Delaware Court Upholds Receiver’s Decision to Include Bidder in Auction Despite Alleged Information Advantage

B.E. Capital Management Fund LP v. Fund.com Inc., C.A. No. 12843‑JTL (Del. Ch. Apr. 10, 2026)

INTRODUCTION

Can a successor receiver let a past receiver, removed for being a “faithless fiduciary,” bid to buy company assets at auction?  In B.E. Capital Management Fund LP v. Fund.com Inc., the Delaware Court of Chancery (the “Court”) highlighted the deference courts give to receivers when making ordinary-course-of-business decisions and provided a thoughtful discussion of auction “game theory.”  For creditors, equity holders, receivers, and bidders alike, this decision provides important guidance on how courts evaluate a receiver’s decision-making, and when they will decline to intervene.

BACKGROUND

Fund.com Inc. (the “Company”) is a defunct company subject to receivership in Delaware.  The Court originally appointed Thomas Braziel as the receiver, but he was adjudicated as a “faithless fiduciary,” which, under Delaware law, means that Braziel was acting to advance his own personal interest rather than the Company’s.  The Court replaced Braziel with a successor receiver (the “Receiver”).  The Company had certain claims against another company subject to liquidation in New Zealand (the “Assets”), which Braziel had helped to recover for the Company.  Subsequently, when the Receiver sought to sell the Assets at auction, the Receiver permitted Braziel to participate as a bidder.

Another bidder objected to Braziel’s participation in the auction.  The bidder alleged that Braziel had “an informational advantage over other bidders concerning the Assets.”  The objector contended that Braziel had “superior knowledge” of the assets and that there were “gaps in the due diligence information available to other bidders about some of the actions Braziel took that could affect the value of the [a]ssets.”  The objector further contended that because of Braziel’s superior knowledge, he could “better assess risk than other bidders” with respect to the Assets.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

As a threshold matter, the Court addressed the standard of review applicable to the Receiver’s decision to permit Braziel to participate in the auction.  The Court explained that, when a court appoints a private individual to act as a receiver, the default standard of review is de novo unless otherwise specified in the order appointing that receiver.  However, “business-oriented and judgment-laden decisions” are different.  Here, the Court reasoned that a similarly situated (i.e., disinterested and independent) board of directors would “enjoy the protections of the business judgment rule” and that a “comparable standard of review should therefore protect the Receiver’s decision.”  The Court therefore determined that it should examine the Receiver’s decision under the far more deferential “abuse of discretion” standard.

INFORMATION ASYMMETRY AND GAME THEORY

The Court’s discussion about the effect of Braziel’s participation centered around two conflicting ideas.  First, letting Braziel participate could be in the best interests of the company if he could pay the highest price.  Second, however, Braziel’s participation may impair the sale process due to his insider knowledge.

When a party with an informational advantage competes against a less-informed party, the less-informed party risks “the winner’s curse.”  That is, when a less-informed party wins an auction against a better-informed party, the less-informed party pays more than the better-informed party believes the asset is worth.  It follows that when a less-informed party wins an auction, they have likely overpaid.  Auction participants understand this, and the effect is that less-informed parties tend not to participate in auctions with better-informed parties.  For instance, the objector in this case refused to participate if Braziel was permitted to bid on the assets.

So, the Receiver found himself in a catch 22.  If Braziel’s informational advantage drove away all the other bidders, then he might be able to buy the assets at a steep discount.  However, by excluding Braziel, the Receiver risked losing the potential highest bidder.

DEFERENCE TO THE RECEIVER’S JUDGMENT

Because the Receiver was protected by the business judgment rule, the Court applied the “abuse of discretion” standard and ultimately held that the Receiver could include Braziel in the auction.  In making this decision, the Court highlighted that the Receiver did not need to design a perfect auction (e.g., running a “first-price-sealed-bid” auction instead of an “English” auction).  Instead, the Receiver only needed to design an auction that fell “within a range of reasonableness.”  As noted by the Court, what typically causes a decision to fall outside this range is “the presence of self-interest that taints the fiduciaries’ judgment.”  Without such a taint of self-interest, courts defer to the “thoughtful, informed judgments that disinterested and independent fiduciaries make.”  Because the Receiver was disinterested and independent, the Court deferred to the Receiver’s judgment.  The Court reasoned that “[i]ncluding Braziel present[ed] a combination of risks and benefits.  So d[id] excluding him.  Neither choice constitute[d] an abuse of discretion.”

CONCLUSION AND KEY TAKEAWAYS

In sum, this case is instructive, holding that disinterested, independent receivers will receive the protection of the business judgment rule when conducting auctions.  Courts will defer to receivers’ decisions, absent evidence of abuse (i.e., self-dealing), and courts will not micromanage a receiver’s auction design, even if the receiver does not design a perfect auction.  For more protection, creditors can try to request a heightened standard of review in the court’s order to appoint a receiver which empowers the court to be less deferential to the receiver.

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