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    Filed September 18, 2000
    
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    
    Nos. 00-5042 and 00-5074
    
    In re: PWS HOLDING CORPORATION
    BRUNO'S, INC; FOOD MAX OF MISSISSIPPI, INC;
    A.F. STORES, INC; BR AIR, INC.;
    FOOD MAX OF GEORGIA, INC;
    FOOD MAX OF TENNESSEE, INC;
    FOODMAX, INC; LAKESHORE FOODS, INC;
    BRUNO'S FOOD STORES, INC; GEORGIA SALES
    COMPANY; SSS ENTERPRISE, INC
    
    W.R. Huff Asset Management Co., L.L.C.,
    Appellant in 00-5042
    
    HSBC BANK USA, as Indenture Trustee for
    the 10.5% Senior Subordinated Notes,
    Appellant in 00-5074
    
    On Appeal From the United States District Court
    for the District of Delaware
    (D.C. Civ. No. 98-cv-00212)
    District Judge: Honorable Sue L. Robinson
    
    Argued: March 10, 2000
    
    Before: BECKER, Chief Judge, SCIRICA and
    NYGAARD Circuit Judges.
    
    (Filed: September 18, 2000)
    
    
    
    
           EDWARD S. WEISFELNER,
            ESQUIRE (ARGUED)
           ANDREW DASH, ESQUIRE
           JOHN P. BIEDERMANN, ESQUIRE
           Berlack, Israels & Liberman
           120 West 45th Street
           New York, NY 10036
    
           STEVEN K. KORTANEK, ESQUIRE
           JOANNE B. WILLS, ESQUIRE
           Klehr, Harrison, Harvey, Branzburg
           & Ellers, LLP
           919 Market Street, Suite 1000
           Wilmington, DE 19801
    
           Counsel for Appellant
           W.R. Huff Asset Management Co.
    
           PETER D. WOLFSON, ESQUIRE
            (ARGUED)
           CAROL NEVILLE, ESQUIRE
           Pryor, Cashman, Sherman & Flynn,
           LLP
           410 Park Avenue
           New York, NY 10022-4441
    
           JEFFREY C. WISLER, ESQUIRE
           Connolly, Bove, Lodge & Hutz
           1220 Market Building
           P.O. Box 2207
           Wilmington, DE 19899
    
           Counsel for Appellant
           HSBC Bank USA, Indenture Trustee
    
           HARVEY R. MILLER, ESQUIRE
            (ARGUED)
           LORI R. FIFE, ESQUIRE
           MARC D. PUNTUS, ESQUIRE
           Weil, Gotshal & Manges, LLP
           767 Fifth Avenue
           New York, NY 10153
    
                                    2
    
    
           THOMAS L. AMBRO, ESQUIRE
           DANIEL J. DeFRANCESCHI,
            ESQUIRE
           One Rodney Square
           P.O. Box 551
           Wilmington, DE 19899
    
           Counsel for Appellees PWS Holding
           Corp.; Bruno's, Inc.; Food Max of MI,
           Inc.; AF Stores, Inc.; BR Air, Inc.;
           Food Max of GA, Inc.; Food Max of
           TN, Inc.; Foodmax Inc.; Lakeshore
           Foods, Inc.; Brunos Food Stores;
           Georgia Sales Co.; SSS Entr, Inc.
    
           HAROLD S. NOVIKOFF, ESQUIRE
            (ARGUED)
           AMY R. WOLF, ESQUIRE
           Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz
           51 West 52nd Street
           New York, NY 10019
    
           EDWARD G. BIESTER, III, ESQUIRE
           Duane, Morris & Heckscher
           4200 One Liberty Place
           Philadelphia, PA 19103-7396
    
           TERESA K.D. CURRIER, ESQUIRE
           Duane, Morris & Heckscher
           1201 Market Street, Suite 1500
           P.O. Box 195
           Wilmington, DE 19899
    
           Counsel for Appellee
           Chase Manhattan Bank
    
           DENNIS S. KAYES, ESQUIRE
            (ARGUED)
           STUART E. HERTZBERG, ESQUIRE
           I. WILLIAM COHEN, ESQUIRE
           Pepper, Hamilton, LLP
           100 Renaissance Center, 36th Floor
           Detroit, MI 48243
    
                                    3
    
    
           DAVID M. FOURNIER, ESQUIRE
           MONICA LEIGH LOFTIN, ESQUIRE
           Pepper, Hamilton, LLP
           1201 Market Street, Suite 1600
           Wilmington, DE 19801
    
           Counsel for Appellee Official
           Committee of Unsecured Creditors
    
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    
    BECKER, Chief Judge.
    
    W.R. Huff Asset Management Co., L.L.C. ("Huff "), and
    HSBC Bank USA ("HSBC") appeal from the order of the
    District Court confirming a reorganization plan for Bruno's,
    Inc., (Bruno's), and several affiliates.1 Bruno's is based in
    Alabama and operates a chain of supermarkets in the
    southeastern United States. Huff was the holder of $290
    million in Bruno's subordinated notes; HSBC was the
    indenture trustee for the subordinated notes (we refer to
    them together as Huff). They argue that the District Court
    should not have confirmed the plan for a host of reasons,
    most notably because it contains releases that violate the
    absolute priority rule of 11 U.S.C. S 1129(b)(2)(B)(ii) and are
    thus impermissible under the Bankruptcy Code.
    
    Three separate interests have appeared to defend the
    plan: the debtors and debtors-in-possession (referred to
    throughout as the Debtors); the Chase Manhattan Bank,
    representing the group of banks (the Banks) that were the
    senior lenders to Bruno's before the reorganization; and the
    Official Unsecured Creditors' Committee. Together they
    contend that the plan does not violate the absolute priority
    rule because the releases were not granted "on account of "
    the interests of the released parties, but rather the claims
    released had little or no value.
    _________________________________________________________________
    
    1. The affiliates are PWS Holding Corp., Food Max of Mississippi, Inc,
    A.F. Stores, Inc., BR Air, Inc., Food Max of Georgia, Inc., Food Max of
    Tennessee, Inc., FoodMax, Inc., Lakeshore Foods, Inc., Bruno's
    Foodstores, Inc., Georgia Sales Co., and SSS Enterprises, Inc.
    
                                    4
    
    
    The absolute priority rule, found in 11 U.S.C.
    S 1129(b)(2)(B)(ii), provides that "the holder of any claim or
    interest that is junior to the claims of [a class of unsecured
    claims] will not receive or retain under the plan on account
    of such junior claim or interest any property." In Bank of
    America National Trust and Savings Association v. 203
    North LaSalle Street Partnership, 526 U.S. 434 (1999), the
    Supreme Court interpreted the "on account of " language in
    S (b)(2)(ii). The Court rejected arguments that "on account
    of " means "in satisfaction of " the interest or "in exchange
    for" the interest and concluded that it means"because of "
    the interest. Id. at 450-51. Accordingly, a causal connection
    between holding the prior claim or interest, and receiving or
    retaining property, will trigger the absolute priority rule.
    Huff submits that this plan, by releasing claims held by the
    bankrupt entity that arose out of the leveraged
    recapitalization, essentially transferred property to holders
    of junior equity in violation of the absolute priority rule.
    Huff argues that the release was a transfer to junior equity
    because the potential claims included claims against junior
    equity--affiliates of Kohlberg, Kravis, Roberts & Co., L.L.C.
    (KKR), and other participants in the recapitalization. Huff
    contends that the transfer violated the absolute priority
    rule because senior creditors (including Huff) had not been
    paid in full.
    
    We conclude that the District Court did not err in the
    challenged respects.2 The Examiner appointed by the
    District Court under 11 U.S.C. SS 1104(c) and 105(a) at the
    behest of Huff found in a comprehensive report that the
    claims released had little potential merit. We find no error
    in the District Court's decision to accept the Examiner's
    findings and legal conclusions regarding the viability of the
    claims, and we reject Huff 's contention that the releases
    were granted "on account of " old equity's interest. We also
    reject the Debtors' contention that the challenge to
    confirmation is equitably moot under In re Continental
    Airlines, 91 F.3d 553, 559 (3d Cir. 1996) (en banc).
    _________________________________________________________________
    
    2. Because the order of reference to the Bankruptcy Court was
    withdrawn in the District of Delaware, this case was heard initially in the
    District Court.
    
                                    5
    
    
    Huff 's other challenges to confirmation include that the
    plan should not have been confirmed because the District
    Court erred in determining that it was proposed in good
    faith as required by 11 U.S.C. S1129(a)(3). Huff has not
    offered anything but innuendo to support its contention
    that the Debtors violated this portion of the Code, and we
    find no error in the District Court's conclusion that the
    plan was proposed in good faith.
    
    Additionally, Huff contends that the plan should not have
    been confirmed because it violates the following sections of
    the Bankruptcy Code: 11 U.S.C. S 510(a), which provides
    that a "subordination agreement is enforceable in a case
    under this title to the same extent that such agreement is
    enforceable under applicable nonbankruptcy law;" 11
    U.S.C. S 524(e), which provides that "[e]xcept as provided in
    subsection (a)(3) of this section, discharge of a debt of the
    debtor does not affect the liability of any other entity on, or
    the property of any other entity for, such debt;" 11 U.S.C.
    S 363, which governs the sale of assets outside of the
    reorganization plan; 11 U.S.C. S 1129(a)(2), which provides
    that a court shall confirm a plan only if "[t]he proponent of
    the plan complies with the applicable provisions of this
    Title;" and 11 U.S.C. S 1129(a)(7), which provides that a
    court shall confirm a plan only if the debtor demonstrated
    at the Confirmation Hearing that creditors rejecting the
    plan would not receive a greater recovery in a Chapter 7
    liquidation.
    
    We reject Huff 's argument under S 510(a) because the
    subordinated noteholders' rights under the agreement do
    not arise until the senior indebtedness is paid in full, which
    has not happened under the plan. We reject the S 524(e)
    argument because we conclude that the limited release in
    Paragraph 58 of the plan does not come within the meaning
    of S 524(e) and is consistent with the standard of liability
    under the Code. We reject Huff 's S 363 argument because
    we do not agree with the contention that the Plan triggered
    a duty to fully market the company. We conclude that Huff
    does not have standing to raise the challenge under
    S 1129(a)(2) because third-party standing is limited on
    appeal in bankruptcy cases and Huff cannot show that it
    was personally aggrieved by any alleged failure of
    
                                    6
    
    
    disclosure. Finally, because we are satisfied that the
    Debtors met the S 1129(a)(7) burden of demonstrating that
    the creditors would not receive a greater recovery under
    Chapter 7, we reject the challenge under this section as
    well. We will therefore affirm the order of the District Court
    confirming the plan.
    
