Donald Nangle appeals from the order of the bankruptcy court 1 which approved a settlement between his trustee and his wife, Jeanne Nangle, settling a complaint to set aside two fraudulent transfers. Because we believe the bankruptcy court did not abuse its discretion, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
On February 17, 2000, Donald Nangle filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. Kathy A. Surratt-Sales was appointed trustee. On February 27, 2001, the trustee filed a complaint against the debtor
2
and his wife,
On July 15, 2002, the trastee filed a Motion to Approve Compromise and Settlement of Adversary Proceeding, which stated that the trustee and Jeanne Nangle “settled the allegations of the complaint.” The proposed settlement provides for (1) a minimum payment of $65,000 to the bankraptcy estate upon the sale of the marital home; (2) an additional 10% of the proceeds from the home if it is sold for a sum greater than $350,000, plus the amount of any unpaid real estate taxes and the real estate commission attributable to the sales price in excess of $350,000; (3) Jeanne Nangle may elect not to sell the home by paying the trustee an amount equivalent to the amount the trastee would have received upon its sale; (4) the Freda Brock-man judgment will be transferred to the trustee and the proceeds from the sale of the judgment or any collections on the judgment received by the trustee will be disbursed in the following order: (i) attorneys fees incurred in the collection of the debt; (ii) the trustee’s commission; (iii) $20,000 for the trustee; and (iv) any excess to be divided evenly between Jeanne Nangle and the trustee; and (5) the trustee’s claim against the home will be secured by a Deed of Trust. The debtor was not a party to the proposed settlement agreement.
The debtor objected to the settlement and on August 26, 2002, the bankruptcy court held a hearing on the settlement agreement and heard the debtor’s objections. The bankruptcy court entered an order granting the trustee’s Motion to Approve Compromise and Settlement of Adversary Proceeding based on the criteria set forth in
Lambert v. Flight Transp. Corp., FTC (In re Flight Transp. Corp. Sec. Litig.),
DISCUSSION
We review the bankruptcy court’s factual findings for clear error and its conclusions of law de novo.
Blackwell v. Lurie (In re Popkin & Stern),
STANDING
First, it is doubtful that the debtor has standing either to object to the settlement or to appeal the bankruptcy court’s approval of the settlement.
4
Standing to bring an appeal is a jurisdictional issue which this court has a duty to raise and decide on its own.
Sioux Falls Cable Tele
Fed.R.Bank.P. 2002(a)(3) provides that all “parties in interest” including the debtor, trustee and creditors, normally must be given twenty days notice of the hearing on approval of a compromise or settlement by the trustee. The debtor’s entitlement to notice of the hearing on the approval of settlement, does not, however, give the debtor standing to challenge the settlement or the bankruptcy court’s order entered over his objection.
In re Thompson,
Debtors, particularly chapter 7 debtors, rarely have a pecuniary interest because how the estate’s assets are disbursed by the trustee has no pecuniary effect on the debtor.
Id.
(citing
In re Schultz Mfg. Fabricating Co.,
The debtor argues that the Brock-man judgment has a potential worth of $173,760.12.
5
He further argues that this
First, the trustee maintains that on November 21, 2002, she received a check for $72,925.30 representing the proceeds payable to her under the Settlement Agreement from the sale of the home. A surplus generated from this sum plus any proceeds from the Brockman judgment seems impossible because pursuant to the settlement agreement, the trustee will first have to pay her commission and attorney’s fees before any sums from the Brockman judgment is brought into the estate. Moreover, once the estate is paid $20,000, any further collections are split between the trustee and Jeanne Nangle. Since the priority and unsecured claims against the debtor total approximately $194,811.81, the Brockman judgment’s proceeds would have to exceed the $173,760.12 estimated by the debtor, in order for a surplus to be realized. This is without even considering administrative expenses, such as attorneys fees, accountant’s fees and the trustee’s fees.
