B.E. Capital Management Fund LP v. Fund.com Inc. , 171 A.3d 140 ( 2017 )


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  •       IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    B.E. CAPITAL MANAGEMENT FUND                     )
    LP,                                              )
    )
    Petitioner,                     )
    )
    - against -                            ) C.A. No. 12843-VCL
    )
    FUND.COM INC.,                                   )
    )
    Respondent.                     )
    OPINION
    Date Submitted: August 9, 2017
    Date Decided: October 4, 2017
    Julia B. Klein, KLEIN LLC, Wilmington, Delaware; Jeffrey Chubak, STORCH AMINI
    PC, New York, New York; Attorneys for Receiver.
    Philip Gentile; Claimant Pro Se.
    LASTER, V.C.
    On October 21, 2016, petitioner B.E. Capital Management Fund LP sought the
    appointment of a receiver for respondent Fund.com Inc. (the “Company”) on the grounds
    that the Company had abandoned its business. The Company did not respond to the
    petition. Nor did anyone else. By order dated November 29, 2016, the court entered a
    default judgment and appointed Thomas Braziel as receiver of the Company (the
    “Receiver”).
    The Receiver commenced a process for marshalling the Company’s assets,
    determining its liabilities, and winding up its affairs. The court set a bar date of April 14,
    2017, for creditors to file claims. Nonparty Philip Gentile submitted a claim for $497,739.
    Gentile had served as the Company’s CEO from March 1, 2008, until June 18, 2010. He
    contended that he was entitled to recover the amount sought as a result of various breaches
    of his employment agreement with the Company (the “Employment Agreement”). Among
    other breaches, he contended that the Company “stopped making payments in February
    2009.”1
    The Receiver rejected Gentile’s claim as time-barred. The Receiver reasoned as
    follows:
    Pursuant to Section 13.1 of the Employment Agreement, the agreement is
    governed by New York law. The statute of limitations for a breach of contract
    claim under N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 213 is six years. Mr. Gentile acknowledges in
    his claim that the Company stopped paying him in February 2009 and did
    1
    Dkt. 31.
    1
    not take legal action against the Company to enforce contractual rights under
    his Employment Agreement within sex years following accrual of his claim.2
    Gentile noticed a timely appeal from the Receiver’s determination. The Receiver
    responded by moving to confirm his determination. This decision denies Gentile’s appeal
    and adopts the Receiver’s determination as a decision of this court.
    Section 296(b) of the Delaware General Corporation Law states:
    Every creditor or claimant who shall have received notice from the receiver
    or trustee that such creditor’s or claimant’s claim has been disallowed in
    whole or in part may appeal to the Court of Chancery within 30 days
    thereafter. The Court, after hearing, shall determine the rights of the parties.3
    The Court of Chancery Rules contain a series of provisions that govern receivers. Rule 156
    provides that “[e]xceptions to claims shall . . . be heard by the Court upon such notice to
    the receiver, creditor and exceptant as may be ordered by the Court.”4 Rule 157 states that
    “[a]t the hearing of exceptions to claims and to accounts, the testimony of witnesses shall
    be taken in the same manner as is provided for in other causes pending in this Court.”5
    2
    Dkt. 41.
    3
    
