Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.
Thе Department of Housing and Urban Development became the owner of a house as a result of a default by its owner on a HUD-insured mortgage. HUD allowed the defaulting mortgagor to remain in the house under a month-to-month lease. When HUD sold the property to.the highest bidder, the defaulting mortgagor sought to invoke a District of Columbia law entitling a tenant to a right of first refusal when the premises are sold. HUD instead applied its own regulations. As it read them, a defaulting mortgagor — even one who after default occupies the premises under a lease — has no such rights. Because HUD’s interpretation of its regulations is plainly valid and preempts cоnflicting local law, we need not reach the issue whether the District provision would otherwise be applicable to HUD. The defaulting mortgagor, who has for more than three years thwarted the winning bidder’s right to the house, must now yield.
* * *
Janice L. Booker owned a house in- Northeast Washington, D.C., subject to a HUD-insured mortgage. She defaulted. The mortgagee foreclosed and then, when HUD paid the insurance claim on the resulting loss, transferred the property to HUD. The Department allowed Booker to remain in occupancy of the house under a, month-to-month lease. HUD put the house on the market in a sealed bid auction and Booker bid for it — but Cynthiа Edwards’s bid topped hers by more than $10,000.
When Booker refused to vacate, claiming a right of first refusal under D.C.Code § 45-1637, Edwards sued Booker in D.C. Superior Court, seeking possession. Besides resisting the suit, Booker filed a complaint in Superior Court against both Edwards and HUD. The cases were consolidated, and HUD removed them to the United States district court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1442’s provision for removal of actions against a federal officer or agеncy, as well as the general provisions for removal of actions over which the district courts would otherwise have original jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. §§ 1441(a), 1446. Federal jurisdiction over the dispute between Booker and Edwards appears to fit comfortably with the district, court’s supplemental jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a). The district court found that HUD lawfully deeded the property to Edwards, to the exclusion of Booker, and granted summary judgment in favor of Edwards and HUD. We аffirm. * * , *
We assume in Booker’s favor that she is right in her claim that under District law she would be entitled as a. tenant to exercise a right of first refusal, even though HUD is the owner of the property. Such a reading of District law could be еffected in full accord with HUD regulations if Booker were a tenant who had not been the defaulting mortgagor. The regulations provide:
(4) Tenants in occupancy will be offered the right of first refusal to purchase the property where:
(i) The tenant has a recognized ability to acquire financing and a good rent-paying history, and has made a request to HUD to be offered the right of first refusal; or
(ii) State or local law requires that tenants be offered the right of first refusal.
24 CFR § 291.100(a)(4) (1996).
In the very same regulation, however, HUD also makes it clear that a defaulting mortgagor is not entitled to such a privilege:
(2) Former mortgagors in occupancy who have defaulted on the mortgage will not be offered .the right of first refusal to repurchase the same property. They may *1168 submit an offer, or bid, to purchase the property when it is publicly listed, which will be treated in the same manner as other offers received from other prospective purchasers during the listing period.
Id. § 291.100(a)(2). There is no question that Booker is a “former mortgago[r] in occupancy who [has] defaulted on the mortgage.” The question, then, is whether signing a lease and becoming HUD’s “tenant” undercut § 291.100(a)(2)’s express disabling provision and left her free to enjoy a tenant’s right of first refusal under § 291.100(a)(4).
HUD’s Property Division Handbook — which government counsel at oral argument said gets a good deal more public circulation than do its regulations — provides an answer. It says that “[t]enants in occupancy,
excepting former mortgagors,
will be offered the right of first refusal.... ” Property Division, U.S. Dep’t of Housing and Urbаn Development, Handbook 4310.5, REV-1, ¶ 6-10B (emphasis in original). Under a long line of cases on the deference that is due agencies’ interpretations of their own regulations, we review only to determine if HUD’s reading is reasоnable. See, e.g.,
Udall v. Tallman,
First, HUD noted in the preamble to the rule that it ha,d considered extending the right of first refusal to defaulting mortgagors but decided against it. “HUD’s prior experience with granting the right of first refusal to former mortgagors proved to be counterproductive, because many of them did not have the financial capability to close the sale, resulting in additional holding costs to the Department.” Single Family Property Disposition Program, 56 Fed.Reg. 48,964/3 (September 16, 1991). Thus HUD’s primary reason for denying defaulting mortgagors a right of first refusal is one that would seem to apply to those who happen to become tenants in the interval between foreclosure and resale as much as to any other defaulting mortgagors.
Further, under HUD regulations no defaulting mortgagor will ever be in possession without a lease. Subject to minor exceptions for ill or injured occupants, all who occupy single-family homes in HUD’s ownership under this insurance program, former mortgagor or not, must sign leases. 24 CFR § 203.674(b)(2). Thus, under Booker’s interpretation § 291.100(a)(2)’s express' denial of the right of first refusal for defaulting mortgagors would apрly only to those who were completely out of possession — persons who would appear to have so little claim to a right of first refusal as hardly to be worth mention. And if executing a lease with a defaulting former mortgagor meant that the person would secure a right of first refusal — which HUD found “counterproductive” because of its experience — it would presumably incline HUD officers simply to evict people such as Booker.
At oral argument Booker suggested there was something anomalous in HUD’s allowing a right of first refusal under local law to persons who may not have a good credit history — see 24 CFR § 291.100(a)(4)(ii) — but denying that right to defaulting mortgаgors. But it seems reasonable of the Department to defer to local law in the general default case (those who fail affirmatively to qualify under § 291.100(a)(4)(i)), yet take advantage of its own experience in a specific class of cases in which it has learned to expect trouble — defaulting mortgagors, whose apparent ly recurrent inability to close the transaction has generated extra closing costs. See 56 Fed.Reg. at 48,964/3. The distinction seems especially valid in light of the Department’s equitable point that it is defaulting mortgagors whose conduct has caused the problem in the first place. Id. at 48,965/1.
We have assumed that in the absence of preemption District law would afford Booker a right of first refusal. Booker points out that “federal regulation of a field of commerce should not be deemed preemptive of statе regulatory power in the absence of persuasive reasons — either that the nature of the regulated subject matter permits no other conclusion, or that the Congress has unmistakably so ordained.”
Florida Lime & Avocado Growers, Inc. v. Paul,
Booker points to nothing in the statute or legislative histоry suggesting that Congress would not have sanctioned HUD’s resolution of the issue. In fact, Congress gave HUD broad authority to manage properties acquired through the operations of its various mortgage programs — “to dеal with, complete, rent, renovate, modernize, insure, or sell for cash or credit, in his discretion, any properties....” 12 U.S.C. § 1710(g). The disposal and management of federal property is, moreover, an area traditionally governed by federal law. See
Clearfield Trust Co. v. United States,
Booker cites
Rowe v. Pierce,
As Booker had no right of first refusal, and accordingly no claim to upset HUD’s conveyance of the property to Edwards, the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Edwards and the Department is
Affirmed.
