the consolidated financial statements presented fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of CBI. In fact, the financial statements prepared by E & Y did not fairly present CBI’s financial position because E & Y did not detect certain unrecorded liabilities when it performed the audits. In March 1994, E & Y acknowledged that CBI’s 1993 financial *441 statements were materially inaccurate and withdrew its October 23, 1993 opinion. Also in March 1994, E & Y commenced additional procedures related to the financial statements of CBI for fiscal year 1993 (the “re-audit”). E & Y never completed the re-audit; in July 1994, CBI directed it to cease all audit-related activities.
II.
The bankruptcy proceeding. In August 1994, CBI filed voluntary petitions for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. In January 1995, E & Y filed a Proof of Claim against CBI in those proceedings in the amount of $210,850 for allegedly unpaid auditing and consulting services. The Proof of Claim states that the claim “arises from professional services rendered in 1993 and 1994 on behalf of [CBI] in connection with the audit of [CBI]’s financial statements and other special engagements.” In June 1995, the Creditors’ Committee filed an Objection to certain claims filed in CBI’s bankruptcy action, including E & Ys claim. The objection does not allege malpractice, but states that it is “without prejudice to the Committee’s right to object to the within proofs of claim on other grounds as may be necessary.”
By order dated August 23, 1995, the bankruptcy court confirmed the First Amended Joint Plan of Reorganization of Creditors’ Committee and CBI. Pursuant to the Plan, Castello’s equity interest in CBI was extinguished, and BSI was appointed Disbursing Agent for the Debtors’ estates and charged with the responsibility of distributing the estates’ assets to their creditors. CBI also granted BSI “the right to pursue and prosecute ... all adversary proceedings and contested matters pending or thereafter commenced or filed in the Bankruptcy Court or elsewhere, including ... any and all objections to claims.” The Plan also contained a settlement of the potential claims between CBI and TCW: TCW was granted an allowed claim of $16.7 million against the estates; CBI was “deemed to have waived and released any and all claims ... against TCW”; and TCW “transferred and assigned to the Disbursing Agent, any and all rights to pursue and prosecute causes of action of any kind held by TCW against any third party, in its capacity as a Creditor or equity security holder of any of the Debtors.”
On October 25, 1996,' the Creditors’ Committee and BSI entered into an assignment under which the Creditors’ Committee expressly assigned to BSI its “right, title and interest to pursue and prosecute all adversary proceedings and contested matters pending as of the Effective Date of the Plan or thereafter commenced or filed in the Bankruptcy Court or elsewhere including, without limitation, the Litigations and objections to claims, inclusive of the Objection to the claim of E & Y.”
The adversary proceeding. On October 16, 1996, BSI, in its capacity as the Disbursing Agent under the Plan, filed a complaint in bankruptcy court against E & Y. On October 25, 1996 — after the express assignment of the Creditors’ Committee claims — BSI filed an amended complaint concerning the professional services rendered by E & Y to CBI from 1992 to 1994. Specifically, the amended complaint alleges: (1) breach of contract in connection with the fiscal 1992 and 1993 audits; (2) negligence in connection with the fiscal 1992 and 1993 audits; (3) negligent misrepresentation that the fiscal year 1992 and 1993 financial statements were materially accurate and that E & Y conducted the fiscal 1992 and 1993 audits in compliance with GAAS; (4) fraud and/or recklessness in connection with the fiscal 1992 *442 and 1993 audits; (5) fraud and/or recklessness in inducing Debtors to retain E & Y to perform the re-audit; (6) breach of fiduciary duty in failing to make certain disclosures to CBI; and (7) expungement of E & Y’s $210,850 Proof of Claim. BSI brought each of the seven claims as the successor to the claims of CBI under the Plan. BSI also brought the second, third, fourth and fifth claims as assignee of the claims that TCW acquired as a creditor of CBI, pursuant to the settlement contained in the Plan. Finally, BSI also brought the seventh claim as the assignee of the Creditors’ Committee’s Objection.
Soon after BSI filed its amended complaint, E & Y moved to withdraw the adversary proceeding from bankruptcy court to the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Wood, /.). By order dated November 13, 1998 (“1998 Order”), the district court denied that motion, concluding that the adversary proceeding qualified as a “core proceeding” under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2), and specifically as a “counterclaim” under § 157(b)(2)(C) and as a proceeding concerning the “allowance or disallowance of claims against the estate” under § 157(b)(2)(B). The court based that conclusion on its determination that the Proof of Claim and the claims in the amended complaint “are related, arise out of the same transaction, and a determination of [BSI’s] claims would likely be dispositive of E & Y’s claims.” The court also found that the claims were core proceedings under the “catch-all” provisions of § 157(b)(2)(A) (“matters concerning the administration of the estate”) and (0) (“other proceedings affecting the liquidation of the assets of the estate or the adjustment of the debtor-creditor or the equity security holder relationship, except personal injury tort or wrongful death claims”). On August 13, 1999, the court denied E & Y’s motion for re-argument and reconsideration of its order.
On May 4, 1999, BSI withdrew the demand for a jury trial contained in its amended complaint; the next day, E & Y filed its answer to that complaint and demanded a jury trial. On September 3, 1999, the bankruptcy court held that E & Y had waived its right to a jury trial when it “voluntarily participated in the equitable reordering of [CBI’s] estates by filing a proof of claim,” because all of the claims BSI presses against E & Y “are an ‘inextricable part’ of the allowance or disallowance of E & Y’s claim against the[ ] estates and the adjustment of the debtor-creditor relationship.”
The bankruptcy court’s opinion.
On April 5, 2000, after a seventeen-day bench trial on the issue of liability, the bankruptcy court granted judgment for CBI on its first through fifth and seventh claims.
3
CBI I,
The court rejected E & Y’s “imputation defense” — that “as the successor in interest to CBI,” BSI lacks standing to pursue the CBI claims “because the knowledge of certain CBI officers ... who were involved in the ... fraud must as a matter of law be imputed to CBI itself and would therefore bar CBI from contending that it was deceived by the erroneous financial statements that E & Y certified” — on two grounds. See id. at 364-65.
First, the court concluded that although management’s knowledge is usually imputed to the company itself, BSI still had standing to press the CBI claims under the widely accepted “adverse interest” exception to such imputation.
