Plaintiff, Eva Mae Roberts, brought this class action alleging that a mortgagee’s exercise of the private power of sale violated the due process clause. Plaintiff also insists that Cameron-Brown Company and the Federal National Mortgage Association (FNMA) failed in their duties to inquire into the circumstances leading to her defaults. Thus, they have allegedly violated HUD Handbook 4191.1. The district court, in response to a number of separate motions, upheld plaintiff’s contentions in all respects, holding that the exercise'of the private contractual power of sale provision in plaintiff’s Deed to Secure Debt violated the due process clause of the fifth amendment.
Roberts v. Cameron-Brown Co.,
The fact situation confronting this court is routine, and probably all too common. In October, 1972, Eva Mae Roberts bought a home in Augusta, Georgia, with the mortgage financed under Section 235 of the National Housing Act, 12 U.S.C. § 1715z. This program encourages private mortgagees to invest in low income housing, and provides for HUD-financed mortgage assistance payments. Cameron-Brown Co., the private mortgagee, assigned the mortgage to FNMA, and continued to service the mortgage under contract with FNMA.
Beginning in January, 1974, Mrs. Roberts failed to make her monthly payments on the mortgage. The failure continued for several months, until on May 6, 1974, FNMA’s attorney notified Mrs. Roberts that FNMA would exercise its option to accelerate the debt. A month later, Mrs. Roberts filed this class action. As noted, the district court has upheld plaintiff’s contentions, though in response to one of the earlier motions, he held there was no private cause of action under the HUD Handbook.
Roberts v. Cameron-Brown Co.,
The joint appellants, FNMA and Cameron-Brown Co., present two issues to the court. First, whether the exercise of a private power of sale by FNMA is governmental action and subject to the due process clause of the fifth amendment. Second, whether a private cause of action under the HUD Handbook should be implied to allow a mortgagor, as a defense to foreclosure, to assert that the mortgagee has failed to *358 comply with the guidelines of HUD Handbook 4191.1.
I.
Appellants contend first of all, and we agree, that there is no sufficient nexus to transform the private mortgagee’s act into that of the federal government. The government must be involved with the activity that causes the actual injury,
Moose Lodge No. 107 v. Irvis,
Appellee insists that the electric service in
Jackson
and the mortgage in
Barrera
were created by the private parties, and that the government, not the mortgagee, creates the FNMA mortgage. The distinction is not apt. Cameron-Brown created the mortgage, not HUD, though HUD certainly exercises some control. HUD provides a convenient mechanism, regulations, and some payments.
1
Northrip v. FNMA,
Appellee’s response is two-fold. First, she mentions that, as in
Barrera,
the mortgage in
Northrip
was wholly the creation of the mortgagor and the investor. That attempted distinction fails utterly, as
Northrip
involved an FNMA mortgage. Secondly, appellee simply admits that she does not approve of the case, and much prefers
FNMA v. Lefkowitz,
Appellee also relies on
McQueen v. Druker,
In the instant case, FNMA and Cameron-Brown Co. invoke foreclosure by private power, a traditional creditor’s remedy under state law. This Circuit recognized the contractual nature of the power of sale provision and the traditional nature of the remedy when we upheld the Texas statute, Article 3810, Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat., setting minimum procedural requirements for private powers of sale.
Barrera v. Security Building and Investment Corp., supra.
The power of sale provision in the instant contract is part of the parties’ contractual undertaking and is not grounded on either federal or state statutes. Ga.Code Ann. § 67-1506 does govern the exercise of private powers of sale, but it does not require the inclusion of non judicial foreclosure in a deed to secure debt or a mortgage. The statute does not come into operation unless there already exists a power of sale in a deed to secure debt, mortgage, or other lien contract.
See Law v. U. S. Dept, of Agriculture,
HUD retains only a limited role in a mortgagee’s decision to exercise the private power of sale. The HUD mortgage form does authorize foreclosure by power of sale as well as by judicial foreclosure, but HUD does not prescribe the method of foreclosure and does not in any manner regulate the exercise of the power of sale. Instead, the mortgagee controls the exercise of the power, and FNMA exercised that power in the instant case on its own initiative and independently of HUD.
Although regulated by the federal government in some aspects of its business, FNMA is essentially a privately-owned mortgage banker providing secondary mortgage loans. In 1968, Congress specifically dissociated FNMA from its previous government ownership and transferred it to private ownership. 2 U.S.Cong. & Admin. News 1968 at 2943-44. FNMA maintains the capital structure of a privately-owned corporation. 12 U.S.C. § 1718. HUD’s control extends over restricted areas, including approving the minimum amount of FNMA stock to be held by servicing companies, requiring that a reasonable portion of its mortgage purchases be related to the national goal of providing low income housing, and auditing financial records. 12 U.S.C. §§ 1718(c), 1723a(h). The Secretary of the Treasury also has some control over FNMA relating to the issuance of debt securities and borrowing from the Treasury. 12 U.S.C. § 1719(b)-(e). We stand with the Sixth Circuit position that although the regulating statutes impose certain obligations on FNMA, the federal government and FNMA have not become so interdependent as to make its actions the actions of the federal government.