    8 Del. C
    . § 296(b).
    4
    Ct. Ch. R. 156.
    5
    Ct. Ch. R. 157.
    2
    Section 296 “does not purport to establish the standard by which the court shall
    allow or disallow a particular claim . . . .”6 The rules do not specify a standard either. Nor
    is there any authoritative precedent from the Delaware Supreme Court.
    While practicing as an attorney before joining the bench, Vice Chancellor and later
    Justice Jack B. Jacobs authored two articles on Delaware receiverships that remain
    authoritative.7 In one, he simply noted that “[a] creditor is given the statutory right of appeal
    to the court of chancery from any adverse determination by the receiver.”8 In the other, he
    observed that “[t]he statute and rules do not specify whether an appeal to the court of
    chancery is de novo or on the record.”9 He went on to state:
    In practice most of the hearings on appeal are on the record. However, the
    reference in section 296 to a “hearing” and the provision in rule 157 that at
    the hearing of the exceptions to claims “the testimony of witnesses shall be
    taken in the same manner as is provided for in other causes pending in this
    Court” suggest that de novo hearings are permissible.10
    6
    2 Edward P. Welch et al., Folk on the Delaware General Corporation Law §
    296.02 (6th ed. 2017).
    7
    Jack B. Jacobs, Delaware Receivers and Trustees: Unsung Ministers of Corporate
    Last Rites, 7 Del. J. Corp. L. 251 (1982) [hereinafter Jacobs, Delaware Receivers]; Jack B.
    Jacobs, Receivership Practice in the Delaware Courts, 6 Del. J. Corp. L. 487 (1981)
    [hereinafter Jacobs, Receivership Practice].
    8
    Jacobs, Receivership Practice, at 499.
    9
    Jacobs, Delaware 
    Receivers, supra, at 265
    .
    10
    Id.; see 
    id. (responding to
    an argument about potential bias on the part of a receiver
    by noting that “any risk of bias would be safeguarded against by the appellate remedy
    (particularly the availability of a de novo trial”).
    3
    Justice Jacobs’ articles did not otherwise discuss the standard of review. Moreover,
    answering the question of whether review is de novo or on the record does not fully
    determine the standard of review. Although “[d]e novo review generally means a new trial
    or hearing on questions of fact,” it is equally possible “to conduct a review de novo on the
    record.”11 This is what the Delaware Supreme Court does when it reviews appeals from
    decisions that have granted motions for summary judgment or judgment on the pleadings
    or that dismiss a pleading for failure to state a claim.12 And to the extent a reviewing court
    conducts a review “on the record” using a deferential standard, the court may deploy
    standards involving varying degrees of deference.13
    11
    DiGiacobbe v. Sestak, 
    743 A.2d 180
    , 184 (Del. 1999).
    
    12 Will. v
    . Geier, 
    671 A.2d 1368
    , 1375 (Del. 1996) (“Our review of the trial
    court’s determinations in [the summary judgment] context is de novo, not deferential, both
    as to facts and the law. On a summary judgment record (which is essentially a paper record
    not involving credibility assessments), we are free to draw our own inferences in making
    factual determinations and in evaluating legal significance of the evidence . . . .”); W. Coast
    Opportunity Fund, LLC v. Credit Suisse Sec. (USA), LLC, 
    12 A.3d 1128
    , 1131-32 (Del.
    2010) (“[T]he grant of a motion for judgment on the pleadings ‘presents a question of law,
    which we review de novo,’ to determine whether the court committed legal error in
    formulating or applying legal precepts. . . . On a motion for judgment on the pleadings this
    Court’s review is limited to the contents of the pleadings.” (quoting Desert Equities, Inc.
    v. Morgan Stanley Leveraged Equity Fund, II, L.P., 
    624 A.2d 1199
    , 1204 (Del. 1993));
    Malpiede v. Townson, 
    780 A.2d 1075
    , 1082 (Del. 2001) (“We review de novo the dismissal
    by the Court of Chancery of a complaint under Rule 12(b)(6). The complaint ordinarily
    defines the universe of facts from which the trial court may draw in ruling on a motion to
    dismiss.” (footnote omitted)).
    13
    See, e.g., Gotham P’rs, L.P. v. Hallwood Realty P’rs, L.P., 
    817 A.2d 160
    , 174
    (Del. 2002) (“We cannot conclude on this record that these findings of fact are clearly
    erroneous.”); Wheatley v. State, 
    465 A.2d 1110
    , 1113 (Del. 1983) (“On the record before
    us, we find no abuse of discretion in the denial of the motion for mistrial.”); cf. Ivanhoe
    4
    The few extant Delaware authorities suggest that the correct standard is de novo
    review with the court having the ability to consider additional evidence. In Lasker v.
    McDonnell & Co., Inc., then-Chancellor, later-Justice William T. Quillen considered an
    appeal from a receiver’s preliminary determination rejecting a creditor’s claim.14 The
    parties agreed to forego a further hearing before the receiver, so the court conducted “a
    judicial hearing . . . as if on appeal from the Receiver’s decision.”15 The court reviewed the
    creditor’s arguments, contention by contention, and analyzed the relevant facts and law,
    effectively conducting de novo review.16 A more oblique authority is Hannigan v. Italo
    Petroleum Corp. of America.17 There, after a corporation emerged from receivership, the
    assignee of a corporate debt filed suit, even though the receiver for the corporation had
    P’rs v. Newmont Mining Corp., 
    535 A.2d 1334
    , 1340-41 (Del. 1987) (“Since the decision
    below denying Ivanhoe’s motion for a preliminary injunction was based entirely on a paper
    record, the standard and scope of review on appeal requires this Court to review the entire
    record and draw its own conclusions with respect to the facts if the finds below are clearly
    wrong and justice requires us to do so.”).
    14
    
