The question presented on appeal is whether the bankruptcy court properly enjoined a state-law based “successor product-line liability” action in an Alaska court against an entity which had acquired a corporate chapter 11 debtor’s assets by purchase and subject to an explicit disclaimer of liability on all unfiled claims relating to products manufactured by the chapter 11 debtor. On intermediate appeal, the district court vacated the injunction. As we conclude that in-junctive relief-was improvidently granted, we affirm the district court order.
*717 I
BACKGROUND
A. The “Successor Liability” Claim
In February 1988, Savage Industries, Ine. (“Debtor Industries”), a Massachusetts firearms manufacturer, commenced voluntary chapter 11 proceedings in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Massachusetts and obtained authorization to operate its business as a debtor in possession. One month later, appellant Savage Arms, Inc. (“Arms”) was incorporated. In May 1989, Debtor Industries submitted a proposal to sell substantially all its corporate assets to Arms’. 1 The bankruptcy court approved the proposed sale in July 1989. Although the court order prescribed safeguards for interests held by objecting creditors, it neither required court approval of the asset-transfer terms subsequently negotiated between Debt- or Industries and Arms, nor made provision for the interests of holders of contingent product liability claims against Debtor Industries. 2
On November 1, 1989, Debtor Industries' and Arms closed their asset transfer agreement, wherein Arms assumed liability for certain pending product liability claims against Debtor Industries, but explicitly disclaimed all liability for any other product liability claims relating to firearms manufactured by Debtor Industries prior to the closing date. 3 Debtor Industries ceased to operate immediately after the asset transfer was consummated. Thereupon, without interruption, Arms took up the manufacture of the identical lines of firearms previously produced by Debtor Industries.
Meanwhile, in May 1989, shortly before Debtor Industries submitted its proposal to transfer its assets to Arms, Kevin Taylor had been injured by a “Stevens” .22 caliber firearm manufactured by Debtor Industries. One year after the chapter 11 asset transfer was consummated, Taylor brought a products liability action against Debtor Industries in an Alaska state court. Later, Western Auto Supply Company (‘Western Auto”), the retad distributor which sold Taylor the allegedly defective firearm, was added as a party defendant. Although Taylor did not name Arms as a defendant, in due course Western Auto filed a third-party complaint alleging that Arms had incurred “successor product-line liability” under Alaska law by continuing to manufacture the identical firearms theretofore manufactured by Debtor Industries. Western Auto demanded either indemnification or an apportionment of damages from Arms as successor to Debtor Industries. 4
*718 In June 1991, the bankruptcy court confirmed the chapter 11 liquidation plan, which made no provision for contingent product liability claims disclaimed by Arms under its November 1989 asset transfer agreement with Debtor Industries. The asset-transfer proceeds began to be disbursed under the confirmed chapter 11 plan in February 1992.
Thereafter, Arms commenced this adversary proceeding against Western Auto in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Massachusetts, requesting declaratory and injunctive relief against further prosecution of Western Auto’s third-party complaint in Alaska state court. Arms asserted that it acquired Debtor Industries’ assets “free and clear” of all product liability claims against Debtor Industries, except those disclosed to Arms by Debtor Industries prior to the chapter 11 asset transfer. See supra notes 2 & 3.
B. The Injunction
Notwithstanding the contention that it lacked jurisdiction once the asset transfer had been consummated, the bankruptcy court enjoined further prosecution of Western Auto’s third-party action against Arms in Alaska state court. The bankruptcy court concluded that it retained the requisite jurisdiction to enjoin any hostile “claim” which contravened the terms of the asset transfer agreement approved by the bankruptcy court in the pending chapter 11 proceeding.
Savage Arms, Inc. v. Taylor (In re Savage Arms, Inc.),
No. 88-40046-JFQ, slip op. at 4-5 (Bankr.D.Mass. Oct. 5, 1992).
But cf. Mooney Aircraft v. Foster (In re Mooney Aircraft),
The bankruptcy court reasoned that — even assuming Alaska were to adopt a common law “successor product-line liability” doctrine,
see, e.g., Dawejko v. Jorgensen Steel Co.,
Western Auto took an intermediate appeal to the district court, which concluded that the bankruptcy court lacked jurisdiction to enjoin prosecution of the Alaska state court action. This appeal followed. 6
II
DISCUSSION
The bankruptcy court reasoned that the requisite jurisdiction to enjoin further prosecution of the state court “successor liability” action summoned from its power to enforce its own order approving the all-assets transfer, 7 in furtherance of two fundamental Bankruptcy Code themes: the Code priority scheme and maximization of creditor recoveries. For the reasons hereinafter discussed, we believe the rationale undergirding the bankruptcy court decision is flawed. 8
*720 A. The Code Priority Scheme
The bankruptcy court expressed concern that unless such successor liability actions are enjoined, claimants will be eneour7 aged to forego their chapter 11 remedies in favor of the more lucrative state-court recoveries conceivably available against the chapter 11 debtor’s successor.
