Federal Circuits, 4th Cir. (March 02, 1988)
Docket number: 85-2311
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U.S. Supreme Court - Commodity Futures Trading Comm'n v. Schor, 478 U.S. 833 (1986)
U.S. Supreme Court - Thomas v. Union Carbide Agricultural Products Co., 473 U.S. 568 (1985)
U.S. Supreme Court - Northern Pipeline Constr. Co. v. Marathon Pipe Line Co., 458 U.S. 50 (1982)
U.S. Supreme Court - Curtis v. Loether, 415 U.S. 189 (1974)
U.S. Supreme Court - Pernell v. Southall Realty, 416 U.S. 363 (1974)
U.S. Supreme Court - Katchen v. Landy, 382 U.S. 323 (1966)
U.S. Supreme Court - Dairy Queen, Inc. v. Wood, 369 U.S. 469 (1962)
U.S. Supreme Court - Beacon Theatres, Inc. v. Westover, 359 U.S. 500 (1959)
U.S. Supreme Court - Schoenthal v. Irving Trust Co., 287 U.S. 92 (1932)
U.S. Supreme Court - Local Loan Co. v. Hunt, 292 U.S. 234 (1934)
U.S. Supreme Court - Schumacher v. Beeler, 293 U.S. 367 (1934)
U.S. Supreme Court - Baltimore & Carolina Line, Inc. v. Redman, 295 U.S. 654 (1935)
U.S. Supreme Court - Pepper v. Litton, 308 U.S. 295 (1939)
U.S. Supreme Court - Bardes v. Hawarden Bank, 178 U.S. 524 (1900)
U.S. Supreme Court - Ross v. Bernhard, 396 U.S. 531 (1970)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Cir. - Bankr. L. Rep. P 71,263 in Re Hudson Shipbuilders, Inc., Debtor. Blackburn-Bliss Trust, John N. Blackburn and William L. Bliss, Trustees, Plaintiffs-Appellants, Cross-Appellees, v. Hudson Shipbuilders, Inc., Defendant, Allied Bank of Texas, Appellee, Cross-Appellant., 794 F.2d 1051 (5th Cir. 1986) 263 in Re Hudson Shipbuilders, Inc., Debtor. Blackburn-Bliss Trust, John N. Blackburn and William L. Bliss, Trustees, Plaintiffs-Appellants, Cross-Appellees, v. Hudson Shipbuilders, Inc., Defendant, Allied Bank of Texas, Appellee, Cross-Appellant.
U.S. Supreme Court - Granfinanciera, S. A. v. Nordberg, 492 U.S. 33 (1989)
John H. Kennett, Roanoke, Va., for defendant-appellant Frank N. perkinson, jr.
Arthur P. Strickland; Strickland & Rogers, on brief, for defendant-appellant Diana M. Perkinson.Donald W. Huffman (Bird, Kinder & Huffman, Roanoke, Va., on brief), for plaintiffs-appellees.Before WIDENER, SPROUSE and CHAPMAN, Circuit Judges.SPROUSE, Circuit Judge:Diana M. Perkinson and her husband, Frank N. Perkinson, Jr., appeal from the district court's order denying their demand for a jury trial in this action against them by Donald W. Huffman, trustee in bankruptcy for the estate of Billy H. Harbour, and Bluefield Holding Company (hereafter Huffman or the trustee). The trustee seeks to recover funds that he alleges Diana Perkinson received from Harbour in transactions voidable as fraudulent transfers and illegal preferences under federal bankruptcy laws, and as voluntary conveyances voidable under Virginia state law. 11 U.S.C. Secs . 543, 547, 548; Va.Code Sec. 55-81.Harbour's creditors placed him in involuntary bankruptcy on February 11, 1982.1 Harbour remained as the debtor in possession during the Chapter 11 proceedings until the court appointed Huffman trustee on February 8, 1983. On October 21, 1984, Huffman as trustee initiated this action to recover payments Harbour made to Diana Perkinson allegedly as legal fees. The trustee asserts Diana Perkinson received payments totalling $125,713.49 either within one year prior to Harbour being placed in bankruptcy or while he remained as debtor in possession.2 Diana Perkinson had represented Harbour and Bluefield Holding Company, a company wholly owned by Harbour, and had served as Secretary and registered agent of the company. Frank Perkinson was joined as a co-defendant in the trustee's action because he and his wife practiced law as a partnership, and she had deposited the disputed funds into their joint account.The district court denied the Perkinsons' motion for a jury trial but certified its order for interlocutory appeal. 28 U.S.C. Sec . 1292(b). We granted the Perkinsons' petition for interlocutory appeal. The merits of the trustee's attempt to avoid the transfers and obtain the funds, of course, have not been determined. The issues on appeal involve the jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court and whether the Perkinsons are constitutionally or statutorily entitled to a jury trial to determine the parties' respective rights under 11 U.S.C. Secs . 