Appellants — Investors and Joint Official Liquidators of Sphinx SPC (“Sphinx”), 1 — appeal from an order of the district court affirming an order of the bankruptcy court approving the settlement of a preference action pursuant to Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 9019. Because we conclude that Investors have no standing to contest the settlement, and that the Joint Official Liquidators are precluded from appealing the settlement, we affirm the district court’s order.
BACKGROUND
Appellant Investors each hold various interests in Sphinx, an exempted investment company incorporated and organized under the Companies Law (2004 Revision) of the Cayman Islands (“Cayman Companies Law”). In an SPC, each investor’s assets and liabilities are held in a particular portfolio, or “cell,” managed by the company. 2
On October 12, 2005, five days before Refco, Inc. (“Refco”) filed for bankruptcy protection under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code, and two days after Refco announced it had discovered a substantial, previously undisclosed liability that caused a crisis of confidence in RCM’s ability to accommodate client withdrawals, a total of $312,046,266.23 was transferred from the Sphinx accounts at RCM to its affiliate Refco, LLC, and ultimately to accounts held on behalf of the cells at Lehman Brothers. Investors allege that this transfer was made at the behest of PlusFunds CEO Chris Sugrue, who Investors further allege maintained previously undisclosed allegiances to Refco.
With the authorization of the bankruptcy court, on December 16, 2005 the Committee commenced an adversary proceeding on behalf of RCM seeking avoidance and recovery of the transfer made to the cells, naming as defendants Sphinx, and Sphinx acting on behalf of each of the cells. There was evidence that the transfer was preferential, and, on January 9, 2006, the Committee filed a motion for summary judgment in the adversary proceeding. Sphinx opposed the motion, arguing that whether Refco was insolvent at the time of the transfer was a material issue of fact, and that, even assuming that the elements for a preference were satisfied, it was inequitable to allow RCM to recover the entire $312 million because RCM and its non-debtor affiliates had abused the bankruptcy process to the detriment of Sphinx. On April 20, 2006, at the close of discovery, and on the eve of the summary judgment argument, the Committee and Sphinx agreed to a settlement whereby Sphinx, on behalf of the cells, would return $263 million to the RCM estate (the “Settlement”). Sphinx also agreed to waive any claim against RCM related to the transfer, including any claim pursuant to § 502(h) of
Investors claim that the “worse-than-losing” Settlement was the result of an “incestuous relationship” between Refco, PlusFunds, and Sphinx.
In re Refco Inc.,
No. 05-60006,
Investors filed objections to the Settlement in bankruptcy court, arguing that it was not the product of honest bargaining but, rather, collusion and fraud. They further argued that the evidence suggested that the proposed Settlement was not a properly authorized corporate act by Sphinx. Finally, Investors asserted that the Settlement was an attempted fraud that was consummated by abuse of the bankruptcy process. Investors claimed “that PlusFunds, Refco, and Sphinx were three faces of the same entity, that Refco’s control over Sphinx eliminated any meaningful adversity between the negotiating parties, and that this rendered the proposed settlement non-arms’ length, collusive, and in bad faith.” Investors Br. at 14-15.
On June 1, 2006, while the Settlement was
sub judice,
involuntary liquidation proceedings were commenced in the Grand Court of the Cayman Islands against Sphinx and an affiliated parent entity, Sphinx Strategy Fund, Ltd. (“Strategy”). On June 5, 2006, the Grand Court of the Cayman Islands issued an order appointing a Provisional Liquidator for Strategy and imposing a “stay ... [of] all actions, suits, or proceedings against [Sphinx] until the hearing of the Petition for winding up.”
6
Refco,
After hearing arguments from all parties, including Investors, the bankruptcy court approved the Settlement as being in the best interests of the debtors, their estates and creditors. The bankruptcy court held that Investors lacked standing to object because they were not a “party in interest” under § 1109(b) of the Bankruptcy Code. The court held as a matter of law that the Settlement affected Investors as equity holders in Sphinx only indirectly. The court noted that reviewing the Settlement’s fairness to Investors was outside its purview because such review
would entirely skew the task of a bankruptcy court and be extremely unfair to debtors and trustees in that it would force them, in essence, to continue negotiating and potentially litigating not only with the defendants that they’re dealing with in litigation, but also parties who claim an interest in those defendants, which is simply inappropriate. Id. at *8 (quoting Bankruptcy Court Transcript).
