This appeal, spawned by what would appear to be one of the largest and most complex bankruptcy proceedings in American history, presents the question whether the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York (Arthur J. Gonzalez,
Judge)
abused its discretion by denying a creditor’s motion either to amend its timely filed proof of claim against a debtor to include the debtor’s parent corporation, or to file a new proof of claim against the parent corporation, six months after the expiration of the court-imposed “bar date” for filing claims. In rejecting the motion, the bankruptcy court — applying the test for “excusable neglect” set forth by the United States Supreme Court in
Pioneer Investment Services Co. v. Brunswick Associates L.P.,
We affirm because we agree with the district court that the bankruptcy court did not abuse its considerable discretion in finding that the creditor’s neglect in this case was not excusable, especially in light of the complexity of the reorganization the court was overseeing.
BACKGROUND
This dispute arises out of a contract for the purchase natural gas by the appellant, Midland Cogeneration Venture Limited Partnership (“Midland”), from Union Pacific Fuels, Inc. (“Union Pacific”). The contract, executed on May 26, 1993, called for Union Pacific to supply natural gas to Midland from October 1, 1993, through September 30, 2006.
See In re Enron Corp.,
On December 2, 2001, Enron and certain of its subsidiaries, including ENA, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York.
In re Enron Corp.,
On August 1, 2002, upon motion of Enron and its subsidiaries, the bankruptcy court set October 15, 2002, as the deadline, or “bar date,” by which creditors would be required to file proofs of claim against the debtors. See In re Enron Corp., No. 01-16034, order at 3 (Bankr.S.D.N.Y. Aug. 1, 2002) (“Bar Date Order”) (order stating that “October 15, 2002 at 5:00 p.m. (New York City Time) shall be the last date and time by which Proofs of Claim relating to these Debtors may be filed”). The order specified that “Proofs of Claim will be deemed timely filed only if actually received by the Enron Claims Docketing Center on or before the applicable Bar Date.” Id. (emphasis in original). And it cautioned that
any holder of a claim against a Debtor who is required to but fails to file a proof of claim for such claim in accordance with this Order on or before the applicable Bar Date shall be forever barred, estopped and enjoined from asserting such claim against such Debtor (or filing a proof of claim with respect thereto) and such Debtor and its respective property shall be forever discharged from any and all indebtedness or liability with respect to such claim.
Id. at 5-6.
The order required that Enron and its affiliates “shall mail, on or before August 16, 2002, [a] Bar Date notice” to potential creditors.
Id.
at 3. That notice, which Enron mailed to creditors on August 10, 2002, and which was thereafter published in various national newspapers,
see In re Enron Corp.,
The notice instructed creditors: “If you assert Claims against more than one Debt- or, you must file a separate Proof of Claim with respect to each such Debtor. In addition, you must identify on your proof of claim form the particular Debtor against which your Claim is asserted.” Id. at 2 (emphasis in original). And it contained a paragraph headed “CONSEQUENCES OF FAILURE TO FILE PROOF OF CLAIM,” that stipulated as follows:
*120 Any entity that is required to file a Proof of Claim, but that fails to do so by the applicable Bar Date described in this Notice, shall be forever barred, estopped and enjoined from the following:
a. asserting any Claim against a Debt- or that the entity has that (i) is in an amount that exceeds the amount, if any, that is identified in the Schedules on behalf of such entity as undisputed, non-contingent and liquidated or (ii) is of a different nature or a different classification than any Claim identified in the Schedules on behalf of such entity (any such Claim being referred to in this Notice as an “Unscheduled Claim”); or
b. voting upon, or receiving distributions under, any plan or plans of reorganization in these chapter 11 cases in respect of an Unscheduled Claim.
Id.
at 2-3 (emphasis in original). The paragraph continued: “If it is unclear from the Schedules whether your Claim is disputed, contingent or unliquidated as to amount or whether it is otherwise properly listed and classified, you must file a proof of claim on or before the applicable Bar Date.”
Id.
at 3 (emphasis in original). Schedule F of Enron’s financial disclosures, in turn, listed Midland’s “Guarantee Claim” as “contingent” and “unliquidated,” and listed the amount of the claim as “unknown.” Sch. F: Creditors Holding Unsecured Nonpriority Claims at 624,
In re Enron Corp.,
On October 10, 2002, five days before the bar date, Midland filed with the bankruptcy court proof of an unsecured claim against ENA in the amount of $12,567,557 based on ENA’s failure to deliver natural gas from April 1 to April 19, 2002, and for damages resulting from ENA’s rejection of its remaining obligations under the natural gas purchase agreement.
