ORDER
This Order has taken such a long time in coming to fruition that the parties could be forgiven for supposing that this court has been feverishly riffling through its judicial drawers in an attempt to find a fleeting moment of satori or to locate a talisman to ward away the Gordian knot of issues raised by this appeal. It has not. Instead, once the court was subjected to this bankruptcy appeal, it embarked on an Odyssean journey through the analytical labyrinth of the numerous applicable Bankruptcy Code provisions, as this appeal presents a seemingly intractable and complex set of legal issues that often go to the very heart of the meaning of a number of key Bankruptcy Code provisions, and indeed to the purpose of the Code itself. Such an ordeal has taken time to properly sift through these numerous issues.
I. Background Facts
Dunes Hotel Associates is a general partnership with no employees. The general partners are corporations ultimately affiliated with the General Electric Pension Trust (GEPT). GEPT is a New York common-law trust with net assets of approximately $23 billion. 1 All decisions re *494 garding Dunes' are made by or on behalf of the Trustees of GEPT. Dunes’s primary asset is a hotel on Hilton Head Island, South Carolina. A South Carolina affiliate of the Hyatt Corporation operates the hotel pursuant to a long-term real property lease. If Hyatt decides to exercise its option to renew, then the lease will not expire until December 31, 2016. For some unknown reason, the lease was not recorded. This inexplicable oversight planted the seed that has been fertilized by untold hours billed by a phalanx of lawyers and has ultimately ripened into this appeal.
In 1986, Aetna Life Insurance Company loaned Dunes $50 million in exchange for a non-recourse note secured by a mortgage on the hotel and an assignment of the lease. Of that sum, $23.6 million passed through Dunes to its two partners, which are both corporations wholly owned by GEPT. The note matured on July 1,1994, at which time Dunes owed a balloon payment that it was unable to pay. Aetna filed a foreclosure action against the hotel property. Dunes alleges that its unfavorable lease with Hyatt prevented it from selling the hotel or obtaining sufficient refinancing to pay its debts. On November 18, 1994, Dunes filed for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code.
II. Procedural History
This case has been on a long and tedious journey through the federal court system. The relevant procedural history is briefly summarized below.
A.Initial Filing under Chapter 11
In November 1994, shortly before a hearing in Aetna’s foreclosure action, Dunes filed for relief under Chapter 11. Dunes claimed to have had two purposes for filing its Chapter 11 case: (1) to reorganize and save the hotel from foreclosure by Aetna; and (2) to obtain relief from the Hyatt lease and Hyatt’s allegedly inadequate performance under the lease, so as to be able to reorganize and realize the full value of the hotel.
B. Initial Case Dismissal Motions
In February 1995, both Aetna and Hyatt filed motions seeking dismissal of the Dunes case because they alleged that it was filed in bad faith. The bankruptcy court denied these motions. The bankruptcy court determined that it would not treat a solvent debtor’s invocation of the powers to avoid a contract as a per se indication of bad faith, at least not while an independent third-party creditor like Aet-na could benefit from the reorganization.
C. Dunes’s Reorganization Plan and Aetna Refinancing
On September 27, 1995, at the hearing on confirmation of Dunes’s Reorganization Plan, Aetna agreed to Dunes’s plan after Aetna accepted a refinancing option that involved the sale of the Aetna claim to GEPT for a cash payment of $49 million, less than the full amount of the disputed claim alleged by Aetna. Aetna acknowledged that its claim was impaired and accepted receipt of the refinancing proceeds as a direct and substantial benefit to Aetna as a creditor of Dunes. The bankruptcy court approved the purchase and vote change, but reserved ruling on whether the Aetna vote could be counted as an acceptance by an impaired class for “cram-down” or whether Aetna received any “benefit” to which it would not otherwise be entitled. Despite its statements at the hearing that the funding of the Aetna claim was unconditional, GEPT subsequently conditioned its funding on Dunes’s pursuit of the avoidance action against the Hyatt lease. On January 26, 1996, the bankruptcy court denied confirmation of the plan.
D. The Hyatt Adversary Litigation
On February 27, 1995, Dunes filed the Hyatt Adversary Litigation seeking, inter alia, avoidance under Bankruptcy Code *495 § 544(a) of Hyatt’s unrecorded leasehold interest in the hotel. The bankruptcy court held that Hyatt’s claim under the unrecorded lease was avoidable under § 544(a). This ruling was never appealed. However, the bankruptcy court proceeded to grant summary judgment against Dunes and dismissed Dunes’s avoidance action because its pursuit of an avoidance claim under § 544(a) required Dunes to satisfy § 550’s requirement that the avoidance benefit Dunes’s estate. The bankruptcy court found that Dunes failed to satisfy the “benefit of the estate” requirement because avoidance would only provide a windfall to Dunes and its equity holder, GEPT.
