Appellant Michael Nigro appeals from the district court’s affirmance,
I
Michael Nigro, an attorney, represented Alan Yong, the principal of the debtor in the bankruptcy proceedings below. On March 17, 1983, Raymond Costello, then trustee of the bankruptcy estate of the debtor Chung King, Inc., filed a complaint seeking court permission to sell real estate owned by the bankruptcy estate to the Unity Masonic Lodge for $116,300. The trustee estimated in his complaint that the sale would net approximately $4,000 for the estate after paying off the liens on the property. At a March 31 hearing held by Judge Eisen, Nigro, acting on his own behalf, presented an offer of $120,000 to purchase the property. The trustee recommended that the bankruptcy court approve the sale to Nigro and estimated that the proposed sale would net “$8,000 or $9,000 maybe even less” for the bankruptcy estate (p. 8 of R. Item 11). At the March 31 hearing the court approved the $120,000 sale to Nigro and issued a confirming order. The court also approved a settlement entered into between the trustee and the sole creditor, Mr. Win Liu, to split any net proceeds from the sale.
Nigro performed a title search subsequent to the court’s March 31 confirmation and discovered that $4,526.30 in back taxes assessed against the property remained unpaid. He then prepared a closing statement which showed a net loss to the estate of $2,238.78 from the approved sale of $120,000. He conferred with the trustee and agreed to make up the $2,238.78 loss to the estate on the sale (Nigro Br. 3; p. 3 of R. Item 13) by increasing the offer to $124,-275.29 (Nigro Reply Br. 3).
*549 Upon learning that the bankruptcy estate would not receive any proceeds if the property were sold to Nigro for $120,000 and that Unity Masonic Lodge had made a subsequent offer of $125,000, creditor Win Liu filed a motion requesting the bankruptcy court to vacate its March 31 order. At the May 10 hearing on Liu’s motion, Unity Masonic complained that it had not received sufficient notice of the March 31 hearing nor the $120,000 Nigro bid and that Nigro had enjoyed a “preferred position” in the bidding as lawyer for Alan Yong, the debt- or’s principal. The court indicated that there was sufficient notice but offered to vacate the sale if a sufficiently higher new offer was made (pp. 10, 12-13 of R. Item 12). Judge Eisen stated that the $125,000 offer of Unity Masonic would benefit the creditor only minimally (yielding $362.36 (p. 9 of R. Item 12)) and would not justify setting aside the sale to Nigro (p. 8 of R. Item 12). The court continued the hearing until June 8,1983, at which time new offers were to be considered.
At the June 8 hearing, Unity Masonic presented a bid of $135,000 for the property. The bankruptcy court then ruled that the offer was sufficiently greater than Nig-ro’s $120,000 bid to justify reopening the bidding. The court set 9:30 A.M. the following day as the deadline for any additional bids, and on June 9 it vacated the March 31st sale and approved the sale of the property to Nigro, who had his client’s permission to purchase the property “on his own” (p. 4 of R. Item 7), for $142,000.
Nigro appealed the bankruptcy court’s decision to vacate and requested that the March 31 order, allowing sale of the property to Nigro for $120,000, be reinstated. The district court ruled that the bankruptcy court’s vacating of the confirmed March 31 sale was proper because of the mistaken failure to consider back taxes in approving the sale and because of the significant difference between the confirmed sale price of $120,000 and the later $135,000 bid by Unity Masonic. The court, however, rejected the appellees’ claims that Unity Masonic’s lack of adequate notice of Nigro’s $120,000 bid or Nigro’s “preferred position” as the debtor principal’s attorney were valid grounds for affirming the bankruptcy court June 9 order vacating the sale of the property to. Nigro for $120,000. Consequently, Judge Bua affirmed the bankruptcy court’s June 9 order approving the sale of the property to Nigro for $142,000.