Id.
at 365 (citing
Sec. Investor Prot. Corp. v. BDO Seidman LLP,
Second, the court endorsed another exception to the normal rule of imputation, the so-called “innocent insider” exception,
see id.
at 364-65, recognized by a number of courts in the Southern District of New York,
see, e.g., Wechsler v. Squadron, Ellenoff, Plesent & Sheinfeld, LLP,
The court also rejected E & Y’s claim that its relationship with TCW was not *444 close enough to permit TCW to hold it responsible for any of its negligence or fraud with respect to CBI’s financial statements. Id. at 365-66. The court explained that, under New York law, three criteria “must be met in order to hold accountants liable in negligence to non-contractual parties who rely to their detriment on inaccurate financial reports:”
“(1) the accountants must have been aware that the financial reports were to be used for a particular purpose or purposes; (2) in the furtherance of which a known party or parties was intended to rely; and (3) there must have been some conduct on the part of the accountants linking them to that party or parties, which evinces the accountants’ understanding of that party or parties’ reliance.”
Id.
at 366 (quoting
Credit Alliance Corp. v. Arthur Andersen & Co.,
By order dated April 18, 2000, the bankruptcy court scheduled a trial on damages: After a second bench trial, the bankruptcy court determined damages of $27,738,603, plus pre-judgment interest of nearly $17,000,000, with respect to the CBI claims, and damages of $15,412,000, plus pre-judgment interest of nearly $10,000,000, with respect to the TCW claims. The court found the appropriate measure of damages suffered by CBI to be the difference in the amount for which its equity could have been sold in 1993 and $0 (CBI’s value at the time the Plan was entered on August 23, 1995). The court found the appropriate measure of damages suffered by TCW (as a creditor of CBI) to be the amount it would have received on its $15.75 million in notes if CBI had been sold in October 1993.
The district court’s orders.
E & Y appealed the bankruptcy court’s decision to the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Wood, /.) on a number of grounds. On June 26, 2004, the district court issued an opinion and order affirming in part and reversing in part the decision of the bankruptcy court.
CBI II,
The district court declined to resolve the question of whether BSI has standing to assert CBI’s fraud claims in light of E & Y’s proffered imputation defense. Id. at 377. The court explained that, “[t]he bankruptcy court’s decision states a number of times that the segment of management involved in the fraud was acting in its own interest and not acting in CBI’s interest,” and that “[t]he bankruptcy court stated, specifically, that the purpose of the fraud was to obtain a bigger bonus for Castello, and to preserve Castello’s personal control over CBI.” Id. at 370. The district court concluded that, “[tjhese statements ... support the bankruptcy court’s conclusion that the adverse interest exception applies, and that imputation is therefore inappropriate.” Id. However, the court expressed some reservations regarding the language utilized by the bankruptcy court:
[I]n its findings of fact, the bankruptcy court suggested (perhaps inadvertently) that there existed at least one purpose for the fraud other than to obtain a bigger bonus for Castello, and to preserve Castello’s personal control over CBI: The bankruptcy court stated in its findings of fact that “[a] principle [sic] reason why ... members of management caused liabilities to remain unrecorded at year-end was not for any corporate purpose but rather to ensure that Castello received the maximum bonus and remained in control.” This language leaves open the possibility that the bankruptcy court found that some corporate purpose was served by the fraud.
Id. (internal citation omitted and alterations in original). However, the court did explicitly “deeline[ ] to adopt any innocent insider exception” to the normal rule of imputation, because “misconduct by those given authority to make decisions on behalf of a company should be imputed to the company even if innocent members of management could and would have prevented the fraud had they been aware of it.” Id. at 372.
On July 8, 2004, E & Y filed a motion for rehearing, in which it asked the district court: to rule on the previously unresolved question of whether BSI has standing to assert CBI’s fraud claims under the adverse interest exception to imputation; to reconsider its earlier holdings that BSI has standing to assert CBI’s negligence and breach of contract claims, and TCW’s fraud claims; and to rule on the question — previously deferred to a jury — of whether BSI has standing to assert TCW’s negligence claims. On October 26, 2004, the district court granted the motion for rehearing, resolved each of the four issues raised in E & Y’s motion in defendants’ favor, vacated in full the judgment of the bankruptcy court, and directed the clerk of the court to enter final judgment in favor of E & Y.
CBI III,
In holding that BSI lacks standing to assert CBI’s fraud claims against E & Y, the district court reversed the bankruptcy court’s conclusion that “CBI’s managers ‘totally abandoned’ CBI’s interests” when they committed their fraudulent acts on four grounds. Id. at 763-65. In so doing, the district court gave no indication that it was according the bankruptcy court’s factual finding any deference.
First, the district court criticized the sufficiency of the evidence that the bank *446 ruptcy court cited in support of its finding of total abandonment:
The exhibit upon which [the bankruptcy court] relie[d] is a vaguely worded schedule regarding the financial scenario that would need to occur “to reach 100 percent of bonus.” The text of the exhibit was found by an [E & Y] employee, on the computer used by John O’Brien, the former Controller of CBI. Although BSI and the Bankruptcy Court below treat this document as evidence of the intention of CBI’s managers in defrauding the company, [E & Y] correctly points out here that the Bankruptcy Court declined to admit this document for that purpose, because the document was not authenticated. There is no testimony by O’Brien concerning the document; there is no indication of who created the document and for what purpose it was created. There is thus no basis to conclude that the document provides any evidence of O’Brien’s intent in participating in the scheme to defraud CBI.
Id. at 764 (internal citations and footnotes omitted).
Second, the court discredited the testimony of Brian Mahoney, a former accounting supervisor at CBI, which BSI pointed to as other record evidence supporting the bankruptcy court’s finding. The gist of Mahoney’s testimony was that “[John] O’Brien told him that the ‘real reason’ for failing to record liabilities and for overstating CBI’s income was to ensure that Cas-tello received his maximum bonus.” Id. at 764-65. The district court explained that “[e]ven if Mahoney’s testimony, which is clearly hearsay, were admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule, its probative value is slight, in view of Mahoney’s testimony immediately thereafter that he had no way of knowing whether O’Brien had some other purpose in mind for failing to record liabilities.” Id. at 765.
Third, the district court held that the bankruptcy court should have drawn an adverse inference “from the fact that BSI chose not to offer any testimony by Paul Rogers, CBI’s former senior financial officer,” because Rogers, “allegedly a central figure in the fraud, ... [who] possessed first-hand knowledge about the ‘real reason(s)’ for the fraud,” was available as a witness to CBI via his court approved settlement agreement. Id.
Finally, following its own review of the record, the court found “some evidence that various corporate purposes were served by the managers’ acts of fraud” besides inflating Castello’s bonus. Id. For instance, the court found that “CBI’s managers hid invoices and left certain liabilities unrecorded in order to give false representations of CBI’s profitability to lending banks, without which CBI would have risked triggering an event of default.” Id.
