Full opinion text
OPINION OF THE COURT BECKER, Chief Judge. This bankruptcy appeal requires us to define the boundaries of the term “property of the estate,” as used in § 541 of Title 11 of the United States Code (Bankruptcy Code), in the context of a federal grant relationship. The appeal arises out of an adversary action instituted by the trustee of debtor Life Service Systems, Inc.(LSS) against defendant Westmoreland Human Opportunities, Inc. (WHO), charging the latter with a breach of its fiduciary duty to LSS’s Unsecured Creditors Committee (Committee). Both LSS and WHO are non-profit organizations which provide community services to residents of West-moreland County in western Pennsylvania. In 1995, LSS was selected by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to receive grant moneys under the federal Supportive Housing Program; LSS and HUD executed a Supportive Housing Grant Agreement (Grant Agreement) as part of this grantor/grantee arrangement. Shortly thereafter, LSS experienced significant financial difficulties, ultimately filing a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition. Because WHO was one of LSS’s largest creditors, it accepted an invitation to join the Unsecured Creditors Committee. During its tenure on the Committee, WHO, without notifying either its fellow Committee members or the Bankruptcy Court, assumed LSS’s position as recipient of Supportive Housing Program funds, executing a Supportive Housing Grant Agreement Amendment (Grant Agreement Amendment) with HUD. In the adversary action at issue on this appeal, LSS’s trustee in bankruptcy alleged that WHO, by assuming LSS’s interest in the grant relationship in this manner, breached its fiduciary duty to Committee constituents. WHO defended on the ground that LSS’s interest in the Supportive Housing Program grant relationship was not property of LSS’s bankruptcy estate and thus did not trigger a fiduciary duty on WHO’s part. The Bankruptcy Court rejected WHO’s defense, holding that LSS’s interest in the grant relationship constituted part of LSS’s bankruptcy estate and that WHO had therefore violated its fiduciary obligations. It entered judgment against WHO in the sum of $135,653. On appeal, the District Court affirmed. Against this background, WHO’s appeal presents the question whether a debtor non-profit community service organization’s interest in a HUD-type federal grant relationship constitutes property of the debtor’s estate. Disagreeing with the Bankruptcy and District Courts, we hold that LSS’s interest in the grant relationship with HUD is excluded from the definition of “property of the estate” set forth in § 541 of the Bankruptcy Code. Despite § 541’s considerable breadth, HUD’s singular supervisory interest in ensuring the effective administration of the Supportive Housing Program, evidenced by the pervasive, strict, and minute oversight over the grant relationship imposed by the Program’s relevant statutory and regulatory provisions, suffices to exclude LSS’s interest in the Supportive Housing Program grant relationship from § 541’s property definition. The District Court, in conducting its § 541 property analysis, failed to account for HUD’s weighty interest. The court mistakenly viewed the provisions of the Grant Agreement as the exclusive calipers for measuring the rights yielded to LSS by virtue of the grant relationship, and therefore neglected to consider the substantial limitations imposed on those rights by the other statutory and regulatory components of the Supportive Housing Program scheme. As a result, we conclude that the District Court erred in deciding that LSS’s interest in the grant relationship constituted property of its bankruptcy estate, and we therefore set aside the court’s judgment. However, our conclusion that LSS’s interest does not qualify as property for purposes of the Bankruptcy Code does not dispose of this appeal. Left unanswered is a question not considered by either the Bankruptcy or the District Court: whether, despite the fact that LSS’s interest in the grant relationship with HUD was not property of its bankruptcy estate, WHO’s assumption of LSS’s interest without notice to Committee members or to the Bankruptcy Court violated the fiduciary duty WHO owed to Committee constituents. The Bankruptcy and District Courts, as well as the parties themselves, all appear to have assumed that resolution of the bankruptcy property question would also dispose of the breach of fiduciary duty issue. Because neither the District nor the Bankruptcy Court addressed the issue that our disposition of the case now raises, relying instead on the erroneous conclusion that LSS’s interest qualified as property for purposes of the Bankruptcy Code, and because the parties failed to adequately brief and argue the question to us, we remand the case to the District Court, which may in turn refer it to the Bankruptcy Court, for resolution of the issue. I. Facts and Procedural History A. In 1995, LSS, a private non-profit community service organization operating in western Pennsylvania, undertook a project to provide supportive housing assistance to homeless families in Westmoreland County. LSS planned to purchase and refurbish two small apartment buildings, which it would then use to provide those families with transitional housing. As the name suggests, transitional housing is not intended to furnish homeless families with a permanent residence, but rather is designed to supply recipients with temporary shelter while they seek permanent housing and learn basic life skills necessary for independent living. LSS’s project was to house some twenty families with children, and would have provided supportive services, including job training and placement, day care, adult education, and instruction in daily life skills such as nutrition and budgeting. As its primary source of funding for the project, LSS turned to HUD, seeking moneys from HUD’s Supportive Housing Program. The purpose of this Program “is to promote the development of supportive housing and supportive services, including innovative approaches to assist homeless persons in the transition from homelessness, and to promote the provision of supportive housing to homeless persons to enable them to live as independently as possible.” 42 U.S.C. § 11381. The Supportive Housing Program facilitates this public purpose by furnishing federal moneys to qualified HUD-selected applicants, who are to use the funds for several types of housing-related activities, including acquisition and/or rehabilitation of existing structures, construction of new structures, leasing of existing structures, and provision of supportive services for transitional housing residents. See generally 42 U.S.C. § 11383(a); 24 C.F.R. § 583.100(a) (2000). Recipients of Supportive Housing Program grants are selected through a nationwide competitive process. See 42 U.S.C. § 11386(b). As part of this process, LSS was required to submit to HUD a detailed application and project proposal, which furnished information about: (1) the housing project itself, such as the project location, the number of homeless families that LSS would accommodate at that location, and the types of supportive services that would be offered at the site; (2) LSS’s past experience in providing housing assistance, including previous housing programs it had operated and prior HUD grants it had received; and (3) the budget for the proposed project. In its application, LSS requested $1,326,965 