    1975 WL 1950
    (Del. Ch. July 9, 1975).
    15
    
    Id. at *1.
    Under Section 296, the receiver initially makes preliminary rulings on
    claims based on the claims notices that creditors and claimants submit. A dissatisfied party
    can seek a further hearing before the receiver and, if it wishes, present evidence. See Jacobs,
    Delaware Receivers, at 265 (describing procedure). Once the receiver makes a final ruling,
    then a dissatisfied party can appeal to the court. See 
    id. The parties
    in Lasker skipped the
    further hearing before the receiver and proceeded directly to the appeal.
    16
    
    1975 WL 1950
    , at *1; see 
    id. at *9
    (noting as to one issue that “[t]he question
    before the Court is essentially one of fact” and ruling on the issue de novo).
    17
    
    181 A. 660
    (Del. Super. 1935).
    5
    disallowed the claim. The question presented was whether the doctrine of res judicata
    barred the creditor from pursuing its claim after the company emerged from receivership.18
    Consistent with Justice Jacobs’ observation that the court reviewing the receiver’s
    determination would have discretion to consider additional evidence, the Delaware
    Superior Court observed that a claimant in a receivership could seek to present evidence
    beyond “a mere notice of his claim” and could seek to have “his rights in the fund in
    controversy adjudicated by bringing the matter directly before the court in some
    appropriate manner.”19
    These decisions indicate that when a court considers an appeal from a receiver’s
    disallowance of a claim pursuant to Rule 296(b), the standard of review is de novo, and the
    court has discretion as to whether to go beyond the record presented to the receiver by
    conducting an evidentiary hearing. This interpretation finds support in the common law
    procedures that predated Section 296. At common law, a creditor who wished to dispute a
    receiver’s determination had to move to intervene in the receivership action.20 If the court
    18
    