See
Proof of Claim, Ex. A 2-3,
In re Enron Corp.,
Midland did not, however, attempt to file a proof of claim against Enron under the guaranty until April 24, 2003 — some six months after the bar date. At that time, Midland filed a motion seeking “to assert the 1996 Guaranty against Enron Corp. as either an amendment to the Claim [against ENA] or as a late-filed claim.” Midland Mot. to Amend at 5. Midland argued that its failure to file a timely claim against Enron under the guaranty “resulted solely from inadvertence,” id., because “Midland and its counsel were so heavily focused upon and involved in negotiations with personnel of [ENA] and its attorneys regarding the rejection of the 1996 Agreement and the assumption and assignment of [an unrelated agreement] that they neglected to include with the [proof of claim against ENA] a claim [against Enron] under the 1996 Guaranty.” Id. at 3. The amended or late-filed claim could not “under any circumstance come as a surprise to [ENA], Enron Corp., its affiliated debtors or their creditors,” Midland argued, because “Midland’s rights and remedies under the 1996 Guaranty were well known by business personnel and counsel for Enron Corp. and [ENA, and because] the 1996 Guaranty was disclosed on Enron Corp.’s schedules of financial affairs.” Id. Midland also contended that neither company could be prejudiced by its delay because they had not yet filed a disclosure statement or plan of reorganization. Id. at 5.
Enron and ENA objected to Midland’s motion, and the bankruptcy court therefore conducted a hearing on May 22, 2003. On July 11, 2003, Enron and various of its subsidiaries filed a disclosure statement
*121
and a draft reorganization plan. On September 17, 2003, the bankruptcy court denied Midland’s motion citing the substantial length of the delay, the lack of a “genuine reason” for the delay, and the potential prejudice to Enron and its reorganization proceedings from the possible opening of the “floodgates” to similar late claims.
In re Enron Corp.,
In the meantime, Enron’s fifth amended plan of reorganization, filed in January 2004, was confirmed on July 15, 2004.
DISCUSSION
On appeal, Midland argues principally that the bankruptcy court misapplied the test for “excusable neglect” set forth by the United States Supreme Court in
Pioneer Investment Services Co. v. Brunswick Associates L.P.,
I. “Excusable Neglect” for Late-Filed Claims
The Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure provide that
when an act is required or allowed to be done at or within a specified period ... by order of court, the court for cause shown may at any time in its discretion ... on motion made after the expiration of the specified period permit the act to be done where the failure to act was the result of excusable neglect.
Fed. R. Bankr.P. 9006(b)(1). Rule 9006 governs the admission of proofs of claim filed after a court-ordered bar date.
See Pioneer,
A. The Pioneer Test
In
Pioneer,
the Supreme Court set out the parameters of what it termed the “somewhat elastic concept” of “excusable neglect.”
After delineating the spectrum of “possible explanations for a party’s failure to
*122
comply with a court-ordered filing deadline” — from “act[s] of God” on one end to a party’s deliberate choice “to flout a deadline” on the other,
id.
at 387-88,
Applying that test to the facts before it, the
Pioneer
Court allowed a claim filed twenty days after the bar date imposed by the bankruptcy court where the notice of that date consisted of a single, “inconspicuous” sentence in a document entitled “Notice for Meeting of Creditors.”
Id.
at 386, 398,
B. “Excusable Neglect” Posi-Pioneer
We have “taken a hard line” in applying the
Pioneer
test.
Silivanch v. Celebrity Cruises, Inc.,
Accordingly, in Silivanch we thought ourselves “compelled ... to conclude that the district court abused its discretion” in finding excusable neglect where the basis for the claim was that the appellant’s attorney had mistakenly relied “on a remark by counsel for another party” concerning the date by which a notice of appeal had to be filed. Id. at 370. It is not only a question of the need for finality.
We operate in an environment ... in which substantial rights may be, and often are, forfeited if they are not asserted within time limits established by law. Judges, of course, make mistakes. We, like the district court, have considerable sympathy for those who, through mistakes' — counsel's inadvertence or their own — lose substantial rights in that way. 1 And there is, indeed, an institutionalized but limited flexibility at the margin with respect to rights lost because they have been slept on. But the legal system would groan under the weight of a regimen of uncertainty in which time limitations were not rigorously enforced- — -where every missed deadline was the occasion for the embarkation on extensive trial and appellate litigation to determine the equities of enforcing the bar.
