Before us is Overland Park Financial Corporation’s appeal, and the Office of Thrift Supervision’s cross-appeal, from a district court order that reversed the bankruptcy court’s holding. This case raises the issue, as a matter of first impression, of this circuit’s interpretation of 11 U.S.C. § 365(o).
*1249 BACKGROUND
The facts of this case are well documented and not in dispute.
See Office of Thrift Supervision v. Overland Park Fin. Corp. (In re Overland Park Fin. Corp.),
To satisfy one of the conditions, Overland Financial stipulated in writing to the Federal Savings & Loan Insurance Corporation that Overland Financial would maintain the net worth of Overland Savings & Loan, and, if necessary, infuse sufficient additional capital. Overland Financial’s stipulation provided:
Overland Park Financial Corporation, a Missouri corporation, hereby stipulates to the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (the “Corporation”) that it will cause the net worth of Overland Park Savings and Loan Association, Overland Park, Kansas, to be maintained at a level consistent with that required by Section 563.13(b) of the Rules and Regulations for Insurance of Accounts, as now or hereafter in effect, and where necessary, that it will infuse sufficient additional equity capital to effect compliance with such requirement in a form satisfactory to the Corporation.
The stipulation was signed by Overland Financial’s president. Overland Financial then acquired Overland Savings & Loan.
In June 1990, the Office of Thrift Supervision 3 (“Thrift Supervision”) advised Overland Savings & Loan it would fail to meet its minimum capital requirements. In turn, Overland Savings & Loan requested Overland Financial to make a capital contribution pursuant to the stipulation. Overland Financial refused to infuse capital at that time, but left open the possibility of future contribution. No such capital infusion has been made to date.
In November 1992, Thrift Supervision appointed Resolution Trust Corporation as receiver for Overland Savings & Loan. 4 At the time of receivership, Overland Savings & Loan reported a risk-based deficiency of $4,073,000. Overland Financial manages the property and affairs of the bankruptcy estate as debtor-in-possession. See 11 U.S.C. § 1107 (stating a debtor-in-possession, subject to certain limitations or exceptions, has the rights, powers, and duties of a trustee serving under Chapter 11).
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In July 1994, twenty months after Thrift Supervision placed Overland Savings & *1250 Loan into receivership, Overland Financial filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition. In response to Overland Financial’s bankruptcy petition, Thrift Supervision filed an unsecured priority proof of claim, alleging Overland Financial breached its capital maintenance commitment, and asserting its rights under 11 U.S.C. § 365(o) (1994) or 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)(8). 5 Thrift Supervision sought $4,073,000, the amount Overland Savings & Loan reported as its risk-based capital deficiency on the date of receivership, in its proof of claim. Overland Financial filed an objection to Thrift Supervision’s proof of claim, and filed a proposed Plan of Reorganization. The Plan of Reorganization proposed a liquidation of the estate, with its assets to be distributed among the allowed .claims. Subsequently, Thrift Supervision filed a motion for immediate cure and for dismissal of the case under 11 U.S.C. §§ 365(o) and 1112(b)(2).
In December 1995, a Partial Pretrial Order was filed which consolidated Thrift Supervision’s proof of claim with its motion for immediate cure under 11 U.S.C. § 365(o). The order set forth Overland Financial’s defenses to Thrift Supervision’s motion for immediate cure. 6
The bankruptcy court denied Thrift Supervision’s motion for immediate cure.
In re Overland Park Fin. Corp.,
The district court reversed the bankruptcy court.
7
In re Overland Park Fin. Corp.,
Overland Financial raises two issues on appeal; first, whether the net worth maintenance stipulation is a capital maintenance commitment subject to 11 U.S.C. *1251 § 365(o), and second, whether Overland Financial is obligated to immediately cure the capital deficit. Thrift Supervision, in its cross-appeal, requests this court to order Overland Financial to effect the maximum cure possible, using all the bankruptcy estate assets. In addition, Thrift Supervision argues it has standing to assert and enforce its proof of claim, and the district court erred in holding Thrift Supervision’s proof of claim moot.
JURISDICTION
We have jurisdiction over this matter, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 158(d), as a final, appealable order from the district court. “[A] decision of the district court on appeal from a bankruptcy judge’s final order is not itself final if the decision remands the case to the bankruptcy judge for significant further proceedings.”
Homa Ltd. v. Stone (In re Commercial Contractors, Inc.),
The district court reversed the bankruptcy court, and remanded the ease for further proceedings consistent with its opinion. In this case, the district court’s decision is final, despite the remand to the bankruptcy court, because the district court left the bankruptcy court with no “significant further proceedings” to conduct.
