This appeal involves a challenge by appellant Rosalyn Fondiller to an order of the bankruptcy court. Appellant’s husband, Harry Fondiller, is a debtor in proceedings brought under chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978. The order appealed from authorized the employment of the law firm of Gendel, Raskoff, Shapiro & Quitt-ner as special counsel to the bankruptcy trustee. Both appellant and the debtor appealed the bankruptcy court’s order to the United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panels of the Ninth Circuit. That court affirmed.
In re Fondiller,
*442 I.
FACTS
Appellant is the wife of Harry Fondiller (debtor), a debtor under chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978 (the Code). Arnold Quittner (and the law firm of Gen-del, Raskoff, Shapiro and Quittner) represents several of debtor’s creditors. While representing his clients in the previously filed bankruptcy of Holosonics, Inc., a company in which debtor was a principal, Quitt-ner engaged in an extensive investigation regarding concealed assets and fraudulent conveyances in which debtor and appellant allegedly were involved. Debtor and appellant each have pending suits in state court that allege abuses on the part of Quittner and Quittner’s clients in the conduct of that investigation.
The trustee in the present bankruptcy case requested authority from the bankruptcy court to employ Quittner and the Quittner firm as special counsel for the specific purpose of continuing to investigate and attempting to recover any assets concealed or fraudulently conveyed. The creditors’ committee approved Quittner’s employment; only debtor and appellant objected. Appellant’s objection was and continues to be that Quittner is ineligible for employment by the trustee because he holds an “interest adverse to the estate,” in contravention of section 327(a) and (c) of the Code. Because of appellant’s lack of standing, we do not address the merits of her complaint.
II.
DISCUSSION
Only those persons who are directly and adversely affected pecuniarily by an order of the bankruptcy court have been held to have standing to appeal that order.
Hartman Corp. of America v. United States,
*443 This rule of appellate standing, the so-called “person aggrieved” test, derives from section 39c of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898, which permitted appeal by a “person aggrieved by an order of a referee.” 11 U.S.C. § 67(c) (1976) (repealed 1978). It exists to fill the need for an explicit limitation on standing to appeal in bankruptcy proceedings. This need springs from the nature of bankruptcy litigation which almost always involves the interests of persons who are not formally parties to the litigation. In the course of administration of the bankruptcy estate disputes arise in which numerous persons are to some degree interested. Efficient judicial administration requires that appellate review be limited to those persons whose interests are directly affected.
There is no statutory provision comparable to section 39c in the 1978 Code. This omission, however, does not mean that the “person aggrieved” test is no longer valid. The need for the rule continues to exist.
See
Levin,
Bankruptcy Appeals,
58 N.C.L.Rev. 967,975-79 (1980). And there is no evidence that Congress intended to alter the right to appellate review by leaving undefined in the Code the requisites for standing.
In re Goodwin's Discount Furniture, Inc.,
At least two courts have expressly applied pre-Code standing-to-appeal law to appeals under the Code.
See In re Goodwin’s Discount Furniture, Inc.,
Our review of the record shows that the order appointing Quittner as special counsel has no direct and immediate impact on appellant’s pecuniary interests. The order authorized Quittner’s employment for the ex-elusive purpose of representing the trustee in an attempt to recover assets allegedly concealed by appellant and the debtor. Thus, appellant’s only demonstrable interest in the order is as a potential party defendant in an adversary proceeding. As such, she is not a “person aggrieved” by Quitt-ner’s appointment.
See Rogers v. Bank of America,
APPEAL DISMISSED,
Notes
. Courts of appeals do not have jurisdiction to consider an appeal from a decision of the bankruptcy appellate panel reviewing a bankruptcy court’s
interlocutory
order.
In re Rubin,
A final order is one “which finally determines the rights of parties to secure in that suit the relief they seek.”
In re Merle’s Inc.,
There is an exception to the finality of judgment rule. Review of an interlocutory order is available under the principles of
Cohen
v.
Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp.,
The order appealed from in this case is very likely reviewable on appeal from final judgment. Appellant can assert any claim with respect to which she might have standing by appealing any final order of the bankruptcy court in which Quittner’s allegedly improper participation has tainted the proceedings. The order probably is unreviewable also under the first prong of the Cohen test. The bankruptcy court is free to reassess Quittner’s eligibility for employment at any time. Thus, the order authorizing Quittner’s employment may not be eligible for immediate review.
