Loveridge v. Hall , 792 F.3d 1274 ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                FILED
    United States Court of Appeals
    Tenth Circuit
    July 10, 2015
    PUBLISH            Elisabeth A. Shumaker
    Clerk of Court
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    TENTH CIRCUIT
    In re: RENEWABLE ENERGY
    DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION,
    Debtor.
    ELIZABETH R. LOVERIDGE,
    Chapter 7 Trustee,
    Plaintiff,
    v.                                               No. 14-4001
    TONY HALL; ELLIS-HALL
    CONSULTANTS, LLC; SUMMIT
    WIND POWER, LLC; SSP, a trust,
    Scott Rasmussen-Trustee; CLAY R.
    CHRISTIANSEN; DIANE E.
    CHRISTIANSEN; RICHARD D.
    FRANCOM; STEPHEN K. MEYER;
    BONNIE G. MEYER; DOES I-X,
    Defendants,
    and
    SUMMIT WIND POWER, LLC;
    KIMBERLY CERUTI, an individual,
    Third-Party Plaintiffs -
    Appellants,
    v.
    PARSONS KINGHORN HARRIS, a
    professional corporation; GEORGE B.
    HOFMANN; MATTHEW M. BOLEY;
    KIMBERLEY L. HANSEN; VICTOR
    E. COPELAND; LISA R. PETERSON;
    MELYSSA DAVIDSON, individuals,
    Third-Party Defendants -
    Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Utah
    (D.C. No. 2:12-CV-00771-RJS)
    Stephen Q. Wood (Mary Anne Q. Wood with him on the briefs) of Wood
    Balmforth LLC, Salt Lake City, Utah, for Third-Party Plaintiffs-Appellants.
    Stuart H. Schultz of Strong & Hanni, Salt Lake City, Utah for Third-Party
    Defendants-Appellees.
    Before TYMKOVICH, GORSUCH, and PHILLIPS, Circuit Judges.
    GORSUCH, Circuit Judge.
    This case has but little to do with bankruptcy. Neither the debtor nor the
    creditors, not even the bankruptcy trustee, are parties to it. True, the plaintiffs
    once enjoyed an attorney-client relationship with a former bankruptcy trustee.
    True, they now allege the former trustee breached professional duties due them
    because of conflicting obligations he owed the bankruptcy estate. But the
    2
    plaintiffs seek recovery only under state law and none of their claims will be
    necessarily resolved in the bankruptcy claims allowance process. And to know
    that much is to know this case cannot be resolved in bankruptcy court. The
    bankruptcy court may offer a report and recommendation. It may even decide the
    dispute if the parties consent. But the parties are entitled by the Constitution to
    have an Article III judge make the final call. So the district court’s ruling
    otherwise — its decision to send the dispute to an Article I bankruptcy court for
    final resolution without their consent — violates the Constitution’s commands
    and must be corrected.
    Conflicts of interest often spell trouble for lawyers. The rules are complex
    and missteps happen. And at least as the complaint in this case tells it, a misstep
    happened here. When Renewable Energy Development Corporation (REDCO)
    found itself facing Chapter 7 reorganization proceedings, the bankruptcy court
    appointed attorney George Hofmann to serve as trustee for the estate. REDCO
    was in the wind business and its assets included lease options with private
    property owners who agreed to allow wind farms on their lands. As trustee, Mr.
    Hofmann was eager to ascertain the value of REDCO’s leases so he consulted
    another client of his with expertise in the field — Kimberly Ceruti, the owner of
    Summit Wind Power, LLC. The pair eventually discovered that REDCO had
    failed to pay some property owners the consideration it owed them. As a result,
    3
    Mr. Hofmann allegedly concluded that REDCO’s options were unenforceable and
    even encouraged Summit to pursue its own leases with the same individuals.
    Which it promptly did.
    What started off sounding like a good idea and maybe even a win-win for
    REDCO and Summit soon yielded a rat’s nest of conflicts. On further study, Mr.