    I. Factual & Procedural Background
    
    As of the commencement date of the Chapter 11 cases,
    Bruno's was a chain of about 200 supermarkets operating
    in the southeastern United States (principally in Alabama).
    In 1995, affiliates of KKR acquired an 83.33% interest in
    Bruno's in a leveraged recapitalization. As part of this
    transaction, then existing shareholders of Bruno's were
    bought out for approximately $880 million. The leveraged
    recapitalization was financed by a revolving credit and term
    loan facility provided by the Banks, an equity contribution
    of $250 million by KKR through Crimson Associates LLP,
    and the issuance by Bruno's of $400 million in notes due
    in 2005 pursuant to an indenture. Section 9 of the
    indenture contains a subordination clause that provides
    that the noteholders' claims are fully subordinated to the
    payment in full (including interest) of the claims of the
    senior lenders (the Banks).
    
    For at least two years following the leveraged
    recapitalization, Bruno's paid all of its debts as they
    matured (including $97.5 million in interest payments on
    the subordinated notes). In the summer of 1997, the
    Debtors were able to refinance the Bank debt relating to the
    recapitalization at a lower interest rate and on terms more
    favorable than the original terms. But by the second half of
    1997, as a result of either mismanagement by the directors
    selected by KKR and a controversial change in pricing
    policy (according to Huff), or as a result of a greatly
    increased level of competition in the market (according to
    the Debtors), Bruno's began to falter. Bruno's had difficulty
    in meeting payment obligations from the recapitalization
    and in paying its suppliers and other creditors. On
    February 2, 1998, it filed a voluntary petition for relief
    under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. Since thefiling
    date, the Debtors have remained in possession.
    
                                    7
    
    
    As of the filing date, Bruno's owed approximately $462
    million to the Banks, $135 million to trade vendors,
    suppliers, and other unsecured creditors, and $421 million
    on the subordinated notes. In the 90 days prior tofiling for
    relief, it made payments to a variety of creditors and
    suppliers amounting to more than $600 million, including
    to firms that provided professional services to the Debtors.3
    However, the only preference action the Debtors pursued
    was an action against the Banks seeking to avoid liens
    granted to the prepetition lenders in December 1997.
    
    In February 1998, the Bankruptcy Trustee appointed a
    nine member "Official Unsecured Creditor's Committee" (the
    Committee). Huff, holder of $290 million in subordinated
    notes, was the largest creditor of the estate and was elected
    co-chair of the Committee. The other members of the
    Committee included four representatives of the Banks,
    three representatives from the trade, and one representative
    of the other subordinated noteholders. A representative
    from the United Food and Commercial Workers Union,
    which represented supermarket employees of Bruno's, was
    appointed to serve on the Committee from March 1998 to
    April 1999.
    
    In October 1998, the Debtors presented a business plan
    to the Committee. The Committee rejected this plan and
    then appointed a subcommittee, the "Strategic Alternatives
    Committee," to work with the Debtors to develop a new
    plan. This Subcommittee conducted a test marketing of the
    enterprise and sent out a summary information package to
    two different sets of potential buyers (neither of which
    included financial buyers). The Subcommittee did not
    believe that there would be interest in purchasing the
    enterprise, and indeed none of the companies contacted
    expressed an interest. By January 1999, the Debtors
    concluded that no potential buyers had an interest in the
    acquisition.
    _________________________________________________________________
    
    3. For example, payments to suppliers included approximately $19
    million to Kraft Foods, $4.1 million to Frito-Lay, and $750,000 to
    Pillsbury. Payments to providers of professional services included
    $225,551.69 to Cravath, Swaine & Moore, $1.2 million to KKR, and
    $232,838.71 to Wasserstein Perella & Co.
    
                                    8
    
    
    Throughout the spring of 1999, the Committee and
    subgroups of the Committee convened several times to
    develop a reorganization plan. Huff asserts that it was
    excluded from these meetings and that many of the
    conferees pursued some interest other than maximizing the
    size of the bankruptcy estate. In March 1999, the Debtors'
    law firm determined that legal claims arising out of the
    leveraged recapitalization (primarily fraudulent transfer
    claims) were not worth pursuing because they believed that
    the claims were unlikely to succeed and that litigation
    would be expensive, time consuming, complicated,
    protracted and vigorously defended, and likely would delay
    the confirmation of the reorganization plan. In April 1999,
    the Committee voted to deny funds to pursue the claims,
    while preserving the claims for further consideration. In
    response, Huff successfully moved for the appointment of
    an independent examiner to evaluate the claims. The
    Debtors presented the first version of the new plan in May
    1999. It was revised several times between May and
    December 1999.
    
    As a part of the negotiations regarding reorganization,
    three independent entities (Wasserstein Perella & Co. (for
    the Debtors), PricewaterhouseCoopers (for the Committee),
    and Chilimark Partners (for the Banks)) conducted
    assessments of the Debtors and reported current value
    estimations ranging between $260 and $315 million. Huff 's
    expert argued for a valuation at $580 million, but this
    valuation was rejected by the District Court, and Huff
    appears to have abandoned any argument for it on appeal.
    HSBC still appears to contend that the reorganized
    enterprise was "significantly undervalued by the Debtors
    and the Bank Group." HSBC does not, however, argue that
    the District Court committed clear error in determining that
    the reorganization value of the Debtors was "substantially
    below the amount necessary to allow for the satisfaction in
    full of the Bank claims" and thus that Huff and the other
    holders of subordinated notes were substantially out of the
    money (by about $300 million). The interests of the holders
    of the subordinated notes, including Huff and HSBC, were
    thus wiped out and, by operation of the Code, 11 U.S.C.
    S 1126(g), the holders are deemed to have rejected the plan.
    
                                    9
    
    
    Huff and HSBC challenge three separate releases of legal
    claims included in the plan. We describe the different
    releases in the three following subsections, sections I.A-C.
    
    A.
    
    The first releases pertain to the estate's claims arising
    out of the leveraged recapitalization. These releases include
    "avoidance claims" that, if successful, could have allowed
    the Debtors to avoid certain aspects of the 1995 leveraged
    recapitalization. In late 1998, the Debtors, with the consent
    of the Committee, undertook a review of the leveraged
    recapitalization to determine if any viable fraudulent
    transfer claims existed and should be pursued. In March
    1999, the Debtors' counsel Weil, Gotshal & Manges
    completed a 100 page report analyzing the claims,
    concluding that the transaction was not a fraudulent
    transfer and that there were no viable claims against any of
    its participants. In April 1999, the Committee nevertheless
    voted to preserve these causes of action in the plan. One
    month later, however, the Committee reversed its position
    and, with the support of the trade representatives and the
    Banks, voted to support the plan releasing the claims.
    
    Huff and HSBC objected to these releases and, as noted,
    successfully moved the District Court for the appointment
    of an Examiner to evaluate the claims. The District Court
    appointed Harrison J. Goldin as Examiner. The Examiner's
    Final Report, prepared with the aid of eminent counsel,
    made extensive findings of fact regarding the leveraged
    recapitalization.4 The Examiner adopted a model for
    assessing the viability of the claims that broke the
    probability of success into five categories. Under the model,
    the Examiner concluded that a claim was "highly likely" to
    succeed if he believed that it had an 80% or greater chance
    of success; "likely" if the Examiner believed that it had a
    60% to 80% chance of success; "reasonable" if the
    Examiner believed that the likelihood of success was
    between 40% and 60%; "unlikely" if the Examiner believed
    its chance of success was only between 20% and 40%; and
    _________________________________________________________________
    
    4. The Examiner interviewed 19 people and reviewed approximately
    75,000 pages of documents relating to the transaction.
    
                                    10
    
    
    "remote" if the Examiner concluded that there was less
    than a 20% chance of success.
    
    As the report details, in August 1995, certain affiliates of
    KKR, including an Alabama corporation formed for the
    transaction, Crimson Associates LLP (of which KKR is the
    general partner), acquired 83.33% of the stock of Bruno's.
    To pay for this transaction, Bruno's and its affiliated
    Debtors obtained cash and credit through the issuance of
    $400 million in notes, a $475 million term loan facility from
    Chemical Bank, and a $125 million revolving credit facility
    from Chemical Bank (from which approximately $10 million
    was drawn to fund the 1995 transaction). KKR and its
    affiliates contributed $250 million, and Bruno's applied $20
    million of its existing cash to the transaction.
    
    The net cash proceeds were allocated to the following
    principal uses: (1) payment of $880.1 million of cash
    merger consideration to the pre-closing shareholders (the
    purchase of Bruno's pre-transaction outstanding common
    stock at $12.00 per share); (2) repayment of $200 million
    plus accrued interest in pre-transaction indebtedness; and
    (3) payment of approximately $40 million in fees and
    expenses related to the merger.5 The Examiner hired Goldin
    Associates, L.L.C., to perform a detailed financial analysis
    of the recapitalization. The analysis covered two principal
    issues regarding Bruno's at the time of the recapitalization:
    the solvency of Bruno's, and the adequacy of Bruno's'
    capital resources to meet its future needs, including its
    ability to pay its debts and satisfy its liabilities as due.
    These issues are important to analyzing the claims arising
    out of the recapitalization because the viability of the
    claims depends on whether the recapitalization left Bruno's
    insolvent or with an unreasonably small amount of assets
    in relation to the business or the transaction. If the value
    of the assets acquired in the recapitalization does not
    exceed the debt incurred, or if the business was left with
    unreasonably small capital, the transaction may be a
    _________________________________________________________________
    
    5. These fees and expenses included $15 million in fees to KKR, more
    than $14 million to Chase, and more than $10 million to BT Securities
    for underwriting fees and intrabank funding costs.
    