in Supportive Housing Program funds to cover the cost of acquiring and rehabilitating the two apartment buildings, the operating expenses for those premises, the cost of the supportive services that would be offered at those sites, and a five percent administrative fee for the expenses LSS would incur in administering the Supportive Housing Program grant. On February 5, 1996, LSS received final approval from HUD for a transitional housing project to be located at 49 Division Street in Greensburg, Westmoreland County. Several days later, LSS and HUD executed the Grant Agreement, which obligated HUD to provide $1,326,965 to the 49 Division Street project, and committed LSS to administer those funds at that project site. The Grant Agreement, which was subject to renewal, carried a three-year term and was scheduled to expire in 1999. Shortly after the execution of the Grant Agreement, LSS purchased the Division Street property and began renovations. B. Several months after entering into the Grant Agreement with HUD, LSS began experiencing significant financial and administrative problems. LSS attempted to resolve these difficulties by seeking consulting relationships with other non-profit entities. First, in September 1996, LSS entered into a consulting agreement with WHO, pursuant to which WHO was to furnish management assistance to LSS. However, this affiliation ended after a month when WHO elected to terminate the agreement upon discovering that LSS’s financial troubles were more serious than originally anticipated. Subsequently, on November 9, 1996, LSS retained Adelphoi, Inc., another non-profit organization operating in Westmoreland County. Pursuant to the management agreement entered into with Adelphoi, all of LSS’s board members resigned and were replaced by new directors selected by Adelphoi. Two months after Adelphoi took over LSS’s management, LSS filed a voluntary Chapter 11 petition. At the time of the petition, LSS had drawn down approximately $288,800 in federal Supportive Housing Program moneys. LSS’s interest in the grant relationship with HUD was not itself listed on the schedule of assets LSS submitted to the Bankruptcy Court. An Unsecured Creditors Committee was formed, and WHO, which had a ' claim against LSS for compensation based on the brief period it spent providing consulting services to LSS, accepted an invitation to sit on the Committee. WHO resigned from the Unsecured Creditors Committee in September 1997 due to accusations of a conflict of interest. However, WHO’s assumption of LSS’s Supportive Housing Program grant occurred prior to the date of this resignation. Less than two weeks after LSS filed its Chapter 11 petition, HUD declared LSS in default of the Supportive Housing Program grant. By letter dated January 29, 1997, HUD notified LSS that it could no longer receive Supportive Housing Program disbursements. HUD also informed LSS that its grant would be reactivated should LSS develop a “workable plan” acceptable to HUD. Further more, HUD warned LSS that if a suitable plan was not forthcoming within 30 days, HUD would exercise its power to either cancel the remainder of the grant, or select a successor to administer the program. Although LSS did not respond within the requested 30-day period, HUD did not in fact terminate the grant or replace LSS as grantee; rather, on March 4, 1997, HUD sent a follow-up communication to LSS, once again requesting a “work-out plan for the continued implementation of the [49 Division Street transitional housing] project.” Ultimately, LSS responded by proposing to HUD that Adelphoi acquire ownership of the Division Street property and that WHO take over administration of the transitional housing project located at that site. On May 28, 1997, WHO was substituted as recipient of LSS’s Supportive Housing Program grant, and WHO and HUD executed the Grant Agreement Amendment, which identified WHO as the project sponsor and as the “Successor to Life Service Systems, Inc.” The Amendment listed both 49 Division Street and a second site at 203 South Maple A venue as the relevant project locations for the transitional housing project. Apparently, WHO did not furnish any consideration to LSS’s estate in exchange for assuming the Grant Agreement, and neither WHO nor LSS provided notice of the assumption to the Unsecured Creditors Committee or to the Bankruptcy Court. After assuming LSS’s Supportive Housing Program grant, WHO did not in fact continue the transitional housing project at the Division Street location. Shortly after WHO and HUD executed the Grant Agreement Amendment, LSS, following its proposal that Adelphoi acquire the transitional housing project’s real property, petitioned the Bankruptcy Court to sell the Division Street property to Westmoreland CHODO, a non-profit entity controlled by Adelphoi (and apparently unaffiliated with WHO). With approval of the Bankruptcy Court, the Division Street real «state was put up for auction. However, Westmore-land CHODO was outbid by a third party purchaser, and thus did not acquire the Division Street real estate. WHO, apparently uninterested in dealing with the third party buyer, discontinued the transitional housing project at the Division Street site and elected to carry on the program at a different location. c. Following the property sale, the Bankruptcy Court appointed James Walsh as LSS’s Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Trustee, at the request of the Unsecured Creditors Committee. On February 16, 1998, the Trustee instituted an adversary action against WHO in the Bankruptcy Court, alleging that WHO, as a member of the Unsecured Creditors Committee, owed a fiduciary duty to the other members of the Committee which it breached by taking over LSS’s status as a recipient of federal Supportive Housing Program moneys without furnishing notice to other unsecured creditors or obtaining prior court approval. In its defense, WHO argued that it breached no fiduciary duty because LSS’s interest in the Supportive Housing Program grant relationship with HUD was never property of LSS’s bankruptcy estate within the meaning of § 541 of the Bankruptcy Code. The Bankruptcy Court held in the Trustee’s favor, concluding that LSS’s interest in the grant relationship with HUD constituted property of LSS’s bankruptcy estate. Furthermore, the court determined that WHO did in fact breach its fiduciary duty to fellow Committee members, and awarded LSS’s estate $135,653 in monetary relief. WHO appealed to the District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania, contending that the Bankruptcy Court had erroneously concluded that LSS’s interest in the Supportive Housing Program grant relationship with HUD qualified as property of LSS’s bankruptcy estate. The District Court, however, affirmed the Bankruptcy Court’s judgment, and WHO timely appealed to this court. In addition to the briefs of the parties, we requested (and received) an amicus curiae brief from the Bankruptcy Section and the Commercial Litigation Department of the Civil Division of the Department of Justice stating their position on the central issues. We also gave the parties an opportunity to reply to this amicus brief. II. Property of the Estate The filing of a voluntary petition in bankruptcy court commences a bankruptcy case and creates a bankruptcy estate comprised of the debtor’s property as of the commencement of the case. See 11 U.S.C. §§ 301, 541. Section 541(a)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code