    Hofmann came to the view that the property owners couldn’t cancel their leases
    with REDCO in favor of Summit without first giving REDCO a chance to cure its
    nonpayment. And, in Mr. Hofmann’s estimation, the chance to cure was a
    valuable opportunity for REDCO and its creditors. So he asked Summit to forgo
    its new leases in favor of REDCO’s old ones. Summit refused. Things got so
    testy that Mr. Hofmann, yes, brought an adversarial proceeding in bankruptcy
    court against one client (Summit) on behalf of another (the REDCO estate).
    Unsurprisingly, Summit responded with state law claims against Mr. Hofmann
    and his law firm, alleging legal malpractice, breaches of fiduciary duties, and a
    good many other things besides. Mr. Hofmann, by now irredeemably conflicted,
    was removed from his post as trustee.
    How do these unfortunate but hardly uncommon facts yield a dispute of
    constitutional magnitude? Summit filed suit in federal court against Mr. Hofmann
    alleging diversity jurisdiction and the right to have the case resolved in an Article
    III court. Mr. Hofmann replied that the case belonged in and should be resolved
    by an Article I bankruptcy court. Ultimately, the district court sided with Mr.
    4
    Hofmann even as it acknowledged some uncertainty about this much and certified
    its decision for an immediate appeal.
    The Constitution assigns “[t]he judicial Power” to decide cases and
    controversies to an independent branch of government populated by judges who
    serve without fixed terms and whose salaries may not be diminished. U.S. Const.
    art. III, § 1. This constitutional design is all about ensuring “clear heads . . . and
    honest hearts,” the essential ingredients of “good judges.” 1 Works of James
    Wilson 363 (J. Andrews ed., 1896) (alteration omitted), quoted in Stern v.
    Marshall, 
    131 S. Ct. 2594
    , 2609 (2011). After all, the framers lived in an age
    when judges had to curry favor with the crown in order to secure their tenure and
    salary and their decisions not infrequently followed their interests. Indeed, the
    framers cited this problem as among the leading reasons for their declaration of
    independence. The Declaration of Independence ¶ 11; Stern, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2609
    .
    And later they crafted Article III as the cure for their complaint, promising there
    that the federal government will never be allowed to take the people’s lives,
    liberties, or property without a decisionmaker insulated from the pressures other
    branches may try to bring to bear. Stern, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2609
    . To this day, one of
    the surest proofs any nation enjoys an independent judiciary must be that the
    government can and does lose in litigation before its “own” courts like anyone
    else.
    5
    Despite the Constitution’s general rule, over time the Supreme Court has
    recognized three “narrow” situations in which persons otherwise entitled to a
    federal forum may wind up having their dispute resolved by someone other than
    an Article III judge. Northern Pipeline Constr. Co. v. Marathon Pipe Line Co.,
    
    458 U.S. 50
    , 64 (1982) (plurality opinion). Cases arising in the territories or the
    armed forces or those involving “public rights” may be sent to Article I tribunals
    of Congress’s creation even if decisionmakers there do not enjoy the same
    insulation and independence as Article III judges. 
    Id. at 63-72
    . Bankruptcy
    courts are, of course, legislative creations of just this sort. And because they
    don’t have a thing to do with the territories or armed forces, the Supreme Court
    has suggested that their lawful charter depends on and is limited by public rights
    doctrine.
