Debtors Luis Vázquez Laboy and Carmen García Calderón claim they were unconstitutionally deprived of a hearing on damages due to them as a result of the Appellees’ willful violation of the automatic stay in their bankruptcy case. Appellees Doral Mortgage Corporation- — -who set in motion the stay violation — and its former attorney-notaries at Canales Law Offices, Edgardo Canales Idrach and Angel Rolán Prado (collectively, Canales) — who actually carried out the acts that violated the stay — have mounted a broad counter-attack, fighting everything from our jurisdiction to the willfulness of the violation. All this avails them nothing, however. Avoiding the constitutional issue, we nevertheless find that the Debtors are entitled to present evidence, and we remand so they can do so.
Shenanigans at the Registry
This case’s decade-plus of court proceedings all stem from the Debtors’ purchase of a property in Corozal, Puerto Rico on December 17, 1996.1 Not long after the purchase — -on December 30, 1996 — the Debtors presented their conveyance deed to the Registry of Property. Under Puer-to Rico law, the Registry has sixty days either to record a deed that has been presented or to notify the presenters of any defects. See 30 L.P.R.A. § 2255. If a deed’s presenters do not correct any defect within sixty days of notification, then the presentation expires and the Registry will reject the deed. See id.
On February 15, 1997 — before the initial sixty-day period was up, and with the conveyance deed still unrecorded — the Debtors borrowed $25,000 from Doral, secured by a mortgage on the property. Canales, acting as a notary retained by Doral, promptly presented the mortgage deed to the Registry.2
This is where things went awry. First, the Registry informed the Debtors that their conveyance deed was defective. So on May 5, 1997, the Debtors withdrew the deed, as was their right under 30 L.P.R.A. § 2254. But the mortgage deed remained in limbo; its presentation expired and it was never recorded. The Registry ought to have informed Doral or Canales that the mortgage deed was defective due to the withdrawal of the conveyance deed, see id. §§ 2255, 2272; Doral disputes that the Registry did so. But there is no question that by July 29, 1999, Doral had learned *370that the conveyance and mortgage deeds remained unrecorded. Nevertheless, it sat on its hands. And in the meantime, on January 31, 2000, the Debtors filed for Chapter 13 bankruptcy. Doral learned of the bankruptcy petition in February and entered the case in early March.
Now Doral was in a fix. The bankruptcy petition had triggered an automatic stay, forbidding any action to perfect a lien against estate property. See 11 U.S.C. § 362(a)(4). But this restriction hurt Doral: Doral’s interest in the Debtors’ property remained un-perfected, and its position in the bankruptcy proceedings suffered as a result.3 If the mortgage had been recorded then Doral’s claim against the bankruptcy estate would have been secured by a lien on the property; the unrecorded mortgage, though, left Doral’s claim effectively unsecured. So, heedless of the stay, on December 1, 2000, Ca-nales — again acting as a notary retained by Doral — presented the mortgage deed to the Registry anew, this time with a corrected conveyance deed.4 See 30 L.P.R.A. § 2275 (allowing for a new presentation after the correction of defects). The Debtors, however, did not take this lying down.
Adversary Action
On August 22, 2001, the Debtors filed an adversary action against Doral in bankruptcy court, claiming that Doral’s presentation of the mortgage deed willfully violated the automatic stay and seeking various relief, including damages, costs, and fees.5 Doral moved to dismiss the complaint. For their part, the Debtors filed a motion for partial summary judgment on liability. There followed a flurry of filings, including an amended complaint that brought Canales into the case. Ca-nales responded with its own summary judgment motion. Finally, on August 29, 2003 the court dismissed the action, holding that Doral’s post-petition attempt to perfect its mortgage fell under an exception to the automatic stay. See 11 U.S.C. § 362(b)(3).6
*371The Debtors moved for reconsideration, and after kicking the issue about for three years the court obliged by reversing itself, granting the Debtors’ motion for partial summary judgment, and effectively denying Doral and Canales’s dispositive motions. The court recognized that Doral had been aware well in advance of the bankruptcy petition that its mortgage was unrecorded, and concluded that the attempt to perfect the mortgage had constituted a violation of the automatic stay. As a result, the court ordered Doral to withdraw the mortgage deed and turn it over to the Debtors for cancellation. An untimely appeal by Canales to the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (also “BAP” or “Panel”) was swiftly dismissed for want of jurisdiction. See Fed. R. Bankr.P. 8002(a) (establishing time to file); In re Abdallah, 778 F.2d 75, 77 (1st Cir.1985) (Rule 8002 time limit is jurisdictional).