defines “property of the estate” as including “all legal or equitable interests of the debtor in property as of the commencement of the case.” Id. § 541(a)(1). As the Supreme Court observed in United States v. Whiting Pools, Inc., 462 U.S. 198, 103 S.Ct. 2309, 76 L.Ed.2d 515 (1983), § 541(a)’s legislative history demonstrates that the language of this provision was intended to sweep broadly to include “all kinds of property, including tangible or intangible property, causes of action ... and all other forms of property currently specified in section 70a of the Bankruptcy Act.” Id. at 205 n. 9,103 S.Ct. 2309 (quoting H.R.Rep. No. 95-595, at 367 (1977), reprinted in 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5963); see also In re O’Dowd, 233 F.3d 197, 202 (3d Cir.2000). In view of this definition, we must determine whether LSS’s interest in the grant relationship constituted a “legal or equitable interest! ]” that, under the terms of § 541(a)(1), falls within § 541’s property definition. Because a district court’s conclusion as to whether an item constitutes “property of the estate” for purposes of § 541 raises a question of law, our review is plenary. See In re Blatstein, 192 F.3d 88, 94 (3d Cir.1999). We first identify the specific intex*ests regarded by the District Court as constituting property of LSS’s bankruptcy estate. We next examine the ways in which a federal agency’s supervisory interest in a grant relationship can alter the dynamics of § 541’s property calculus. We then focus on the District Court’s principal error in this case, i.e., its failure entirely to account for HUD’s weighty federal interest in the Supportive Housing Program, and conclude that, had the court given proper weight to HUD’s strong interest, LSS’s interest in the grant relationship would have been excluded from LSS’s estate for bankruptcy purposes. Finally, we note that considerations of bankruptcy policy militate in favor of excluding LSS’s interest from § 541’s property definition. In the course of this discussion, we distinguish LSS’s Trustee’s attempts to rely on case law holding that government-issued licenses, in general, qualify as property of the estate under the Bankruptcy Code. Our last task will then be to delineate the scope of our holding in the instant case. A. Analysis under § 541’s property definition must begin by focusing directly on the specific interests claimed to constitute the debtor’s property. In the case before us, the District Court characterized LSS’s interest in the grant relationship as a set of contractual rights arising out of the Grant Agreement executed between LSS and HUD in 1995, ultimately deciding that these contractual rights were property of LSS’s bankruptcy estate. In reaching this conclusion, the District Court began by turning to relevant Pennsylvania state law and determining that, under that case law, contractual rights are classified as property interests. See, e.g., Klingner v. Pocono Int’l Raceioay, Inc., 289 Pa.Super. 484, 433 A.2d 1357,1361 (1981) (noting that contractual rights are personal property under Pennsylvania law). In terms of our analysis, we do not question the District Court’s reading of Pennsylvania law, and assume that ordinary contract rights would qualify as such property interests under that state law; it is well-established that federal courts typically must look to state law in ascertaining the existence and scope of the debtor’s “legal or equitable interests” for purposes of § 541(a)(1). See Butner v. United States, 440 U.S. 48, 54, 99 S.Ct. 914, 59 L.Ed.2d 136 (1979) (“Congress has generally left the determination of property rights in the assets of a bankrupt’s estate to state law.”) (footnote omitted); O’Doivd, 233 F.3d at 202 (“While federal law defines what types of property comprise the estate, state law generally determines what interest, if any, a debtor has in property.”). It is also settled that the expansive nature of § 541’s property definition encompasses rights and interests arising from ordinary contractual relationships. See 5 Collier on Bankruptcy ¶ 541.08[4], at 541^9 (15th ed. rev., King et al. eds., 1996); see also In re Minoco Group of Cos., Ltd., 799 F.2d 517, 519 (9th Cir.1986) (holding that insurance contracts constitute “property of the estate” for purposes of § 541). Attempting to- delineate the scope of LSS’s interest in the grant relationship, the District Court examined the provisions of the Grant Agreement executed in 1995 between LSS and HUD, and identified three sets of contractual rights that it believed arose out of the relationship: (1) the debtor LSS’s right to receive payment from HUD for authorized expenditures that LSS incurred while administering its Supportive Housing Program project; (2) the debtor’s right to compel HUD to make payments in connection with LSS’s administration of the Supportive Housing Program; and (3) the debtor’s right to assign its interest in the Supportive Housing Grant, subject to HUD’s prior written approval. The court then held that LSS’s interest in the grant relationship, evidenced by these three sets of rights, qualified as property of LSS’s bankruptcy estate within the meaning of § 541. We conclude that this decision was incorrect. B. At bottom, the problem with the District Court’s § 541 property analysis lies in its failure to take into account HUD’s strong federal interest in supervising the efficient and effective administration of Supportive Housing Program grant funds by intermediaries such as LSS, designed to ensure that the Program’s ultimate beneficiaries (i.e., homeless individuals) receive the full measure of federal assistance afforded to them under the terms of the Program. As will be seen in detail below, HUD’s singular interest in preserving such a supervisory role-evidenced by the strict and pervasive oversight imposed by the Supportive Housing Program scheme on the grant relationship — can alter the dynamics of § 541’s property calculus, resulting in the exclusion of the grantee’s interest from its bankruptcy estate. Our analysis proceeds in several steps. We first explain that a federal agency’s supervisory interest over the administration of a grant program can result in the exclusion of a grantee’s interest in the grant relationship from § 541’s property definition if the interest is sufficiently weighty. We then present a method for assessing when an agency’s interest rises to such a level. Finally, we focus on the facts of the case before us and on the specific provisions of the Supportive Housing Program, explaining the two related ways in which the District Court’s failure to account for HUD’s supervisory interest manifested itself: (1) the court neglected to consider the pervasive restrictions imposed on a Program grantee’s rights by the substantive provisions of two major components of the Supportive Housing Program grant scheme; and (2) in light of these limitations, the court construed the scope of the LSS’s rights under the grant arrangement too expansively. 