543, 547, and 548 and Va.Code Sec. 55-81.The Perkinsons first assert, in effect, that the funds Mrs. Perkinson received from Harbour were for fees earned under Virginia law so that the federal bankruptcy court has no jurisdiction to entertain the trustee's action, Northern Pipeline Co. v. Marathon Pipe Line Co., 458 U.S. 50, 102 S.Ct. 2858, 73 L.Ed.2d 598 (1982). They also assert that both the seventh amendment to the United States Constitution and the Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgeship Act of 1984, Pub.L. No. 98-353, 98 Stat. 333 (hereafter the 1984 Bankruptcy Act or the 1984 Act) grant them a right to a trial by jury.3 We hold that the bankruptcy court has jurisdiction over these actions and that neither the seventh amendment nor the 1984 Act require a jury trial. We discuss seriatim the jurisdiction issue, the seventh amendment question and whether, apart from the constitutional requirements, the 1984 Act entitles the Perkinsons to a jury trial in the trustee's action against them.I.The Perkinsons advance three related arguments in support of their contention that the bankruptcy court has no jurisdiction over the trustee's actions. First, they assert that under Northern Pipeline a non-Article III bankruptcy judge has no jurisdiction over the trustee's avoidance action based on alleged fraudulent or preferential transfers because the actions involve only rights created by the substantive law of Virginia. They assert that any action involving the sums paid to Mrs. Perkinson is not a "case under Title 11," did not "arise under Title 11;" nor did the issues "arise in a case under Title 11." 28 U.S.C. Sec . 1334.4 They argue instead that, at most, the issues in this case only "relate to a case under Title 11" and possess the same characteristics as Northern Pipeline's suit against Marathon Pipe Line, which could not be tried by a bankruptcy judge. Second, they argue that if Congress intended to include actions to litigate rights created by state substantive law as "core" proceedings, section 157(b) of the 1984 Act violates the principles of Northern Pipeline.5 Third, the Perkinsons stress that Harbour transferred some of the property more than a year prior to the filing of the bankruptcy petition and, as to those transfers, the Virginia avoidance law, and not the federal bankruptcy law, provides the essential procedural mechanism under which the trustee can proceed.6 Assuming these factual contentions are correct, we think neither of these classes of transfers are within the proscription of the Supreme Court's holding in Northern Pipeline.Initially, the Perkinsons maintain that their right to legal fees was created by the substantive law of Virginia, so the trustee's attack of that right can only be determined in a state forum or by an Article III judge. They urge that the trustee's action is similar to Northern Pipeline's action against Marathon, which the Supreme Court reviewed in Northern Pipeline. The trustee, on the other hand, insists that his action is a "core" proceeding "arising in a case under title 11" that, under Northern Pipeline, can be determined by a bankruptcy judge.In Northern Pipeline, the Supreme Court held that a jurisdictional provision of the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978, Pub.L. No. 95-598, 92 Stat. 2549, violated the separation of powers doctrine by conferring Article III judicial power on non-Article III bankruptcy judges with respect to proceedings that included those only "related to cases under Title 11." The Court found no constitutional objections to the congressional exercise of its Article I Sec. 8 bankruptcy powers in assigning jurisdiction over traditional bankruptcy matters to bankruptcy courts. Although not so stated by the Court, those proceedings presumably were matters "arising under title 11, or arising in ... a case under title 11." 28 U.S.C. Sec . 1334 (replacing 28 U.S.C. Sec . 1471); see 1 Collier on Bankruptcy p 3.01[c][ii]-[iv] (15th ed. 1987) (hereafter Collier). It held, however, that a contract action based on state law must be resolved in a state court or by an Article III judge. See Thomas v. Union Carbide Agricultural Products Co., 473 U.S. 568, 105 S.Ct. 3325, 3334-35, 87 L.Ed.2d 409 (1985).Our first task is to identify the jurisdictional restrictions applied to bankruptcy courts in Northern Pipeline and to determine if the trustee's action against the Perkinsons comes within them. In the aftermath of Northern Pipeline, the limitations encompassed in the phrase "related to cases under title 11" are not entirely clear. It generally has been held, however, that the Northern Pipeline restriction is limited to actions by the bankrupt or his trustee over the disposition of state-created substantive rights.7As Justice Rehnquist said in his concurring opinion to Northern Pipeline:[T]he lawsuit in which Marathon was named defendant seeks damages for breach of contract, misrepresentation, and other counts which are the stuff of the traditional actions at common law.... There is apparently no federal rule of decision provided for any of the issues in the lawsuit; the claims of Northern arise entirely under state law.458 U.S. at 90, 102 S.Ct. at 2881 (Rehnquist, J., concurring).In his dissent, Chief Justice Burger added:[T]he Court's holding is limited to the proposition ... that a "traditional" state common-law action, not made subject to a federal rule of decision, and related only peripherally to an adjudication of bankruptcy under federal law, must, absent the consent of the litigants, be heard by an "Art. III court" if it