The debtor has argued that there is a reasonable likelihood that a surplus will exist at the time his creditors are paid, because of the likelihood that a non-dis-chargeable 6 claim against him and in favor of Patricia Siemer will be set aside in the Missouri State Courts by the time distribution of the Brockman judgment is made. 7 First, until the Siemer judgment is reversed, it is properly included in the analysis of whether the debtor will have a surplus after this and other debts are paid. We do not believe the debtor has shown that there is a reasonable possibility of a surplus, and therefore believe that the debtor does not have the pecuniary interest necessary to have standing to appeal the decision of the bankruptcy court.
THE MERITS
Even if the debtor had standing to object to the settlement and to appeal the approval of that settlement, we nevertheless affirm the bankruptcy court’s decision.
The factors bearing on the fairness of the settlement include: (1) the probability of success in the litigation; (2) the difficulties, if any, to be encountered in the matter of collection; (3) the complexity of the litigation involved, as well as the expense, inconvenience and delay necessarily attending it; and (4) the paramount interest of the creditors and a proper deference to their reasonable views in the premises.
In re Flight Transp. Corp. Sec. Litig.,
The bankruptcy court also found that pursuing the litigation would have been time consuming and expensive, and that
On appeal the debtor argues: (1) there are two legal impediments to assigning the Brockman judgment, including a U.S. District Court stay order arising out of the Eastern District of Missouri in separate litigation, and the apparent claim in a pending bankruptcy case in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in the District of Arizona, wherein the debtor (Arthur Muegler) had alleged a possible fee interest in the judgment; (2) the collection mechanism proposed by the trustee is unreasonable, i.e. the settlement agreement does not impose a duty on the trustee to take any action on the judgment, and allows the trustee “absolute discretion” to determine if it is in the Estate’s best interest to pursue transfer, sale or collection of the judgment; (3) the settlement agreement does not require the trustee to engage in bona fide collection of the Brockman judgment; (4) it is not explained how Jeanne Nangle, not a party to the bankruptcy, should or would have the right to request that the Court appoint special “collection counsel” for the trustee to pursue collection of the judgment at any time after one year from the date of execution of the settlement agreement; (5) the settlement agreement did not preclude identical litigation by creditors, such as Patricia Siemer, against the debtor in state court; (6) the bankruptcy court incorrectly utilized the settlement approval standard enunciated in In re Flight Transportation Corporation Securities Litigation, because, as applied by the bankruptcy court, it ignores his interest in protecting the settlement mechanism; and (7) he never consented to the settlement and objects thereto because the trustee filed a spurious lawsuit against him and Jeanne Nangle. Specifically the debt- or argues that the trustee’s suit regarding the transfers could have never succeeded because the statute of limitations under 11 U.S.C. §§ 548 and 544(b), as well as under R.S.Mo. Chapter 428 expired.
Regarding the alleged impediment to assignment of the Freda Brockman judgment, a close reading of the order of U.S. District Court Judge Shaw reveals that it does not prohibit the
assignment
of the judgment by the debtor or Jeanne Nangle. The order merely enjoins acts that will result in the garnishees’ (Nangle included) gaining possession of any funds or property from the Registry of the District Court or from the execution sale. The order also temporarily and preliminarily enjoins and prohibits any act to alter, amend or change the status or terms of Arthur Muegler’s interest in and to any of the proceeds of the judgment entered in the
Nangle v. Brockman
lawsuit. In any event, the trustee, after assignment of the judgment, steps into the shoes of the Jeanne Nangle and has no greater rights than the debtor possessed before his transfer.