1. A federal agency like HUD clearly has a substantial supervisory interest in preserving the coherence and integrity of the federal grant scheme it is charged with administering, and in ensuring that federal grant moneys disbursed pursuant to that scheme are dispensed by intermediaries in an efficient and effective manner to the ultimate beneficiaries of the grant. While the Bankruptcy Code’s property definition is certainly expansive, it is not limitless, and, as we will demonstrate, a federal agency’s strong supervisory interest in the administration of a grant program can play a significant role in determining whether the interests created by a federal grant program fall within § 541’s definition of “property of the estate.” We recognize, of course, that each time a federal agency executes a contractual agreement with a private party, or enters into an arrangement with an entity in or der to furnish assistance to the public, a federal interest is arguably implicated. We therefore must take care to distinguish those situations in which a federal grantor agency’s supervisory interest is sufficiently weighty to exclude the grantee’s interest in the grant relationship from § 541’s property definition from those situations in which it is not. As we see it, the strength of an agency’s supervisory interest can best be gauged by examining the substantive provisions of the grant scheme established by applicable federal statutes and regulations. Cf. In re Joliet-Will County Cmty. Action Agency, 847 F.2d 430, 431-32 (7th Cir.1988) (analyzing the provisions of a federal “foster grandparents” grant program administered by ACTION as part of the § 541 bankruptcy property inquiry). To be sure, if a provision of a federal grant program specifically authorizes federal grant moneys to be used to pay a debtor grantee’s creditors, it will be difficult for us to conclude that the federal agency’s interest is sufficiently weighty to exclude the debtor’s interest from § 541’s property definition. Cf. id. at 432. But the Supportive Housing Program involved in the case before us contains no such authorization, and thus our analysis of the nature of HUD’s supervisory interest, as manifested in the substantive provisions of the Program, must be more searching. The strength of an agency’s supervisory interest can best be measured by the level of agency oversight over the grant relationship preserved in the provisions of the federal grant program. A grant framework clearly evidences a desire to sustain the federal agency’s strong supervisory interest over that relationship when it: (1) gives an agency extensive control over the identity of the grant recipients with whom it must deal by limiting the pool of applicants eligible to receive funds, and by restricting the grantee’s ability to substitute a replacement entity in its stead; and (2) imposes rigorous federal oversight of the grantee’s performance in furtherance of the grant relationship. As we see it, a federal agency’s retention of pervasive restrictions on a grantee’s identity and manner of performance under a HUD-type grant program is inconsistent with the grantee’s assertion of a property interest in the grant relationship. As we will discuss below after examining the details of the Supportive Housing Program, such limitations greatly constrict the scope of the rights yielded to the grantee by the terms of the grant arrangement, and substantially (if not completely) restrict their transferability and alienability, thereby effectively rendering the grantee’s interest essentially valueless. Moreover, as we explain infra in Part II.C., inclusion of such interests in the grantee’s bankruptcy estate would further neither the equitable nor the rehabilitative purpose of the Bankruptcy Code. As a result, we are satisfied that if these controls are sufficiently extensive, i.e., if, under the terms of the arrangement between the grantor federal agency and the grantee, the agency retains strict, pervasive, and minute oversight over the identity of the grant recipient and the manner of that recipient’s performance, the existence of such controls can demonstrate that the federal grantor agency’s interest in ensuring the effective administration of that program is weighty enough to exclude the grantee’s interest from § 541’s property definition. A number of federal courts have applied a similar approach to resolve the related question whether unexpended federal funds themselves and property purchased with those moneys once disbursed (as opposed to contract rights like those at issue on this appeal) constitute bankruptcy property of the debtor within the meaning of § 541. For instance, the Seventh Circuit in Joliet-Will considered the bankruptcy property status of such funds and property in the case of a bankrupt nonprofit community service organization. Although the debtor’s trustee claimed that those items represented property of the debtor’s estate, the Seventh Circuit concluded that the federal moneys and personal property fell outside of § 541’s property definition because the nature of the federal grant program and the relationship between the grantee community organization and grantor federal agency rendered the debt- or organization “a trustee, custodian, or other intermediary, who lacks beneficial title and is merely an agent for the disbursal of funds belonging to another.” Id. at 432 (citing to 11 U.S.C. § 541(d)). In reaching this conclusion, the court relied principally on the fact that “[t]he grants impose minute controls on the use of the funds, such that the recipient has very little discretion.” Id. (emphasis added). More specifically, the court noted that each grant required the recipient to adhere to a budget identifying particular project items and the costs chargeable to the grant for each item; that the grantee could not re-alloeate unused moneys between items; that the grantee was required to reconvey title to property purchased with grant funds and costing more than $1,000 to the federal government, at the federal agency’s direction; and that the statutes and regulations creating the grant scheme did not authorize the grantor federal agency to permit grant moneys to be used to pay creditors of the private grantee. See id. Federal district and bankruptcy courts have also used the pervasiveness of government control over the administration of a grant program as the touchstone for assessing whether federal grant moneys and the property purchased with those moneys constitute property of the grantee’s bankruptcy estate. See, e.g., In re Community Assocs., Inc., 173 B.R. 824, 828 (D.Conn.1994) (holding that three vans purchased with grant funds by the debtor, a private community service organization, did not constitute property of the debtor’s estate for bankruptcy purposes, on the ground that the agreement between the grantee organization and grantor agency imposed “ ‘minute controls’ on ... [the] use of the grant funds and the use of the vans” purchased with those grant funds); In re Alpha Ctr., Inc., 165 B.R. 881, 884 (Bankr.S.D.I11.1994) (holding that a van and state grant moneys transferred by the debtor community service organization to a successor grantee were not property of the debtor’s estate for bankruptcy purposes, on the ground that extensive legislation and regulatory rules restricted the debtor community service organization’s discretion as to the use of grant moneys and vans purchased with those grant moneys); cf. In re Southwest Citizens’ Org. for Poverty Elimination, 91 B.R. 278, 286-87 (Bankr.D.N.J.1988) (noting that, although the federal grantor agency conceded that twenty vehicles purchased by the debtor community service organization with federal grant funds constituted property of the debtor’s estate, the federal agency, by virtue of the restrictions imposed by the agency on the grantee’s use of the funds, retained an “equitable rever-sionary interest” in the vehicles superior to the