Dunes appealed the bankruptcy court’s avoidance decision to this court. This court affirmed the bankruptcy court. After the Bankruptcy Court of the District of Maryland decided an allegedly similar case, Dunes asked this court to reconsider its order affirming the bankruptcy court. This court declined to reconsider the affir-mance in light of new, non-mandatory authority on an issue not argued before the bankruptcy court. Dunes appealed to the Fourth Circuit, but the court found Dunes’s appeal to be interlocutory.
E. Proceedings Regarding the Dismissal Order
On June 27, 1997, Hyatt filed a second motion asking the bankruptcy court to order dismissal of Dunes’s Chapter 11 case. Before the bankruptcy court heard Hyatt’s Second Dismissal Motion, Dunes filed another modified plan that included a commitment to pay fully and in cash any allowable claims, did not change the treatment of the Aetna claim, and continued to reserve the right of Dunes to pursue the avoidance claim against Hyatt. The bankruptcy court concluded that “[a]fter nearly three (3) hard-fought years, it [wa]s clear ... that this case is no more than a litigation tactic to terminate the Lease between Dunes and Hyatt for the benefit of Dunes’[s] equity holder.” (Bankr.Dismissal Order, dated Sept. 26, 1997 at 13) On September 26, 1997, the bankruptcy court dismissed Dunes’s Chapter 11 case for five reasons. First, Dunes had been unable to confirm a plan in three years. Second, the unreasonable delay of bankruptcy had been prejudicial to creditors. Third, Dunes had maintained and prosecuted the case in bad faith, using Chapter 11 as a litigation tactic to benefit insiders. Fourth, each proposed plan contained avoidance provisions in contravention of the bankruptcy court’s order and the district court’s affirmance. Finally, no bankruptcy purpose was being served by the continued maintenance of the case. According to Dunes, the validity of the dismissal order is dependent upon the substantive correctness of the bankruptcy court’s avoidance decision. According to Hyatt, these reasons for dismissal stand on their own and are not dependent upon the court’s decision on the avoidance issue.
On October 3, 1997, Dunes filed its notice of appeal of the Dismissal Order. Proceedings before this court were stayed while four related appeals were considered by the Fourth Circuit. On July 22, 1998, the Fourth Circuit dismissed as interlocutory Dunes’s appeals from this court’s af-firmance of the bankruptcy court’s decision regarding avoidance. On November 13, 1998, the parties argued this appeal before this court. The appeal is now ripe for decision by this court.
III. Standard of Review
Both parties to this appeal have argued over the correct standard of review that this court must employ when reviewing the bankruptcy court’s' dismissal of Dunes’s Chapter 11 case. A bankruptcy court’s findings of fact are reviewed under the clearly erroneous standard, and its conclusions of law are reviewed
de novo. See Travelers Ins. Co. v. Bryson Properties, XVIII,
Despite this apparently clear precedent as to this court’s standard of review, Dunes argues that the lower court’s decision to dismiss for bad faith is to be reviewed
de novo
and that “bad faith” is a mixed question of law and fact.
See Landmark Land Co. of Carolina, Inc. v. Cone,
This court will apply the rule enunciated in
Carolin Corp.,
rather than
Landmark Land Co.,
for several reasons. First, language in a footnote in the latter case is obviously dicta. Immediately after the court made this observation, it stated that “we need not at this time decide the appropriate standard of review for the good faith determination because our reasoning applies under either standard.”
Id.
Second, the Fourth Circuit was addressing the standard of review in a diversity case applying California law, not bankruptcy law as the court did in
Carolin Corp.
Third, following the rule in
Carolin Corp.,
rather than
Landmark Land Co.,
is consistent with the approach taken in other circuits.
See, e.g. C-TC 9th Ave. Partnership v. Norton Co.,
a finding is clearly erroneous when there is no evidence in the record supportive of it and also, when, even though there is some evidence to support the finding, the reviewing court, on review of the record, is left with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made in the finding.
*497
Pizzeria Uno Corp. v. Temple,
However, the clearly erroneous rule will not “protect findings which have been made on the basis of the application of incorrect legal standards or made in disregard of applicable legal standards.”
Id.
In the context of this case, the “bankruptcy court’s ruling involving findings of fact may be overturned if the findings are premised on improper legal standards or on proper legal standards improperly applied.”
