The Department of Education (DOED) appeals from an order of the district court, published at
Hurst v. United States Dep’t of Educ.,
*837 DOED has articulated the issue raised by this appeal as: “Whether the six-year limitations period for the Attorney General to ‘bring suit’ on a defaulted federally-funded student loan (20 U.S.C. § 1091a(a)(4)(C)) governs the assertion of a counterclaim by the Department of Education in litigation brought by the debtor.” 1 More specifically, DOED’s argument is that because § 1091a(a)(4)(C) expressly limits only when “the Attorney General may file suit [to enforce student loan obligations on behalf of DOED]” and makes no reference to counterclaims interposed by DOED in actions brought against it, the six-year limitations period specified therein has no application to the counterclaim asserted by DOED in this case.
DOED fails to cite a single authority interpreting either § 1091a(a)(4)(C) or any similar statute in the restrictive sense it seeks to establish here. The decisions it relies upon in this regard,
Thomas v. Bennett,
That leaves us with the unconditional language of § 1091a and general principles of federal limitations law. It is fairly well established under the latter that a counterclaim for affirmative relief, such as DOED’s claim for the remainder of plaintiff’s loan debt, is subject to the operation of pertinent statutes of limitation.
See, e.g., Chauffeurs, Teamsters, Warehousemen & Helpers v. Jefferson Trucking Co.,
The general rule identified above has been applied on numerous occasions to government counterclaims in various settings.
See, e.g., Holcomb v. United States,
The judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Kansas entered for plaintiff on DOED’s counterclaim is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The district court’s opinion reports the following undisputed chronological facts pertinent to the issue raised by DOED: (1) plaintiff ceased payment on her student loan obligation in 1974; (2) DOED was assigned the right to collect on the debt on June 15, 1981; (3) this action was commenced in November of 1987; and (4) DOED filed its answer in January of 1988 (its counterclaim was added by an unopposed oral motion granted at the pretrial conference held June 27, 1988).
See Hurst,
. DOED’s attempt to read into § 1091a the counterclaim exception set out in § 2415(f) is not persuasive. That exception is expressly restricted to the "[limitations] provisions
of this section [i.e.,
§ 2415(a)-(e) ]" (emphasis added). While it is true, as DOED points out, that prior to enactment of § 1091a the general contract limitations period established in § 2415(a) governed student loan enforcement actions,
see, e.g., Thomas,