    As developed to date, public rights doctrine has something of “a potluck
    quality” to it. Waldman v. Stone, 
    698 F.3d 910
    , 918 (6th Cir. 2012) (Kethledge,
    J.). The original idea appears to have been that certain rights belong to
    individuals inalienably — things like the rights to life, liberty, and property —
    and they may not be deprived except by an Article III judge. Meanwhile,
    additional legal interests may be generated by positive law and belong to the
    people as a civic community and disputes about their scope and application may
    be resolved through other means, including legislation or executive decision. See
    Stern, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2612
    ; Caleb Nelson, Adjudication in the Political Branches,
    6
    
    107 Colum. L. Rev. 559
    , 566-72 (2007). But the boundary between private and
    public rights has proven anything but easy to draw and some say it’s become only
    more misshapen in recent years thanks to seesawing battles between competing
    structuralist and functionalist schools of thought. Compare, e.g., Northern
    Pipeline, 
    458 U.S. 50
    , and Stern, 
    131 S. Ct. 2594
    , with Commodity Futures
    Trading Comm’n v. Schor, 
    478 U.S. 833
     (1986), and Wellness Int’l Network, Ltd.
    v. Sharif, 
    135 S. Ct. 1932
     (2015). Indeed, the Court itself has acknowledged, its
    treatment of the doctrine “has not been entirely consistent.” Stern, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2611
    ; see also S. Elizabeth Gibson, Jury Trials and Core Proceedings: The
    Bankruptcy Judge’s Uncertain Authority, 
    65 Am. Bankr. L.J. 143
    , 168-175 (1991)
    (“How a majority of the Court could have embraced these opposing views of
    article III within the span of less than a decade is difficult to understand,” id. at
    174).
    Bankruptcy courts bear the misfortune of possessing ideal terrain for testing
    the limits of public rights doctrine and they have provided the site for many such
    battles. See Northern Pipeline, 
    458 U.S. 50
    ; Granfinanciera, S.A. v. Nordberg,
    
    492 U.S. 33
     (1989); Stern, 
    131 S. Ct. 2594
    . Even today, it’s pretty hard to say
    what the upshot is. Through it all, the Supreme Court has suggested that certain
    aspects of the bankruptcy process may implicate public rights and thus lawfully
    find resolution in Article I courts. See, e.g., Northern Pipeline, 
    458 U.S. at 71
    (plurality opinion); Granfinanciera, 
    492 U.S. at
    56 n.11; Stern, 
    131 S. Ct. at
    2614
    7
    n.7. But the Court has also emphasized time and again that not every “proceeding
    [that] may have some bearing on a bankruptcy case” implicates a public right
    amenable to resolution in an Article I tribunal. Stern, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2618
    .
    That much, of course, hardly decides cases. What most everyone wants to
    know is which aspects of typical bankruptcy proceedings do and don’t implicate
    public rights. Yet even Stern, perhaps the Court’s most comprehensive tangle
    with the question, offered no comprehensive rule for application across all cases.
    Instead, it invoked a number of different factors to support the result it reached in
    the particular and rather unusual case at hand. 
    Id. at 2614
     (justifying its decision
    because the case at hand didn’t “fall within any of the varied formulations of the
    public rights exception in this Court’s cases”); see also 
    id. at 2621
     (Scalia, J.,
    concurring) (noting the “surfeit” of factors and formulations offered by the
    majority); Ralph Brubaker, A “Summary” Statutory and Constitutional Theory of
    Bankruptcy Judges’ Core Jurisdiction After Stern v. Marshall, 
    86 Am. Bankr. L.J. 121
    , 172 (2012).
    But along the way Stern did clearly take at least one thing off the table. It
    held that when a “claim is a state law action . . . and not necessarily resolvable by
    a ruling on the creditor’s proof of claim in bankruptcy,” it implicates private
    rights and thus is not amenable to final resolution in bankruptcy court. Stern, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2611
    . Indeed, the Court repeated this point — repeatedly. See 
    id. at 2617, 2618, 2620
    . So whatever else you might say in the midst of this still-very-
    8
    much-ongoing battle over bankruptcy and public rights doctrine, you can say this
    much: cases properly in federal court but arising under state law and not
    necessarily resolvable in the claims allowance process trigger Article III’s
    protections.
    Happily, too, this is all the guidance we need to answer this appeal. While
    the parties before us agree on little else, they agree that Summit’s claims against
    Mr. Hofmann and his firm are properly heard in federal court under the federal
    diversity statute, that they arise under state law, and that none will necessarily be
    resolved in the process of allowing or disallowing claims against the estate.
