A bankruptcy court granted the creditor-appellant relief from the automatic stay prescribed by the Bankruptcy Code, finding that its right to an injunction to enforce a restrictive covenant was not a “claim” dischargeable in bankruptcy. The district court reversed, *405 and this appeal followed, We reverse and remand.
The Standard Carpetland USA, Inc. (“Car-petland”) employed debtor-appellee Barry Stuart Udell (“Udell”) in its Fort Wayne, Indiana store. The parties entered an employment contract that included a covenant not to compete. For three years after leaving Carpetland, Udell was not to engage in any business similar to Carpetland within 50 miles of Fort Wayne. The covenant gave Carpetland the right to both an injunction and liquidated damages:
In the event of Udell’s actual or threatened breach of the provisions of this paragraph 11, Carpetland shall be entitled to an injunction restraining Udell as well as reimbursement for reasonably [sic] attorneys fees incurred in securing said judgment and stipulated damages in the sum of $25,-000.00.
Soon after leaving Carpetland, Udell purchased a local carpet store which he claims does not compete in the same market as Carpetland. Udell sued Carpetland in the Superior Court for Allen County, Indiana, seeking damages for breach of the employment contract with respect to allegedly past due commissions and other compensation. Carpetland counterclaimed for damages and an injunction pursuant to the restrictive covenant. The state court granted Carpetland a preliminary injunction in June, 1992. Udell is appealing this order in the Indiana appellate courts.
Several days after the injunction issued, Udell filed a Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition. To enforce its preliminary injunction in the Indiana court, Carpetland filed a motion for emergency relief from the automatic stay prescribed by the Bankruptcy Code. Car-petland argued that its right to an injunction was not a “claim” under § 101(5)(B) of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. § 101 et seq., and therefore could not be discharged in Udell’s bankruptcy. In relevant part, § 101(5)(B) defines “claim” as a “right to an equitable remedy for breach of performance if such breach gives rise to a right to payment.”
PROCEEDINGS IN THE LOWER COURTS
The bankruptcy court granted Carpetland relief for the purpose of enforcing the injunction entered in the state court.
The district court reversed the grant of relief.
In reversing the bankruptcy court’s grant of relief from the stay, the district court found it unnecessary to reach Udell’s argument that, even if Carpetland’s right to an injunction were not a § 101(5)(B) claim, the bankruptcy court abused its discretion by giving insufficient consideration to Udell's inability to get a “fresh start,” or to the unequal treatment of other creditors which will result from the lifting of the stay.
WAIVER
Udell asserts that Carpetland has waived its arguments before us because only one of its arguments was raised in its petition for reconsideration in the district court. We are satisfied, however, that at one time or another, the substance of all of Carpetland’s present arguments were subsumed in the presentation to the district court.
DISCUSSION
For bankruptcy purposes, a “debt” is a liability on a “claim.” 11 U.S.C. § 101(12). By fashioning a single definition of “claim” for the 1978 Bankruptcy Code, Congress intended to adopt the broadest available definition of that term.
Pennsylvania Public Welfare Dep’t v. Davenport,
(A) right to payment ... or
(B) right to an equitable remedy for breach of performance if such breach gives rise to a right to payment, whether or not such right to an equitable remedy is reduced to judgment, fixed, contingent, matured, unmatured, disputed, undisputed, secured, or unsecured[.]
Carpetland argues that our interpretation of § 101(5)(B) should focus on whether the equitable remedy itself gives rise to an alternative right to payment. Udell, on the other hand, argues that a right to an equitable remedy is a “claim” whenever the breach of performance also gives rise to a right to payment — any right to payment, even one that serves a separate remedial purpose from the equitable remedy. We must decide whether § 101(5)(B) requires any connection between the equitable and the legal remedies beyond the fact that both remedies arise from the same breach of performance.
In
Ohio v. Kovacs,
The Court found that Ohio had effectively converted its cleanup order into a demand for money damages. After the appointment of the receiver, the only performance Ohio sought from Kovacs was “a money payment to effectuate the ... clean up.”