                                    11
    
    
    "fraudulent transfer." Transactions in violation of the
    prohibition on fraudulent transfers can be avoided. 6
    
    The test of solvency is whether, at the time of the
    recapitalization, the company's assets exceeded its
    liabilities. There are two basic approaches to this
    evaluation: asset by asset evaluation, which ascribes value
    to each asset and determines solvency by comparing the
    sum of those assets to total liabilities, and enterprise
    valuation, which values the business as a going concern
    and includes intangibles such as relationships with
    customers and suppliers, and the name, profile, and
    reputation of the business.7 The Examiner concluded that
    it was likely (i.e., that there was a 60-80% chance) that a
    court would apply the business enterprise analysis. The
    Examiner believed that the business enterprise evaluation
    was the appropriate measure of solvency because KKR
    acquired Bruno's as a going concern.
    
    Under the business enterprise evaluation, the Examiner
    performed three separate analyses: a comparable public
    company analysis, a comparable acquisitions analysis, and
    a discounted cash flow analysis. The Examiner found that
    in all but one of the relevant formulations, Bruno's was
    solvent at the time of the recapitalization. The approach
    favored by the Examiner, comparing enterprise value
    derived from a discounted cash flow analysis to long-term
    debt, reflected that the enterprise value of Bruno's exceeded
    its long-term debt by approximately $270 million to $690
    million. The valuation is a range because the Examiner
    used three earnings amounts: sales, EBITDA (earnings
    _________________________________________________________________
    
    6. Fraudulent transfer actions may be brought by a debtor-in-possession
    under S 548 of the Code, see 11 U.S.C.S 548, and, pursuant to S 544(b)
    of the Code, under applicable state fraudulent transfer statutes, see 11
    U.S.C. S 544(b). Because the recapitalization occurred approximately two
    and one-half years before the commencement of the Chapter 11 cases,
    S 548 is inapplicable, and hence any fraudulent transfer claims would
    have to be brought under state law through S 544(b) of the Code.
    
    7. In assessing liabilities, the Examiner considered the bank loans,
    subordinated notes, capital lease obligations, deferred tax liability, and
    contingent and other off-balance sheet liabilities. The Examiner
    concluded that no material adjustments to the balance sheet liabilities
    were required for purposes of the solvency analysis.
    
                                    12
    
    
    before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization), and
    EBIT (earnings before interest and taxes). The trading
    market enterprise value is divided by these earning
    amounts to derive multiples, which are applied to Bruno's'
    earnings totals to derive valuation.
    
    The other methods of analyzing solvency also resulted in
    a range because the Examiner considered multiple earnings
    amounts. The "assets to liabilities" construct, comparing
    total adjusted enterprise value derived from a discounted
    cash flow analysis to total liabilities, showed that Bruno's
    was solvent by approximately $215 to $635 million. The
    acquisition multiples test, which gives greater weight to an
    acquisition premium, also indicated that Bruno's was
    solvent, with assets of approximately $188 million to $250
    million, using multiples of EBITDA and EBIT, respectively
    (and higher if the multiple of sales is applied). 8 The market
    multiples solvency test, which does not include a control
    premium, produced lower margins of solvency ranging from
    approximately $27 to $104 million. The only test which
    indicated insolvency applied a southeast sales multiple.
    Under this test, the Examiner considered the sales earnings
    amount for comparable enterprises operating in the
    southeastern United States only.
    
    The Examiner concluded that the southeast sales test
    was an inappropriate means of measuring the solvency of
    Bruno's and, in any event, should be given less weight than
    the other valuations standards. The Examiner also noted
    that the purchase price itself was probative of Bruno's'
    value (and thus solvency). The purchase price indicated an
    enterprise value of $1.2 billion, which exceeded long-term
    debt by approximately $245 million. Adding current
    liabilities of $156.4 million, the sum exceeded total
    liabilities by about $90 million.9 Although he deemed it
    unlikely that a court would apply the asset-by-asset test,
    _________________________________________________________________
    
    8. The Examiner considered the sales multiple to be a less appropriate
    measure of solvency than EBITDA and EBIT.
    
    9. The Examiner's Report appears to contain an arithmetical or
    typographical error in that it concludes from the above numbers that the
    sum exceeded total liabilities by over $190 million, rather than $90
    million. Nothing in this case turns on this point, however.
    
                                    13
    
    
    the Examiner also conducted an analysis under the asset-
    by-asset methodology. The sum of Bruno's assets, valued
    piecemeal, was $1,024.8 million. The assets did not exceed
    the total of liabilities, which were $1,114.1 million.
    
    Additionally, the Examiner analyzed whether the
    recapitalization left Bruno's with unreasonably small
    capital. The critical question is whether the parties'
    projections were reasonable at the time of the transaction.
    The analysis looked at historical data, such as cashflow,
    net sales, gross profit margins, and net profits and losses,
    and whether the parties considered difficulties that might
    arise, such as interest rates fluctuations and market
    downturns, to gauge the reasonableness of the projections
    in light of working capital needs in the industry and actual
    cash available to service needs. Actual performance of the
    debtor following the transaction is evidence of whether the
    parties' projections were reasonable.
    
    The Examiner opined that Bruno's was not
    undercapitalized. He concluded that at the time of the
    recapitalization Bruno's was a viable enterprise capable of
    substantial improvement, and that the parties' projections,
    although aggressive in some areas, were conservative in
    others. The enterprise failed, in his opinion, not because of
    inadequate capital, but because a series of unfortunate
    decisions, including a change in pricing strategy and a
    decision to close one distribution center, caused substantial
    erosion in the company's customer base. Declining demand
    for Bruno's' services resulted in declining revenue, which
    led to the bankruptcy.
    
    In part because of these conclusions, the Examiner
    opined that any claims arising out of the recapitalization
    were unlikely to succeed (i.e., that they had only a 20-40%
    chance of success). He reasoned that "the Recapitalization
    differed fundamentally from prior-leveraged transactions
    that have been found to be unlawful; among other things,
    the risks of the transaction were borne by the acquirer
    (KKR) and the lenders (who were unsecured), rather than
    shifted onto pre-transaction creditors." The Examiner also
    concluded that the claims were "not promising," were
    "limited and speculative," that "significant defenses" were
    available to each of the principal participants, the former
    
                                    14
    
    
    shareholders, the Banks, the subordinated noteholders,
    and KKR in the recapitalization, and that
    
           [i]n light of the multiple legal and factual obstacles to
           any substantial fraudulent transfer or illegal
           distribution recovery by the Debtors [relating to the
           recapitalization], the examiner believes that the
           prosecution of such claims is extremely difficult to
           justify . . . . As a legal matter, the laws of the governing
           jurisdiction (Alabama, and, if suit is filed in Delaware,
           the Third Circuit) present formidable obstacles to
           recovery from the principal defendants.
    
    The releases of these claims do not cover any direct,
    personal, non-derivative claims held by creditors against
    non-debtor third parties. The releases do extinguish many
    if not all of the claims arising out of the recapitalization
    that could have been pursued by the Debtors or on their
    behalf. The parties do not dispute the findings of fact
    included in the Examiner's Final Report. Huff and HSBC
    argue, however, that the Examiner's (and the District
    Court's) conclusion that there was little value to be had
    from the claims was flawed because it depended on the
    Examiner's conclusion that Bruno's was left solvent after
    the recapitalization. Huff argues that the Examiner erred in
    adopting the enterprise valuation approach.
    
    B.
    
    The second issue regarding the releases has to do with
    Paragraph 58 of the Confirmation order, which releases
    Committee members and professionals who provided
    services after the petition date from certain liability for their
    work in the reorganization. The release in Paragraph 58 is
    limited to claims brought in connection with work on the
    bankruptcy reorganization plan, and it does not eliminate
    liability but rather limits it to willful misconduct or gross
    negligence. Huff and HSBC nevertheless argue that this
    release violates S 524(e) of the Bankruptcy Code because it
    affects the liability of another entity for the debt of the
    Debtors. The Debtors respond that the releases do not
    come within the meaning of S 524(e) and were consistent
    with the standard of liability under the Code.
    
                                    15
    
    
    C.
    
    The third set of claims concern the waiver of preferences,
    i.e., preference claims to recover from trade creditors and
    suppliers for payments made in the 90 days prior tofiling
    for bankruptcy. As noted above, the Debtors paid out
    substantial sums of money during this period. Under
    bankruptcy law, such payments can be recovered by the
    estate; S 547 of the Bankruptcy Code vests exclusive
    discretion to prosecute or not prosecute preference claims
    with the trustee or debtor-in-possession. Afterfiling, the
    Debtors pursued a preference action against the Banks,
    seeking to avoid certain liens granted to the Banks within
    90 days of the filing. The action settled; the Banks agreed
    to release the liens granted just prior to the bankruptcy
    filing against property and assets of the Debtors and, in
    exchange, the Debtors agreed to pay the fees and expenses
    of the Banks' attorneys throughout the Chapter 11 case.
    The Debtors waived many other preference actions. The
    Debtors represent that they decided to waive these claims
    as a part of the reorganization plan in order to facilitate
    and rehabilitate post-reorganization relationships with key
    suppliers.
    
    D.
    
    The District Court confirmed the Debtors' reorganization
    plan after a three day hearing. The confirmation order was
    issued by the District Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C.S 1334,
    which grants jurisdiction to the district courts over
    bankruptcy matters. Because this is an appeal from a
    district court exercising original jurisdiction in bankruptcy,
    our jurisdiction stems from 28 U.S.C. S 1291 rather than
    28 U.S.C. S 158(d). See In re Marvel Entertainment Group,
    Inc., 140 F.3d 463, 470 (3d Cir. 1998). The confirmation
    order was a final appealable order. See id.  at 469. We
    review the District Court's legal determinations de novo, its
    factual findings for clear error, and its exercise of discretion
    for abuse thereof. See In re Environmental Energy, Inc., 188
    F.3d 116, 122 (3d Cir. 1999).
    
