Appellant The Cadle Company (“Ca-dle”), the major creditor of the bankruptcy estate of James H. Moore, III (“Moore”), appeals the district court’s affirmance of the bankruptcy court’s approval of a settlement of estate claims over its objection and despite its offer to purchase the claims for higher value. We reverse and remand, concluding that the claims at issue could be sold as well as compromised and that the bankruptcy court’s failure to consider the effect of such a sale was an abuse of discretion.
I.
Cadle sued Moore in state court more than a year before Moore filed for bankruptcy, seeking to recover a judgment it owned against him. Thе complaint also named Moore’s wife Elizabeth Moore (“Elizabeth”), JHM Properties, Inc. (“JHM”), and Brunswick Homes, LLC (“Brunswick”). 1 In essence, Cadle alleged that from 1997 to 2002, Moore used various business entities to shield his personal assets from creditors. Specifically, Cadle asserted claims of reverse veil-piercing against Brunswick and JHM and fraudulent conveyance against JHM and Elizabeth. It also sought a constructive trust against the assets of Brunswick, JHM, and Elizabeth.
*256 Summary judgment motions had been filed, and a ruling was pending when Moore filed for bankruptcy, staying the litigation. The chapter 7 trustee, Jeffrey Mims, inherited the case and retained Ca-dle’s attorneys as special counsel.
Cadle is the estate’s largest creditor. It filed proofs of clаim for roughly $12.5 million, or 86% of the unsecured debt. Because Moore represented that he had no assets for distribution, asset recovery litigation was the only potential means for creditors to receive any payment. Cadle thus continued to fund the litigation after it came under the trustee’s control. It advanced over $60,000 in attorneys’ fees to the trustee’s attorneys — Cadle’s former attorneys — to continue prosecution of the claims.
As the legal fees continued to mount without resolution, Cadle sought a more active role. In January 2007, it offered to purchase the claims from the trustee for $10,000. The trustee refused as to the amount but did not reject the possibility of a sale. Instead, he proposed a threе-part counteroffer: $150,000 in cash; 10% of any gross recovery; and waiver of Cadle’s $12.5 million in claims against the estate.
Cadle refused that counteroffer but continued to negotiate. It asked the trustee either to sell the claims to it for $15,000 or to auction them to the highest bidder. The trustee refused both options. Cadle raised the cash offer to $30,000 and continued to ask for an auction. The trustee again refused.
Meanwhile, the bankruptcy court ruled on the summary judgment motions pending at the time of removal. It denied Brunswick’s motion but was openly hostile to reverse veil-piercing as a viable theory under Texas law.
After the court’s ruling, the case seemed to be on course for trial. The trustee asked Cadle to fund a forеnsic accountant, but Cadle refused unless the trustee could provide a cost estimate. Apparently Ca-dle’s withholding of carte blanche caused the trustee to re-evaluate the case. The trustee did not hire its own expert and instead began negotiating a settlement with defendants. He did not notify Cadle of this change in strategy, though Cadle had consistently demonstrated a strong desire to press the case to trial. The trustee eventually entered a proposed settlement of the claims with the defendants for $37,500.
Cadle first learned of the proposed settlement once the trustee had filed his motion for approval with the bankruptcy court. Cadle contacted the trustee and offered immediately to pay $50,000 for thе claims. It also filed an objection to the proposed settlement in the bankruptcy court, urging that the proposed settlement was essentially a sale of estate assets and that the trustee therefore had a duty to maximize the value of the claims. Cadle argued that the trustee could not push through a settlement for a lesser amount than the major creditor was willing to pay the estate. Cadle asked instead that the claims be sold to it or auctioned to the highest bidder.