Id.
at 282,
Kovacs
is helpful in its analysis of the statute, even though the resolution of that case turned on the fact that Ohio had itself elected to convert its equitable right into a demand for a money judgment, the reverse of our present situation. The Court noted that “the key phrases ‘equitable remedy,’ ‘breach of performance,’ and ‘right to pay
*407
ment’ are not defined” in § 101(5)(B); it proceeded to examine its legislative history, p'd. at 280,
A sponsor of the Bankruptcy Reform Act stated with respect to the definition of “claim”:
Section 101(4)(B) [now § 101(5)(B) ] ... is intended to cause the liquidation or estimation of contingent rights of payment for which there may be an alternative equitable remedy with the result that the equitable remedy will be susceptible to being discharged in bankruptcy. For example, in some States, a judgment for specific performance may be satisfied by an alternative right to payment, in the event performance is refused; in that event, the creditor entitled to specific performance would have a “claim” for purposes of a proceeding under title II.
On the other hand, rights to an equitable remedy for a breach of performance with respect to which such breach does not give rise to a right to payment are not “claims” and would therefore not be susceptible to discharge in bankruptcy.
124 Cong.Ree. 32393 (1978) (remarks of Rep. Edwards) (emphasis added). The quoted part of the legislative history shows that one example of a “claim” is a right to an equitable remedy that can be satisfied by an “alternative” right to payment. If the right to payment is not an alternative remedy, it must at least arise “with respect to” the equitable remedy, not apart from it. Id. The proper inquiry under § 101(5)(B), then, is whether Carpetland’s right to an injunction “gives rise” to an alternative or other corollary right to payment of liquidated damages.
Udell argues that Carpetland has improperly shifted our inquiry from whether the “breach” gives rise to a right to payment, to whether the “equitable remedy” gives rise to a right to payment. This, Udell claims, is to rewrite the statute. We disagree. There must first be a breach that gives rise to a right to an equitable remedy. Under applicable federal or state laws, that remedy may give rise to an “alternative” or other corollary right to payment. Both remedies, however, issue from the original breach; “such breach” as gives rise to the equitable remedy also gives rise to the right to payment. 1
This reading of § 101(5)(B) is reinforced by
Home State Bank,
501 U.S. at-,
Also consistent with our reading are the decisions, including our own, that deal with the dischargeability in bankruptcy of environmental injunctions. In
Matter of CMC Heartland Partners,
We recognize the appealing simplicity of Udell’s “plain language” reading of § 101(5)(B). Udell asserts that “for an equitable remedy to be a claim, it must be the sole remedy available for breach of the agreement”; any right to payment arising from the same breach would turn the equitable remedy into a claim. The Supreme Court’s approach in Kovacs, however, belies this reading of § 101(5)(B). In Kovacs, a single “breach of performance” — violations of environmental laws — had given rise to a judgment in three parts, two of them injunc-tive, and the third monetary. Udell’s suggested “plain language” reading should have ended the ease. Ohio already had a money judgment for injury to wildlife. This right to payment arose from the same breach as the cleanup order. For the Court, however, the cleanup order was a “claim,” not because Ohio already had a $75,000 judgment arising from the same breach, but because Ohio’s actions had effectively converted the cleanup order into money damages.
In light of Kovacs,
Home State Bank
and the legislative history of § 101(5)(B), we hold that a right to an equitable remedy for breach of performance is a “claim” if the same breach also gives rise to a right to a payment “with respect to” the equitable remedy.
2
If the right to payment is an “alternative” to the right to an equitable remedy, the necessary relationship clearly exists, for the two remedies would be substitutes for one another. This is the example of “claim” given in the legislative history. As the Supreme Court’s decision in
Home State Bank
implies, relationships other than outright substitution may also suffice. For example, the right to foreclose on a mortgage, though not strictly an “alternative” to the right to the proceeds from the sale of the debtor’s property, nonetheless gives rise to a corollary right to payment (and may in fact be considered as an alternative to money in the sense that the debtor can stop the foreclosure by paying the full debt). The two remedies are sufficiently related that the Supreme Court classified the right to foreclose as a “claim.”
See id.
501 U.S. at -,
APPLICATION OF THE RULE TO THE PRESENT CASE
Indiana law determines the nature of Carpetland’s contractual remedies, including whether the right to an injunction gives rise to a right to payment.
See Butner v. United States,
With “the great weight of authority in this country,” Indiana law permits (under proper circumstances) the award of an injunction in addition to liquidated damages.
