ORDER
This adversary proceeding is before the Court on the defendants’ motion to dismiss one count of the complaint. The question presented by the motion is whether a bankruptcy trustee of a corporate debtor has standing to assert claims to pierce the corporate veil of the debtor to recover amounts from the debtor’s shareholder and related corporate entities sufficient to pay the debts of the debtor.
I. The Procedural Background
The trustee of debtor Mattress N More, Inc., Richard D. Ellenberg, (“trustee”) filed an adversary proceeding against Amjad Wa-liagha, also known as Amjad W. Agha (“Wali-agha”), and nineteen (19) corporate defendants. 1 Mr. Waliagha owns 100% of the stock of the debtor and 100% of the stock of these 19 corporate defendants.
The trustee’s original complaint, filed January 15,1998, was pled in three counts. The first count was labeled “Joint and Several Liability to Creditors,” the second count alleged a trademark violation by virtue of the defendants’ use of the trade name and trademark “Mattress N More,” and the third count alleged improper transfers from the debtor to Mr. Waliagha in the amount of $155,673.00.
On March 12, 1998, the defendants filed a motion to dismiss Count I of the trustee’s complaint. In this motion, defendants argue that the claims pled in Count I were in the nature of alter ego claims and that the trust *106 ee did not have standing to assert an alter ego claim. The trustee filed a reply to the motion to dismiss on April 6, 1998. In the meantime, at a pretrial conference held on April 2, 1998, the Court gave the plaintiff additional time for discovery and time in which to file an amended complaint clearly setting forth the factual allegations and claims. Defendants were directed to review the amended complaint when it was filed and then to file a pleading, advising the Court whether defendants’ motion to dismiss Count I was still appropriate.
The trustee filed an amended complaint on August 21, 1998, and the defendants filed a notice on September 4, 1998 advising the Court that it was appropriate to consider the defendants’ motion to dismiss Count I. Neither the defendants nor the plaintiff trustee have filed any additional briefs or memoran-da pertaining to the motion to dismiss, even though the trustee has now filed an amended complaint in which Count I has been revised. For purposes of this motion, the Court will consider the defendants’ motion to pertain to Count I of the trustee’s amended complaint.
II. What claims are the defendants seeking to dismiss?
The title of Count I now reads “Piercing the Corporate Veils-Joint and Several Liability of Each Defendant.” In Count I, the trustee alleges that the 19 corporate defendants are wholly owned by defendant Walia-gha, that Mr. Waliagha is the president and chief executive officer of all these defendants, that the corporate defendants operate as one business with the objective of selling mattresses and related products, and that each of the corporate defendants has been operated by Mr. Waliagha in a manner to abuse the corporate structures and to constitute a fraud upon creditors. The trustee further alleges that the debtor was used to order and manufacture the inventory for all the corporate defendants and to make other joint purchases for all the corporate defendants, but that the common expenses were not allocated among the corporate defendants and were not paid for by the corporate defendants. The trustee alleges that control over the corporate defendants was exercised in a central location, that the checkbooks for the corporate defendants were kept and written at one location, and that all cheeks were signed by Mr. Waliagha. The amended complaint alleges that for the most part, no corporate formalities have been observed and that the stated purpose of using separate legal entities was to protect assets from creditors, that most of these entities did not file any tax returns for 1996 and 1997, and that Mr. Waliagha took funds from each corporate defendant’s account when it had funds and deposited funds when it needed funds, thus commingling funds. The trustee alleges that each defendant should be jointly and severally liable for all sums owed by debtor to creditors, including administrative expenses. The trustee alleges that this sum is not less than $350,000.00.
Count I also contains specific allegations of wrongdoing with respect to defendants Decatur Mattress Co., Norcross Mattress Co., and Zena International, Inc. The trustee alleges that debtor transferred all of its functions to Decatur Mattress Co. and Norcross Mattress Co. and that these two defendants took over the location, telephone numbers, employees, vehicles, business opportunities and business relations of the debtor. In addition, Decatur Mattress Co. and Norcross Mattress Co. are alleged to have taken all of the debtor’s equipment, including equipment purchased shortly before debtor’s assets were transferred. The complaint further alleges that Zena International, Inc. has overcharged debtor for alleged services.