Id. at 367-68 (footnote in original, renumbered; other footnotes omitted).
As we observed in
Silivanch, id.
at 370 (collecting cases), other courts have, for the most part, adopted a similar “hard line” to applying
Pioneer
that emphasizes the reason for the delay.
See, e.g., United States v. Torres,
II. Standard of Review
“In an appeal from a district court’s review of a bankruptcy court decision, we review the bankruptcy court decision independently, accepting its factual findings unless clearly erroneous but reviewing its conclusions of law
de novo.” In re AroChem Corp.,
Midland contends that we should review the bankruptcy court’s decision de novo because the court “failed to exercise any real discretion” insofar as it did not “analyze the evidence in the Motion record or Enron docket.” Appellant’s Br. at 15. Midland’s position, however, is not supported by the bankruptcy court’s opinion, which indicates that the court — having presided over the complex Enron proceedings for nearly two years as of the time it issued the order appealed from here— carefully weighed the history of Midland’s relationship with Enron and ENA, as well *125 as Midland’s explanation for its delay in filing the claim against Enron and the relevant legal standards, before issuing an opinion spanning some twenty typewritten pages.
The bankruptcy court specifically credited Midland’s arguments that it acted in good faith,
see In re Enron Corp.,
Enron contends in its brief on appeal that some “26 percent of all [Enron-related] debtors, including ENA, received Enron credit support in the form of guaranties,” Appellees’ Br. at 30 n. 13, a fact Midland does not challenge and of which the bankruptcy court, given its familiarity with the case, must have been aware. The court thus plainly reviewed the record before it, made inferences based on that record, and reached a conclusion based on those facts and inferences. Midland may disagree with that conclusion, and may argue that the court exceeded its permissible discretion in reaching it, but we think that its contention that the court failed to exercise its discretion at all is entirely without merit.
We note in passing that the two cases that Midland cites in support of this argument do not help it. In the first,
Thomas v. Continental Casualty Co.,
III. The Bankruptcy Court’s Application of Pioneer
The bankruptcy court found no evidence that Midland did not act in good faith, and *126 Enron does not dispute this point. We therefore focus on the court’s application of the remaining three prongs of the Pioneer test.
A. Reason for the Delay
Midland’s motion to amend its proof of claim indicated that its failure to file a timely claim against Enron “resulted solely from inadvertence,” which it attributed to the fact that it and “its counsel were so heavily focused upon and involved in negotiations with personnel of Enron North America and its attorneys regarding the rejection of the 1996 Agreement and the assumption and assignment of [an unrelated agreement], that they neglected to include with the Midland Claim a claim under the 1996 Guaranty.” Midland Mot. to Amend at 3, 5. The bankruptcy court rejected this explanation as not a “genuine reason for the delay” and concluded that the “reason for the delay” factor therefore favored Enron, noting that the “Debtors provided Midland with adequate notice of the Bar Date.”
In re Enron Corp.,
As we have noted, “inadvertence, ignorance of the rules, or mistakes construing the rules do not usually constitute ‘excusable’ neglect.”
Pioneer,
Apparently recognizing the weakness of its inadvertence argument, Midland advances for the first time on appeal two additional explanations for its failure to file a timely claim. First, Midland contends that while the debtors’ motion seeking a bar date order included a provision requesting that separate claims be filed against each Enron entity, the order itself, as issued by the bankruptcy court, did not specifically contain such a provision. Appellant’s Br. at 8. Midland asserts that the omission of the requirement for separate claims in the court’s bar date order “implied that the Bankruptcy Court had rejected the Debtors’ requested multiple-filing requirement.” Id. Second, Midland argues that
the universal creditor expectation [at the time it filed its proof of claim against ENA] was that the Debtors’ estates would be substantively consolidated as part of a plan of reorganization, and therefore that a creditor’s claim against any individual Enron entity would be accorded parity of distribution with claims against other Enron entities— regardless which Enron entity had originally been hable to it.
Id. Because it anticipated that all the payouts would thus derive from a common pool, Midland apparently thought it would not matter against which entity it asserted its claim. It was only after “Midland began to believe that the Enron entities might not all be substantively consolidated” that it filed its motion to amend its claim or file a late claim against Enron. Id. at 8-9.
