OPINION
In this matter, the bankruptcy court granted the appellants (collectively, “Fidelity”) summary judgment on their complaint against the debtor, Fioravante Set-tembre, for denial of a discharge. The district court reversed and remanded the case for trial on Fidelity’s complaint. Fidelity now seeks review of the district court’s order.
I.
Between August 2001 and July 2003, Settembre and a third party borrowed approximately $700,000 from Fidelity to fund a business venture called InsBanc, Inc. The venture apparently failed, and, on October 15, 2005, Settembre filed a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. At Fidelity’s request, the bankruptcy court thereafter ordered Settembre to produce business records for the years 2003-05. After repeated delays, Settembre produced very few of the records that he was ordered to produce, and claimed the rest no longer existed.
In response, Fidelity filed a complaint under 11 U.S.C. § 727(a)(3), in which it sought to deny Settembre a discharge based upon his alleged failure to maintain records from which his financial condition could be ascertained. Fidelity thereafter moved for summary judgment on its com *440 plaint. The bankruptcy court granted the motion, finding that Setiembre was a “sophisticated person” who should have been able to produce the requested documents, and that his reason for not doing so — that he had lost them in a move — was “patently insufficient.”
Setiembre appealed to the district court, which reversed. That court held that Set-iembre “should have the opportunity to testify and present evidence regarding his level of sophistication, the complexity of his financial situation, the nature of [his] accounts], whether there are independent means of substantiating his financial transactions, and any other relevant information.” Accordingly, the district court remanded the case for trial on Fidelity’s complaint. Fidelity now seeks review of that order.
II.
We must determine whether the district court’s remand order is a “final” one over which we have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 158(d)(1). Most circuits — by our count, nine of them — hold that a district court order remanding a case to the bankruptcy court “is not final and appealable unless the remand is for ‘ministerial’ proceedings.”
In re Holland,
This circuit’s approach has been a body in motion. We passed very near the minority rule in
In re Gardner,
Since then we have moved away from the minority rule. In
In re Frederick Petroleum,
We again declined to follow
Gardner
in
In re Millers Cove,
Finally, in
In re Brown,
Since our 1987 decision in
Gardner,
then, this circuit has refused to exercise jurisdiction over bankruptcy appeals in which the district court has remanded the case for proceedings that were beyond ministerial. And we have rigorously applied the requirements of Rule 54(b) to partial judgments “entered as ‘to one or more but fewer than all the claims or parties.’ ”
In re Yousif,
This trajectory, we think, has brought us among the constellation of circuits that follow the majority rule. We clarify that position today, and hold expressly that “a decision by the district court on appeal remanding the bankruptcy court’s decision for further proceedings in the bankruptcy court is not final, and so is not appealable to this court, unless the further proceedings contemplated are of a purely ministerial character.”
Lopez,
There are good reasons to follow the majority rule. First, “the majority rule is consistent with (in fact, it is identical to) the rule with regard to the finality of district court decisions in general[.]”
Lopez,
The majority rule also makes sense as a practical matter. The alternative minority rule — or rules, really, since “no single formulation has emerged as canonical” — “is
terribly
woolly,” forcing courts to balance
*442
various interests that are themselves not crisply defined and that, in some formulations at least, devolve into a scattering of sub-factors which diffuse the analysis still further.
Lopez,
So we proceed to apply the majority rule here. In reversing the bankruptcy court’s entry of summary judgment in Fidelity’s favor, the district court held that, on the record before it, “there are enough questions to warrant a trial.” A trial is not a proceeding purely of a ministerial character. We therefore lack jurisdiction over the order before us, and dismiss this appeal.
Notes
. The caveat concerns the definition of a case, not the definition of finality. As Judge Posner has explained:
A bankruptcy case is often a congeries of functionally distinct cases. The clearest example is that of the adversary action. Suppose the debtor has a tort claim against some third party. The trustee in bankruptcy will litigate that claim as an adversary
action against the third party, embedded in the bankruptcy proceeding. Once the action is finally decided in the bankruptcy and district courts, the fact that the bankruptcy proceeding may be continuing is no reason to delay the appeal from the decision in the action, so the decision is deemed "final,” and appeal allowed.
Lopez,
