MEMORANDUM OPINION
TONY M. DAVIS, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE
To prevent repetitious litigation, the doctrine known as “res judicata” holds that all matters that were or should have been litigated at the time of a judgment [605]*605are barred from further litigation. As a corollary to this doctrine, any cause of action on a contract “merges” into the judgment on that contract, and disappears. But does a judgment on a note prevent collection of all attorney fees where the note specifically provides for the payment of post-judgment attorney’s fees?
I. BACKGROUND AND FACTS
A. Original judgment
On May 16, 2008, American Bank of Commerce (“ABC”) loaned money to Russell Allen Graves.1 The promissory note signed for this loan provided for the collection of post-judgment attorney’s fees from Graves.2
Some twenty months later, Graves defaulted on payment. ABC sued, and a state court granted ABC summary judgment on the amount owed.3 The court also awarded ABC other fees, including $2,500 for “attorney’s fees for services rendered through the trial of this case” and $2,000 for “legal fees for the foreclosure of the security arrangement” (there was apparently a pri- or foreclosure on some real estate that secured the note), for a total of $4,500 in legal fees.4 The judgment further stated “[a]ll relief not expressly granted herein is denied.”5
B. Post-judgment collection efforts
More than four years after judgment, ABC filed an application to garnish a brokerage account owned by Graves.6 Six months later, Graves filed bankruptcy under chapter 7, the brokerage account became property of the bankruptcy estate, and the funds in the account — totaling $110,473 — were transferred to the chapter 7 Trustee.7 Afterwards, all other security interests to the account were released, leaving ABC with the only remaining claim secured by the account.8 Three months after the bankruptcy filing, ABC filed a proof of claim asserting a lien against the account.9
ABC has now filed an amended proof of claim and asks the Court to direct the Trustee to disburse funds from the account to ABC prior to approval of his final report.10 ABC claims $33,386 in attorney’s fees dating from two years after the judgment on the note until the day before ABC filed the amended proof of claim.11 Together with the balance unpaid on the judgment — $76,699—this would almost entirely deplete the proceeds from the brokerage account.
The Trustee objects to the post-judgment legal fees and argues that because the state court judgment only awarded $4,500 in legal fees, ABC can claim no more.12 According to the Trustee, after a [606]*606judgment on a promissory note, the doctrine of merger dictates that there can be no further cause of action on that note because any claims to attorney fees promised in the note merge into the judgment.13 ABC responds that there is a widely-recognized exception to the doctrine of merger — when there is a specific contractual obligation to pay post-judgment collection fees 14 — and the promissory note language quoted above falls under that exception.15
Would Texas recognize an exception to the doctrine of merger, and if so, do the terms of this promissory note fall under the exception?16
II. ANALYSIS
A, Does the Doctrine of Merger Prevent Collecting Post-Judgment Attorney Fees in Texas?
i. Res judicata and the doctrine of merger in Texas.
Res judicata — meaning a thing adjudicated17 — is a legal principal that stops parties from litigating issues that have already been decided. It applies when a new case has the same “identity of parties, issues, subject .matter, relief sought and cause of action” as a previous case.18 Courts have also applied this doctrine to bar issues that could have been decided in a previous case.19 Res judicata serves the public goals of affording full respect to prior judgments and relieving courts from repetitious litigation, and the private goal of “repose” — to be finally free from the cost and hassle of litigation.20
The Texas Supreme Court has adopted the “transaction test” to determine whether res judicata preempts litigation, stating that “[a] subsequent suit will be barred if it arises out of the same subject matter [as] a previous suit and which through the exercise of diligence, could have been litigated in a prior suit.”21 Res judicata is operative if the facts underlying the cause of action had already occurred before the previous decision.22 [607]*607However, res judicata “extends only to facts in issue as they existed at the time the judgment was rendered, and does not prevent a re-examination of the same question between the same parties, where, in the interval, the facts have changed, or new facts have occurred which may alter the legal rights or relations of the parties.” 23
The doctrine of merger is a specific application of res judicata, and operates with the same principles.24 Under the doctrine, “if a plaintiff prevails in a lawsuit, his cause of action merges into the judgment and the cause of action dissolves.”25 For example, under Texas law, general contractual obligations to pay for legal fees and collection fees typically merge with a judgment on the underlying contract.26 Texas courts also consider judgment-enforcement actions to be legally distinct from actions on a contract, so an obligation to pay “costs of collection” does not extend to post-judgment garnishment actions.27
But what if, in the contract itself, the parties have expressed their intent that post-judgment costs and fees will survive the judgment?
ii. Can obligations under a contract ever survive a judgment on that contract?
Whether a post-judgment contractual obligation survives a judgment is an issue of first impression in Texas. Based on the way the Texas Supreme Court has handled similar issues, it would most likely recognize an exception to the merger rule where new facts have arisen since the pri- or litigation and where the parties have expressed their intent that an obligation survive the judgment.
