Whispering Pines Estates, Inc. d/b/a The Pines at Edgewood Centre (“Whispering Pines” or “Debtor”) has appealed two orders to the Panel. 1 The first appeal is of the bankruptcy court’s October 23, 2006 order confirming the First Amended Plan of Reorganization of Flash Island, Inc. (“Confirmation Order”). The Debtor’s second appeal is of the bankruptcy court’s December 28, 2006 order granting Flash Island Inc. (“Flash Island”) relief from the automatic stay (“Stay Relief Order”). The Panel granted the motion of Whispering Pines to consolidate both appeals on March 19, 2007. This opinion will only address the issues presented in Whispering Pines’ appeal of the Stay Relief Order. 2 The initial question presented in that appeal is whether the bankruptcy court had jurisdiction to enter the Stay Relief Order while the Confirmation Order was on appeal. Because we conclude that it did not, the Panel reverses the Stay Relief Order.
BACKGROUND
Whispering Pines, the operator of a residential assisted living facility in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, filed a Chapter 11 case on November 16, 2005. Since that time, Whispering Pines has operated its business as a debtor-in-possession and continued to use cash collateral subject to the liens of Flash Island as authorized by the court. Flash Island is a secured creditor holding two mortgage loans against Whispering Pines’ real estate (“Property”). Flash Island filed a First Amended Liquidating Plan of Reorganization dated May 23, 2006. Among other things, the Flash Island Plan provided for the appointment of a liquidating trustee to sell the Property-
With respect to the proposed sale of the Property, the Flash Island Plan provided that the Trustee could at his option retain a real estate broker to assist with the sale of the Property during the marketing period, and established a marketing budget for the appointed trustee. The “marketing period” for the Property was defined to be the period between the effective date of the Flash Island Plan and the 60th day thereafter. A “forbearance period” for the Property was defined to include the marketing period, and the period between the date of an agreement for the sale of the property and September 1, 2006. The Flash Island Plan further specified a minimum acceptable offer as $1,700,000 for the purchase of the Property, the establishment of a minimum carve-out in the amount of $40,000 for the payment of expenses and fees of professionals, as well as certain claims, and for the sale of the Property pursuant to § 363 of the Bank *755 ruptcy Code, should the Trustee receive and accept an acceptable offer. 3
The Flash Island Plan also provided Flash Island with relief from the automatic stay to complete the sale of the Property, and the right to exercise its remedies under the loan documents at the end of the forbearance period without need of further court order or approval, should the Property not be sold by that time. The Flash Island Plan established that the plan would become effective on the later of the 30th day following the date (1) the order confirming the plan became final, or (2) on which all of certain conditions precedent were satisfied or waived. The conditions precedent were defined to be (1) the entry of the confirmation order, and (2) the entry of a final decree that reserved jurisdiction to the extent provided for in the plan. Whispering Pines objected to Flash Island Plan, and proposed its own plan, which it subsequently withdrew. 4 After the confirmation hearing on July 21, 2006, the court took the confirmation of the Flash Island Plan under advisement.
On October 23, 2006, the bankruptcy court entered the Confirmation Order and an memorandum opinion in support of same.
See In re Whispering Pines Estate, Inc.,
Slip Opinion,
While confirmation of the Flash Island Plan was pending, Flash Island filed a motion for relief from the automatic stay on October 11, 2006, in which it sought permission to exercise its remedies under the loan documents and foreclose its liens against the Property (“Stay Relief Motion”). The Debtor objected to the court’s jurisdiction to consider the Stay Relief Motion. The Debtor also objected on the basis that, even if the court did have jurisdiction to consider the Stay Relief Motion, its ongoing payments to Flash Island provided Flash Island with adequate protection, and that there remained an equity cushion in the Property. At its hearings on November 14, 2006 and December 6, 2006, the court indicated at the outset that it believed it retained jurisdiction to consider the Stay Relief Motion. In its written opinion of December 28, 2006, with respect to the jurisdictional issue raised by the Debtor, the court held:
While the Court acknowledges that a timely appeal divests the Court of jurisdiction over the matters under appeal, the Court ruled from the bench on December 6, 2006, that the subject matter of the two motions was different from *756 the matter under appeal, and, thus, the Court had jurisdiction to hear and rule on the two motions. Specifically, the appeal questioned whether the requirements of section 1129 were met, allowing the Flash Island plan to be confirmed, not whether a Chapter 11 trustee should be appointed or relief from the automatic stay granted.