The court acknowledged Investors’ allegation that the Settlement was the product of fraud, but stated that the only relevant inquiry in bankruptcy court is whether the debtor acted in good faith to ensure that the Settlement is favorable to the estate, and, in this case, there was no dispute that the Committee acted in the best interests of the estate.
Investors appealed the approval order to the district court, arguing that: (1) their interest was sufficiently direct, adverse, and pecuniary to establish appellate standing, (2) they were a “party in interest” under § 1109(b) and therefore had standing to object in the bankruptcy court proceeding, (3) the scope of judicial review in a bankruptcy proceeding was broad enough to consider the rights of affected third parties and, therefore, the bankruptcy court erred when it held that it was legally precluded from considering whether the Settlement was fair to Investors, and (4) the bankruptcy court abused its discretion because it did not accord the Grand Court’s order comity.
See Refco,
Investors’ arguments to the district court were equivocally supported by Appellants Kenneth Krys and Christopher Stride, Joint Official Liquidators (“JOLs”) of Sphinx. On August 8, 2006, the Cayman Court entered a winding-up order for Sphinx and appointed Krys and Stride to serve as JOLs. The JOLs stepped into the shoes of Sphinx and assumed the power “to bring or defend any action, suit, prosecution or other legal proceedings, whether civil or criminal, in the name and on behalf of the company.” JOLs Br. at 17 (quoting Cayman Companies Law § 109(a)). On September 11, 2006, the JOLs filed a brief in the district court, expressing their concern. At the time the JOLs filed their brief, they were in the process of investigating the details behind the Settlement, and had not reached any firm conclusions about its legitimacy.
The district court rejected each of Investors’ arguments. First, the district court found that Investors were “not directly and adversely affected pecuniarily
On appeal to this Court, Investors argue that the district court erred in dismissing their appeal of the bankruptcy court’s order for lack of appellate standing. Investors assert that the approval of the Settlement will cost them tens of millions of dollars, thereby imposing upon them a direct, pecuniary harm sufficient to confer party-in-interest and appellate standing. Investors Br. at 26-31. In the alternative, Investors assert that when the Sphinx directors breached their fiduciary duty by entering a fraudulent settlement, the funds at issue became the
res
of a constructive trust, of which Investors were the beneficiaries. Because Investors hold a constructive trust over the money used to fund the Settlement, they argue, they have standing under the direct, pecuniary interest test.
Id.
at 37. Investors further contend that, even if their interest is not direct and pecuniary, the rule limiting appellate standing in the bankruptcy context to parties with a direct, pecuniary interest “is a prudential one, not constitutionally mandated, and, as such, courts have been willing to relax the rule in the interests of justice,_”
Id.
at 33. Investors argue that the appellate standing rule should be relaxed in this case so that the bankruptcy process is not employed to consummate a fraud.
Id.
at 34. At a minimum, Investors claim, they should have been allowed to intervene under Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 2018(a), as they expressly sought to do in the bankruptcy court.
Id.
at 37. Investors assert that the district court ignored the factual record when it stated that Investors “were aware of the Adversary Proceeding for approximately five months but failed to request intervention until after the Settlement was announced
...Refco,
DISCUSSION
Like the district court, we review the bankruptcy court’s articulation of the legal standards applicable to the evaluation of a settlement under Bankruptcy Rule 9019
de novo, In re Iridium, Operating LLC,
A. Whether Investors Have Party-In-Interest Standing
Investors claim they had standing to appear before the bankruptcy court and object to the Settlement because they are a “party in interest” within the meaning of § 1109(b) of the Bankruptcy Code. That section, Investors argue, is to be construed broadly to allow all parties affected by the case to be heard. “Bankruptcy Code § 1109(b) was not intended to exclude injured parties from the judicial process, but instead to underscore that in bankruptcy, which so directly concerns issues of property rights, all affected entities should have access to justice.” Investors Br. at 27.
Section 1109(b) provides that the term “party in interest [] includ[es] the debt- or, the trustee, a creditors’ committee, an equity security holders’ committee, a creditor, an equity security holder, or any indenture trustee.”
