This is an appeal from a decision of the bankruptcy appellate panel,
Appellants tell the following story: With a few exceptions, they are local business and professional people who helped found Coastal in 1972. They pledged funds, some contributed services, and they agreed to serve as its officers and directors. They believed that they were its shareholders as well. Coastal applied for, and won, a cable T.V. license for Newport, Rhode Island, and the surrounding area, in part because the state public utilities commission was impressed by Coastal’s “broad local actual ownership.” Once the award became final, Coastal’s value skyrocketed. But, at that point, the attorney that the appellants had retained to file the requisite papers, Paul Burke (an appellee here), unlawfully refused to give them their share certificates and instead issued all the shares to himself. Burke, as sole shareholder, then fired appellants as officers and directors of Coastal. While this was going on, he negotiated the sale of Coastal’s shares, and eventually transferred those shares to George Sisson who, in turn, resold them to Berkshire Cable Television Co. Appellants tried to stop these moves through a state court suit, which apparently remains unresolved. In the meantime, the state public utilities commission, discovering that appellants might no longer be the shareholders and directors of Coastal, began proceedings to issue a new license to someone else. The commission’s action did not destroy Coastal’s value, however, for the muddy legal situation meant that some of the new applicants for the license were willing to pay a high price for Coastal’s old rights — whatever they might be.
The case arrived in bankruptcy court because Sisson, when he sold his interest to Berkshire, agreed with Berkshire that Coastal would assume some of Sisson’s debts. Berkshire loaned Coastal about $65,-000 for it to use to repay these debts. That arguably made Berkshire a creditor of Coastal, and Berkshire then petitioned the company that (it claimed) it owned into bankruptcy under chapter 11. Berkshire said that Coastal owed various creditors about $110,000 and owned a license worth $3 million; and, Berkshire asked the bankruptcy court to authorize the sale of the license to generate cash to pay the debt.
Appellants oppose the sale of the license. They believe that with Coastal back in their hands the public utilities commission would allow them to provide service; and, under those circumstances, they presumably feel the license would be worth considerably more than $3 million. They asked the bankruptcy judge to decide whether to authorize the sale only after he had adjudicated the share ownership question — a matter of state law. The judge began to do so; the parties decided to settle instead; the settlement apparently fell apart; and the *764 bankruptcy judge then authorized the sale of the license without deciding the share ownership question.
The version of the appellees (Coastal, Burke and related parties) can be stated more briefly. Obviously, they do not agree that Burke cheated the appellants. They contend that the sales described were all legitimate, and they see this case as a simple effort by a creditor to force its debtor to sell its valuable asset and pay its debts before the asset’s value falls.
The bankruptcy appellate panel agreed with the appellees. It made a few general statements to the effect that a bankruptcy court could consider what is best for the debtor (Coastal) or the creditors (Berkshire) without necessarily considering what is best for the shareholders or who the shareholders are. See,
e.g., In re Equity Funding Corp. of America,
We find the bankruptcy appellate panel in error as to abuse of discretion. Although the record is too bare for us to say who is right about the underlying facts (particularly as the bankruptcy judge made no findings), we do not see how the bankruptcy judge could decide whether the T.Y. license ought to be sold without first deciding whom to believe about the shares. If Berkshire rightfully owns the shares, both Coastal and it are better off if the license is sold. On the other hand, if appellants are correct and they own the shares, neither they nor Coastal (nor for that matter Berkshire) are better off through a sale. Unless one makes various heroic factual assumptions, it is impossible to see how the bankruptcy court could find a sale appropriate without first knowing who owns Coastal.
The record before us also raises a question related to the bankruptcy court’s jurisdiction — a matter that we raise sua
sponte. Clark v. Paul Gray, Inc.,
[i]n the exercise of its equitable jurisdiction ... has the power to sift the circumstances surrounding any claim to see that injustice or unfairness is not done in the administration of the bankrupt estate.
Pepper v. Litton,
*765 We fear that one or more of these basic principles may have been violated for the following reasons: First, it is uncertain whether there is a legitimate debt. The record indicates that Coastal’s debts largely consist of the $85,000 it owes to Berkshire. While the record does not reveal the exact nature of that debt, it suggests the debt is connected to Berkshire’s purchase from Sis-son of Coastal stock. When this court asked Coastal’s counsel at oral argument, “What led Coastal to owe Berkshire $85,-000?”, he replied, “I cannot answer that.” This court then asked whether:
a dispute ... to sell a $3 million license is being adjudicated by a federal bankruptcy judge, with what appears to be not a full hearing, on the basis of an $85,000 debt that may not exist.
Counsel for Coastal replied, “It is substantially correct.” It appears possible that, if appellants own Coastal, Coastal may have no corporate debt at all. If so, whether the bankruptcy court would have jurisdiction to proceed further is doubtful.
Second, there are sufficient allegations of fraud in this case, and they are closely enough related to the relevant debt and in this instance to the court’s jurisdiction, to warrant determining the underlying facts and their relation to the question.
Cf. Porterfield v. Gerstel,
Third, the need for a bankruptcy proceeding once the state-law ownership question is resolved seems doubtful. If appellants own the shares, there may be no debt and, in any event, they do not request a sale of a license. If appellees own the shares, they can simply sell the license; they do not need a bankruptcy court to do so. To meet the “good faith” requirement of § 1129(a)(3), many courts have held that a reorganization plan must bear some relation to the statutory objective of resuscitating a financially troubled corporation.
See, e.g., In re Nikron, Inc., supra; In re Nite Lite Inns, supra; In re BBT, supra. See generally Fidelity Assurance Association v. Sims,
We shall not resolve these questions now, however, for the record is inadequate and they have not been argued. Moreover, given the importance of state law to this case, we believe that a federal district court, not a bankruptcy court, should pass upon them in the first instance.
See Northern Pipeline Construction Co. v. Marathon Pipeline Co.,
So ordered.
