I
In 1981, a natural disaster struck Ohio. As a result, the entire state was designated a disaster relief area. The Shaners, who grew corn and beans at their Fairfield County, Ohio, farm, were among the Ohio farmers who suffered crop production losses in excess of thirty percent and thereby qualified for emergency loan relief.
Prior to the disaster, the Shaners had incurred substantial indebtedness to Cambridge Production Credit Association (“PCA”). The crop losses prevented the Shaners from paying the 1981 installment on this debt. PCA demanded payment in full or a liquidation sale.
In January 1982, the Shaners applied to FmHA for an emergency loan. Within two weeks the application was denied for insufficient cash flow and inability to refinance existing loans. The Shaners persisted in their attempts to secure an FmHA loan. On May 6, they met with Douglas Dietrich, FmHA supervisor for Fairfield County.
Subsequent to the May 6 meeting, Dietrich issued a certificate of approval. The lone requirement listed on the certificate was “[security for this loan is a [first] lien on 1982 crops.” Dietrich also sent the Shaners a letter announcing the approval, “subject to the availability of loan funds.” However, Dietrich was concerned about FmHA’s position vis-a-vis PCA. In particular, he was concerned that PCA might encumber the Shaners equipment so as to prevent them from planting a 1982 crop and that, even if a 1982 crop were planted, PCA’s claim to it would be senior to FmHA’s.
Seeking to avoid these risks, Dietrich notified the Shaners in July 1982 of his intention to cancel the loans. The reasons he gave were the failure to obtain for FmHA a first lien on the 1982 crops and the failure to obtain a non-disturbance agreement from PCA. 1 The Shaners filed for bankruptcy in August 1982, and Dietrich canceled the loan approvals effective in September.
Upon cancellation, the Shaners appealed Dietrich’s determination. Their appeal was denied on the grounds of their failure to secure a non-disturbance agreement with PCA. On a subsequent appeal, FmHA’s acting state director held for the Shaners, ruling that, because the Uniform Commercial Code would have given FmHA priority over PCA with respect to the 1982 crops, a first lien was unnecessary. On May 25, 1983, the acting state director reinstated the Shaners’ application. Pursuing the application further, however, was not possible, as the Shaners were now in bankruptcy and the loss of land and equipment to their creditors disabled them from generating sufficient cash flow from their 1983 crops to qualify for a loan.
The parties now agree that Dietrich erred in requiring a first lien. The Shaners claim that this error constitutes negligence entitling them to recovery under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). They also claim that they were unconstitutionally deprived of various property *993 rights. The District Court rejected these arguments and granted summary judgment against the Shaners. We now affirm.
II
The Shaners bring this claim under the Federal Tort Claims Act, which authorizes negligence suits against the federal government “where the United States, if a private person, would be liable to the claimant in accordance with the law of the place where the act or omission occurred.” The Ohio Supreme Court has recently reviewed the line of cases dealing with the liability of lenders to borrowers in
Blon v. Bank One,
The Shaners believe that their relationship with the FmHA had blossomed into the loan processing stage. They contend that FmHA’s decision to cancel their loan resulted from negligence. Specifically, the concern on which the cancellation was based, the Shaners’ failure to secure a first lien for FmHA, was obviated by U.C.C. § 9-312(2), which would have given FmHA the priority it sought through the lien. 2 The Shaners argue that FmHA was negligent in failing to recognize that requiring a first lien was unnecessary and in canceling the loan on this basis. 3 Since FmHA committed this negligence during the loan processing stage, the argument continues, FmHA violated its fiduciary duty to the Shaners.
The Shaners’ reading of Ohio law is overripe. None of the cases it cites creates a broad fiduciary duty or a duty to avoid negligence. They merely create a duty to disclose.
Stone v. Davis,
The Shaners argue alternatively that, if it has not already done so, the Ohio Supreme Court would impose a general fiduciary duty on FmHA, as its relationship with the Shaners is one of “special trust and confidence.”
Blon,
The Shaners next contend that the Good Samaritan Doctrine imposes a duty of due care on FmHA. Although the Ohio Supreme Court has never explicitly adopted this doctrine, the Court has cited it favorably, and it appears to be the law of Ohio.