Buoyed by their string of successes, the Debtors petitioned the court for damages, which then-section 362(h) authorized following a willful violation of the automatic stay.7 The former 11 U.S.C. § 362(h) read: “An individual injured by any willful violation of a stay provided by this section shall recover actual damages, including costs and attorneys’ fees, and, in appropriate circumstances, may recover punitive damages.” The Debtors explicitly sought both a preliminary conference and a full hearing on damages. The court acceded to the request for a conference, which occurred on June 22, 2007,8 but the hearing on damages never happened: on October 8, 2008, the court denied both the hearing and damages, and attorneys’ fees to boot, finding that the cancellation of the mortgage was remedy enough.- On December 17, 2008, the court entered a final judgment denying damages. The Debtors appealed to the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel, which summarily affirmed due to a missing transcript; now they seek our review.
Jurisdiction
Before reaching the parties’ substantive arguments, we must determine whether we have jurisdiction to consider the matter at all. Doral and Canales say we do not, for two reasons. First, they say, the bankruptcy court’s order on the motion for reconsideration constituted a final judgment, so the Debtors’ request for damages and subsequent appeal months later were untimely. And second, they say, even if there were some question as to whether the court’s order was a final judgment, the law of the case requires us to hold that it was because the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel so held and no one challenged the Panel’s determination. Both of these arguments fail. We plainly “have jurisdiction of [timely] appeals from all final decisions, judgments, orders, and decrees” of intermediate bankruptcy tribunals. 28 U.S.C. § 158(d)(1). Here, the BAP issued a final decision and judgment in the form of a summary affirmance. Therefore, we have jurisdiction.
We will, however, address Doral and Canales’s jurisdictional arguments as applied to the bankruptcy court, because if *372the bankruptcy court had no authority to entertain the Debtors’ request for damages then no hearing on damages was necessary and our review can end there.
The first jurisdictional argument, again, goes to timeliness. Specifically, Doral and Canales say that the Debtors’ request for damages was functionally equivalent to a motion to alter or amend a judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e) because it sought additional relief after the court had already granted summary judgment. As a basis for this argument Doral and Canales say the order granting summary judgment was a “final judgment”; if it was then the motion may be properly characterized as one under Rule 59. And if this is the case then the motion had to be filed within ten days of the original judgment. See Fed. R.Civ.P. 59(e) (amended in 2009 to extend filing period to twenty-eight days). Rule 59’s time limit is jurisdictional. Barrett v. United States, 965 F.2d 1184, 1187 (1st Cir.1992). So, Doral and Canales conclude, because the damages request was not filed within ten days of the summary judgment grant, the bankruptcy court had no jurisdiction to entertain it. But if, as the Debtors argue, the motion was something other than one to set aside judgment, then the Rule 59 ten-day window would not apply.
The term “final judgment” is no misnomer — the Supreme Court has held consistently for generations that it applies only to a determination that leaves nothing more for the court to do than to execute judgment. See Riley v. Kennedy, 553 U.S. 406, 128 S.Ct. 1970, 1981, 170 L.Ed.2d 837 (2008) (“A final judgment is ‘one which ends the litigation on the merits and leaves nothing for the court to do but execute the judgment.’ ”) (quoting Catlin v. United States, 324 U.S. 229, 233, 65 S.Ct. 631, 89 L.Ed. 911 (1945)). It follows that if the issue of damages was still open when the court resolved the Debtors’ motion for partial summary judgment then the court’s determination was not final. See Garzaro v. Univ. of P.R., 575 F.2d 335, 337 (1st Cir.1978) (holding that an order that “leaves open the monetary liability of defendants, is not a ‘final’ order” and collecting sources). Indeed, the Debtors requested damages in their complaint and the court failed to act on this request — the issue remained unresolved when the court granted summary judgment. The bankruptcy court referred to its conclusion only as an order. No judgment entered after the court’s order. And later on, the court itself explicitly held that it had not issued a final judgment. The only thing that might lead us to accept Doral and Canales’s contention that the order was a final judgment is a single line in the order: “judgment must enter in favor of the debtors.” But this line is not particularly convincing— judgment did not actually enter at all. Given all this, it is abundantly clear that the court did not issue a final judgment before the Debtors filed their motion for damages. There was no motion to alter or amend judgment because there was no final judgment to alter or amend.