II
It is important to define the specific issue before us in order to ensure that the appropriate legal standards are applied. We are reviewing the June 9 decision of the bankruptcy court to vacate a confirmed sale. The setting aside of an order confirming a sale involves different concerns and less discretion on the bankruptcy judge’s part than the denial of confirmation of a sale in the first instance. See,
e.g., In re General Insecticide Co.,
A bankruptcy court may vacate a prior order confirming a sale, however, only in very limited circumstances in the exercise of its powers as a court of equity.
In re Beck Industries, Inc.,
While this equitable determination is largely within the province of the bankruptcy court,
Webcor,
It is also well settled that after confirmation, the offer of a substantially higher sale price alone is insufficient to set aside a confirmed sale unless the initial sale price is so grossly inadequate as to shock the conscience of the court.
Smith v. Juhan,
Grossly Inadequate Sales Price
The district court erred in holding that the inadequacy of the March 31st Nig-ro offer served as a sufficient basis alone for setting aside the confirmation order of that date accepting Nigro’s $120,000 bid which was later adjusted by Nigro to $124,-275.29. As noted above, the vacating of a confirmed sale solely because the confirmed sale price is lower than a subsequent bid is proper only where the initial confirmed sale price was so grossly inadequate as to shock the conscience of the court. The district court erroneously relied on one pre-confirmation case,
In re Muscongus Bay,
Appellees submit and this Court has discovered no case which holds that an 8.6% or even a 12.5% difference between the confirmed sale price and a later offer renders the original confirmed sale price grossly inadequate or shocking to the court's conscience. Rather, only much larger differences between the confirmed price and a later offer have resulted in findings of “grossly inadequate.” See
Wolverton v. Shell Oil Co.,
Mistake
Neither in our view could the March 31 sale be set aside on the basis of compelling equities arising out of “fraud, mistake or a like infirmity.”
Webcor,
It is not clear from the case law precisely what type of magnitude of “fraud, mistake or * * * infirmity” justifies the setting aside of a judicial sale in bankruptcy. By far the most frequent mistake or infirmity held to warrant vacating a confirmed sale is defective notice to interested parties of the judicial sale. See,
e.g., In re Times Sales,
Appellant Nigro misinterprets our
Web-cor
standard to mean that the bankruptcy court may vacate a confirmed sale only when equity would avoid a like sale between private parties (Br. 5). Although other courts have stated a “private parties” test in this context, see,
e.g., Morrison v. Burnette,
The most permissive statement of law governing vacation of confirmed bankruptcy sales appears to be that of the Tenth Circuit set forth in Mason v. Ashback in 1967:
A court of equity may set aside an order of sale either before or after confirmation when it appears that the same was entered through mistake, inadvertence, or improvidence. While a judicial sale will not be set aside on the ground of inadequacy of price alone, unless the inadequacy is so great as to shock the conscience of the chancellor, inadequacy of price, accompanied with other circumstances having a tendency to cause such inadequacy, or indicating any apparent unfairness or impropriety, will justify setting aside the sale. Such additional circumstances may be slight and insufficient in themselves to justify vacating the sale.
A fair interpretation of the
Webcor
fraud, mistake or like infirmity test in light of the concerns expressed in that opinion regarding the principle of finality requires us to reject an approach which allows slight errors combined with a mere inadequacy of price to justify vacating a confirmed sale. Instead, we read
Webcor
to require that errors raised by a party seeking to vacate a confirmed sale must
of themselves
justify setting aside the sale. See
In re Times Sales,
The only rational justification for the “fraud, mistake or a like infirmity” rule is that the existence of undiscovered errors or infirmities may prevent the bankruptcy judge from making a fair and proper confirmation decision based on accurate knowledge of all relevant factors. Later discovery of minor errors in the judicial sale process does not demonstrate that the judge was prevented from rendering a fair determination. To allow bankruptcy judges to upset a confirmed sale because of the presence of minor errors (which would not have prevented the confirmation of the sale in the first instance and which were ■promptly corrected) and of a later offer exceeding the confirmed sale price would give bankruptcy judges nearly as much discretion before confirmation of a sale as after and would go a long way toward eroding the principle of finality in judicial sales. It would specifically invite bankruptcy courts to circumvent the “grossly inadequate" rule {supra p. 550) by allowing the presence of minor errors to justify vacating confirmed sales where the confirmed sale price is not the highest obtainable price but is not grossly inadequate and where as here those errors were corrected. In the case before us, the bankruptcy judge did not apply the appropriate standard and any equitable concerns present cannot be characterized as fundamental or compelling so as to justify the judge’s decision to vacate.