McGavin v. Segal,
Dunes argues that the bankruptcy court’s dismissal of its Chapter 11 case is fundamentally flawed because the decision hinges upon the lower court’s earlier determination that Dunes was not permitted to seek avoidance of the Hyatt lease. Dunes argues that this legal determination was error and thus cannot provide the basis for affirming the lower court’s dismissal of the Chapter 11 case. In contrast, Hyatt argues that this court may affirm the lower court’s dismissal because the avoidance decision is correct, and, even if it were not, the avoidance decision is not the only pillar supporting the bankruptcy court’s dismissal. This court has searched in vain for a viable ground of dismissal that did not, to a significant degree, depend upon the substantive correctness of the Bankruptcy Court’s avoidance ruling. The bankruptcy court’s decision to dismiss the debtor’s Chapter 11 case and Dunes’s appeal from that order stands or falls on the issue of whether Dunes can avoid Hyatt’s leasehold interest under the “strong-arm” provision of the Bankruptcy Code. Dunes argues that this ruling is the linchpin of the bankruptcy court’s dismissal, so that to reverse the ruling would take the rug from beneath the bankruptcy court’s Order of Dismissal.
See Dunes Hotel Assocs. v. S.C. Hyatt Corp.,
Nos. 97-1943, 97-2482,
IV. Law/A.nalysis
This case is one of those rare ducks 3 in which the literal application of certain Bankruptcy Code provisions would result in an outcome at odds with the purposes and goals of the Bankruptcy Code. This appeal presents the court with the issue of whether a solvent debtor in Chapter 11 bankruptcy can avoid an unrecorded leasehold interest under § 544(a) without ever triggering the “benefit of the estate” analysis of § 550(a), when the debtor and the debtor’s equity holder are the only entities that would benefit from the avoidance of the lease. The court’s analysis of this issue may be summarized as follows. First, Dunes as debtor-in-possession may avoid Hyatt’s leasehold interest without ever triggering the requirement that avoidance benefit the estate pursuant to the recovery provisions of § 550(a). Second, even though Dunes may technically side-step § 550, this court finds that the policies and purposes of the Bankruptcy Code preclude Dunes’s use of the avoidance powers under the unique circumstances of this case. Third, because the bankruptcy court and this court has long precluded Dunes from seeking avoidance under these circumstances, and the pursuit of this elusive goal is the only reason Dunes remains in Chapter 11, this court affirms the bankruptcy court’s dismissal of this case on the grounds of bad faith.
*498 A. Avoidance of the Leasehold Interest Under § 544(a) Without Triggering § 550(a)
Dunes has argued, and the court has filled-in the interstices of, a persuasive sequential analysis. First, there is a difference between nullification of the leasehold interest and recovery of the actual property transferred under § 550(a). Second, if the leasehold interest were avoided, Dunes -would step into the shoes of Hyatt, so that Dunes would receive the leasehold interest, whereas Hyatt would be left clutching only an unsecured claim against the estate. Third, this leasehold interest is automatically preserved and becomes a part of the bankruptcy estate. Fourth, when the leasehold interest becomes part of the estate, it merges with Dunes’s fee simple that was already part of the bankruptcy estate at the commencement of this case, so that Dunes would have an unencumbered fee. Fifth, simultaneously with the preservation of the leasehold interest, Dunes would have to seek the return of the actual hotel to the possession of the debtor, so that it may become part of the estate. Dunes as debtor-in-possession may do so pursuant to the turnover provision of § 542, without any need to recover the hotel pursuant to § 550(a). As a result, the benefit to the estate analysis of § 550(a) is technically inapplicable.
1. Nullification and Recovery are Separate Concepts
Bankruptcy Code § 1107(a) provides that a debtor-in-possession, such as Dunes, is empowered as a trustee.
See
11 U.S.C. § 1107(a) (1994). Bankruptcy Code § 544(a) expressly provides that a trustee may avoid any transfer of property that is voidable by (1) a hypothetical judicial lien creditor; (2) a hypothetical execution creditor; and (3) a hypothetical bona fide purchaser of real property, whether or not any such creditors or purchasers actually exist.
See
11 U.S.C. § 544(a) (1994). It is undisputed that Hyatt failed to record its lease and thus failed to perfect its interest in the real property, making it avoidable under § 544(a).
4
Avoidance has three separate and distinct consequences. First, § 544(a) nullifies the transfer.
See
David G. Epstein et al.,
Bankruptcy
§ 6-80, at 424 (West Hornbook ed.1993). Second, § 551 preserves the transfer automatically by operation of law for the benefit of the estate.
See id.
Third, § 550 may be used, if necessary, to recover property from a third person for the benefit of the estate.
See id.
Therefore, “[a]voidanee of a transfer is significant in itself apart from” preservation and recovery.
See id.
at 422. This separation of these three concepts is supported by the Code’s legislative history and by reference to other code provisions and case law. Bankruptcy Code § 550 “enunciates the separation between the concepts of avoiding a transfer and recovering from the transferee.” H.R.Rep. No. 95-595, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 375 (1977),
reprinted in
1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5963, 6331; S.Rep. No. 95-989, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. 90 (1978),
reprinted in
1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5787, 5876;
see also Santee v. Northwest Nat’l Bank,
[t]he avoidance of [an] unperfected lien pursuant to § 544(a) is a meaningful event in and of itself, and requires no further action to be taken by the debtor. There is simply nothing to ‘recover’ under § 550(a), and therefore the ‘benefit to the estate’ analysis discussed in the Wellman decision is not directly applicable to this lien avoidance action.