    Accordingly, we can be sure this is not the sort of case that may be forcibly
    shipped to an Article I bankruptcy court for final decision. The parties may
    waive their right to an Article III forum and choose to have their claims resolved
    in bankruptcy court. Wellness Int’l Network, 
    135 S. Ct. at 1939
    . But a district
    court may not — as the district court did here — send parties entitled to an
    Article III court to an Article I forum for final decision without their consent.
    Mr. Hofmann resists this result by suggesting that Summit’s claims are
    factually “intertwined” with the bankruptcy proceedings and for this reason
    belong in bankruptcy court. After all, he says, any harm that happened here
    happened only because of a conflict of interest arising from his service as a
    bankruptcy trustee. This much may be true but it equally strikes us as irrelevant.
    As we read Stern, it doesn’t leave room for the notion that a claim independently
    9
    arising under state law and not necessarily resolvable in the claims allowance
    process — but “factually intertwined” with bankruptcy proceedings — may be
    sent to bankruptcy court for final resolution without consent. As we see it, the
    only “intertwining” Stern cares about concerns the law, not the facts. In the
    process of rejecting the idea that the claim before the Court implicated public
    rights doctrine, Stern observed (among other things) that the claim was not
    “intertwined with a federal regulatory program Congress has power to enact” but
    arose instead under state law. 
    131 S. Ct. at 2614
     (quoting Granfinanciera, 
    492 U.S. at 54
    ). The Court pointed out that prototypical public rights disputes arise
    from “federal statutory scheme[s]” while “quintessential[]” private rights disputes
    involve common law rights affecting personal life, liberty, or property. Id. at
    2614, 2618. In this way, the Court did suggest the source of law generating a
    claim may inform its categorization as involving a public or private right. But the
    Court nowhere suggested that any claim “factually intertwined” with bankruptcy
    may be sent to bankruptcy court for final resolution without consent.
    We confess we’re glad of this. Asking what source of law generated the
    claim at issue may well raise some questions around the edges — like what about
    claims pursuing fraudulent conveyances, which find a home in a federal statute
    but surely implicate longstanding common law rights? See Granfinanciera, 
    492 U.S. at 56
    . Still, questions like these aren’t a patch on what would be involved if
    in each case we had to ask whether the plaintiff’s claims are “factually
    10
    intertwined” with a bankruptcy proceeding. If, as Mr. Hofmann submits, our case
    is “factually intertwined” enough with bankruptcy to warrant its resolution in
    bankruptcy court — just because a trustee in the bankruptcy happened to generate
    a conflict of interest with a client outside the bankruptcy — what wouldn’t be?
    What if a trustee and creditor came to blows in the courthouse parking lot over
    the terms of a proposed reorganization plan? What if a trustee stole from a third
    person and gave the money to the bankruptcy estate? Couldn’t someone plausibly
    describe disputes like these as at least as “factually intertwined” with bankruptcy
    as our own?
    The implausibility of Mr. Hofmann’s “factually intertwined” test as a
    viable interpretation of Stern and its inadvisability as a practical matter are
    further underscored by this. If we were to adopt his test, you could make a pretty
    good argument Stern itself would have had to come out the other way. In Stern
    the debtor brought a tort counterclaim against a creditor in hopes of enlarging the
    bankruptcy estate and the Supreme Court found the allegation sufficient to trigger
    the bankruptcy court’s “core” authorities. 