The bankruptcy judge below appeared to apply the Tenth Circuit rule in deciding to vacate the sale. Judge Eisen acknowledged the grossly inadequate standard as applying to situations where inadequacy of the sale price is the sole concern, but distinguished the case before him and indicated the standard of decision applied:
“I agree with you in that particular instance that the amount might be required, that ratio. I am taking into consideration in exercising the Court’s discretion all the surrounding circumstances of this matter and the offering of the property for sale, and in my discretion I feel it is sufficiently great an increase to reopen bidding.” (p. 17 of R. Item 13).
The court clearly relied on the higher post-confirmation bid of $135,000 to vacate the sale at the corrected price of $124,275.29 *553 and failed to specify what compelling equities (“surrounding circumstances”) motivated its decision.
The bankruptcy judge’s action was contrary to the Webcor standard. In reopening the bidding he specifically indicated that he would not vacate the sale solely on the basis of any mistake or infirmity, but only if a substantially higher bid was received. The court compared Nigro’s original offer of $120,000 to the $125,000 offer at the May 10 hearing of Unity Masonic (which would have yielded approximately $300 to the estate and creditor), noted the slight benefit accruing from the $125,000 offer and stated that “there is really no detriment to the estate from accepting or approving the original buyer” (p. 8 of R. Item 12). The court indicated that only receipt of a higher bid would allow the court to set aside the original sale as approved:
“I could * * * set a date to accept new offers; if there was a substantial difference * * * the Court could use extraordinary powers. If there was no substantial, extraordinary or in the Court’s discretion, difference, the Court would affirm its previous ruling * * * ” [approving the $120,000 Nigro bid adjusted by $4,275.29] (pp. 8-9, 13 of R. Item 12).
The court was quite willing to approve the sale knowing that appellee creditor Liu would receive nothing. 3
This case does not involve the type of fundamental errors or compelling equities which would justify setting aside a confirmed sale. The only “mistake or like infirmity” pointed to by the appellees or the district court as supporting the vacating of the March 31 order is the trustee’s failure to discover and disclose $4,526.30 in unpaid back taxes owed on the property. We first note that appellees have failed to cite any cases holding or intimating that a trustee’s failure to discover unpaid back taxes constitutes sufficient error to vacate a confirmed sale. This type of error is different in nature from the error most often resulting in the setting aside of a confirmed sale — lack of notice, sée cases cited supra p. 551, or from other errors in the sale process causing a setting aside of a confirmed sale. 4 Indeed the error was immediately rectified by Nigro’s increasing his bid price to cover the loss to the estate.
The magnitude of harm to creditors and a debtor’s estate resulting from defective notice is indeterminate in nature. Although post-confirmation bids sometimes give an indication of what amount could have been obtained at a properly conducted sale (see, e.g., In re Lamont, supra), the ultimate results of such a proper sale {e.g., including a counteroffer from the party originally obtaining the property) cannot be known. A similar problem exists with other errors in sale procedures held to justify vacating a sale, such as unfairness towards bidders and sham bidders. See supra p. *554 551. In contrast, the magnitude of harm caused by the mistake or infirmity here is known.
The $4,526 mistake here is not an insignificant amount of money, especially in light of how little creditors often obtain in bankruptcy proceedings. Nevertheless, the size of the error in relation to the confirmed sale price, the uncertainty regarding the small amount of equity thought to be held by the estate in the property before the error was discovered, and the quick correction of the error all lead us to conclude that this case lacks the compelling equities or fundamental errors which would justify setting aside the confirmed sale and would shock the conscience of the court. See
In re General Insecticide,
The bankruptcy court referred to unspecified “surrounding circumstances” in its decision to vacate. Presumably the court was alluding to the appellees’ unwarranted complaints concerning improper notice and Nigro’s “preferred position.” The appel-lees also raised those points before the district court as supporting the bankruptcy court’s decision to vacate. But the district court ruled that any defect in notice could not serve as a basis for upholding the bankruptcy court’s decision. The court pointed out that Judge Eisen had expressly found adequate notice and held that there was sufficient evidence in the record to support the finding (p. 422 of the district court’s opinion).