In re Whispering Pines Estate, Inc.,
Slip Opinion,
In light of a foreclosure sale of the Property scheduled for April 10, 2007, the Panel granted the Debtor’s expedited request for oral argument with respect to the consolidated appeals. Following oral argument on April 4, 2007, an order was entered staying the Stay Relief Order pending further action by the Panel. 6
POSITIONS OF THE PARTIES
With respect to its appeal of the Stay Relief Order, Whispering Pines argues in the first instance that the bankruptcy court lacked jurisdiction over the Stay Relief Motion while the Debtor’s appeal of the Confirmation Order was pending before the Panel. Alternatively, Whispering Pines argues that the granting of the Stay Relief Motion violated §§ 1141 and 1144 of the Bankruptcy Code, or that the Stay Relief Order was an impermissible revocation of the Flash Island Plan due to its position that the terms of the Stay Relief Order contradicted the terms of the Flash Island Plan. Finally, even were the bankruptcy court to have had jurisdiction to consider the Stay Relief Motion, Whispering Pines argues that the bankruptcy court erred in finding that Flash Island had successfully demonstrated cause for relief as required under § 362 of the Bankruptcy Code.
Flash Island disputes all of these allegations, contending that the bankruptcy court retained jurisdiction to adjudicate the Stay Relief Motion, that the previously confirmed Flash Island Plan did not bar it from pursuing the Stay Relief Motion and that the court did not abuse its discretion in finding that cause existed to grant the Stay Relief Motion. Flash Island also contends that Whispering Pines is precluded from arguing on appeal that the Stay Relief Order was an impermissible revocation of the Flash Island Plan because Whispering Pines had not raised that issue in the bankruptcy court.
JURISDICTION
A bankruptcy appellate panel may hear appeals from “final judgments, orders and decrees [pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(a)(1) ] or with leave of the court, from interlocutory orders and decrees [pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(a)(3) ].”
Fleet Data Processing Corp. v. Branch (In re Bank of New England Corp.),
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Reviewing courts generally apply the clearly erroneous standard to findings of fact and de novo review to conclusions of law.
See T.I. Fed. Credit Union v. DelBonis,
Decisions involving a bankruptcy court’s discretion are reviewed for abuse.
See Beal Bank, S.S.B. v. Waters Edge Ltd. P’ship,
DISCUSSION
It is well established that the filing of a notice of appeal is an event of jurisdictional significance in which a lower court loses jurisdiction over the subject matter involved in the appeal.
See Griggs v. Provident Consumer Disc. Co.,
This Panel has consistently applied the general rule. In
Markarian,
the Panel reversed the bankruptcy court’s approval of a settlement agreement and dismissal
*758
entered while an appeal of the bankruptcy court’s order granting summary judgment in the same action was pending.
As courts have noted, however, a bankruptcy case typically raises a myriad of issues, many totally unrelated and unconnected with the issues involved in any given appeal.
See Urban Development,
Determining what is related and unrelated to the pending appeal in a bankruptcy case, however, is not always a simple task. Id. at 743-44. This can be seen, for example, by the issues considered by the court in Urban Development. In that case, a debtor filed a two-count adversary complaint shortly after the debtor’s appeal of an order granting relief from the automatic stay. Id. at 743. In the complaint, the debtor sought to enjoin a foreclosure sale and obtain permission to sell the property pursuant to § 363 of the Bankruptcy Code. Id. at 742^13. The creditor objected to each count on the basis that the court lacked jurisdiction over the issues once the appeal had been taken. Id. at 743. With respect to the first count, the court declined to act, finding that the requested injunction of the foreclosure sale would directly interfere with the pending appeal of the order granting relief from the automatic stay, as that order had specifically resolved the creditor’s right to proceed and foreclose its mortgage lien. Id. at 744. Because an injunction of the foreclosure sale would implicate the very right the creditor had obtained in the order granting relief from stay, the court found that it lacked jurisdiction to consider the requested injunctive relief. Id.
On the other hand, with respect to the second count, the Urban Development *759 court found that it did have jurisdiction to consider the debtor’s other request for permission to sell the property free and clear of liens as provided for under § 363 of the Bankruptcy Code. Id. at 745. With respect to the proposed sale of the property under § 363, the court reasoned that the issues involved in the stay litigation appeal, which the court narrowly defined to be the lack of adequate protection, lack of equity and lack of need to preserve the property for any effective reorganization, were wholly separate from whether the debtor could sell certain property of the estate free and clear as authorized by § 363, which only involved meeting one of the pre-conditions in that section. Id.
The bankruptcy court in this case, similarly, while acknowledging the general rule that the pending appeal of the Confirmation Order divested it of jurisdiction, determined that it retained jurisdiction over issues it considered not to be involved in the appeal.
See Whispering Pines Estate,
After careful review and consideration of the record, briefs and arguments submitted in this matter, the Panel disagrees with the conclusion of the bankruptcy court that it had jurisdiction over the Stay Relief Motion. We find this to be the case because we find the subject matter under the appeal of the Confirmation Order so closely related to the Stay Relief Motion that the entry of the Stay Relief Order impermissibly interfered with the Debtor’s rights in its appeal. As such, we find that the bankruptcy court’s decision contravenes the generally recognized rule of appellate jurisdiction and our previous decisions recognizing this rule.