“The law is well established that a federal appellate court will generally not consider an issue or argument not raised [in the district court].”
Kamagate v. Ashcroft,
*127 First, Midland’s contention that the bankruptcy court impliedly rejected Enron’s request for a multiple-filing requirement is at odds with the bankruptcy court’s order, which specifically “authorized and approved in all respects” the relief requested in Enron’s bar date motion. Bar Date Order at 2.
Second, while the bar date
order
did not mention the multiple-filing requirement, not only the bar date
notice
but also the
instructions
for filing a proof of claim explicitly required separate claims for different Enron entities — the former in boldface type, the latter in capital letters.
See
Bar Date Notice at 2; Mot. of the Debtors for an Order Pursuant to Bankruptcy Rules 2002(a)(7), 2002(1), and 3003(c)(3) Establishing Deadlines for Filing Proofs of Claim and Approving the Form and Manner of Providing Notice Thereof at 2, Ex. D 3,
In re Enron Corp.,
Third, Midland’s contention that it “mistakenly rel[ied] on the ... anticipated substantive consolidation” of the Enron bankruptcies, Appellant’s Br. at 24, is inconsistent with its claim of inadvertence insofar as it suggests a “conscious, tactical decision” to file a single claim on the basis of what turned out to be an erroneous assumption.
Cf. In re Sacred Heart Hosp. of Norristown,
For the foregoing reasons, we cannot conclude that the bankruptcy court abused its discretion in finding that Midland provided an inadequate explanation for its failure to file a timely claim, and that the “reason for the delay” prong of the Pioneer test therefore favored Enron.
B. Length of the Delay
The bankruptcy court concluded that the six months that elapsed between the bar date and Midland’s attempt to file the late claim constituted a “substantial” delay, noting that the purpose of the bar date order was to “exclude such late claims in order to provide the Debtors and their creditors with finality to the claims process and permit the Debtors to make swift distributions under any confirmed plan of reorganization.”
In re Enron Corp.,
We have previously acknowledged the “essential function” of bar date orders in bankruptcy proceedings.
See In re Hooker Invs., Inc.,
Notwithstanding the centrality of bar dates, however, neither we nor — as far as our research discloses — any other court has established a bright-line rule governing when the lateness of a claim will be considered “substantial.”
But cf. In re O’Brien Envtl. Energy, Inc.,
We agree that the lateness of a claim must be considered in the context of the proceeding as a whole. It stands to reason, for example, that in some circumstances a claim filed six
months
late will be more disruptive to a reorganization process than one filed six
weeks
late. Under other conditions, however, a claim filed six months late will not be disruptive at all— if, for example, the proceeding has come to a temporary halt for other reasons — while one filed six weeks late, while the proceedings are in full swing, will threaten to upset the entire process.
See Linder v. Trump’s Castle Assocs.,
At the same time, we agree with the Third and Seventh Circuits to the extent that their decisions in O’Brien Environmental Energy and Kmart may be taken to suggest that even if the “length of the delay” and extent of disruptiveness are often related, the evaluation of lateness should, at least to some extent, also take into account the creditor’s explanation for the delay. Thus, a long delay (presumably more likely in most circumstances to occasion more disruption) with a strong explanation might be more acceptable than a short delay with a weak explanation — even if both explanations are credible. Similarly, an explanation that a court deems legitimate on its face — and that might suffice for a delay of a few weeks — might nonetheless not suffice for a delay of a few months where increased disruption is likely to result. In both instances, the “reason for the delay” might weigh in favor of the creditor, while the “length of the delay” might weigh in favor of the debtor, simply because the explanation, though legitimate to explain some lateness, does not suffice to explain the degree of lateness. By the same token, where an explanation is nonexistent, or not credible, both the “reason for the delay” and the “length of the delay” factors might weigh in favor of the debtor, even if the delay is, in absolute terms, quite short.
In considering these issues, finally, we are particularly reluctant — absent evident arbitrariness — to substitute our judgment for that of the bankruptcy judge who has presided over the proceedings, who is most familiar with the parties and the potential impact of any late-filed claim, and whose ability to oversee an efficient reorganization would be undermined by the very process of second-guessing itself.
