Bonneville Power Administration (“BPA”) appeals the district court’s affir-mance of two orders entered by the bankruptcy court. Debtor Mirant Corporation and related entities filed a petition under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code, triggering a dispute between the parties regarding the ability of BPA to terminate an executory contract for the future purchase of electric power. On the one hand, the Bankruptcy Code’s automatic stay, effective upon the filing of a Chapter 11 petition, precludes any act to obtain possession of or exercise control over property of the estate. See 11 U.S.C. § 362(a). On the other hand, in an executory contract related to the future call of energy purchase by BPA, see generally § 365, the parties agreed to an ipso facto clause that provided for default and a termination payment in the event of a bankruptcy filing, see § 365(e). 1 BPA argues that the Bankruptcy Code (or the “Code”) permits it to terminate the executory contract pursuant to the contract’s ipso facto clause. See § 365(e)(2)(A). The parties now dispute the priority of the two Chapter 11 provisions: the automatic stay and the termination arguably permitted by the combined effect of the ipso facto clause and § 365(e)(2)(A).
*241 This appeal requires us to address the intersection of three relevant statutory provisions: 11 U.S.C. § 362(a) (the automatic bankruptcy stay); 11 U.S.C. § 365(e)(2)(A) (permitting a nondebtor party to an executory contract to terminate or modify such contract when applicable law excuses the nondebtor from accepting or rendering performance to the trustee or an assignee); and the Anti-Assignment Act (or “the Act”), 41 U.S.C. § 15 (prohibiting transfer of contracts to which the United States is a party).
Concluding that the bankruptcy stay precedes any termination permitted by either the Anti-Assignment Act or the agreement of the parties, we affirm the district court’s order declaring BPA to have violated the automatic stay. Finding no abuse of discretion in the court’s determination that cause was not shown where the Anti-Assignment Act is not an applicable law under § 365(e)(2)(A), we affirm also the denial of BPA’s motion to lift or modify the stay.
I. Background
A Factual Background
Mirant Corporation is an international energy company that produces and sells electricity in the United States and abroad. Appellee Mirant Americas Energy Marketing, L.P. (“Mirant”) is a subsidiary of Mirant Corporation and engages in asset risk management, including commodities, energy, and financial product trading. Mirant is responsible for procuring fuel and selling power for Mirant Corporation’s operating facilities.
BPA is a federal power marketing agency within the United States Department of Energy. BPA was created in 1937 by Congress to market low-cost hydroelectric power generated by a series of federal dams along the Columbia River in the Pacific Northwest.
See generally
Bonneville Project Act of 1937, 16 U.S.C. § 832. Originally, BPA marketed the energy produced for the benefit of the public, particularly domestic and rural customers, giving preference and priority to public bodies and cooperatives.
See
§ 832c(a). For some time, surplus in energy production meant BPA could market freely to all who desired to purchase in the area. In 1980, increasing demands upon the supply triggered, in part, Congress’s enactment of the Pacific Northwest Electric Power Planning and Conservation Act, 16 U.S.C. §§ 839-839h, which required BPA to offer new contracts to its customers.
See Aluminum Co. of Am. v. Cent. Lincoln People’s Util. Dist.,
BPA and Mirant are parties to the Western Systems Power Pool Agreement (the “WSPPA”), a contract the parties agree is standard for electric power sales. The WSPPA is an umbrella agreement governing electric power transactions. Subject to the WSPPA, BPA and Mirant’s predecessor in interest (Southern Company Energy Marketing, L.P. 2 ) entered two agreements: (1) the Agreement to Enable Future Purchases, Sales, and Exchanges of Power and Other Services No. 99PB-10588 (the “Enabling Agreement”) and (2) an option contract though which BPA purchased a one-time call option for the future *242 purchase of a set amount of firm power from Mirant over a three-year period commencing in 2004 (the “Confirmation Agreement”).
Together, the WSPPA, the Enabling Agreement, and the Confirmation Agreement (collectively, the “Agreement”) form the sum of the parties’ contractual rights and obligations. 3 Under the terms of the Agreement, BPA owed no obligation to exercise its option, and if it did not do so, the option expired on the strike date provided, December 23, 2003. The parties agree, and the lower courts noted, that BPA did not exercise and, in practical terms, would not have exercised its option because the option price bargained for in the Agreement exceeded the market price of energy during the relevant period of the Agreement.