Id.
at 1373. We have recognized the district court’s order of remand is not final when the bankruptcy court is required to perform “more than a mere ministerial duty” or it involves the “exercise of considerable judicial discretion.’ ”
State Bank of Spring Hill v. Anderson (In re Bucyrus Grain Co.),
DISCUSSION
11 U.S.C. § S65(o)
At the core of this case is the interpretation to be given to 11 U.S.C. § 365(o). The section provides, in relevant part:
In a case under chapter 11 ..., the trustee shall be deemed to have assumed, ... and shall immediately cure any deficit under, any commitment by the debtor to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Resolution Trust Corporation, the Director of the Office of Thrift Supervision ... or its predecessors ... to maintain the capital of an insured depository institution, and any claim for a subsequent breach of the obligations thereunder shall be entitled to priority under section 507. This subsection shall not extend any commitment that would otherwise be terminated by any act of such an agency.
Notably, Congress intended 11 U.S.C. § 365(o) “ ‘to prevent institution-affiliated parties from using bankruptcy to evade commitments to maintain capital reserve requirements of a Federally insured depository institution.’ ”
Resolution Trust Corp. v. First Corp, Inc. (In re Firstcorp, Inc.),
Our review of the district court’s interpretation of 11 U.S.C. § 365(o) is
de novo. Rushton v. State Bank of S. Utah (In re Gledhill),
A “Commitment” to maintain capital
In any case of statutory construction, the starting point of our analysis must begin with the language of the statute itself.
Chickasaw Nation v. United States,
The crux of Overland Financial’s argument and the bankruptcy court’s decision is a “commitment” to maintain capital, under 11 U.S.C. § 365(o), must take the form of an enforceable contract. Overland Financial argues, and the bankruptcy court agreed, the stipulation is informal and unenforceable because it pre-dates the 1984 regulation
8
requiring “formal net worth agreements,” lacks consideration, and is “open-ended.”
Overland Park,
The plain language of 11 U.S.C. § 365(o) reads “any commitment by the debtor ... to maintain the capital.... ” Based on our reading of this particular statutory language, in the context of the statute as a whole, it is apparent that nowhere in 11 U.S.C. § 365(o) does Congress mention the commitment must be contractual, executory, formal, or post 1984. Congress undisputedly knew how to include “executory” or other limiting language, but Congress did not do so in § 365(o).
Compare
11 U.S.C. § 365(a)-(n)
with
11 U.S.C. § 365(o). Based on the plain language, we refuse to import Overland Financial’s constrictive requirements into the statute’s express language. It is well recognized by this circuit that in drafting legislation, we assume Congress says what it means.
Sundance Assoc., Inc. v. Reno,
“When Congress does not define a word, its common and ordinary usage may be obtained by reference to a dictionary.”
True Oil,
B. Assumption of cure
Our second issue of statutory interpretation requires us to determine the time in which Overland Financial’s duty to assume the cure matures and attaches. Again, we find
Firstcorp
well-reasoned and persuasive. In
Firstcorp,
the acquisition of a savings and loan was conditioned on the holding company’s maintenance of capital at or above a specified level.
[Assumption and cure under § 365(o) are prerequisites to obtaining Chapter 11 protection. If a debtor cannot “immediately” cure a deficit under a capital maintenance commitment that exists at the time of a bankruptcy filing, then § 365(o) requires that debtor to proceed not under Chapter 11 but under Chapter 7, to which § 365(o) does not apply.
Id. at 247. Consistent with the Fourth Circuit, we hold before a debtor may proceed with Chapter 11, and acquire Chapter 11 protection, the debtor’s commitment to assume and cure its capital deficit must be satisfied.
OVERLAND FINANCIAL’S DEFENSES
Despite the five years of litigation in this case, Overland Financial has not had the opportunity to be heard by a court on each of its defenses. As we previously stated, the bankruptcy court ruled in favor of Overland Financial, thereby obviating the need to consider further defenses. Subsequently, the district court declined to address the remaining defenses because the bankruptcy court did not address the defenses in the first instance. On appeal, Thrift Supervision believes Overland Financial’s remaining defenses should be resolved simply because Thrift Supervision briefed the defenses. However, as a general rule, we do not consider issues not passed upon below.
R. Eric Peterson Constr. Co. v. Quintek, Inc. (In re R. Eric Peterson Constr. Co.),
STANDING
We must determine whether Thrift Supervision has standing to pursue its unsecured priority claim, filed pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 365(o) or § 507(a)(9). “We
*1254
review de novo issues such as standing that are prerequisites to this court’s jurisdiction.”