Doral and Canales next argue that the law of the case effectively precluded the bankruptcy court’s exercise of jurisdiction over the motion for damages. This is so, Doral and Canales say, because the BAP dismissed Canales’s appeal of the order granting summary judgment on the ground that it lacked jurisdiction due to Canales’s untimely filing. According to Doral and Canales, the BAP’s dismissal constituted an implicit holding that the order was a final judgment. However, that is not the case.
“The law of the case doctrine ‘posits that when a court decides upon a rule of law, that decision should continue to govern the same issues in subsequent *373stages in the same case.’ ” Remexcel Managerial Consultants, Inc. v. Arlequin, 583 F.3d 45, 53 (1st Cir.2009) (quoting Arizona v. California, 460 U.S. 605, 618, 103 S.Ct. 1382, 75 L.Ed.2d 318 (1983)). We need not expound on this doctrine in great detail, as it plainly does not apply here. Not only was the bankruptcy court’s order granting summary judgment not a final judgment, but the BAP did not hold that it was one either. Intermediate bankruptcy tribunals have jurisdiction over appeals not only from “final judgments, orders, and decrees,” but also from “interlocutory orders and decrees.” 28 U.S.C. § 158. Any appeal to an intermediate bankruptcy tribunal—whether from a final judgment or an interlocutory order—is subject to the time limit imposed by Rule 8002(a) of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure.9 Thus, the BAP’s generic determination of untimeliness says nothing and implies nothing about whether the unsuccessful appeal was from a final or interlocutory order. For this reason, the law of the case has no place here.
Doral and Canales propose the last-ditch policy argument that it would be unfair to allow the Debtors an opportunity to appeal when Canales was barred from the same opportunity; this argument is perhaps their least compelling. Let us put it this way: If Doral and Canales were correct that the order granting summary judgment constituted a final judgment, then Canales dug its own appeal’s grave by filing fifty-eight days after the court’s ruling—not just untimely, but very untimely. But they are not correct on the final judgment issue, which means that when final judgment actually did enter, there was no reason they could not have cross-appealed, fighting summary judgment before the BAP and then before us. See, e.g., In re Bos. Reg’l Med. Ctr., Inc., 291 F.3d 111, 116 n. 2 (1st Cir.2002) (noting that appellees aggrieved by a lower court judgment may cross-appeal); Fed. R. Bankr.P. 8002(a) (establishing time limit for cross-appeals). They have not done so. Doral and Canales have failed to avail themselves of procedures that were readily available to them; this failure decidedly does not imply that they were unfairly deprived of an opportunity to appeal the order granting summary judgment.
In the end, then, the bankruptcy court had jurisdiction over the Debtors’ damages motion, and we certainly have jurisdiction over the Debtors’ appeal of its denial. We turn now to the merits of the case.
Standard of Review
Before a bankruptcy case reaches us, appellants have two options for intermediate review: they may be heard by a district court or a bankruptcy appellate panel. In re Hill, 562 F.3d 29, 32 (1st Cir.2009); see also 28 U.S.C. § 158. Whichever option the appellants choose, in conducting our own review we “cede no special deference to the intermediate decision,” focusing instead on the bankruptcy court’s decision. Hill, 562 F.3d at 32. Our review of the bankruptcy court’s decision is de novo, though we will only upset the court’s factual determinations in the case of clear error. Id.