The Agreement includes a default provision, or ipso facto clause, that authorizes BPA to terminate the contract and claim liquidated damages if Mirant petitioned for bankruptcy before the option period expired. The Agreement provides that default by the institution of a bankruptcy proceeding triggers the non-defaulting party’s “right to terminate all transactions between the Parties under this Agreement upon written notice” and the non-defaulting party’s right to a termination payment. Upon termination, the non-defaulting party may liquidate all transactions with the debtor and demand a termination payment equal to the market-based cost of replacing the option contract. 4 The Agreement also provides that all transactions under the agreement are forward contracts and that the parties are forward contract merchants as defined by the Bankruptcy Code. See 11 U.S.C. § 556.
On July 1, 2003, BPA wrote to Mirant requesting, pursuant to the Agreement, adequate assurances of Mirant’s ability to perform. Mirant responded by letter on July 3, stating its willingness to wire assurance but disputing the reasonable estimate of the amount of assurance. On July 7, Mirant wired to BPA $523,389 as adequate assurance of its ability to perform.
B. Procedural Background
On July 14, 2003, Mirant Corporation and 82 of its direct and indirect subsidiaries, including Mirant, filed voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy petitions. That day, the court held a hearing and entered an interim order authorizing the Debtors to comply with the terms of prepetition trading contracts and to enter into postpetition trading contracts in the normal course of business and setting a final hearing for the entry of a final order of authorization. The bankruptcy court also approved the joint administration of the Debtors’ cases. 5
Under the Code, Mirant as a debtor remains in possession of its estate. See 11 *243 U.S.C. § 1101. 6 Mirant continues to conduct its business in the ordinary course. On July 16, 2003, the bankruptcy court ordered the parties, specifically including all governmental units, to comply with the Code’s automatic stay provision, § 362, and its provision regarding executory contracts and unexpired leases, § 365 (the “Order to Comply”). 7 The Order to Comply enjoined BPA from multiple acts affecting Mirant or the debtor estate, including interference in any way with any and all of the property of any of the Debtors. The Order to Comply expressed that it had no effect upon any exceptions to the automatic stay, based upon any section of the Bankruptcy Code, or upon the right of any party to seek relief from the automatic stay according to § 362(d).
BPA terminated its Confirmation Agreement with Mirant shortly thereafter, and Mirant characterizes this termination as a violation of the bankruptcy court’s order and stay. On July 30, 2003, BPA notified Mirant in writing that the Chapter 11 petition constituted default under the parties’ Agreement and that accordingly, BPA terminated all transactions with Mirant. BPA stated that under the terms of the Agreement, both parties were forward contract merchants and that the Agreement was a forward contract for purposes of 11 U.S.C. § 556. BPA also demanded a termination payment from Mirant under the Agreement of $1,085,040 8 and set forth terms for the payment of that amount in light of the assurance Mirant had already provided and the amount BPA yet owed Mirant under the Agreement. BPA requested payment of the remaining amount allegedly owed by Mirant, $533,026, within three days of receipt of the July 30 letter. 9
In response to BPA’s termination letter and termination payment demand, Mirant wrote to BPA on August 7, 2003, challenging BPA’s status as a forward contract merchant under the Code, describing BPA’s purported termination of the Agreement as a violation of §§ 362 and 365 of Chapter 11, and demanding that BPA immediately withdraw its purported termination of the Agreement and perform. BPA later responded by letter, notifying Mirant of BPA’s refusal to withdraw the termination letter.
On August 27, 2003, the bankruptcy court entered its final authorization order to Debtors, permitting compliance with prepetition trading contracts and entrance into post-petition trading contracts in the ordinary course of business, providing credit support for trading contracts, and authorizing assumption of prepetition trading contracts. This final authorization order contemplated the possible future event of a creditor, such as BPA, demanding acceptance or rejection of a trading option contract.