Northrip v. FNMA,
Appellee responds to the lack of government and mortgagee interdependence with the statement that state action is the improper emphasis, anyway. Foreclosure marks the end of the mortgagor’s statutory entitlements, including federal assistance payments, and the mortgagor’s interest in mortgage insurance. According to appellee,
Jackson, Barrera et al.
did not involve federal statutory entitlements. Since the instant case allegedly does, the whole line of cases proceeding from
Goldberg v. Kelly,
*360
In
Hoffman v. HUD,
Appellee does not fully grasp the importance of the state action concept to this case. One point on which we agree with the district court is his comment that “if plaintiffs due process argument is to prevail, it must rest on a finding by this Court that the federal government participates to such a degree in mortgage arrangements under section 235 of the National Housing Act that the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment applies.”
II.
Appellants insist that both HUD and Congress have rejected a private cause of action under the HUD Handbook and further, that to imply such a cause of action would seriously disrupt the administration of the National Housing Act and HUD’s program. Appellants use the four requirements of
Cort v. Ash,
HUD did not promulgate the Handbook for the espeeial benefit of Section 235 mortgagors, and it is not a federal statute, anyway. HUD designed the Handbook for HUD-approved mortgagees in servicing HUD-insured home mortgages, as the Handbook itself states.
3
In
Baker v. North-land Mortgage Co.,
*361
Second, Congress and HUD have rejected the implied private cause of action. No evidence exists demonstrating that Congress intended to create a private cause of action under the National Housing Act. HUD has chosen not to publish the Handbook, thus prohibiting it from having the force and effect of law, as several district courts have noted.
E. g., Brown v. Lynn,
Third, a private cause of action would not further the goals of the National Housing Act. It would delay foreclosure, and the ultimate losses to HUD will be much greater, since interest will continue to run in favor of the mortgagee, and the property may deteriorate. Further, an implied cause of action will discourage private investment, and interfere with the primary jurisdiction of HUD to approve and supervise HUD programs.
Brown v. Lynn,
Finally, mortgage foreclosure has traditionally been a matter for state courts and state law, 7 and there are state law remedies available to protect mortgagors from unconscionable mortgages. Georgia law provides protection from certain unconscionable practices and remedies for mortgagees’ excesses. 8
Mrs. Roberts alleges, as a final line of attack, that the Handbook requirements operate as a contract between the government and the mortgagees which make the mortgagors third party beneficiaries. Congress established the Section 235 program to extend home ownership to families with low incomes (thus, the “benefit”), and HUD owes a pre-existing duty to the mortgagees, *362 i. e., the mandate to administer the program so as to maximize national housing goals.
This Circuit has found third-party beneficiary contracts in a variety of circumstances. In
Bossier Parish School Bd. v. Lemon,
Mrs. Roberts is, at most, a third party “incidental” beneficiary, and thus has no cause of action. Restatement of Contracts 2d §§ 133, 147 (tentative draft). The Restatement position is that a beneficiary is “intended,” and not merely “incidental,” only if the performance of the promise satisfies an obligation of the promisee to pay money to the beneficiary, or if the circumstances indicate that the promisee intends to give the beneficiary the benefit of the promised performance. In other words, HUD, or the mortgagee, would have to intend that the mortgagor have an enforceable right. 11 We find no indication that HUD intended the Handbook to be anything other than it states, a compilation of procedural information and policy guidelines for mortgagees.
REVERSED.
Notes
.
See also Guesnon v. McHenry,
. See
also Dixon v. Ala. Bd. of Educ.,
. “This Handbook 4191.1, ... is designed to provide lenders the information required to service HUD insured single-family home mortgages.” Handbook 4191.1, at i.
“The purpose of this Handbook is to provide procedural information and policy guidelines for use by HUD approved mortgagees in servicing HUD insured home mortgages.” Handbook 4191.1 at 1, p. 1.
. HUD’s Assistant Secretary for Housing Management issued the letter, which stated, “These requirements, and other requirements in Handbook 4191.1, are not intended as legal prerequisites to foreclosure actions since foreclosures are governed by the terms of mortgage instructions and applicable state laws.” HM Mortgage Letter 75-10.
. Appellee insists that HUD promulgations since HM Mortgage Letter 75-10 supersede the letter. The new promulgations, however, include the statement that the subpart “is not intended to affect rights and obligations as between the mortgagee and mortgagor under the mortgage.” 41 Fed.Reg. 49366 (1976). Appellee counters that statement by noting that the official comment makes it clear that HUD does not intend to tell judges sitting in foreclosure cases what action of a mortgagee may or may not be a defense to foreclosure. 41 Fed.Reg. 49731 (1976). That comment certainly gives us the leeway to find that the failure to follow the Handbook in all particulars in the instant case is no bar to foreclosure.
.
See also Holloway v. Bristol-Myers Corp.,
. This circuit in
Barrera
noted that powers of sale were common before 1776 in the colonies, and have always been regulated by the states. The Supreme Court has even held that a private power of sale “of its own force” was effective under California law to extinguish a federal tax lien.
U. S. v. Brosnan,
.
See, e. g.,
Ga.Code Ann. §§ 20-116, 37-601, 37-607-11, 37-709, 57-102, 57-112;
Kouros v. Sewell,
. Other plaintiffs included the assignee of the aircraft owner and a burn victim.
. The dissenters felt that state law applied, but that if federal law did apply, plaintiffs would have a remedy.
.
See also Guesnon v. McHenry,