At the hearing to approve the settlement, the trustee’s attorney characterized Cadle’s $50,000 offer as a “substantial offer” and stated that accepting it could be in the best interest of creditors. The trustee’s attorney also acknowledged that $50,000 was “substantially more than the settlement amount” and that the objective of the trustee was to maximize the funds available to creditors in this “no-asset case.” Finally, the attorney assured the court that either conducting an auction or selling the claims to Cadle would dispose of them permanently, and the court would no longer have to face this issue. R. 1171- *257 74. The court, however, was unconvinced that a sale was possible. It questioned whether a trustee “can sell causes of action such as avoidance actions, particularly avoidance actions.” R. 1194.
A second hearing was held, and Cadle urged the same arguments. Defendants responded that it would be unfair to them if the court were tо upset the proposed settlement.
In a ruling from the bench, the bankruptcy court determined that the settlement was in the best interest of the estate. That conclusion was based in part on the court’s misgivings as to whether the trustee could sell these claims. It concluded as a matter of law that the claims could not be sold. R. 1315-16.
The court thus believed it had only two options: Approve the settlement or require the trustee to continue litigating the claims. The court questioned whether reverse veil-piercing is a well-grounded legal theory, reasoned that litigation would be expensive for the estate, and suggested that the trustee would have difficulty collecting any judgment. The court also believed that the views of Brunswick, as а “contingent” creditor, merited consideration, because Brunswick had filed a $12 million indemnity claim against the estate, the “contingency” being the success of the reverse veil-piercing claims. The district court affirmed the rulings of the bankruptcy court.
II.
“We review a district court’s af-firmance of a bankruptcy court decision by applying the same standard of review to the bankruptcy court decision that the district court applied.”
Barner v. Saxon Mort. Servs., Inc. (In re Barner),
The threshold question is whether the trustee could legally sell the claims. The bankruptcy court held that it could not and approved the proposed compromise on the basis that continued litigation offered little promise for the estate.
Cadle argues it can purchase the claims from the trustee and pursue them at its own risk and expense, paying the estate immediately for that right. It thus contends that the court’s analysis was in error because it failed to consider the sale alternative.
As a general matter, a trustee may sell causes of action bеlonging to the estate. Section 363 of the Bankruptcy Code governs the sale, use, or lease of property of the estate, allowing the trustee to sell “property of the estate,” other than in the ordinary course of business, after notice and a hearing. 11 U.S.C. § 363(b)(1). Section 541 defines “property of the estate” to include, among other things, “all legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property as of the commencement of the case.” 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(1). “[T]he term ‘all legal and equitable interests of the debtor in property1 is all-encompassing and includes rights of action as bestowed *258 by either federal or state law.” 2 A trustee may sell litigation claims that belong to the estate, as it can other estate property, pursuant to § 363(b). 3
We now turn to whether the trustee may sell the particular claims in this case to Cadle. A trustee may sell only assets that are property of the estate.
In re Cont'l Air Lines, Inc.,
A. The Alter Ego Claims.
We have previously addressed whether alter ego claims brought by a creditor under Texas state law are property of the estate within the meaning of § 541.
S.I. Acquisition,
Our decision in S.I. Acquisition alone, however, does not necessarily resolve the question whether the alter ego claims brought by Cadle actually belong to the estate. That case dealt with a traditional veil-piercing claim, whereby a creditor attempts to hold liable a debtor-corporation’s shareholders or its affiliated entities for the obligations of the debtor-corporation. Here, by contrast, Cadle has brought a reverse veil-piercing claim that seeks to hold Brunswick and JHM liable for the acts of the individual debtor, Moore.
We have previously held that distinction to be one without a difference. In
Schimmelpenninck v. Byrne (In re Schimmelpenninck),
B. The Fraudulent-Transfer Claims
Whether an action brought under state law belongs to the estate under § 541(a)(1) depends on whether the debtor could have brought that action at the commencement of the case. 6 At least one of our decisions reads MortgageAmerica broadly to hold that fraudulent-transfer claims brought under Texas law are property of the estate under § 541(a)(1). 7
That reading of MortgageAmerica conflicts with S.I. Acquisition:
In addressing the Fraudulent Transfer action, we held that under Texas law this cause of action was assertable only by a creditor and did not belong to the debtor corporation [citing MortgageAmerica,714 F.2d at 1272-73 ]. Even though this claim therefore could not be treated like the other two actions, [which we held to be property of the estate,] we nevertheless held that it also was stayed pursuant to section 362(a)(3). Our reasoning was that while the defendant in the state court action was not the debtor, but a control person of the debtor, the creditor’s suit sought to recover property of the debtor’s estate.