III. Legal Analysis
The threshold issue is whether the causes of action alleged in Count I belong to the bankruptcy estate. At the outset, it is important to note that Count I, as amended, contains more than just a claim to pierce the corporate veil. It also contains claims against defendants Decatur Mattress Co., Norcross Mattress Co., and Zena International, Inc. for improper transfers and improper charges. These claims clearly belong to the estate, are property of the estate and are appropriate subjects for an action brought by the trustee. Thus, none of these claims should be dismissed.
Whether the alter ego claims can be asserted by a bankruptcy trustee is more com
*107
plicated. Defendants argue that the trustee has no standing to assert an alter ego claim under Georgia law, and that any such claim only belongs to individual creditors. Plaintiff has not contested the proposition that a trustee has no authority to assert alter ego claims under § 544 of the Bankruptcy Code.
2
See Moore v. Kumer (In re Adam Furniture Indus., Inc.),
Section 541 defines property of the bankruptcy estate. It includes whatever legal and equitable interests the debtor had in property as of the filing of the bankruptcy petition. Once the bankruptcy petition has been filed, property rights belonging to a debtor under state law become assets of the estate.
Butner v. United States,
The Second, Fourth, Fifth, and Seventh Circuits have all found that general alter ego claims become property of the bankruptcy estate and may be pursued by the trustee. In
S.I. Acquisition, Inc. v. Eastway Delivery Service, Inc. (In re S.I. Acquisition, Inc.),
The standing issue arose in the Seventh Circuit case of
Koch Refining v. Farmers Union Central Exchange, Inc.,
In the Fourth Circuit case of
Steyr-Daimler-Puch of America Corp. v. Pappas,
The Second Circuit decided two cases on this issue,
Kalb, Voorhis & Co. v. American Financial Corp.,
Curiously, the defendants in the case at bar did not cite or seek to distinguish any of the above Circuit Court cases. Instead, they rely on
Mixon v. Anderson (In re Ozark Restaurant Equipment Co., Inc.),
The analysis of state law by the Circuit Courts which held that the trustee had standing to file an alter ego claim is not particularly helpful. After the Seventh Circuit decided
Koch,
the Supreme Court of Illinois disagreed with the Seventh Circuit and held that in Illinois, a corporation may not bring an alter ego action against its parent shareholder, piercing the corporate veil in the process.
Selcke v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co. (In re Rehabilitation of Centaur Ins. Co.),
In both St. Paul and S.I. Acquisition, the courts found nothing in Ohio or Texas law, *109 respectively, suggesting that a corporation could or could not bring an alter ego action against its parent. And yet, because the purpose of the doctrine is to prevent fraud and injustice, the courts held that they believed the state law would allow such a claim. These courts do not appear to be saying what the law is, but what they believe it should be.
The parties agree that here we must look at Georgia law to decide whether the trustee has standing to pursue an alter ego claim. There are two eases decided by Bankruptcy Courts in Georgia on this issue,
In re City Communications, Inc.,
As with the state laws analyzed in Koch and S.I. Acquisition, [sic] the emphasis under Georgia law appears to be equitable concerns rather than the specific relationships between the alter ego and the creditors. The alter ego doctrine focuses on the overall behavior of the corporation and the alleged alter egos as shareholder derivative actions focus on the continuing course of conduct of the corporate officers and directors. Therefore, as in Koch and SI Acquisition, under Georgia law, an alter ego claim is property of the estate under § 541 and can be asserted by the Trustee.
Id.
In the
Adam Furniture
case, the Court agreed with
City Communications
and held that “an alter ego action under Georgia law is primarily a suit in equity that would permit a debtor corporation to proceed against its own principals, ... [and] the trustee succeeds to such interest of the estate and has standing to bring the alter ego action.”
Defendants are correct that no Georgia court has ever addressed whether an alter ego claim may be brought by the corporation itself. It does appear that all the Georgia alter ego cases involve claims asserted by creditors. This makes sense, since the doctrine is largely a debt collection device. After reviewing the principles of corporate jurisprudence and dozens of Georgia cases involving veil-piercing claims, the Court concludes that the Supreme Court of Georgia would probably not allow a corporation to assert a claim to pierce its own corporate veil.
