Alan S. Canter, Elco Resort Developers, Inc. and Greylock Glen Corporation (appellants) seek ultimately to regain possession of 1,162 acres of land situated in northwestern Massachusetts in the town of Adams. They appeal three judgments of the district cоurt, dismissing as moot their appeals from an order of the bankruptcy court that allowed appellee Community Savings Bank to foreclose mortgages on the property. We affirm.
Each appellant owned a portion of the 1,162 acres, and togеther they were building on the land the Greylock Glen project, a 550 room hotel and convention center featuring a ski resort and a golf course. Community Savings Bank provided the primary funding for the project. From May, 1973 until October, 1974 the bank made seventeen loans to appellants totaling $3.8 million in principal. The loans were secured by mortgages which, cumulatively, encumbered the entire project site. In October funding by the bank ceased, appellants were unable to secure adequate financing elsewhere, and all work on the project halted. The golf course and ski resort had already neared completion, but only the gradings and foundation had been installed for the hotel and convention center. Since then appellants have made no payments on account of interest or taxes, and the bank has been obliged even to incur expenditures to maintain the golf course. In 1978 it commenced foreclosure proceedings. Appellants responded with petitions seeking protection under the rеorganization provisions of the bankruptcy laws, the corporate debtors filing under Chapter XI and Canter under Chapter XII. As a result, the bank was automatically stayed from proceeding with the foreclosures. Rules Bankr.Proc. 11-44(a); 12-43(a).
A month later, the bank instituted adversary proceedings against each of the debtors, seeking to lift the automatic stays and to foreclose the mortgages. See Rules Bankr.Proc. ll-44(d); 12-43(d). Appellants again responded, this time by filing counterclaims to extinguish and recoup the mortgages, advancing what the bank has termed “the meritless but now fashionable” argument that the bank breached an oral promise to loan appellants $32 million. In 1979 appellants attempted to withdraw the counterclaims from the bankruptcy court and to assert them in state court. The bаnkruptcy court enjoined them from doing so and retained summary jurisdiction over the counterclaims. Appellants failed timely to appeal the jurisdictional issue.
Trial was held before the bankruptcy court in September, 1979, but only on the issue of lifting the automatic stаys, and not
Appellants appealed to the district court, claiming that the bankruptcy court should have offset their counterclaims against their debt, and thаt the court’s valuation of the Greylock Glen property at $2.5 million was clearly erroneous. Contemporaneously, appellants filed a motion in the bankruptcy court for a stay of the January 16 order pending appeal to the district court. On Februаry 11, 1980, the bankruptcy court denied this motion. Four days later the district court did likewise, being “not persuaded that equities lie with Appellants.”
Free at last from injunctive restraint, the bank quickly consummated the foreclosure process. A foreclosure sale was duly advertisеd for and held on February 20, 1980. Numerous prospective bidders attended the sale, but the bank was the only actual bidder. Through three separate purchases, the bank acquired the entire tract of land for $2.7 million against an aggregate debt, including interest, of over $6 milliоn. The sale was approved by the Massachusetts Land Court.
The appeals from the January 16th order remained pending in the district court. Following the foreclosure sale, however, the bank moved their dismissal as moot, relying upon Rule 805 of the Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure which states in relevant part:
“Unless an order approving a sale of property ... is stayed pending appeal, the sale to a good faith purchaser .. . shall not be affected by the reversal or modification of such order on aрpeal, whether or not the purchaser ... knows of the pendency of the appeal.”
After oral argument and two rounds of briefs, the district court concluded that the bank was a good faith purchaser within the meaning of Rule 805. Accordingly, on September 26, 1980, it issued a memorandum and the orders dismissing as moot the appeals of the January 16th order.
