Your logic is complex, you're mixing many elements that can produce errors: namely CLOB and BFILE. You should try first to isolate which element in your function leads to this abnormal behaviour.
I suggest you run a simple function to make sure that your BLOB logic is fine:
create or replace FUNCTION f$bfile_to_blob
RETURN BLOB IS
bb BLOB;
BEGIN
DBMS_LOB.CREATETEMPORARY(bb, TRUE, DBMS_LOB.SESSION);
bb := hextoraw('FFFFFFFF');
return bb;
END;
select rawtohex(dbms_lob.substr(f$bfile_to_blob, 4000, 1)) from dual;
This should produce FFFFFFFF. Now you know that the problem lies with your reading of the BFILE object. We can see in your code that you have a loop withoug an exit condition. Since the program exits, we deduct that your loop exits with an error.
The documentation explains that the exception is raised by the READ procedure:
The number of bytes or characters actually read is returned in the amount parameter. If the input offset points past the End of LOB, then amount is set to 0, and a NO_DATA_FOUND exception is raised.
The exception is raised and the function exits without having return anything.
As you may know, NO_DATA_FOUND exceptions are not considered errors inside an SQL statement. The error is interpreted as NULL by the SELECT query.
You should modify your function to catch this error and exit the loop gracefully:
FUNCTION f$bfile_to_blob(I_FID_ID IN INTEGER)
RETURN BLOB IS
bf BFILE;
Amount INTEGER := 32767;
Position INTEGER := 1;
buffer RAW(32767);
bl LONG RAW := '';
bb BLOB;
BEGIN
SELECT fid_bckp
INTO bf
FROM filedoc
WHERE fid_id = I_FID_ID;
dbms_lob.open(bf, dbms_lob.lob_readonly);
DBMS_LOB.CREATETEMPORARY(bb, TRUE, DBMS_LOB.SESSION);
LOOP
BEGIN
dbms_lob.read(bf, Amount, Position, buffer);
EXCEPTION
WHEN NO_DATA_FOUND THEN
EXIT;
END;
dbms_lob.writeappend(bb, amount, buffer);
Position := Position + Amount;
END LOOP;
dbms_lob.close(bf);
RETURN bb;
END;