The district court then reversed its earlier holding that, “regardless of whether BSI has standing to sue [E & Y] for defrauding CBI, BSI has standing to assert CBI’s negligence and breach of contract claims” on the grounds that because “[t]he factual allegations giving rise to CBI’s negligence and breach of contract claims are virtually identical to the allegations giving rise to CBI’s fraud claimsf,] ... [t]he claims assert ‘a single form of wrongdoing under different names’ for purposes of the standing analysis.” Id. at 765-66.
Finally, the court reversed its earlier holding that BSI had standing to assert TCW’s claims on the grounds that it had “overlooked controlling law, which holds that a bankruptcy trustee does not have standing to assert claims against third parties on behalf of creditors of a corporation, even where the creditors assigned their claims to the trustee.”
Id.
at 766 (citing
*447
Breeden v. Kirkpatrick & Lockhart LLP (In re Bennett Funding Group, Inc.) (‘Bennett”),
DISCUSSION
BSI now presses two main arguments on appeal. First, BSI argues that it has standing to assert the CBI claims, because the district court erred in finding the adverse interest and innocent insider exceptions inapplicable, and therefore in imputing the fraudulent acts of members of CBI’s management to CBI. BSI argues that, in the alternative, its claims based on E & Y’s conduct in connection with the 1994 re-audit are meaningfully distinct from its claims based on management’s fraud, and therefore it has standing to assert the re-audit claims even if management’s wrongdoing is imputed to CBI. Second, BSI argues that it has standing to assert the TCW claims because Barnes is no longer good law and is distinguishable from the instant case. We agree that BSI has standing to assert all of CBI’s claims under the adverse interest exception to the normal rule of imputation. Thus, we need not address BSI’s arguments regarding the innocent insider exception and the 1994 re-audit. 5 We also agree that BSI has standing to assert the TCW claims. To the extent that Barnes interprets federal law, it is not binding on this Court. We find that, in light of the subsequent inclusion of § 541(a)(7) in the Bankruptcy Code, Barnes’ reasoning is no longer persuasive. We therefore must reach the two arguments that E & Y presses on cross-appeal: first, that none of BSI’s claims are core proceedings that may be adjudicated by a bankruptcy judge; and, second, that the district court erred in holding that E & Y was not entitled to a jury trial on the CBI Claims. We reject both.
I.
Does BSI have standing to assert the CBI claims against E & Y notwithstanding the role CBI’s management played in the fraud? Under New York law, “[a] claim against a third party for defrauding a corporation with the cooperation of management accrues to creditors, not to the guilty corporation.”
Shearson Lehman Hutton, Inc. v. Wagoner,
“[BJreach of contract, negligence, and fraud, when committed by auditors, are a single form of wrongdoing under different names,” and therefore, under the logic of
Wagoner,
a bankruptcy trustee does not have standing to bring any claims related to professional malpractice in the context of cooperative wrongdoing between the debtor and its auditors.
Cenco Inc. v. Seidman & Seidman,
“The rationale underlying the
Wagoner
rule derives from the fundamental principle of agency that the misconduct of managers within the scope of their employment will normally be imputed to the corporation.”
Wight v. BankAmerica Corp.,
There is no dispute that, if the Wagoner rule applies, BSI lacks standing to assert CBI’s claims against E & Y for fraud, negligence and breach of contract in connection with its 1992 and 1993 fiscal audits. Members of CBI’s management committed various acts of fraud that E & Y failed to uncover during the two audits. If the acts of those individuals, and the knowledge of the fraud possessed by those individuals, can be imputed to CBI itself, then BSI— standing in CBI’s shoes — cannot sue E & Y for its role in the fraud. Thus, the parties’ dispute focuses solely on whether any exception to the Wagoner rule bars such imputation. We find that the adverse interest exception is satisfied, and thus that BSI has standing to pursue the CBI claims.
A.
Our review of orders issued by a district court “in its capacity as an appel
*449
late court is plenary.”
Giaimo v. DeTrano (In re DeTrano),
A factual finding is not clearly erroneous unless “the reviewing court on the entire evidence is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.”
United States v. U.S. Gypsum Co.,
B.
The bankruptcy court’s conclusion that “the [imputation] doctrine [is] rendered inapplicable by virtue of the ‘adverse interest’ exception because the segment of management involved in the fraud was acting for its own interest
and not that of CBI
” was based on its factual finding that “the fraud was perpetrated for the purpose of obtaining a bigger bonus for Castello, and to preserve Castello’s personal control over the company” and its legal understanding that “[u]nder the ‘adverse interest’ exception, the knowledge of company management involved in a fraud will not be imputed to the company itself if such management was
acting totally for its own interest and not that of the corporation.
”
CBI I,
The most important piece of record evidence that supports the bankruptcy court’s finding is Mahoney’s testimony. Mahoney, a former accounting supervisor at CBI, testified that he was told by O’Brien, CBI’s former Controller, that “the real reason” for the fraud was to maximize Castello’s bonus. He testified that he had multiple conversations over the period of the fraud with O’Brien and Paul Rogers, CBI’s former senior financial officer, in which he was instructed as to the exact procedure to follow in order to “overstate” CBI’s income to reach the “gross profit percentage” necessary “for Mr. Castello’s bonus to be met.” His fraudulent activity came only at the direction of O’Brien and Rogers. He also testified that he was “not aware of’ any motivations for the fraud besides Castello’s bonus.
Appellees argue that the district court was correct to dismiss Mahoney’s testimony as lacking in probative value, because “when asked ‘whether Mr. O’Brien had other purposes in mind for reaching the gross profit percentage besides the reason he gave you,’ ” Mahoney testified that he didn’t “ ‘know if [O’Brien] had other *450 ideas.’ ” 6 Thus, Appellees contend that “Mahoney’s testimony was completely non-probative on the central question posed by the adverse-interest exception: [D]id the managers totally abandon the Company’s interests or were they ‘simultaneously serving their own interests and the company’s interests’?”
Mahoney’s testimony, however, is clearly probative of this central question: Mahoney, one of the key figures in the scheme, had himself
totally abandoned
CBI’s interests when he engaged in the fraudulent activity and was convinced that the rest of the guilty members of CBI’s management had done the same. While the bankruptcy court might have elected to infer from Mahoney’s testimony that there actually
were
other reasons for the fraud, it was clearly not required to draw such an inference. “In reviewing findings for clear error, [an appellate court is] not allowed to second-guess ... the trial court’s ... choice between permissible competing inferences. Even if the appellate court might have weighed the evidence differently, it may not overturn findings that are not clearly erroneous.”
Ceraso v. Motiva Enters., LLC,
Indeed, Appellees point to only one piece of direct evidence for the proposition that CBI’s management had mixed motives for the fraud: the testimony of Louis Scerra, an auditor at E & Y, regarding a conversation he had with Frank Pa-dos, TCW’s principal representative on the CBI Board, in March 1994. In other words, Appellees provide only one piece of evidence that directly contradicts the inference of total abandonment that the bankruptcy court drew from Mahoney’s testimony. 7 Scerra testified that Pados told him that the fraud was designed to “help the company prosper, grow, increase in value.” Appellees contend that this testimony is “unchallenged and unrebutted.”