    131 S. Ct. at 2604
    . That sounds pretty
    “factually intertwined.” Yet the Court held the case triggered Article III’s
    protections. A similar sort of problem may recur with Granfinanciera too. There
    the debtor allegedly engaged in a fraudulent conveyance to hide assets from the
    bankruptcy estate. Though the Court decided the case on other grounds (the
    Seventh Amendment), Stern seemed to suggest that fraudulent conveyance cases
    11
    involve private rights and thus are of the sort that (absent consent) must be
    decided in Article III courts. See 
    id.
     at 2614 n.7 (describing Granfinanciera as
    teaching that “Congress could not constitutionally assign resolution of the
    fraudulent conveyance action to a non-Article III court”); see also In re
    Bellingham Ins. Agency, Inc., 
    702 F.3d 553
    , 563 (9th Cir. 2012) aff’d sub nom.
    Executive Benefits Ins. Agency v. Arkison, 
    134 S. Ct. 2165
     (2014). Even though,
    surely, one could argue fraudulent conveyance claims are usually (always?)
    “factually intertwined” with the bankruptcy process because they challenge
    efforts to evade it. That Mr. Hofmann’s proposed test would place us at odds
    with what the Supreme Court has decided in Stern — and at least suggested about
    Granfinanciera — does much to make us skittish of following where he would
    have us go.
    Notably, many circuits to come this way before us have read Stern much as
    we do. In fact, some have even read the decision as claiming a good deal more
    ground for Article III than we must to resolve this appeal. The Ninth Circuit, for
    one, has suggested that only the second portion of the Stern test we’ve discussed
    — whether the matter would necessarily be resolved in the claims allowance
    process — must be satisfied to trigger Article III’s protections. After all, the
    Ninth Circuit has noted, Granfinanciera involved a claim at least nominally
    arising from federal statute (not state law), yet it’s one Stern seemed to suggest
    belongs on the private side of the rights ledger. In re Bellingham, 702 F.3d at
    12
    564. Neither is the Ninth alone in this view. See, e.g., In re Fisher Island Invs.,
    Inc., 
    778 F.3d 1172
    , 1192 (11th Cir. 2015) (holding that a bankruptcy court had
    authority to decide a state law dispute that was necessarily resolved in the claims
    allowance process); In re Frazin, 
    732 F.3d 313
    , 320-24 (5th Cir. 2013) (invoking
    the claims allowance process to explain why a bankruptcy court could decide
    certain state law claims but not others); Waldman, 698 F.3d at 921 (finding an
    Article III problem because “there was never any reason to think that” the
    debtor’s “disallowance claims would necessarily resolve his affirmative [state
    law] claims”). To decide the case before us, however, we do not have to travel so
    far for both of the factors Stern discussed are present here and surely all the
    circuits to have spoken on the subject would agree their combination is enough
    (maybe more than enough) to invite Article III’s application.
    Mr. Hofmann brushes aside these authorities and asks us to find inspiration
    instead in Albert v. Site Mgmt., Inc., 
    506 B.R. 453
     (D. Md. 2014), and In re Refco
    Inc., 
    461 B.R. 181
     (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2011). But neither of these cases
    acknowledges Stern’s direction that a case meeting both of the conditions we’ve
    discussed is entitled to an Article III forum. Neither of these cases appears
    reconcilable with the most thoughtful circuit learning on the subject we’ve just
    outlined. Refco even admits that its result is in tension with Stern, going so far as
    to acknowledge that the Supreme Court would likely reject its result. Refco, 
    461 B.R. at 191
    ; see also In re Lyondell Chem. Co., 
    467 B.R. 712
    , 721 (S.D.N.Y.
    13
    2012) (agreeing with Refco’s self-assessment). And it can come as no surprise
    that a court’s well-reasoned confession its ruling runs afoul of Supreme Court
    precedent is enough to send us packing the other direction.
    Perhaps what Mr. Hofmann, the district court, and these authorities are
    aiming at is something different and a good deal more plausible than an extension
    of public rights doctrine to cases “factually intertwined” with bankruptcy. In
    places, you could read them all as suggesting less that cases like ours qualify as
    bona fide public rights disputes and more that we should consider recognizing a
    fourth qualification to Article III, one particular to bankruptcy, to cover them.