We believe this concern to be unwarranted. For one thing, it is more illusory than real, given the nature of the successor product-line liability doctrine itself. '
See supra
note 4. As a general rule, a successor to the chapter 11 debtor would be absolved of strict tort liability if the claimant failed to pursue any available chapter 11 remedy.
See, e.g., Conway v. White Trucks,
Notice is the cornerstone underpinning Bankruptcy Code procedure. Under the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978 — in a, deliberate departure from its forerunners— virtually all administrative responsibilities were removed from the bankruptcy judge.
See, e.g., In re Sullivan Ford Sales,
*721
Bankruptcy Code § 102(1) is founded in fundamental notions of procedural due process.
See In re Center Wholesale Inc.,
Thus, even assuming that the Western Auto successor liability claim constituted an “interest” in the Debtor Industries chapter 11 assets transferred to Arms and that it would be extinguishable under section 363(f) “after notice and a hearing,” Bankruptcy Code § 102(1), 11 U.S.C. § 102(1);
but cf. Zerand-Bernal Group v. Cox,
Anns concedes that Debtor Industries never attempted notice to retailers or wholesalers of firearms manufactured by Debtor Industries. Arms now argues that direct notification would have entailed exorbitant financial and logistical burdens unwarranted in the circumstances. There is no suggestion, however, that either the identity or the whereabouts of large-volume firearms distributors like Western Auto did not appear in Debtor Industries’ business records as wholesalers or retailers of its firearms. Furthermore, the asset transfer agreement itself disclosed that forty-four product liability claims were pending in the chapter 11 proceedings against Debtor Industries by the time the asset transfer was consummated,
see supra
note 3, which strongly suggests that Debtor Industries may have been on notice that certain types of firearms (hence, particular distributors) may have been prominent candidates for future indemnification claims. These unresolved factual determinations were for the bankruptcy court, had the parties to the all-asset transfer alerted the court to their intention to negotiate the “free and clear” transfer term at issue here. Even assuming direct notice were proven impracticable, however, Debtor Industries concededly made no attempt to provide notice by publication,
see
Fed.R.Bankr.P. 2002(k);
Novak v. Callahan (In re GAC Corp.),
As it was never determined “appropriate in the particular circumstances” for Debtor Industries and Arms to dispense with all notice and opportunity to be heard on the part of potential claimants like Taylor and Western Auto, it would border on the bizarre to conclude that the third-party complaint Western Auto filed against Arms in Alaska state court threatened disruption to any legitimate function served by the Bankruptcy Code priority scheme which Debtor Industries and Arms subverted in their private negotiation of the asset transfer agreement. Furthermore, it cannot seriously be questioned that the central “notice and hearing” requirement prescribed by the Bankruptcy Code would be eviscerated were we to presume, as Arms belatedly suggests, that an entire class of future product liability claimants was beyond the purview of “such notice ... and such opportunity for a hearing as [was] appropriate in the particular circumstances ...,” Bankruptcy Code § 102(1)(A), 11 U.S.C. § 102(1)(A).
B. “Chilling” Future Chapter 11 Liquidation Sales
As an additional basis for injunctive relief, the bankruptcy court expressed the concern that permitting state-court successor liability actions to proceed would “chill” chapter 11 asset bidding because all-asset transfers “free and clear” would be seen as unenforceable against similarly situated product liability claimants. Once again we must disagree.
We are satisfied that this largely illusory concern is entirely of the parties’ own making, brought on by their mutual arrangement for effecting an all-asset transfer without regard to basic Bankruptcy Code notice requirements. Thus, even assuming that state-law based successor product-line liability claims may be barred through recourse to Bankruptcy Code § 363®,
but see Zerand-Bernal Group,
The failure to afford appropriate notice pursuant to Bankruptcy Code § 102(1) and to obtain bankruptcy court approval of the asset transfer agreement terms privately negotiated between Debtor Industries and Arms precluded a legitimate basis for enjoining the Alaska state court action.
See In re Federal Shopping Way,
Ill
CONCLUSION
We express no view as to whether Bankruptcy Code § 363(f) enables the ex-tinguishment of state-law based successor “produet-line” liability claims.
But see Zerand-Bernal Group,
The district court order vacating the bankruptcy court injunction is affirmed; costs to defendant-appellee.