S.I. Acquisition,
Our decision in Educators nevertheless controls, because the above discussion in S.I. Acquisition is dictum. 9 Thus, under our precedent, the Texas fraudulent-conveyance actions are property of the estate under § 541(a)(1) that the trustee may sell to Cadle. 10 Yet we hesitate to *260 rest our decision entirely on that basis, because of the conflict between Educators and S.I. Acquisition and because of the tension between that result and the general rule that an action belongs to the estate under § 541(a)(1) only if the debtor cоuld have brought that action at the commencement of the case. 11
But § 541(a)(1) is not the only provision under which property may become property of the estate. Although that section often provides the bulk of estate assets and thus is the focus of “property of the estate” analysis, the trustee’s avoidance powers, allow the trustee to enlarge the property of the estate after commencement of the case.
See Gaudet v. Babin (In re Zedda),
Central to this bankruptcy is the trustee’s power under § 544(b), which allows him to succeed to the actual, allowable and unsecured claims of the estate’s creditors.
See
11 U.S.C. § 544(b). If an actual, unsecured creditor can, on the date of the bankruptcy, reach property that the debt- or has transferred to a third party, the trustee may use § 544(b) to step into the shoes of that creditor and “avoid” the debtor’s transfer. Although the cause of action belonged to one creditor, any property the trustee recovers becomes estate property and is divided
pro rata
among all general creditors.
12
The trustee may recover the full extent of the fraudulently transferred property on the basis of one creditоr’s claim.
Moore v. Bay,
The trustee’s successor rights arise under federal law, but the extent of those rights depends entirely on applicable state law. That distinction creates important differences between fraudulent transfer actions brought under § 544(b) and those pursued under § 548. For example, a four-year limitations period applies to fraudulent transfer actions brought under Texas law, whereas the § 548 reachback period is limited to two years. Compare *261 Tex. Bus. & Comm.Code ANN. § 24.010(a)(1) with 11 U.S.C. § 548(a)(1).
Cadle is an actual unsecured creditor that brought fraudulent-conveyance claims against defendants under Texas law before commencement of the bankruptcy. Because those claims sought to recover estate property, the automatic-stay provisions of § 362(a)(3) barred Cadle from pursuing the fraudulent-transfer claims individually once the petition was filed.
See MortgageAmerica,
The question we must next address is whether, by operation of § 544(b), those fraudulent-transfer claims became property of the estate that may be sold. A split of authority exists as to whether the trustee may sell causes of action that arise from his avoidance powers. 13
We focus narrowly on the trustee’s ability to sell causes of action that he has inherited frоm creditors under § 544(b)— causes of action that exist independent of the bankruptcy proceeding. “It is well established that a claim for fraudulent conveyance is included within ... [estate] property.”
14
“[T]he right to recoup a fraudulent conveyance, which outside of bankruptcy may be invoked by a creditor, is property of the estate that only a trustee or debtor in possession may pursue once a bankruptcy is under way.”
Nat’l Tax Credit Partners, L.P. v. Havlik,
Allowing a trustee to sell § 544(b) rights of action is in accord with the trustee’s existing powers. In chapter 11 cases, for instance, “a party other than the debtor or the trustee may be authorized by a plan of reorganization to exercise avoidance powers.”
McFarland v. Leyh (In re Tex. Gen. Petroleum Corp.),
Moreover, a sale of assets under § 363 requires notice and a hearing and is subject to court approval.