debtor’s interest and the debtor’s trustee’s interest as a hypothetical lien creditor under 11 U.S.C. § 544). We believe that such a “minute control” analysis is equally appropriate in assessing whether a debtor’s interest in a grant relationship with HUD qualifies as property of the debtor’s estate under the terms of the Bankruptcy Code. We hold then that a federal agency’s interest in ensuring the efficient administration of program funds can result in the exclusion of the debtor grantee’s interest in the grant relationship from § 541’s property definition if the agency’s supervisory controls over the identity of the grantee and the manner of the grantee’s performance are sufficiently pervasive and rigorous. The District Court, however, neglected entirely to take account of HUD’s strong interest in the Supportive Housing Program. This omission manifested itself in two related ways. First, the court mistakenly viewed the provisions of the Grant Agreement itself as the exclusive calipers for measuring the rights and obligations that LSS and HUD incurred by virtue of their grantor/grantee relationship, failing to consider the restrictions placed on those rights by the other major components of the Supportive Housing Program, both statutory and regulatory. Second, the court construed the scope of the contractual rights it identified as arising out of the Grant Agreement too expansively, omitting consideration of the limitations imposed on those rights by the full Supportive Housing Program scheme. We now turn to the facts of the case subjudice and to the details of the Supportive Housing Program, and explain why the District Court’s conclusion that LSS’s interest in the Program qualified as bankruptcy property was erroneous. 2. The District Court conducted its “property of the estate” inquiry by focusing solely on the Grant Agreement executed between LSS and HUD in 1995, concluding that “LSS’ rights under the Grant Agreement became property of the bankruptcy estate once the bankruptcy petition was filed.” By confining its examination to the Grant Agreement, however, the court failed to take into account the fact that the Grant Agreement represents only one component of a broader federal grant scheme. To be sure, the grant agreement into which the government and a grantee enter is an important element of the Supportive Housing Program’s framework for the disbursement and administration of federal housing assistance funds. See 24 C.F.R. § 583.400(a) (2000) (“The duty to provide supportive housing or supportive services in accordance with the requirements of this part will be incorporated in a grant agreement executed by HUD and the recipient.”). However, the grant agreement is by no means the exclusive source of those parties’ rights and obligations under the federal Supportive Housing Program. The rights and obligations of grantor and grantee are also detailed in: (1) Subtitle C of the Stewart B. McKinney Homeless Assistance Act (Homeless Assistance Act or Act), 42 U.S.C. §§ 11381-89; and (2) a set of regulations codified at 24 C.F.R. § 583 (Supportive Housing Rule or Rule), see 42 U.S.C. § 11387 (authorizing the HUD Secretary to issue final regulations implementing the Homeless Assistance Act). In fact, the Grant Agreement itself recognizes that the provisions of the Homeless Assistance Act and the Supportive Housing Rule are integral elements of the grant relationship. For example, the Grant Agreement states that “[t]his grant agreement will be governed by the [Homeless Assistance] Act, [and] the Supportive Housing rule (24 CFR 583), a copy of which is attached hereto ... and made a part hereof.” Considering all of the components of the Supportive Housing Program as a coherent whole, it is evident that HUD’s strong federal interest in safeguarding the effective administration of Program funds, demonstrated by the rigorous controls imposed on the grant relationship by the Act and the Rule, suffices to exclude LSS’s interest in the grant relationship from LSS’s bankruptcy estate. The Supportive Housing Program scheme — embodied in the Homeless Assistance Act, Supportive Housing Rule, and the grant agreement executed between HUD and the grantee— places important limitations on and provides HUD with extensive oversight over both the identity of grant recipients and the manner of those recipients’ performances under the grant arrangement. Turning first to the restrictions imposed on the identity of grantees, the provisions of the Program limit eligibility for receipt of federal funding to certain statutorily-enumerated entities: only “a State, metropolitan city, urban county, governmental entity, private nonprofit organization, or community mental health association that is a public nonprofit organization” is eligible to serve as a grant recipient. See 42 U.S.C. § 11382(l).d Further, in order to secure the right to administer Program funds, even those entities within this limited pool of eligible applicants must participate in a nationwide competitive process, in which they are required to submit a comprehensive project proposal. Recipients are selected by HUD, and the Homeless Assistance Act expressly mandates that HUD use the seven statutorily-enumerated criteria listed in the margin in order to make its selection. See 42 U.S.C. § 11386(b). On their face, these seven criteria demonstrate that HUD is to use these factors as a screen for ensuring that the grant recipient will implement its proposed project and administer Supportive Housing Program funds in an efficient and effective manner. In addition, and most importantly, the Supportive Housing Program preserves HUD’s control over the identity of the grant recipient by prohibiting changes in the grantee absent HUD’s prior written approval. The Supportive Housing Rule states that “[a] recipient may not make any significant changes to an approved program without prior HUD approval,” and expressly defines “significant changes” to include “a change in the recipient.” 24 C.F.R. § 583.405(a)(1) (2000). This general restraint on a grantee’s ability to alienate or assign its interest in the grant arrangement with HUD is also reflected in a provision of the Grant Agreement executed between LSS and HUD: “No change may be made to the project nor any right, benefit, or advantage of the Recipient hereunder be assigned without prior written approval'of HUD.” The Supportive Housing Program’s limitations on the uses to which grantees can put federal funds are just as strict, if not more so, than the Program’s controls over the identity of grant recipients. In general, a Supportive Housing Program grant is tied to a particular project location, detailed in the recipient’s funding proposal and application. A recipient may not change the location of the project site without prior written HUD approval. See 24 C.F.R. § 588.405(a)(1) (2000). Further more, the Supportive Housing Rule requires each recipient’s project to comply with all applicable state and local housing codes, see id. § 588.300(a), and to meet various habitability standards with respect to such matters as structure and materials, interior air quality, and water supply, see id. § 583.300(b). Most importantly, if the grant recipient receives Supportive Housing Program moneys for acquisition, rehabilitation, or new construction purposes, the Supportive Housing Program requires that the recipient continue to use the property at that project site for the particular purposes specified in the funding application