*244 Before the bankruptcy court, on October 17, 2008, Mirant filed a motion to enforce the automatic stay and for contempt, arguing (1) that the transmission of BPA’s July 30 termination letter violated the automatic stay, 11 U.S.C. § 362(a), because the act constituted an attempt to obtain possession of property of the estate and to exercise control over the estate; and (2) that BPA, as an entity of a government agency, cannot be a forward contract merchant under the Code’s definition (the “Motion to Enforce”). BPA responded that under the Code, it was a forward contract merchant and that the Anti-Assignment Act, 41 U.S.C. § 15, bars any assignment of the Agreement, thus permitting BPA’s termination of the Agreement consistent with 11 U.S.C. § 365(e)(2)(A). The bankruptcy court heard argument on November 12, 2003, 10 ruled that BPA had violated the stay, and offered BPA an option either to rescind its termination or to return for a continued hearing on the motion for contempt related to that violation. 11
On November 17, 2003, the court entered an order, to which the parties had agreed in the interim, declaring that BPA had violated the automatic stay, denying the relief sought by BPA, ordering BPA to rescind its termination of the Confirmation Agreement, and returning the parties to the status quo that existed immediately prior to the delivery of the Termination Letter (the “Stay Violation Order”). 12 BPA appealed the Stay Violation Order to the district court. During this period, other creditors, aside from BPA, filed motions for modification of the stay and motions to require Mirant’s assumption and assignment or rejection of various trading contracts, and they received bankruptcy court rulings on those motions.
On December 5, 2003, BPA filed a motion to modify the automatic stay retroactively to permit termination of the Confirmation Agreement (the “Motion to Modify Stay”). At that time, the option of the Confirmation Agreement was soon to expire on December 23. The bankruptcy court held a December 17 hearing on the motion and responses, and the court subsequently denied the Motion to Modify Stay. In its memorandum opinion, the bankruptcy court cited the Ninth Circuit in holding that (1) the stay applies to prevent unilateral termination even if a contract is unassumable and contains a valid ipso fac-
*245
to clause and (2) the stay must be modified before the ipso facto clause may be invoked.
See Computer Commc’ns, Inc. v. Codex Corp. (In re Computer Commc’ns),
BPA appealed the order denying the Motion to Modify Stay, and the district court consolidated BPA’s appeals of the two bankruptcy court orders. The district court affirmed the bankruptcy court’s Stay Violation Order and denial of BPA’s Motion to Modify Stay on August 13, 2004. BPA timely appealed to this Court.
II. Discussion
A. Standard of Review
We review questions of law, including the interpretation of statutory language,
de novo. See, e.g., Fed. Trade Comm’n v. Nat’l Bus. Consultants, Inc.,
The bankruptcy court’s denial of a motion for modification of a stay is reviewed for abuse of discretion.
See, e.g., Chunn v. Chunn (In re Chunn),
B. The Parties ’ Arguments
The parties agree that the Confirmation Agreement here is an executory contract under the Bankruptcy Code and that therefore the Code’s provision for ex-ecutory contracts applies. See 11 U.S.C. § 365. 13 Generally, § 365(e) of the Code bars the enforcement of ipso facto clauses in executory contracts, such as the ipso facto clause in the Agreement here. § 365(e)(1). 14 However, an exception to *246 this general rule appears in subsection (e)(2)(A),
(2) Paragraph (1) of this subsection does not apply to an executory contract ..., if—
(A)(i) applicable law excuses a party, other than the debtor, to such contract or lease from accepting performance from or rendering performance to the trustee or to an assignee of such contract or lease, whether or not such contract or lease prohibits or restricts assignment of rights or delegation of duties; and
(ii) such party does not consent to such assumption or assignment ....
§ 865(e)(2)(A) (emphasis added).
BPA argues that the subsection (e)(2)(A) exception applies to this ease, permitting the Agreement’s ipso facto clause to have effect, terminating the Agreement as of Mirant’s Chapter 11 filing, and precluding any review by the bankruptcy court. According to BPA, the exception applies because the Anti-Assignment Act is an “applicable law” under the text of § 365(e)(2)(A) that excuses BPA “from accepting performance from or rendering performance to the trustee or to an assign-ee” of the Agreement. § 365(e)(2)(A).
The Anti-Assignment Act provides,
No contract or order, or any interest therein, shall be transferred by the party to whom such contract or order is given to any other party, and any such transfer shall cause the annulment of the contract or order transferred, so far as the United States is concerned.
41 U.S.C. § 15(a).
BPA explains the Act’s application to this Agreement as follows. BPA argues that § 365(e)(2)(A) carves out a class of executory contracts whose ipso facto clauses may be given effect when nonbankrupt-cy, applicable law renders the contract unassignable (in the abstract as opposed to upon a factual showing) to “the trustee or an assignee” without consent of the non-debtor party. This Agreement is such an executory contract, according to BPA, because the Anti-Assignment Act excuses the United States from accepting performance from an assignee. In this vein, BPA asks this Court to join other circuits that have held that § 365(e)(2)(A) creates a hypothetical test, under which a debtor is precluded from assuming or assigning an executory contract even if the applicable law would not bar assignment in the actual circumstances before the court but does bar assignment to a hypothetical third party,
“i.e.,
under the applicable law, could the government refuse performance from [an assignee].”