    Id. at 661-62,
    664.
    19
    
    Id. at 664.
           20
    See 65 Am. Jur. 2d Receivers § 266 (“If the receiver disallows the claim, the
    creditors’ remedy is to intervene in the action and petition the court for an order directing
    the receiver to allow the claim.” (citing Wood v. Provident Tr. Co. of Philadelphia, 
    152 So. 186
    (Fla. 1933)); 2 Ralph Ewing Clark, A Treatise on the law and Practice of Receivers §
    533 (3d ed. 1959) (“One claiming an interest in the property in the hands of the receiver,
    or claiming any relief in respect to the possession and control of the res may apply to the
    court appointing the receiver [and] ask to be made a party . . . .”); accord 
    Hannigan, 181 A. at 664
    (“Under the old Chancery Practice, [taking an exception to a receiver’s
    6
    permitted intervention, then the creditor litigated the claim before the court as if it were an
    ordinary civil proceeding.21 Effectively, under the common law system, the court
    conducted a de novo review on a potentially different record. Section 296 and the related
    Court of Chancery Rules streamlined the exceptions process by replacing the formality of
    intervention with a more straightforward procedure.22 There is no indication, however, that
    the simplified procedure altered the standard of review that prevailed at common law.
    Finally, de novo review of a receiver’s ruling on a claim comports with the standard
    of review that the Delaware Supreme Court has directed trial courts to use when reviewing
    a master’s report. “The standard of review for a master’s findings—both factual and
    legal—is de novo.”23 “When a receiver by order of court hears testimony and proof and
    rejects or allows a claim his action is closely analogous to that of a master.” 24 It follows
    determination] was usually done by [the creditor] intervening in and making himself a real
    party to the action in which the receiver was appointed.”).
    21
    See, e.g., Nat’l Sur. Corp. v. Sharpe, 
    59 S.E.2d 593
    , 596 (N.C. 1950) (“The
    general rule as to evidence in civil actions and proceedings apply on the trial of exceptions
    to reported findings of a receiver in respect to the validity and priority of claims against the
    estate of an insolvent debtor.”); see also 65 Am. Jur. 2d Receivers § 274 (“Where a receiver
    has denied a claim or the circumstances are such that the claim must be determined by the
    court, the claimant must support his or her claim by evidence, either documentary or oral,
    or by a stipulation of facts.”).
    22
    See Clark, supra, § 657(b) (discussing the modern practice of exception by
    motion, noting “the court will generally discourage such claims being presented by the
    method of intervention”).
    23
    