    II. Equitable Mootness
    
    Under the doctrine of equitable mootness, an appeal
    should be dismissed, even if the court has jurisdiction and
    
                                    16
    
    
    could fashion relief, if the implementation of that relief
    would be inequitable. See In re Continental Airlines, 91 F.3d
    553, 559 (3d Cir. 1996) (Continental I). As we noted in
    Continental I, "[t]he use of the word`mootness' as a
    shortcut for a court's decision that the fait accompli of a
    plan confirmation should preclude further judicial
    proceedings has led to unfortunate confusion" between
    equitable mootness and constitutional mootness. Id.
    Constitutional mootness implicates the Article III case or
    controversy requirement; an appeal is moot in the
    constitutional sense only if events have taken place that
    make it "impossible for the court to grant `any effectual
    relief whatever.' " Church of Scientology of Calif. v. United
    States, 506 U.S. 9, 12 (1992) (citation omitted). Equitable
    mootness is a broader concept that has developed in
    bankruptcy law. It provides that that "[a]n appeal should
    . . . be dismissed as moot when, even though effective relief
    could conceivably be fashioned, implementation of that
    relief would be inequitable." Continental I , 91 F.3d at 558
    (citing In re Chateaugay Corp., 988 F.2d 322, 325 (2d Cir.
    1993)).
    
    In Continental I, we dismissed the appeal after finding it
    equitably moot because the appeal had an "integral nexus"
    with the feasibility of the Continental Debtors' plan of
    reorganization. Id. at 564. The Court identified prudential
    factors with which to evaluate equitable mootness,
    including whether the plan has been substantially
    consummated or stayed, whether the requested relief would
    affect the rights of other parties, whether the requested
    relief would affect the success of the plan, and whether it
    would further the public policy of affording finality to
    bankruptcy judgments. See id. at 560. These factors are
    given varying weight, depending on the particular
    circumstances, but the foremost consideration is whether
    the reorganization plan has been substantially
    consummated. See id. "This is especially so where the
    reorganization involves intricate transactions . . . or where
    outside investors have relied on the confirmation of the
    plan." Id. at 560-61 (citations omitted). We have also noted,
    however, that the doctrine is "limited in scope and [should
    be] cautiously applied," id. at 559, and that it involves "a
    
                                    17
    
    
    discretionary balancing of equitable and prudential factors,"
    id. at 560.
    
    The Debtors here argue that, since the stay was denied
    and the reorganization has gone forward, this appeal is
    equitably moot. They argue that the appeal, if successful,
    would necessitate the reversal or unraveling of the entire
    plan of reorganization. We disagree. There are intermediate
    options. The releases (or some of the releases) could be
    stricken from the plan without undoing other portions of it.
    We draw instruction in this regard from In re Chateaugay
    Corp., 167 B.R. 776, 780 (S.D.N.Y. 1994), in which the
    court stated that
    
           [i]t is difficult to conceive how a potential liability of, at
           most, several million dollars could unravel the Debtors'
           reorganization, which involved the transfer of billions of
           dollars, and which has resulted in the revival of
           Debtors into a multibillion dollar operation with $200
           million in working capital . . . appellees have made no
           showing that it would "knock the props out from under
           the authorization for every transaction that has taken
           place and create an unmanageable, uncontrollable
           situation for the Bankruptcy Court."
    
    (quoting In re Chateaugay Corp., 10 F.3d 944, 952 (2d Cir.
    1993)).
    
    In balancing the policy favoring finality of bankruptcy
    court judgments--particularly reorganization plans--
    against other considerations, we conclude that the equities
    here do not require dismissal. Huff has clearly been an
    active participant in the reorganization and was heard at
    length in the confirmation hearing, and in that sense has
    had its day in court. It seeks to invalidate releases that
    affect the rights and liabilities of third parties. The plan has
    been substantially consummated, but, as noted above, the
    plan could go forward even if the releases were struck, and
    Huff 's reply brief suggests that it now seeks only
    alterations to the plan rather than an unraveling of the
    reorganization. Cf. In re Continental Airlines , 203 F.3d 203,
    210 (3d Cir. 2000) (Continental II) (rejecting equitable
    mootness argument as inadequately pled, but noting also
    that the argument was unlikely to succeed because"[n]o
    
                                    18
    
    
    evidence or arguments have been presented that Plaintiffs'
    appeal, if successful, would necessitate the reversal or
    unraveling of the entire plan of reorganization"). We
    therefore hold that this appeal should not be dismissed for
    equitable mootness.
    
    III. The Absolute Priority Rule
    
    Section 1129(b)(2) of the Bankruptcy Code requires that
    creditors be paid in full before holders of equity receive any
    distribution. It reads in pertinent part:
    
           (2) For the purpose of this subsection, the condition
           that a plan be fair and equitable with respect to a class
           includes the following requirements:
    
           . . .
    
           (b) With respect to a class of unsecured claims--
    
           . . .
    
           (ii) the holder of any claim or interest that is junior to
           the claims of such class will not receive or retain under
           the plan on account of such junior claim or interest
           any property.
    
    11 U.S.C. S 1129(b)(2). This provision is the"absolute
    priority rule." Huff contends that the District Court erred in
    confirming the plan because, by releasing the claims arising
    out of the recapitalization, the plan awarded an interest to
    old equity (KKR and the other participants in the
    reorganization) "on account of " their interest in the estate
    in violation of the absolute priority rule. Huff 's theory has
    several components. First, it makes the legal argument that
    under Bank of America National Trust and Savings
    Association v. 203 North LaSalle Street Partnership , 526
    U.S. 434 (1999), the Supreme Court's most recent case
    construing S 1129(b)(2), no junior class of creditors or
    interest holders may receive or retain any property under a
    plan in which a rejecting class of creditors is not being paid
    in full. Second, Huff submits that the District Court erred
    in concluding that the claims were eliminated because they
    were unlikely to succeed and potentially costly to the
    debtors to pursue. The success of this contention depends
    
                                    19
    
    
    on Huff 's ability to establish that the Examiner and the
    District Court erred in concluding that the claims were
    unlikely to succeed. We begin by discussing 203 North
    LaSalle.
    
    A.
    
    In 203 North LaSalle, 526 U.S. 434 (1999), the Supreme
    Court held that, even if it is assumed that there is a new
    value corollary to the absolute priority rule (which would
    allow old equity to contribute new value and receive interest
    in the reorganized entity in exchange), allowing junior
    interest holders to have an exclusive opportunity to obtain
    an interest in a reorganized entity by providing new value,
    free from competition and without market valuation,
    violates S 1129(b)(2)(B)(ii). See id. at 458.10 This is because
    the exclusive opportunity to invest in the reorganized entity
    (and receive equity in it thereby) must be considered
    property received "on account of " the junior claim (the
    equity interest). Id. Huff argues that the plan, by releasing
    the claims arising out of the leveraged recapitalization held
    by the bankrupt entity against holders of junior equity
    (such as KKR) even though senior creditors were not paid
    in full, essentially transferred property to those holders of
    junior equity in violation of the absolute priority rule.
    
    There can be little doubt that a legal claim is property
    within the meaning of the Bankruptcy Code. See Northview
    Motors, Inc. v. Chrysler Motors Corp., 186 F.3d 346, 350 (3d
    Cir. 1999) (treating estate's legal claims as estate property
    within the meaning of the Code). Similarly, a release of
    liability has value cognizable under the Code. Accordingly,
    when the Debtors extinguished the claims arising out of the
    _________________________________________________________________
    
    10. For some time, there has been a split of authority regarding whether
    there is a "new value" exception or corollary to the absolute priority rule.
    Such a corollary would mean that, when old equity provides new value
    under the reorganization plan, any property it receives under the plan
    would not be considered to be received "on account of " the old equity
    interest and therefore would not violate the absolute priority rule. The
    Supreme Court declined to decide whether there is a new value corollary
    in 203 North LaSalle, 526 U.S. at 454 (1999), and that issue is not
    presented in this case.
    
                                    20
    
    
    recapitalization, KKR received something of value even
    though some creditors senior to the equity holder had not
    been paid in full. KKR is a key potential object of the
    avoidance claims because it was a moving force in the
    reorganization, and a holder of equity in the Debtors. Thus,
    if KKR benefitted from the releases "on account of " its
    interest in the Debtors, then the plan violated the absolute
    priority rule.
    
    In 203 North LaSalle, the Supreme Court interpreted the
    "on account of " language in S 1129(B)(2)(b)(ii). The Court
    rejected arguments that "on account of " means "in
    satisfaction of " the interest or "in exchange for" the interest
    and concluded that it means "because of " the interest. 526
    U.S. at 450-51. Accordingly, a causal connection between
    holding the prior claim or interest, and receiving or
    retaining property, will trigger the absolute priority rule.
    The degree of causation required is not defined specifically
    in 203 North LaSalle, because the Court concluded that on
    either of several views the creditor's objection in that case
    would require rejection of the plan at issue. See id. at 454.
    Nevertheless, the Court provided a few points of reference
    for defining prohibited "on account of " transactions.
    
    First, the Court rejected the amicus curiae position of the
    United States, which had contended that, under a
    reorganization plan, old equity should not be allowed to
    take any property of the debtor if creditors are not paid in
    full. See id. at 451. The Court said that this "starchy"
    position could not be correct because, under this view of
    the absolute priority rule, Congress would have omitted
    entirely the phrase "on account of." Id.  at 451-52. This
    confirms that there are some cases in which property can
    transfer to junior interests not "on account of " those
    interests but for other reasons.
    
    Second, in considering the necessary level of causation,
    the Court looked to the two basic goals of Chapter 11:
    those of "preserving going concerns and maximizing
    property available to satisfy creditors." Id.  at 453. While
    emphasizing that it was not providing "an exhaustive list of
    the requirements," id., the Court explained:
    
           Causation between the old equity's holdings and
           subsequent property substantial enough to disqualify a
    
                                    21
    
    
           plan would presumably occur on this view of things
           whenever old equity's later property would come at a
           price that failed to provide the greatest possible
           addition to the bankruptcy estate, and it would always
           come at a price too low when the equity holders
           obtained or preserved an ownership interest for less
           than someone else would have paid.
    
    Id. at 453 (citations omitted).
    
    B.
    