Kansas Health Care Ass’n, Inc. v. Kansas Dep’t of Soc. & Rehab. Servs.,
In order to understand Thrift Supervision’s standing to pursue its capital maintenance claim, it is necessary to reiterate briefly its statutory authority. In FIR-REA, Congress vested Thrift Supervision with broad federal regulatory and enforcement authority over savings and loans.
See Franklin Sav. Ass’n v. Director, Office of Thrift Supervision,
Based on Thrift Supervision’s statutory succession to the two agencies involved with the stipulation, we hold Thrift Supervision is entitled, if not obligated, to pursue its capital maintenance claim.
10
It seems only logical an agency endowed with regulatory and enforcement power to ensure the safety, soundness and compliance of the thrift industry would be rendered virtually impotent without its ability to pursue and, perhaps, rectify a thrift’s capital deficit.
See generally Cohen v. de la Cruz,
MOOTNESS
The district court concluded at the end of its opinion that Overland Financial’s duty to immediately cure renders Thrift Supervision’s proof of claim moot.
In re Overland Park Fin. Corp.,
Accordingly, we hold Thrift Supervision has standing to enforce its proof of claim, we AFFIRM the district court’s holding the stipulation is a binding commitment subject to 11 U.S.C. § 365(o) cure, REVERSE the district court’s mootness determination, and REMAND to the district court with instructions to remand to the bankruptcy court to further consider Over *1255 land Financial’s defenses not addressed in this opinion.
Notes
. The Federal Savings & Loan Insurance Corporation’s approval was required because it insured Overland Savings & Loan’s deposits at that time.
. The Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 ("FIR-REA”) abolished the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, and transferred to Thrift Supervision and its Director the role of primary federal regulator of federally insured savings associations. See 12 U.S.C. § 1462a(e). Congress also transferred the Federal Savings & Loan Insurance Corporation’s enforcement powers to Thrift Supervision. See 12 U.S.C. § 1818(b). Title 12 U.S.C. § 1464(s)(l)(B) mandates the Director of Thrift Supervision to require all savings and loans to achieve and maintain adequate capital by "using such other methods as the Director determines to be appropriate.”
.Congress established Resolution Trust Corporation, a federally chartered corporation, to act as conservator or receiver for federally insured thrifts that failed between 1989 and 1995. 12 U.S.C. § 1441a(b)(l),(3). After the Resolution Trust Corporation terminated at the end of 1995, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation assumed the role of conservator or receiver in Resolution Trust Corporation’s remaining cases. 12 U.S.C. § 1441a(m)(l).
. Thrift Supervision’s proof of claim was filed pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)(8), now amended as 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)(9). We will refer to the current 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)(9) provision.
. Overland Financial's defenses, articulated in the bankruptcy proceedings and in appellant’s brief, are: (1) the stipulation is not an enforceable contract; (2) the stipulation terminated when Overland Savings & Loan was seized by Thrift Supervision; (3) Thrift Supervision cannot maintain a private right of action for damages to enforce a regulatory requirement; (4) Section 365(o) does not apply in a Chapter 11 liquidation. Overland Financial raises the additional defenses of estoppel and unclean hands due to Thrift Supervision’s lack of good faith in dealing with Overland Financial's efforts to recapitalize Overland Savings & Loan and because its arbitrary change of allowed accounting practices contributed to the existence of a capital deficiency.
.The district court limited the issue on appeal to Thrift Supervision’s 11 U.S.C. § 365(o) claim, and struck Overland Financial's attempt to raise additional issues on appeal due to its failure to file a cross-appeal. The district court also declined to consider Overland Financial’s defenses because the bankruptcy court did not reach those issues.
. In 1984, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board promulgated a final rule requiring an individual or group of individuals, applying for a de novo savings and loan institution, to sign an agreement personally guaranteeing the net worth maintenance of the savings and loan. 49 Fed.Reg. 41237 (Oct. 22, 1984). Overland Financial draws a line between pre- and post-1984 stipulations. Overland Financial argues pre-1984 stipulations are informal and unenforceable, but in contrast, post-1984 stipulations are "formal” net worth maintenance agreements "which look[ ] like real contracts or agreements.” Overland Financial asserts its "informal stipulation” predates 1984.
. Overland Financial candidly acknowledges courts will reject an interpretation of a statute that produces an absurd result.
See United States v. Brown,
. Neither Resolution Trust Corporation nor Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation is a party to this litigation. We therefore will not address their standing, as Overland Savings & Loan's receiver, to pursue a proof of claim.