8
We previously explored the contours of the term “party in interest” in a slightly different context in
Comcoach,
In reaffirming Comcoach’s underlying principle, we see no need to limit standing in the § 1109(b) context solely to the class of creditors and debtors permitted by Comcoach in the quite different context of § 362(d)(1). 11 See supra note 8. For, even granting § 1109(b) the benefit of somewhat greater breadth — breadth that might be warranted by the additional parties listed in the text of § 1109(b) but not in the text of § 362(d)(1) — Investors’ equity argument still reads into § 1109(b) a degree of separation from the primary parties in a bankruptcy proceeding that we are unwilling to countenance. To the extent that the rights of a party in interest are asserted, those rights must be asserted by the party in interest, not someone else. The principle set forth in Comcoach therefore applies with equal force to this case. We reaffirm it today.
Investors cannot claim that they seek to enforce any rights distinct from those of Sphinx as a creditor and a defendant in an adversary proceeding. The record establishes that Sphinx is a single legal entity, and that the individual cells are not legally separate entities from Sphinx. By investing in Sphinx, Investors placed control of their funds entirely within the hands of the Sphinx directors (or managers acting on behalf of the directors). Only Sphinx, not individual Investors, or even Investors as a group, could assert a claim against the Refco estate, and only Sphinx was permitted to negotiate a settlement with the Committee. Investors maintain a financial “interest” in Sphinx, but they are not a “party in interest” within the meaning of the Bankruptcy Code. The party in interest in the bankruptcy sense, representing the Investors’ financial interest, is Sphinx.
Investors spend many pages of their brief arguing passionately for an expansive interpretation of § 1109(b) to ensure that “fraud will not prevail, that substance will not give way to form, that technical considerations will not prevent substantial justice from being done.” Investors Br. at 31 (quoting
Pepper v. Litton,
Investors point out that bankruptcy courts have declared that § 1109(b) should be construed “broadly.”
13
They argue that a broad construction of § 1109(b) means that
“whenever
a party has an interest that is affected by a Bankruptcy Court determination, equity will allow that party to be heard, will require the court to consider that party’s complaint in ascertaining whether the order sought is appropriate, and will allow an appeal of the court’s determination.” Investors Br. at 40. Even when a statute is broadly construed, however, it still has its limits. “The term ‘party in interest’ [in § 1109(b)] is broadly interpreted, but not infinitely expansive.”
S. Blvd., Inc. v. Martin Paint Stores (In re Martin Paint Stores),
[I]t is important that a bankruptcy court is not too facile in granting applications for standing. Overly lenient standards may potentially over-burden the reorganization process by allowing numerous parties to interject themselves into the case on every issue, thereby thwarting the goal of a speedy and efficient reorganization .... Granting peripheral parties status as parties in interest thwarts the traditional purpose of bankruptcy laws which is to provide reasonably expeditious rehabilitation of financially distressed debtors with a consequent distribution to creditors who have acted diligently.
This admonition is pertinent to the matter at hand. Had the bankruptcy court permitted Investors to object to the Settlement and conduct discovery on the numerous factual issues that, according to Investors, would prove that the Settlement “was the product of tortious misconduct, collusion, and fraud by a faithless fiduciary,” Investors Br. at 14, the Code’s goal of a “speedy and efficient reorganization,”
Ref-co,
In any event, a bankruptcy court’s obligation is to determine whether a settlement is in the best interests of
the estate,
not to ensure that the
creditors’
representatives are honoring their fiduciary duties.
See Nellis v. Shugrue,
We hold, therefore, that Investors are not a “party in interest” within the meaning of § 1109(b) of the Bankruptcy Code, and affirm the district court’s holding that the bankruptcy court did not abuse its discretion by approving the settlement without ruling on the merits of the Investors’ objections, allowing them to intervene, or affording them any opportunity for discovery.