Id.; see also Lippi v. City Bank,
This means that a trustee or debtor-in-possession may avoid a transfer or lien without automatically triggering the recovery provisions of § 550(a).
See Webber Lumber & Supply Co. v. Trucklease Corp. (In re Webber Lumber & Supply Co.),
*500 2. Debtor-in-Possession Avoids Leasehold Interest, so that Hyatt Retains at Most Only an Unsecured Claim Against the Estate
Hyatt argues that avoiding the leasehold interest would merely subordinate it in priority, and that the lease would remain valid and enforceable as between the parties pursuant to state law.
See Pyne v. Hartman Paving, Inc. (In re Hartman Paving, Inc.),
A lien is avoided under § 544(a) as a transfer of the debtor’s interest in property, and the consequence of such avoidance is nullification of the transfer. This nullification means that the transfer is retroactively ineffective and that the transferee ... legally acquired nothing through it. In the present cases, the trustee’s avoidance of the creditors’ liens results in nullification of the transfer of property represented by those liens, and the security transactions are ineffective not only as to the trustee but also as to the debtor and creditor themselves as the immediate parties to the transactions.
*501
In re Bell,
Of course, Hyatt would not be without recourse and could proclaim that the broadsword of the avoidance powers had inflicted a mere “flesh wound” upon its claim, rather than a deathblow.
6
Under § 544(a), the debtor-in-possession in this case “may entirely avoid the inferior third-party interest in the property, and the third-party is left with only an unsecured claim against the debtor’s estate.”
In re Bell,
To illustrate how section § 544(a) works to avoid transfers, suppose that a bank acquires an Article 9 security interest in the debtor’s existing inventory and equipment, but fails properly to perfect the interest. The debtor files bankruptcy. Because of section 544(a)(1), the trustee is deemed to have a judicial hen on the debtor’s inventory and equipment from the very moment the case commenced. Because of state law ..., the trustee’s claim of a judicial lien on the property enjoys priority over the bank’s unperfected security interest. Because of federal law, section 544(a), the bank’s interest is avoided. The debtor’s obligation to the bank remains, but the bank’s claim in bankruptcy is entirely unsecured.
Epstein, supra § 6-61, at 392. Dunes argues that, unlike the situation in which a trastee avoids an unperfected lien securing a pre-existing debt, leaving the debt remaining but unsecured, there is no creditor-debtor relationship in this case, so that Hyatt would have no claim. In short, no underlying debt means no claim. Under its theory of avoidance in this situation, Dunes could avoid Hyatt’s leasehold inter *502 est and Hyatt would have no claim against the estate. This court disagrees. Dunes’s argument is based on the erroneous legal assumption that there is nothing more to a commercial real estate lease than the transfer of a leasehold interest, i.e., the encumbrance on the fee. To the contrary, the hotel lease was both a transfer of a leasehold interest in the real property and a contract to lease the hotel. See 14 S.C.Juris. Landlord & Tenant § 5, at 167 (1992) (“[P]roperty law and contract law combine to determine the validity of leases.”). In the absence of any South Carolina case supporting this well-established rule of law, the following quotation from a recent North Carolina Court of Appeals case adequately supports the proposition:
A lease is a contract which contains both property rights and contractual rights. Property rights include the right to receive unpaid rents and the reversionary right in the leasehold. Contract rights include the right to sue for breach of express and implied covenants and the right to sue for consequential damages stemming from a breach of a lease. Once a lease has been terminated, all property rights are extinguished; any contractual rights, however, remain intact.
Strader v. Sunstates Corp.,
3. Automatic Preservation of the Avoided Leasehold Interest
After avoidance, the leasehold interest is automatically “preserved for the benefit of the estate but only with respect to property of the estate.” 11 U.S.C. § 551 (1994); see also Epstein, supra § 6-86, at 425 (“The preservation is not discretionary and is effected without action. It occurs automatically.”). Two clarifications of this statute need to be made. First, “[t]he operation of the section is automatic ..., even though preservation may not benefit the estate in every instance.” S.Rep. No. 989, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. 91 (1978), 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5877. Therefore, the preserved interest need not always benefit the estate. See 5 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 551.01, at 551-2 (Lawrence P. King, ed., 15th ed. rev. 1998) (“Nonetheless, it appears that all transfers and liens on property of the estate avoided ... are automatically preserved, regardless of benefit to the estate.”). Second, the purpose of the limitation that the avoided interest be preserved “only with respect to property of the estate” is “to prevent the trustee from asserting an avoided lien that floats, such as a tax lien, against after-acquired property of the debtor.” Epstein, supra § 6-87, at 427. 7 However,
[t]he phrase, “only with respect to property of the estate,” has been construed to mean that an avoided transfer becomes property of the estate only if the avoided transfer involves estate property. This construction is wrong. The clear purpose of the phrase.is to limit only the subrogation powers of section 551, not to restrict the reach of sections *503 551 and 541 in bringing avoided transfers within the bankruptcy estate.