The charges of Nigro’s “preferred position” were found without merit by the district court. It concluded that Nigro’s March 31 offer was made on his own behalf and correctly observed that Judge Ei-sen did not rely on this argument in his decision to vacate nor did he even seriously discuss the charge (pp. 422-423 of the district court’s opinion). The district court was correct in rejecting these unfounded allegations as providing a sufficient basis to support the order to vacate.
The only other justification which might potentially validate the decision to vacate is the failure of the trustee to discover unpaid back taxes, which we have already rejected as insufficient. The failure to discover unpaid back taxes earlier will result in lone creditor Liu receiving nothing from Nigro’s adjusted $124,275.29 offer (Appellees’ Br. 9) instead of an estimated $4,000 to $4,500. Yet if every error in the judicial sale process causing some inequity allowed the setting aside of confirmed sales, the principle of finality of judicial sales would be seriously undermined. Affirmance of the bankruptcy and district courts here would take us a long way down that road. Parties must be encouraged to make their highest bids at judicial sales. V/ebcor, supra. In the long run this policy benefits creditors as well as the bankruptcy estate by ensuring that the highest bids always are made in a timely fashion and are properly considered by the bankruptcy court.
The district court’s order is vacated and the cause is remanded to it with instructions to vacate the bankruptcy court’s June 9 order and reinstate the original March 31 order allowing the sale of the property to Michael Nigro for $120,000 with a stipulation that there be no loss to the estate, presumably by his advancing $124,275.29 to the bankruptcy trustee for the property. Costs to be borne by appellees.
Notes
. The bankruptcy court never attempted to rest its decision to vacate on a grossly inadequate price theory nor did the appellees make such a claim to the district court (p. 421 of the district court opinion). The bankruptcy court appeared to recognize that it could not vacate the March 31 sale solely on the theory of a grossly inadequate price but instead believed that the price differential combined with other circumstances present in the case justified the decision (p. 17 of R. Item 13). See infra pp. 552-53.
. In
Mason
the Tenth Circuit reversed the bankruptcy court's refusal to set aside its confirmation of a sale and ordered the confirmed sale vacated. It is significant to note that the equities in
Mason
favoring vacating the sale were much more compelling than in the present case. In
Mason
the post-confirmation bid was $1,000 and the confirmed sale price was $650 (a 35% difference) and the creditors received no notice of the judicial sale, rendering it "wholly illusory” in the court’s words.
. In the event that no substantially higher bid was entered, the bankruptcy court stated that it would confirm the original Nigro offer so long as Nigro agreed to increase his offer to avoid a loss to the estate on the sale (R. Item 12 at pp. 13 and 16). The bankruptcy judge was acting well within his discretion in allowing Nigro to increase his confirmed offer to compensate for slight errors in the bidding process due to the then unknown back taxes rather than vacating the sale and reopening the bidding entirely. Such a practice appears to be the proper method of correcting relatively minor errors that would have caused some detriment to the bankruptcy estate and creditors without trampling on the principle of finality of judicial sales. It cannot be said that the court would have refused to confirm the sale if it had known at the time that the sale for $120,000 would have resulted in a small net loss to the bankruptcy estate. When the bankruptcy judge conditioned the $120,000 sale on the payment of back taxes, Unity Masonic’s $125,000 offer (made known to the bankruptcy judge by the debtor’s April 8, 1983, motion to reopen and yielding $362 to estate and creditor) was in place, giving the court enough leverage over Nigro to cause him to increase his bid to $124,275.29 to cover previously unknown unpaid back taxes on the property.
. Even in cases cited as sanctioning the vacating of confirmed sales under a more lenient standard than the traditional one, see
Cada,