    DiGiacobbe, 743 A.2d at 184
    .
    24
    Clark, supra, § 657; see also 16 William Meade Fletcher et al., Fletcher
    Cyclopedia of the Law of Corporations § 7927 (Perm. Ed., Rev. Vol. 2015) (“In accepting
    7
    that the same standard of review would apply when a trial court review the determinations
    of a receiver.25
    This decision therefore concludes that a de novo standard of review applies when
    this court considers an appeal from a receiver’s determination of a creditor’s claim. It bears
    noting that allowing or disallowing claims is only one of many tasks that a receiver or
    custodian may perform.26 This decision has no cause to determine whether the de novo
    standard of review would apply in other contexts. To the contrary, in a situation where a
    receiver or custodian has exercised judgment regarding the business and affairs of a
    corporation, such as when selling assets or settling a claim, a more deferential standard of
    review would seem warranted.27 Indeed, where the receiver or custodian has exercised the
    or rejecting the claims of creditors, as well as in filing a report of findings of fact and
    conclusions of law, a receiver acts like a master, and objections to a receiver’s findings of
    fact and conclusions of law are reviewed de novo by the district court.” (citing United
    States v. Fairway Capital Corp., 
    433 F. Supp. 2d 226
    , 231-32 (D.R.I. 2006))
    25
    See United States v. ECC P’rs, L.P., 
    820 F. Supp. 2d 654
    , 659-660 (D. Md. 2011)
    (reasoning that federal courts would apply the same de novo standard of review in an appeal
    from a federal receiver as to an appeal from a federal masters); accord Fairway 
    Capital, 433 F. Supp. 2d at 231-32
    .
    26
    See Jacobs, Receivership Practice, at 496-99 (describing practical tasks that a
    receiver must accomplish once appointed).
    27
    See, e.g., In re First Woburn Bancorp., Inc., 
    1999 WL 33318823
    , at *1 (Del. Ch.
    Oct. 5, 1999) (holding “the Receiver’s decision to seek a closing agreement from the I.R.S.,
    while perhaps debatable, has the prima facie protection of the business judgment rule” and
    emphasizing that “[t]he Receiver’s decision is entitled to the protective presumption of the
    business judgment rule in the absence of any persuasive evidence of bad faith, self-dealing,
    gross negligence, or any other reason justifying removal of that protection”); see also Badii
    ex rel. Badii v. Metro. Hospice, Inc., 
    2012 WL 764961
    , at *11 (Del. Ch. Mar. 12, 2012)
    8
    powers that otherwise would rest with the board of directors, a strong argument could be
    made that the standard of review should be at least as deferential as the standard that would
    apply to the board’s decision in the same context. To that end, decisions appointing
    receivers or custodians frequently establish a standard of review that will govern particular
    types of actions.28 This decision has not addressed any context other than an appeal from a
    receiver’s decision disallowing a claim. A ruling on the standard of review that would apply
    in a different context must await a concrete case where that issue is presented.
    Having determined that de novo review of the Receiver’s decision is warranted, the
    next step is to address the substance of the claim. In my view, the Receiver reached the
    right conclusion for the wrong reasons.
    In rejecting Gentile’s claim, the Receiver relied on the statute of limitations for
    contract claims under New York law. As a court of equity, the Court of Chancery is not
    (“In performing these tasks, the receiver may exercise independent business judgment to
    implement, in relation to the IRS offer, or recommend otherwise whatever steps he or she
    determines, in good faith, will maximize the value of the Company for its various
    stakeholders under the circumstances.”).
    28
    See, e.g., Jagodzinski v. Silicon Valley Innovation Co., LLC, 
    2012 WL 593605
    , at
    *2 (Del. Ch. Feb. 14, 2012) (“With respect to matters in which the interests of all members
    are implicated, the decisions of the Receiver shall be subject to review and reversal by the
    Court only on a showing that the Receiver acted in bad faith, in violation of his fiduciary
    duties, or clearly outside the scope of his authority. The Receiver shall be presumed to have
    acted in good faith, reasonably, and in compliance with his fiduciary duties.”).
    9
    bound by statutes of limitation.29 Instead, it applies the doctrine of laches. That said, “[i]n
    determining whether an action is barred by laches, the Court of Chancery will normally,
    but not invariably, apply the period of limitations by analogy as a measure of the period of
    time in which it is reasonable to file suit.”30 Consequently, “[a] filing after the expiration
    of the analogous limitations period is presumptively an unreasonable delay for purposes of
    laches.”31 “[I]f unusual conditions or extraordinary circumstances make it inequitable to
    allow the prosecution of a suit after a briefer, or to forbid its maintenance after a longer
    period than that fixed by the statute” then the court may “determine the extraordinary case
    in accordance with the equities which condition it.”32
    To determine the applicable statute of limitations for a breach of contract claim, a
    Delaware court looks first to the terms of the contract.33 The Receiver applied New York’s
    statute of limitations because the contract selected New York law. That was logical, but
    incorrect. “[C]hoice-of-law provisions in contracts do not apply to statutes of limitations,
    unless a provision expressly includes it. If no provision expressly includes it, then the law
    29
    Reid v. Spazio, 
    970 A.2d 176
    , 183 (Del. 2009) (“Although both laches and statutes
    of limitation operate to time-bar suits, the limitations of actions applicable in a court of law
    are not controlling in equity.”).
    30
    Levey v. Brownstone Asset Mgmt., LP, 
    76 A.3d 764
    , 769 (Del. 2013).
    31
    
