Before us is an appeal brought by Great Road Service Center, Inc. (“Great Road” or the “Appellant”), a chapter 7 corporate debtor, of bankruptcy court orders authorizing payment of fees and expenses of Chapter 7 Trustee David M. Nickless (“Trustee Nickless”) and his special counsel Attorney Roberta Golden (“Attorney Golden”). The orders approved fees totaling $11,742.50, amounting to all the bankruptcy estate’s funds, leaving nothing for creditors. Before us, too, is Trustee Nick-less’s motion seeking sanctions against Great Road’s attorney for prosecuting a frivolous appeal.
Because Great Road concedes that the estate is insolvent and that, in no event would reduction or disallowance of the fee awards create a surplus fund from which a distribution to it might be made, we conclude that Great Road lacks standing to appeal. Moreover, after assessing both the lighter-than-air character of Great Road’s standing assertions and the insub-stantiability of its case on the merits, we conclude that the sanctions motion will be granted. Accordingly, we dismiss Great Road’s appeal and impose sanctions on its counsel as described below.
I. BACKGROUND
Great Road filed its chapter 7 petition in February 1997. Nickless became trustee. App. at 1. In June of that year, Attorney Golden was appointed special counsel to pursue claims against Great Road’s gasoline supplier, Sunoco, Inc., et al., apparently for alleged violation of the Robinson-Patman Pricing Act. 1 Attorney Golden initiated an adversary proceeding in August 1998 and prosecuted the action until April 2002, when she was terminated as special counsel. Trustee Nickless thereafter assumed responsibility for the matter. App. at 9, 28. In September 2002 the bankruptcy court granted summary judgment, dismissing all claims. App. at 28, 29.
Trustee Nickless’s Final Report Before Distribution (the “Final Report”) sought compensation for his services as well as Attorney Golden’s. App. at 5. For himself, he asked for $1,742.50 (fees). App. at 68. Attorney Golden sought $25,576.29 in fees and $1,913.79 in expenses. App. at 86. Great Road objected to so much of their fees as related to the adversary proceeding. App. at 5-6, 102-22. It asserted, inter alia, that the lawsuit lacked merit, was poorly prosecuted by Attorney Golden, and that Trustee Nickless was grossly negligent in failing to properly assess the merits of the litigation throughout its course. App. at 102-22.
The bankruptcy court overruled the objection to Trustee Nickless’ fees, but reduced Attorney Golden’s compensation to $10,000.00. App. at 179-81. Great Road appealed. App. at 182.
Both parties agree that reduction or dis-allowance of Trustee Nickless’ or Attorney Golden’s compensation would not yield a *550 surplus for the estate. See Appellant’s Brief at 7-8; Reply Brief at 3-4. Such funds as might be freed up by denying or reducing the fee awards would be applied to priority claims of the United States Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”), claims for which Great Road’s principal David Tolf (“Tolf’) is personally hable. See id.
II. JURISDICTION
A bankruptcy appellate panel may hear appeals from “final judgments, orders and decrees [pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1)] or with leave of the court, from interlocutory orders and decrees [pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(a)(3)].”
Fleet Data Processing Corp. v. Branch (In re Bank of New England Corp.),
III. STANDING
Bankruptcy standing is narrower than Article III standing.
Spenlinhauer v. O’Donnell,
Great Road concedes that the estate is insolvent, and that reduction or disallowance of the fee awards would not create surplus funds from which it might receive a distribution.
See Reply Brief
at 3. Great Road is thus not “aggrieved” by the orders on appeal. Those orders do not directly or adversely affect Great Road’s pecuniary interests.
See Spenlinhauer,
We reject Great Road’s suggestion that Trustee Nickless was obliged to raise the issue of standing at the fee hearing below.
See
Reply Brief at 2. “[Questions of standing must be considered sua sponte, as it is akin to subject matter jurisdiction.”
See In re Toms,
We also reject Great Road’s suggestion that it has standing to assert fraud upon the court even though it is not a “person *551 aggrieved” in the usual sense. See Reply Brief at 2. Great Road has cited no authority for that proposition. Moreover, even if Great Road had standing to press the point, it has failed to demonstrate that any such fraud occurred.
Lastly, we reject Great Road’s contention that, as a corporate debtor, it has standing under 11 U.S.C. § 505(a)(1) to challenge the fee orders because its principal, David Tolf, has an interest in seeing the orders overturned.
