I.
The FDIC sued Evelyn Gretchen Belli (“Belli”) for the amount due on several personal guarantees and a promissory note. Belli raised the affirmative defense that the FDIC’s claims had expired under the applicable statute of limitations. The district court rejected this defense, granted the FDIC’s motion for summary judgment and denied Belli’s motion for summary judgment.
II.
From January 1981 through February 1983, Belli executed a series of continuing personal guarantees. In those documents, she agreed to personally guarantee $916,-293.54 of any indebtedness owed by the Riddell Corporation to the Mississippi Bank of Jackson, Mississippi (“Bank”). In September of 1982, Belli executed and delivered to the Bank a promissory note for $98,500. Payment under the guarantees and promissory note was due on demand. On August 8, 1983, the Bank made demand on Belli for payment under the guarantees and the promissory note.
On May 11, 1984, the FDIC was appointed receiver of the Bank. That same day, in its corporate capacity, the FDIC purchased the notes and continuing guarantees. The FDIC filed suit on May 7, 1990, seeking to recover the outstanding balance on the promissory note, as well as the amount due on the continuing guarantees. The district court granted the FDIC’s motion for summary judgment, and denied Belli’s motion for summary judgment, ruling that 28 U.S.C. § 2415(a) did not bar the FDIC’s suit. It then entered judgment in’ the amount of $945,614.37. Belli timely appealed.
III.
This appeal requires us to interpret two statutes of limitations. The first, 28 U.S.C. § 2415(a), applies generally to contractual claims asserted by the government. It bars such claims if they are not “filed within six years after the right of action accrues.... ” The second statute, 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(14), part of the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 (“FIRREA”), specifies that the statute of limitations on a contractual claim held by the FDIC runs from the later of (1) the date on which the FDIC is appointed conservator or receiver;, or (2) “the date on which the cause of action accrues.” Section 1821(d)(14) therefore favors the FDIC in a way that § 2415(a) does not explicitly address.
Because the events giving rise to this suit occurred before the enactment of FIR-REA, however, both parties disagree over § 1821(d)(14)’s applicability to this case. Belli argues that the FDIC’s claims had expired under § 2415(a) before the enactment of FIRREA. Therefore, she argues, the statute of limitations in FIRREA could not revive the FDIC’s claims. The FDIC argues that § 2415(a) did not bar its claims because the cause of action on those claims did not “accrue” until the FDIC acquired them by assignment. In any event, argues the FDIC, § 1821(d)(14) applies retroactively to revive its claims. We consider these arguments below.
*840 A.
Our first task is to decide when a cause of action “accrues” within the meaning of § 2415(a). The parties disagree over the meaning of the word “accrues” in that statute, as applied to an FDIC suit on a note. Belli argues that the word refers to the moment in which the payor on the note came into breach. The FDIC contends that the word refers to the moment in which the government acquired the right to sue on the note.
Various circuits have taken conflicting positions on this issue. For example, the Tenth Circuit applied § 2415(a) to an FDIC suit on a note, and held that the cause of action accrued on the date the note matured.
FDIC v. Galloway,
The starting point in the
Hinkson
and
Metropolitan Bank
analysis is that the term “accrues” is ambiguous. According to the
Hinkson
court, when a federal agency comes into possession of claims by assignment, and where the actionable event occurs before that time, “accrual could begin” either when “the actionable event occurs” or when “the cause of action is assigned to the federal government.”
Hinkson,
In our view, however, the term “accrues” does not admit of such an ambiguous construction. Neither the FDIC nor the opinions on which it relies point to authority for the proposition that a transfer from one party to another of a cause of action that has already accrued somehow effects a new accrual for purposes of § 2415(a). To the contrary, the ordinary usage of the term “accrues” is that a cause of action “accrues” when “it comes into existence.”
U.S. v. Lindsay,
Although we will consider at greater length 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(14), it is worth noting here that this provision reinforces our understanding of § 2415(a). In § 1821(d)(14)(A), Congress adopted a statute of limitations that runs from “the date the claim accrues.” In the next subsection, however, Congress specified that the limitations period
begins to run on the later of: (i) the date of the appointment of the Corporation as conservator or receiver; or (ii) the date on which the cause of action accrues.