    We do not believe that these releases were made"on
    account of " KKR's junior interest as that phrase is
    construed in 203 North LaSalle. What doomed the plan in
    203 North LaSalle was not that old equity received property
    under the plan, but the "exclusivity" that old equity
    enjoyed, which suggested that old equity might have
    obtained the interest for less than someone else might have
    paid.11 Under the 203 North LaSalle plan, old equity set the
    price for the interest it obtained under the plan, and the
    right to set this price amounted to a property right in itself:
    
           Hence it is that the exclusiveness of the opportunity
           with its protection against the market's scrutiny of the
           purchase price by means of competing bids or even
           competing plan proposals, renders the partners' right a
           property interest extended "on account of " the old
           equity position and therefore subject to an unpaid
           senior creditor class's objection.
    
    Id. at 456.
    
    In this case, to the extent that KKR and the other entities
    that benefitted from the releases had an exclusive
    _________________________________________________________________
    
    11. Huff argues that 203 North LaSalle's prohibition on exclusive
    opportunities was violated here because the Debtors had the exclusive
    opportunity to dispose of the Debtors' property. However, to read 203
    North LaSalle so broadly would be to undermine the express statutory
    provision for exclusivity in S 1121(b), which provides "[e]xcept as
    otherwise provided in this section, only the debtor may file a plan until
    after 120 days after the date of the order for relief under this chapter."
    See In re Zenith Electronics, 241 B.R. 92, 106 (Bankr. D. Del. 1999)
    (making this point). This we decline to do.
    
                                    22
    
    
    opportunity to gain the release in the reorganization, it was
    only because they were on the radar screen as potentially
    liable parties. Huff has adduced no evidence that they
    sought out the releases or set a price for them; indeed, Huff
    itself made several offers for the claims, which were
    considered and rejected, demonstrating that KKR enjoyed
    no exclusivity of opportunity.12
    
    The District Court held that the decision to extinguish
    the claims arising out of the recapitalization was made
    because the claims were adjudged to have a negative value
    to the estate and not because the junior creditors
    persuaded the Debtors to release them "on account of "
    their interest in the Debtors and in violation of the absolute
    priority rule. It concluded that the claims were extinguished
    for three reasons. First, it was persuaded by the Examiner's
    conclusion that there was a low likelihood of recovery on
    the claims. At the stay hearing, the Court noted that
    
           I have to say I was sitting at the end of the
           confirmation hearing, still waiting to hear the facts that
           would convince me that there . . . was value to be had
           . . . and I never heard that. And I remain convinced
           that there was every opportunity to make that record,
           and that record was not made.
    
    The Examiner concluded that the prospects for successfully
    prosecuting the claims were "not promising." He noted that,
    as a factual matter, the recapitalization transaction differed
    markedly from prior highly leveraged transactions that had
    been found to be unlawful insofar as the risks of the
    transaction were born by the acquirer (KKR) and other
    unsecured creditors and not by pre-transaction creditors.
    Second, the Court concluded that the potential cost to the
    _________________________________________________________________
    
    12. Huff has argued that its own willingness to buy the claims from the
    bankruptcy estate shows that the claims did have value (and thus, by
    implication, that they were extinguished not because they lacked value
    but because they had value that the junior creditors saw and managed
    to capture in violation of the absolute priority rule). But Huff offered only
    $100,000 plus some portion of any future recovery. We do not think that
    relatively meager and arguably strategic offer demonstrates that the
    claims would have had more value to the estate if they had been
    preserved or sold to Huff than they did under the reorganization plan.
    
                                    23
    
    
    estate of prosecuting the action and defending and paying
    indemnification claims, cross claims, and counterclaims
    arising out of the prosecution was high. Third, the Court
    believed that there was some likelihood that the Banks and
    the subordinated noteholders, as participants in the
    leveraged recapitalization, would be estopped from
    recovering on the claims.
    
    Huff and HSBC do not challenge the Examiner's (and the
    District Court's) factual findings, which, at all events, are
    well supported, but contend that the Examiner's analysis of
    the value of the claims was flawed because he made a legal
    error in determining that a court would evaluate the claims
    on an enterprise evaluation basis, and thus he incorrectly
    concluded that the claims were unlikely to succeed. It is on
    this basis that they challenge the finding made by the
    Examiner and accepted by the District Court that the
    claims were of little value to the estate. Their theory is that
    the claims did have substantial value and thus that the
    District Court erred in concluding that the claims were
    released because they were adjudged to be unlikely to
    succeed.
    
    C.
    
    The Examiner analyzed the viability of any claims arising
    out of the recapitalization primarily under Alabama law.13
    Two types of fraudulent transfers, actual and constructive,
    are within the scope of the Alabama Fraudulent Transfer
    Act, ALA. CODE 1975, S 8-9A-1 et seq. See McPherson Oil Co.,
    Inc. v. Massey, 643 So.2d 595, 596 (Ala. 1994). An actual
    fraudulent transfer is one made by a debtor who transfers
    assets "with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any
    creditor of the debtor." ALA. CODE 1975, S 8-9A-4(a). The
    trial court considers several factors in determining whether
    the debtor possessed the requisite intent, including to
    _________________________________________________________________
    
    13. Huff does not challenge the decision to analyze claims arising out of
    the recapitalization under Alabama law. The Examiner canvassed choice
    of law rules and determined that Alabama law would apply to the claims
    whether suit was filed within the Third Circuit or in Alabama because
    Alabama's contacts with Bruno's generally, and with the recapitalization
    specifically, exceeded all others in quantity, substance, and significance.
    
                                    24
    
    
    whom the transfer was made, the amount of assets
    transferred, and the financial condition of the debtor before
    and after the transfer. See id., S8-9A-4(b); McPherson Oil,
    643 So.2d at 596. A constructive fraudulent transfer occurs
    when a debtor transfers assets to another without
    consideration, and the debtor was, or became, insolvent at
    the time of the transfer. See ALA. CODE 1975, S 8-9A-5(a);
    McPherson Oil, 643 So.2d at 596; Champion v. Locklear,
    523 So.2d 336, 338 (Ala. 1988).
    
    The parties have focused on potential constructive
    fraudulent transfer claims.14 To succeed on a claim of
    constructive fraudulent transfer arising out of the
    recapitalization, a claimant would have to show that
    Bruno's was insolvent or left with unreasonably small
    capital at the time of the recapitalization.15 Based on the
    conclusion that the leveraged recapitalization did not
    render Bruno's insolvent or leave it with unreasonably
    small capital, the Examiner concluded that the claims had
    little value.16 He noted as well that, because KKR bore most
    of the risk of the transaction, the chance that KKR would
    be held liable for constructive fraudulent transfer was
    remote.
    
    Huff would have us reject the Examiner's conclusions
    that Bruno's was solvent after the recapitalization on the
    basis that the Examiner used an incorrect method to
    evaluate solvency. Huff argues that the Examiner erred by
    evaluating solvency on a "business enterprise" method
    rather than a "piecemeal or asset-by-asset" valuation
    method (which does not take goodwill into account except
    _________________________________________________________________
    
    14. The Examiner concluded that the chances that a claim for actual
    fraudulent transfer would succeed were remote.
    
    15. The Examiner concluded that the fraudulent transfer claims would
    not be barred under the applicable statutes of limitations, and no one
    has challenged that conclusion.
    
    16. The Examiner also concluded that there was a reasonable possibility
    that the subordinated noteholders and the Banks would be estopped
    from sharing in any fraudulent transfer recoveries. In this regard, it is
    significant that 87% of the debtors' creditors (i.e. the senior lenders and
    the subordinated noteholders) participated in the recapitalization.
    
                                    25
    
    
    insofar as the entity includes separately saleable 
    intangibles).17
    
    The Examiner used the business enterprise method, as
    opposed to the asset-by-asset method, after extensive
    analysis of the case law. He concluded that it was unlikely
    that a court would analyze fraudulent conveyance claims
    under the asset-by-asset test and that the business
    enterprise method was consistent with generally accepted
    accounting principles (GAAP) and appropriate under the
    circumstances. We conclude that the District Court's
    decision to credit the Examiner's Report, which concluded
    that the business enterprise approach was the appropriate
    measure of solvency, was not error. The Alabama
    Fraudulent Transfer Act does not appear to require an
    asset-by-asset approach.18 The statute limits the definition
    of assets without excluding assets, such as goodwill, that
    are typically included in the business enterprise analysis
    _________________________________________________________________
    
    17. The Examiner actually used an "adjusted business enterprise"
    method, in which he considered short-term liabilities, which are often
    left out of a business enterprise analysis. He did so because he
    concluded that a court analyzing fraudulent transfer would include short
    term liabilities in an assessment of liabilities. The Examiner also
    considered contingent and off-balance sheet liabilities for the same
    reason.
    
    18. The statute provides that
    
           (a) A debtor is insolvent if the sum of the debtor's debts is greater
           than all of the debtor's assets at a fair valuation.
    
           (b) A debtor who is generally not paying his debts as they become
           due is presumed to be insolvent.
    
           ***
    
           (d) Assets under this section do not include property that has been
           transferred, concealed, or removed with intent to hinder, delay, or
           defraud creditors or that has been transferred in a manner making
           the transfer voidable under this chapter.
    
           (e) Debts under this section do not include an obligation to the
           extent it is secured by a valid lien on property of the debtor not
           included as an asset.
    
    ALA. CODE 1975 S 8-9A-2. No evaluation method is specified by the
    statute, which does not define "fair valuation."
    
                                    26
    
    
    but not in an asset-by-asset evaluation. See ALA. CODE 1975
    S 8-9A-2.
    
    Moreover, however value is analyzed, it is clear that
    Bruno's functioned soundly for several years after the
    recapitalization, paying its debts (including all interest
    payments) and successfully renegotiating the interest rates
    on some of its loans. Huff has given us no reason to
    conclude that the Examiner incorrectly determined that
    Bruno's was solvent at the time of the recapitalization. Huff
    itself initially invested in Bruno's in December 1995 (four
    months after the recapitalization). It made additional
    investments in 1996 and early 1997, and in October 1997
    Huff 's analysts were still recommending Bruno's as a
    "buy." Importantly, and as the District Court noted, at the
    time of the recapitalization Huff 's own experts agreed that
    Bruno's was solvent:
    
           The credit analysis prepared by Huff 's financial
           analyst, Allen Gurevich, in August 1995 (Debtor's
           Exhibit 18) and the testimony of Huff 's portfolio
           manager (tr. pp 122-123) and Huff 's inside attorney
           Bryan Bloom (tr. 166-0167) that the fair market value
           of Bruno's at the time of the Leveraged Recapitalization
           in August 1995 approximated 1.1 billion.
    