However, the bankruptcy court expressly found Scerra’s testimony to be “evasive, lacking in credibility, or both.”
CBI I,
Moreover, the record contains external evidence that the bankruptcy court could have interpreted as contradicting Scerra’s testimony: the bonus schedule that Scerra found on O’Brien’s computer and faxed to Mahoney, a CBI Board member, in April 1994. The schedule shows the “additions” to the various inputs on CBI’s balance sheet for April 1993 necessary “to reach 100 percent of bonus.” The document was admitted by the bankruptcy court only for the limited purpose of determining what was in Scerra’s mind when he faxed it. It is not direct evidence that Castello’s bonus motivated CBI’s management. However, in keeping with the hearsay-limited purpose of the bonus schedule, the bankruptcy court could have inferred from the fact that Scerra sent the schedule to a member of CBI’s Board that Scerra had concluded that the fraud’s purpose was to benefit Castello personally. Thus, the court could have concluded that Scerra’s testimony— that he had been told nearly a month before he sent the fax that the fraud was actually to benefit CBI — was not credible.
Appellees also echo the district court’s conclusion that the “record contains some evidence that various corporate purposes were served by the managers’ acts of fraud, at least some of which were distinct from the issue of Castello’s bonus.”
CBI III,
First, it is important to remember that the “total abandonment” standard looks principally to the intent of the managers engaged in misconduct.
See Capital Wireless Corp. v. Deloitte & Touche,
Second, the fraudulent scheme benefit-ted Castello in at least three ways: (1) by allowing him to maintain control of CBI even after CBI’s actual financial results and an unapproved loan to Castello would have allowed TCW either to accelerate payment of its notes or to take control of CBI under the Shareholders’ Agreement; (2) by avoiding default on CBI’s loans from banks and vendors, which would have forced Castello to relinquish control of the company; and (3) by allowing him to collect two bonuses greater than would have been justified by earnings under his contract, one of which was also a prohibited loan because it was taken before he was entitled to it. Notwithstanding Appellees’ adamant protests to the contrary, the three principal forms of inventory fraud engaged in by CBI’s management helped Castello to secure at least one of these benefits. 8
The first form of inventory fraud was the delayed recording of invoices. It is undisputed that this aspect of the fraud helped generate falsely inflated earnings for CBI. The inflation of CBI’s earnings improved its earnings to fixed charge ratio, which allowed the company to avoid triggering note acceleration or a takeover under its Shareholders’ Agreement with TCW, as well as to avoid defaulting on its bank loans. The inflated earnings also increased Castello’s bonus.
The second form of inventory fraud was the creation of fictitious inventory. Maho-ney testified that the purpose of this aspect of the fraud was to increase the amount of inventory available as collateral for CBI’s bank loans. The fictitious inventory was also included in CBI’s calculation of its total assets, which may have artificially reduced the cost of goods sold, and thus increased the apparent profit margin. Even if the fictitious inventory did not affect the earnings to fixed charge ratio, it still helped CBI to continue borrowing money from the lending banks and to avoid having its loans called. Had CBI’s credit line from the banks been cut off and its loans called, Castello would have lost control of CBI to TCW (one event that triggered note acceleration or a takeover under the Shareholders’ Agreement was a failure to pay off the note on schedule) and his fraud would have been exposed.
The third form of inventory fraud was “paper” transfers of inventory between CBI subsidiaries, which allowed those subsidiaries to borrow past their bank-imposed inventory-based loan limits. Again, this aspect of the fraud increased CBI’s cash flow, which was essential to Castello retaining control of the company.
Ultimately, it is clear that Appellees’ claim that “the inflated quarterly figures ... had no effect on Castello’s bonus or control” ignores the reality of the complicated financial balancing act CBI’s man *453 agement performed to maintain Castello’s increasingly tenuous control of CBI. By inflating CBI’s quarterly figures, management maintained the veneer of profitability required to keep TCW and the banks at bay. Inflating CBI’s quarterly figures was also a necessary step in the surreptitious creation of the false annual reports necessary for Castello to collect his maximum bonus — after all, it is difficult to imagine how convincing false annual reports could be created from accurate quarterly ones.
Third, the purported “benefits” that Ap-pellees suggest CBI
itself
received as a result of management’s machinations are illusory. “A corporation is not a biological entity for which it can be presumed that any act which extends its existence is beneficial to it.”
Bloor v. Dansker (In re Investors Funding Corp. of N.Y. Sec. Litig.),
After reviewing the record as a whole, we find that the bankruptcy court’s conclusion that “the segment of management involved in the fraud was acting for its own interest and not that of CBI” is not clearly erroneous.
See CBI I,
II.
While BSI may assert CBI’s claims against E & Y, several questions remain. One involves the claims of TCW and a New York case of a distant era: Does BSI have standing to bring the TCW claims against E & Y notwithstanding
Barnes v. Schatzkin,
In
Barnes,
the First Department of New York’s Appellate Division held that a bankruptcy trustee could not, under § 70(a) and (e) of the then-existing Bankruptcy Act, take an assignment of a claim from a
*454
debtor’s creditor against a third party and sue on that claim as a trustee.
Id.
at 10,
Both parties misread Barnes. Insofar as Barnes draws its understanding of the powers of the bankruptcy trustee from the then-existing Bankruptcy Act, it interprets federal — as opposed to state — law. As such, its holding is not binding on this Court. Moreover, much has changed since Barnes was decided. The now-recognized powers of a bankruptcy trustee to accept and protect property acquired after the commencement of a bankruptcy proceeding have altered the equation. Although not bound by its decision, we agree with the reasoning set forth in Semi-Tech; intervening changes to federal bankruptcy law have undermined the rationale of Barnes. BSI has standing to assert the TCW claims under § 541(a)(7) of the modern Bankruptcy Code. See 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(7).
A.
“In a bankruptcy proceeding, state law determines whether a right to sue belongs to the debtor or to the individual creditors.”
Mediators,
In
Barnes,
the trustee for Cowley, a bankrupt partnership, sued “the defendants, members of the New York Stock Exchange” for “execut[ing] orders for Cowley ..., knowing them to be conducting a bucket shop, and aid[ing] and abett[ing] in the [partnership’s] fraud and ... conversion.”