See Cont’l,
We conclude, therefore, that the fraudulent-transfer claims are property of the estate under § 541(a)(1) per
Educators,
The bankruptcy court’s ruling that the claims could not be sold was legal error, and its approval of the proposed settlement was an abuse of discretion. The court’s failure to consider the consequences to the estate of a sale was also an abuse of discretion. 20
*263 C. The Constructive-Trust Remedy.
“Under Texas law, a constructive trust is ... an equitable remedy imposed by law to prevent unjust enrichment resulting from an unconscionable act.”
Haber Oil Co. v. Swinehart (In re Haber Oil Co.),
If Cadle had demonstrated its entitlement to a constructive trust in the disputed properties by the time Moore filed for bankruptcy, those properties would belong exclusively to Cadle and would not be subject to pro rata distribution among all estate creditors. Id.; see also 11 U.S.C. § 541(d). But that did not occur; at the filing of the petition, Cadle and the defendants had only filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The constructive-trust remedy is therefore intertwined with the alter ego and fraudulent-transfer claims. Like the underlying claims, that remedy belongs to the estate. Cadle may thus acquire the constructive-trust remedy if it successfully purchases the underlying causes of action.
III.
Whether a trustee’s proposed compromise of estate claims can constitute a proposed sale of estate property that triggers § 363 sale provisions is an issue of first impression in this circuit. The bankruptcy cоurt’s power to approve a proposed settlement or “compromise” of the estate’s claims arises under rule 9019 of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure. A proposed settlement must be “fair and equitable” and in the best interests of the estate.
Am. Can Co. v. Herpel (In re Jackson Brewing Co.),
A sale of assets under § 363, as implemented by rule 6004, requires notice and a hearing and is subject to court approval and must be supported by an articulated business justification, good business judgment, or sound business reasons.
See Cont’l,
We must decide whether Cadle’s overbid required the bankruptcy court to scrutinize the proposed compromise under § 363 and rule 6004, in addition to rule *264 9019(a). The issue has given rise to a circuit split:
The cases are mixed [ ] on whether the settlement of a claim that the estate owns is a sale (that is, disposition) of property of the estate [citing Hicks, Muse & Co., Inc. v. Brandt (In re Healthco Int’l Inc.),136 F.3d 45 (1st Cir.1998) (deciding that settlement is not a sale), Goodwin v. Mickey Thompson Entm’t Group, Inc. (In re Mickey Thompson Entm’t Group, Inc.),292 B.R. 415 (9th Cir. BAP 2003) (stating that settlement is a sale); In re Dow Corning Corp.,198 B.R. 214 (Bankr. E.D.Mich.1996) (same)]. The point may be academic for purposes of whether court approval is required, because Rule 9019 requires notice and a hearing and court approval of settlements, independent of section 363(b)(1). However, there may be other consequences, such as ... whether overbids are permitted, [citing Mickey Thompson].
3 Collier on BaNkruptcy, supra, ¶ 363.02.
The trustee argues that a bankruptcy court need not consider overbids, because a proposed settlement amount need only be “reasonable.” Cadle urges that the court should have considered an auction of these claims in light of its higher offer. It asks us to adopt the reasoning of
Goodwin v. Mickey Thompson Entertainment Group, Inc. (In re Mickey Thompson Entertainment Group, Inc.),
When confronted with a motion to approve a settlement under Rule 9019(a), a bankruptcy court is obliged to consider, as part of the “fair and equitable” analysis, whether any property of the estate that would be disposed of in connection with the settlement might draw a higher price through a competitive process and be the proper subject of a section 363 sale.
Id. at 421-22.
The First Circuit has held, without analysis, that a settlement is not a sale.
See Hicks, Muse & Co. v. Brandt (In re Healthco Int’l, Inc.),
The Collier treatise has sided with Mickey Thompson and other courts that have construed settlements as the equivalent of the sale of estate assets:
Compromises of Estate Claims Which Should Have Been Noticed as a Sale A compromise of a claim of the estate is in essence the sale of that claim to the defendant. In most compromises, the procedures of Rule 6004 and the substance of Code section 363 will not be implicated. However, if other parties indicate that they are willing to pay more for the claim, or if it is otherwise shown that a bidding procedure would be appropriate, then the trustee must *265 proceed under section 363 and procedures described herein [citing Mickey Thompson].