    And as the Examiner noted, "in connection with the
    transaction, other sophisticated financial inst[itutions]
    relied on KKR's projections. From interviews with
    representatives of all of these institutions and a review of
    thousands of documents, the Examiner is aware of no
    instance in which these institutions contemporaneously
    challenged the reasonableness of KKR's projections for
    Bruno's." Huff 's challenge to the Examiner's and the
    District Court's finding that the leveraged recapitalization
    did not render Bruno's insolvent is unavailing.
    
    As noted above, Huff does not challenge the Examiner's
    factual findings, and we find no error in District Court's
    decision to accept the Examiner's decision to evaluate the
    claims using the business enterprise method. Huff 's
    remaining argument that the release of the claims was on
    account of the interest amounts to an argument from res
    ipsa loquitur: KKR had an equity interest in the corporation,
    
                                    27
    
    
    and therefore the Debtors must have made the releases for
    that reason. If we were to accept this position, without
    some evidence of a causal relationship, any time that old
    equity received anything of value under a reorganization
    plan we would have to conclude that it was received"on
    account of " the interest--the position rejected by the
    Supreme Court in 203 North LaSalle. See  526 U.S. at 451-
    52. In this regard, it is significant that claims against all
    participants in the recapitalization, and not just KKR, were
    extinguished, including all claims against the noteholders
    (including Huff) and all claims against the shareholders
    who were bought out in the recapitalization (who were the
    managers of the company when it made the deal for the
    reorganization).
    
    The evidence compels the conclusion that the claims
    were extinguished because, in the judgment of the plan
    proponents, extinguishment was the approach most likely
    to provide the greatest possible addition to the bankruptcy
    estate. To be sure, the releases were not subjected to a
    formal "market test," as 203 North LaSalle  suggests may be
    required. However, in these circumstances, the Examiner's
    finding that the claims had little to no value, which was
    accepted by the District Court, was an appropriate
    surrogate for a market test and an acceptable safeguard.
    
    We thus conclude that the District Court did not err in
    concluding that the potential cost of defending and paying
    indemnification claims, cross claims, and counterclaims
    arising out of the prosecution of the claims was high, and
    that the claims were extinguished not on account of KKR's
    interest in the Debtors, but because the Debtors
    determined that they were unlikely to have any value. The
    Examiner's and the District Court's conclusions that the
    claims were unlikely to succeed and were potentially costly
    to pursue are legally and factually supported. Huff has
    failed to demonstrate the requisite causal relationship
    between the transfer of value and KKR's interest in the
    Debtors. Therefore, we conclude that the plan did not
    violate the absolute priority rule.
    
    This is not to say that a reorganization plan can transfer
    assets whenever the Trustee or the Debtor-in-Possession
    judges that to do so would be in the best interest of the
    
                                    28
    
    
    reorganized entity. Rather, we announce a narrow rule that,
    without direct evidence of causation, releasing potential
    claims against junior equity does not violate the absolute
    priority rule in the particular circumstance in which the
    estate's claims are of only marginal viability and could be
    costly for the reorganized entity to pursue.
    
    IV. Good Faith
    
    Huff contends that the plan should not have been
    confirmed because the District Court erred in determining
    that it was proposed in good faith. Section 1129(a)(3)
    provides that the court shall confirm a plan only if "[t]he
    plan has been proposed in good faith and not by any means
    forbidden by law." 11 U.S.C. S 1129(a)(3)."[F]or purposes of
    determining good faith under section 1129(a)(3) . . . the
    important point of inquiry is the plan itself and whether
    such a plan will fairly achieve a result consistent with the
    objectives and purposes of the Bankruptcy Code." In re
    Abbotts Dairies of Pennsylvania, Inc., 788 F.2d 143, 150 n.5
    (3d Cir. 1986) (quoting In re Madison Hotel Assocs., 749
    F.2d 410, 425 (7th Cir. 1984)) (alteration in original). The
    District Court's determinations of fact pertaining to good
    faith are reviewed for clear error. Cf. Abbotts Dairies, 788
    F.2d at 147 (holding that the standard of review for good
    faith under S 363(m) of the Code is mixed:"we exercise
    plenary review of the legal standard applied by the district
    and bankruptcy courts, but review the latter court's
    findings of fact on a clearly erroneous standard") (citations
    omitted).
    
    Huff contends that the plan was not proposed in good
    faith because the releases from any claims arising out of
    the recapitalization were made in a collusive quid pro quo
    for the waiver of preferences. Huff 's theory of bad faith is
    that KKR orchestrated the reorganization and controlled the
    Debtors throughout the reorganization in order to avoid
    potential liability arising out of the leveraged
    recapitalization, and that it persuaded the other creditors to
    agree to the reorganization plan by including the waiver of
    preferences.
    
    As the District Court found, however, the timing of the
    releases belies this argument; there is scant evidence tying
    
                                    29
    
    
    the release of the claims arising out of the recapitalization
    to the waiver of preferences. The Debtors decided not to
    pursue the preferences on March 17, 1999. One month
    later, the Committee passed a resolution preserving the
    claims arising out of the recapitalization until further
    information could be gathered about them. This shows that
    a month after the Debtors decided not to pursue the
    preferences, the Committee had not decided whether to
    release the claims arising out of the recapitalization plans.
    
    At the confirmation hearing, Ms. Schirmang, co-chair of
    the Committee, testified that the Debtors did not release
    the claims arising out of the leveraged recapitalization in a
    quid pro quo deal for the preference claims. She testified
    that, when the Committee decided to release the claims in
    May 1999, it did so "in the interest of getting the plan into
    the hands of creditors and hopefully getting a distribution
    as soon as possible and getting the Debtor out of
    bankruptcy." Ms. Schirmang also testified that the
    preference waivers were intended to maintain and
    rehabilitate post-petition relationships within the trade, and
    that there was nothing unusual about the waiver of
    preferences: "to be honest with you, I have never seen a
    reorganized debtor pursuing preference actions." The trade
    creditors who benefitted from the waivers included key
    suppliers to the business. See note 3, supra. Huff has not
    presented anything but innuendo in support of its
    argument that the Debtors failed to act in good faith. Given
    the record evidence, we conclude that the District Court's
    finding that the plan was proposed in good faith was not in
    error.
    
    V. Conformity to Applicable Provision of
           Title II of the Code
    
    Section 1129(a)(1) provides that the court shall confirm a
    plan if it "complies with the applicable provisions of this
    title." 11 U.S.C. S 1129(a)(1). This requires that the plan
    conform to the applicable provisions of Title II. See
    Lawrence P. King, Collier on BankruptcyP 1129.03[1], 1129-
    25 (15th ed. rev. 1996). Huff argues that the plan should
    not have been confirmed because it violates several
    provisions of Title II.
    
                                    30
    
    
    A. Section 510(a)
    
    Section 510(a) provides that a "subordination agreement
    is enforceable in a case under this title to the same extent
    that such agreement is enforceable under applicable
    nonbankruptcy law." Huff argues that it had subrogation
    rights under the indenture which are violated by the terms
    of the plan. The relevant provision of the indenture provides
    that
    
           [a]fter all senior indebtedness has been paid in full
           . . . . Holders shall be subrogated . . . to the rights of
           holder of Senior Indebtedness to receive distributions
           [from the debtors] applicable to Senior Indebtedness to
           the extent that distributions otherwise payable to the
           Holders have been applied to the payment of Senior
           Indebtedness. No payments or distributions to the
           holders of Senior Indebtedness to which the Holders of
           the Securities or the Trustee would be entitled except
           for the provisions of this Article . . . shall, as between
           the Company, its creditors other than holders of the
           Senior Indebtedness and the Holders of the Securities,
           be deemed to be a payment by the Company to or on
           account of Senior Indebtedness.
    
    The subordination agreement is an intercreditor
    arrangement between the Banks (the senior indebtedness)
    and the subordinated noteholders. It does not relieve the
    Debtors of their payment obligations on the subordinated
    notes. But the subordinated noteholders' subrogation rights
    under the indenture described in these provisions never
    arose because the Banks' claims were not paid in full under
    the plan. There is no question that the Banks were not paid
    in full under the reorganization plan, because the
    reorganized entity was worth at most $340 million, whereas
    the Banks had claims of $421 million.
    
    Huff argues that the subordinated noteholders had a
    right under this provision to subrogation. More specifically,
    Huff argues that it should be awarded warrants to
    purchase common stock if and when the reorganized
    company reaches a value of $421 million. But the
    bankruptcy estate is evaluated and distributions made at
    the time of the effective date of the reorganization plan. See
    
                                    31
    
    
    11 U.S.C. S 1129(b)(2)(B)(i) (referring to"value, as of the
    effective date of the plan"). After that date, there are no
    remaining claims under which Huff could assert
    subrogation rights. This contention therefore fails.
    
    Huff also argues that under an additional clause, the so-
    called X clause, the subordinated noteholders should get
    securities in the new entity subordinated to the Banks'
    interests to the same extent that they had an interest in the
    old entity.19 The clause states that
    
           [u]ntil all Obligations with respect to Senior
           Indebtedness (as provided in Subsection above) are
           paid in full in cash or cash equivalent, any distribution
           to which holders would be entitled but for this article
           shall be made to holders of Senior Indebtedness (except
           that Holder may receive (i) securities that are
           subordinated to at least the same extent as the
           Securities to (a) Senior Indebtedness and (b) any
           securities issue in exchange for Senior Indebtedness),
           as their interests may appear.
    
    This clause does not apply to the current situation. The
    clause requires that, if the Debtors distribute securities to
    the subordinated noteholders, the general obligation to turn
    over distributions to Senior Indebtedness is waived so long
    as the new securities are subordinated "to the same extent
    as" the existing subordinated debt.
    
    As the Seventh Circuit has explained, these clauses are
    quite common, and are intended to avoid a procedure of
    requiring junior creditors to turn over securities and then
    receive them back once senior creditors are paid in full:
    
           [s]uch clauses are common in bond debentures,
           although there is no standard wording. Without the
           clause, the subordination agreement that it qualifies
           would require the junior creditors to turn over to the
           senior creditors any securities that they had received
           as a distribution in the reorganization, unless the
           senior creditors had been paid in full. Then,
    _________________________________________________________________
    
    19. The Debtors argue that this issue was not raised in the District
    Court, but we are satisfied that it was raised in HSBC's objections to the
    plan, and in Huff 's argument to the District Court.
    