First, the Texas Supreme Court has held that an action based on facts that develop after the prior action is not barred by res judicata.28 In City of Lubbock v. [608]*608Stubbs, Lubbock sued a resident, Stubbs, for violating the city’s zoning ordinance.29 Stubbs argued the claim was barred because a court had previously held the zoning rules to be arbitrary and unreasonable as applied to his property.30
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MEMORANDUM OPINION
TONY M. DAVIS, UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE
To prevent repetitious litigation, the doctrine known as “res judicata” holds that all matters that were or should have been litigated at the time of a judgment [605]*605are barred from further litigation. As a corollary to this doctrine, any cause of action on a contract “merges” into the judgment on that contract, and disappears. But does a judgment on a note prevent collection of all attorney fees where the note specifically provides for the payment of post-judgment attorney’s fees?
I. BACKGROUND AND FACTS
A. Original judgment
On May 16, 2008, American Bank of Commerce (“ABC”) loaned money to Russell Allen Graves.1 The promissory note signed for this loan provided for the collection of post-judgment attorney’s fees from Graves.2
Some twenty months later, Graves defaulted on payment. ABC sued, and a state court granted ABC summary judgment on the amount owed.3 The court also awarded ABC other fees, including $2,500 for “attorney’s fees for services rendered through the trial of this case” and $2,000 for “legal fees for the foreclosure of the security arrangement” (there was apparently a pri- or foreclosure on some real estate that secured the note), for a total of $4,500 in legal fees.4 The judgment further stated “[a]ll relief not expressly granted herein is denied.”5
B. Post-judgment collection efforts
More than four years after judgment, ABC filed an application to garnish a brokerage account owned by Graves.6 Six months later, Graves filed bankruptcy under chapter 7, the brokerage account became property of the bankruptcy estate, and the funds in the account — totaling $110,473 — were transferred to the chapter 7 Trustee.7 Afterwards, all other security interests to the account were released, leaving ABC with the only remaining claim secured by the account.8 Three months after the bankruptcy filing, ABC filed a proof of claim asserting a lien against the account.9
ABC has now filed an amended proof of claim and asks the Court to direct the Trustee to disburse funds from the account to ABC prior to approval of his final report.10 ABC claims $33,386 in attorney’s fees dating from two years after the judgment on the note until the day before ABC filed the amended proof of claim.11 Together with the balance unpaid on the judgment — $76,699—this would almost entirely deplete the proceeds from the brokerage account.
The Trustee objects to the post-judgment legal fees and argues that because the state court judgment only awarded $4,500 in legal fees, ABC can claim no more.12 According to the Trustee, after a [606]*606judgment on a promissory note, the doctrine of merger dictates that there can be no further cause of action on that note because any claims to attorney fees promised in the note merge into the judgment.13 ABC responds that there is a widely-recognized exception to the doctrine of merger — when there is a specific contractual obligation to pay post-judgment collection fees 14 — and the promissory note language quoted above falls under that exception.15
Would Texas recognize an exception to the doctrine of merger, and if so, do the terms of this promissory note fall under the exception?16
II. ANALYSIS
A, Does the Doctrine of Merger Prevent Collecting Post-Judgment Attorney Fees in Texas?
i. Res judicata and the doctrine of merger in Texas.
Res judicata — meaning a thing adjudicated17 — is a legal principal that stops parties from litigating issues that have already been decided. It applies when a new case has the same “identity of parties, issues, subject .matter, relief sought and cause of action” as a previous case.18 Courts have also applied this doctrine to bar issues that could have been decided in a previous case.19 Res judicata serves the public goals of affording full respect to prior judgments and relieving courts from repetitious litigation, and the private goal of “repose” — to be finally free from the cost and hassle of litigation.20
The Texas Supreme Court has adopted the “transaction test” to determine whether res judicata preempts litigation, stating that “[a] subsequent suit will be barred if it arises out of the same subject matter [as] a previous suit and which through the exercise of diligence, could have been litigated in a prior suit.”21 Res judicata is operative if the facts underlying the cause of action had already occurred before the previous decision.22 [607]*607However, res judicata “extends only to facts in issue as they existed at the time the judgment was rendered, and does not prevent a re-examination of the same question between the same parties, where, in the interval, the facts have changed, or new facts have occurred which may alter the legal rights or relations of the parties.” 23
The doctrine of merger is a specific application of res judicata, and operates with the same principles.24 Under the doctrine, “if a plaintiff prevails in a lawsuit, his cause of action merges into the judgment and the cause of action dissolves.”25 For example, under Texas law, general contractual obligations to pay for legal fees and collection fees typically merge with a judgment on the underlying contract.26 Texas courts also consider judgment-enforcement actions to be legally distinct from actions on a contract, so an obligation to pay “costs of collection” does not extend to post-judgment garnishment actions.27
But what if, in the contract itself, the parties have expressed their intent that post-judgment costs and fees will survive the judgment?
ii. Can obligations under a contract ever survive a judgment on that contract?
Whether a post-judgment contractual obligation survives a judgment is an issue of first impression in Texas. Based on the way the Texas Supreme Court has handled similar issues, it would most likely recognize an exception to the merger rule where new facts have arisen since the pri- or litigation and where the parties have expressed their intent that an obligation survive the judgment.