Barnes,
*455
The court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss on the grounds that a trustee of a bankrupt partnership had no capacity, under section 70 of the then-existing Bankruptcy Act, to sue on claims assigned to it by customers of the bankrupt. The court noted that, under New York law: “The claims on which the plaintiff seeks to recover were never part of the assets of [the bankrupt] nor did they arise in favor of the plaintiff as trustee in bankruptcy. They belonged to various creditors.... The claim pleaded arose, if at all, in favor of 164 ... customers_”
Id.
at 11,
A trustee in bankruptcy has only such title and power as given by the Bankruptcy Act. He is a creature of that statute. No serious assertion is made here that [the assigned] claims ... were property of the bankrupt. They were not assets which passed to the trustee because they belonged to the bankrupt. The [only] causes of action which the trustee has by reason of the Bankruptcy Act, other than such as were property of the bankrupt, are causes of action to recover or follow assets.
... We are not concerned with a discussion of what might have been put into the National Bankruptcy Act; our concern is only with what it does contain.
Id.
at 13,
The Barnes Court’s reasoning is quite clear. New York law dictates that claims against a third party for defrauding a debtor’s creditors with the help of the debtor accrue to those creditors rather than to the debtor. Thus, Cowley’s trustee could not assert Cowley’s customers’ claims against the members of the New York Stock Exchange for aiding and abetting Cowley’s fraud and conversion, because those claims belonged to Cowley’s customers, not to its estate. Moreover, the trustee could not assert those claims even though the customers assigned them to the trustee after Cowley’s bankruptcy proceeding commenced, because then-existing federal law did not give trustees that power. Barnes has nothing to say with regard to whether the assignment would otherwise have been impermissible under state law.
In the instant case, the question before us is not whether TCW owns the claims (a matter of state law), but whether BSI can assert those claims as a result of a post-bankruptcy assignment from TCW. To the extent that the parties read Barnes as prohibiting the assignment in question, then, it is with regard to the decision’s interpretation of a trustee’s powers under federal law. Thus, Barnes does not bind us.
We are sympathetic to the parties’ confusion on this point; this Court has not always clearly articulated the weight we have accorded various aspects of Barnes. However, notwithstanding Appellees’ contention to the contrary, we have never adopted Barnes’ interpretation of the powers of the bankruptcy trustee under federal law as the law of this Circuit.
The three decisions that Appellees cite in support of their contention are
Bennett,
B.
Having concluded that
Barnes
is not binding on us, we must now determine whether we find its reasoning persuasive. We do not; its rationale has been undermined by the inclusion of § 541(a)(7) in the current Bankruptcy Code.
See
11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(7). Indeed, the significance of § 541(a)(7) was recognized in Semi-Tech— by the same court that decided
Barnes. Semi-Tech,
The plaintiff in Semi-Tech was an entity (“LLC”) created pursuant to a plan of liquidation to bring actions on behalf of a bankrupt estate (“Semi-Tech”). The plan provided for the assignment of “Creditor Causes of Action” — certain claims held by creditors (“Noteholders”) of Semi-Tech against third-parties — to LLC as part of a settlement between Semi-Tech and the Noteholders. After the plan was approved by the bankruptcy court, many Notehold-ers opted into the plan’s settlement and assigned their claims to LLC. In Semi-Tech, LLC asserted a number of these *457 assigned claims against Ernst & Young LLP and several of its affiliates. The complaint alleged that the Canadian office of Ernst & Young, which served as Semi-Tech’s pre-bankruptcy auditor, injured Noteholders by failing to report a number of Semi-Tech’s questionable transactions.
As Appellees do here, the defendants in Semi-Tech asserted that LLC did not have standing to assert the assigned claims of the debtor’s creditors against Ernst & Young under Barnes. The New York State Supreme Court disagreed:
[T]he majority in Barnes based its reasoning on the Bankruptcy Law then in effect that had no provision permitting a trustee [to receive] property for the benefit of the estate.... Section 541(a)(7) in the current Bankruptcy Code clearly includes as property of the estate: “[a]ny interest in property that the estate acquires after the commencement of the case.”
Semi-Tech Litigation, LLC v. Ting,
Index No. 604644/2002, at 14 (N.Y. Gen. Term IAS Part
The Appellate Division affirmed the Supreme Court’s decision in relevant part.
Semi-Tech,
Appellees acknowledge that if
Semi-Tech’s
view is applied to this ease, BSI would have standing to assert the TCW claims. They do not dispute that the facts of this case replicate the facts of
Semi-Tech
almost exactly. Instead, Appellees argue we should not follow the decision for two reasons: first, the legislative history of the revisions to the Bankruptcy Code makes clear that Congress did not intend for those revisions to abrogate
Barnes;
and, second, the First Department’s decision in
Semi-Tech
conflicts with the Second Department’s decision in
P & F Industries, Inc. v. Medallion Group, Inc.,
First, Appellees point to the legislative history of the 1978 revisions to the Bankruptcy Code as evidence that Congress did not intend those revisions to abrogate Barnes. In the same round of revisions in which Congress adopted § 541(a)(7) — the new section of the Code cited by the Semi-Tech Court as the basis for abrogating Barnes — Congress considered but rejected a proposed § 544(c). Section 544(c) provided in relevant part:
(1) The trustee may enforce any cause of action that a creditor [or] a class of creditors ... has against any person, if — (A) the trustee could not recover against such person on such cause of action other than under this subsection; (B) recovery by the trustee for the benefit of such creditor ... or the members of such class will reduce the claim or interest of such creditor or ... [creditors] ... against or in the estate; (C) there is a reasonable likelihood that recovery against such person will not create an allowable claim in favor of such person against the estate; and (D) enforcement of such cause of action is in the best interest of the estate.
*458
Mixon v. Anderson (In re Ozark Rest. Equip. Co.),
In reality, the rejected § 544(c) would have significantly broadened the trustee’s power to assert creditors’ claims when compared to the Appellate Division’s interpretation of § 541(a)(7) in Semi-Tech. Most importantly, it would have allowed a trustee to assert the claims of creditors without their assignment or permission. In explaining the import of the proposed § 544(c), the House Report stated:
Subsection (c) is new. It overrules Caplin v. Marine Midland Grace Trust Co.,406 U.S. 416 [92 S.Ct. 1678 ,32 L.Ed.2d 195 ] (1972), which precluded a ... trustee from enforcing a claim on behalf of debenture holders against an indenture trustee for misconduct. The trustee is permitted to act as a class representative under this provision [under certain conditions].... A judgment in the action binds all creditors ... that could have brought the action, and the court may stay the commencement or continuation of any other action on the same cause of action. All creditors that could have brought the action are given notice of the trustee’s suit, and nothing precludes such creditors from retaining their own attorneys and joining the action in their own behalf.
