In this case of first impression at the federal appellate level, we must address the effect of post-confirmation default and consequent relief from the automatic stay on the bifurcated lien of a secured creditor. The creditor claims that, in such circumstances, relief from the automatic stay nullifies the earlier lien-stripping order, mends the bifurcation, and restores the lien on the collateral to its original shape. Both the bankruptcy court and the district court rebuffed this claim. We too reject it: relief from the automatic stay, in and of itself, works no such alchemy.
I.
Background
The relevant facts are undisputed. In 1991, the debtors, Maria Celina Carvalho and Francisco Andrade, borrowed $155,000 from Federal National Mortgage Association (FNMA). They signed a promissory note in that amount and secured it by granting FNMA a first mortgage on a multi-family residence in Dorchester, Massachusetts (the Property).
Approximately five years later, the debtors filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code. See 11 U.S.C. §§ 1301-1830 (allowing individual debtors to reorganize their debts). FNMA filed a proof of claim, presumably including arrearages, accrued interest, late charges, and the like, in the amount of $165,166. Several other creditors also filed claims.
Alleging that the then-current value of the Property was less than the amount owed to FNMA, the debtors asked the court to bifurcate FNMA’s claim into secured and unsecured portions. See 11 U.S.C. § 506(a) (stating that the “allowed claim of a creditor secured by a lien on property ..., is a secured claim to the extent of the value of such creditor’s interest ... and is an unsecured claim to the extent that the value of [such interest] is less than the amount of such allowed claim”); see also id. § 103(a) (making general provisions under Chapter 5 of the Bankruptcy Code applicable to bankruptcy cases under, inter aha, Chapter 13). After some skirmishing, not relevant here, the parties stipulated to the applicability of this lien-stripping protocol. They then agreed to divide the debt into a secured claim of $105,000 (representing the agreed value of the Property) and an unsecured claim for roughly $60,000 (representing the balance of the indebtedness owed to FNMA).
In due course, the bankruptcy court confirmed a Chapter 13 plan (the Plan) that embodied the bifurcation. Under the terms of the Plan, the debtors were to make regular payments to a court-appointed trustee, who would then disburse funds to the various creditors (including FNMA) according to a set schedule. Under this scenario, FNMA was to receive fixed monthly payments on the secured portion of its bifurcated claim until that item was paid in full but was to receive only an aggregate 10% dividend on the unsecured portion.
See id.
§ 1322(b)(2) (allowing bankruptcy courts to approve Chapter 13 plans modifying the rights of most secured creditors);
see also Lomas Mtge., Inc. v. Louis,
At some point — the exact date is of no moment-the debtors began struggling to meet their obligations under the Plan. When they failed to make the obligatory escrow payments, FNMA sought relief from the automatic stay in order to exercise its state-law right of foreclosure against the Property. See 11 U.S.C. § 362(a) & (d)(1) (staying proceedings against a debtor or her estate but allowing a court to lift or modify the stay “for cause”). FNMA’s motion acknowledged the bifurcation of its claim and prayed generally for relief from the stay. It did not, however, specify the amount of the debt that it envisioned as secured.
The debtors were not represented by counsel at this point in time and interposed no objection. Accordingly, the bankruptcy court granted FNMA’s motion. The court’s order did not specify the amount of the secured claim, nor did it mention (let alone revoke) the earlier bifurcation.
Notwithstanding the lifting of the automatic stay, the debtors continued, albeit with an occasional misstep, to make payments to the trustee as called for by the Plan. 1 When the debtors finally obtained counsel, they moved to vacate the order granting relief from the automatic stay. The bankruptcy court denied this motion on November 13, 2000. For reasons that are not readily apparent from the record, FNMA nonetheless refrained from moving forward with a foreclosure proceeding.
Near the end of the following year, the debtors moved to discharge FNMA’s mortgage. By then, they had completed payment of FNMA’s secured and unsecured claims as called for by the Plan and had offered to pay the arrearages incurred with respect to the escrow account. Although FNMA had not yet foreclosed on the Property, it steadfastly refused to accept payments from either the trustee or the debtors after the date of default.