is to be heard by any court or agency of the United States.Id. at 92, 102 S.Ct. at 2882 (Burger, C.J., dissenting).If there was any question that these statements reflect the limits of Northern Pipeline 's holding, it was dispelled by the Court's decision in Thomas v. Union Carbide Agriculture Products Co., 105 S.Ct. at 3334-35, in which the Court noted:[Our] holding in [Northern Pipeline ] establishes only that Congress may not vest in a non-Article III court the power to adjudicate, render final judgment, and issue binding orders in a traditional contract action arising under state law, without consent of the litigants, and subject only to ordinary appellate review. (Citations omitted).Here, Harbour, the bankrupt, transferred a large amount of money to Mrs. Perkinson. The dispute between the trustee and Mrs. Perkinson over the right to this money does not depend upon the substantive law of Virginia, rather it is governed by federal bankruptcy laws. It is a dispute involving the restructuring of debtor-creditor relations. As the Northern Pipeline plurality opinion noted:the restructuring of debtor-creditor relations, which is at the core of the federal bankruptcy power, must be distinguished from the adjudication of state-created private rights, such as the right to recover contract damages that is at issue in this case.458 U.S. at 71, 102 S.Ct. at 2871.In this case, the transfers that were made within a year prior to the filing of Harbour's bankruptcy petition8 present very little analytical difficulty; actions to recover them are specifically identified as "core" matters in section 157(b)(2)(F) ("proceedings to determine, avoid, or recover preferences") and (H) ("proceedings to determine, avoid, or recover fraudulent conveyances") of the 1984 Act. Mrs. Perkinson claims she earned the money transferred to her as legal fees. Her contractual right to receive the funds is no doubt a right that existed by virtue of Virginia law. It does not belong, however, to the same species of legal rights involved in Northern Pipeline. Northern Pipeline's action was based on its claim for breach of contract and warranty--a traditional common law action based on no federal rule of decision. The trustee's action is a core proceeding arising under title 11, or arising in a case under title 11,9 in which Congress gave bankruptcy courts in personam jurisdiction over Mrs. Perkinson and summary jurisdiction to decide this dispute between her and the trustee.In their brief, however, the Perkinsons make the additional argument that some of the involved funds were paid to Mrs. Perkinson more than one year prior to Harbour's bankruptcy and the trustee can only recover those funds under section 55-81 of the Virginia Code.10 They contend that actions based solely on Virginia's avoidance law only peripherally relate to the administration of Harbour's bankruptcy and are the equivalent of Northern Pipeline's action against Marathon. We are unable to determine from the record if, in fact, some funds were paid to her beyond the controlling bankruptcy time frame. Assuming her factual contentions are correct, however, we are not persuaded that the trustee's recovery under section 55-81 of the Virginia Code should be treated differently from recovery under 11 U.S.C. Secs . 547 and 548 of funds transferred within one year of bankruptcy.First, the language of section 157(b)(2)(F) and (H) does not limit the proceedings to avoid preferences and fraudulent transfers only to those proceedings authorized by sections 547 and 548 of the Bankruptcy Code. It embraces state avoidance laws and includes them as part of the bankruptcy proceedings. 1 Collier p 3.01[b][ii] (15th ed.); Taggart, at 247. The legislative history of section 157(b) certainly demonstrates that this was the intent of Congress.11 Moreover, section 544(b) gives trustees in bankruptcy the same authority to avoid transfers that an unsecured debtor would have under state law.12 In Carlton v. Baww, Inc., 751 F.2d 781 (5th Cir.1985), for example, the Fifth Circuit held that an action by the trustee to avoid a fraudulent conveyance under state law, as authorized by section 544(b), is a proceeding arising under title 11 and the district court (and presumably the bankruptcy court) has jurisdiction over the action.13 Finally, section 157(b)(3) provides that "a determination that a proceeding is not a core proceeding shall not be made solely on the basis that its resolution may be affected by state law." 28 U.S.C. Sec . 