See In re West Elecs., Inc.,
BPA asks this Court to hold that under a hypothetical test, § 365(e)(2) permits automatic termination of the Agreement pri- or to judicial review and prior to the entry of automatic stay, or in the alternative, *247 that § 865(e)(2) requires a bankruptcy-court to lift the automatic stay in order for the ipso facto clause to be enforced. Accordingly, BPA challenges both the bankruptcy court’s entry of automatic stay and denial of a modification to the stay because the ipso facto clause and the Anti-Assignment Act permit BPA to terminate the Agreement automatically upon Mirant’s Chapter 11 filing prior to any review by or approval of the bankruptcy court under § 365(e)(2)(A).
Mirant responds that the automatic stay provision, § 362(a), is violated by BPA’s termination of the Agreement, that is, BPA’s attempt to exercise control of property of the estate without the oversight of the bankruptcy court. Mirant argues the bankruptcy court did not abuse its discretion in entering the stay because the stay is automatic and either the Anti-Assignment Act does not apply because there was no transfer or, even if the Act does apply, the stay’s automatic entry precedes any termination permitted by the combined effect of the Act, § 365(e)(2)(A), and the ipso facto clause of the Agreement. Mirant also argues the bankruptcy court did not err in denying BPA’s motion to modify the stay because BPA failed to show the cause required under § 362(d)(1). In support, Mirant urges this Court to adopt an actual, or as-applied, analysis to determine whether the Anti-Assignment Act applies to this case and to conclude that it does not (thereby foreclosing termination via the ipso facto clause) because no assignment occurred here.
C. Analysis
1. Hypothetical vs. Actual Test
We begin by addressing the question that affects each of the issues raised by BPA, that is, whether this Circuit adopts the actual or hypothetical approach to the text of § 365(e)(2)(A). The hypothetical test was first announced and adopted in the sole circuit opinion to address the conjunctive effect of § 365 and the Anti-Assignment Act.
West,
We think that by including the words “or the debtor in possession” in 11 U.S.C. § 365(c)(1) Congress anticipated an argument like the one here made and wanted that section to reflect its *248 judgment that in the context of the assumption and assignment of executory contracts, a solvent contractor and an insolvent debtor in possession going through bankruptcy are materially distinct entities. While the relevant case law is very sparse, it supports our understanding of the interplay between ... § 365(c)(1) and 41 U.S.C. § 15.
Id. (footnote omitted).
In other words, under the Third Circuit’s hypothetical approach, which rested on language in § 365(c)(1) that does not appear in § 365(e)(2)(A), a court must ask whether BPA could refuse to accept performance of the Agreement from
any
as-signee because the Anti-Assignment Act makes the Agreement unassignable as a matter of law. If so, then irrelevant is the fact that the debtor did not actually assign, intend to assign, or attempt to assign the contract, and consequently the executory contract is terminable by its ipso facto provision under § 365(c).
See id.; see also RCI Tech. Corp. v. Sunterra Corp. (In re Sunterra Coup.),
In contrast, the
West
dissent believed that Congress did not intend
for
“a ‘solvent contractor and an insolvent debtor in possession going through bankruptcy’ [to be] different entities for the purposes of the [Anti-Assignment Act].”
West,
The actual or as-applied determination of whether a law is “applicable” under § 365(c) and (e)(2)(A) was first adopted by the First Circuit.
Summit Inv.,
Although this Circuit has addressed § 365(c)(1), we have yet to address § 365(e) or to name the test we apply to the determination of whether a nonbank-
*249
ruptey law applies under either § 365(c)(1) or § 365(e)(2)(A).