Consistent with this position, FNMA objected to the proposed discharge. The main thrust of its objection was that the debtors had not in . fact' fully paid (or offered to pay) their debt because their payments had tracked the Plan instead of the terms of the seminal promissory note. In FNMA’s view, the latter, rather than the former, limned the extent of the debtors’ actual obligation because the bankruptcy court’s order lifting the automatic stay had, in effect, nullified the earlier bifurcation and reinstated the debt to its original shape. On this basis, FNMA asserted that the debtors could obtain a discharge of the mortgage only by paying the full contractual amount owed on the original indebtedness, dollar for dollar.
The debtors vehemently disagreed with this logic, and the bankruptcy court rejected it. The court concluded that lifting the automatic stay lacked the talismanic significance envisioned by FNMA. It held, moreover, that the confirmation of the Plan had a res judicata effect, thus limiting FNMA’s entitlement to the amounts provided for in- the Plan. Accordingly, the court enjoined any foreclosure pending an assessment of the debtors’ ability to cure the earlier default.
On FNMA’s first-tier appeal, the district court affirmed the injunction (albeit on a somewhat different rationale). This second-tier appeal followed. See 28 U.S.C. § 158(a) & (d).
*49 II.
Analysis
As the parties have framed the case, the central issue is not whether the debtors have a right to attempt to cure their default, but, rather, how much they must pay in order to do so. In making this determination, the court of appeals normally looks to the bankruptcy court’s decision, scrutinizes that court’s findings of fact for clear error, and affords de novo review to its conclusions of law.
See Jamo v. Katahdin Fed. Credit Union (In re
Jamo),
Before plunging into our analysis, we deem it important to note what FNMA does not contest. In mounting this appeal, it challenges neither the validity of the Plan nor the bifurcation of its claim within the Plan as originally formulated. This bears out our intuition that both the Plan and the bifurcation were properly drafted and implemented under existing law.
See, e.g., Lomas Mtge.,
The debtors’ initial response is that the fact of confirmation has a res judicata effect sufficient to trump FNMA’s thesis. This counterattack has a certain superficial appeal. Broadly stated, the doctrine of res judicata operates to bar the relitigation of issues that were or could have been raised in an earlier action between the same parties prescinding from the same set of operative facts.
See Allen v. McCurry,
*50
Although we accept this general rule, it does not pertain here. A debtor’s post-confirmation default, like many other post-confirmation events, does not come within the preclusive reach of a confirmed plan.
See Barbosa v. Soloman,
Still and all, rejecting a res judicata argument is a far cry from saying that FNMA’s full contractual lien has been resurrected. FNMA labors to persuade us that the debtors’ post-confirmation default, coupled with FNMA’s securing of relief from the automatic stay, produced just such a Lazarus-like effect. We are not convinced.
FNMA’s asseveration relies heavily upon
In re Miano,
Upon careful perscrutation, we find that the resemblance between the two cases is more apparent than real. There are a number of salient distinctions. For one thing, the
Miaño
debtors sold the encumbered property at a price much higher than the value originally ascribed to it by the bankruptcy court. In contradistinction, the instant debtors have not sold the Property at all (indeed, they have made plain their desire to retain possession of it). For another thing,
Miaño
involved a short-term situation in which the debtors made absolutely no payments under the confirmed plan. This stands in stark contrast to the situation before us, where the Plan has run its course and the debtors have made virtually all the payments called for under it (they have even offered to make the side payments due to FNMA, albeit with some hiccoughs along the way). While principles of equity may suggest that Chapter 13 debtors who turn their backs on a confirmed plan from the get-go cannot expect to reap its benefits,
cf. In re Pearson,
Even leaving these distinctions to one side, we find the
Miaño
decision singularly unpersuasive. The court’s legal analysis strikes us as seriously flawed. Moreover, the decision rests on a porous legal foundation; none of the cases cited by the court stands for the proposition that relief from the automatic stay necessarily includes relief from the confirmed plan as a whole. Even when read for all they are worth, these cases at most reiterate the venerable saw that a debtor’s post-confir
*51
mation default can provide good cause for relief from the automatic stay.