2
See
Reply Brief at 3. It invokes
In re Datair Systems Corp.
for the proposition that a “[cjorpo-rate debtor had standing under 11 USCS sec. 505(a)(1) to bring injunction suit focusing on effort of IRS to allege penalties against two vital officers of debtor.” Reply Brief at 3
(citing Datair Systems Corp. v. Starkey (In re Datair Systems Corp.),
Deel v. United States (In re Deel),
also cited by Great Road, is equally inapplicable.
See Deel v. United States (In re Deel),
IV. MOTION FOR SANCTIONS
What remains is Trustee Nick-less’s motion seeking costs and sanctions against Great Road’s counsel (the “Motion”) on the grounds that the appeal as it relates to Trustee Nickless’s fees and expenses “is frivolous and contains no facts or legal support upon which the appeal may succeed.” 4 Federal Rule of Bank *552 ruptcy Procedure 8020, which adopts Rule 38 of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, provides as follows:
If a court of appeals determines that an appeal is frivolous, it may, after a separately filed motion or notice from the court and reasonable opportunity to respond, award just damages and single or double costs to the appellee.
Fed. R. Bankr.P. 8020. Imposing sanctions under Rule 8020 is a two-step process.
Maloni v. Fairway Wholesale Corp. (In re Maloni),
A. Frivolous Appeal
There is no exact formula for determining whether an appeal is frivolous. Several factors may be considered, including: an appellant’s bad faith, 5 whether the argument presented on appeal is meritless in toto, or whether only part of the appeal is frivolous. Id. We may also consider whether an appellant’s arguments effectively address the issues on' appeal, fail to cite any authority, cite inapplicable authority, make unsubstantiated factual assertions, assert bare legal conclusions, or misrepresent the record. Id.
We agree with Trustee Nickless that Great Road’s appeal is frivolous for two reasons. First, as explained above, Great Road’s standing arguments are patently meritless under First Circuit law. Great Road mustered no meaningful argument, no pertinent authority, on the point.
Second, putting standing aside, we have assayed the appeal’s potential merit of the appeal. We can confidently say that its meritlessness is so plain as to warrant sanction. The bankruptcy judge is in the best position to gauge the interplay of factors and make delicate judgment calls anent fee awards. Accordingly, appellate courts give considerable deference to a bankruptcy court’s determination of appropriate fee awards.
Casco Northern Bank, N.A. v. DN Assocs. (In re DN Assocs.),
B. Procedural Requirements
Before ordering sanctions, we must examine the procedural context to assure that Rule 8020’s requirements are satisfied.
Maloni,
C. Sanctions Amount
We may impose “just damages” and single or double costs as sanctions. 8 Lawrenoe P. King, CollieR on BanKRüptCY ¶ 8020.07. Damages may either be in the form of a lump-sum monetary penalty or attorney’s fee. Id. A lump-sum amount may be whatever amount we conclude is warranted. Id. We may, if we choose, award attorney’s fees and remand the matter to the bankruptcy court to set the amount, or make an award based on the appellee’s submissions. Id. Single or double costs are calculated under the provisions of Bankruptcy Rule 8014, which provides in pertinent part for costs incurred in the production of copies of briefs. Id; Fed. R. Bankr.P. 8014.
In this case, we will forgo generating substantial, additional work and delay on the parties or the court below. We conclude that double costs are warranted, but will go no further.
Y. CONCLUSION
For these reasons, the appeal is DISMISSED for want of Appellant’s standing. We award double costs as sanction against Appellant’s counsel for bringing a frivolous appeal.
Notes
. We are vague about the content of the complaint as it is not included in the record. For today, its specifics are beside the point.
. Any funds generated by a reduction or disal-lowance of Trustee Nickless’ or Attorney Golden’s fees would be used to pay down IRS priority claims for which Tolf is personally liable. See Reply Brief at 3; Appellant’s Brief at 7-8.
. The case has been criticized and distinguished by other courts, including a Massachusetts bankruptcy court that stated "the court’s reading of section 505(a) of the Bankruptcy Code in
In re Datair Systems Corp.
is open to question.”
See Mohawk Inds., Inc. v. United States (In re Mohawk Inds., Inc.),
.Trustee Nickless cites to "Rule 11 of the Rules of Civil Procedure and 11 USC Section 1927.” It would seem that he meant to refer to Fed. R. Bankr.P. 9011 and 28 U.S.C. § 192.7. However, neither rule applies in this proceeding. The applicable rule governing *552 frivolous appeals is Fed. R. Bankr.P. 8020. Rule 8020 allows a bankruptcy appellate panel to sanction the appellant’s attorney directly. See 8 Lawrence P. King, Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 8020.07.
. A finding of bad faith is generally not required to impose sanctions under Rule 8020.
See Maloni,