157(b)(3). In short, the portion of this dispute that must be resolved by the bankruptcy court's interpretation of Va.Code Sec. 55-81 likewise falls within the dispute resolution mechanism of section 157(b). This dispute does not involve the type of state-created substantive rights that Northern Pipeline ruled must be resolved by Article III judges.14II.The Perkinsons next contend that the seventh amendment of the United States Constitution guarantees them a jury trial. The seventh amendment provides:In Suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by jury, shall be otherwise re-examined in any Court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law.The nature of the seventh amendment inquiry has been so thoroughly and universally stated that extensive case citation is not necessary.15 Simply stated, the essence of our seventh amendment inquiry is whether the underlying issues to be ascertained and determined in this proceeding are legal or equitable. If the action is to enforce legal rights, then it falls within the seventh amendment grant of a right to a trial by jury. Curtis v. Loether, 415 U.S. 189, 195, 94 S.Ct. 1005, 1008, 39 L.Ed.2d 260 (1974); see also Ross v. Bernhard, 396 U.S. 531, 90 S.Ct. 733, 24 L.Ed.2d 729 (1970); Dairy Queen, Inc. v. Wood, 369 U.S. 469, 82 S.Ct. 894, 8 L.Ed.2d 44 (1962); Beacon Theatres, Inc. v. Westover, 359 U.S. 500, 79 S.Ct. 948, 3 L.Ed.2d 988 (1959). In deciding this question, courts have traditionally employed a historical test looking to the custom that existed with respect to the action under English common law at the time the seventh amendment was adopted. Baltimore & Carolina Line, Inc. v. Redman, 295 U.S. 654, 657, 55 S.Ct. 890, 891, 79 L.Ed. 1636 (1935); Damsky v. Zavatt, 289 F.2d 46, 48-51 (2d Cir.1961). See also Ross v. Bernhard, 396 U.S. at 533-34, 90 S.Ct. at 735.16 Our analytical chore, however, has been abbreviated by the Supreme Court's decisions in Schoenthal v. Irving Trust Co., 287 U.S. 92, 53 S.Ct. 50, 77 L.Ed. 185 (1932), and Katchen v. Landy, 382 U.S. 323, 86 S.Ct. 467, 15 L.Ed.2d 391 (1966), and the congressional enactment of the Bankruptcy Act of 1984. Our inquiry is directed at determining whether the underlying issues in this case are legal or equitable, but we focus on the Supreme Court's decision in Schoenthal, Katchen and Congress' enactment of the 1984 Act.The universal rule under the Bankruptcy Act of 189817 and its predecessors18 had been that actions to set aside the bankrupt's transfers as fraudulent or preferential were actions outside the bankruptcy proceeding and were to be resolved by plenary proceedings in a different forum.19 Schoenthal, the linchpin case recognizing that rule in the seventh amendment context,20 unequivocally had determined that actions such as this one were to be considered outside the bankruptcy proceedings, were legal in nature and were under the aegis of the seventh amendment. As in Schoenthal, the Court in Katchen considered (under the Bankruptcy Act of 1898) an action similar to the one we review. It held emphatically that bankruptcy proceedings were equitable. Although the case cast some doubt on the vitality of Schoenthal, the Court refrained from overruling it. The 1984 Act, by designating actions to avoid preferences and fraudulent transfers as core proceedings, mandated that these actions be resolved within the bankruptcy forum by the bankruptcy judge, a legislative mandate that has a direct bearing on the seventh amendment jury question.21 The combined effect of judicial and legislative actions, we think, is to cast the trustee's claim against the Perkinsons as a bankruptcy proceeding entirely within the traditionally equitable bankruptcy forum22 and free of the seventh amendment's requirement that in all suits at common law the right to trial by jury shall be preserved.In Schoenthal, the Court stated that "[s]uits to recover preferences constitute no part of the proceedings in bankruptcy but concern controversies arising out of it." 287 U.S. at 94-95, 53 S.Ct. at 51. It said, therefore, that "[t]he question whether remedy must be by action at law or may be pursued in equity notwithstanding objection by defendants depends upon the facts stated in the bill." Id. at 95, 53 S.Ct. at 51. The Court referred both to the historical English practice and to the then current American practice in suits by bankrupts to recover preferential payments.23 Although Schoenthal dealt with suits to recover preferences, there is little doubt that, under the 1898 Act, the same reasoning would have applied with equal force to an action by a trustee to set aside the transfer as a fraudulent conveyance.A noted commentator has stated:It follows that whether the trustee's suit should be at law or in equity is to be judged by the same standards that are applied to any other owner of property which is wrongfully withheld. If the subject matter is a chattel, and is still in the grantee's possession, an action in trover or replevin would be the trustee's remedy; and if the fraudulent transfer was of cash, the trustee's action would be for money had and received. Such actions at law are as available to the trustee today as they were in the English courts of long ago.Glenn, Fraudulent Conveyances and Preferences, Sec. 98 (1940) (footnote omitted). He went on to say with reference to the Supreme Court's decision in Schoenthal:The actual