    And somewhere in here there may be a good argument premised on historical
    understanding. At the time of the founding, English bankruptcy commissioners
    could “summarily” decide matters related to the disposition of property in the
    bankruptcy estate — a sort of equitable in rem authority to administer and dispose
    of the bankrupt’s assets for the benefit of his creditors. But bankruptcy
    commissioners could not resolve “plenary” suits involving outside parties or
    questions about what property belonged in or out of the bankruptcy estate. Such
    matters had to be resolved before a judge. Congress’s early attempts to
    implement a nationwide bankruptcy system reflected this same jurisdictional
    divide. See Brubaker, supra, at 123-30; Arkison, 
    134 S. Ct. at 2170
    . And there’s
    a colorable argument that Article III should be read in light of this historical
    practice. You might even rationalize Stern and other existing cases along these
    14
    lines. After all, Stern’s second condition, focusing on the amenability of a claim
    to resolution in the bankruptcy claims process, could be read as suggesting that
    the constitutional line falls along something like the old summary-plenary divide.
    So might Stern’s suggestion that fraudulent conveyance claims belong in an
    Article III court despite the fact they sometimes nominally arise from federal
    statute. And so might the logic behind the Ninth Circuit’s decision in Bellingham
    and similar circuit decisions elsewhere.
    Recognizing the summary-plenary line as the operative constitutional
    boundary in bankruptcy may have the virtue of consistency with historical
    practice and afford lower courts (some of) the guidance they’ve long wanted. See
    Brubaker, supra, at 123-30. It might also have the virtue of avoiding further
    entanglements with public rights doctrine in this area — a doctrine that’s not only
    pretty hard to get your hands around, but one that on even a good day may be
    poorly suited to the task of allocating decisonmaking authority in bankruptcy
    given (after all) that bankruptcy involves the disposition of private assets between
    private parties. It’s perhaps telling in this regard that, despite suggesting some
    aspects of bankruptcy implicate only public rights, precisely none of the Court’s
    Article III bankruptcy cases has yet upheld a bankruptcy court’s decision on this
    basis. And perhaps telling, too, that several Justices have expressed openness to
    exploring the use of historical practice as a basis for the constitutional boundary
    between Article I and Article III in the bankruptcy context. See Wellness Int’l
    15
    Network, 
    135 S. Ct. at 1951
     (Roberts, C.J., dissenting); 
    id. at 1967-68
     (Thomas,
    J., dissenting); Stern, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2621
     (Scalia, J., concurring); see also
    Brubaker, supra, at 164-67; Gibson, supra, at 170.
    Still, it’s hardly clear that pursuing this idea further would help Mr.
    Hofmann. For this case doesn’t involve the administration or distribution of
    estate assets and it would seem to fit pretty neatly on the plenary side of the line.
    Even more problematically still, while the district court discusses a possible
    argument in this direction, Mr. Hofmann’s brief does no more than allude to it.
    And because entertaining an argument for drawing a new doctrinal boundary
    between Article I and Article III in the bankruptcy context would require us to
    confront highly “difficult constitutional question[s]” that are “not adequately . . .
    briefed,” we are naturally reluctant to venture farther into this dark wood without
    more help from counsel. Wellness Int’l Network, 
    135 S. Ct. at 1970
     (Thomas, J.,
    dissenting). After all, what looks a promising possibility from afar often reveals
    scraggly particulars on closer encounter. So in the end we think the prudent
    course is to leave Mr. Hofmann’s allusion where we find it and defer its
    resolution for another case where it may be more fully explored by the parties.
    Still, that’s not the end of our encounter with this appeal. It isn’t because
    saying (as we do) that a bankruptcy court may not decide this case without the
    parties’ consent under Stern doesn’t necessarily mean it cannot hear the case and
    offer a report and recommendation about its disposition to a district court.
