ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
ORDER.
PER CURIAM:
Upon consideration of the petition for rehearing of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”) and of the response to the foregoing, it is
ORDERED, by the Court, that the petition is denied, for the reasons set forth in the opinion of the Court filed herein this date.
OPINION
Appellee FDIC petitions for rehearing of the decision in
Auction Co. v. FDIC,
Auction Co. I
held that the FDIC counted as “the United States” for the purposes of the catch-all federal statute of limitations for any “civil action commenced against the United States,” 28 U.S.C. § 2401(a). See
That the FDIC as Receiver “counts as the United States for the Tucker Act,” as we held in
Auction Co. I,
As we noted in
Auction Co. I,
the FDIC argued that the district court had jurisdiction over this action pursuant to § 1821(d)(6), which allows suit in district court following administrative review of claims against depositories. The panel rejected that suggestion and agreed with Auction Company’s theory of jurisdiction, which looked to the FDIC’s sue-or-be-sued clause for a waiver of immunity and found subject matter jurisdiction based on the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989’s (“FIRREA”) “deemer” clause, 12 U.S.C. § 1819(b)(2)(a). See
The FDIC’s petition for rehearing reiterates its theory of jurisdiction, arguing that Auction Company’s account cannot be correct because the jurisdiction-precluding effect of § 1821(d)(13)(D) extends to this *1200 ease, allowing only such jurisdiction as is granted in § 1821(d)(6). 1 Although we will not attempt to define fully the concept of “claims” as it appears in subsections (d)(13)(D) and (d)(6) of 12 U.S.C. § 1821, we will make clear the grounds for our rejection of the FDIC’s view of those sections as they apply to this case.
Section 1821(d)(13)(D) states in relevant part:
Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, no court shall have jurisdiction over
(i) any claim or action for payment from, or any action seeking a determination of rights with respect to, the assets of any depository institution for which the Corporation has been appointed receiver, including assets which the Corporation may acquire from itself as such receiver; or
(ii) any claim relating to any act or omission of such institution or the Corporation as receiver.
The only clause of the subsection that “otherwise provide[s]” jurisdiction is 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(6), which provides for administrative determination of “any claim against a depository institution for which the Corporation is receiver” and thereafter for adjudication in district court. These two subsections would seem to set up a standard exhaustion requirement: (d)(6)(A) routes claims through an administrative review process, and (d)(13)(D) withholds judicial review unless and until claims are so routed. Their wording, however, creates a difficult interpretative problem: the jurisdiction-preeluding language of (d)(13)(D) can accommodate quite a broad reading—broad enough to cover contracts between private parties and the FDIC as Receiver for a failed depository institution. But (d)(6)(A) is quite narrow—it allows judicial review, after administrative determination, of “any claim against a depository institution for which the Corporation is receiver.” Thus, for claims that are not “against a depository institution” but that do fall within (d)(13)(D), the effect of the two sections, on a plain language approach, would be not to impose an administrative exhaustion requirement but to foreclose judicial jurisdiction altogether, a result troubling from a constitutional perspective and certainly not the goal of FIRREA. See generally, e.g.,
Hudson United Bank v. Chase Manhattan Bank of Connecticut,
There are two possible ways to produce such a harmonious reading of “claims”. One may either read (d)(6)(A) broadly, ignoring the phrase “against a depository institution,” or read (d)(13)(D) narrowly, implying the phrase “against a depository institution” on the basis of the statute’s general focus on such claims. See
Office and Professional Employees International Union v. FDIC,
Our circuit has not taken a position on the issue, although we have indicated that bankruptcy law is a useful aid in understanding FIRREA. See
OPEIU,
Section 1821(d)(13)(D)(ii), as discussed, bars jurisdiction (except as otherwise provided in subsection (d)) over “any claim relating to any act or omission of such institution or the Corporation as receiver.” Whatever may be the scope of “claim,” we think it is clear that the reference to “the Corporation as receiver” in (d)(13)(D)(ii) means the Corporation as receiver
for such institution
(i.e., a particular institution of the sort referred to in (d)(13)(D)(i)). Omitting this restriction would change § 1821(d)(13)(D) from an exhaustion requirement to a grant of immunity for all claims arising from acts the FDIC takes “as receiver”—except to the extent that those claims could be handled by an administrative process open only to claims “against a depository institution.” We are confident that Congress did not intend such a result, which would raise serious constitutional questions. See, e.g.,
Nat’l Unión Fire Ins. Co. v. City Savings,
■ In this case, however, the FDIC did not act as receiver for any particular depository. The contract it entered into related to the assets of an unspecified number of unnamed depositories and provided that the assets could be unilaterally withdrawn at any time up to 48 hours before the auction. We refuse to , conceive of this arrangement as a contract between Auction Company and the FDIC as Receiver for a quantum flux of probabilistic depositories whose identities are revealed only by the filing of a lawsuit. A federal receivership is not Schroedinger’s cat. If the FDIC enters into a transaction whose economic realities are impossible to square with *1202 the notion that the FDIC is acting as receiver for a particular depository, liability for its acts will run to the FDIC directly, unmediated by exhaustion requirements governing claims against depositories. If the FDIC acts as a generic receiver, it must expect to be sued as such.
* * *
With this clarification, the petition for rehearing is hereby denied.
So ordered.
Notes
. The FDIC suggests also that our analysis of the jurisdictional issue was unnecessary. This underestimates the imperatives of limited federal jurisdiction. Federal courts have an independent obligation to assure themselves of jurisdiction, even when the parties fail to challenge it. See, e.g.,
FW/PBS, Inc. v. Dallas,
. Even such a harmonious reading would not necessarily limit the net effect of (d)(6)(A) and (d)(13)(D) to the imposition of an exhaustion requirement on a specific class of suits against the FDIC. For example, it may well be that Congress intended entirely to prevent parties from maintaining declaratory judgment actions against the receiver, see
Nat'l Union Fire Insur
*1201
anee Co. v. City Savings,
. Claims based on contracts rejected by the receiver pursuant to § 1821(e)(1) and (2) would fall into this category. Cf. 11 U.S.C. §§ 365(g), 502(g) (providing that rejection of an executory contract by bankruptcy trustee is treated as breach occurring immediately before filing of bankruptcy petition).