See Stumpf v. McGee (In re O’Connor),
The plain text of § 365(e)(2)(A) requires an actual test for determining whether a law is “applicable” under the exception, permitting enforcement of an ipso facto clause. According to the statute’s plain language, an executory contract’s ipso fac-to clause may be enforced if “applicable law excuses a [nondebtor] party ... from accepting performance from or rendering performance ... to an assignee of such contract” and that non-debtor party does not consent to “such assumption or assign
*250
ment.” 11 U.S.C. § 365(e)(2)(A). Congress might have chosen the exception to apply if any law prohibited the assignment, but instead Congress tethered the exception to “applicable” law that “excuses a party.” It is axiomatic that an applicable law must apply to a set of circumstances; BPA creates smoke and erects mirrors when it argues that a contract not assignable as a matter of law, even if no such assignment existed in fact and no excuse existed in fact for the nondebtor party to refuse acceptance or performance in a particular situation, satisfies the language chosen by Congress in drafting the § 365(e)(2)(A) exception. The law that releases a nondebtor from the general rule foreclosing the enforcement of an ipso fac-to clause must apply to something and must excuse the nondebtor from some specific performance or acceptance,
see
§ 365(e)(2)(A); thus, if the debtor demonstrates that no application exists or that no excuse obtains on a given record, then the congressional language announces such a circumstance is material, making the § 365(e)(2)(A) exception unavailable. The applicability of the law under § 365(e)(2)(A) is determined not in the abstract but on the record at hand.
See Cajun Elec.,
That applicability is determined based upon the case is supported also by the congressional choice to structure the exception as a two-part test, the second portion of which requires a fact-based showing. See 11 U.S.C. § 365(e)(2)(A)(i)-(ii). Subsection (ii) provides that the § 365(e)(2)(A) exception lies only where “such [nondebtor] party does not consent to such assumption or assignment.” § 365(e)(2)(A)(ii). The combination of the plain text and the overall structure of the test that must be met in order for the exception to arise communicates that Congress intended § 365(e)(2)(A) to apply to a given factual situation rather than to a class of executory contracts as BPA urges.
BPA argues that the use of the adjective “such” merely refers to the assumption and assignment provided in the preceding subsection and does not demand that Congress intended an actual test would determine the exception’s availability. We are not persuaded that standing alone, Congress’s use of the adjective “such” to modify “assignment” in § 365(e)(2)(A)(ii) mandates the use of an actual test. The modifier “such” references the assignments provided in the preceding subsection and does not, on its own, require an as-applied approach to the determination of whether a law applies to permit an ipso facto clause’s enforcement. However, in combination with the other factors that demand a case-by-case inquiry into whether a nonbankruptcy law applies to permit termination by ipso facto clause, we cannot agree with so broad an analysis as permitted by the entirely theoretical approach countenanced by those courts adopting the hypothetical approach.
Finally, the plain text of the law proffered by BPA as applicable here, the Anti-Assignment Act, cuts against the broad application advanced by BPA. In theory, a law of such general applicability might exist to merit application in most if not all circumstances under § 365(e)(2)(A), but the Anti-Assignment Act is, by its own terms, not so broadly applicable. Subsection (a) of the Act provides a general rule for annulment of a public contract upon a transfer by a party other than the United States. 41 U.S.C. § 15(a). Subsection (b), though, limits the application of the general rule, and the limitation applies on the basis of specific facts. “The provisions of subsection (a) of this section shall not apply in any case in which the moneys due or to become due from the United States *251 ... under a contract providing for payments aggregating $1,000 or more, are assigned to a bank, trust company, or other financing institution” given other fact-based circumstances. § 15(b) (emphasis added). Both the text of the Anti-Assignment Act and the text of § 365(e)(2)(A) require a case-by-case inquiry into the application of the Act to the executory contract or lease at issue in the bankruptcy proceeding. As such, we hold that with respect to § 365(e)(2)(A) and the Anti-Assignment Act, the actual test must be used to determine the Act’s applicability to a given case. 18 When the law to be applied to a § 365(e)(2)(A) determination cannot apply to the case and the record before the bankruptcy court in fact or law, then § 365(e)(2)(A)’s exception cannot give effect to an ipso facto clause.
2. Automatic Stay
Given that the actual test applies based upon the plain language of § 365(e)(2)(A), we next conclude that the automatic stay must precede any enforcement of an ipso facto clause ultimately permitted by a bankruptcy court under § 365(e)(2)(A).
Section 362 provides for an automatic but not permanent stay against “any act to obtain possession of property of the estate” from which a party may seek relief “for cause, including the lack of adequate protection of an interest in property.” 11 U.S.C. § 362(a)(3), (d)(1);
Cueva,
Sweeping all of the debtor’s property into the bankruptcy estate created at filing is the means by which the Code achieves effective and equitable bankruptcy administration. Only through a comprehensive administration of the debtor’s property, wherever located and by whomever controlled, can the court shield the property from creditors’ unauthorized grasp; prevent harassment of debtors; and ultimately ensure equal distribution among creditors.
