Dеfendant-appellant Central Vermont Public Service Corp. (“CVPS”) appeals from the district court’s order denying its Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b)(4) motion. In that motion, CVPS sought relief from a bankruptcy court order permanently enjoining it from pursuing civil claims against the ap-pellees Harold and Edith Herbert (“the Herberts”). After waiting more than four years to challenge the bаnkruptcy court injunction, CVPS contended that the bankruptcy court order was void for lack of jurisdiction. The district court ruled that the Rule 60(b)(4) motion was untimely and rejected CVPS’s jurisdictional argument. Although the district court’s untimeliness ruling was in error, we agree that the bankruptcy court at least had an arguable basis for exercising its jurisdiction, and accordingly, we affirm the district court’s denial of CVPS’s Rule 60(b)(4) motion.
I. BACKGROUND
In 1993, the Herberts purchased the mortgage and security agreements encumbering Pico Ski Resort in southern Vermont. In 1995, they foreclosed against the resort and incorporated it as “Pico Mountain, Inc.” (d/b/a Pico Mountain Resort), which they owned and controlled as shareholders, officers, and directors. In July 1996, the Herberts formed two new entities: Sherburne Pass Mountain Properties,
In January 1997, CVPS filed a proof of claim in the Pico Mountain, Inc. Chapter 7 рroceeding for the cost of the electrical power it had supplied to the resort. Pico Management placed $214,802.79 in escrow to pay the CVPS electrical power bill for utilities. Meanwhile, the trustee of the bankruptcy estate of Pico Mountain, Inc. investigated causes of action against the Herberts for allеged breaches of fiduciary duty toward the debtor. This issue was resolved when the trustee entered into a settlement agreement whereby the Her-berts agreed to pay the lesser of $120,000 or thirty percent of the allowed unsecured claims against the debtor. In an adversary proceeding, the trustee sought bankruptcy court approval of the settlement and filed a complaint in that court to enjoin all creditors, including CVPS, from bringing actions against the Herberts “through any derivative or alter ego claim[s] regarding a Pico Mountain, Inc. debt.”
On June 16,1997, the trustee’s summons and complaint were served on CVPS. CVPS does not dispute that it failed to enter an appearance or dеfend against the trustee’s action. 1 On October 29, 1997, Bankruptcy Judge Francis G. Conrad approved the settlement and entered an injunction barring creditors of the bankruptcy estate from pursuing any claim, direct or derivative, against the Herberts. Canney v. A.E.I. Music Network (In re Pico Mountain, Inc.), No. 96-10756, Adv. Proceeding No. 97-1036 (Bankr.D.Vt. Oct. 29, 1997). On December 2, 1997, Judge Conrad entered a default judgment against those dеfendants that had not answered the trustee’s complaint, including CVPS, and ordered that the trustee was not required to serve those defendants with copies of the injunction.
CVPS concedes that it learned of the injunction from the Herberts’ counsel on December 15, 1997, less than two months after the injunction and less than two weeks after the default judgment was entered against it. Nevertheless, CVPS waited more than four years — until February 13, 2002 — to challenge the injunction by filing a Rule 60(b)(4) motion. This attack on the injunction was prompted by a suit filed by the Herberts in Chittenden Superior Court. That suit seeks to reclaim the moneys that Pico Management had placed in escrow, on the basis that the
In an oral ruling on June 18, 2002, the bankruptcy court denied the motion as both untimely, citing
Beller & Keller v. Tyler,
II. DISCUSSION
A.Standard of Review
Generally, we review Rule 60(b) motions for abuse of discretion.
Lawrence v. Wink,
B. Timeliness
At the outset, CVPS argues that the distriсt court erred in ruling that the motion was not timely. Even though Rule 60(b) states that “[t]he motion must be made in a reasonable time,” courts have been “exceedingly lenient in defining the term ‘reasonable time,’ with respect to voidness challenges. In fact, it has been oft-stated that, for all intents and purposes, a motion to vacate a default judgmеnt as void ‘may be brought at any time.’”
Beller & Keller,
C. Bankruptcy Court Jurisdiction to Enter the Underlying Order
CVPS argues that the bankruptcy court’s order was void for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. CVPS contends that the bankruptcy court issued a final order in a non-core proceeding without the parties’ consent and without a district court’s
de novo
review, and that therefore it exceeded its jurisdiction under
Northern Pipeline Constr. Co. v. Marathon Pipe Line Co.,
However, this case comes to us, not on direct appeal, but on appeal from a denial of a Rule 60(b)(4) motion through which CVPS seeks to overturn a final default judgment. Because “final judgments should not be lightly reopened, [Rule 60(b) ] may not be used as a substitute for timely appeal.... Since 60(b) allows extraordinary relief, it is invoked only upon a showing of exceptional circumstances.”