See Wissel v. Ohio High School Athletic Assn.,
Nos. C-900397, C-900566,
Recovery under the Good Samaritan Doctrine is limited to physical harm. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 323 (1964). The record contains no evidence of physical injury to the Shaners or their property. Therefore, summary judgment was properly granted as to the Good Samaritan claim.
Ill
The Shaners assert property rights in the FmHA emergency loan they applied for and in access to the FmHA’s administrative appeal process and claim that they have been deprived of this property in violation of the Fifth Amendment. However, the Shaners do not seek to have these property rights restored.
5
Instead, they seek money damages as compensation for injuries resulting from the allegedly unconstitutional deprivation. The kernel of this contention is that the deprivation caused them to lose their farm. This claim, then, is in fact a Bivens
6
action. A
Bivens
action may be brought only against individual federal officials, not against the United States.
See, e.g., Ashbrook v. Block,
Like the District Court, we do not believe that either of the asserted interests constitutes a property right. “To have a property interest in a benefit, a person clearly must have more than an abstract need or desire for it. He must have more than a unilateral expectation of it. He must, instead, have a legitimate claim of entitlement to it.”
Board of Regents v. Roth,
The Shaners cite
Association of Orange County Deputy Sheriffs v. Gates,
The FmHA has similarly broad discretion in determining whether to approve an application. For instance, the determination of whether an applicant has presented a via
*995
ble farm plan or has offered sufficient security are left largely to the sound judgment of FmHA.
See
7 U.S.C. §§ 1961(a), 1964(d). Therefore, the Shaners’ interest in obtaining an emergency loan was too speculative to be considered a property right.
Accord Nelson v. United States,
When the Shaners’ emergency loan application was first denied in January 1982, FmHA provided them with a complete statement of their appeal rights as required under 7 C.F.R. § 1900.56. After the July 1982 rejection, the notice to the Shan-ers was incomplete, omitting the statements required under section 1900.56(a)(4). The Shaners claim, misguidedly, that they had a property right in this information and that it was deprived without due process.
It is well-established that “due process ‘is simply not implicated by a
negligent
act of an official causing unintended loss of or injury to life, liberty or property.’ ”
Nishiyama v. Dickson County,
IV
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s opinion and order granting summary judgment is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The non-disturbance agreement would have prevented PCA interfering with the Shaners' ability to plant a 1982 crop. The cancellation notice was the first occasion on which this requirement had been committed to writing. FmHA contends that Dietrich had orally informed the Shaners of this requirement: the Shaners deny this.
. The government concedes that the Shaners’ reading of this provision, codified at Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 1309.31(B), is correct and that the first lien requirement was unnecessary.
. The question of whether FmHA’s insistence on a first lien was negligent is not before us. Although we assume for the purposes of this appeal that this was negligence, the ultimate determination would rest, of course, with the fact-finder.
. FmHA raises a second defense, the Shaners’ failure to obtain a non-disturbance agreement from PCA. FmHA contends that the Shaners were notified of this requirement at their May 6, 1982 meeting with Dietrich. The Shaners claim that they were not so informed until the cancellation. If it was a condition for the loan, the Shaners' failure to obtain a non-disturbance agreement was adequate grounds for the cancellation. However, Mr. Shaner’s affidavit raises sufficient doubt as to whether this was a condition to require a jury determination.
Similarly, FmHA asserts that Dietrich told the Shaners, again at the May 6 meeting, that they would be required to make a delinquent payment to PCA. The Shaners contend that the only condition imposed was that they obtain a first lien for FmHA. Moreover, Dietrich’s notice of cancellation does not list failure to make this payment in any way, let alone as a ground for canceling the loan approvals. Resolution of this argument also lies with the trier of fact. Therefore, neither of these arguments support FmHA's position that summary judgment was appropriate.
. Indeed, the FmHA actually restored the asserted property rights, allowing the Shaners to pursue their administrative appeals and reinstating their loan application.
.
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
. Although Daniels and Nishiyama involved Fourteenth Amendment due process claims against state officials under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, there is no reason to regard the Fifth Amendment due process clause as having a different meaning for the purposes of a suit against a federal official. See Erwin Chemerinsky, Federal Jurisdiction § 9.1, at 452-53 (1989). Thus, the Nishiyama gross negligence requirement applies here.