decision was that in the case of a preference the trustee's suit must be at law unless he needs equitable relief for any reason as above suggested. But what is true of a preference, which essentially is an offense against a bankruptcy law as such, is a fortiori true of a fraudulent conveyance, and hence the Supreme Court's decision should be accepted as final for all purposes.Id. It seems clear then that under the doctrine announced in Schoenthal and at least until the Supreme Court's decision in Katchen, adverse claimants like the Perkinsons would have had a right to a jury trial in a trustee's action to avoid and recover the fraudulent or preferential conveyance.Katchen was decided in 1966, thirty-four years after Schoenthal. In it, the Supreme Court reviewed a holding that a bankruptcy court had summary jurisdiction to order a creditor to surrender property that the bankrupt had preferentially transferred to him. The Court upheld the summary jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court and emphasized that the creditor had subjected himself to the jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court by filing a claim in the bankruptcy proceeding. Justice White's opinion stated, with great emphasis, that bankruptcy courts are "essentially courts of equity" and "characteristically proceed in summary fashion...." 382 U.S. at 327, 86 S.Ct. at 471 (citations omitted). The Court also stated:When Congress enacted general revisions of the bankruptcy laws in 1898 and 1938, it gave "special attention to the subject of making [the bankruptcy laws] inexpensive in [their] administration." Moreover, this Court has long recognized that a chief purpose of the bankruptcy laws is "to secure a prompt and effectual administration and settlement of the estate of all bankrupts within a limited period," and that provision for summary disposition, "without regard to usual modes of trial attended by some necessary delay," is one of the means chosen by Congress to effectuate that purpose.Id. at 328-29, 86 S.Ct. at 472 (citations omitted).The Katchen decision, of course, addressed an action by a trustee against an adverse claimant who had filed a claim in the bankruptcy proceeding and thus submitted to the jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court. The Court stopped short of overruling Schoenthal, however, stating:But although petitioner might be entitled to a jury trial on the issue of preference if he presented no claim in the bankruptcy proceeding and awaited a federal plenary action by the trustee, when the same issue arises as part of the process of allowance and disallowance of claims, it is triable in equity.Id. at 336, 86 S.Ct. at 476 (citation omitted).If this language connoted a reticence by the Court to overrule Schoenthal,24 its reluctance is understandable. Schoenthal was based on solid precedent and historical judicial treatment of actions by debtors or trustees to set aside preferential transfers.25 Short of congressional action dramatically altering the structure of bankruptcy administration that was established in the early bankruptcy acts, it seems likely that the principle announced in Schoenthal would have remained a permanent fixture in the law of bankruptcy.An essential key to the Court's ruling in Schoenthal that suits to recover preferences were legal in nature was the well-founded concept that Congress intended actions against third parties in general and avoidance actions in particular not to be part of bankruptcy proceedings.26 Congress dramatically changed this rule, however, in the 1984 Act. It directed that bankruptcy courts may now hear, determine, and enter orders and judgments in all proceedings under Title 11, and all core proceedings arising under Title 11 or arising in a case under Title 11. 28 U.S.C. Sec . 157(b)(1). From the unmistakable language of the Act, it is manifest that Congress intended bankruptcy courts to have jurisdiction over "proceedings to determine, avoid, or recover preferences," 11 U.S.C. Sec . 157(b)(2)(F), and "proceedings to determine, avoid, or recover fraudulent conveyances," 11 U.S.C. Sec . 157(b)(2)(H).Relying on Schoenthal and precedent involving common law actions to avoid transfers, the Perkinsons contend, however, that[i]f the bankruptcy statutes must be interpreted to categorize the adversary suits by the Trustee against the Perkinsons as "core" proceedings and if the bankruptcy statutes must further be interpreted to require core proceedings be tried by the bankruptcy judge and if the Constitution is interpreted to prohibit bankruptcy judges from conducting jury trials, then the appropriate provisions of 28 U.S.C. Sec . 