OPINION
Plаintiff Donald F. Harker, Trustee of Troutman Enterprises, Inc., appeals the decision of the bankruptcy appellate panel awarding life insurance proceeds to the intervenors Rufus Troutman, Terry Trout-man and Lester Troutman, sharehоlders of the reorganized Troutman Enterprises, Inc. Because we find that the Shareholders lacked standing to appeal the decision of *362 the bankruptcy court, we vacate the decision of the bankruptcy appellatе panel and affirm the judgment of the bankruptcy court. We deny the motion of the reorganized Troutman Enterprises to intervene as untimely.
I.
On July 11,1986, Troutman Enterprises, Inc. purchased a $600,000 life insurance policy on Larry Troutman, a shareholder and оfficer of Troutman Enterprises. The policy named Troutman Enterprises as owner and beneficiary.
Troutman Enterprises filed for bankruptcy protection on April 23,1992 and the bankruptcy court confirmed its amended joint plan of reorganization on September 1, 1993. Troutman Enterprises did not disclose the insurance policy in its initial disclosure schedules, the amended plan of reorganization, or at any time during Chapter 11 proceedings.
On October 30, 1995, the Internal Revenue Service moved to convert Troutman Enterprises’s Chapter 11 case to a Chapter 7 case pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1112(b). None of Troutman Enterprises’s creditors objected to this motion, and on January 4, 1996, the case was converted and Donald Harker was appointed Trustee of Trout-man Enterprises. Shortly thereafter, the reorganized Troutman Enterprises, without notifying the Trustee, purported to transfer ownership of the policy. Trout-man Enterprises remained the sole beneficiary of the policy.
Approximately three weeks after Larry Troutman’s death in 1999, the reorganized Troutman Enterprises filed an amended schedule disclosing its interest in the life insurance policy. Following this disclosure, the Trustee instituted an adversary proсeeding against Nationwide Life Insurance Company, the issuer of the policy, seeking turnover of the life insurance proceeds. After Nationwide interpleaded the proceeds and was dismissed from the case, the Shareholders moved to intervene as third-party defendants. In an agreed order, dated July 26, 1999, the Trustee consented to the Shareholders’s intervention application.
The Shareholders asserted entitlement to the insurance proceeds and moved for dismissal of the Trustee’s complaint for failure to state a claim, or in the alternative, for summary judgment. In response to the Shareholders’s motion, the Trustee (1) contested the Shareholders’s standing; (2) argued the insurance policy never vested in the reorganized Troutman Enterprises; and (3) asserted that judicial estoppel barred their claim to the insurance proceeds. The bankruptcy court granted the Trustee’s complaint for turnover, reasoning that Troutman Enterprisеs’s failure to disclose the insurance policy during Chapter 11 proceedings estopped its Shareholders’s claim to the insurance proceeds.
Harker v. Troutman (In re Troutman Enters., Inc.),
Addressing the standing issue, the bankruptcy appellate panel concluded the Shаreholders “have standing because as shareholders of the reorganized debtor they may have some interest in the proceeds of the Policy.”
Harker v. Troutman (In re Troutman Enters., Inc.),
In a separate bankruptcy proceeding not currently before this Cоurt, creditors of the reorganized Troutman Enterprises sought an involuntary Chapter 7 petition against the reorganized Troutman Enter
*363
prises. The bankruptcy court dismissed this petition, reasoning that the creditors could not assert any claims against the reorganized Troutman Enterprises, but could only pursue recovery in the pending Chapter 7 case.
In re Troutman Enters., Inc.,
In February of 2001, the reorganized Troutman Enterprises moved to intervene in this action, asserting that its interests might not be adequately protected by the Shareholders. Thereafter, John Paul Rieser was appointed as Trustee for thе reorganized Troutman Enterprises and on November 1, 2001, moved to substitute for the reorganized Troutman Enterprises.
II.
In reviewing bankruptcy decisions, we review the judgment of the bankruptcy court directly.
Canadian Pac. Forest Prods. Ltd. v. J.D. Irving, Ltd. (In re The Gibson Group, Inc.),
A.
Challenging the Shareholders’s participation in this case, the Trustee first argues the Shareholders cannot satisfy intervention requirements. In order to intervene as of a right under Rule 24 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, a party must show (1) their motion to intervene was timely; (2) a substantial, legal interest in the subject matter of the case; (3) their ability to protect that interest may be impaired without intervention; and (4) the pаrties before the court may not adequately represent their interest.
Grutter v. Bollinger,
Intervention is a procedural hurdle, rather than a jurisdictional requirement, and as such, can be waived.
See Transamerica Ins. Co. v. South,
B.
The Trustee’s waiver of his intervention objeсtion does not end our inquiry.
United States v. AVX Corp.,
Appellate standing in bankruptcy cases is more limited than Article III standing or the prudential requirements associated therewith.
In re PWS Holding Corp.,
Under ordinary prudential standing limitations, litigants must normally assert their own rights, rather than those of third parties.
Singleton v. Wulff,
Bankruptcy proceedings regularly involve numerous parties, each of whom might find it personally expedient to assert the rights of another party even though that other party is present.... In this context, the courts have been understandably skeptical of the litigant’s motives and have often denied standing as to any claim that asserts only third-party rights.
Johns-Manville, Inc.,
Associated with the рrohibition on third-party standing is the so-called shareholder standing rule, the “longstanding equitable restriction that generally prohibits shareholders from initiating actions to enforce the rights of the corporation unless the corporation’s manаgement has refused to pursue the same action for reasons other than good-faith business judgment.”
Franchise Tax Bd. of Calif. v. Alcan Aluminium Ltd.
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In the bankruptcy context, courts have relied on the shareholder standing rule in holding that shareholders could not appeal a bankruptcy court decision where they asserted only a derivative interest.
Pignato v. Dein Host, Inc. (In re Dein Host, Inc.),
In this casе, the Shareholders cannot assert any personal or direct interest in the proceeds of the life insurance policy on Larry Troutman. The record indicates that Troutman Enterprises is both policy owner and beneficiary. Even if we were to recognize the purported transfer of policy ownership, the Shareholders would still lack a personal or direct interest in the policy. Without a direct interest in the life insurance policy, the Shareholders cannot invoke the exception to the shareholder standing rulé. Therefore, we find that the Shareholders did not have standing to appeal the bankruptcy court’s decision.
III.
The final issue we must address is the reorganized Troutman Enterprises’s motion for intervention. At a minimum, a motion for intervention must be timely.
Grutter,
In the case at hand, the reorganized Troutman Enterprises waited a year and a half to pursue intervention, and then only after the bankruptcy courts rendered two decisions. Its purported justification, a belief that until rеcently, its Shareholders adequately represented its interests, does not withstand scrutiny. The Trustee began contesting the Shareholders’s standing in October of 1999, thereby notifying the reorganized Troutman Enterprises’s of the possibility that its Shareholders might not be аble to adequately protect its interests. Although this case contains some unusual circumstances, they do not excuse the reorganized Troutman Enterprises’s untimely motion for intervention. Therefore, we deny the motion for intervention.
IV.
Because we find that the Shareholders lacked standing to appeal the bankruptcy court’s decision, we do not reach the substantive issues addressed by the bankruptcy courts below — the effect of post-confirmation conversion, the application of judicial estoppel to remedy debtor nondisclosure and, perhaps most importantly, who would be entitled to how much of the life insurance policy proceeds. We therefore vacate the decision of the bankruptcy *366 appellate panel and affirm the judgment of the bankruptcy court.
