Mаrvin Gorden borrowed from the United States under a farm price support program. The Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC), a part of the Department of Agriculture, advanced the money; the Consolidatеd Farms Service Agency (CFSA), another component of that Department, administered the loans. Gorden pledged corn as security for repayment. Actually, the notes call for repayment in corn. This is how the program supports the price of agricultural products: if the market price of the commodity drops, farmers can repay in the commodity just as if the price had remained at the lеvel the government prefers, and competition in the market to buy the commodity (to use in payment of loans) prevents the price from falling below that level. But the note also allows payment in several other ways; and if the price of the commodity rises, the farmer will sell the crop in the market and pay off the loan in cash. As with any other loan, the creditor bears a risk of nonpayment, and thеse loans were secured by the corn to reduce that risk.
Our case arises out of the security features of the loans, which in.this respect were standard commercial transactions. Gorden signed сontracts containing usual provisions for secured transactions covered by Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code. Paragraph 7 of each contract provides:
[I]f, upon maturity of the notе, the loan indebtedness (i.e., the unpaid amount of the loan, charges, and interest) is not satisfied by payment of the amount thereof or *154 by the delivery of an eligible commodity pursuant to the provisions of the note, the producer authorizes CCC, or its agent, to the extent permitted by law, to enter on the premises and remove the collateral commodity....
In September and October of 1989, notes for 159,952 bushеls of corn came due. Gorden did not deliver corn, although he did tender commodity certificates and a personal check for about 17% of the debt. Gorden also purported to revoke the CCC’s power to enter his farm to seize the crop in satisfaction of the balance. Having fulfilled its part of the bargain, the Department of Agriculture was not impressed — or dissuaded — by Gorden’s effort to renеge. The CFSA hired Ernie Peterson and his firm Cashton Farm Supply to go get the corn, which Peterson did. Between November 20 and 22, 1989, Peterson hauled 20,876 bushels of corn from Gorden’s farm in Wisconsin. To halt the removal, Gorden filed a bаnkruptcy petition and asked the bankruptcy judge to forbid further seizures. The judge declined, but during a lull (removal paused while the bankruptcy judge had the request under advisement) Gorden had the corn storage shed locked. Peterson then desisted — for a secured creditor may seize collateral only when “this can be done without breach of the peace” (UCC § 9-503, enacted in Wisconsin as Wis.Stat. § 409.503), and breaking the lоck would breach the peace.
According to Gorden, even Peterson’s limited success in removing collateral breached the peace, because in order to get access to the corn Peterson had to remove a bulkhead, which was destroyed. Gorden says that the structure of the corn shed suffered injury in the process. Peterson replies that this occurs in any movement of corn, and that § 9-503 permits a creditor to do the same sort of things the debtor would do in the process of making a regular commercial delivery. Which position is correct is an issue that could be resolvеd by litigation under the UCC — which, given
United States v. Kimbell Foods, Inc.,
Relying on
Hollibush v. Ford Motor Credit Co.,
Deeper problems with this case prevent us from elaborating on that theme. For Gorden does not rely оn any federal statute creating a private right of action. Instead he invokes
Bivens.
But, as the Supreme Court is fond of observing,
Bivens
is a fallback for those who lack other remedies. People must use remedial systems designed for their claims and may not appeal to what is effectively a system of federal constitutional common law in an effort to bypass the express remedies or sidestep limitations deliberately crafted. See, e.g.,
FDIC v. Meyer,
- U.S. -,-,
Kimbell Foods
concludes that state law governs efforts by the federal government to collect debts that arise from federal loan programs. Unless a federal statute or regulation supplies a rule of law for the occasion, the court applies the same rules of state law that govern debtor-creditor relations. See also
United States v. Einum,
No other court has considered whether the theory of
Kimbell Foods,
and the availability of remedies under contract law and the UCC, displaces
Bivens
claims in federal debt-collection cases. We held in
Cameron v. IRS,
We take the next step and hold that errors in the collection of debts due to federal agencies must be addressed through the statutes, regulations, and contracts that specify the parties’ rights. Any action proper under the debt contract (including the provisions of the UCC that govern secured transactions) is constitutionally unobjectionable; thе debtor consented. Any action that violates the Constitution also will lead to a remedy under these bodies of law, though probably in a bankruptcy court or the Court of Federal Claims rather than in the district сourt. At oral argument, Gorden’s counsel candidly conceded that he filed this Bivens action to avoid the restrictions (especially the time limits) that accompany these other remedies. That is not a proper use of the Bivens device. The judgment of the district court accordingly is vacated, and the case is remanded with instructions to dismiss for want of jurisdiction.