H.R. Rep. 95-595, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 370-71 (1977), 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5787, 6326, 6327. We can think of many arguments against allowing a trustee to usurp the claims of a bankrupt’s non-cooperating creditors that do not counsel against permitting creditors to voluntarily transfer their claims to a trustee as part of a court-approved plan of reorganization or liquidation. There is no evidence to suggest the grounds on which proposed § 544(c) was actually rejected. 11 Because it is perfectly plausible that Congress intended to leave Caplin intact without expressing any view on Barnes, we disagree with Appel-lees that Congress’s rejection of § 544(c) fatally undermines the reasoning of Semi-Tech.
Second, Appellees argue that “the First Department’s decision in Semi-Tech carries only modest weight as a predictor of New York law because it conflicts with the Second Department’s decision in P & F.” As we have already noted, however, Appel-lees point to no state law bar to the assignment of the TCW claims to BSI. Thus, to the extent that Appellees ask us to interpret federal law to bar such an assignment, a conflict between New York courts on the issue, while potentially informative, is not determinative.
In any event, Appellees misread
P & F,
which did not involve an assignment of claims from a debtor’s creditor to a bankruptcy trustee. In
P & F,
a bankruptcy
*459
trustee unsuccessfully asserted claims against three defendants for fraudulently disguising a loan to the bankrupt as secured debt in order to give themselves an unfair advantage over the bankrupt’s general creditors in bankruptcy proceedings.
P & F,
The fact that the trustee in bankruptcy unsuccessfully litigated the issue of whether the 1976 loan transactions ... were fraudulent as to [bankrupt’s] general creditors does not preclude plaintiff from asserting that defendants tortiously interfered with its contract with [the bankrupt]. This claim was personal to plaintiff. It was not an asset of [the bankrupt’s] before it was bankrupt or of its estate while it was in bankruptcy. It therefore could not have been asserted by the trustee in bankruptcy.
Id.
at 866-67,
Allowing a debtor’s creditors to assign their claims for the benefit of the debtor’s estate permits debtors, creditors, and bankruptcy courts the flexibility in reorganizing or liquidating a debtor’s assets necessary to achieve efficient administration of the reorganization or liquidation. Indeed, the voluntary and court-approved assignment at issue in this case perfectly illustrates how both a debtor and its creditors can benefit from the flexibility that § 541(a)(7) of the Bankruptcy Code facilitates. The Barnes view would unnecessarily hamstring those parties on the basis of an outdated version of the Bankruptcy Code. Because neither of Appellees’ arguments convinces us otherwise, we hold that BSI has standing to assert the TCW claims against E & Y.
III.
Because we have found that BSI has standing to assert both the CBI and the TCW claims against E & Y, we must reach the two arguments that Appellees press on cross-appeal. We first answer the question: Are the CBI and TCW claims “core proceedings” that may be tried by a bankruptcy judge?
The distinction between “core” and “related” matters in the context of bankruptcy (or “title 11”) proceedings can be traced back to
Northern Pipeline Construction Co. v. Marathon Pipe Line Co.,
A bankruptcy court’s power to “enter appropriate orders and judgments” in a given bankruptcy proceeding therefore hinges on whether the proceeding is “core” or “related,”
see
28 U.S.C. §§ 157(b)(1), (c)(1), consistent with the constitutional limits that
Marathon
established.
See S.G. Phillips Constructors, Inc. v. City of Burlington (In re S.G. Phillips Constructors, Inc.),
A.
In crafting § 157, “Congress realized that the bankruptcy court’s jurisdictional reach was essential to the efficient administration of bankruptcy proceedings and intended that the ‘core’ jurisdiction would be construed as broadly as possible subject to the constitutional limits established in
Marathon.” S.G. Phillips Constructors,
CBI’s claim for expungement of E & Y’s Proof of Claim is unquestionably a core proceeding; it directly affects the allowance of E & Y’s claim against CBI’s estate.
See
28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(B);
S.G. Phillips Constructors,
We agree with the district court that because “CBI’s remaining claims of negligence, breach of contract, and fraud are based upon the same operative facts as” the above core proceedings “and were filed in response to [E
&
Y’s] Proof of Claim, which is based on the same set of
*462
facts, those claims are also ... core.”
CBI II,
Appellees direct us to our decision in
Orion Pictures,
which they argue suggests that even where a claim arguably falls within the language of one of § 157(b)(2)’s broad provisions, it may still not be core within the limits of
Marathon. See Orion Pictures,
Appellees also contend that none of CBI’s claims can be deemed core on the basis that they affect the allowance of E & Y’s Proof of Claim, because as objections to that claim they would be time-barred under the Plan. The parties agree that the Plan set a “bar date” of December 1, 1995 for filing objections to creditors’ claims and that the Creditors’ Committee timely filed an objection to E & Y’s Proof of Claim, which it later assigned to BSI. However, E & Y alleges that the initial objection filed by the Creditors’ Committee only referenced the “excessive” amount of E & Y’s claim, and argues that the Creditors’ Committee could not amend that objection to assert new claims against *463 E & Y after the bar date passed (e.g., for malpractice).
E
&
Y offers no authority for its contention that once an objection to a proof of claim is made, it can never be amended after the bar date.
14
Nor do Appellees explain why a claim must be “an objection” to a creditor’s claim against an estate in order to qualify as a core proceeding affecting the allowance of such a claim under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(B). However, even if we accepted Appellees’ argument
ar-guendo,
it would not affect our holding that all of the CBI claims are core. The Plan’s bar date did not apply to counterclaims filed in an adversary proceeding. All of the CBI claims are interconnected with E & Y’s fees claim. Thus, all of the CBI claims are counterclaims against E & Y and core pursuant to § 157(b)(2)(C).
See Baudoin,
Appellees also argue that the CBI claims cannot be deemed core, because CBI’s $45 million in claims arise under state law, would exist even if CBI had not gone bankrupt, and are disproportionate to E & Y’s $210,850 fees claim. Appellees derive the rule on which they base this argument — that, “counterclaims based on state law causes of action that would exist independently of a bankruptcy and are disproportionate to the proof of claim can never be treated as core” — from two cases:
Complete Management v. Arthur Andersen, LLP (In re Complete Management, Inc.),
02-CIV-1736,
In
Complete Management,
the debtor’s auditor, Arthur Andersen, asserted a proof of claim against the debtor in bankruptcy court for professional services rendered.
Marshall
involves a proof of claim and an adversary proceeding filed by Pierce Marshall in the bankruptcy of his stepmother, Vickie Lynn Marshall (aka Anna Nicole Smith).
Marshall,
B.
The TCW claims are in a slightly different posture than the CBI claims; none of them affect the allowance of E & Y’s fees claim against the estate. Nonetheless, the TCW claims qualify as core under the language of § 157(b)(2)(C), because they are “counterclaims by the estate against persons filing claims against the estate.” After
Marathon,
“[proceedings can be core by virtue of their nature if ... the type of proceeding is ... uniquely affected by the bankruptcy proceedings.”