See Credit General Ins. Co. v. NationsBank, N.A. Midwest,
Similarly, the Arthur Muegler Bankruptcy is not an impediment to the assignment of the Brockman judgment. Even if the Brockman judgment is an asset in that case, the trustee would have no more
Regarding the debtor’s argument that the trustee should not have discretion with regard to whether she pursues collection of the Brockman judgment, the trustee argues that the language used in the Settlement agreement, regarding the “absolute discretion” of the trustee, is appropriate in light of the fact that Jeanne Nangle retains an interest in the judgment to the extent the trustee collects sufficient sums to reach the point where one half of the proceeds are paid to her. The trustee argues that the “absolute discretion” language is designed only to make it clear to Jeanne Nangle that the trustee did not assume a duty to her or a duty to act on her behalf in collecting the Brockman judgment. The trustee further argues that the discretionary language is appropriate because of the obstacles that may make collecting the Brockman judgment difficult: the Judge Shaw order, the Arthur Muegler Bankruptcy, and the fact that the Brockman judgment is over six years old and neither the debtor, Jeanne Nangle, nor the trustee has received any payments or recovery with respect to it.
First, regardless of the language used in the settlement agreement, the trustee is always bound by a duty to creditors and the estate to collect the assets of the debtor, reduce them to money, and close the estate as quickly as possible, as set forth in section 704 of the Bankruptcy Code.
See
11 U.S.C. § 704(1). The language of the settlement agreement is in line with this proposition. The trustee has discretion in transferring or selling estate property, and liquidating assets of the estate. So long as the trustee acts reasonably, in the best interest of creditors and the estate, and obtains fair value for property under the circumstances of the case, the trustee’s choice of disposition will be respected.
See In re Merry Go Round Enterprises, Inc.,
Regarding the debtor’s objection to the provision which allows Jeanne Nangle to have a right to request the court to appoint a special “collection counsel” for the trustee to pursue collection of the judgment at any time after one year from the date of execution of the settlement agreement, the debtor does not argue or attempt to show how this provision adversely affects creditors or the estate.
The debtor argues that the settlement agreement does not protect the debtor from future creditor actions. Simply stated, the trustee owes no fiduciary obligation to the debtor and does not represent the debtor.
In re New Concept Housing, Inc.,
The debtor argues that the bankruptcy court incorrectly utilized the settlement
Finally, the debtor argues that the settlement should not have been approved because the trustee filed a spurious lawsuit against him and Jeanne Nangle. Specifically, the debtor argues that the trustee’s suit regarding the transfers could have never succeeded because the statute of limitations under 11 U.S.C. §§ 548 and 544(b), as well as under R.S.Mo. Chapter 428 expired. First, Jeanne Nangle, who was represented by independent counsel, could have turned down the trustee’s settlement proposal if she believed the trustee’s case against her was frivolous. She did not. Ironically, the debtor’s argument actually makes an argument about why the settlement was reasonable: If the trustee’s case against the Nangles was weak, then settlement was the most appropriate course of action. Indeed, three out of the four criteria in In re Flight Transportation Corporation Securities Litigation focuses on the difficulty of the litigation and the costs to pursue that litigation.
Compromise is an art, not a science. Most of the debtor’s objections go to individual items of the settlement agreement, arguing that some items could have been more favorable to him. There is no one best compromise, only a range of reasonable compromises. As long as the one before the court falls within that range, it may be approved. The debtor’s last objection seems to be that the settlement is too good. It is hard to give any credence to such an objection.
CONCLUSION
The order of the bankruptcy court approving the trustee’s settlement is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Barry S. Schermer, United States Bankruptcy Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
. The debtor was a nominal defendant only. No relief was sought against him.
. Van Horn was a civil class-action suit, not a proceeding in a bankruptcy case, but the Eighth Circuit in Van Horn, cited In re Flight Transportation Corporation Securities Litigation for this proposition.
.
It is important to note that a bankruptcy trustee can settle claims without the debtor’s approval.
In re New Concept Housing, Inc.,
. How the debtor arrived at this amount is a mystery, but it may be based on interest that has accrued on the $117,598.08 Brockman judgment originally awarded to Nangle in 1996. In the debtor’s appellate brief, he refers to his Objection to Trustee's Motion to
. Whether the judgment is dischargeable or not is irrelevant to the issue of distribution by the trustee.
. The judgment of Siemer is still in the process of being appealed by the debtor in the Court of Appeals of the State of Missouri.