Id. Even if Epstein’s reading of § 551 were not correct, the avoided lease had encumbered a hotel that Dunes owned in fee simple as of the commencement of the case, so that the hotel was already property of the estate. With those clarifications duly noted, this court may address Hyatt’s argument that Dunes must use the recovery provisions of § 550(a) to recover the leasehold interest for the estate. This court disagrees. In responding to the argument that a trustee must always recover property under § 550 in order to give meaning to the avoidance powers, some commentators recognize that
this argument ignores the fact that an automatic consequence of avoidance, beyond its nullifying effect, is preservation of the lien or other interest that is avoided, and that the preserved interest automatically becomes part of the estate without recovery. Thus, when a transfer is avoided, the interest which the transfer created becomes part of the estate without further ado.
Epstein,
swpra
§ 6-80, at 423-24;
see also McRoberts v. Transouth Fin. (In re Bell),
4. Avoided Leasehold Interest Merges With Fee Simple
When the debtor-in-possession owns the fee and avoids the leasehold interest, an interesting quasi-metaphysical phenomenon occurs. The avoided leasehold interest “merges with any residual interest in the debtor which passed to the estate when the bankruptcy case commenced.” Epstein,
supra
§ 6-80, at 424;
see also In re Bell,
5. Under a Literal Reading of the Code, the Debtor-in-Possession May Use § 542. Turnover to Bring the Hotel Back into the Estate and Need Not Use § 550(a) to do so
In order to secure complete relief from the lease after avoidance, the only
*504
thing Dunes would have to do would be to physically take possession of the hotel, so as to bring the hotel itself into the estate, rather than simply the right to immediate possession based on a fee simple ownership without encumbrance.
See In re Greater Southeast Community Hosp. Found., Inc.,
Hyatt argues that Dunes must use the recovery provisions of § 550(a) in order to bring the hotel into the bankruptcy estate.
See In re Saunders,
the inclusion of property recovered by the trustee pursuant to his avoidance powers in a separate definitional paragraph 8 clearly reflects the congressional intent that such property is not to be considered property of the estate until it is recovered. Until a judicial determination has been made that the property was, in fact, fraudulently transferred, it is not property of the estate. If it were, the trustee could simply use a turnover action under 11 U.S.C. § 542, and the two (2) year statute of limitations of § 546(a) for actions under §§ 544 and 548 could be avoided.
Id. Such analysis is sound, but it does not assist Hyatt in this case for two reasons. First, Dunes does not seek to use turnover instead of avoidance under § 544 and thus sidestep the applicable statute of limitations. Instead, Dunes seeks to use the *505 avoidance powers of § 544 to nullify Hyatt’s leasehold interest, and then use § 542 to require Hyatt to turnover the hotel after the lease has been avoided. Second, Hyatt’s argument assumes the result it seeks. Bankruptcy Code § 541(a)(3) simply recognizes that if property is recovered by a debtor under § 550, it then becomes property of the estate by operation of that subsection. If no “recovery” under § 550(a) is necessary, then § 541(a)(3) is inapplicable.
Hyatt also argues that Dunes must use the recovery provisions of § 550 to obtain possession of the hotel because § 542 is not listed in § 541(a)(3) as a statutory procedure for recovering any interest in property so as to bring it into the bankruptcy estate. This court disagrees. Bankruptcy Code § 542 requires turnover to the trustee or debtor-in-possession of “property that the trustee may use, sell, or lease under section 363 of this title.” 11 U.S.C. § 542(a) (1994). Bankruptcy Code § 363 provides that a trustee may use, sell, or lease “property of the estate.” 11 U.S.C. § 363(b)(1), (c)(1) (1994). “Therefore, § 542 mandates only the turnover of ‘property of the estate’' to a bankruptcy trustee.”