10 COLLIER ON BANKRUPTCY, SUprd, ¶ 6004.01.
We adopt the reasoning of
Mickey Thompson.
The proposed compromise was a disposition of estate property. Ca-dle’s higher offer obligated the bankruptcy court to consider whether an auction and § 363 sale were appropriate. “Whether to impose formal sale procedures is ultimately a matter of discretion” that we leave to bankruptcy courts.
Mickey Thompson,
The trustee points out that Brunswick has agreed to waive its $12 million indemnity claim against the estate as a part of the proposed settlement. The trustee argues that the proposed settlement is therefore a true compromise, unlike the situation in Mickey Thompson. 22 Brunswick’s indemnity claim is a contingent claim that would be triggered only if the reverse veil-piercing claims against it were to prevail. That would not occur, however, unless it were shown that Brunswick and Moore are the sаme entity.
The merits of the indemnity claim are not before us, so we do not express any opinion as to whether Brunswick can hold an indemnity claim against itself. On remand, the bankruptcy court should compare the value to the estate of the release of that claim, if any, against the value of Cadle’s higher bid. Bankruptcy courts should not allow defendants to settle estate claims at a discount and avoid § 363 scrutiny by filing large, frivolous claims against the estate. 23 In any event, there is no logical reason why Cadle cannot assume the liability of that indemnity claim as a part of its bid for the alter-ego action.
Cadle’s $50,000 bid was indeed a “substantial offer.”
24
Moreover, “entertaining overbids often triggers a bidding sequence that may lead to a much higher price.”
Mickey Thompson,
The trustee’s administrative expenses are also unknown, though Cadle has already paid the trustee’s attorneys’ fees. Thus it remains to be seen what the estate will recover from a sale or compromise of these claims. It certainly cannot be presumed that any sale price, no matter the amount, will fail to translate to more money for the estate.
On remand, the bankruptcy court must afford proper deference to the views of Cadle, as the estate’s majority creditor and the only creditor to take an interest in the claims.
25
Our caselaw recognizes the para
*266
mount interest of creditors and requires deference to their reasonable views concerning proposed settlements.
Jackson Brewing,
If the bankruptcy court were to upset the proposed settlement in the interest of maximizing the value of estate assets, it would not work an injustice on defendants. “Everyone who deals with a bankruptcy trustee in a trаnsaction that is not in the ordinary course of business is charged with the knowledge that the law may require court approval.... ”
Mickey Thompson,
In the event an auction is held and the trustee selects defendants’ offer, the bankruptcy court must assess the transaction as both a proposed sale under § 363 and a proposed compromise under rule 9019. 26 Procedures under that rule would not be invoked, however, were the trustee to accept Cadle’s bid, because the transaction would not constitute a proposed settlement.
IV.
In summary, the claims at issue are assets of the estatе that can be sold to Cadle. The bankruptcy court’s decision to the contrary was an error of law and therefore an abuse of discretion. We adopt Mickey Thompson. The proposed settlement was a disposition of estate assets, and Cadle’s overbid required the court to consider the appropriateness of an auction and § 363 sale procedures. Its failure to consider those alternatives was also an abuse of discretion.
On remand, the bankruptcy court must determine whether the claims are the proper subject of an auction and § 363 sale. In reaching that decision, it should analyze the merit of Brunswick’s indemnity claim.
The judgment of the district court, affirming the decisions of the bankruptcy court, is REVERSED, and this matter is REMANDED to the district court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Elizabeth owns 100% of JHM, which owns 50% of Brunswick; Moore was president of Brunswick. We refer to Moore, Elizabeth, JHM, and Brunswick collectively as "defendants.”
.
S.I. Acquisition, Inc. v. Eastway Delivery Serv., Inc. (In re S.I. Acquisition, Inc.),
.
