Before us is a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction an appeal from a judgment by the district court remanding a case to the bankruptcy court for further findings. We asked the parties to brief the issue of our appellate jurisdiction. The appellant’s brief cites cases from other circuits that might be thought to support appellate jurisdiction in a case such as this, but neglects to cite any case from this circuit — though our cases, as the cases the appellant does cite make clear, rule out such jurisdiction.
We write to reiterate this circuit’s ppsition but also to invite the Supreme Court’s attention to a persistent circuit split that only the Supreme Court can heal. In a series of cases beginning with
In re Riggsby,
Our position is not idiosyncratic. Indeed, it is followed in at least eight of the other circuits. See
In re Gould & Eberhardt Gear Machinery Corp.,
Two circuits clearly (the Third and the Ninth), and one possibly (the Sixth), allow an appeal from an order by the district court remanding the ease to the bankruptcy court if on balance the goal of an expeditious winding up of the bankruptcy proceeding will be furthered by allowing an immediate appeal. See
In re Marin Motor Oil, Inc.,
Slightly more difficult are cases in which the district court, on appeal from the bankruptcy court, resolves the status of a creditor’s claim, but no judgment is entered. For example, the trustee may have contested the claim and the court have resolved the contest in the creditor’s favor; so his claim has been ' allowed, but how much of it he will be able to collect will depend on the number and priority of other claims and the value of the debt- or’s estate. An immediate appeal is allowed nonetheless, e.g.,
In re Riggsby, supra,
None of
those
cases, in which an appeal is allowed before the bankruptcy proceeding has ended, is a precedent for allowing an appeal in this ease. The minority rule, which allows an immediate appeal nevertheless upon a balancing of the pros and cons of relaxing the requirement of finality— a standard so loose that it might conceivably allow an immediate appeal in the present case — amounts to the assumption by a court of appeals of a discretionary authority to allow an interlocutory appeal in bankruptcy when, all things considered, such an appeal would be consistent with sound administration of the bankruptcy laws. This is plain from the formulation in
In re Bonner Mall Partnership, supra,
There are also compelling practical objections to the rule. It is
terribly
woolly, as the quotation from the
Bonner Mall
opinion will have illustrated. The Third Circuit’s formulation is no more precise: it involves “balancing a general reluctance to expand traditional interpretations regarding finality and a desire to effectuate a practical termination of the matter before us. Factors to evaluate in this weighing process are the impact upon the assets of the bankrupt estate, the necessity for further factfinding on remand, the preclusive effect of our decision on the merits on further litigation, and whether the interest of judicial economy would be furthered.”
In re Meyertech Corp., supra,
Dismissed.