Duckwall v. Rees,
[W]here the sum specified [as liquidated damages] may be substituted for the performance of the act at the election of the person by whom the money is to be paid, or the act done, equity will deny specific performance and leave the aggrieved party to his remedy at law. Which of these types any given contract may be depends *409 upon the intention of the parties as expressed in the whole instrument....
Id.
While we have not found an Indiana case actually granting both remedies, the cases that deal with the subject in no way impeach this general statement. In
Duckwall,
where a contract for the purchase and sale of land provided for liquidated damages
and
repayment of the down payment in the event of the seller’s breach, the court held that the right to payment was intended to be a substitute for specific performance, which would not be granted. In
Seach v. Richards, Dieterle & Co.,
The district judge found that a “threatened breach” is in effect a future breach, and that Carpetland’s right to an injunction gives rise to a right to payment “solely because the specific language employed by these parties contemplates liquidated damages for
future
breach” (emphasis added). We disagree. A threatened breach is a present act. In Carpetland’s case, a threatened breach could give rise to two independent remedies: (1) an injunction against the future realization of the threat, and (2) liquidated damages for the actual harm that has already accrued from the threat.
5
Carpetland’s right to liquidated damages does not arise “with respect to” its right to an injunction,
see
124 Cong.Rec. 32393; the two rights address entirely separate remedial concerns.
Cf. Davis,
We further find that Carpetland’s right to an injunction does not give rise in any other sense to the payment of liquidated damages. Lacking is the derivative relationship between the two remedies exemplified by
*410
Home State Bank, supra,
where the equitable remedy of foreclosure was the means for realizing -the right to the proceeds from the sale of the debtor’s property.
Id.
501 U.S. at -,
Accordingly we rule that it was error for the district judge to reverse the order of the bankruptcy judge on the ground that the equitable relief sought by Carpetland was a “claim” dischargeable in bankruptcy.
REMAND
It does not necessarily follow that Carpet-land is entitled to relief from the stay, however. The automatic stay prescribed by the Bankruptcy Code applies to “judgment[s] obtained before the commencement of the case under this title,” 11 U.S.C. § 362(a)(2), whether or not the judgment arises out of a “claim.” Though the bankruptcy court correctly held that Carpetland’s right to an injunction is not a claim, the court was' required to also consider (1) the prejudice to the debtor or the bankruptcy estate from allowing the non-bankruptcy litigation to continue; (2) the relative hardship to the debtor and to the party seeking relief; and (3) the creditor’s probability of prevailing on the merits in the litigation, before it could lift the automatic stay.
Matter of Fernstrom Storage and Van Co.,
DECISION
The order of the district court is reversed, and this case is remanded to the district court for consideration of whether the bankruptcy court abused its discretion by granting Carpetland relief from the stay. Costs to be awarded to Carpetland.
FLAUM, Circuit Judge, concurring in the result.
Even though I agree with the court’s eventual outcome, I am unable to accept the court’s approach which, in my view, dodges this statute’s plain language in an effort to reach a sensible result.
This case presents a classic statutory construction problem. Mr. Udell entered into a contract with his employer Carpetland, Inc., promising not to compete against Carpetland within fifty miles for three years after leaving its employ. Subsequently Mr. Udell left Carpetland and breached this promise. The undisputed consequences of Udell’s breach are spelled out in his employment contract— an injunction against Udell along with stipulated damages in the sum of $25,000. Car-petland sued obtaining the money plus an injunction. Udell declared bankruptcy asking that Carpetland’s injunction be stayed under 11 U.S.C. § 362 (1990). Here, Udell tenders a theory that Carpetland’s injunction is a “claim” dischargeable in bankruptcy as defined in 11 U.S.C. § 101(5)(B).
The statutory language defines a “claim” as a “right to an equitable remedy for breach of performance if such breach gives rise to a right to payment, ...” 11 U.S.C. § 101(5)(B) (emphasis supplied). Anyone unschooled in the intricacies of bankruptcy law might trustingly conclude that this is a fairly easy case — the injunction is a claim because the contract’s breach gave rise to $25,000 damages, and therefore, Carpetland’s injunction is subject to the automatic stay. The court, however, concludes that this cannot be. I agree, but most cautiously. Here we must do some pretty heavy lifting before we can disregard the genuinely plain text of this statute.