12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(14)(B). Section 1821(d)(14) supports our reading of the word “accrues” in two ways. First, it shows that Congress knows how to clearly specify that a statute of limitations runs from the time that a government entity is appointed receiver of a bank. The absence of similar language in § 2415(a) suggests a contrary meaning. Second, in § 1821(d)(14)(B)(ii), Congress uses the word “accrues” in a manner inconsistent with the government’s reading of the word “accrues” in § 2415(a); to apply the FDIC’s proposed definition of “accrues” to subsection (ii), above, would render subsection (i) redundant.
The FDIC argues that Congress, when it enacted § 1821(d)(14), merely intended to clarify what it had meant all along in § 2415(a). It suggests that the existence of a circuit split over the meaning of § 2415(a) gives rise to the inference that Congress intended to settle the issue.
*841
However, the case on which the FDIC relies,
NCNB Texas Nat’l Bank v. Cowden,
In
Cowden,
we held that pre-FIRREA law authorized the FDIC to transfer the fiduciary appointments held by an insolvent bank to a federally created bridge bank.
Cowden,
However, the text and legislative history of § 1821(d)(14) do not support the conclusion that it clarifies, rather than changes, § 2415(a). First, the new language in FIR-REA is inconsistent with the reading that the FDIC asks us to attach to § 2415(a); Congress’s use of the term “accrues” in FIRREA suggests that the term does not refer to the moment in which a private party assigns a cause of action to the FDIC. See 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(14)(B)(ii). Second, the scant legislative history of this section indicates that it was meant to modify existing law by lengthening the limitations period applicable to the FDIC. For example, in a passage to which the FDIC refers, Senator Riegle. said:
Section 212 of the conference bill [codified at 12 U.S.C. § 1821] provides for extended statute of limitations periods for claims brought by the FDIC in its capacity as conservator or receiver of a failed institution.... Extending these limitations periods will significantly increase the amount of money that can be recovered by the Federal Government through litigation_”
135 Cong.Rec. 10,205 (1989) (emphasis added). Thus, instead of clarifying the reach of § 2415(a), this passage reflects a congressional intent in § 1821(d)(14)(B) to lengthen the limitations periods applicable to the FDIC. More generally, Representative Ortiz said: “I understand that this bill would redefine and augment the powers of the [FDIC].... The powers set forth in this bill are, in many respects, new....” 135 Cong.Rec. H 5003 (August 3, 1989). Third, while the existence of a circuit split militates in favor of the FDIC’s position, we are reminded that “individually” this consideration “might not justify any conclusion as to Congress’s intent.”
Cowden,
The FDIC argues that two recent decisions of this Circuit compel us to adopt the position taken by the Third and Ninth Circuits. We disagree. In the first case,
FDIC v. Mmahat,
The second case,
FDIC v. Wheat,
In Wheat, we clearly stopped short of interpreting the term “accrues” in the manner here suggested by the FDIC. Instead, we based our conclusion on § 2416’s discovery rule, as applied to a breach of fiduciary duty case. The FDIC has not argued that, and we do not see how, § 2416 could apply in this case, where the causes of action are clear on the faces of the guarantees and promissory note at issue. So our holding in Wheat does not apply here.
Belli and the FDIC have' also raised nontextual arguments to support their respective readings of § 2415(a). Belli contends that we must construe any ambiguities in § 2415(a) in her favor, because Congress enacted that statute to protect citizens against whom the government brings stale claims.
See Guarantee Trust Co. v. United States,
B.
Because we have decided that § 2415(a) barred the FDIC’s suit, we must decide the extent to which § 1821(d)(14) applies retroactively. We agree with the FDIC that § 1821(d)(14) applies to claims held by the FDIC that were alive on August 9, 1989, FIRREA’s effective date. Statutory changes that relate only to procedure or. remedy usually apply immediately to pending cases.
United States v. Vanella,
However, § 1821(d)(14) does not revive claims that had expired before August 9, 1989. In an analogous case, we held that a Louisiana statutory suspension of prescription did not revive a cause of action that had prescribed before the statute’s effective date.
Trizec Properties, Inc. v. United States Mineral Products Company,
The FDIC’s causes of action under the guarantees and promissory note accrued on or before August 8, 1983, the date the Bank demanded payment. Therefore the six year limitations period under § 2415 expired before August 9, 1989, FIRREA’s effective date. So FIRREA’s extended statute of limitations did not revive any of the FDIC’s claims against Belli.
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the district court’s denial of Belli’s motion for summary judgment; we also REVERSE the order granting the FDIC’s motion for summary judgment and render judgment in favor of Belli.
REVERSED and RENDERED.