                                    32
    
    
           presumably, if the senior creditors obtained full
           payment by liquidating some of the securities that had
           been turned over, the remaining securities would be
           turned back over to the junior creditors. The X Clause
           shortcuts this cumbersome procedure and enhances
           the marketability of the securities received by the
           junior creditors, since their right to possess (as distinct
           from pocket the proceeds of) the securities is
           uninterrupted.
    
    In the Matter of Envirodyne Indus., Inc., 29 F.3d 301, 306
    (7th Cir. 1994). We agree. The clause is not a requirement
    that the Debtors distribute to the subordinated noteholders
    subordinated securities, or warrants to purchase securities,
    if the reorganized entity does well in the future so that the
    Banks (the Senior Indebtedness) make back their losses, in
    proportion to any securities distributed to Senior
    Indebtedness.
    
    Huff makes one final argument under this section--that
    the provision of the indenture that states that"nothing in
    the indenture shall impair, as between the Company and
    the holders, the obligation of the Company, which is
    absolute and unconditional, to pay principal of and interest
    on the Securities in accordance with their terms," requires
    the Debtors to preserve a recovery for the noteholders with
    the issuance of securities junior to the common stock. This
    is a misreading of the provision, which simply provides that
    the subordination agreement is an intercreditor
    arrangement, i.e., an arrangement between the Banks (the
    senior indebtedness) and the subordinated noteholders,
    and does not relieve the Debtors of their payment
    obligations on the subordinated notes.
    
    B. Section 524(e)
    
    Section 524(e) provides that "[e]xcept as provided in
    subsection (a)(3) of this section,[20 ] discharge of a debt of
    _________________________________________________________________
    
    20. Subsection (a)(3) provides that a discharge of a case under Title II
    
           operates as an injunction against the commencement or
           continuation of an action, the employment of process, or an act, to
    
                                    33
    
    
    the debtor does not affect the liability of any other entity
    on, or the property of any other entity for, such debt." 11
    U.S.C. S 524(e). Huff argues that the release in Paragraph
    58 of the confirmation order violates S 524(e), because it
    affects the liability of the members of the Committee and
    professionals who provided services to the Debtors to third
    parties. However, we believe that Paragraph 58, which is
    apparently a commonplace provision in Chapter 11 plans,
    does not affect the liability of these parties, but rather
    states the standard of liability under the Code, and thus
    does not come within the meaning of 524(e).21
    
    Section 524(e) "makes clear that the bankruptcy
    discharge of the debtor, by itself, does not operate to relieve
    non-debtors of their liabilities." In re Continental Airlines,
    203 F.3d 203, 211 (3d Cir. 2000) (Continental II ) (citations
    omitted). Section 524(e), by its terms, only provides that a
    discharge of the debtor does not affect the liability of non-
    debtors on claims by third parties against them for the debt
    discharged in bankruptcy. Thus, for example, S 524(e)
    makes clear that a discharge in bankruptcy does not
    _________________________________________________________________
    
           collect or recover from, or offset against, property of the debtor of
           the kind specified in section 541(a)(2) of this title that is acquired
           after the commencement of the case, on account of any allowable
           community claim, except a community claim that is excepted from
           discharge under section 523, 1228(a)(1), or 1328(c)(1) of this title, or
           that would be so excepted, determined in accordance with the
           provisions of sections 523(c) and 523(d) of this title, in a case
           concerning the debtor's spouse commenced on the date of the filing
           of the petition in the case concerning the debtor, whether or not
           discharge of the debt based on such community claim is waived.
    
    11 U.S.C. 524(a)(3).
    
    21. HSBC argues more generally that "[t]he most obvious defect of the
    Plan is that it incorporates releases and provides for extinction of causes
    of action against non debtor third parties for no consideration." It argues
    that under In re Continental Airlines, 203 F.3d 203, 211 (3d Cir. 2000),
    a plan with releases is unconfirmable as a matter of law. HSBC reads
    S 524(e) and Continental II too broadly. Section 524(e) provides that the
    bankruptcy discharge of the debtor does not operate to relieve non-
    debtors of their liabilities, but by its terms it does not govern provisions
    in a plan by which a debtor releases its own claims against third parties.
    
                                    34
    
    
    extinguish claims by third parties against guarantors or
    directors and officers of the debtor for the debt discharged
    in bankruptcy. Indeed, Continental II held that a plan that
    enjoined plaintiffs' actions against the debtor's directors
    and officers who "ha[d] not formally availed themselves of
    the benefits and burdens of the bankruptcy process," id. at
    211, violated S 524(e), id. at 214. The injunction in that
    plan protected directors and officers from actions taken
    prior to bankruptcy that allegedly violated the securities
    laws and thus abrogated the liability of third parties.
    
    Paragraph 58 does not similarly affect the liability of
    third parties. Paragraph 58 provides that
    
           [n]one of the Debtors, the Reorganized Debtors, New
           Bruno's, the Creditor Representative, the Committee or
           any of their respective members, officers, directors,
           employees, advisors, professionals or agents shall have
           or incur any liability to any holder of a Claim or Equity
           Interest for any act or omission in connection with,
           related to, or arising out of, the Chapter 11 Cases, the
           pursuit of confirmation of the Plan, the consummation
           of the Plan or the Administration of the Plan or the
           property to be distributed under the Plan, except for
           willful misconduct or gross negligence, and, in all
           respects, the Debtors, the Reorganized Debtors, New
           Bruno's, the Creditor Representative, the Committee
           and each of their respective members, officers,
           directors, employees, advisors, professionals and
           agents shall be entitled to rely upon the advice of
           counsel with respect to their duties and responsibilities
           under the plan.
    
    Under Paragraph 58, members of the Committee and
    professionals who provided services to the Debtors remain
    liable for willful misconduct or gross negligence. Because
    we conclude that this standard of liability is the standard
    that already applies in this situation, we believe that
    Paragraph 58 affects no change in liability.
    
    Section 1103(c) of the Bankruptcy Code, which grants to
    the Committee broad authority to formulate a plan and
    perform "such other services as are in the interest of those
    represented," 11 U.S.C. S 1103(c), has been interpreted to
    
                                    35
    
    
    imply both a fiduciary duty to committee constituents and
    a limited grant of immunity to committee members, see In
    re L.F. Rothschild Holdings, Inc., 163 B.R. 45, 49 (S.D.N.Y.
    1994); In re Drexel Burnham Lambert Group, Inc. , 138 B.R.
    717, 722 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 1992), aff 'd, 140 B.R. 347
    (S.D.N.Y. 1992); In re Tucker Freight Lines, Inc., 62 B.R.
    213, 216, 218 (Bankr. W.D. Mich. 1986); Lawrence P. King,
    Collier on Bankruptcy P 1103.05[4], 1103-32-33 (15th ed.
    rev. 1996) ("[A]ctions against committee members in their
    capacity as such should be discouraged. If members of the
    committee can be sued by persons unhappy with the
    committee's performance during the case or unhappy with
    the outcome of the case, it will be extremely difficult to find
    members to serve on an official committee.").
    
    This immunity covers committee members for actions
    within the scope of their duties. The committee members
    and the debtor are entitled to retain professional services to
    assist in the reorganization. In Pan Am Corp. v. Delta
    Airlines, Inc., 175 B.R. 438, 514 (S.D.N.Y. 1994), it was held
    that committee members and those professionals who
    provide services to the debtor with respect to
    reorganization, or to the committee members in their
    capacity as committee members, however, do remain liable
    for willful misconduct or ultra vires acts.
    
    We agree with this interpretation of S 1103(c) and hold
    that it limits liability of a committee to willful misconduct
    or ultra vires acts. The release in Paragraph 58 sets forth
    the appropriate standard for liability that would apply to
    actions against the committee members and the entities
    that provided services to the Committee in the event that
    they were sued for their participation in the reorganization.22
    _________________________________________________________________
    
    22. Huff also argues that the failure of the Debtors to enforce the
    subordinated noteholders' subrogation rights violates S 524(e) and calls
    this a provision "extinguish[ing] the Noteholders' rights to seek recoveries
    directly against the Banks," which constitutes an impermissible non-
    consensual third-party release. However, this argument is specious for
    the same reason that Huff 's main argument about the surbordination
    agreement is specious: the subordinated noteholders' subrogation rights
    only arise when the senior lenders are paid in full. As noted above, the
    senior creditors in this case were not paid in full under the plan.
    
                                    36
    
    
    It does not affect the liability of another entity on a debt of
    the debtor within the meaning of S 524(e).
    
    Nothing in our recent opinion in Continental II  is to the
    contrary. In that case, we held that a plan that enjoined
    plaintiffs' actions against Continental's directors and
    officers violated S 524(e). Id. at 214. The release in question
    here differs from that in Continental II in a fundamental
    way: it sets forth the applicable standard of liability under
    S 1103(c) rather than eliminating it altogether. In
    Continental II, we concluded that it was clear under any
    rule that the court might adopt that the releases at issue
    were impermissible because "the hallmarks of permissible
    non-consensual releases--fairness, necessity to the
    reorganization, and specific factual findings to support
    these conclusions--are all absent here." Id. at 214. We did
    not treat S 524(e) as a per se rule barring any provision in
    a reorganization plan limiting the liability of third parties.
    See id. Because of the differences between the releases in
    the two cases, Continental II does not compel the
    conclusion that this release is impermissible. Indeed,
    because this release does not affect the liability of third
    parties, but rather sets forth the appropriate standard of
    liability, we believe that this release is outside the scope of
    S 524(e).
    