Burgess v. Sikes (In re Burgess),
No. 04-30189,
Furthermore, this Court has recognized the automatic stay’s broad application and noted that such breadth reflects a congressional intent that courts will presume protection of property when faced with uncertainty or ambiguity.
Brown v. Chesnut (In re Chesnut),
Here, Mirant’s interest in the Agreement, even if it were ultimately terminable, became property of the estate upon Mirant’s filing on July 14, 2003. Accordingly, the Agreement was subject to review by the bankruptcy court, and a party with an interest in an executory contract or lease must come before the bankruptcy court to move for a modification or lift of the stay under § 362(d) in order to effect the terms of an ipso facto clause under § 365(e)(2)(A).
The Bankruptcy Code, which must be read and must function as a whole, demands this conclusion. The Ninth Circuit has noted three compelling reasons to read the Code in this manner.
See Computer Commc’ns,
Moreover, on this record, the interplay of the Bankruptcy Code and the Anti-Assignment Act in particular comports with the conclusion that the automatic stay must precede any termination permitted by an ipso facto clause and § 365(e)(2)(A). While the Bankruptcy Code and this Court’s caselaw interpreting it require that the initiation of the broad automatic stay is immediate upon filing, such automatic triggering is absent from the text of the Anti-Assignment Act and caselaw interpreting the Act. According to BPA, the termination permitted by § 365(e)(2)(A) and the ipso facto clause of the Agreement here is automatic upon Mirant’s filing for relief under the Bankruptcy Code and precedes the entry of automatic stay. We disagree. The Anti-Assignment Act, instead, provides the government with an option to rescind its contracts upon transfer. The Anti-Assignment Act permits the United States to elect its response to the transfer of a contract to which it is a party. The United States may either waive its rights under the Act and continue performance, or it may terminate the contract.
See Tuftco Corp. v. United States,
Accordingly, the automatic stay prohibited BPA from terminating the Agreement. Even when § 365(e)(2)(A) will ultimately permit a nondebtor party to terminate an executory contract by virtue of the combined effect of § 365(e)(2)(A), applicable law, and an ipso facto clause, the nondebt- or party must seek relief from the stay before the bankruptcy court under *253 § 362(d). Therefore, we affirm the bankruptcy court’s Stay Violation Order.
S. The Denial of Modification to Stay
We next address BPA’s contention that the lower courts erred in failing to lift or modify the stay under § 362(d)(1). Based upon our conclusion that the Anti-Assignment Act has no application on this record, we cannot say the bankruptcy court abused its discretion in denying BPA’s Motion to Modify Stay. The bankruptcy court denied BPA’s motion because the court concluded that BPA failed to show cause for relief from stay under § 362(d)(1), although a portion of the court’s conclusion also necessarily rested upon the legal determination that the Anti-Assignment Act is not an applicable law under § 365(c)(1) or (e)(2)(A).
The Bankruptcy Code does not precisely define “cause” under § 362(d)(1), and in the past we have noted that this lack of definition affords “flexibility to the bankruptcy courts.”
Little Creek Dev. Co. v. Commonwealth Mortgage Corp. (In re Little Creek Dev. Co.),
Here, BPA has not demonstrated cause because the Anti-Assignment Act is not an applicable law on this record because here there has been no transfer. In order for the Act to apply to this case, it must be said that the Agreement was “transferred” within the meaning of the Act.
See
41 U.S.C. § 15. The caselaw, however, does not support BPA’s reading of transfer under the Act. On this record, the Anti-Assignment Act cannot apply because no assignment, which would be prohibited by the Act, occurred between prepetition debtor and debtor in possession for three salient reasons. First, Mirant never affirmatively assumed or rejected the Agreement.
See
11 U.S.C. § 365(a).
19
According to § 365(f)(2)(A), assumption must precede assignment.