Moore v. Manson (In re Springfield Furniture, Inc.),
The hotel became property of the estate at the commencement of the Chapter 11 case. Bankruptcy Code § 541(a)(1) provides that, but for a few limited exceptions not applicable to this case, the estate includes “all legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property as of the commencement of the case.” 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(1) (1994). This provision is expansive enough to ensure that the encumbered fee was property of the estate at the commencement of the case. Furthermore, as noted earlier, after the leasehold interest is avoided, it is preserved, becomes property of the estate pursuant to § 541(a)(4), and merges with the debtor-in-possession’s fee interest, so that the debt- or-in-possession is considered to have unencumbered ownership of the hotel as of the commencement of the Chapter 11 case. As a result,' Dunes may bring the hotel itself into the estate by using its turnover powers, rather than seeking recovery of the hotel, because § 541(a)(1) is sufficiently broad so to “include[ ] any property recovered by the trustee using the turnover powers conferred by section 542 of the Code, provided the property was merely out of the possession of the debtor, yet remained ‘property of the debtor.’ ” 5 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 541.04, at 541-10 to 541-11 (Lawrence P. King, ed., 15th ed. rev.1998) (citing S.Rep. No. 989, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. (1978), 1978 U.&.C.CAN. 5868).
For the reasons set forth above, a literal application of the pertinent Bankruptcy Code provisions would permit Dunes as debtor-in-possession to avoid Hyatt’s leasehold interest and obtain possession of the hotel without ever triggering § 550’s benefit of the estate analysis.
B. The Policies and Purposes of the Bankruptcy Code Preclude the Debtor-in-Possession’s Use of Avoidance Under the Unique Circumstances of this Case
Dunes might believe that its unrelenting quest for the Holy Grail of avoidance is at an end, but this court will not allow it to grasp the prized Relic without considering whether, under the unique facts of this case, to do so would be in harmony with the goals and policies of the Bankruptcy Code. Because the literal language of the Bankruptcy Code permits Dunes as the debtor-in-possession to avoid Hyatt’s leasehold interest and seek turnover of the hotel without ever triggering the recovery provisions of § 550(a), the benefit to the estate requirement is not a substantive element of this avoidance action. This court will not inject into the avoidance provisions a
per se
requirement that a trustee or debtor-in-possession must demonstrate a “benefit to the estate” as a substantive element of every avoidance ac
*506
tion. Such a rule would be largely unnecessary.
See
5
Collier on Bankruptcy
¶ 550.07, at 550-25 (“The trustee, however, usually will file a consolidated action to avoid the transfer and recover the property transferred or its value.”). When a trustee seeks to recover the transferred property, the recovery must be for the benefit of the estate.
See
11 U.S.C. § 550(a) (1994). In those cases, such as this one, where recovery is unnecessary, a per se rule requiring a trustee to demonstrate that the avoidance action would benefit the estate may prove unworkable.
See Enserv Co. v. Manpower, Inc./California Peninsula (In re Enserv Co.),
Congress did not intend that actions pursued under Section 547 [preferences] would be subject to question based on equitable considerations, such as who would reap the benefits. Such challenges could only unduly complicate bankruptcy administration, especially in the majority of cases where it is not clear who benefits from successful prosecution of preference actions until late in the administration of the case. There is no statutory requirement that unsecured creditors or even the estate benefit from the voiding of a preference.
Id. With no statutory requirement that every avoidance action benefit the estate, this court will not impose such a potentially problematic criterion.
However, the policies of the Bankruptcy Code mandate that this court frustrate Dunes’s attempts to avoid Hyatt’s leasehold interest under the unique circumstances of this case. “The plain meaning of legislation should be conclusive, except in the ‘rare cases [in which] the literal application of a statute will produce a result demonstrably at odds with the intentions of its drafters.’ ”
United States v. Ron Pair Enters., Inc.,
In this case, a solvent debtor-in-possession that has already averted foreclosure by paying off its only pre-petition secured creditor now seeks to remain in Chapter 11 bankruptcy for the sole purpose of avoiding Hyatt’s unrecorded lease and thus obtaining a potential windfall for itself and its equity holder at the expense of the only remaining non-insider creditor.
9
“The bankruptcy laws are intended as a shield, not as a sword.”
In re Penn Central Transp. Co.,
Second, Dunes as a solvent debtor-in-possession should not be permitted to remain in bankruptcy for the sole purpose of being able to use the strong-arm clause of the Bankruptcy Code to strike down a bilateral contract to the detriment of its only remaining non-insider creditor. To allow Dunes to do so would set the stage for a post-deal negotiation of a lease that was entered into between two sophisticated entities in 1973.
See Barclays-American/Business Credit, Inc. v. Radio WBHP, Inc. (In re Dixie Broad., Inc.),
Finally, permitting a fiduciary such as the debtor-in-possession to use the strong-arm provision of § 544(a) to create a windfall for itself and its equity holder in derogation of the interests of Hyatt, the only remaining non-insider creditor, is contrary to the purpose of the avoidance powers as enunciated by numerous courts and commentators.
See McFarland v. Leyh (In re Texas Gen. Petroleum Corp.),
Whether a particular action provides a windfall for the debtor or a benefit for the estate “depends on a case-by-case, fact-specific analysis.”