Appellants attack, on statutory and due process grounds, the procedure employed by the district court to decide the mootness issue. Contending that the court lacked authority under the Bankruptcy Act and its rules even to entertain the bank’s motion to dismiss, they label the motion an independent plenary action to clear title to the Greylock Glen property, and claim the bank should have sought a state court declaratory judgment as to its status as a good faith purchaser. These contentions are meritless. Any court necessarily has jurisdiction to inquire into its own jurisdiction,
United States v. United Mine Workers,
1947,
Next, appellants complain that the district court deprived them of due process by relying upon briefs and orаl argument to determine whether the bank was a good faith purchaser. According to appellants, the court should have conducted a full evidentiary hearing on the issue. Appellants forget, however, that there already was a record; the burden was оn them to supplement it, if they wished. The district court decided the issue of ultimate fact — the bank’s good faith — on the basis of underlying facts that were not in dispute. Both parties agreed that the bank had conducted a public sale of the Greylock Glen property on February 20, 1980, that the bank had purchased the property for $2.7 million, and that the Massachusetts Land Court approved the sale. In their briefs, appellants were able to raise a number of supposed irregularities in the advertising and conduct
Turning to the merits, we agree with the district court that the bank was a good faith purchaser of the property within the meaning of Rule 805 and, consequently, that appellants’ appeals of the bankruptcy court order were moot. We note at the outset that the fact that the bank was both the seller and purchaser of the property, and a party to the dismissed appeal does not affect its status under Rule 805. The rule does not distinguish between mortgage holders and other potential purchasеrs of encumbered property. It is designed to give finality to orders of the bankruptcy court that have not been stayed pending appeal.
E. g., In re Bleaufontaine, Inc.,
ante, at 1389 n.12;
In re Rock Industries Mach. Corp.,
7 Cir., 1978,
No definition of “good faith purchaser” appears in the bankruptcy laws, but the traditional definition of the phrase, or its like, is one who purchases assets for value, in good faith, and without knowledge of adverse claims.
E. g., Industrial Nat’l Bank v. Leo’s Used Car Exchаnge, Inc.,
1973,
To qualify as a good faith purchaser, then, the bank merely must have paid value for the property and have acted in good faith. We are satisfied that it acted in the “strictest good faith,”
Union Market Nat’l Bank v. Derderian,
1945,
The remaining question is whether the bank paid value. In the context of bankruptcy-related sales, a buyer is generally deemed to have purchased for “value” when he pays at least 75 per cent of the appraised value of the assets. In re Rock Industries Mach. Corp., ante, at 1197 n.l. Here, however, the debtors’ property had received more than one appraisal, and the fair market value of the land was vеry much in dispute. Louis Abt, the appraiser for the bank, valued the property at approximately $2.5 million; appellants’ appraiser, Floyd Rossi, concluded that it was worth almost three times that amount. After reading reports and hearing testimony from both apрraisers, the bankruptcy court adopted Abt’s figure of $2.5 million. Appellants attempted to challenge this finding as clearly erroneous in their mooted appeals. The short answer is that it was not.
Abt testified credibly that the explosion of interest rates after 1974 precluded completion of the hotel-convention center. Appellants presented evidence that there was potential demand for a convention center in Adams, but not that the Greylock Glen project was financially viable. Rossi’s apрraisal of $7.3 million was based upon sale of the golf course at $10,000 per acre, the ski area at $5,000 per acre, and the remaining land at $3,500 per acre. The court properly discounted this valuation of the golf course, since it was based solely uрon replacement cost rather than more relevant guides to current market value, such as comparable sales. Abt testified to financial difficulties currently plaguing golf courses,
Since the bank met all the requirements of a good faith purchaser under Rule 805, appellants’ prime contеntion on appeal from the bankruptcy court order — that the bankruptcy court should have found equity in the property on the part of appellants — is moot.
*
In
re
Dutch Inn of Orlando, Ltd.,
5 Cir., 1980,
We regard this appeal as so frivolous as to warrant the imposition of double costs, and it is so ordered.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
In addition to appellants’ moot contention that their counterclaims gave them equity in the property, they raised several other issues concerning the counterclaims which the district court deemed interlocutory appeals. These issues now await district court review following the bankruptcy court’s grant of summary judgment to the bank on the merits of the counterclaims.