We note that although they are not parties in interest entitled to object to the Settlement and conduct discovery, Investors may still have remedies for fraud perpetrated by their fiduciaries. Counsel for Investors indicated at oral argument that they intended to file suit against the Sphinx directors alleging breach of fiduciary duty. Assuming they file their claim within the appropriate jurisdiction, and overcome any pre-trial hurdles, they may then be permitted to conduct discovery on the issues they sought to investigate in bankruptcy court, and seek redress before a judge or jury. 14
B. Whether Investors Have Appellate Standing
The district court held (alternatively) that Investors had no standing to
C. Whether JOLs May Appeal from the Settlement Order
The JOLs assert that they have standing to appeal the bankruptcy court order on behalf of Sphinx. “It is settled law,” the JOLs argue, “that a liquidator has standing to bring an action on a company’s behalf.” JOLs Br. at 27. We agree. But the JOLs may only bring an action on behalf of the company that the company could have brought itself. The JOLs have correctly noted that, “[a]s Cayman Islands court-appointed liquidators of Sphinx and its affiliates, the JOLs
stand in the shoes of
Sphinx.” JOLs Resp. to Summ. Affirmance at 2 (emphasis added). Sphinx consented to the Settlement. Indeed, without Sphinx’s consent, the Settlement Agreement would never have been presented to the bankruptcy court for approval. Having consented to the Settlement below, Sphinx is bound by it on appeal, for it is well-established that “a party to a consent judgment is thereby deemed to waive any objections it has to matters within the scope of the judgment.”
Coughlin v. Regan,
D.
Because Investors have no standing to prosecute this appeal, and the JOLs are precluded from doing so, we need not consider the merits of their claims that the bankruptcy court abused its discretion by approving the settlement.
* * *
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the order of the district court is Affirmed.
Notes
. An SPC is a Segregated Portfolio Company.
. Because we need not decide any issue of Cayman Islands law to resolve this appeal, we assume the accuracy of the parties’ submissions to the extent there is no conflict between them.
Compare Euromepa, S.A. v. R. Esmerian, Inc.,
. According to Investors, directors of an SPC are required by law to keep each cell’s assets segregated and separately identifiable from the others. Where a particular cell incurs liability in excess of its assets, the creditor may be paid first from the assets of the liable cell, and then from the SPC’s general assets, if permitted by the articles of association and only to the extent that the company's general assets exceed any minimum capital amounts required by Cayman regulatory law. In no case may the assets of one cell be permitted to satisfy the liabilities of another. Investors allege that RAI placed the cells' funds in unsegregated accounts at RCM. By contrast, Appellees — the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors of Refco Incorporated and its affiliated debtors and debtors-in-possession ("Committee”) — assert that Investors’ funds were held in separate accounts in the name of each of the cells while at RCM.
. 11 U.S.C. § 502(h) permits a party to file a claim against the bankruptcy estate upon surrender of a preference.
. According to Investors, the mere 15.7 cents on the dollar that the Settlement gave them was about half the market value of even the most junior claims against the estate.
.On June 7, 2006, Strategy filed for protection in the Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York under Chapter 15 of the Bankruptcy Code. On June 27, 2006, the involuntary liquidation proceedings were dismissed by the Grand Court of the Cayman Islands. Voluntary bankruptcy proceedings were commenced against Sphinx in July and August 2006.
. There was nothing in the JOLs' brief that the district court needed to address; the JOLs' brief merely stated that they were in the process of investigating the Settlement and they could not adopt the positions of the Committee.
. To be clear, an “equity security holder” in this context is, of course, a debtor’s equity security holder. See 11 U.S.C. § 101(17) ("The term 'equity security holder’ means holder of an equity security of the debtor.”). This, the Investors — i.e., Sphinx’s investors— clearly cannot claim to be.
. In
Comcoach,
we were interpreting the term "party in interest” in the context of a request for relief from a stay under 11 U.S.C. § 362(d)(1), and not in the context of the right to be heard under § 1109(b).
. Courts in our Circuit have consistently (and correctly) interpreted
Comcoach
to stand for the principle that party-in-interest standing under § 1109(b) does not arise if a party seeks to assert some right that is purely derivative of another party’s rights in the bankruptcy proceeding.
See S. Blvd., Inc. v. Martin Paint Stores (In re Martin Paint Stores),
.
See Comcoach,
. We make no judgment on this issue.
. Investors Br. at 27-28 (citing
Ionosphere,
. Investors also argue that, even if they are not parties in interest, they should have been permitted to intervene in the bankruptcy proceeding pursuant to Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 2018(a). We disagree. In-tervener status, no less than party-in-interest status, would permit Investors to take a stand on the Settlement contrary to that of Sphinx, requiring the debtor to negotiate with two faces of the same entity. It was not an abuse