Wellman v. Wellman,
No benefit to the estate was conferred at the time of GEPT’s funding of Aetna’s oversecured claim. Outside of the § 362 automatic stay, Aetna could have been paid in full from its collateral, as even Dunes agrees that the hotel was worth at least $52.5 million, 11 and Aetna’s claim was for around $49 million. Alternatively, according to the Debtor’s Plan & Disclosure Statement & Conditional Modification before the bankruptcy court at the time of the initial summary judgment hearing on the avoidance actions, the repayment of Aetna’s debt was to be funded or guaranteed by GEPT. In either case, even before GEPT made its offer to purchase Aetna’s claim on the condition that the debtor-in-possession pursued the avoidance actions, Aetna’s repayment in full was not dependent upon, nor would it have been materially enhanced by, the avoidance of Hyatt’s leasehold interest. Even after GEPT made its funding commitment conditioned on the debtor-in-possession’s pursuit of avoidance, this court agrees with the bankruptcy court’s finding that
GEPT’s willingness to acquire the only substantial non-contingent claim against Dunes, without requiring the prior termination of the SC Hyatt Agreement, but merely Dunes’[s] continued pursuit of termination through this Reconsideration Motion, demonstrates that avoid- *510 anee or rejection is not actually necessary to satisfy or benefit the creditors but only to benefit Dunes and GEPT.
(Bankr.Order, dated Dec. 5, 1995 at 25-26) Therefore, this court rejects Dunes’s argument that GEPT’s funding commitment in exchange for Dunes’s promise to pursue avoidance actually conferred a benefit on the estate at the time of the funding. With no benefit realized years ago at the time Aetna’s claim was paid, the estate will certainly not realize a benefit from avoidance now. GEPT’s financing condition was contingent upon Dunes’s
pursuit
of the avoidance claim, not on actually achieving avoidance. To say the least, Dunes has been indefatigable in its pursuit of avoidance. Thus, Dunes has already satisfied the conditions of its agreement with GEPT, so that regardless of the decision on the issue of avoidance made by the bankruptcy court, this court, or even the Fourth Circuit, the estate will not be bene-fitted any more or any less than it already has been several years ago. In short, actual avoidance of the Hyatt lease was and still is unnecessary to pay any creditor.
See Wellman v. Wellman,
Second, Dunes argues that benefit to the estate is to be construed broadly and not to be tied to the question of whether avoidance is actually necessary for the debtor-in-possession to meet its obligations to creditors.
See Citicorp Acceptance Co. v. Robison (In re Sweetwater),
There is a fatal flaw in Dunes’s argument. Unlike all the cases cited by Dunes, there simply are no non-insider creditors to be paid in this ease, so that these nonexistent creditors cannot be benefitted either directly or indirectly by avoidance. Therefore, even if this court were to accept
*511
Dunes’s argument that avoidance of Hyatt’s leasehold interest may increase the value of the estate by permitting Dunes to lease the hotel to another company at a better monthly rate, the only entities that would benefit as a result would be the debtor Dunes and its equity holder GEPT, and “[t]he debtor or its equity holders are the last category of persons or entities which the code is designed to benefit.”
Capital Management Co. v. Alison Corp. (In re Alison Corp.),
For the reasons set forth above, this court refuses to allow Dunes to avoid Hyatt’s lease. To do so would clearly be in contravention of the policies and purposes of the Bankruptcy Code.
C. Affirmance of the Bankruptcy Court’s Dismissal of the Chapter 11 Case
To reverse the Old Chinese proverb by Lao-tzu, a journey of a thousand miles must end with a single step. The last step in this court’s analysis is to affirm the bankruptcy court’s dismissal of the Chapter 11 case. Section 1112 of the Bankruptcy Code gives the bankruptcy court “substantial discretion” to dismiss a Chapter 11 reorganization case for any one of a non-exhaustive list of ten “causes.”
See
11 U.S.C. 1112(b) (1994);
Toibb v. Radloff,
First, the subjective bad faith inquiry is designed to determine whether the debtor’s real motivation is to abuse the bankruptcy reorganization process instead of using Chapter ll’s provisions to reorganize or rehabilitate an existing enterprise.
See id.
at 702. The record in this case
*512
supports the conclusion that the bankruptcy court was not clearly erroneous in its finding that Dunes and Hyatt have long been involved in a two-party dispute in bankruptcy court and that Dunes has sought to use the avoidance power as a litigation tactic in that dispute.