See, e.g., Simantob v. Claims Prosecutor, LLC (In re Lahijani),
.See Southmark Coip. v. Crescent Heights VI, Inc. (In re Southmark Corp.),
. Although the holding in
Schimmelpenninck
is in the alternative, "[ajlternative holdings are binding precedent.”
Pruitt v. Levi Strauss & Co.,
.
Highland Capital Mgmt. LP v. Chesapeake Energy Corp. (In re Seven Seas Petroleum, Inc.),
.
See Schertz-Cibolo-Universal City, Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Wright (In re Educators Group Health Trust),
.
See also Seven Seas,
. In
Educators,
. These are not § 548 claims. The petition was filed in May 2006. The allegedly fraudulent transfers occurred between 1997 and 2002. The trustee could not avoid those transfers by relying on § 548, because of that provision's two-year limitations period. Only through the Texas Fraudulent Transfers Act *260 and its attendant four-year limitations period could the trustee challenge these transfers. Compare Tex. Bus. & Comm.Code Ann. § 24.010(a)(1) with 11 U.S.C. § 548(a)(1).
.
See S.I. Acquisition,
. See 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(3) (stating that property of the estate includes "[a]ny interest in property that the trustee recovers under section ... 543, 550, 553, or 723 of [the Code]”); see also id. § 550(a) (providing that "to the extent that a transfer is avoided under section 544, 545, 547, 548, 549, 553(b) or 724(a) of [the Code], the trustee may recover, for the benefit of the estate, the property transferred”).
. Compare Lahijani,
.
Morley v. Ontos, Inc. (In re Ontos, Inc.),
.
See Lahijani,
.
City of Boerne v. Boerne Hills Leasing Corp. (In re Boerne Hills Leasing Corp.),
. 11 U.S.C. § 503(b)(3)(B);
see also Lahijani,
. The sale of § 544(b) actions will not necessarily undermine core bankruptcy principles. In approving such sales, bankruptcy courts must ensure that fundamental bankruptcy policies оf asset value maximization and equitable distribution are satisfied. Bankruptcy courts must make those decisions on a case by case basis in light of the factual circumstances.
Concerns that a creditor may recover more than its pro rata share of assets by purchasing a § 544(b) action are mitigated where that creditor represents the vast majority of all outstanding claims. Certainly no such issues arise where a single creditor holds the entirety of estate claims. Cadle's claims represent 86% of the unsecured debt.
. The purchase offer need not necessarily promise a percentage of future recovery to the estate. A set price offer provides "benefit to the estate” in the form of the sale price, which becomes part of the estate аssets.
See Lahijani,
In the present case, the bankruptcy court expressed serious misgivings as to the value of these claims and announced dim prospects for their success. Yet it refused to consider Cadle’s offer, because it did not include a percentage of future recoveries for the estate. That offer exceeded defendants’ by $12,500. Given the court's assessment, it valued the prospect of any future recovery at nearly zero, and Cadle’s offer could have maximized the value оf the claims to the estate.
.
See Protective Comm. for Indep. Stockholders of TMT Trailer Ferry, Inc. v. Anderson,
.
See Myers v. Martin (In re Martin),
.
See Mickey Thompson,
. Even if Brunswick’s indemnity claim is legally viable, its value would be limited to Brunswick's maximum exposure in the alter-ego action. No one has ever valued that action at $12 million; Cadle's most optimistic estimates value it at no more than $2 million.
. Concerns about why Cadle is willing to pay what it is willing to pay are irrelevant to the analysis, the proper focus of which is maximization of the estate's assets. Similarly irrelevant are concerns about the viability of reverse veil-piercing claims under Texas law. Cadle has offered to bear those risks.
.Although Brunswick has filed a contingent claim, its interests are directly adverse to those of all other creditors in this matter. Brunswick’s best interest is to minimize the value of these claims. The bankruptcy court should not afford any weight to Brunswick’s views as a creditor unless and until it has determined the likely merit of Brunswick’s indemnity claim.
.
See, e.g., Nicole,