In the instant case, Midland filed its motion to amend on April 24, 2003, Enron’s preliminary reorganization plan was filed on July 11, 2003, and the bankruptcy court rejected Midland’s motion on September 17, 2003. Enron amended its reorganization plan for the first time on September 18, 2003, and the plan was finally confirmed, after a total of five amendments, on July 15, 2004. Midland contends that the late inclusion of its $12.5 million claim would not have disrupted the proceedings because the claim is de min-imis in the context of the vastness of the Enron bankruptcy, and because including it would simply have involved plugging the number into the computer program used to calculate creditor distributions and allowing the program to spit out a result. We find this contention unpersuasive because it ignores the arduous process of valuing assets, validating claims, and negotiating a compromise among a host of creditors.
If Midland’s claim was submitted long before Enron’s final reorganization plan was filed or confirmed, it was nonetheless submitted long after the negotiations required to develop that plan had begun. The bankruptcy court could well have concluded that the negotiations were at a sufficiently advanced stage that the belated introduction of a multimillion-dollar claim would have a disruptive effect.
Cf. In re Am. Classic Voyages Co.,
C. Prejudice
While
Pioneer
itself “gives us little guidance as to what prejudice actually is,”
In re O’Brien Envtl. Energy, Inc.,
Many of these considerations are, of course, the same as those taken into account in evaluating the length of the delay, and indeed, some courts have conflated the two analyses.
See, e.g., In re Am. Classic Voyages Co.,
In evaluating the instant case, the bankruptcy court noted that the late Midland claim was “not substantial in relation to the [Enron] estate” and was filed before Enron and its subsidiaries filed their draft plan of reorganization and disclosure statement.
In re Enron Corp.,
In disputing these findings, Midland argues: (1) that Enron had notice of its claim, and thus could have taken account of it in crafting its reorganization plan, because the claim was listed as “contingent and unliquidated” in a schedule filed as part of Enron’s Schedules of Financial Affairs; (2) that the $12.5 million claim is “outweighed 68,000 to 1” by the other claims in Enron’s $858 billion bankruptcy, Appellant’s Br. at 12, 18; and (3) that the bankruptcy court’s reference to the possible opening of the “floodgates” to claims was “wholly unsupported” by the record, id. at 25. We consider each of these arguments in turn.
First, the schedule in which Midland’s claim was listed was buried in the middle of more than a thousand pages of such claims, and lists the amount of Midland’s claim as “unknown.” To suggest, on this basis, that Midland’s failure to file its proof of claim by the bar date should be absolved because Enron “knew” it was potentially liable to Midland tends to undermine the process of distinguishing between asserted and unasserted claims by requiring creditors to submit proofs of claim in order to participate in the bankruptcy reorganization.
Second, while a claim of $12.5 million might seem insignificant in the face of a $900 billion bankruptcy, courts have previously upheld findings of prejudice in cases in which the late-filed claim was a small fraction of the total claims.
Cf. In re Kmart Corp.,
At the same time, we cannot consider Midland’s claim in isolation. Even if that claim is negligible relative to the total size *132 of Enron’s bankruptcy, the more relevant question is whether allowing one such claim would lead to “a mountain of such claims,” id., which the bankruptcy court, having admitted the first claim, would be hard pressed to reject. Indeed, the significant percentage of Enron-affiliated debtors who received guaranties from the parent company suggests that the pool of potential claimants who, like Midland, have claims against both the subsidiaries and Enron itself as guarantor is quite large.
This, then, brings us to Midland’s third concern: that the bankruptcy court strayed into improper speculation when it considered the possible opening of the “floodgates” to similar claims. 2 Midland contends that this conclusion was speculative because, at the time the court decided its motion, only six other requests for leave to file a late claim had been submitted, compared with a total of more than 28,000 claims on the claims register. Yet, Midland introduced no evidence concerning the number of potential claimants who might have been prompted to file late claims in the wake of a ruling in Midland’s favor. And, as the district court suggested at oral argument, the relative trickle of late-filed claims could well have been the result of the bankruptcy court’s anticipated enforcement of the bar date. See May 19, 2004, Hearing Tr. at 9.
We also think it apparent that the bankruptcy court contemplated the possibility that Midland’s claim was not unique. In this regard, we agree with Enron that it is worth comparing the court’s treatment of Midland’s claim with that of two other creditors: PPC Industries, which filed a $165,000 claim against ENA three-and-a-half months late,
see In re Enron Corp.,
No. 01-16034,
As these decisions suggest, the court’s treatment of other late-filed claims, albeit not carefully explained, indicates that it was willing to recognize and admit those claims where, given its familiarity with the proceeding as a whole, it thought there was a justifiable basis for doing so. Moreover, the record provides ample support for the court’s conclusion that Midland’s claim was sufficiently large and insufficiently distinguishable from other guaranty-based claims that permitting its late *133 filing would be unduly prejudicial to Enron.