3
There is something anomalous about a corporation, which is created to protect its shareholders from the liability of the enterprise, asserting a claim to destroy the very protection for which it was created. Furthermore, it is relatively difficult to pierce the corporate veil in Georgia. Stephen B. Presser, Piercing the corporate veil, § 2.11, at 2-91 (1998). The trustee unquestionably has standing to sue these defendants for any improper transfers from the debtor, and to sue any officer, shareholder or director for breach of fiduciary duties and negligent management.
See Hickman v. Hyzer,
Finally, from a policy perspective, perhaps a trustee should be able to pursue general *110 alter ego claims as a representative of the estate. However, there is no statutory basis in the Bankruptcy Code for a trustee to do so, and it is doubtful that the Supreme Court of Georgia would allow a corporation to pierce its own veil. It has been suggested that only amendments to § 544 of the Bankruptcy Code would solve the problem, by allowing the trustee to pursue creditor damage claims such as alter ego actions. John D. Wilmore, The Bankruptcy Trustee: Can an Alter Ego Sue in Alter Ego?, 20 Ca. Bankr.J. 155 (1992), Bryan D. Hull, A Void in Avoidance Powers? The Bankruptcy Trustee’s Inability to Assert Damages Claims on Behalf of Creditors Against Third Parties, 46 U.Miami L.Rev. 263 (1991). These suggestions are valid, and it is Congress who should address the balance to be struck between the goals of bankruptcy legislation and creditor’s rights and the policies of economic expansion which lay behind the state law doctrines of limited liability.
In accordance with the above reasoning, defendants’ motion to dismiss Count I of plaintiffs amended complaint is DENIED in part and GRANTED in part. It is denied insofar as the allegations in Count I contain claims for fraudulent conveyances or other specific improper or avoidable transfers from the debtor, looting, and breaches of fiduciary duty. The motion to dismiss is granted to the extent that Count I asserts a claim by the trustee to pierce the debtor’s corporate veil and hold the defendants liable for all of the debtor’s debts and the trustee’s administrative expenses.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The corporate defendants are: Norcross Furniture Company, Inc., Snellville Mattress Company, Inc., Norcross Mattress Company, Inc., Midtown Mattress Company, Inc., Duluth Mattress Company, Inc., Decatur Mattress Company, Roswell Mattress Company, MNM 1, Inc., MNM 2, Inc., MNM 3, Inc., MNM 4, Inc., MNM 5, Inc., Snellville Mattress Co., Orange Park Mattress Company, Regency Mattress Co., Sarasota Mattress, Inc., University Mattress Co., Inc., Bran-denton Mattress Co., Inc., and Zena International, Inc. In the answer to the complaint, the defendants state that eight (8) of these corporations are no longer in operation. They are Midtown Mattress Company, Inc., Roswell Mattress Company, MNM 1, Inc., MNM 2, Inc., MNM 3, Inc., MNM 4, Inc., MNM 5, Inc., Sarasota Mattress, Inc., and University Mattress Company, Inc.
. Section 544 contains certain avoiding powers of the trustee. Section 544(a) is often referred to as the “strong arm” statute and gives the trustee the status of certain types of claimants as of the time of bankruptcy. Section 544(b) allows the trustee to avoid a transfer that is voidable by an unsecured creditor under nonbankruptcy law.
. It is difficult to predict what the state law is or would be when there is no state court case on point. As a trial court, the Bankruptcy Court does not have the ability to certify a question to the Supreme Court of Georgia. Ga. Const., art. VI, § VI, HVI, R.SUP.CT.GA. 46. This case may present an appropriate question for certification, should it reach the federal appellate courts.
. For the trustee to prevail on a claim that the defendants should be liable for all of the debtor’s debts and administrative expenses, the trustee would probably have to have all these entities in bankruptcy and then move for substantive consolidation, with notice to all creditors of all affected entities. Substantive consolidation is a process whereby the assets and the liabilities of different entities are combined and treated as if belonging to a single entity. It is usually a doctrine used to combine the assets of different debtor corporations and their respective debtor affiliates. See Mark L. Prager & Jonathan A. Backman, Pursuing Alter-Ego Liability Against *110 Non-Bankrupt Third Parties: Structuring a Comprehensive Conceptual Framework, 35 St. Louis U.L.J. 657 (1991).