157 are unconstitutional by denying the Perkinsons the right of trial by jury.We disagree.Schoenthal went no further than to hold that a preferential transfer action under the 1898 Act must be tried in a non-bankruptcy forum and that its characterization as being either legal or equitable in the seventh amendment context must, therefore, be determined independently of the bankruptcy proceeding--i.e., its legal or equitable nature must be judged as if it were a unitary common law action to avoid a transfer without any connection to a bankruptcy proceeding.27 It based its holding, however, on its recognition that avoidance actions were not part of the bankruptcy proceedings and, when judged under the practice of litigating those cases, were considered to be legal in nature.28 The Court reasserted, moreover, the conventional jurisprudence that bankruptcy proceedings are equitable. Thirty-four years later, Katchen reasserted with even greater force the ancient principle that bankruptcy proceedings are equitable.More importantly for our purposes, Katchen explained the somewhat subtle, but eminently logical, reasoning of seventh amendment jurisprudence relating to bankruptcy controversies. Justice White carefully explained how actions that are, and always have been considered to be, legal for seventh amendment or other purposes, become equitable when merged into bankruptcy proceedings.29So, in cases of bankruptcy, many incidental questions arise in the course of administering the bankrupt estate, which would ordinarily be pure cases at law, and in respect of their facts triable by jury, but, as belonging to the bankruptcy proceedings, they become cases over which the bankruptcy court, which acts as a court of equity, exercises exclusive control. Thus a claim of debt or damages against the bankrupt is investigated by chancery methods.382 U.S. at 337, 86 S.Ct. at 477 (quoting Barton v. Barbour, 104 U.S. (14 Otto) 126, 134, 26 L.Ed. 672 (1881)).The Bankruptcy Act, passed pursuant to the power given to Congress by Art I, Sec. 8, of the Constitution to establish uniform laws on the subject of bankruptcy, converts the creditor's legal claim into an equitable claim to a pro rata share of the res....Id. at 336, 86 S.Ct. at 476.Justice White, in answering the creditors' argument that the exercise of summary jurisdiction would violate the Court's holding in Dairy Queen, said:Such a result is not consistent with the equitable purposes of the Bankruptcy Act nor with the rule of Beacon Theatres and Dairy Queen, which is itself an equitable doctrine. In neither Beacon Theatres nor Dairy Queen was there involved a specific statutory scheme contemplating the prompt trial of a disputed claim without the intervention of a jury.Id. at 339, 86 S.Ct. at 478 (citations omitted).In a different context, the Court in Northern Pipeline said:The interaction between the Legislative and Judicial Branches is at its height where courts are adjudicating rights wholly of Congress' creation. Thus where Congress creates a substantive right, pursuant to one of its broad powers to make laws, Congress may have something to say about the proper manner of adjudicating that right.Id., 458 U.S. at 83 n. 35, 102 S.Ct. at 2878 n. 35.The Court recognized in Northern Pipeline that the "reconstructing of debtor-creditor relations" is a pure bankruptcy matter in which Congress could assign jurisdiction to bankruptcy judges. Id. at 71, 102 S.Ct. at 2871. It can hardly be gainsaid that bankruptcy proceedings are equitable. In all the Bankruptcy Acts, at least from 1841 until the Bankruptcy Act of 1978, however, Congress purposefully excluded the actions of a trustee to avoid and recover fraudulent and preferential transfers from its designation of matters considered "pure" bankruptcy or "core" bankruptcy proceedings. See Bardes, 178 U.S. 524, 20 S.Ct. 1000, 44 L.Ed. 1175 (1900); 2 Collier paragraphs 23.12, 23.13 (14th ed.); Taggart, at 233. It just as purposefully reversed this course of action when it enacted the 1978 and the 1984 Acts.Granting bankruptcy courts broad jurisdictional powers to entertain actions aimed at resolving disputes between a trustee and an adverse third party resulted, in large measure, from the deleterious effect of disputes over whether a particular issue was subject to summary or plenary jurisdiction.30 The summary/plenary distinction and the judicial quagmires resulting from the disputes it generated were the by-products of the 1898 Act rule that third-party claims were to be tried independently of the bankruptcy forum. Congress, after studying this problem for almost ten years,31 dramatically altered bankruptcy proceedings in the 1978 Act to correct these deficiencies. It not only reconstructed the mechanics of bankruptcy administration, but completely altered the philosophy underlying the litigation of bankruptcy issues. See Taggart, at 233; Countryman, at 7-12. After the Supreme Court declared the jurisdictional provision of the 1978 Act unconstitutional in Northern Pipeline, Congress obviously restructured the jurisdictional grant in the 1984 Act. The jurisdictional features of both acts, however, were designed primarily to eliminate a major defect in bankruptcy litigation--the