See Jasik v. Conrad (In re Jasik),
[sjince GEPT bought the Aetna claim, Dunes’[s] only remaining purpose in this case is to terminate the Lease. To ask this Court to maintain this case for such a purpose for more than two years after it has been determined that such an avoidance under the Bankruptcy Code is impermissible is an abuse of the bankruptcy process. Clearly, the termination or avoidance of the Lease has always been the driving force behind Dunes’[s] petition based upon representations by the cognizant GEPT Trustee in September 1995 that funds were always available to pay Aetna, but GEPT would not do so while Hyatt was Dunes’[s] lessee.
(Bankr.Dismissal Order, dated Sept. 26, 1997 at 34) This court agrees with the lower court that the Bankruptcy Code does not permit such a use of its provisions solely as a litigation tactic.
See In re CTC 9th Ave. Partnership,
Second, the “objective futility inquiry is designed to insure that there is embodied in the petition ‘some relation to the statutory objective of resuscitating a financially troubled [debtor].’ ”
Carolin Corp.,
IV. Conclusion
After reviewing the bankruptcy court’s avoidance decision de novo, this court affirms the bankruptcy court’s order granting summary judgment on Dunes’s avoidance action and finds that Dunes cannot assert an avoidance action against Hyatt because the Bankruptcy Code does not permit a debtor-in-possession to avoid an interest to provide a windfall for the debt- or and its equity holder. After reviewing the bankruptcy court’s order dismissing the Chapter 11 case on the ground of bad faith, this court concludes that the finding of bad faith was not clearly erroneous and thus it affirms the bankruptcy court’s order.
*513 It is therefore,
ORDERED, that the above-referenced Orders of the bankruptcy court are AFFIRMED.
AND IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. By comparison in 1994, the Gross Domestic Product of Costa Rica was $8.28 billion, Luxembourg was $12.5 billion, Yugoslavia was $10 billion, Bolivia was $5.51 billion, Equador was $16.36 billion, Syria was $17.24 billion, Lithuania was $5.22 billion, *494 and Paraguay was $7.75 billion. See Microsoft Encarta 97 World Atlas.
. Gertrude Stein, Everybody's Autobiography 289 (1937).
. Although the issues presented by this case may render it a rare duck, this court notes that the duck has been plucked several times before during this litigation, so that one might think there would be no feathers left.
. In its August 25, 1995 Order, the bankruptcy court ruled that the unrecorded Hyatt lease is avoidable under § 544(a) and applicable South Carolina real property recording law. This aspect of the lower court’s avoidance decision has not been appealed and so is the law of this case.
. In its Order dated August 25, 1995, the bankruptcy court rejected the much-criticized central holding of In re Hartman Paving, which charged the knowledge of the debtor to the debtor-in-possession for purposes of priority under state law. No party appealed this aspect of the lower court’s ruling, so it is the law of this case and would likely be the law of this circuit if the Fourth Circuit were to revisit the issue.
. Of course, there are flesh wounds and there are flesh wounds. The court is reminded of the scene in Monty Python’s Search for the Holy Grail wherein the indomitable Black Knight, during a sword fight in which he has his arms and legs lopped off, proclaims to King Arthur that he has suffered “only a flesh wound.”
. The legislative history of the statute provides that "[t]he section as a whole prevents junior lienors from improving their position at the expense of the estate when a senior lien is avoided.” S.Rep. No. 989, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. (1978), 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5877 (providing legislative history for § 551);
see also Barclays American/Mortgage Corp. v. Wilkinson (In re Wilkinson),
. Here, the court is referring to subsection 541(a)(3), which provides that the estate includes ''[a]ny interest in property that the trustee recovers under section ... 550 ... of this title.” 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(3) (1994).
As o£ the date of dismissal of the Chapter 11 case, Hyatt had an unsecured claim for reim-bursemenl of capital costs.
. The court notes that even the In re Glanz decision, heralded by Dunes as the flagship of its supporting authority, acknowledges that equitable principles should preclude a debtor from receiving a windfall from avoidance.
. At the time of the dismissal hearing on August 21, 1997, the value of the hotel without avoidance was approximately $60 million.
. The Fourth Circuit observed that such a stringent test is justified for
threshold denials of Chapter 11 relief. Such a test obviously contemplates that it is better to risk proceeding with a wrongly motivated invocation of Chapter 11 protections whose futility is not immediately manifest than to risk cutting off even a remote chance that a reorganization effort so motivated might nevertheless yield a successful rehabilitation. Just as obviously, it contemplates that it is better to risk the wastefulness of a probably futile but good faith effort to reorganize than it is to risk error in prejudging futility at the threshold. We believe that such a stringent test is necessary to accommodate the various and conflicting interests of debtors, creditors, and the courts that are at stake in deciding whether to deny threshold access to Chapter 11 proceedings for want of good faith in filing.
Carolin Corp., 886 F.2d at 701. Three years into the bankruptcy proceedings, the rationale for the stringent, nature of the test is less compelling. However, the facts before this court satisfy the standard regardless.
