As a general rule, parties may appeal from a final decision, order, or judgment rendered by a court, but not simply from statements or findings contained in the body of such a decision, order, or judgment. This appeal contradicts that general rule. Consequently, we dismiss it for want of appellate jurisdiction.
Much of the relevant background is laid out in an opinion resolving an earlier, related appeal.
See Metro. Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co. v. Shan Trac, Inc.,
On March 8, 2000, the debtor, Yury Shkolnikov, drove a rented van into a median barrier in Clark County, Nevada. Eight of the van’s passengers were killed and five were injured, apparently because Shkolnikov fell asleep at the wheel. The applicable automobile liability insurance policy, issued in Massachusetts by Metropolitan Property & Casualty Insurance Co. (Metropolitan), provided a per-accident limit of $300,000 in coverage.
Faced with potential damages far in excess of that sum, Metropolitan commenced a statutory interpleader action, 28 U.S.C. § 1335, in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. Attempts to settle the interpleader action never quite came to fruition: the action culminated in a process by which the victims could collect the insurance proceeds without litigating their tort claims, but some claimants found the scope of the required waiver to be unacceptable, and the process aborted.
See Shan Trac,
On November 17, 2003, the claimants, qua creditors, brought a motion in the bankruptcy court for relief from the automatic stay and for an assignment of rights. The motion described in detail the asset that the creditors sought to have assigned — Shkolnikov’s rights against his liability insurance carrier (Metropolitan). Without opposition, the bankruptcy court granted the motion on December 3, 2003.
Simultaneous with, the filing of the motion, the creditors, for whatever reason, brought an adversary proceeding against Shkolnikov to compel an assignment of the same rights. The bankruptcy court, acting sua sponte, dismissed the adversary proceeding on February 13, 2004. The creditors appealed.
During the pendency of the appeal, the creditors agreed to purchase whatever rights Shkolnikov might have against Metropolitan from the trustee in bankruptcy rather than attempting to obtain them through continued prosecution of the ad *24 versary proceeding. However, when the trustee gave notice of his intention to sell the asset, Metropolitan objected. The trustee appeared at the hearing before the bankruptcy court and said, in essence, that he thought there was no merit to the creditors’ putative claims against Metropolitan but that, as a fiduciary, he saw no reason to pass up an opportunity to sell the asset (and, thus, enrich the bankruptcy estate). The bankruptcy court nonetheless denied the motion to sell, stating that it would be “an abuse of ... power[ ]” to grant the motion in light of the trustee’s representations.
The creditors moved for reconsideration and, when the court denied that motion, they appealed. On February 2, 2006, the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (the BAP) dismissed the appeal.
See In re Shkolnikov,
When the bankruptcy court granted the appellants’ motion seeking relief from stay and assignment of Shkolnikov’s rights against Metropolitan (and others), its order conveyed to them the very rights that were the subject of the trustee’s sale motion. That order is final and binding on all parties, including Metropolitan. The court’s refusal to authorize conveyance of the same rights to them a second time aggrieved the appellants not at all. Accordingly, they lack standing----There is no right to redundant relief.
Id. at 4-5 (citations and footnote omitted). Accordingly, the BAP dismissed the creditors’ appeal for lack of standing.
Since Metropolitan appeared before the BAP as an appellee, this ruling represented a victory for it. Though triumphant, Metropolitan has now appealed. It does not contest the result of the underlying proceeding — after all, as we have pointed out, the BAP’s dismissal of the creditors’ appeal was favorable to Metropolitan — -but, rather, contests the BAP’s statement that the earlier order conveyed Shkolnikov’s rights to the creditors. That is not a permissible basis for an appeal.
It is an abecedarian rule that a party cannot prosecute an appeal from a judgment in its favor.
See Lindheimer v. Ill. Bell Tel. Co.,
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That proposition captures the essence of this case: Metropolitan, though successful in defending against the creditors’ appeal to the BAP, takes umbrage with the BAP’s statements about the 2003 order. That sort of dissatisfaction, without more, cannot confer a right to appeal upon a successful litigant.
See, e.g., Abbs v. Sullivan,
We need go no further. Because Metropolitan had no right to appeal from the BAP’s decision in its favor, we dismiss this proceeding without prejudice for want of appellate jurisdiction. We take no view as to the correctness vel non of the BAP’s interpretation of the 2003 order which, as we understand it, remains open to testing in other proceedings. 2
Appeal dismissed. All parties shall bear their own costs.
Notes
. There may be a narrow exception to this proposition in cases in which an essential element of the decision will have detrimental preclusive legal effect on the would-be appellant in future proceedings.
See Elect'l Fittings Corp. v. Thomas & Betts Co.,
307 U.S.
*25
241, 242,
. We are advised that Metropolitan has pending, before the district court, an appeal from the denial of a motion for relief from the 2003 order.
