Pinpoint IT Services, LLC appeals from a bankruptcy court order modifying the automatic stay. We conclude that, because Pinpoint can demonstrate no legally cognizable harm attending entry оf the order, it lacks standing, and this appeal must be DISMISSED.
BACKGROUND
Atlas IT Export, LLC filed a petition for chapter 7 relief in September 2011. On its Schedule B, Atlas listed a contingent, un-liquidated claim against Pinpoint in the approximаte amount of $3,200,000.00.
On the petition date, two lawsuits involving Pinpoint and Atlas were pending. The first, initiated in October 2010 in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, pitted Pinpoint, as plaintiff, against Atlas, as defendant/counterсlaim-ant. We will call it the “Virginia Action.” The second, filed in February 2010 in the U.S. District Court for the District of Puerto Rico, set Atlas, as plaintiff, against Pinpoint, as defendant/counterclaimant. We will call it the “Puerto Rico Action.”
The cases were mirror images of each other: Atlas’ complaint in the Puerto Rico Action was substantively identical to its counterclaim in the Virginia Action; and Pinpoint’s counterclaim in the Puertо Rico Action incorporated the allegations of its complaint in the Virginia Action. Atlas’s bankruptcy filing stayed prosecution of Pinpoint’s claims.
In the bankruptcy court, Atlas’ chapter 7 bankruptcy trustеe, Noemi Landrau Rivera, initially filed “Trustee’s Request for Modification [of] Debtor’s Automatic Stay,” seeking modification of the stay to continue the Puerto Rico Action. Pinpoint opposed the motiоn.
Several days later, Landrau Rivera and Atlas filed a “Stipulation for Entry of Order for Modification of Automatic Stay,” also seeking “stay relief’ to continue the Puerto Rico Action. Pinpoint complained that it was not a party to the stipulation and that Landrau Rivera’s submission was simply a “disguised” motion for relief from stay. Pinpoint asked not only for the dis-allowance of the stipulation, but also for the imposition оf sanctions against Lan-drau Rivera. Landrau Rivera withdrew her earlier filed motion for relief.
When the stipulation came before it, the court confirmed that Landrau Rivera was consenting to a modification of the stay that extended not only to Atlas’ continued prosecution of its complaint, but to Pinpoint’s pressing its counterclaims, as well. The judge repeatedly asked Pinpoint’s counsel to explain how such modification, permitting the parties to go forward with all claims in the Puerto Rico Action, would prejudice his client. He answered only that the Puerto Rico Action was “duplica-tive” of the Virginia Action.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the court ruled:
[A]s requested by the Trustee at docket No. 57, the Court is modifying the automatic stay so as to allow the litigation in the District Court against Pinpoint and Pinpoint’s counterclaim against the Debtor to proceеd to judgment.
APPELLATE STANDING
“We assess our appellate jurisdiction even when it goes unchallenged.” Raymond C. Green, Inc. v. DeGiacomo (In re Inofin Inc.),
“[Standing to appeal from a final bankruptcy court order is accorded only to a ‘person aggrieved,’ ” that is, one whose pecuniary interests are directly and adversely affected by the challenged order. Id. at 117-18 (citation omitted). Thus, a party asserting appellate standing must demonstrate that the bankruptcy court’s order either diminishes his propеrty, increases his burdens, or detrimentally affects his rights. Aja v. Emigrant Funding Corp. (In re Aja),
“Most requests for relief from the automatic stay come from a party wanting to take action against a debtor or against property of the bankruptcy estate.” In re Sweports, Ltd.,
Although the parties acknowledge that thе filing of a bankruptcy petition triggers an automatic stay of actions against the debtor,
Here, the automatic stay had no impact whatsoever on Landrau Rivera’s power to litigate Atlas’ claims against Pinpoint — in either Virginia or in Puerto Rico. Thus, to the extent the order on appeal ostensibly freed her to do so, it was a nonevent. But the other aspect of the order, that which freed Pinpoint to press its claims against the estate in the district court, had substantive content. That content, however, operated to Pinpoint’s benefit.
At oral argument, the only adverse effect of stay relief that Pinpoint could point to was that the order enabled it only to litigate in Puеrto Rico and that the Puerto Rico Action should give way to the earlier-filed Virginia Action. Although Pinpoint bemoans this procedural inconvenience, its right to argue in the Puerto Rico district court for transfеr of the Puerto Rico Action to Virginia, or for staying the Puerto Rico Action in favor of the Virginia Action,
Pinpoint cannot demonstrate any legally cognizable diminution of its property or any detrimental effect on its meaningful rights. We, therefore, conclude that Pinpoint cannot meet the “person aggrieved” standard necessary to satisfy the requirement for standing to appeal the bankruptcy court’s order.
CONCLUSION
This appeal is DISMISSED due to Pinpoint’s lack of standing.
Notes
. During the same period, Pinpoint filed a motion for relief from the automatic stay, in order to continue the Virginia Action. The bankruptcy court dеnied the motion, and Pinpoint appealed. The Panel dismissed the appeal as interlocutory on January 29, 2013. See LeBlanc v. Salem (In re Mailman Steam Carpet Cleaning Corp.),
The order before us decided only that Pinpoint may not presently proceed in the United States District Court for the Eastern District оf Virginia, based upon principles related to judicial economy, as well as the best interests of the estate and creditors. The order does not prevent Pinpoint, however, from attempting to рrove its case, or from arguing the “first-to-file rule,” in the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico. Indeed, the bankruptcy court previously entered an order granting relief from the automatic stay in ordеr to allow the same contract dispute to continue to be litigated in that district. Thus, contrary to Pinpoint’s assertion, much more remains to be done. Confronted with a dispute that has yet to be resolved, we conclude that the order is not yet final and therefore, not appealable as of right. To rule otherwise would set the stage for the sort of "piecemeal appellate review” frоwned upon by this circuit. Nichols v. Cadle Co.,101 F.3d 1448 , 1449 (1st Cir.1996).
Pinpoint IT Services, LLC v. Atlas IT Export, LLC (In re Atlas IT Export, LLC), BAP No. PR 12-090, slip op. at 6 (B.A.P. 1st Cir. Jan. 29, 2013). Pinpoint has appealed the judgment of dismissal to the First Circuit.
. Section 362(a) of the Bankruptcy Code provides that thе filing of a bankruptcy petition "operates as a stay, applicable to all entities, of the commencement or continuation, ... of a judicial ... proceeding against the debtor that wаs or could have been commenced before the commencement of the case under this title, ... [.]" 11 U.S.C. § 362(a)(1).
. Of course, one might question whether it was appropriate for Landrau Rivera to obtаin an order that, in effect, only provided Pinpoint relief from stay to litigate its Puerto Rico Action counterclaims to judgment. See Benjamin v. Aroostook Med. Ctr., Inc.,
. Thus, Pinpoint’s complaints about the procedural propriety of Landrau Rivera’s stipulation with Atlas are of no consequence.