for at least 20 years. See 42 U.S.C. § 11383(b)(1); 24 C.F.R. § 583.305(a) (2000). Finally, the Supportive Housing Program furnishes HUD with a series of remedial options exercisable in the event of a default on the part of the grant recipient. For example, should the grantee cease to use the project site for the agreed-upon project purposes before the expiration of the 20 year period, the Supportive Housing Program mandates that the recipient be required to repay to HUD some or all of the federal grant moneys it has received. If the property ceases to be used for listed project purposes within 10 years of the project’s start date, the Program requires that the recipient repay to HUD 100 per cent of the acquisition, rehabilitation, or new construction assistance received. And if the property ceases being used in the required manner some time after 10 years have passed, the repayment obligation is reduced by 10 percentage points for each year in excess of the 10 years that the property was used as supportive housing. See 42 U.S.C. § 11383(c)(1); 24 C.F.R. § 583.305(b) (2000). In addition, the Grant Agreement executed between LSS and HUD lists other remedial options available to HUD upon due notice to the grantee, including the issuance of a letter of warning requesting corrective action, the reduction of grant amounts, and the substitution of an alternate recipient of HUD’s choosing. In the aggregate, these provisions demonstrate that the Supportive Housing Program contemplates a strong supervisory role for HUD, the agency charged with implementing the Program and ensuring its efficient and effective administration. As we see it, HUD’s interest was strong enough to materially affect the § 541 “property of the estate” calculus, excluding LSS’s interest in the grant relationship with HUD from LSS’s bankruptcy estate. In contrast, in its opinion, the District Court never mentioned either the Homeless Assistance Act or the Supportive Housing Rule, instead focusing exclusively on the Grant Agreement. The court’s failure to account for HUD’s strong supervisory interest in the administration of the Supportive Housing Program led to its incorrect conclusion that LSS’s interest qualified as property of its bankruptcy estate. Furthermore, by omitting consideration of HUD’s strong supervisory interest in the grant relationship, the District Court also appeared to give too much weight to LSS’s contractual rights, because it failed to consider the limitations imposed on those rights by the substantive provisions of the Supportive Housing Program scheme. For example, in identifying the contractual rights yielded to LSS by virtue of its grant relationship with HUD, the District Court pointed to the fact that LSS had the power to assign its interest in the Supportive Housing Grant arrangement to another party. Although it recognized that this power of assignment was subject to HUD’s prior written approval, the District Court did not take sufficient note of the extent of the restrictions that the other components of the Supportive Housing Program, i.e., the Homeless Assistance Act and the Supportive Housing Rule, placed on the grantee’s power to assign. For instance, as discussed above, § 11382(1) of the Homeless Assistance Act restricts eligibility for Supportive Housing Program funding to a prescribed list of entities — essentially state and local government units and non-profit organizations — and § 11386(b) of the Act directs that grantees be selected by HUD according to express statutorily-enumerated criteria. Under the terms of the Supportive Housing Program, LSS would not have had the power to assign its interest to a party that fell outside of § 11382(l)’s list of eligible entities — e.g., a private for-profit corporation — or to a party that failed to meet the criteria set forth in § 11386(b). The District Court’s analysis, however, implied that LSS’s right to assign was limited solely by the necessity of HUD’s formal approval, and not by the substantial restrictions on the grant relationship imposed by the other components of the Supportive Housing Program. In short, by omitting consideration of HUD’s strong supervisory interest, the court construed the scope of the grantee’s power of assignment too broadly. C. Considerations of bankruptcy polidetailed in the previous section. Cf Kok-oszka v. Belford, 417 U.S. 642, 645, 94 S.Ct. 2431, 41 L.Ed.2d 374 (1974) (noting that because “it is impossible to give any categorical definition to the word ‘property’ ” as used in § 70a(5) of the Bankruptcy Act, the predecessor to the current definition of property contained in 11 U.S.C. § 541, “[i]n determining the term’s scope — -and its limitations — the purposes of the Bankruptcy Act must ultimately govern”) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). It is well-settled that two overarching purposes, one equitable and the other rehabilitative, undergird the Bankruptcy Code in general and the definition of property contained in § 541 in particular. See, e.g., In re Andrews, 80 F.3d 906, 909 (4th Cir.1996). First, the Bankruptcy Code attempts to provide for the efficient and equitable distribution of an insolvent debtor’s remaining assets to its creditors. See, e.g., City of New York v. Quanta Resources Corp., 739 F.2d 912, 915 (3d Cir.1984). Second, the Code seeks to provide debtors with a “fresh start” by relieving them of the weight of their outstanding debts and permitting them to reorganize them affairs. See, e.g., United States v. Whiting Pools, Inc., 462 U.S. 198, 203, 103 S.Ct. 2309, 76 L.Ed.2d 515 (1983); Insurance Co. of North America v. Cohn, 54 F.3d 1108, 1113 (3d Cir.1995). We do not believe that inclusion of intangible contractual rights flowing from a HUD-type federal grant arrangement will further either of the dual purposes of the Bankruptcy Code. Under the scheme contemplated by the Bankruptcy Code, a debtor’s creditors are typically compensated to the extent possible and in as equitable a fashion as possible pursuant to a court-approved plan, generally after the trustee marshals the debtor’s bankruptcy property and liquidates it at a bankruptcy sale. As a practical matter, in order for such a procedure to generate a pool of funds from which creditors can be compensated, the items constituting the bankrupt’s property must be readily alienable and assignable — i.e., they must be capable of being sold to a third party and of fetching some value as a consequence of that sale. Unlike a federal license, which furnishes clear, quantifiable benefits to the licensee, it is difficult to see how LSS’s tenuous interest in the Supportive Housing Program grant relationship with HUD would yield that value, given the fact that, as discussed supra in Part II.B.2, any potential purchaser would surely have to fall within the list of eligible applicants contained in § 11382(1) of the Homeless Assistance Act, and would be required to meet the criteria set forth in § 11386(b). Moreover, it is unclear why an entity that qualifies as an eligible applicant under § 11382(1) would elect to bid on and purchase the opportunity to administer Program funds from a previous grantee, rather than simply engaging in the ordinary grantee selection process. Put another way, even were LSS’s Trustee to place the right to succeed to LSS’s interest in the Grant Agreement with HUD up for auction, we are dubious, as a practical matter, that any potential buyers would actually bid for that right. Inclusion of a grantee’s intangible contractual rights as part of the bankruptcy estate in furtherance of the Bankruptcy Code’s rehabilitative goal seems equally problematic. It is true that a debtor’s “reorganization effort would have small chance of success ... if property essential to running the business were excluded from the estate,” Whiting Pools, 462 U.S. at 203, 103 S.Ct. 2309; cf. Stewart v. Gurley, 745 F.2d 1194, 1196 (9th Cir.1984) (per curiam) (“Unless the debtor can demonstrate that the property is necessary to an effective reorganization, the property is of no value to him.”)