time, resources and efficiency wasted in deciding whether disputes were to be resolved by summary or plenary proceedings. In the 1978 Act, Congress accomplished this purpose in two ways. First, it expanded the bankruptcy courts' jurisdiction and, second, it allowed them to conduct jury trials in cases that previously had been routed to non-bankruptcy forums.32 In the 1984 Act, Congress achieved this purpose by granting bankruptcy courts summary jurisdiction over all civil proceedings except those only peripherally related to a case under title 11. By this action, Congress brought all but a very narrow category of cases33 affecting the bankruptcy estate within the bankruptcy framework, to be litigated in the traditional equitable forum of the bankruptcy court.It is true that in determining seventh amendment rights we examine issues rather than cases. Ross v. Bernhard, 396 U.S. at 538, 90 S.Ct. at 738. Here, however, the issues we examine relate to the restructuring of the debtor-creditor relationship in bankruptcy. American courts have held core bankruptcy proceedings to be equitable from the beginning of our system of bankruptcy.34 Now, Congress also has determined that actions such as the trustee's in this case are core bankruptcy proceedings requiring summary disposition by a bankruptcy judge. As such, they assume the historical equitable posture of all such bankruptcy proceedings, and the litigants involved in these actions have no seventh amendment right to a trial by jury.35III.The Perkinsons contend that, even if the seventh amendment does not mandate that they receive a jury trial, provisions of the 1984 Act nevertheless require it.Congress could have exceeded constitutional requirements, of course, and statutorily provided a right to trial by jury in all bankruptcy matters. In fact, as we previously noted, Congress took an expansive approach to jury trials in the 1978 Act. See King, at 705; see also Levy, at 10; Countryman, at 7-12; Note, The Bankruptcy Amendments and Federal Judgeship Act of 1984: The Impact on the Right of Jury Trial in Bankruptcy Court, 16 Tex.Tech.L.Rev. 535, 541 (1985) (hereafter Note). Section 241(a) of that Act, 28 U.S.C. Sec . 1471, provided in part: (a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section, the district courts shall have original and exclusive jurisdiction of all cases under title 11. (b) Notwithstanding any Act of Congress that confers exclusive jurisdiction on a court or courts other than the district courts, the district courts shall have original but not exclusive jurisdiction of all civil proceedings arising under title 11 or arising in or related to cases under title 11. (c) The bankruptcy court for the district in which a case under title 11 is commenced shall exercise all of the jurisdiction conferred by this section on the district courts.Title 28, section 1480, also part of section 241(a) of the 1978 Act, provided in part: (a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section, this chapter and title 11 do not affect any right to trial by jury, in a case under title 11 or in a proceeding arising under title 11 or arising in or related to a case under title 11, that is provided by any statute in effect on September 30, 1979.Rather than expand existing rights to jury trials in bankruptcy proceedings, the 1984 Act drastically restricted such rights. For reasons not completely apparent either in the language of the Act or from its legislative history, Congress went beyond those faults identified by the Supreme Court in Northern Pipeline in restructuring the 1978 Act to eliminate its constitutional faults. 1 Collier p 3.01[b][i] (15th ed.). The pervasive jury trial rights contained in section 1480 under the 1978 Act were eliminated. In its stead, Congress provided in part:Sec. 1411. Jury trials (a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section, this chapter and title 11 do not affect any right to trial by jury that an individual has under applicable nonbankruptcy law with regard to a personal injury or wrongful death tort claim.Pub.L. No. 98-353, Sec. 102(a) (codified at 28 U.S.C. Sec . 1411).Congress, in the 1984 Act, granted bankruptcy courts the authority to "hear and determine" matters that previously could only be determined in plenary proceedings, as well as matters that could be determined in summary proceedings. 28 U.S.C. Sec . 