    Id. 32 Wright
    v. Scotton, 
    121 A. 69
    , 73 (Del. 1923).
    33
    See Certain Underwriters at Lloyds, London v. Chemtura Corp., 
    160 A.3d 457
    ,
    464 (Del. 2017).
    10
    of the forum applies because the statute of limitations is a procedural matter.”34 The choice-
    of-law provision in the Employment Agreement states: “This Agreement shall be governed
    and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of New York, without reference to
    principles of conflict of laws thereunder.”35 Because it does not expressly apply New
    York’s statute of limitations, the contract provision is not dispositive.
    Absent a specific contractual statute of limitations provision, a Delaware court
    follows a multistep process to identify the applicable statute of limitations. Relevant factors
    include the nature of the claim and where it arose. The analysis begins with Delaware’s
    Borrowing Statute.36 In substance, it states that if claim arose in a jurisdiction that has a
    shorter statute of limitations than Delaware, then the court should use the shorter period.
    The Borrowing Statute does not apply here, because New York’s six-year statute of
    limitations for breach of contract claims is longer than Delaware’s three-year statute.37
    34
    Pivotal Payments Direct Corp. v. Planet Payment, Inc., 
    2015 WL 11120934
    , at
    *3 (Del. Super. Dec. 29, 2015) (footnote omitted). See generally John F. Coyle, The
    Cannons of Construction for Choice-of-Law Clauses, 
    92 Wash. L
    . Rev. 631, 649 (2017)
    (“[M]ost U.S. courts have held that statutes of limitations are procedural and hence not
    covered by a generic choice-of-law clause.”).
    35
    Mot., Ex. 1 § 13.1.
    36
    
    10 Del. C
    . § 8121. See, e.g., Bear Stearns Mortg. Funding Tr. 2006-SLI v. EMC
    Mortg. LLC, 
    2015 WL 139731
    , at *9 (Del. Ch. Jan. 12, 2015). For insightful commentary
    on the Borrowing Statute, see Dylan Consla & Brandon Mordue, Stop Borrowing Trouble:
    Clarifying The Saudi Basic Exception to Delaware’s Borrowing Statute, 41 Del. J. Corp.
    L. 29 (2016).
    37
    Compare N.Y. C.P.L.R. 213(2) with 
    10 Del. C
    . § 8016(a).
    11
    If the Borrowing Statute does not apply, then a Delaware court follows Delaware’s
    general choice-of-law rules to select the operative statute of limitations.38 The governing
    inquiry is “the most significant relationship test set forth in the Restatement (Second) of
    Conflicts of Laws.”39 This test requires that the court evaluate five fact-intensive factors
    “in deciding which state has the most significant relationship.”40
    The limited record created before the Receiver does not provide sufficient
    information to conduct the necessary analysis, although it strongly suggests that New
    York’s statute of limitations would apply. Under the de novo standard of review that
    governs this appeal, the court could conduct further proceedings to determine the operative
    limitations period. In this case, however, the current uncertainty does not require further
    proceedings. New York’s statute of limitations is the longest period that potentially could
    apply, and even under that statute of limitations, Gentile’s claim remains time-barred.
    As noted, New York’s statute of limitations for a claim for breach of a written
    contract is six years.41 “Generally, any Statute of Limitations begins to run when a cause
    of action accrues. In New York, a breach of contract cause of action accrues at the time of
    38
    Bear Stearns, 
    2015 WL 139731
    , at *9 (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting
    In re Washington Mut., Inc., 
    2010 WL 3238903
    , at *6 (Bankr. D. Del. Aug. 13, 2010).
    39
    