See, e.g., W. Equities Inc. v. Harlan (In re Harlan
),
FNMA mounts one last argument in support of reversing the lien-stripping order and reinstating the full amount of the original debt. It asserts that a Chapter 13 plan is akin to a contract and that, given their default, the debtors cannot now expect FNMA to perform its side of the bargain. This argument is unavailing.
To the extent that a confirmed plan resembles a contract, there is no legally sound reason why the remedy for every default necessarily should be rescission. Generally speaking, the law of contracts recognizes a wide spectrum of potential anodynes.
See generally
3 E. Allan Farnsworth,
Farnsworth on Contracts
§§ 12.1 to 12.3 (2d ed.2003). Here, it seems clear that, under the bankruptcy court’s ukase, FNMA stands to receive a condign remedy (either specific performance or expectation damages) with respect to the debtors’ default. The root purpose of a contract remedy is “to place the plaintiff-promisee in as good a position as [it] would have occupied had the defendant-promisor not breached the contract,” 24 Richard A. Lord,
Williston on Contracts
§ 64:1, at 7 (4th ed.2002) (collecting cases), and either of these remedies would accomplish that goal by making FNMA whole. That is why other courts have approved the use of such remediation in comparable circumstances.
See, e.g., Ellis,
FNMA resists this straightforward answer, urging us to subject defaulting debtors to a more draconian penalty in order to discourage repetitive defaults and a generally nonchalant attitude anent compliance with reorganization plans. We regard such punitive measures as unnecessary, unwise, and incompatible with the goals of the Bankruptcy Code. We explain briefly.
Bankruptcy law endeavors to strike an equitable balance between the debtors’ needs — especially the need for a fresh start — and the creditors’ rights. The bankruptcy court must hold that delicate balance steady and true. As matters stand, the Code gives bankruptcy courts more than adequate powers to ensure that debtors do not engage in gamesmanship or otherwise flout the provisions of Chapter 13.
See Perry v. Commerce Loan Co.,
in.
Conclusion
We need go no further. In this case, we have been asked to hand a new weapon to a secured creditor at the expense of the debtors’ honest efforts to carry out the provisions of a confirmed plan of reorganization. Neither the Bankruptcy Code nor the case law affords any compelling reason why we should do so. We hold, therefore, that bifurcation of a creditor’s claim into secured and unsecured portions is not annulled by the mere act of granting relief from the automatic stay. 3 Consequently, we affirm the order staying foreclosure until the debtors’ ability to cure their post-confirmation default can be ascertained. To that end, we remand this case to the district court with instructions that it, in turn, remand the matter to the bankruptcy court for further proceedings aimed at determining the precise amounts owed to FNMA and what fees and interest, if any, should be assessed in consequence of the debtors’ earlier default.
Affirmed. Costs shall be taxed in favor of the appellees.
Notes
. The trustee twice moved to dismiss the case for the debtors' failure to remain current. Both times, however, the debtors managed to bring their payments up to date.
. Typically, bifurcation does not apply to a debtor’s principal residence.
See
11 U.S.C. § 1322(b)(2). Here, a part of the Property served as the debtors' principal residence, but FNMA’s loan was nonetheless subject to bifurcation because the loan was simultaneously secured by other collateral (i.e., the remaining units in the multi-family tenement).
See Lo-mas Mtge.,
. We regard it as unlikely that a bankruptcy court has the authority, in the exercise of its discretion, to rescind a lien-stripping order merely because it deems the creditor entitled to relief from the automatic stay. After all, Chapter 13 is designed to ensure that debtors enjoy a fresh start.
See
H.R.Rep. No. 95-595, at 118 (1978),
reprinted in
1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5787, 5963, 6078-79. Exceptions to this policy should be construed narrowly.
In re Pelkowski,