U.S. Lines,
Appellees argue that the TCW claims should not be deemed core as a matter of policy. They warn of the “perils of affording core status to claims asserted on behalf of persons or entities other than the debt- or.” Specifically, Appellees point to the risk of “jurisdiction by assignment” in violation of 28 U.S.C. § 1359,
18
whereby “third-party litigation could routinely be transformed into a core bankruptcy proceeding simply by assigning the claim to the estate.”
19
Appellees’ policy concern might be valid in theory, but there is no evidence that the assignment in this case was made for the purpose of manufacturing the bankruptcy court’s jurisdiction. Indeed, as the district court noted, the assignment here “was effected as an integral part of the Plan, which was approved by the bankruptcy court.”
CBI II,
Thus, we hold that the bankruptcy court had jurisdiction to try both the CBI claims and the TCW claims, because they are both core proceedings.
IV.
That leaves the last line of defense raised in Appellees’ cross-appeal: Were Appellees’ Seventh Amendment rights violated when they were not afforded a jury trial on the CBI claims?
The Seventh Amendment protects the right to a jury trial only for matters at law, “in contradistinction” to those in equity.
Granfinanciera, S.A. v. Nordberg,
There is no question that, outside of the bankruptcy context, CBI’s first through fifth claims,
20
and all of the TCW claims, are legal in nature. Appellees also do not appeal from the district court’s decision that E
&
Y is entitled to a jury trial with regard to the TCW claims. However,
Granfinanciera
and
Langenkamp v. Culp,
A.
Filing a proof of claim against a bankruptcy estate triggers the process of “allowance and disallowance of claims,” and, therefore, a creditor who files such a claim subjects itself to the bankruptcy court’s equitable jurisdiction in proceedings affecting that claim.
Granfinanciera,
Notwithstanding
Langenkamp,
Appel-lees contend that under this Court’s decision in
Germain,
a creditor does not lose its jury trial rights as to debtor-asserted counterclaims based on “actions that are neither in violation of nor in compliance with the Bankruptcy Code, but are independent of and outside the reach of the bankruptcy process.”
Germain,
Appellees’ argument is unpersuasive because the relationship between the creditor’s and debtor’s claims in Germain is materially different than that between CBI’s and E & Y’s claims here. In particular, the debtor’s claims in Germain were not asserted to counter the proof of claim that the creditor filed in its bankruptcy proceedings. Id. at 1325. Indeed, the debtor in Germain did not object to the creditor’s proof of claim, which was based entirely on pre-bankruptcy business dealings between the debtor and creditor. Id. Rather, the debtor commenced independent litigation in state court six months later solely directed at the creditor’s conduct after the debtor filed for bankruptcy. Id. The only reason the debtor’s claims ended up in bankruptcy court was because the creditor removed them from state court. Id. Thus, resolution of the debtor’s claims in Germain would not affect the equitable restructuring of the debtor-creditor relationship in debtor’s bankruptcy proceeding. By contrast, here, the CBI claims were asserted in the bankruptcy proceedings to counter E & Y’s Proof of Claim, and their resolution would directly affect the bankruptcy court’s equitable restructuring of the debtor-creditor relationship. Indeed, the Germain Court explicitly distinguished this type of a situation— where the action in which a jury trial is sought is actually part of the claims-allowance process:
A different result might adhere if the action had become part of the claims-allowance process.... An action that bears directly on the allowance of a *468 claim is integrally related to the equitable reordering of debtor-creditor and creditor-creditor relations. If an equitable reordering cannot be accomplished without resolution of what would otherwise be a legal dispute, then that dispute becomes an essential element of the broader equitable controversy.
Id. at 1329 (internal citation omitted). Therefore, Germain does not alter the well-established principle that Appellees are not entitled to a jury trial on the CBI claims that are integral to, and directly affect the allowance of, the proof of claim they filed with the bankruptcy court.
B.
Lastly, Appellees contend that even if this Court finds that E
&
Y is not entitled to a jury trial on the CBI claims, E
&
Y is still entitled to vacatur of the portions of the bankruptcy court’s judgment that relate to the CBI claims under
Lytle. See
Both parties agree that if
Ly-tle
applies to this case, it would require vacatur of the bankruptcy court’s judgment. However, under the Supreme Court’s decision in
Katchen,
the
Lytle
rule does not apply in the context of bankruptcy proceedings.
See Katchen,
Appellees do not dispute that if Katchen applies here, E & Y is not entitled to vacatur under Lytle. Instead, Appellees allege that Katchen is no longer good law, because it “is an artifact of the archaic scheme of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898, in which certain claims could not be tried in federal court, but instead [had] to be tried via a separate ‘plenary’ suit in state court (absent a non-bankruptcy basis for federal jurisdiction).” Appellees explain that “[i]t was against this background of delay and expense resulting from having to wait for trial of the plenary action in a separate tribunal that the Katchen Court concluded that the equitable proceedings ... could go first.” Appellees argue that because the Bankruptcy Code of 1978 eliminated this need for delay by giving federal courts jurisdiction over all claims arising in the context of bankruptcy proceedings, the Katchen rationale for abrogating Lytle in the context of bankruptcy has been eliminated.
Appellees’ reasoning might very well be sound, but to no avail. This Court does not have the discretion to ignore Supreme Court precedent simply because the reasoning on which it is premised may seem no longer viable. The Supreme Court has explicitly stated that if its precedent “has direct application in a case, yet appears to rest on reasons rejected in some other line of decisions, the Court of Appeals should follow the case which directly controls, leaving to [the Supreme] Court the prerogative of overruling its own decisions.”
Rodriguez de Quijas v. Shearson/Am. Express, Inc.,
CONCLUSION
We reject both of Appellees’ challenges to BSI’s standing to assert the CBI and TCW claims. CBI management’s role in defrauding the company’s creditors is not a bar to BSI asserting the company’s claims against its former accountant, because the bankruptcy court’s finding that management had “totally abandoned” the company’s interests was not clearly erroneous. The rights of a trustee to accept and protect property after the commencement of bankruptcy proceedings is an issue of federal bankruptcy law; § 541(a)(7) of the Bankruptcy Code permits a trustee (or equivalent) to assert claims against a third party that were assigned to the trustee by a creditor of the bankrupt whose shoes it fills. Similarly, we reject both of the challenges that Appellees press to the venue and manner in which BSI chooses to assert its claims. The CBI and TCW claims are all core proceedings that may be tried in a bankruptcy court. The CBI *470 claims may be tried without a jury and before any claims that require a jury trial.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is Affirmed in part, ReveRsed in part, and Remanded to the district court for proceedings in accordance with this decision.
