After the bankruptcy court confirmed a reorganization plan proposed by 0 & S
I.
0 & S owned and operated a fleet of commercial trucks. Many of these trucks were financed or leased from various entities, including Mercedes Benz Financial Services USA (doing business as “Daimler”). In May 2012, 0 & 'S filed a voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition. After Daimler filed a motion seeking adequate protection of its secured interest, Daimler and 0 & S negotiated an agreed order in which 0 & S promised to make protection payments to Daimler to cover, among other things, the erosion in value of the Daimler trucks that 0 & S retained. The parties calculated these protection payments based on their assessment of each truck’s value, including $64,500 for each 2010 freightliner. O & S agreed to pay Daimler two percent of each truck’s value each month.
After O & S filed a motion for determination of secured status, the bankruptcy court concluded that Daimler had a secured claim and an unsecured claim. The court calculated the secured-claim amount based on: (1) the value of the vehicle collateral retained by O & S and (2) O & S’s net post-petition income from the Daimler trucks. The court assessed the present value of the vehicle collateral using the National Automobile Dealers Association retail value of $62,100 for each 2010 freightliner. The court calculated the net income from the Daimler trucks as $51,909.40, a sum that approximated O & S’s revenue less its expenses and the protection payments.
O & S moved for reconsideration of the court’s secured-status order, alleging several errors. First, O & S contended that the bankruptcy court erred when it relied on the present value of the trucks to calculate the vehicle-collateral sum. O & S argued that Daimler had been afforded a double recovery because the court did not reduce the present value based on the protection payments that O & S already had made. O & S also argued that the court erred by calculating the additional $51,909.40 net-income figure because Daimler had waived the right to any proceeds in the agre'ed protection order and because the relevant funds had been commingled with other funds in O & S’s account. The bankruptcy court denied reconsideration.
O & S appealed the order and the denial of reconsideration, and the BAP eventually dismissed the appeal for lack of jurisdiction on September 15, 2014. However, while that appeal still was pending before the BAP, O & S proposed a new plan of reorganization to the bankruptcy court. This plan incorporated the bankruptcy court’s secured-status order, stating that Daimler’s secured claim amounted to $62,100 per truck in vehicle collateral plus $51,909.40 from net income. The plan also stated that this sum was “subject to adjustment” based on “the final outcome of the pending appeal of the Daimler Decision by Debtor and any subsequent appeal.” During the confirmation hearing, the court found that the vehicle-collateral calculation was no longer relevant because O & S already had returned all of the retained trucks to Daimler. Accordingly, the court concluded that Daimler’s secured claim was limited to $51,909.40. The bankruptcy court then confirmed the reorganization plan.
Following the plan’s confirmation, O & S appealed to the BAP. In this appeal, O & S reiterated its argument that the bankruptcy court improperly had calculated the amount of Daimler’s secured claim. O & S repeated its contention that the- bankruptcy court’s order afforded Daimler a double
II.
We review de novo the BAP’s determination that it lacked jurisdiction over O & S’s appeal. See GAF Holdings, LLC v. Rinaldi (In re Farmland Indus., Inc.),
O & S’s notice of appeal to the BAP listed three orders—the secured-status order, the denial of reconsideration of the secured-status order, and the plan confirmation. At oral argument, the parties agreed that the first two orders were interlocutory and non-final when rendered.
The BAP concluded that O & S did not have standing to challenge the bankruptcy court’s order confirming its proposed plan. Although the modern Bankruptcy Code does not articulate a standard for appellate standing, our circuit consistently has applied a “person aggrieved” standard derived from the Bankruptcy Act of 1898. See, e.g., Peoples v. Radloff (In re Peoples),
Generally, under the person-aggrieved doctrine, a debtor lacks standing to appeal a judgment rendered wholly in his favor. Houchin Sales Co. v. Angert,
In Zahn, we examined a case in which a Chapter 13 bankruptcy debtor sought review of an adverse interlocutory ruling. Id. at 1141. The debtor appealed the interlocutory order; however, the BAP dismissed the appeal for lack of jurisdiction because the panel concluded that the interlocutory ruling did not constitute a final, appealable order. Id.; see Official Comm. of Unsecured Creditors v. Farmland Industries, Inc. (In re Farmland Indus., Inc.),
In subsequent cases before bankruptcy courts, debtors have complied with this procedure in order to demonstrate standing as persons aggrieved by their plans’ confirmations. See, e.g., Fisette v. Keller (In re Fisette),
As the BAP recognized, O & S did not follow the Zahn procedure because O & S failed to object to its proposed plan. The court thus did not have before it an objection from O & S when it confirmed the plan, and O & S did not obtain an adverse ruling along with the bankruptcy court’s favorable confirmation judgment. Cf. Weston v. Mann (In re Weston), 18
On appeal to our court, O & S argues that it had standing despite its failure to comply with Zahn because the confirmed plan included a provision stating that the amount of Daimler’s secured claim was “subject to adjustment” based on “the final outcome of the pending appeal of the Daimler Decision by Debtor and any subsequent appeal.” We recognize that parties may use such language in a reorganization plan to condition the amount of a claim based on the outcome of then-pending litigation related to an interlocutory order. See In re Farmland,
However, we conclude that the impre-, cise language used by O & S was insufficient to meet Zahn’s requirement that a debtor object to a plan in order to demonstrate person-aggrieved status. The reservation did not articulate O & S’s objection to the plan, nor did it specifically reference O & S’s intent to appeal from the plan confirmation on the basis of the secured-status order incorporated therein. In light of the strong policy favoring finality in bankruptcy proceedings, we find that the language in the confirmed plan was not sufficient to reserve O & S’s right to appeal from the plan confirmation or to place the bankruptcy court and creditors on notice that O & S would seek such relief.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we agree that the BAP lacked jurisdiction over the appeal from the confirmation order, and we affirm.
Notes
. Prior to the plan’s confirmation, O & S argued that the secured-status order and denial of reconsideration were final, appealable orders. O & S has abandoned this position in its present appeal. We note that if the orders were indeed final when rendered, we would lack jurisdiction to consider them now because O & S failed to timely appeal from the BAP’s September 15 decision. See Fed. R.App. P. 4(a)(1)(A).
, We need not determine whether other, more specific language would have been an appropriate substitute for Zahn’s objection requirement. It is enough to say that the imprecise language employed here did not suffice.
. Because we affirm based on standing, we do not reach the BAP’s mootness determination.