- However, given the pervasive supervisory controls over the grant reserved to HUD under the terms of the Supportive Housing Program scheme, see supra Part H.B.2., it is difficult to see how LSS’s interest in the Supportive Housing Program grant could be considered essential to the continued operation of its community service operations. The Supportive Housing Program makes available to HUD an array of remedial options in the event of a default on the part of a grantee, such as the filing of a bankruptcy petition. For instance, under the terms of the Grant Agreement executed between LSS and HUD, once the grantee defaults, HUD can seek to preserve the integrity of the Supportive Housing Program grant by ordering the recipient to stop incurring costs chargeable to the grant program, by reducing the amount of grant moneys available, or by substituting another recipient of HUD’s choosing. In fact, after LSS filed its Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition on January 14, 1997, HUD exercised one such remedial option by freezing LSS’s ability to draw down grant moneys. Neither of the parties disputes that HUD’s actions were authorized by the Supportive Housing Program. In light of this freeze on the disbursement of funds to LSS, it is difficult to see how LSS’s contractual interest in the grant relationship would be of any assistance to its business reorganization. In short, we think, as a practical matter, that LSS’s tenuous interest in the Supportive Housing grant arrangement, subject to HUD’s pervasive supervisory controls, would yield no value even if put up for auction by LSS’s Trustee. Given the apparent worthlessness of LSS’s interest, we do not believe that inclusion of that interest within § 541’s definition of property would serve either the Bankruptcy Code’s equitable goal of protecting creditors by ensuring that they are fairly compensated from a tangible pool of funds, or the Code’s rehabilitative goal of permitting the debtor to make a fresh start. D. In response to this § 541 property analysis, LSS’s Trustee counters that even highly regulated items of property, such as stock exchange seats and government-issued licenses, can constitute “property of the estate” for bankruptcy purposes, and argues, therefore, that the fact that federal law imposes significant restrictions on grantees such as LSS should not preclude the grantee’s interest from falling within the Bankruptcy Code’s property definition. In support of this position, the Trustee points us to such decisions as In re Page, 107 F. 89 (3d Cir.1901), involving the bankruptcy status of a member’s seat on the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, see id. at 89, and In re Central Arkansas Broadcasting Company, 68 F.3d 213 (8th Cir.1995) (per curiam), concerning the bankruptcy status of a radio station broadcasting license issued by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), see id. at 214. The Trustee is certainly correct in contending that the fact of significant regulatory control, by itself, will not keep a piece of property outside of § 541’s expansive scope, and we do not mean to suggest that regulation qua regulation directs the outcome of the § 541 property inquiry. Rather, we conclude only that, under the appropriate set of circumstances, the supervisory controls imposed on a grant relationship by the substantive provisions of the grant program can be sufficiently pervasive, strict, and minute so as to make manifest the federal agency’s strong interest in overseeing the administration of that grant program. It is that weighty federal interest, and not the bare fact of regulation itself, that can keep the debtor’s interest in the grant relationship outside of § 541’s property definition. Furthermore, the Trustee’s reliance on cases such as Page and Central Arkansas Broadcasting is unavailing. In Page, a decision that is now a century old, we held that a debtor’s seat on the Philadelphia Stock Exchange qualified as property of the bankruptcy estate under the Bankruptcy Act of 1898, notwithstanding the fact that the Stock Exchange’s constitution required any sale or transfer of the seat to be approved by the Exchange. See Page, 107 F. at 92. We noted that this limitation “possibly affected the value of the seat for the purposes of sale, but, while restricting, did not destroy its transferability.” Id. However, our decision in Page has little bearing on our analysis in the instant case. Unlike Page, which examined the effect of a transfer restriction alone on the bankruptcy status of the subject property, our § 541 property analysis takes into account the full panoply of supervisory conditions and controls imposed by the Supportive Housing Program scheme on the grant relationship between LSS and HUD. More importantly, because the case before us involves a federal agency with a substantial interest in overseeing the grant program it is charged with administering, we must accord greater weight to that governmental interest than we ordinarily would provide, as in Page, to a private entity’s supervisory interest over its relationship with its constituent members. The Trustee’s reliance on Central Arkansas Broadcasting, in which the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit held that a FCC-issued radio operating license fell within the ambit of the Bankruptcy Code’s property definition, see 68 F.3d at 214-15, does more to advance his case. After all, the fact that the FCC, a federal agency, designates a particular radio operator as licensee and retains the power to approve the transfer of an issued license does implicate a federal concern. Moreover, the Eighth Circuit’s decision is consistent with a line of cases holding that state-issued licenses, commonly liquor licenses, are encompassed within § 541’s property definition. See, e.g., In re Nejberger, 934 F.2d 1300, 1300-01 (3d Cir.1991) (holding that a debtor licensee’s interest in a license issued by the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board constituted property of the debtor’s estate within the meaning of § 541). Nonetheless, we conclude that there are fundamental differences in the nature of a HUD-type grant relationship as compared to that of a licensing arrangement that excludes the former from § 541’s property definition. First, an entity selected as a licensee plays a different role and faces a different set of incentives than does an entity chosen as a HUD-type grantee. Ordinarily, an entity’s receipt of a license permits the entity to engage in federally regulated activities for its own profit. In other words, the benefits of the license accrue primarily to the licensee itself. In contrast, an entity chosen as a HUD-type grant recipient is not itself the beneficiary, but acts as an intermediary administering those moneys for the benefit of the ultimate recipients of the federal assistance. Put another way, unlike the licensee, the