OPINION OF THE COURT
This appeal concerns the application of our recent decision in
JELD-WEN, Inc. v. Van Brunt (In re Grossman’s Inc.),
1. Background
The Plaintiffs’ story presents the challenge of administering unknown future claims in bankruptcy. In late 1998 or early 1999, Wright hired a contractor, who installed shingles manufactured by Owens Corning on her roof. In 2005, West similarly hired a contractor, who likewise installed shingles manufactured by Owens Corning on his roof. They both discovered leaks in 2009, and determined that the shingles had cracked. Each sent warranty claims to Owens Corning. It rejected Wright’s claim in part and West’s claim in full. In November 2009, Wright filed a class action against Owens Corning alleging fraud, negligence, strict liability, and breach of warranty. West later was added as a named plaintiff.
Meanwhile, back in October 2000, the Debtors filed their Chapter 11 bankruptcy petitions. In November 2001, the Bankruptcy Court set a claims bar date of April 15, 2002. All claimants were required to file proofs of claim on or before that date. It also approved a bar date notice, which was published twice in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and USA Today, among other publications. The notice directed claimants to file proofs of claim if they held claims 2 that arose prior to the filing of the Debtors’ bankruptcy cases. It specifically identified claims relating to “the sale, manufacture, distribution, installation and/or marketing of products by any of the Debtors, including without limitation ... roofing shingles.... ”
The Debtors’ bankruptcy proceedings resulted in the filing of the Plan in June 2006. Soon after, the Bankruptcy Court approved notices of the confirmation hearing for the Plan, including a generic notice to most unknown claimants. 3 This notice was published in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and USA Today, among other publications. It stated, in bold, that the Plan might affect the rights of holders of claims against the Debtors.
Two other notices of the Debtors’ bankruptcy proceedings also were published. In June 2006, notice of the hearing to consider the disclosure statement was published in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, and the Toledo Blade. In November 2006, notice of the Plan’s date of confirmation, September 26, 2006 (the “Confirmation Date”), was published in the same four publications. The Plan provided for the discharge of all claims relating to the Debtors under the Bankruptcy Code that arose before the *104 Confirmation Date. 4 The order confirming the Plan (the “Confirmation Order”) likewise provided that all claims arising before the Confirmation Date were discharged.
When the Plaintiffs filed their class action, there was little dispute as to the effect of Owens Coming’s bankruptcy on the Plaintiffs’ claims against it. Based on our much-maligned decision in
Avellino v. M. Frenville Co. (In re M. Frenville Co.),
Based on Grossman’s, Owens Corning filed its motion for summary judgment, arguing that the Plaintiffs’ claims were discharged under the Plan and Confirmation Order. Before the District Court, the Plaintiffs argued that Grossman’s is limited to asbestos-related cases, it does not apply retroactively, and they were not afforded due process because the notices of the bankruptcy proceedings were insufficient. The Court rejected these arguments, holding that the Plaintiffs’ claims were discharged under the Plan and Confirmation Order.
On appeal, the Plaintiffs advance two arguments. First, they argue that the District Court applied Grossman’s too rigidly, creating the unworkable result that persons who did not anticipate future tort actions at the time of a bankruptcy proceeding nonetheless possess claims under the Bankruptcy Code that are discharged. The test set out in Grossman’s, they assert, requires that the debtor and claimant anticipate a future tort action at the time of the bankruptcy proceedings for a claim to exist. Second, they claim that the District Court’s due process analysis fell short because it based its ruling on our precedent holding that unknown claimants generally are entitled to notification by publication.
II. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
The District Court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a) and (d)(2). We have jurisdiction to review the Court’s final order under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We review a district court’s grant of summary
*105
judgment
de novo. MBIA Ins. Corp. v. Royal Indem. Co.,
III. Grossman’s and “Claims” under the Bankruptcy Code
A. Waiver
In addressing whether the Plaintiffs held claims under the Bankruptcy Code, we first confront the effect of their failure to advance to the District Court their argument on appeal regarding
Gross-man’s.
Before the District Court, the Plaintiffs contended only that
Grossman’s
is limited to asbestos-related claims and should not apply retroactively. They advance neither argument to us. We generally follow “a well established principle that it is inappropriate for an appellate court to consider a contention raised on appeal that was not initially presented to the district court.”
Lloyd v. HOVENSA,
We believe that the “public interest” weighs heavily toward our consideration of whether the Plaintiffs held claims under the Bankruptcy Code. What constitutes a claim has the potential to affect a wide range of proceedings, the issue is purely legal, the scope of Grossman’s is generally at issue in this case, and addressing whether the Plaintiffs held claims will clarify the test we established in Grossman’s. This is an appropriate situation for us to exercise our discretion.
