We are asked to decide in what circumstances a trustee in bankruptcy may be sued in state court for actions that he, undertook in his role as trustee. Betty Lasiter filed a voluntary petition for bankruptcy under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code in the bankruptcy court in Indianapolis in 1993, and the court appointed Paul Gresk as trustee. Shortly after his appointment he filed an adversary action against Lasiter, her sons, and Richard Scharpf, claiming that a chain of transactions in which Lasiter had in 1989 sold her home to a trust for the sons and leased it back from the trust to live in, and *545 had three years later married Scharpf who shortly afterward bought the home from the trust, constituted a fraudulent conveyance. The trustee hoped by the adversary action to recover the house for the debtor’s estate. In 1994, however, he dropped the action. The bankruptcy proceeding was closed in June of the following year.
Eleven months later, Lasiter and Scharpf moved the bankruptcy court for leave to file a suit for malicious prosecution against Gresk in an Indiana state court, contending that Gresk had known from the outset that the adversary proceeding had no merit. Lasiter and Scharpf had already filed the suit, without waiting for leave to do so from the bankruptcy court; it has lain dormant pending final action on the motion for leave. The bankruptcy court denied the motion, the district court affirmed, and Lasiter and Scharpf appeal to us, arguing that leave to file is not required when the bankruptcy proceeding has ended, because then creditors can’t be affected by the suit, but that if leave is required the bankruptcy court should have granted it.
The Bankruptcy Code nowhere states that someone wanting to sue a trustee in bankruptcy concerning actions taken by him in the course of his trusteeship must obtain the permission of the bankruptcy court. The requirement is assumed, however, in a provision of the Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C. § 959(a); see
Thompson v. Texas Mexican Ry.,
This concern is most acute when suit is brought against the trustee while the bankruptcy proceeding is still going on. The threat of his being distracted or intimidated is then very great, and some of the cases we have cited stress this. In this case, the suit and the motion for leave to file it came after the bankruptcy had been wound up. We cannot find any federal appellate court rulings on whether leave is required in such a case. But we think that it is. Without the requirement, trusteeship will become a more irksome duty, and so it will be harder for courts to find competent people to appoint as trustees. Trustees will have to pay higher malpractice premiums, and this will make the administration of the bankruptcy laws more expensive (and the expense of bankruptcy is already a source of considerable concern). Furthermore, requiring that leave to sue be sought enables bankruptcy judges to monitor the work of the trustees more effectively. It does this by compelling suits growing out of that work to be as it were prefiled before the bankruptcy judge that made the appointment; this helps the judge decide whether to approve this trustee in a subsequent case.
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Yet these reasons alone might not be sufficient to warrant the extension (if that is how it should be regarded) of the leave-to-file requirement to suits filed after the winding up of the bankruptcy. For we are mindful of the Supreme Court’s refusal in
Ferri v. Ackerman,
Of course principles of res judicata and the good faith of state courts would head off the worst consequences of the kind of divided jurisdiction over bankruptcy matters that we have just described. But a simpler and more secure protection is to require the person wanting to bring a suit in state court against a trustee in bankruptcy to obtain leave to do so from the bankruptcy court. We can draw an analogy between federal officers and bankruptcy trustees, and hence between the federal officers’ removal statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1442; see
Arizona v. Manypenny,
We need not consider what remedies the trustee might have if, as indeed happened in this case, the suit is brought in state court without the plaintiffs seeking the leave of the bankruptcy court, or after that leave is denied. Of course the trustee could move the state court to dismiss the suit, or to stay it until the necessary leave was obtained; and such a motion presumably would be granted. A more interesting question is whether he could obtain an injunction from the bankruptcy court directing the plaintiff in the state court action to dismiss the suit. A bankruptcy proceeding can be reopened for cause, 11 U.S.C. § 350(b), by “the debtor or other party in interest.” Bankr. R. 5010. The term “party in interest” is not defined, but is generally held to include the trustee.
In re Winebrenner,
The remaining question is whether the bankruptcy judge abused his discretion (which is the standard governing our review of such a ruling,
In re Beck Industries, Inc., supra,
The bankruptcy judge was satisfied that there was probable cause here. It is true that the original transaction, in which Lasiter sold her home to a trust of which her son was the trustee and leased it back from the trust to live in, occurred four years before she declared bankruptcy and we may assume was motivated by the tax reasons that she gave for the transaction. But the reason for the trust’s sale of the house to her husband is not illuminated by the record, and looking at the series of transactions as a whole the trustee could reasonably suspect that the beneficial ownership of the home had either remained with Lasiter all the time or had been revested in her by the sale nominally to her husband. Such a chain of transfers was bound ■ to cause a light bulb to flash in a receiver’s or bankruptcy trustee’s brain. The trustee might well have been thought derelict not to pursue the claim of fraudulent conveyance to the extent that he did. The fact that he couldn’t substantiate his suspicions did not retroactively remove his probable cause to sue. In these circumstances, the suit by Lasiter and her husband for malicious prosecution was doomed and leave to file the suit in state court was rightly denied.
Affirmed.