First, the Texas Supreme Court has held that an action based on facts that develop after the prior action is not barred by res judicata.28 In City of Lubbock v. [608]*608Stubbs, Lubbock sued a resident, Stubbs, for violating the city’s zoning ordinance.29 Stubbs argued the claim was barred because a court had previously held the zoning rules to be arbitrary and unreasonable as applied to his property.30 However, the zoning rules had changed since that decision, as had Stubbs’s use of the property.31 The Texas Supreme Court found the claim was not barred.32 The court determined that “the cause of action alleged by the city is based upon acts of Stubbs subsequent to the judgment rendered in the former suit,” and therefore “the issues are not the same.”33 In Texas, res judicata “extends only to facts in issue as they existed at the time the judgment was rendered, and does not prevent a re-examination of thé same question, where ... the facts have changed, or new facts have occurred which may alter the legal rights or relations of the parties.”34
Second, the Texas Supreme Court has held that separate terms of a continuing contract can be breached and sued upon separately, even after a previous judgment on the contract.35 In Ben C. Jones & Co. v. Gammel Statesman Publishing Co., Jones had a two-year printing contract with Gammel — Gammel would print, bind, and deliver book's, and Jones would sell them.36 Gammel failed to deliver certain orders and Jones sued for its lost profits.37 During the trial, more causes of action arose when Gammel continued to fail to make deliveries — however, Jones did not add these claims to the litigation.38 The trial court rendered judgment for Jones but stated that the judgment' would be final as to all causes of action that arose before the judgment and were known to the plaintiff at the time of the judgment.39 Under the trial court’s ruling, Jones lost the ability to sue for the breaches that occurred during or after the litigation.40 The Supreme Court of Texas reversed, holding that “[t]his was a continuing contract and a failure ... to perform any one of the things contracted for by the terms of the contract was a partial breach thereof and constituted a separate and independent cause of action.”41 Thus, the jüdg[609]*609ment did not bar claims on the breaches that occurred during the litigation, even though they were obligations arising under the original contract.42
Because the parties in Ben C. Jones contracted for performance over a period of time, the judgment on certain breaches of the contract did not dissolve all future contractual obligations.43 The trial court’s judgment did not merge all claims on breaches that occurred during the litigation of previous claims — the future contractual obligations survived the entry of judgment on the contract, as intended by the parties to this “continuing contract.”44 This suggests that contractual obligations may survive judgment under Texas law where the contract demonstrates that the parties so intended.
Third, the Texas Supreme Court has said that, generally, res judicata only applies to claims that, “through the exercise of diligence, could have been litigated in a prior suit.”45 If the claims could not have been litigated in the prior action, then res judicata does not apply.46 Indeed, City of Lubbock and Ben C. Jones can be read as applications of this general rule..In City of Lubbock, a different set of facts were at issue in the second suit that could not have been litigated in the previous case. In Ben C. Jones, new causes of action arose from breaches of the ongoing obligations under the contract. The Texas Supreme Court would most likely apply this general limitation on res judicata to the more specific doctrine of merger.
Taken together, Texas law appears to support an exception to the merger doctrine at least where (1) new facts arise after the judgment and (2) the contract clearly evinces the intent of the contracting parties that obligations continue after judgment. In other jurisdictions, courts have held that a clear intent for contractual obligations to continue post-judgment is sufficient for an exception to the merger doctrine.47 Perhaps the Texas Supreme Court would adopt the same rule; however, [610]*610this dispute can be resolved on narrower grounds.
B. Does the language of the note come under the exception?
The narrower exception to the merger doctrine applies to the note here if (1) new facts have arisen that could not have been previously litigated and (2) the language contained in the note indicates an intent that post-judgment attorney’s fees survive the judgment.
The issue here is whether ABC is entitled to post-judgment attorney’s fees for collection activities. By their nature, post-judgment collection efforts happen after a judgment and so could not have been litigated. Thus, the first element — new facts are in issue that could not have been litigated before the judgmenthas been met.
The language of the note also clearly evinces the parties’ intent that some obligations of the contract continue post-judgment. Here Graves agreed “to pay to Payee all of Payee’s collection costs and expenses, including but not limited to, (a) court costs; [and] (b) Payee’s reasonable attorney’s fees incurred.” Further, the agreement specified that “[t]he costs recoverable by Payee under this section shall include expenses which may not be taxable as court costs, including, without limitation, all costs and expenses incident to appellate, bankruptcy, post-judgment and alternative dispute resolution proceedings.” 48 This specific reference to post-judgment activities establishes the parties’ intent that the obligation to pay post-judgment attorney’s fees in ABC’s promissory note survives the judgment and remains in effect.49
III. CONCLUSION
There is an exception to the merger doctrine that allows contractual obligations intended to survive a judgment on the contract to remain effective post-judgment. The promissory note here creates an obligation that was intended to, and did, survive the judgment. And this obligation is based on new facts that could not have been litigated in the prior suit. This Court will therefore overrule the Trustee’s objection to ABC’s proof of claim, and will grant [611]*611the motion to authorize distribution, both through two separate orders.