That the subject matter of the appeal concerning the Confirmation Order and that considered in the Stay Relief Motion are intimately related can be seen by an examination of the terms and purposes of each. The Confirmation Order, by its very terms, approved the Flash Island Plan providing for the sale of the Property, appointed a specific Chapter 11 trustee, and set a purported outside sale date for the Property, along with defining the time periods for the sale to occur. The Flash Island Plan also provided Flash Island with relief from the automatic stay in the event the Property was not sold by a particular date. The appeal of the Confirmation Order further challenges a proposal for the sale of the Property. That Flash Island sought and obtained permission to foreclose the Property by the Stay Relief Motion is inconsistent with the terms of the sale proposed by Flash Island in its own plan.
More so, once an appeal is pending, it is imperative that a lower court not exercise jurisdiction over those issues which, although not themselves expressly on appeal, nevertheless so impact the appeal so as to interfere with or effectively circumvent the appeal process.
See Strawberry Square Assoc.,
We conclude that we do have the power to deal with the matter raised by the creditor, because it does not affect the *760 question which is presented to the appellate court, providing, of course, that any relief which we may grant does not impinge upon that question.
In re Hardy,
Similarly, a district court reversed a bankruptcy court’s decision to allow the debtor to modify its confirmed plan while the creditor’s appeal of the order confirming plan was pending, finding that the court had no jurisdiction to so modify the plan.
See Southold Devel. Corp.,
It must be noted that while the reasoning of the courts such as
Urban Development
and
Strawberry Square Associates,
in ultimately finding jurisdiction to consider certain matters subsequent to an appeal in each case, closely follow the reasoning of the bankruptcy court in this case, we find those cases distinguishable. In each of those cases, as the bankruptcy court did in this case, the courts defined the issues under the appeal narrowly. In
Strawberry Square Associates,
the court found that the consideration of the creditor’s plan did not interfere with the debtor’s appeal of the order granting relief from stay, even though the creditor’s plan also provided for a sale of the subject property.
See
However, although we find the question of whether the appeal was related to the subject matter of the relief requested in each case a closer question than those courts did, the granting of the relief requested in each of the foregoing cases did not immediately impact the pending appeal as did the entry of the Stay Relief Order in this case. In those cases, the creditor’s foreclosure was already pending by virtue of the previous relief granted, and the subsequent request did not directly interfere with the granting of that previous relief. By contrast, in this case, the entry of the Stay Relief Order in this case allowed for Flash Island’s immediate foreclosure of the Property, which directly implicated the matter under the appeal of the Confirmation Order.
As this Panel articulated in
Mar-karian,
the general rule is that once a
*761
notice of appeal has been filed, the lower court loses jurisdiction over the subject matter of the appeal and those aspects of the case involved in the appeal.
See
CONCLUSION
Because the Panel concludes that the bankruptcy court did not have jurisdiction to enter the Stay Relief Order while the Confirmation Order was on appeal, the Panel REVERSES the Stay Relief Order.
Notes
. The underlying bankruptcy cases of Whispering Pines and AMI-Burlington, Inc. d/b/a The Anchorage Inn ("AMI-Burlington”) are jointly administered. AMI-Burlington is not a party to this appeal.
. A separate opinion will issue with respect to the Debtor’s appeal of the Confirmation Order.
. References to sections in the Bankruptcy Code shall be to the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978, as amended by the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005, Pub.L. No. 109-8, 119 Stat. 23, 11 U.S.C. § 101, et seq., unless otherwise noted herein.
. Whispering Pines alleged that the Flash Island Plan was inadequate, inter alia, due to its limited provisions for the sale of the Property, feasibility of the proposed sale and violation of § 1129(a)(9) in its treatment of priority and secured tax claims. Whispering Pines’ objections, the adequacy of the Flash Island Plan and competing confirmation process will be further addressed in the separate opinion concerning the appeal of the Confirmation Order.
.Flash Island further extended this date to December 15, 2006 by its filing with the bankruptcy court on October 25, 2006.
. The bankruptcy court and the Panel had each previously denied Whispering Pines' application for a stay pending appeal. A stay was issued following oral argument, however, based on the Panel’s renewed concerns with the bankruptcy court’s jurisdiction to consider the Stay Relief Motion and enter the Stay Relief Order.
. The First Circuit law regarding the handling of motions under Rule 60(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (applicable to bankruptcy proceedings by Fed. R. Bankr.P. 9024) by lower courts while appeals are pending, as this Panel has previously noted, is well established.
See Eastern Savings Bank v. LaFata (In re LaFata),