IV. Pioneer and the Equitable Test for Late-Amended Claims
In addition to permitting bankruptcy courts to accept
netv
proofs of claim that are filed belatedly as the result of “excusable neglect,” the bankruptcy rules permit courts to accept late-filed
amendments
to timely filed proofs of claim.
See
Fed. R. Bankr.P. 7015 (stating that Fed.R.Civ.P. 15, governing the amendment of pleadings, “applies in adversary proceedings”);
In re Trans World Airlines, Inc.,
[A]mendment to a claim is freely allowed where the purpose is to cure a defect in the claim as originally filed, to describe the claim with greater particularity, or to plead a new theory of recovery on the facts set forth in the original claim. However, the court must subject post bar date amendments to careful scrutiny to assure that there was no attempt to file a new claim under the guise of amendment.
In re Integrated Res., Inc.,
Courts considering amendments to claims typically engage in a two-step inquiry: First, they examine “ ‘whether there was [a] timely assertion of a similar claim or demand evidencing an intention to hold the estate liable.’”
Id.
(quoting
In re Black & Geddes, Inc., 58
B.R. 547, 553 (S.D.N.Y.1983)). An amendment will meet this threshold if it “1) corrects a defect of form in the original claim; 2) describes the original claim with greater particularity; or 3) pleads a new theory of recovery on the facts set forth in the original claim.”
In re McLean Indus., Inc.,
Not surprisingly, as the bankruptcy court in the instant proceeding noted, this equitable analysis of belated
amendments
to claims closely resembles Pioneer’s “excusable neglect” analysis of belated
new
claims.
See In re Enron Corp.,
In the instant case, Midland’s motion before the bankruptcy court was styled as a motion “to amend” its proof of claim against ENA to include its guaranty claim against Enron, though the motion requested “in the alternative” that Midland be permitted to file a new claim against Enron itself.
See
Midland Mot. to Amend at 7. In considering the motion, the court separated its equitable analysis of the proposed amendment from its analysis of “excusable neglect,” notwithstanding its acknowledgment that the two tests were “similar” and commanded the same result.
In re Enron Corp.,
We need not dwell on this question, however. To be sure, there may well be instances in which a claim, considered as an amendment to an earlier-filed claim, might be permitted in a court’s equitable discretion because accepting it is not unduly prejudicial to other parties, even though the same claim, considered as a new claim under Pioneer, might not be permitted because the reason for the delay is not sufficiently compelling. Midland’s, though, is not such a claim. Even assuming that the district court properly determined that the company’s claim against Enron “related back” to its claim against ENA and that it therefore constituted an “amendment,” because the critical factors under both the equitable test applicable to amended claims and the Pioneer test weigh heavily against it, the claim must in any event fail.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we agree with the bankruptcy court that three of the four Pioneer factors favor Enron. We cannot conclude that the bankruptcy court abused its discretion in finding that Midland failed to meet its burden of proving “excusable neglect,” and in rejecting Midland’s late-filed claim on that basis. The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. Judge Learned Hand said of statutes of limitations:
They are often engines of injustice; their justification lies in furnishing an easy and certain method of solving problems which are often intrinsically insoluble, or soluble only with so much uncertainty and after so much trouble that in the long run the game is not worth the candle. Perhaps they are not justifiable at all .... But where they do exist one must be prepared for hard cases, and it is no answer that this is one.
Helvering v. Schine Chain Theaters, Inc.,121 F.2d 948 , 950 (2d Cir.1941).
Silivanch,
. The bankruptcy court's opinion suggests that it considered this factor only in relation to the equitable test for amending claims, see infra part IV, and not necessarily with respect to the prejudice analysis under Pioneer. Accordingly, even if the court’s "floodgate” analysis was unduly speculative, it is not clear that such an error would be relevant to this appeal. Still, we consider the issue to the extent the "floodgate” concern might have implicitly affected the court's prejudice analysis, and because, as we have indicated, courts in this and other Circuits regularly cite the potential “flood” of similar claims as a basis for rejecting late-filed claims.
