Debtor-Appellant Caddo Parish-Villas South, Ltd. (“Caddo”) seeks review of a district court order reversing and remanding a bankruptcy court order disallowing a claim by Creditor-Appellee Beal Bank, S.S.B. (“Beal”). We need not reach the merits of this appeal, because we find appellate jurisdiction to be lacking under the long-established principle that a district court order is not final within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 158(d) where that order reverses an order of the bankruptcy court and remands the case to the bankruptcy court for significant further proceedings. The appeal is therefore dismissed.
I.
This appeal arises out of a bankruptcy proceeding initiated by Caddo in November 1996. Beal filed a Proof of Claim in connection with that proceeding asserting a secured claim in the amount of $3,286,-869.63. The Proof of Claim is based on a Mortgage Note (“Note”) secured by an Act of Mortgage (“Mortgage”) that encumbers an apartment complex in Shreveport, Louisiana (“Property”) belonging to Caddo. The Property is Caddo’s sole asset, and the Note is non-recourse.
The Note and Mortgage were originally executed in favor of Housing America Mortgage Company, Inc. (“HAMC”) in August 1971. Two years later, HAMC endorsed the Note and Mortgage to Federal National Mortgage Association (“FNMA”). FNMA was the owner and holder of the Note and Mortgage for just over one year, at which time the Note went into default. FNMA then endorsed the Note and Mortgage to the Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”). HUD was the owner and holder of the Note and Mortgage for the next twenty-one years, during which time HUD and Caddo en-' tered into a Provisional Workout Arrangement (“PWA”). When efforts by Caddo to obtain a second PWA failed, HUD began preparations to foreclose its lien against the Property.
HUD did not ultimately foreclose on the Mortgage, but instead sold the Note and Mortgage to Beal in October 1995. HUD did not transfer the Note to Beal at the time of sale. Instead, HUD filed an Act of Notarial Endorsement and Assignment of Mortgage Note and Mortgage, evidencing HUD’s endorsement of the Note to Beal, and an Assignment of Lost Note Affidavit, evidencing that the Note, was endorsed in 1973 pursuant to the ^National Housing Act, that it was subsequently transferred to HUD, and that, at the time of Beal’s purchase of the Note, HUD could not locate it despite diligent efforts to do so.
The Note was in default at the time Beal purchased it. Beal sent several letters to Caddo demanding payment, and ultimately accelerated the Note. In August 1996, Beal filed an action in Louisiana state court to foreclose the Mortgage and to obtain appointment of a keeper. The Louisiana state court issued an order of sequestration for the Property and directed the Sheriff of Caddo Parish to appoint Barron Builders and Management Co. as keeper. Caddo initiated the present bankruptcy proceeding soon after.
In March 1997, Caddo filed an Objection to Beal’s Proof of Claim, arguing that Beal is not the holder of the Note and therefore is prohibited from enforcing the Note and Mortgage. The bankruptcy court first heard the Objection in April 1997, and determined that Caddo had rebutted the prima facie validity of Beal’s claim and had shifted the burden to Beal to prove its claim. At a second hearing in June 1997, the bankruptcy court denied Beal’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings, held that Beal had not met its burden of establishing its claim, sustained Caddo’s Objection and disallowed Beal’s claim. Beal then filed a Motion for Reconsideration and submitted an Act of Assignment, executed by HUD; purporting to transfer to Beal HUD’s *626 rights to enforce the Note. The bankruptcy-court refused to consider this assignment and denied the Motion for Reconsideration. Beal appealed to the district court, which reversed the bankruptcy court’s order and remanded to the bankruptcy court for further proceedings on the issue of indemnification. This appeal followed.
II.