The first canon
1
of statutory construction is, of course, that where the language of a
*411
statute is clear in its application, the court must apply its plain meaning as written.
See Connecticut Nat. Bank,
— U.S. at -,
In its opinion the court concludes that since the statute’s text is ambiguous, it is permitted to examine the legislature’s chronicles with the hope of finding an insight that might help reach the right result. This approach concerns me. According to the majority opinion, since the Supreme Court noted in
Kovacs
that certain terms (“equitable remedy,” “breach of performance,” and “right to payment”) were not defined in § 101(5)(B), the provision as a whole must be ambiguous as well.
2
I would take a different tack. Rather than appearing not to do what we must, let us grant that this statute needs fixing, and that under some exceedingly limited circumstances, we are actually permitted, within the law, to do what is normally the exclusive domain of Congress, that is, mend an otherwise implausible statute. Despite the primacy of the plain language canon,
3
there is a legitimate, albeit very narrow, exception to our duty to follow the unambiguous text of a statute — where the plain language of the statute would lead to “patently absurd consequences,” then we need not so apply the language.
See Public Citizens v. Dept. of Justice,
To appreciate the patent absurdity of implementing the plain text of Section 101(5)(B) one must keep in mind that this is a bankruptcy statute. If, following the plain language, an injunction may be stayed in bankruptcy anytime the underlying breach of contract 4 or law also happens to give rise to money damages, the real-world results would be ludicrous. If we were to apply the plain text of § 101(5)(B) to individuals restrained by court orders — e.g. trespassers, polluters, stalkers, batterers — theoretically, simply by filing bankruptcy, the violator could escape from any restraining order prompted by a breach that also gave rise to an award of money damages. Certainly the parade of horribles is extensive, and I need not belabor it further. Since the text of § 101(5)(B) presents one of those extremely unique circumstances of patent absurdity, we may turn to the purpose, context and policy of § 101(5)(B) to supplement its plain language. 5
Having so concluded, I am, however, mindful of the risk this exception creates to the rule of law. As Justice Kennedy admonished, “loose invocation of the ‘absurd result’ cannon of statutory construction creates too great a risk that the court is exercising its own “WILL instead of JUDGMENT,’ with the consequence of ‘substitutfing] [its own] pleasure to that of the legislative body.’”
Notes
. None of the courts that have interpreted § 101(5)(B) were troubled by any perceived conflict between the language of § 101(5)(B) and an inquiry, dictated by its legislative history, focusing on whether the equitable remedy gives rise to a right to payment. All of the courts below in
Kovacs
found that Ohio's cleanup order had given rise to a right to payment, rendering the order dischargeable in bankruptcy. The Supreme Court approved the reasoning repeatedly affirmed below: the "cleanup duty had been reduced to a monetary obligation."
Id.
at 280,
. This interpretation of § 101(5)(B) is also consistent with a complementary provision of the Bankruptcy Code. Section 502(c)(2) of the Code provides for the "estimat[ion] for purpose of allowance” of “any right to payment arising from a right to an equitable remedy for breach of performance” (emphasis added).
. The parties have not argued issue preclusion by reason of the order of the Allen County court, and accordingly we shall not enter that thicket. We do observe, however, that an Indiana judge, applying Indiana law, granted an injunction in this' case, implying that the right to liquidated damages was cumulative and not alternative.
. In
Hollars v. Randall,
.We express no view as to the enforceability of the liquidated damages provision.
. To refer to this rule as a "canon” is something of an understatement; it is in fact the large-bore howitzer of statutory construction.
See Connecti
*411
cut Nat. Bank v. Germain,
- U.S. -, -,
. There is no presumption that words in a statute need a definition if they have a plain meaning. In fact the presumption is just the opposite.
See Connecticut Nat. Bank,
- U.S. at -,
. See supra note 1 and accompanying text.
. Section 101(5)(B) not only refers to contract based rights, but can reach rights to performance arising from public law breaches.
Kovacs,
. I accept the conclusion in the opinion of the court, that adding the word "alternative” immediately before “right” on the second line of § 101(5)(B) is necessary for this statute to work in the real world. See ante Opinion of the Court, p. 408.
