Oxford Finance, LLC v. Redwood Liquidating Co., Jason Myers, Dana Moss, and Harish Soundararajan

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJune 18, 2026
Docket25-51853
StatusUnknown

This text of Oxford Finance, LLC v. Redwood Liquidating Co., Jason Myers, Dana Moss, and Harish Soundararajan (Oxford Finance, LLC v. Redwood Liquidating Co., Jason Myers, Dana Moss, and Harish Soundararajan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oxford Finance, LLC v. Redwood Liquidating Co., Jason Myers, Dana Moss, and Harish Soundararajan, (Del. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF DELAWARE

In re: Chapter 11 Redwood Liquidating Co.

Post-Effective Date Debtor. | Case No. 22-10621 (BLS)

Oxford Finance, LLC,

Plaintiff, Adv. Pro. No. 25-51853 (BLS) Vv, Redwood Liquidating Co., Jason Myers, Dana Moss, and Harish Soundararajan,

Defendants.

OPINION Oxford Finance LLC (the “Plaintiff” or “Oxford”) filed an adversary complaint against Redwood Liquidating Co. (“Redwood”) and Jason Myers, Dana Moss, and Harish Soundararajan (the “D&O Defendants” and, together with Redwood, the “Defendants”).! As described in detail below, Oxford contends that it owns certain valuable causes of action that Redwood has pursued, and Oxford now seeks to recover from Redwood the proceeds that have resuited from the settlement of litigation arising from those causes of action. The adversary complaint alleges five causes of action: (I) declaratory judgment, (ID breach of contract, (III) fraudulent concealment, (IV) conversion, and (V) negligent

1 References to “DI.” refer to the main proceeding’s docket (22-10621), and references to “Adv. D.L.” refer to this proceeding’s docket.

misrepresentation. All counts are asserted against Redwood and Counts IIT and V are also asserted against the D&O Defendants. Redwood has asserted a counterclaim against Oxford seeking confirmation that the Plan Administrator has the sole authority to settle valuable malpractice claims and distribute the proceeds arising therefrom.” Before the Court are Redwood’s Motion to Dismiss, the D&O Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss, Redwood’s Counterclaim and Oxford’s Motion to Dismiss the Counterclaim.* For the reasons that follow, the Motion to Dismiss filed by Redwood will be granted as to Counts I, I and [V. The Motions to Dismiss filed by Redwood and the D&O Defendants will also be granted as to Counts TIT and V. BACKGROUND This adversary proceeding stems from the voluntary Chapter 11 petition filed by GenapSys, Inc. (the “Debtor” or “GenapSys”), Redwood’s predecessor in interest, on July 11, 2022. The adversary proceeding seeks to recover proceeds arising from the settlement of malpractice claims brought by Redwood against GenapSys’s former corporate counsel (the “Malpractice Claims”).’ In a nutshell, the Malpractice Claims allege that former counsel drafted defective corporate documents which led to serious prepetition governance disputes for GenapSys, including a determination in the Delaware Chancery Court that many of GenapSys’s directors were not validly appointed.” GenapSys’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing occurred

7D 761. 3 Pursuant to the Agreed Order Governing Consolidation, Procedure and Scheduling [Adv. D.I. 12], the Motion of the Post-Effective Date Debtor for Entry of an Order (1) Enforcing (A) the Sale Order and Asset Purchase Agreement, and (B) the Confirmation Order and the Combined Disclosure Statement and Plan, (H) Finding that the Plan Administrator Has the Sole Power and Authority to Pursue and Settle Malpractice Claims, (Ill) Authorizing the Plan Administrator to Distribute the Settlement Proceeds, and (IV) Granting Related Relief [D.1. 761] is deemed to constitute a counterclaim asserted by Redwood against Oxford in this adversary proceeding. 4 Adv. G Lb. 761. See Esfandyarpour v. Zollars, Myers, Eliasson, McKenzie, Cecil, & GenapSys, Inc., No. 2022-0324- MTZ, 2022 WL 2666997, at *1, *2 (Del. Ch. July 8, 2022).