grantee’s position is more akin to that of “a trastee, custodian, or other intermediary, who lacks beneficial title and is merely an agent for the disbursal of funds belonging to another.” In re Joliet-Will County Cmty. Action Agency, 847 F.2d 430, 432 (7th Cir.1988). In this latter situation, as compared to a typical licensing arrangement, the federal government will likely possess a weightier supervisory interest in ensuring that the grantee administers the moneys it receives in an effective and efficient manner so that the ultimate beneficiaries receive the full measure of the federal assistance intended for them. Furthermore, as a practical matter, we do not believe that a grantee’s interest in a HUD-type grant arrangement is as easily bought and sold-and thus as readily capable of serving as a source of funds from which the debtor’s creditors can be paid-as is a debtor’s interest in a government-issued license. For example, in Central Arkansas Broadcasting, the FCC-issued radio license found to constitute property of the debtor’s estate had been sold and transferred as part of a bankruptcy auction conducted by the trustee. See 68 F.3d at 214. In fact, courts have generally acknowledged that the value of a government-issued license can typically be realized through sale, notwithstanding conditions requiring government approval prior to transfer. See, e.g., Nejberger, 934 F.2d at 1302 (noting that “in practice, a liquor license can be bought and sold in the market place”); In re Terwilliger’s Catering Plus, Inc., 911 F.2d 1168, 1171 (6th Cir.1990) (“It is undeniable that a liquor license has pecuniary value to its holder since the license enables the holder to sell alcoholic beverages and can be sold for value.”). In sharp contrast, our discussion swpra at Part II.C. demonstrates the unlikelihood that a grantee’s interest in a HUD-type grant relationship would be able to yield any type of value at a bankruptcy auction, especially given the strict restrictions imposed by federal law over the identity of any potential grantee. E. In light of the numerous and varied scenarios under which federal agencies enter into contractual arrangements with private entities, we must be careful to delineate the scope of our holding. As we earlier observed, each time a federal agency executes a contractual agreement with a private party, a federal interest is arguably implicated, and we certainly do not mean to suggest in our discussion that every right arising out of any such contractual arrangement should be automatically excluded from § 541’s property definition. For example, as discussed supra in Part II.D., a licensee’s interest in a government — issued license is generally likely to fall within the ambit of the Bankruptcy Code’s property definition, given the fact that licenses, unlike grants, typically inure to the direct benefit of the recipient (as opposed to other, ultimate beneficiaries), and are generally capable of being bought and sold in the public market. Moreover, we recognize that agencies of the federal government can and do routinely enter into contracts with private entities that share the features of ordinary commercial agreements. Federal procurement contracts, typically entered into between government agency purchasers and private suppliers, are one such example. Our holding is not meant to imply that the rights and interests yielded to private entities by those contracts automatically fall outside the scope of § 541’s property definition. Although we need not decide today the question whether a contractual interest arising out of a federal procurement relationship qualifies as property of the debt- or’s estate within the meaning of 11 U.S.C. § 541, we observe that, in contrast to a grantor/grantee relationship such as the one entered into between HUD and LSS in this case, a garden-variety federal procurement contract (for goods or services) generally does not directly further a public-oriented purpose (such as the provision of transitional housing to homeless individuals). Thus, federal procurement contracts appear significantly less likely to implicate a federal concern akin to the weighty federal interests operating in the instant case — i.e., HUD’s supervisory interest in ensuring the efficient administration of federal grant moneys by qualified intermediaries to the ultimate beneficiaries of the grant. The absence of a significant, direct public-oriented objective undergirding a procurement contract relationship is evident from the language of the Federal Grant and Cooperative Agreement Act of 1977 (FGCAA), currently codified at 31 U.S.C. §§ 6301-08. The FGCAA’s distinction between procurement contracts and grant agreements is, in large part, based on the extent to which each contractual arrangement directly furthers a public purpose. The statute characterizes a procurement contract as “the legal instrument reflecting a relationship between the United States Government and ... [an]other recipient when ... the principal purpose of the instrument is to acquire (by purchase, lease, or barter) property or services for the direct benefit or use of the United States Government.” 31 U.S.C. § 6303 (emphasis added). In contrast, the FGCAA describes a grant agreement as the legal instrument reflecting a relationship between the United States Government and ... [anjother recipient when— (1) the principal purpose of the relationship is to transfer a thing of value to ... [the] other recipient to carry out a public purpose of support or stimulation authorized by a law of the United States instead of acquiring (by purchase, lease, or barter) property or services for the direct benefit or use of the United States Government;.... Id. § 6304 (emphasis added). As the FGCAA’s provisions recognize, a private party’s interest in a federal procurement contract is much less likely to serve a public-oriented purpose, such as the provision of federal assistance to third-party beneficiaries, and thus the federal government’s interest in the contractual arrangement appears substantially less likely to lead to the exclusion of LSS’s interest from § 541’s property definition. F. In sum, we do not mean to suggest that every grantee’s interest in a grant relationship with a federal agency will fall outside the scope of § 541’s property definition, for we must be mindful of the fact that Congress intended the Bankruptcy Code’s definition of property to sweep broadly. But the Code’s property definition is not without limitations, and under certain concededly narrow circumstances, a federal agency’s weighty interest in overseeing the administration of its grant programs can suffice to keep a grantee’s interest outside of the Code’s property definition. In this regard, the touchstone of our analysis is the strength of the federal agency’s supervisory interest over the grant program, best measured by the level of agency oversight over the grant relationship preserved in the provisions of the federal grant program. Controls that are sufficiently extensive, i.e., federal agency retention of strict, pervasive and minute oversight over the identity of the grant recipient and the manner of that recipient’s performance, can demonstrate the strength of an agency’s federal interest in the effective administration of grant moneys, and can lead to the exclusion of the grantee’s interest in the grant relationship from its bankruptcy estate. In the case before us, HUD’s weighty interest, manifested in the extensive super