B. “Claims” Under the Bankruptcy Code
Consideration of the treatment of unknown future claims involves two competing concerns: the Bankruptcy Code’s goal of providing a debtor with a fresh start by resolving all claims arising from the debtor’s conduct prior to its emergence from bankruptcy; and the rights of individuals who may be damaged by that conduct but are unaware of the potential harm at the time of the debtor’s bankruptcy. In overruling
Frenville’s
“accrual test,” we
*106
recognized that it had been “universally rejected” based on its conflict with the Code’s broad definition of the term “claim.”
Grossman’s,
The rule is an amalgam of the two tests that other Courts of Appeals generally follow — the conduct test and the pre-petition relationship test. Under the former, a claim arises “when the acts giving rise to [the] liability were performed, not when the harm caused by those acts was manifested.”
Id. See Watson v. Parker (In re Parker),
As applied to the Plaintiffs, we easily conclude that Wright held a claim. She purchased shingles manufactured by Owens Corning in late 1998 or early 1999. Her exposure to Owens Coming’s products predated its bankruptcy petition. We applied the test announced in
Grossman’s
retroactively to the claimants in that case.
Id.; see also In re Rodriguez,
Whether West held a claim is less obvious. He purchased his shingles in 2005, after Owens Corning filed its bankruptcy petition but before the Plan was confirmed. In
Grossman’s,
we were not confronted with post-petition, pre-confirmation exposure, and thus based our test on pre-petition exposure. We, however, noted that the Eleventh Circuit Court has extended the pre-petition relationship test to post-petition, pre-confirmation relationships.
Grossman’s,
Not extending our test to post-petition, but pre-confirmation, exposure would unnecessarily restrict the Bankruptcy Code’s expansive treatment of “claims” that we recognized in Grossman’s. It also would separate artificially individuals who are affected by a debtor’s products or conduct pre-petition from those who are affected after the debtor’s filing of its bankruptcy petition but before confirmation of a plan. We thus restate the test announced in Grossman’s to include such exposure and hold that a claim arises when an individual is exposed pre-confirmation to a product or other conduct giving rise to an injury that underlies a “right to payment” under the Code. As West’s exposure to Owens Coming’s shingles occurred pre-confirmation, he also held a claim.
IV. Due Process
Though the Plaintiffs held claims under the Bankruptcy Code, those claims may not have been discharged by the Plan and Confirmation Order. Discharge of the claims of future unknown claimants raises questions regarding due process.
6
Notice is “[a]n elementary and fundamental requirement of due process in any proceeding which is to be accorded finality....”
Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank & Trust Co.,
As the District Court noted, we generally hold that for unknown claimants, like the Plaintiffs, notice by publication in
*108
national newspapers is sufficient to satisfy the requirements of due process, particularly if it is supplemented by notice in local papers.
Id.
at 348-49. But whether adequate notice has been provided depends on the circumstances of a particular case.
Grossman’s,
Though the Debtors’ notices were sufficient as to most unknown claimants, the Plaintiffs’ situation differed significantly from that of the typical unknown claimant. At the time the Plaintiffs received their notices, Frenville was the law in our Circuit (though we refrain from saying “good” law). As noted, under the Frenville test the Plaintiffs did not hold “claims” under the Bankruptcy Code. On reading the notices, the Plaintiffs could only understand that their rights would not be affected in any way by the referenced proceedings, and thus, correctly, would not have taken any action to ensure that their interests were represented. Not until we overturned Frenville and established our new test for determining when a claim exists under the Code did the Plaintiffs unexpectedly hold “claims” that arguably could be discharged in the proceedings addressed in the notices. By that time, however, the bar date had passed, the Confirmation Order had been entered, and the Confirmation Date had occurred, each of which affected the Plaintiffs’ newfound claim status without an opportunity for them to be heard. Due process affords a re-do in these special situations to be sure all claimants have equal rights. We thus hold that, for persons who have “claims” under the Bankruptcy Code based solely on the retroactive effect of the rule announced in Grossman’s, those claims are not discharged when the notice given to those persons was with the understanding that they did not hold claims. 7
*109 Because we now explicitly extend the Grossman’s test to include post-petition, pre-confirmation exposure to a debtor’s conduct or product, there are two groups of persons holding “claims” based on the Grossman’s test who, at the time they were given notice of a bankruptcy proceeding, would understand that they did not hold claims. The first group comprises those who hold claims based on Gross-man’s rejection of the Frenville test — that is, persons exposed to a debtor’s conduct or product pre-petition. As to these persons, due process calls for the outcome of the Frenville test to apply for bankruptcy cases in which reorganization plans are proposed and confirmed prior to June 2, 2010, when Grossman’s was decided. After that date, persons exposed to a debt- or’s conduct or product pre-petition are deemed to understand that they held claims.