157(b)(1). Considered against the background of congressional effort to eliminate the systemic problems caused by the plenary/summary distinction, it seems logical to infer from the structure of the 1984 Act that Congress intended all core proceedings to be determined by exercise of summary jurisdiction. See King, at 703; Taggart, at 248. Apart from that, the plain language of section 1411 indicates almost conclusively that litigants such as the Perkinsons have no statutory right to a trial by jury under the 1984 Act.36 A comparison of section 1480 of the 1978 Act with the cryptic language of section 1411 in the 1984 Act reinforces that conclusion. The general structure of the jurisdiction sections of the 1984 Act, the absence in it of the broad jury trial provision contained in the 1978 Act, and the 1984 language specifically limiting the right to a jury trial to negligence and wrongful death actions effectively forecloses any argument that Congress intended issues such as are involved here to be tried by jury.The judgment of the district court is affirmed.AFFIRMED.WIDENER, Circuit Judge, dissenting:Since I believe that the Perkinsons are entitled to trial by jury, I respectfully dissent.Huffman, as a trustee in bankruptcy, commenced adversary proceedings against the Perkinsons to avoid allegedly preferential and fraudulent transfers or voluntary conveyances. The trustee relied both upon federal law to set aside the transfers as preferential and fraudulent,1 and also upon Virginia state law which allows for the voiding of voluntary conveyances. Va.Code Sec. 55-81. The trustee seeks repayment or judgment.2 There is no property in the hands of the Perkinsons which the trustee seeks to recover. The Perkinsons, who have not filed any claim in the bankruptcy case, challenge the court's jurisdiction and demand trial by jury on the claims asserted by the trustee. The district court did not refer these proceedings to a bankruptcy judge, and this appeal is from an interlocutory order of the district court denying trial by jury.My concern is not with the trustee's ability to press for the recovery of preferential, fraudulent or voluntary transfers; rather, it is with the determination that the exercise of all avoiding powers at the trustee's disposal are "core proceedings" subject to summary adjudication by the bankruptcy court and free of the Seventh Amendment's jury requirement.* I agree with the majority that the district court has jurisdiction, although my reasons differ from those given in the majority opinion.Congress has the undoubted power to create federal question causes of action, as it has done here, in 11 U.S.C. Sec . 547 for preferences and Sec. 548 for fraudulent transfers. It also has the undoubted power to authorize a trustee in bankruptcy to proceed against the beneficiary of a preferential or fraudulent transfer under federal substantive law or of a voluntary conveyance under Virginia Code Sec. 55-81 as it has done in 11 U.S.C. Sec . 544(b).Following the 1978 amendments to the Bankruptcy Code as amended in 1984, the trustee has the power to bring into the bankruptcy case the beneficiaries of preferential, fraudulent or voluntary conveyances, even involuntarily as here. Northern Pipeline requires that when someone is made a party in a proceeding in a bankruptcy case involuntarily, as here, that he be brought into an Article III court. The district judge in this case prudently held to himself the decision in the adversary proceeding and did not refer it to a bankruptcy judge. By so doing, the district court wisely finessed the even more ticklish question than the one present here.I can see nothing about bringing the Perkinsons into the case which is a violation of Northern Pipeline and the subsequent case dealing with the same subject, Commodities Future Trading Comm. v. Schor, 478 U.S. 833, 106 S.Ct. 3245, 92 L.Ed.2d 675 (1986). Neither can I see in this case the exercise by Congress of any authority relating to jurisdiction which it did not have. Since the trustee proceeds against the Perkinsons on both federal and state substantive law grounds, it is a matter of indifference on which ground, if any, he may ultimately be successful for the grounds on which he proceeds must govern the procedure.It is the nature of the federal and state causes of action which the trustee asserts, as well as the procedural aspect in which this case finds itself, which must determine whether or not the Perkinsons are entitled to trial by jury, which will be discussed below.IIThe trustee seeks to use his avoiding powers to restore the value of the transferred assets to the debtor's estate.3 Although the distinction may sometimes be difficult to draw, preferences are generally permitted outside of bankruptcy law while fraudulent or voluntary conveyance law reaches actions taken by a debtor irrespective of the pendency of a bankruptcy case.4 The justification for fraudulent conveyance law is fundamentally broader than the reasons for a bankruptcy proceeding. The Supreme Court has long recognized the distinction between a fraudulent and preferential conveyance:One is inherently and always vicious; the other innocent and valid, except when made in violation of the express provisions of a statute. One is malum per se and the other malum prohibitum, -and then only to the extent that it is forbidden. A fraudulent conveyance is void regardless of its date; a preference is valid unless made within the prohibited period.Van Iderstine v. National Discount Co.,