Willful Violation
An important premise of the Debtors’ appeal is that the bankruptcy court found Doral and Canales to have willfully violated the automatic stay. Without a willful violation, the damages provision of 11 U.S.C. § 362 by its terms would become *374irrelevant. Doral and Canales claim that the bankruptcy court never found a willful violation. They focus on the absence of the word “willful” anywhere in the court’s analyses. They further argue that there was no willful violation as a matter of fact, precluding partial summary judgment in the Debtors’ favor and therefore precluding damages. We disagree: as the bankruptcy court effectively held, there was a willful violation as a matter of undisputed fact.10
A violation is “willful” if a “creditor’s conduct was intentional (as distinguished from inadvertent), and committed with knowledge of the pendency of the bankruptcy case.” In re McMullen, 386 F.3d 320, 330 (1st Cir.2004). Doral and Canales cannot and do not contest that Canales, at Doral’s request, intentionally presented the mortgage deed to the Registry after the Debtors had filed their bankruptcy case. Nor is there any dispute that Doral had knowledge of the case while it retained Canales, given that Doral filed a notice of appearance in the underlying bankruptcy case months before Canales filed the mortgage deed with the Registry. Doral and Canales each attempt to cast themselves as the guiltless party in the filing of the deed: Doral claims that Ca-nales filed the deed on the basis of Doral’s pre-petition urgings, and Canales claims that it did so without notice from Doral as to the pending bankruptcy action. In other words, Doral took no actions once it had knowledge, and Canales did take actions but had no knowledge. Diffusion of responsibility, however, gets them nowhere. See McMullen, 386 F.3d at 331 (cataloguing cases of joint willful violations); see also In re Timbs, 178 B.R. 989, 995 (Bkrtcy.E.D.Tenn.1994) (cataloguing cases of joint willful violations by attorney and client). It seems to us that Doral ought to have informed Canales when it learned of the bankruptcy petition, and that Ca-nales — given the notary’s role of giving legal effect to “the will of the parties,” 4 L.P.R.A. § 2002 (emphasis added) — ought to have done more than follow Doral’s word alone.11 Despite their protestations, Doral and Canales’s acts are not wholly separable from one another, and in the end there is no question that each is responsible for a willful violation as a matter of law. See McMullen, 386 F.3d at 331.
Doral and Canales argue that the bankruptcy court’s determination that “[t]he present case is more like an avoidance action ... than a common violation of the automatic stay” forecloses a finding of willfulness as a matter of law. They do *375not, however, explain how this avoidance analogy (which the court used only to support its decision not to award damages) might affect our willfulness analysis. Instead, the analogy seems designed to fit the proverbial round peg (here, a willful violation of the stay) into a square hole (here, an avoidance action), casting this case as something it is not. We have already spelled out what constitutes a willful violation, applied that standard here, and concluded that there was such a violation. In contrast, an avoidance action allows a bankruptcy trustee to cancel an improper conveyance or recover for the estate the value of the improperly conveyed property. See 11 U.S.C. §§ 544, 545, 547(b), 548(a), 549(a). Here, the adversary action may indeed have been like an avoidance action in that cancelling an improper conveyance was a portion of the remedy, but it simply was not one.12 Doral and Canales’s analogy to avoidance actions cannot trump the language of the statute that actually applies here and the well-established case law construing that language; as a matter of plainly applicable law, Doral and Canales willfully violated the stay.
Hearing on Damages
Now we reach the meat of the appeal: the Debtors’ contention that the court erred by denying them a hearing on damages. The parties frame this as an issue implicating the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process Clause. But “courts should not decide constitutional issues when this can be avoided,” see United States v. Vilches-Navarrete, 523 F.3d 1, 9 n. 6 (1st Cir.2008), and we can address the Debtors’ concerns without recourse to the Fifth Amendment.