    C. Sections 363 and 1123
    
    Section 363 governs the sale of assets outside of the
    reorganization plan. It permits the trustee (or the debtor-in-
    possession), after notice and a hearing, to use, sell, or lease
    property of the estate outside of the ordinary course of
    business. See 11 U.S.C. S 363(b)(1); In re Rickel Home
    Centers, 209 F.3d 291, 297 (3d Cir. 2000). Section
    1123(b)(4) provides that a plan may "provide for the sale of
    all or substantially all of the property of the estate, and the
    distribution of the proceeds of such sale among holders of
    claims or interests." 11 U.S.C. S 1123(b)(4). Huff
    characterizes the reorganization plan as involving a sale of
    assets and tries to transform these two sections of the
    Bankruptcy Code into a general duty to fully market the
    company, similar to the duty recognized by the Delaware
    Supreme Court in the context of corporate change in
    
                                    37
    
    
    control transactions. See Paramount Communications v.
    QVC Network, 637 A.2d 34, 43 (Del. 1994); Revlon, Inc. v.
    MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings, 506 A.2d 173, 182 (Del.
    1986).
    
    This argument fails because these provisions of the Code,
    even if they do impose a duty to fully market assets in
    some circumstances (a question we do not address), are
    simply inapplicable to this situation. The plan wiped out
    old equity and issued new stock to the creditors. For tax
    purposes, this transaction was accomplished by
    transferring substantially all of the assets of the Debtors to
    a creditors' representative and immediately thereafter to the
    newly created Bruno's Supermarkets, a corporation whose
    equity is owned by the senior lenders. But just because a
    transaction is a sale or exchange for tax purposes does not
    mean that it is a sale within the meaning of the Code. See
    In re PCH Assocs., 804 F.2d 193, 201 (2d Cir. 1986)
    (looking to the economic substance of the transaction to
    determine whether it was a sale or a lease within the
    meaning of the Code). In a similar case, Major's Furniture
    Mart, Inc. v. Castle Credit Corp., 602 F.2d 538, 546 (3d Cir.
    1979), we stated that
    
           [i]t is apparent to us that on this record none of the
           risks present in a true sale is present here. Nor has the
           custom of the parties or their relationship, as found by
           the district court, given rise to more than a
           debtor/creditor relationship in which Major's' debt was
           secured by a transfer of Major's' customer accounts to
           Castle . . . . Accordingly, we hold that on this record
           the district court did not err in determining that the
           true nature of the transaction between Major's and
           Castle was a secured loan, not a sale.
    
    That the assets passed though the hands of a creditors'
    representative before being returned to the reorganized
    Debtors does not transform this plan from a stand-alone,
    internally generated plan of reorganization to a sale of
    assets to a third party. To hold otherwise would be to read
    S 1129 of the Code as characterizing the many
    reorganizations involving the transfer of control from a
    corporation's old equity to its creditors as involving a sale,
    a position without support in our jurisprudence.
    
                                    38
    
    
    D. Section 1129(a)(2)
    
    Section 1129(a)(2) provides that the court shall confirm a
    plan only if "[t]he proponent of the plan complies with the
    applicable provisions of this Title." 11 U.S.C.S 1129(a)(2).
    We agree with the District Court's conclusion that
    S 1129(a)(2) requires that the plan proponent comply with
    the adequate disclosure requirements of S 1125.23 Title 11
    U.S.C. S 1125(b) mandates the filing of a disclosure
    statement containing "adequate information." Huff argues
    that the plan proponents failed to comply with the
    disclosure requirements by failing to provide adequate
    information regarding the release of the preferences. The
    Debtors respond that Huff does not have standing to raise
    this argument.
    
    Appellate standing in bankruptcy cases is more limited
    than standing under Article III or the prudential
    requirements associated therewith. "Generally, litigants in
    federal court are barred from asserting the constitutional
    rights of others." Kane v. Johns-Manville Corp., 843 F.2d
    636, 643 (2d Cir. 1988) (citing Warth v. Seldin , 422 U.S.
    490, 499, 509 (1975)). The court in Kane explained why
    limits on third-party standing are particularly relevant to
    appellate standing in bankruptcy proceedings:
    
           Bankruptcy proceedings regularly involve numerous
           parties, each of whom might find it personally
           expedient to assert the rights of another party even
           though that other party is present in the proceedings
           and is capable of representing himself. Third-party
           standing is of special concern in the bankruptcy
           context where, as here, one constituency before the
    _________________________________________________________________
    
    23. Other courts also have found S 1125 to be one of the applicable
    provisions of the Code referenced to in S 1129. See, e.g., Tenn-Fla
    Partners v. First Union Nat'l Bank of Fla., 229 B.R. 720, 732 (W.D. Tenn.
    1999); In re Trans World Airlines, Inc., 185 B.R. 302, 313 (Bankr.
    E.D.Mo. 1995) ("The principal purpose of section 1129(a)(2) of the
    Bankruptcy Code is to assure that the plan proponents have complied
    with the disclosure requirements of section 1125 of the Bankruptcy Code
    in connection with the solicitation of acceptances of the plan."); see also
    Lawrence P. King, Collier on BankruptcyP 1129.03[2] at 1126-26.1 &
    n.14 (15th ed. rev. 1996).
    
                                    39
    
    
           court seeks to disturb a plan of reorganization based
           on the rights of third parties who apparently favor the
           plan. In this context, the courts have been
           understandably skeptical of the litigant's motives and
           have often denied standing as to any claim that asserts
           only third-party rights.
    
    Id. at 644; see also Travelers Ins. Co. v. H.K. Porter Co.,
    Inc., 45 F.3d 737, 741 (3d Cir. 1995) (adopting the
    reasoning of Kane).
    
    Title 11 U.S.C. S 1109(b)--which provides that "[a] party
    in interest, including the debtor, the trustee, a creditors'
    committee, an equity security holders' committee, a
    creditor, an equity security holder, or any indenture
    trustee, may raise and may appear and be heard on any
    issue in a case under this chapter"--confers broad standing
    at the trial level. However, courts do not extend that
    provision to appellate standing:
    
           This rule of appellate standing is derived from former
           section 39(c) of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898, which
           permitted only a "person aggrieved" to appeal an order
           of the bankruptcy court. 11 U.S.C. S 67(c) (1976)
           (repealed 1978). Although the present Bankruptcy
           Code does not contain any express restrictions on
           appellate standing, courts have uniformly held that the
           "person aggrieved" standard is applicable to cases
           under the Code.
    
    Kane, 843 F.2d at 641-42.
    
    This court has emphasized that appellate standing in
    bankruptcy cases is limited to "person[s] aggrieved."
    Travelers Ins. Co., 45 F.3d at 741. We consider a person to
    be aggrieved only if the bankruptcy court's order
    "diminishes their property, increases their burdens, or
    impairs their rights." In re Dykes, 10 F.3d 184, 187 (3d Cir.
    1993) (citation omitted). Thus, only those "whose rights or
    interests are directly and adversely affected pecuniarily" by
    an order of the bankruptcy court may bring an appeal. Id.
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). The
    "person aggrieved" standard is more stringent than the
    constitutional test for standing. In re O'Brien Envtl. Energy,
    Inc., 181 F.3d 527, 530 (3d Cir. 1999).
    
                                    40
    
    
    Huff contends that Bruno's failed to disclose that it had
    not done a thorough analysis of preference claims before
    deciding not to pursue them. But Huff itself was aware of
    this alleged failing at the time and pointed it out to the
    other creditors when it opposed the plan. Huff clearly would
    not have acted any differently if the disclosure had been
    made as it now argues it should have been. Similarly,
    because Huff pointed out the alleged failure to disclose in
    its statements protesting the plan, it cannot show that it
    was personally aggrieved because other creditors might
    have voted differently if they had had the information
    allegedly missing from the disclosure. Since Huff cannot
    show that it was personally aggrieved by any failure to
    disclose, we conclude that Huff does not have standing to
    raise this claim. See In re Middle Plantation of Williamsburg,
    Inc., 47 B.R. 884, 891 (E.D. Va. 1984) ("Holders of impaired
    claims who have been induced to vote in favor of a plan are
    the only ones who may raise the issue of the adequacy of
    the Disclosure Statement."), aff 'd, 755 F.2d 928 (4th Cir.
    1985).
    
    We do not foreclose the possibility that, in another case,
    a creditor objecting to a plan for lack of disclosure that
    actually had the information it complains is missing from
    the disclosure might nevertheless have standing if it could
    show that there is a possibility that other creditors would
    have acted differently (thus benefitting the protesting
    creditor) if they had had the same information. See In re
    Perez, 30 F.3d 1209, 1217 (9th Cir. 1994) (concluding that
    a creditor had standing on this theory). But in this case,
    because Huff itself made the information available to the
    other creditors, it has not made such a showing. The
    chance that the other creditors would have acted differently
    is simply too speculative to be a basis for third party
    standing here.
    
    E. Section 1129(a)(7)
    
    Section 1129(a)(7) provides that a court shall confirm a
    plan only if
    
           With respect to each impaired class of claims or
           interests--
    
                                    41
    
    
           (A) each holder of a claim or interest of such class--
    
           (i) has accepted the plan; or
    
           (ii) will receive or retain under the plan on account of
           such claim or interest property of a value, as of the
           effective date of the plan, that is not less than the
           amount that such holder would so receive or retain
           if the debtor were liquidated under chapter 7 of this
           title on such date; or
    
           (B) if section 1111(b)(2) of this title applies to the
           claims of such class, each holder of a claim of such
           class will receive or retain under the plan on account
           of such claim property of a value, as of the effective
           date of the plan, that is not less than the value of such
           holder's interest in the estate's interest in the property
           that secures such claims.
    
    11 U.S.C. S 1129(a)(7). The District Court found that the
    Debtors have demonstrated at the Confirmation Hearing
    that creditors rejecting the plan would not receive a greater
    recovery in a Chapter 7 liquidation. We review this factual
    finding for clear error.
    
    Huff failed to challenge the Debtors' liquidation analysis.
    Huff also did not introduce evidence to demonstrate that
    the recapitalization claims have significant value or that it
    was in the best interests of the estate to pursue the
    preference claims. And as noted above, the Examiner's
    District Court findings to the contrary are well supported.
    Accordingly, the District Court did not commit clear error in
    holding that the Debtors met their burden under
    S 1129(a)(7).
    
    VI. Conclusion
    
    For the foregoing reasons, the Order of the District Court
    confirming the Debtor's Second Amended Joint Plan of
    Reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code
    will be affirmed.
    
                                    42
    
    
    A True Copy:
    Teste:
    
           Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals
           for the Third Circuit
    
                                    43

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