See
§ 365(f)(2)(A);
see also Cinicola v. Scharffenberger,
The parties dispute whether, as a matter of law, a transfer or assignment occurs as a result of the change in status from pre-petition debtor to debtor in possession. If the change in the status produces a transfer of the executory contract, then according to BPA, the Anti-Assignment Act applies. If the change in status is nominal only and there is no transfer or assignment as a matter of law, then, as Mirant argues, the Anti-Assignment Act may have no applicability in the absence of a transfer. See 41 U.S.C. § 15 (providing that “any such transfer shall cause the annulment of the contract or order transferred, so far as the United States is concerned”). We need not, on this record, resolve this res nova question. 21 We hold only what this record permits, that is, no transfer occurs under the Anti-Assignment Act where the debtor neither assumes nor attempts to assume the execu-tory contract, the nondebtor concedes there is no assignment in fact, and the nondebtor, seeking to invoke the combined effect of the Anti-Assignment Act and § 365(e)(2)(A), fails to move for assumption or rejection under § 365(d)(2). In such a circumstance, where no party has moved to assume the executory contract before the bankruptcy court, no assignment occurs between prepetition debtor and debtor in possession with respect to the Anti-Assignment Act and § 365(e)(2)(A).
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the bankruptcy court correctly determined that a Chapter 11 automatic stay must precede the enforcement of any eventual right a nondebtor may have to terminate an exec-utory contract under § 365(e)(2)(A). Accordingly, we affirm the bankruptcy *255 court’s Stay Violation Order. Also, the bankruptcy court did not abuse its discretion to deny modification or lift of stay where no assignment or transfer had occurred or been attempted. On such a record, the Anti-Assignment Act is not an applicable law under § 365(e)(2)(A).
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. See Black's Law Dictionary 847 (8th ed.2004) (defining ipso facto clause as a "contract clause that specifies the consequences of a party's bankruptcy”).
. Mirant Corporation was originally a wholly owned subsidiary of Southern Company Energy Marketing.
. Although the parties below disputed the integration of the contracts, some of which were executory in nature and others of which were not, the bankruptcy court assumed without deciding that the Confirmation Agreement was an executory contract and that the three contracts formed a single agreement. In their briefings to this Court, both parties treat the three contracts as an integrated agreement.
. As a practical matter, the bankruptcy court noted that the peculiar facts of this case mean the primary dispute between the parties is the termination payment. Because market prices were lower than the option price of the Agreement during the relevant period, both parties acknowledged that the Agreement would never have been performed. According to the bankruptcy court, BPA seeks to declare Mir-ant’s default and thereby obtain a claim against Mirant in bankruptcy proceedings for the amount of the termination payment.
.The United States Trustee for the Northern District of Texas appointed three official committees in the jointly administered cases.
. A debtor in possession "means debtor except when a person that has qualified under section 322 of this title is serving as trustee in the case.” 11 U.S.C. § 1101.
. Section 362 provides for automatic stay of, among other actions, "any act to obtain possession of property of the estate or of property from the estate or to exercise control over property of the estate,” 11 U.S.C. § 362(a)(3), and provides exceptions to the automatic entry of stay, § 362(b).
Section 365 provides for the administration of contracts, such as the one at issue here, including the debtor’s assumption or rejection of such a contract. 11 U.S.C. § 365(a).
. BPA calculated the termination payment based upon market quotes for replacement transactions on July 30, 2003.
. By its own description, the July 30 letter constituted a contracting officer's final decision under 41 U.S.C. § 605, permitting Mirant to appeal the decision to either the Department of Energy Contract Board of Appeals or the United States Court of Federal Claims.
. During the hearing, BPA represented that the only basis for Mirant's default under the Agreement was the filing of a bankruptcy petition.
. The bankruptcy court also ruled BPA was not a forward contract merchant. A forward contract merchant must be a person under the plain text of the Code. 11 U.S.C. § 101(26). The bankruptcy court reasoned that because a governmental entity is not a person under the code, see §§ 101(26), 101(41), BPA could not be a forward contract merchant. As such, the court concluded, BPA is not authorized by the Code to enjoy the exceptions to automatic stay provided to forward contract merchants under §§ 362(b)(6) and 556. BPA waived its challenge to the bankruptcy court’s interpretation of "forward contract merchant" on appeal to this Court.
.BPA subsequently wrote to counsel for Mirant, withdrawing its Termination Letter and reinstating the Confirmation Agreement. BPA noticed its retention of rights under the Agreement and applicable law and expressed that its compliance with the Stay Violation Order did not constitute waiver of those rights. The issue of waiver—whether BPA waived its challenge to the Stay Violation Order by agreeing to withdraw its termination—was presented to the district court, which concluded that BPA did not waive its challenge to the Stay Violation Order because the bankruptcy court had already ruled that BPA violated the stay when the court presented BPA the option of either rescission of the termination letter or continuation on the motion for contempt. Mirant does not argue BPA waived its ability to challenge the Stay Violation Order on appeal to this Court.