The opportunity for a plaintiff to present evidence on damages after winning partial summary judgment on liability is a right so fundamental in civil proceedings that it normally goes without saying. See, e.g., Donahue v. United States, 634 F.3d 615, 622 (1st Cir.2011) (district court “granted partial summary judgment ... with respect to liability” and then “held a bench trial on the issue of damages”); In re Rivera Torres, 432 F.3d 20, 22 (1st Cir.2005) (“The bankruptcy court entered partial summary judgment in favor of the Debtors, subject to a later hearing on damages.”); Vélez v. Awning Windows, Inc., 375 F.3d 35, 39 (1st Cir.2004) (district court “granted the plaintiffs motion for partial summary judgment ... resolvfing] the issue of liability” and then “convened a damages hearing before a jury”); accord 10B Wright, Miller & Kane, Federal Practice & Procedure § 2736 (3d ed.1998) (noting that “if the court establishes the existence of liability” via partial summary judgment, “the case then will proceed for a determination of the damage issue”). Such an opportunity is necessary here given the bankruptcy code’s unequivocal mandate of actual damages following a willful violation of an automatic stay. As a reminder, the statute at issue provides: “An individual injured by any willful violation of a stay provided by this section shall recover actual damages, including costs and attorneys’ fees.” 11 U.S.C. § 362(h) (prior to amendment). There can be no question that, as a general matter, the statute mandates actual damages. And it would be impossible for a court to set the amount of actual damages, costs, and attorneys’ fees without taking evidence. *376Thus, the bankruptcy court frustrated both the statute’s language and its mandated result by denying the Debtors a chance to prove damages. In order “to enforce [the statute] according to its terms,” as both we and the bankruptcy court must do, remand is necessary. Caminetti v. United States, 242 U.S. 470, 485, 37 S.Ct. 192, 61 L.Ed. 442 (1917); see also Mass. Museum of Contemporary Art Found., Inc. v. Buchel, 593 F.3d 38, 50 (1st Cir.2010) (same).
Anticipating our decision’s grounding in statutory language, Doral and Canales claim that the court’s determination of a willful violation is not enough to trigger a damages inquiry: they say that in order to be statutorily entitled to damages a party must first prove injury, too. See 11 U.S.C. § 362(h) (prior to amendment, establishing right to recovery for “[a]n individual injured by any willful violation,” emphasis added). The Debtors claim injury: they have expended court costs and attorneys’ fees in order to vindicate the automatic stay, and the statute mandates that they may recover both as actual damages.13 Moreover, in the context of a procedural argument founded on the absence of any opportunity to offer proof of damages, Doral and Canales’s contention puts the trailer before the tractor. The Debtors would no doubt welcome an opportunity to prove injury, which is closely intertwined with damages; as it is, they have not had the opportunity to prove anything beyond the willful violation. The Debtors also point out that in each of a plethora of nonbinding lower-court cases Doral and Ca-nales cite on this point, the court made its final determination on damages only after reviewing evidence specific to injury and damages.14 Thus, contrary to Doral and Canales’s contentions, these cases support the Debtors’ argument that the statute affords them an opportunity to present evidence. The Debtors have a statutory right to prove damages after a willful violation of the automatic stay, and such a violation is precisely what occurred here.
The parties spend more energy on the question of whether the bankruptcy court already provided adequate opportunity for the Debtors to prove damages. As a starting point, Doral says we cannot review the question at all and must summarily affirm because the Debtors have not produced a transcript of the bankruptcy court’s conference that was nominally on damages. This might be an issue, except for the undisputed fact that the court never held an evidentiary hearing but, instead, explicitly denied the Debtors’ request for one. Cf. Rodríguez v. Señor Frog’s de la Isla, Inc., 642 F.3d 28, 37 (1st Cir.2011) (argument could not succeed absent transcript because there was not “enough raw material so that we [could] do our job”). Moreover, the transcript is readily available through the bankruptcy court docket: it shows that the court discussed damages barely if at all and took no evidence. Instead, at the June 22, 2007 status conference, the parties laid out a skeletal version of their legal arguments, and the court *377ordered further briefing. Between the bankruptcy court’s rejection of a damages hearing and the easily obtained transcript’s showing that the status conference did not allow for the presentation of evidence, there is more than enough for us to conclude, as we do, that the court improperly denied the Debtors an opportunity to prove damages.
Wrapping up, we note that the bankruptcy court’s decision itself shows why such an opportunity is necessary. The record reveals no clear foundation for the bankruptcy court’s conclusion that damages were unwarranted. The court only suggested that the adversary proceeding was “like an avoidance action,” but did not otherwise support its conclusion that cancellation of the mortgage was a sufficient remedy for the willful violation. And the court gave no explanation for disregarding the statute’s language mandating the recovery of costs and attorneys’ fees. The court’s conclusion is rooted in neither record nor statute, and an analogy unsupported by any evidence is not enough to justify its decision to disregard the statute’s mandatory language and deny damages.
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, we reverse the bankruptcy court’s denial of a hearing on damages, vacate its rejection of damages, and remand for the parties to present evidence on damages. Costs are taxed in favor of the appellants.