Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge STEPHEN F. WILLIAMS.
Auction Company of America (“Auction Company”) seeks damages for breach of contract from the Federal Deposit Insurance Company (“FDIC”) as statutory successor to the Resolution Trust Corporation (“RTC”). It filed the first of three suits (and the one both parties regard as controlling for limitations purposes) four years arid one day after the cause of action accrued. The filing was too late under the District of Columbia’s three-year limitations period for contract actions, 12 D.C.Code § 301(7), but timely under either the general six-year limitations period for civil actions against the United States, 28 U.S.C. § 2401(a), or the Missouri five-year contract limitations period, Mo. Ann. Stat. § 516.120(1). The district court ruled that the federal statute did not govern and performed a choice-of-law analysis to arrive at the D.C. limitations period. It thus dismissed the complaint. Because we find that the federal statute does apply, we reverse and remand without reaching the state choice-of-law issue.
Auction Company’s claim is that it entered into a contract with the RTC, as receiver for certain failed thrifts, to auction off key thrift assets. On September 18,1990, after a number of actions that according to Auction Company impeded its efforts to organize the auction, the RTC terminated the contract and thereby breached it. Four years and one day later, on September 19, 1994, Auction Company filed its first complaint.
That complaint’s caption named the RTC as defendant, but also said that the suit was against the RTC in its corporate capacity
12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(5) requires the RTC as Receiver to allow or disallow claims within 180 days. Without waiting for the end of this period, Auction Company filed a second suit on October 4, 1995. This complaint named the RTC as Receiver as defendant but was in other respects identical to the first. The RTC as Receiver moved to dismiss on the grounds that Auction Company had not exhausted its administrative remedies. On February 9, 1996, following the disallowance of its claim by RTC as Receiver, Auction Company filed its third suit'. By this time the RTC no longer existed; its authorizing statute provided for termination on December 31, 1995. See 12 U.S.C. § 1441a(m)(l). The FDIC, its statutory successor, was named as defendant in the third suit and was substituted into the first two. We do not believe this substitution affects our analysis, and we will limit our focus to the FDIC.
All three actions were consolidated before the district court. The FDIC moved for judgment on the pleadings under Rule 12(c), seeking dismissal on the grounds that the District of Columbia three-year statute of limitations for contracts applied. Auction Company suggested instead the six-year limitations period for civil actions against the United States. See 28 U.S.C. § 2401(a). Alternatively, it noted that the contract at issue contained a choice-of-law clause selecting Missouri law, and argued that the Missouri statute of limitations should govern. The district court, treating the 12(c) motion as “essentially” one to dismiss under 12(b)(6), ruled, that the FDIC was not “the United States” for the purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 2401(a). It thus proceeded to pick between the D.C. and the Missouri statutes of limitation. Reviewing de novo, we find error in the first determination and stop at that juncture: Section .2401(a) does apply, and Auction Company’s suits were timely.
28 U.S.C § 2401(a) provides that “every civil action commenced against the United States shall be barred unless the complaint is filed within six years after the right of action first accrues.” The question for this appeal, broadly stated, is whether the FDIC counts as the United States for the purposes of this provision. The district court was impressed by
O’Melveny & Myers v. FDIC,
In
O’Melveny
the FDIC as Receiver sued the counsel of a failed savings and loan for malpractice and breach of fiduciary duty in failing to expose frauds in the management of the S&L. The lawyers defended on the grounds that the management was fully aware of its own frauds, and that knowledge of those frauds must therefore be imputed to the' S&L, and thence to the FDIC as Receiver. The argument was a possible winner for the lawyers under California’s imputation law, but the FDIC argued that state law should be displaced by federal common law. Immediately after the Court’s declaration that the FDIC was not the United States, it twice discounted the significance of the remark, noting that: (1) even if the FDIC were the United States it would be begging the question to assume that it was asserting its own rights rather than those of the S&L;
Creating federal common law is one thing, applying a federal statute quite another. State law will generally fill the gaps in a comprehensive federal statutory scheme such as the FDIC’s enabling legislation, but it will not do so to the exclusion of another applicable federal statute. See
id.
at 85,
So we turn to the statute itself. Section 2401(a) originated as the internal limitations period for the Little Tucker Act. See
Christensen v. United States,
While this shuffle expanded the function of § 2401(a), see, e.g.,
Daingerfield Island Protective Society v. Babbitt,
Does the Little Tucker Act treat the FDIC as Receiver as the United States? Jurisdiction over contract claims, under either Tucker Act, exists only for contracts “with the United States.” If a contract with the FDIC as Receiver supports jurisdiction under either Tucker Act, then it'counts as a contract with the United States, and the FDIC as Receiver must be “the United States” for the Tucker Acts'. So the key question turns out to be whether a contract with the FDIC as Receiver will allow a Tucker Act suit. If that is so, then the equivalent meaning of “United States” in the Little Tucker Act and its statute of limitations allows us to conclude that the FDIC as Receiver is the United States for the purposes of § 2401(a).
The answer to the question is yes; the Act may be invoked whenever “a federal instrumentality acts within its statutory authority to carry out [the government’s] purposes” as long as no other specific statutory provision bars jurisdiction.