Notes
. The Honorable Kimba M. Wood of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York became Chief Judge on August 1, 2006.
. The bulk of this section derives from the bankruptcy court’s findings of fact. See
CBI I,
. The bankruptcy court previously dismissed BSI’s sixth claim, for breach of fiduciary duty.
CBI I,
. As noted before, the court agreed with the bankruptcy court that BSI could assert TCW’s fraud claims against E & Y.
. Judge Wood’s analysis of the innocent insider exception and its likely genesis as a product of courts’ confusion regarding the relationship between the normal rule of imputation, the adverse interest exception to that rule, and the sole actor exception to that exception is extremely persuasive.
See CBI
ir,
. Although the district court also deemed Ma-honey’s testimony "clearly hearsay,”
see CBI III,
. The district court found that the bankruptcy judge should have drawn an adverse inference from the fact that BSI did not offer testimony from Rogers, CBI’s former senior financial officer, regarding the motivation for the fraud.
CBI II,
. Other aspects of the fraud received little attention in the parties’ briefs: intentionally recording credits due to customers late in order to increase accounts receivable; artificially reducing the reserve for doubtful accounts; and falsely reporting the age of accounts receivable to the lenders to maintain the required collateral for bank loans. There is also no evidence in the record that any of these forms of fraud benefitted only CBI. Indeed, because the banks limited CBI’s credit to a certain percentage of inventory and accounts receivable, like the second and third principal forms of inventory fraud discussed below, the primary effect of these aspects of the fraud would have been to increase CBI’s ability to borrow, thus allowing Castello to retain control of the company.
. Appellees argue that even if the adverse interest exception is satisfied, this court must determine if the “sole actor” rule — an exception to the exception — applies.
See Mediators,
. In Bennett, the court writes:
Put another way, '[a] claim against a third party for defrauding a corporation with the cooperation of management, accrues to creditors, not to the guilty corporation.’
Wagoner,
In short, we hold that the defrauded investors and not the bankruptcy trustee are entitled to pursue the claims arising from the fraud.
In
Wight,
the Court does not refer to the relevant language from
Barnes:
"In
[Wagoner],
we ruled that under governing New York law, ‘[a] claim against a third party for defrauding a corporation with the cooperation of management accrues to creditors, not to the guilty corporation.’ ”
. The only mention of § 544(c)’s rejection is contained in a joint explanatory statement between the House of Representatives and the Senate regarding provisions of the Code that were amended in the process of creating a compromise bill between the houses of Congress: "The House amendment deletes section 544(c) of the House bill.” 124 Cong. Rec. 11,097 (Sept. 28, 1978).
. It is not clear precisely to what extent BSI's fraud, negligence and breach of contract claims are direct defenses to E & Y’s Proof of Claim, because — as noted by the district court — it is not clear what accounting services are covered by E
&
Y's fees claim.
See CBI II,
. Appellees raise this claim specifically in response to the district court's holding that all of the CBI claims also fall under the "catchall” provisions of 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2): (A) ("matters concerning the administration of the estate”) and (O) ("other proceedings affecting the liquidation of the assets of the estate or the adjustment of the debtor-creditor or the equity security holder relationship, except personal injury tort or wrongful death claims”). We express no opinion on that holding. The two provisions under which we find the CBI claims to be core— § 157(b)(2)(B) and (C) — are not as broadly worded.
. Indeed, the only authority Appellees purport to cite for their contention, 9 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶3001.04[1] (15th ed.2005), refers solely to post-bar date amendments to proofs of claim — as opposed to objections thereto — in the referenced language.
. Another difference between Complete Management and the instant case is that the plaintiffs in Complete Management argued principally that their claims were core under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(0) ("other proceedings affecting the liquidation of the assets of the estate or the adjustment of the debtor-creditor or the equity security holder relationship, except personal injury tort or wrongful death claims”).
.Indeed, the quotation from which Appel-lees excerpt Complete Management's holding reads, in full:
*464 There is some case law support for [debt- or's] position that, since Andersen filed a proof of claim against the estate of [debtor] in the Bankruptcy Court, the adversary proceeding by [debtor] against Andersen for negligence in performing its audit work for [debtor] is a counterclaim, and therefore a core proceeding. However, while the cases speak of the filing of a proof of claim subjecting the claimant to the equitable jurisdiction of the Bankruptcy Court, no case has suggested that the equitable jurisdiction extends to a counterclaim that is, as here, seventy times greater than the proof of claim.
. Whether Vickie's counterclaim is core is still an open question before the Ninth Circuit.
See Marshall v. Marshall,
. Section 1359 provides that: “A district court shall not have jurisdiction of a civil action in which any party, by assignment or otherwise, has been improperly or collusively made or joined to invoke the jurisdiction of such court.”
. Appellees also cite to 131 Liquidating Corp. v. LaSalle Capital Group, Inc. (In re 131 Liquidating Corp.), 222 B.R. 209 (S.D.N.Y.1998) in support of their argument. E & Y asserts that the case stands for the proposition that the fact that a claim arises out of the same transaction as core claims does not necessarily "render[ ] the claim core.” Whether or not that is an accurate reading of 131 Liquidating, the case does not resemble the factual context of this case. See 222 B.R. at 212. In 131 Liquidating, the district court found that a claim brought by the debtor and its shareholders against three individual principals of one of the debtor's creditors was not core. Id. at 211. However, those principals had not filed a proof of claim against the estate, nor (according to the district court) did the claims against them qualify as core under any of the express provisions of § 157(b)(2). I'd. at 211-12. In this case, the TCW claims are core under the language of § 157(b)(2)(C). That conclusion does not contravene the limits of Marathon because TCW’s claims are integrally related to the core bankruptcy proceedings. We express no judgment on the question of when, if ever, a claim that does not qualify as core under § 157(b)(2)’s express language could be rendered core only on the grounds that it is based on the same transaction as a core proceeding.
. The only claim that sounds solely in equity is CBI's claim for the expungement of E & Y’s Proof of Claim.
. As previously noted, the district court’s holding that E & Y is entitled to vacatur of the portions of the judgment that relate only to the TCW claims is not at issue in this appeal.
. A federal court, or a state court for that matter, cannot ordinarily preempt a defendant's Seventh Amendment rights by deciding factual issues on equitable claims that are common to legal claims while reserving those legal claims for a later jury trial. That would indeed constitute a right with no real remedy. However, when one steps into Bankruptcy Court, one knows the rules of engagement on a proof of claim and the defenses thereto. They do not include a right to a jury trial.
. The preclusive effect of the bankruptcy court's judgment depends on other legal considerations, which we need not explore here.