    16
    Indeed, as the Supreme Court has recently explained, where (as here) we are
    faced with a “Stern claim”— a claim the bankruptcy court is statutorily but not
    constitutionally authorized to decide and for which it has not received the parties’
    consent to proceed — it’s still possible under 
    28 U.S.C. § 157
    (c)(1) and
    consistent with Article III for a bankruptcy court to “hear the proceeding and
    submit proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law to the district court for
    de novo review and entry of judgment.” Arkison, 
    134 S. Ct. at 2173
    . In cases
    like this, the bankruptcy court may act as a sort of magistrate or special master,
    an adjunct to the decisionmaker, not the decisionmaker itself — and in this way
    honor both statutory and constitutional commands. 
    Id.
     So while Summit is right
    and the district court erred in sending Mr. Hofmann’s case to bankruptcy court for
    final decision, the district court remains free on remand to refer the case to a
    bankruptcy court for a report and recommendation.
    Summit resists this result, fighting even a temporary trip to bankruptcy
    court for a report and recommendation. For a bankruptcy court to hear a claim as
    a matter of statutory law, Summit notes, 
    28 U.S.C. § 157
    (a) instructs that the
    claim must “aris[e] under title 11 or aris[e] in or relate[] to a case under title 11,”
    the federal bankruptcy code. And Summit says this requirement isn’t met in this
    case because the parties’ fight is so far removed from bankruptcy that it can’t be
    said to “aris[e] under title 11 or aris[e] in or relate[] to a case under title 11.” But
    whatever other problems might attend this line of argument one is by now
    17
    familiar: it wasn’t made before the district court and is therefore another one we
    may and do decline to resolve in this appeal. See Waldman, 698 F.3d at 917.
    Not ready to give up quite so easily on its effort to avoid even a short
    detour from district court, Summit suggests we cannot ignore and must resolve its
    argument because it implicates the subject matter jurisdiction of the federal
    courts. But that much it does not — quite — do. The statute Summit invokes, 
    28 U.S.C. § 157
    , involves only the allocation of responsibility between the
    bankruptcy and district court; it does not “implicate questions of subject matter
    jurisdiction.” Stern, 
    131 S. Ct. at 2607
    . We acknowledge that § 157(a) shares
    similar language with 
    28 U.S.C. § 1334
    (b) — and we readily accept that statute is
    jurisdictional: quite expressly it provides district courts with “jurisdiction” over
    “all civil proceedings arising under title 11, or arising in or related to cases under
    title 11.” So maybe Summit’s § 157(a) argument could be transferred to
    § 1334(b), and maybe the argument could present a successful jurisdictional
    challenge there. But if it did, it wouldn’t be just the bankruptcy court that would
    lack jurisdiction to hear and report on this case. The district court itself would
    have no authority to hear the case either for § 1334(b) expressly governs its
    jurisdiction too.
    Anxious to remain in federal court — just not ever visit bankruptcy court
    — Summit shirks from acknowledging this, the full consequences of its argument,
    and nowhere mentions § 1334(b) in its opening brief or how its argument might
    18
    apply to that statute. And, happily for everyone, we don’t have to address the
    question on our own motion either, even though it does implicate subject matter
    jurisdiction. We don’t because, whether or not the district court has jurisdiction
    to decide this case under § 1334(b), everyone acknowledges it clearly has
    jurisdiction to do just that under § 1332(a) given that the complaint alleges
    complete diversity of citizenship and a sufficient amount in controversy. See,
    e.g., Penteco Corp. Ltd. P’ship–1985A v. Union Gas Sys., Inc., 
    929 F.2d 1519
    ,
    1521 (10th Cir. 1991).
    At the end of the day, then, we are confident that the district court
    possesses subject matter jurisdiction to hear this case at least under the diversity
    statute, that Summit is entitled under Stern to have an Article III district court
    resolve its claims, and that the district court may refer the case to an Article I
    bankruptcy court for a report and recommendation. Many other questions remain
    for tomorrow. But resolving this much is enough work for today. The case is
    remanded to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    19