Notes
. The assets included all Debtor Industries' real estate, manufacturing equipment, leases, contracts, corporate records, patents, trademarks, cash, accounts receivable, and inventory. The assets were sold subject to all liens.
. The order approving the sale provided as follows:
ORDERED, that [DEBTOR] INDUSTRIES ... is hereby authorized to enter into and conclude within sixty (60) days of this Order becoming final and non-appealable a Definitive Agreement (the “Agreement”) with SAVAGE ARMS, INC. ("Purchaser”) providing for the sale and transfer of its real property and certain of its tangible and intangible assets to Purchaser and the assumption by Purchaser of certain secured and priority liabilities as set forth in this Order....
. Section 2(b) of the Asset Transfer Agreement states, in pertinent part:
Arms does not assume, and [Debtor Industries] shall pay, perform and discharge:
(iv) any liability of obligation resulting from or arising out of claims for personal injury or property damage based on the malfunction or failure of any product manufactured or distributed, in whole or in part, by [Debtor Industries], arising out of any act, omission, event, occurrence or circumstance that existed on or before Closing, except to the extent expressly set forth in Schedule 2 or Section 4(f) hereof....
Debtor Industries warranted, in Section 6(e), that only 44 product liability claims were pending at the time of the asset transfer. In Section 4(f), Arms conditioned its purchase agreement on the bankruptcy court’s estimate that 24 pending- prepetition product liability claims against Debtor Industries did not exceed $400,000 in aggregate value.
.As a general-rule, a corporation which acquires another corporate entity’s assets does not assume the seller's liabilities unless (1) the buyer expressly assumes those liabilities; (2) the transaction constitutes a merger or consolidation; (3) the buyer is a mere extension of the seller; or (4) the transaction amounts to a fraudulent or collusive
*718
attempt to avoid the seller’s liabilities.
See Conway v. White Trucks,
A three-part policy underlies the "product-line” liability doctrine: (1) such all-asset acquisitions virtually eliminate the tort plaintiff's remedies against the seller; which usually dissolves after the sale; (2) the buyer becomes the most efficient conduit for effecting the cost-spreading policy at the root of strict tort liability; and (3) fairness demands that the buyer — the party enjoying the economic benefits of its predecessor’s good will — bear the initial financial burden of its predecessor's contingent product liability.
Id.
at 579-80,
. Section 363(f) provides:
(f) The trustee may sell property under subsection (b) or (c) of this section free and clear of *719 any interest in such property of an entity other than the estate, only if—
(1) applicable nonbankruptcy law permits sale of such property free and clear of such interest;
(2) such entity consents;
(3) such interest is a lien and the price at which such property is to be sold is greater than the aggregate value of all liens on such property;
(4) such interest is in bona fide dispute; or
(5) such entity could be compelled, in a legal or equitable proceeding, to accept a money satisfaction of such interest.
Bankruptcy Code § 363(f), 11 U.S.C. § 363(f).
. After the district court decision, but prior to oral argument in this appeal, the Alaska court severed the Taylor claim against Western Auto from the third-party "successor liability” claim against Arms, allowing the former to proceed to trial. Judgment eventually entered for Western Auto. Although it is not known whether Taylor appealed the adverse state court judgment, failure to do so would not moot the present appeal since Western Auto represents that it will seek indemnification for its
litigation costs
from Arms, based on its "successor liability” theory.
See, e.g., Anderson v. United States Dep’t of Health and Human Servs.,
. Even though the bankruptcy court did not do so, Arms has devoted considerable attention to the precise statutory source of the bankruptcy court's "jurisdiction” to enjoin prosecution of the Alaska state court action.
See, e.g.,
28 U.S.C. §§ 157(a), 1334; Bankruptcy Code § 105(a), 11 U.S.C. § 105(a). Further, Arms suggests that it may opt to rescind the chapter 11 asset transfer if found liable as Debtor Industries' "successor.”
But see Zerand-Bernal Group v. Cox,
."[We] undertaken an independent review of the bankruptcy court order, utilizing the same appellate standards governing the district court review."
LaRoche v. Amoskeag Bank (In re LaRoche),
. The Code "notice" requirements have even greater force in a case like the present, where the order approving the proposed sale authorized a transfer of
substantially all
chapter 11 éstate assets — for present purposes, the functional equivalent of an order confirming a conventional chapter 11 reorganization plan. As such, the order confirming a chapter.il liquidation sale warrants especial bankruptcy court scrutiny.
See In re Abbotts Dairies,
. The procedures utilized below differed markedly from those employed in the cases cited by the bankruptcy court.
See, e.g., Paris,