Nemaizer,
CVPS claims that the bankruptcy court’s injunction is void under
Marathon
because the court lacked jurisdiction to adjudicate pre-petition state law rights. In
Marathon,
the Supreme Court held that Congress could not constitutionally empower a bankruptcy court, which is not an Article III court, to adjudicate a state breach-of-contract action (based on a pre-petition contract) brought by a debtor against a defendant that had not filed a claim with the bankruptcy court.
See
In the wake of
Marathon,
Congress passed the Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgeship Act of 1984 (“1984 Amendments”), categorizing “core” and “non-core” proceedings. 28 U.S.C. § 157. Core proceedings are actions essential or basic to the administration of a bankruptcy case, and Congress offered a non-exhaustive list of such actions. 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2). In a core proceeding, a bankruptcy court may “enter appropriate [final] orders and judgments.” § 157(b)(1). Where a bankruptcy court acts in a non-core proceeding, a final order may be issued only in one of two ways: by the district court after
de novo
review of the bankruptcy court’s proposed factual findings and legal conclusions, § 157(c)(1); or by the bankruptcy court with the consent of the parties, § 157(c)(2).
See generally Orion Pictures Corp.,
As noted above, when reviewing the denial of a Rule 60(b)(4) motion to vacate for wаnt of jurisdiction, we consider only whether there is at least an arguable basis for jurisdiction. If so, we will not disturb the judgment on jurisdictional grounds. In this case, we easily conclude that there is, at a minimum, an arguable basis for bankruptcy court jurisdiction, because CVPS’s claims are arguably part of the core proceeding before the bankruptcy court and because CVPS consented to the bankruptcy court’s jurisdiction.
The distinction between core and non-core is somewhat subjective and contextual, and we need not determine whether the injunction in this case was actually part of a core proceeding, because the issue before us is only whether the bankruptcy court arguably had jurisdiction. Here we conclude that the proceeding was arguably core. As part of a settlement by whiсh the Herberts contributed to the bankruptcy estate, the injunction, at least arguably, was “at the heart of the administration of the bankruptcy estate,” had significant “ramifications ... for the administration of the estate,” or was core because of the “nature of the proceeding.”
Moreover, even if the injunction in itself was not pаrt of a core proceeding as defined by the 1984 Amendments, CVPS’s claims against" the Herberts also were arguably subject to bankruptcy court jurisdiction based upon CVPS’s filing a proof of claim in the bankruptcy court in January 1997, almost a year before the bankruptcy court’s injunction. Our cases have upheld bankruptcy jurisdiction in what would otherwisе be non-core proceedings where the party opposing the finding of jurisdiction has filed a proof of claim. In doing so, we have relied on two theories: (1) the proof of claim transforms litigation into a core proceeding; and (2) by filing the proof of claim, the creditor consents to the bankruptcy court’s broad equitаble jurisdiction.
See S.G. Phillips Constructors,
One could argue that CVPS’s proof of claim gave the bankruptcy court core jurisdiction only over CVPS’s claims against Pico Mountain, Inc. and not оver its claims against the Herberts. However, CVPS’s claims against the Herberts are state law claims arising from the Herberts’ alter ego relationship with Pico Mountain or the Herberts’ liability for Pico Mountain’s debts. In the context of cases such as this, we have ruled that the trustee is “the proper person to assert claims .... against the debtor’s alter ego or others who have misused the debtors property in some fashion,” and by extension, we have held that such alter ego claims are core proceedings.
St. Paul Fire and Marine Ins. Co. v. PepsiCo, Inc.,
In this case, the trustee’s complaint for injunctive relief specifically cited the creditors’ “derivative or alter-ego claim[s],” and CVPS now bases its state claims аgainst the Herberts, in part, on Vermont’s alter ego doctrine and similar claims of incorporator liability and breach of fiduciary duty, citing
Winey v. Cutler,
In sum, we conclude that the bankruptcy court did not “plainly usurp[]” its power and that there was an arguable basis for jurisdiction.
Nemaizer,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AffiRM the district court’s denial of CVPS’s Rule 60(b)(4) motion.
Notes
. CVPS asserts that "[i]t is not even clear that [it] ever received thе summons, complaint, and pre-trial order the Trustee mailed on June 6, 1997. With 249 defendants served by first class mail, it is possible clerical errors were made. 1 ' When asked about this assertion at oral argument, CVPS admitted that there is nothing to support it beyond the claim that CVPS's files did not contain the referenced documents when they were searched in preparation for the filing of the complaint in the instant action. In other words, the assertion is pure speculation, and it should not have been made.