Caddo contends that this court has jurisdiction to review the district court’s order pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(d), which provides that “[t]he courts of appeals shall have jurisdiction of appeals from all
final
decisions, judgments, orders, and decrees entered under subsections (a) and (b) of this section.” (emphasis added). We disagree. Although Caddo accurately identifies the basic principle recognized in
In re Eagle Bus Mfg., Inc.,
In
In the Matter of Ben Hyman & Co., Inc.,
In
In the Matter of Cross,
In
In re Emerald Oil Company,
In
In
re
County Management, Inc.,
These piecemeal decisions were finally assembled into a single coherent rule in
In re Bowman,
Nothing in the case law following
Bowman
suggests that this circuit has ever deviated from the general rule that a district court order is not final where it reverses an order of the bankruptcy court and remands the case to the bankruptcy court for significant further proceedings. That rule has in fact been reasserted by this court on several occasions.
See, e.g., Matter of Nichols,
In the present case, the district court reversed the bankruptcy court's order disallowing Beal's claim, and remanded the case to the bankruptcy court "for a determination of whether Beal Bank should be required to indemnify Caddo Parish from future claims on the Note in accordance with La. UCC § 3-309(b)." The crucial question for jurisdictional purposes is whether this remand for a determination of indemnification requires "significant further proceedings" on the part of the bankruptcy court. If so, then this court lacks jurisdiction under the Bowman rule and its progeny.
Whether a remand order requires “significant further proceedings” within the meaning of
Bowman
turns on whether
*628
the order calls on the bankruptcy court to perform a judicial function or a purely ministerial function. Judicial functions entail significant further proceedings; ministerial functions do not. In
County Management,
the court observed in dicta that “[t]he salutary purpose of the rule set forth in § 158 is to avoid piecemeal appeals.”
The remand order in the present case plainly requires more than “purely mechanical” or “computational” proceedings, or mere entry of an order in accordance with the district court’s decision. Caddo nonetheless argues that the district court’s order does not entail significant further proceedings. First, Caddo contends that the indemnification determination is “essentially ministerial,” because La. UCC § 3 — 309(b) requires that the debtor be “adequately protected against loss that might occur by reason of a claim by another person to enforce the instrument.” We disagree. The fact that a legal determination may be relatively easy to make because it is governed by a clear rule of law does not transform a judicial function into a ministerial function. The bankruptcy court must still determine whether a threat of third-party enforcement of the Note exists, and if so what constitutes adequate protection against loss that might occur by reason of such enforcement. These functions require the district court to make findings of fact and to apply existing law to those facts. In short, they are judicial functions that may give rise' to further appeal. Thus, our interest in avoiding piecemeal appeals militates against hearing the present appeal prior to determination of the indemnification issue.
Second, Caddo argues that where the further proceedings required by a district court’s remand to the bankruptcy court will neither enhance nor alter this court’s resolution of the issues currently before it, and could prove futile in any event, the order is final for purposes of appeal. In support of this proposition, Caddo cites
Cullen Ctr. Bank & Trust v. Hensley,
We do not read Hensley, as Caddo does, for the broad proposition that a remand is ministerial any time it neither enhances nor alters this court’s resolution of the issues currently before it, or any time it may prove futile following appeal. Such a reading would be plainly inconsistent with this court’s prior holdings in Cross, Emerald Oil, and County Management. Each of those cases involved a situation in which the issues to be resolved on remand neither enhanced nor altered the issues raised on appeal, and each involved a situation in which immediate resolution of the issues on appeal may well have nullified the need for a remand. Yet in each case this court determined that the contested orders were not final and that jurisdiction was therefore lacking.
This court adheres strictly to the maxim that one panel of the court cannot overturn another, even if it disagrees with the prior panel’s holding.
See Texas Refrigeration Supply v. FDIC,
III.
We find that the district court’s order in the present case requires the bankruptcy court to exercise its judicial functions on remand. The order thus entails significant further proceedings and falls outside of the finality requirement of section 158(d) under the Bowman rule. The appeal is therefore DISMISSED.
Notes
. The Supreme Court's decision in
Connecticut National Bank v. Germain,
. While both
Hyman
and
Cross
arose under the Bankruptcy Act, Lhis court has since relied on them in interpreting the meaning of “final order” under the jurisdictional provisions relating to the Bankruptcy Code of 1978.
In re Bowman,