Butz Engineering Corp. v. United States,
As the FDIC as Receiver counts as the United States for the Tucker Act, it does so for the Tucker Act (and general federal) statute of limitations. The FDIC appears to take refuge in the idea that the captioning of the lawsuit -somehow outweighs the functional identity of the United States and its in-strumentalities for the purposes of § 2401(a). But that argument has been overwhelmingly rejected, by this circuit and others, in the specific context of the application of § 2401(a). See, e.g.,
Mason v. Judges of the U.S. Court of Appeals for D.C.,
* * *
This is not a Tucker Act suit, however, nor one under the APA. The FDIC could have argued, though it did not, that what distinguishes a suit against an agency from a suit against the United States is not the captioning of the complaint but the operative waiver of immunity. Section 2401(a), of course, is not limited to suits brought under the Tucker Act or the APA, but the FDIC could have argued that waiver under a sue-or-be-sued clause is different. Such a clause, the argument would go, lifts the immunity of only the agency, not the United States (assuming that that makes sense), and a suit in district court based on such a clause is accordingly not against the United States, even if the Tucker Act provides alternative Court of Federal Claims jurisdiction. The parties disagree about the source' of district court jurisdiction here, and one likely reason the FDIC did not make this argument is that its brief locates the basis for jurisdiction in the district court’s ability to review administrative disallowances of claims against depositories. 2
The FDIC’s argument, given these propositions, would be that when an agency is sued in its own name pursuant to a sue-or-be-sued clause, recovery is limited to funds within the agency’s control, and the suit is not against the United States. A suit is against the United States, the argument goes, only if recovery would come from general Treasury funds. This position finds some support in the case law, beginning with suits against the Department of Housing and Urban Development but now reaching the FDIC and other agencies. See, e.g.,
Licata v. United States Postal Service,
If we followed the analysis of these decisions, the FDIC could make the argument that this suit seeks funds under FDIC control and hence is not against the United States, pointing perhaps to 12 U.S.C. § 1821a(d), which limits some judgments to the assets of the FSLIC Resolution Fund. See
Far West,
A demonstration of the confusion requires 'a brief trip into the origins of the distinction between suits against the United States and those against an agency. In
Federal Housing Administration, Region No. 4 v. Burr,
As later cases picked up
Burr,
however, the doctrine changed shape.
Marcus Garvey Square,
It is at this point that confusion becomes evident. The practical weakness of the idea that recovery of funds within an agency’s control is not recovery against the United States is, we think, well exposed by the Fourth Circuit’s observation that “[t]he funds appropriated to HUD ... clearly originate in the public treasury, and they do not cease to be public funds after they are appropriated.”
Portsmouth,
The logical fallacy is just as clear. To ascertain whether a suit is against the United States, rather than a federal agency, the
Marcus Garvey
court and similar cases have turned to the test enunciated in
Dugan
and
Land.
See, e.g.,
Portsmouth,
* * *
So we find the argument the FDIC did not make no more persuasive than the one it did. Focusing on the waiver of immunity is valuable, however, because it permits a deeper understanding of the nature of § 2401(a) and discloses a functional rationale for its application that is perhaps more satisfying than its historical origins in the Tucker Act. As a consequence of the different waivers of immunity available, plaintiffs suing the FDIC have a fairly wide choice of forum, at least if they sue in contract. 5 They may bring suit in the Court of Federal Claims, if they have a Tucker Act suit for more than $10,000; they may bring a Tucker Act suit for a lesser amount in either the Court of Federal Claims dr a district court; and they may sue in any court of law or equity under the FDIC sue- or-be-sued clause. The question of whether to apply 28 U.S.C. § 2401(a) comes down to whether a specific limitations period is somehow tied to the choice of forum.
According to the FDIC, it should be: A suit under the sue-or-be-sued clause, naming the FDIC as Receiver, should be subject to the appropriate state statute of limitations. A Tucker Act suit naming the United States should be subject to § 2401(a). What to do with a Tucker Act suit that does not name the United States as defendant (a small but nonempty class, see, e.g.,
Kline v. Cisneros,
More specifically, § 2401(a) represents Congress’s general qualification — on the limitations issue — of its consent to suit against the United States. See
Saffron,
So ordered.
Notes
. These decisions have often been cursory or unclear in their treatment of the Receiver/Corporate distinction, but the FDIC gives us no persuasive reason why the distinction makes a difference here. The RTC as Receiver did not inherit this contract from defunct depositories; it entered into the contract in furtherance of its statutory mission, and the rights and obligations at issue are its rights and obligations, not those of the depositories. Cf.
O’Melveny,
. We address this argument despite the FDIC’s failure to raise it because, in some guises, it has jurisdictional overtones. See, e.g.,
Falls River-
. The effects are similar because, regardless of the origin of the funds, their loss forces the Government "to choose between allowing its interests to be served less well and spending more money to make up the shortfall."
Kauffman,
. Distinguishing between suits against agencies and those against the United States would frequently be necessary if Tucker Act jurisdiction were preemptive — that is, if Tucker Act jurisdic
. Tort claims are different; the Federal Tort Claims Act provides the exclusive avenue for relief where it applies. See 28 U.S.C. § 2679(a);
FDIC v. Meyer,