. "[T]he legislative history of § 365(a) indicates that Congress intended the term [execu-tory contract] to mean a contract 'on which performance remains due to some extent on both sides.' "
NLRB v. Bildisco & Bildisco,
. Section 365(e)(1) provides the general rule,
(1) Notwithstanding a provision in an exec-utory contract or unexpired lease, or in applicable law, an executory contract or unexpired lease of the debtor may not be terminated or modified, and any right or obligation under such contract or lease may not be terminated or modified, at any time after the commencement of the case solely because of a provision in such contract that is conditioned on—
(B) the commencement of a case under this title ....
§ 365(e)(1).
. BPA secondarily argues that if the Act must be applied to the facts, rather than in the abstract, then the assignment here occurs as a result of Mirant's change in status from prepetition entity to debtor in possession. But before the bankruptcy court, BPA conceded there was no assignment on this record from Mirant prepetition to Mirant as debtor in possession. BPA argued instead that subsection (e)(2)(A)’s text contemplates a hypothetical, rather than actual, test of assignment.
THE COURT: "[A] debtor is not an assign-ee when property passes to an estate, not for tax purposes, not for anything. In fact, there is no assignee here? Who’s the as-signee?”
COUNSEL FOR BPA: “Your Honor, there isn’t one. But that's what (a)(2) contemplates. It's a hypothetical test.”
. Section 365(c) precludes a trustee from assuming or assigning an executory contract if "(1)(A) applicable law excuses a [nondebt- or] party ... to such contract or lease from accepting performance from or rendering performance to an entity other than the debt- or or the debtor in possession ... and (B) such party does not consent to such assumption or assignment.” 11 U.S.C. § 365(c)(1). Although the language of subsections (c)(1) and (e)(2) of § 365 are similar, they are by no means parallel overall or identical in effect. The two are not sufficiently similar that case-law interpreting the one should be given any more than informative weight in interpreting the other.
. "Before the 1984 amendment, the pivotal language in section § 365(c) read precisely like the current version of section 365(e)(2); that is, it adverted to the 'applicable law excusing] a party, other than the debtor, to such contract or lease from accepting performance from or rendering performance
to the trustee or to an assignee
of such contract or lease
Summit Inv., 69
F.3d at 613 (alteration in original). In 1984, Congress made no change to the statute we address today, § 365(e)(2)(A), and with respect to § 365(c), it replaced the phrase "to the trustee or to an assignee of such contract or lease" that still appears in § 365(e)(2)(A) with the phrase "to an entity other than the debtor or debtor in possession."
See
Leasehold Management Bankruptcy Amendments Act of 1983, Pub.L. No. 98-353, § 362, 98 Stat. 333, 361 (July 10, 1984);
see also Summit Inv.,
. Although we join the First Circuit in requiring'an actual test to determine whether a law applies under § 365(e)(2)(A), we do not entirely join its reasoning. See Summit Inv., 69 F.3d at 612-14. Interpreting § 365(e)(2)(A), the First Circuit found that the statute's plain text permitted both the actual and hypothetical tests and adopted the actual test on the basis of legislative history and a determination that no assignment existed when prepetition debtors became debtors in possession under the Bankruptcy Code. Id. at 612-13. Instead, Congress’s choice to trigger § 365(e)(2)(A)'s exception upon the application of a law to a particular case dictates that an abstract approach should not be read into the statute.
. We have previously recognized that in Chapter 11 proceedings, an executory contract might be neither assumed, rejected, nor assigned and that in such a circumstance, the contract would ride through the proceedings, leaving the nondebtor’s claim to survive the bankruptcy. Century Indem. Co. v. NGC Settlement Trust (In re Nat’l Gypsum Co.), 208 F.3d 498, 504 n. 4 (5th Cir.2000).
. Section 365(d)(2) vested BPA with the procedure to demand Mirant's action with respect to the Agreement. "[T]he court, on the request of any party to such contract or lease, *254 may order the trustee to determine within a specified period of time whether to assume or reject such contract or lease.” § 365(d)(2). This statutory provision, as the bankruptcy court noted, offered BPA the means to obtain the information it needed, whether Mirant would assume or reject the Agreement after filing for bankruptcy, and in the time in which BPA urged that an answer was needed.
. Though other courts have concluded no assignment exists with respect to an executory contract or lease as a result of the change in status between a prepetition debtor and a debtor in possession,
see Summit Inv.,