In contrast, because the Grossman’s test is limited to pre-petition exposure, persons exposed to a debtor’s conduct or product post-petition, but pre-confirmation, would continue to conclude that they did not hold claims. Hence the second group is comprised of persons who hold claims based on our decision today extending the Gross-man’s test. Due process requires that the outcome of the Frenville test will continue to apply to their claims in bankruptcy cases where reorganization plans are proposed and confirmed prior to the date of today’s decision.
******
Because at the time of the Confirmation Date Frenville controlled the status of their “claims,” the Plaintiffs were not afforded due process. Accordingly their claims were not discharged by the Plan and Confirmation Order, and they retained their cause of action against Owens Corning. In this context, the District Court correctly determined that the Plaintiffs held “claims” under the Bankruptcy Code. But it should not have held that those claims were discharged, and thereby granted summary judgment to Owens Corning, in the circumstances before us. We thus affirm in part and reverse in part the District Court’s judgment, and remand the case to that Court for further proceedings. The shadow of Frenville fades, but more slowly than we would like.
Notes
. The Plaintiffs incorrectly named Owens Coming as the defendant rather than Owens Corning Sales LLC. Nonetheless, we continue to refer to the defendant as "Owens Corning.”
. The notice defined “claim” as it is defined in the Bankruptcy Code: "[a] right to payment, whether or not such right is reduced to judgment, liquidated, unliquidated, fixed, contingent, matured, unmatured, disputed, undisputed, legal, equitable, secured, or unsecured....” 11 U.S.C§ 101(5).
. For notice purposes, claimants are divided into "known” and "unknown.” A "known” claimant (or creditor) "is one whose identity is either known 'or reasonably ascertainable by the debtor.’ ”
Chemetron Corp. v. Jones,
. Section 1141 of the Bankruptcy Code provides that “confirmation of a plan ... discharges the debtor from any debt that arose before the date of such confirmation, ... whether or not (i) a proof of the claim based on such debt is filed ...; (ii) such claim is allowed ...; or (iii) the holder of such claim has accepted the plan.” 11 U.S.C. § 1141(d)(1)(A). "Debt” is defined as liability on a claim. Id. § 101(12).
. This assumes that the applicable law comes from either Illinois or Pennsylvania, the states where the Plaintiffs reside. Under either's law, as with most states’ laws, a right to payment does not accrue until a product defect is evident and an individual suffers actual damages.
See Hermitage Corp. v. Contractors Adjustment Co.,
. Having determined that the Plaintiffs held "claims” under the Code based on
Gross-man's,
the District Court first held that the claims were discharged pursuant to the Confirmation Order before considering whether the notices afforded the Plaintiffs due process, a concept rooted in fairness and applicable to bankruptcy through the Fifth Amendment of our Constitution.
See SLW Capital, LLC v. Mansaray-Ruffin (In re Mansaray-Ruffin),
. Given our reliance on the exceptional circumstances created by the retroactive application of
Grossman’s,
we express no opinion on the broader issue of whether discharging unknown future claims comports with due process.
See generally
Laura B. Bartell,
Due Process for the Unknown Future Claim in Bankruptcy
— Is
This Notice Really Necessary
?, 78 AM. BANKR. LJ. 339 (2004). In this vein and consistent with our statements that whether due process has been provided depends on the circumstances of a particular case, our holding is not a bright-line rule that all persons with unknown future claims once governed by
Frenville
could not have been provided due process regardless of the adequacy of notice to those future claimants. For example, in some bankruptcy proceedings a future claims representative is appointed to represent and protect the interests of persons with future unknown claims. These representatives are appointed, in part, to address the broader issue of whether discharging unknown future claims comports with due process.
See, e.g., id.
at 340. Indeed, future claims representatives have been appointed by courts notwithstanding their conclusion that those unknown persons did not hold "claims” under the Bankruptcy Code.
See, e.g., New Nat’l Gypsum Co. v. Nat’l Gypsum Co. Settlement Trust (In re Nat’l Gypsum Co.),
