Plaintiff-appellant challenges a district court order affirming a bankruptcy court order that denied approval of a proposed settlement and release agreement between plaintiff-appellant and an estate in bankruptcy. Because the district court order is interlocutory rather than final, we have no jurisdiction over this case. Appeal DISMISSED.
I. BACKGROUND
Debtor F.D.R. Hickory House, Inc. (“Hickory House”) was incorporated for the purpose of acquiring a number of restaurants from defendants-appellees Snookies, Inc., et al. (“Snookies”). Following the sale, Snook-ies filed suit in state court and alleged fraud and criminal conversion against a number of parties, including Hickory House and plaintiff-appellant Bryan Lockwood, who was an officer and a principal of Hickory House. The state court ruled for Snookies and held that Hickory House, Lockwood, and the other named defendants were jointly and severally Hable for approximately $16,000,000 in costs and damages.
After entry of the judgment, Lockwood and the trustee for Hickory House signed a proposed settlement and release agreement, under which Lockwood agreed to pay Hickory House $7,650 in full and final settlement of all of Hickory House’s potential claims against Lockwood. The bankruptcy court refused to approve the proposed settlement and release agreement because it would have abrogated claims that were not property of the Hickory House estate. The district court affirmed following the same rationale. Lockwood appeals from the district court’s affir-mance.
II. DISCUSSION
Although a district court, at its discretion, may review interlocutory judgments and orders of a bankruptcy court, see 28 U.S.C. § 158(a), a court of appeals has jurisdiction over only final judgments and orders
Notwithstanding the lack of finality of an order, we still may review it if the order falls within one of three recognized exceptions to the final judgment rule. First, the collateral order doctrine permits us to review interlocutory orders that “(1) finally determine a claim separate and independent from the other claims in the action; (2) cannot be reviewed after the final judgment because by then effective review will be precluded and rights conferred will be lost; and (3) are too important to be denied review because they present a significant and unresolved question of law.” Parklane Hosiery Co. v. Parklane/Atlanta Venture (In re Parklane/Atlanta Joint Venture),
The district court refused to approve the proposed settlement and release agreement because it would have affected the rights of Snookies; not only would the proposed settlement and release agreement have settled Hickory House’s claims against Lockwood, but also it would have enjoined all parties to the earlier state court action from enforcing that judgment against Lockwood. Thus, the issues addressed by the district court order are not separate and independent from the other claims in the bankruptcy proceeding. Additionally, there is no indication that immediate review is necessary to preserve the rights of either Lockwood or Hickory House. Hickory House’s claims against Lockwood will not be lost if they are settled or adjudicated after a final judgment in the bankruptcy proceedings, and postponing a transfer of $7,650 from Lockwood to Hickory House should not irreparably harm either party. Finally, the appeal from the order presents no significant, unresolved questions of law. We, therefore, cannot review the district court order under the collateral order exception.
This circuit also recognizes the doctrine of practical finality, or the Forgay-Conrad rule, which permits a court to review an interlocutory order that
decides the right to the property in contest, and directs it to be delivered up by the defendant to the complainant, or directs it to be sold, or directs the defendant to pay a certain sum of money to the complainant, and the complainant is entitled to have such decree carried immediately into execution.
In the third and “most extreme,” id., exception to the final judgment rule, we will review immediately “even an order of marginal finality ... if the question presented is fundamental to further conduct of the case.” Atlantic Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n,
III. CONCLUSION
Lockwood challenges the district court’s affirmance of a bankruptcy court order that rejected a proposed settlement and release agreement between Lockwood and Hickory House. Because the district court order is not a final judgment and because the order does not fall within any of the three exceptions to the final judgment rule recognized in this circuit, we lack jurisdiction to review the order. Accordingly, this appeal is DISMISSED.
Notes
. See TCL Investors v. Brookside Sav. & Loan Ass'n (In re TCL Investors),
. Enacted as part of the Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgeship Act of 1984, section 158(d) replaced 28 U.S.C. § 1293 (repealed 1984), which previously had governed court of appeals jurisdiction over bankruptcy cases. See In re TCL Investors, 775 F.2d at 1518; City Nat’l Bank v. General Coffee Corp. (In re General Coffee Corp.),
. In this respect, an order rejecting a proposed settlement and release agreement is analogous to an order denying summary judgment, which we have held is interlocutory, and, thus, not appeal-able. Smith v. First Nat'l Bank (In re Smith),
. Neither the bankruptcy court nor the district court challenged this assessment; both courts rejected the proposed settlement and release agreement because it impermissibly limited the rights of Snookies. In any case, this court can only accept or reject the proposed settlement and release agreement. We cannot appraise independently Hickory House's claims against Lockwood and impose the resulting "agreement” upon the parties, nor can we remand the case to the district court for such a determination. Thus, to the extent that the resolution of the Hickory House estate depends upon an exact valuation of Hickory House's claims against Lockwood, this is a matter properly left to future adjudication, which the bankruptcy court order invites.