    Id. 40 Certain
    Underwriters, 160 A.3d at 465
    .
    41
    N.Y. C.P.L.R. 213(2).
    12
    the breach.”42 Gentile entered into the Employment Agreement on March 4, 2008. He
    asserts the Company stopped paying him on February 16, 2009. He resigned as CEO on
    June 18, 2010. On July 2, his attorney sent the Company a letter demanding the same
    $497,739 that Gentile now seeks in his claim. Given these facts, the latest date on which
    Gentile’s claim could have accrued is June 18, 2010, when he resigned from the Company.
    Six years from that date is June 18, 2016. Gentile did not submit his claim until more than
    eight months later, on February 14, 2017. Absent any basis for tolling, Gentile’s claim is
    barred even under New York’s generous statute of limitations.
    Gentile seeks to invoke several bases for tolling. “Normally, when a foreign
    jurisdiction’s limitations period is found to apply, that jurisdiction’s tolling laws will also
    apply.”43 Gentile argues that under New York law, the limitations period was tolled (i) by
    his filling of a previous suit, (ii) by the Company’s subsequent re-affirmance of the debt,
    and (iii) as a matter of equity. None of these arguments succeed.
    Under New York law, the filing of an action that is later discontinued voluntarily
    does not toll the limitations period.44 On November 22, 2010, Gentile filed suit against the
    42
    Ely-Cruikshank Co., Inc. v. Bank of Montreal, 
    615 N.E.2d 985
    , 986 (N.Y. 1993).
    43
    Hatfield v. Halifax PLC, 
    564 F.3d 1177
    , 1184 (9th Cir. 2009) (citing Restatement
    (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 142 cmt. f (1971)).
    44
    See N.Y. C.P.L.R. 205(a) (stating that actions terminated by voluntary
    discontinuance are not eligible for tolling); George v. Mt. Sinai Hosp., 
    390 N.E.2d 1156
    ,
    1159-61 (N.Y. 1979) (explaining operation of statute).
    13
    Company in the Supreme Court of the State of New York for breach of the Employment
    Agreement. On August 24, 2011, the parties filed a Stipulation to Arbitrate Dispute and a
    Stipulation of Discontinuance. Gentile has not produced any evidence that the dispute was
    arbitrated or resulted in further litigation.45 Because the New York action was discontinued,
    it did not toll the statute of limitations.
    Under New York law, “[a]n acknowledgement or promise to perform a previously
    defaulted contract . . . restart[s] the statute of limitations.”46 The Company did not promise
    to perform. Gentile has pointed to a Form 10-K dated April 23, 2010, in which the
    Company acknowledged that it “owe[d] Mr. Gentile approximately $200,000 under his
    employment agreement for 2009.”47 Accepting that this disclosure restarted the statute of
    limitations on April 23, 2010, it ran six years later, on April 23, 2016. Gentile filed his
    claim on February 14, 2017.
    Finally, equitable tolling does not apply. New York law recognizes only three “well-
    settled and limited” occasions when the doctrine operates: “(1) the plaintiff timely filed the
    45
    Dkt. 60 (containing email from Gentile admitting the evidence of the New York
    lawsuit is “all that [his attorneys] found”).
    46
    Guilbert v. Gardner, 
    480 F.3d 140
    , 149-50 (2d Cir. 2007) (applying New York
    law); see also Lew Morris Demolition Co., Inc. v. Bd. of Ed., 
    355 N.E.2d 369
    , 371 (N.Y.
    1976) (noting New York has replaced the common law, now requiring a writing which
    “recognize[s] an existing debt and . . . contain[s] nothing inconsistent with an intention on
    the part of the debtor to pay it”).
    47
    Dkt. 53, Ex. 3.
    14
    complaint in the wrong forum, (2) the defendant actively misled the plaintiff, or (3) the
    plaintiff in some extraordinary way had been prevented from complying with the
    limitations period.”48 The first indisputably does not apply. The second and third do not
    apply either. The Company did not do anything to mislead Gentile or to prevent him from
    prosecuting his claim. He previously sued in New York, but then he chose not to pursue
    the litigation to its conclusion.
    In sum, the Receiver correctly determined that Gentile’s claim is barred by the
    statute of limitations. The Receiver reached this result erroneously by looking to the
    choice-of-law provision in the Employment Agreement and applying New York’s statute
    of limitations directly. This decision has reached the same result by applying the doctrine
    of laches, using the statutory limitations period as the presumptive period for the laches
    analysis, attempting a choice-of-law analysis, assuming that New York’s limitations period
    would apply because it is the most generous to Gentile, and finding that the statutory period
    ran before Gentile filed his claim. Consequently, after conducting a de novo review on the
    record developed before the Receiver, this court overrules Gentile’s exceptions. The
    Receiver’s motion to confirm is granted. This court adopts the Receiver’s determination as
    a decision of this court.
    48
    O’Hara v. Bayliner, 
    679 N.E.2d 1049
    , 1054 (N.Y. 1997).
    15