immediately after the Chancery Court issued its ruling that the board was not properly constituted. In the Chapter 11 case, this Court approved a sale of substantially all the Debtor’s assets to Sequencing Health, Inc. (“Sequencing”) on September 12, 2022.° Oxford was the Debtor’s prepetition senior secured lender with a lien on substantially all of the Debtor's assets.’ Rather than have its lien attach to the sale proceeds as part of the sale transaction, Oxford agreed instead to have its debt assumed by Sequencing and to release all of its liens and claims on GenapSys’s remaining assets.® Oxford thus became Sequencing’s secured lender shortly after the Court- approved sale closed and had liens on substantially all of Sequencing’s assets, including all assets that were purchased by Sequencing from GenapSys.” On January 6, 2023, several months after the above sale closed, this Court entered the Order Confirming the Debtor s Combined Disclosure Statement and Chapter 1] Plan of Liquidation (the “Sale Order”).'° The Debtor’s liquidating plan (hereinafter the “Plan”) provided that all assets remaining in the estate after the sale to Sequencing would be administered by the Plan Administrator on a post-confirmation basis for the benefit of the Debtor’s creditors and holders of certain preferred equity interests.!! As noted above, Oxford had waived any claims against the estate as part of the sale to Sequencing and thus is not entitled to participate as a creditor in any distributions under the confirmed Plan. On January 13, 2023, the Plan went effective. ?

SDL 243, 7 Adv. DL. 1 9 13. 8 Td. ° Td. DL 430. HY), 430-1. PDE 438.

In April 2023, Oxford sent Sequencing a Notice of Default, advising that Sequencing was in default under the Amended and Restated Loan and Security Agreement and Assumption Agreement (the “Loan Agreement”) and explaining that it was entitled to exercise its rights and remedies as a secured creditor.!? In August 2023, Oxford foreclosed on its collateral.'4 As a result, Sequencing conveyed substantially all its assets to Oxford, including the purchased assets that had formerly belonged to GenapSys.'° According to the Complaint, Oxford believed that this included all assets of the Debtor with any material value." In June 2023, Redwood initiated a lawsuit against GenapSys’s former corporate counsel in California Superior Court asserting the Malpractice Claims.'” After nearly two years of litigation in California, the Debtor’s former corporate counsel moved for summary judgment in that court on the basis that the Combined Disclosure Statement and Plan filed in the Chapter 11] case did not identify the Malpractice Claims with enough specificity.'® In March 2025, the Plan Administrator filed the Redwood Plan Administrator s Motion for an Order Clarifying Debtor s Combined Disclosure Statement and Plan (hereinafter the “Clarification Motion”) in this Court.!? In the Clarification Motion, the Plan Administrator sought an order confirming that the Debtor’s Malpractice Claims had indeed been adequately disclosed and preserved under the Plan for prosecution by the Plan Administrator.” Counsel to Sequencing and Oxford were each properly served with the Clarification Motion,”! but neither filed any objection or response thereto. Former corporate counsel objected to the Clarification Motion, arguing again that the

3 Adv. D.L1 974. 4 478.

6 fd. 945. 415. G99, 20 See id. 17.1. 699-7; 699-8,

Malpractice Claims had not been adequately disclosed in the approved Disclosure Statement and thus were effectively waived and expunged as a result of confirmation of the Debtor’s Plan. Specifically, former counsel argued that applicable bankruptcy law obliged the Debtor to identify and describe the Malpractice Claims with particularity in the Disclosure Statement, and they contend the Debtor failed to do so.

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Bluebook (online)
Oxford Finance, LLC v. Redwood Liquidating Co., Jason Myers, Dana Moss, and Harish Soundararajan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oxford-finance-llc-v-redwood-liquidating-co-jason-myers-dana-moss-and-deb-2026.