delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Fair Housing Act forbids racial discrimination in respect to the sale or rental of a dwelling. 82 Stat. 81, 42 U. S. C. §§ 3604(b), 3605(a). The question before us is whether the Act imposes personal liability without fault upon an officer or owner of a residential real estate corporation for the unlawful activity of the corporation’s employee or agent. We conclude that the Act imposes liability without fault upon the employer in accordance with traditional agency principles, i. e., it normally imposes vicarious liability upon the corporation but not upon its officers or owners.
I
For purposes of this decision we simplify the background facts as follows: Respondents Emma Mary Ellen Holley and *283 David Holley, an interracial сouple, tried to buy a house in Twenty-Nine Palms, California. A real estate corporation, Triad, Inc., had listed the house for sale. Grove Crank, a Triad salesman, is alleged to have prevented the Holleys from obtaining the house — and for racially discriminatory reasons.
The Holleys brought a lawsuit in federal court against Crank and Triad. They claimed, among other things, that both were responsible for a fair housing law violation. The Holleys later filed a separate suit against David Meyer, the petitioner here. Meyer, they said, was Triad’s president, Triad’s sole shareholder, and Triad’s licensed “officer/ broker,” see Cal. Code Regs., tit. 10, §2740 (1996) (formerly Cal. Admin. Code, tit. 10, §2740) (requiring that a corporation, in order to engage in аcts for which a real estate license is required, designate one of its officers to act as the licensed broker); Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code Ann. §§ 10158, 10159, 10211 (West 1987). They claimed that Meyer was vicariously liable in one or more of these capacities for Crank’s unlawful actions.
The District Court consolidated the two lawsuits. It dismissed all claims other than the Fair Housing Act clаim on statute of limitations grounds. It dismissed the claims against Meyer in his capacity as officer of Triad because (1) it considered those claims as assertions of vicarious liability, and (2) it believed that the Fair Housing Act did not impose personal vicarious liability upon a corporate officer. The District Court stated that “any liability against Meyer as an officer of Triad would оnly attach to Triad,” the corporation. App. 31. The court added that the Holleys had “not urged theories that could justify reaching Meyer individually.” Ibid. It later went on to dismiss for similar reasons claims of vicarious liability against Meyer in his capacity as the “designated officer/broker” in respect to Triad’s real estate license. Id., at 52-55.
*284
The District Court certified its judgment as final to permit the Holleys to appeal its vicarious liability determinations. See Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 64(b). The Ninth Circuit reversed those determinations.
Meyer sought certiorari. We granted his petition,
*285 II
The Fair Housing Act itself focuses on prohibited acts. In relevant part the Act forbids “any person or other entity whose business includes engaging in residential real estate-related transactions to discriminate,” for example, beсause of “race.” 42 U. S. C. § 3605(a). It adds that “[p]erson” includes, for example, individuals, corporations, partnerships, associations, labor unions, and other organizations. § 3602(d). It says nothing about vicarious liability.
Nonetheless, it is well established that the Act provides for vicarious liability. This Court has noted that an action brought for compensation by a victim of housing discriminаtion is, in effect, a tort action. See
Curtis
v.
Loether,
It is well established that traditional vicarious liability rules ordinarily mаke principals or employers vicariously liable for acts of their agents or employees in the scope of their authority or employment.
Burlington Industries, Inc.
v.
Ellerth,
The Ninth Circuit held that the Fair Housing Act imposed more extensive vicarious liability — that the Act went well beyond traditional principles. The Court of Appeals held that the Act made corporate owners and officers liable for the unlawful acts of a corporate employee simply on the basis that the owner or officer controlled (or had the right to сontrol) the actions of that employee. We do not agree with the Ninth Circuit that the Act extended traditional vicarious liability rules in this way.
For one thing, Congress said nothing in the statute or in the legislative history about extending vicarious liability in this manner. And Congress’ silence, while permitting an inference that Congress intended to apply ordinary background tort principles, cannot show that it intended to apply an unusual modification of those rules.
*287 Where Congress, in other civil rights statutes, has not expressed a contrary intent, the Court has drawn the inference that it intended ordinary rules to apply. See, e. g., Burlington Industries, Inc., supra, at 754-755 (deciding an employer’s vicarious liability under Title VII based on traditional agency principles); Meritor Savings Bank, FSB v. Vinson, 417 U. S. 57, 72 (1986) (“Congress wanted courts to look to agency principles for guidance”).
This Court has applied unusually strict rules only where Congress has specified that such was its intent. See,
e. g., United States
v.
Dotterweich,
For another thing, the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), the federal agency primarily charged with the implementation and administration of the statute, 42 U. S. C. § 3608, has specified that ordinary vicarious liability rules apply in this area. And we ordinarily defer to an administering agency’s reasonable interpretation оf a stat
*288
ute.
Chevron U. S. A. Inc.
v.
Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
A HUD regulation applicable during the relevant time periods for this suit provided that analogous administrative complaints alleging Fair Housing Act violations may be filed
“against any person who directs or controls, or has the right to direct or control, the conduct of another person with respect to any aspect of the sale ... оf dwellings ... if that other person, acting within the scope of his or her authority as employee or agent of the directing or controlling person . . . has engaged ... in a discriminatory housing practice.” 24 CFR § 103.20(b) (1999) (repealed) (emphasis added).
See
Gladstone, Realtors
v.
Village of Bellwood,
When it adоpted the similar predecessor to this regulation (then codified at 24 CFR §105.13, see 53 Fed. Reg. 24185 (1988)), HUD explained that it intended to permit a “respondent” (defined at 42 U. S. C. §3602) to raise in an administrative proceeding any defense “that could be raised in court.” 53 Fed. Reg., at 24185. It added that the underscored phrase was designed to make clear that “a complaint mаy be filed against a directing or controlling person with respect to the discriminatory acts of another only if the other person was acting within the scope of his or her authority as employee or agent of the directing or controlling person.” Ibid, (emphasis added). HUD also specified that, by adding the words “acting within the scope of his or her authority as employee or agent of the directing or controlling person,” it disclaimed any “intent to impose absolute liability” on the basis of the mere right “to direct or control.” Ibid.; see 54 Fed. Reg. 3232, 3261 (1989).
*289
Finally, we have found no convincing argument in support of the Ninth Circuit’s decision to apply nontraditional vicarious liability principles — a decision that respondents do not defend and in fact concede is incorrect. See Brief for Rеspondents 6, 10-11, 43 (conceding that traditional vicarious liability rules apply); Brief for United States as
Amicus Curiae
8, 22. The Ninth Circuit rested that decision primarily upon the HUD regulation to which we have referred. The Ninth Circuit underscored the phrase “
‘or has the right to direct or contro[l] the conduct of another person.’”
The Ninth Circuit also referred to several cases decided in other Circuits. The actual holdings in those cases, however, do not support the kind of nontraditional vicarious liability that the Ninth Circuit applied. See
Chicago
v.
Matchmaker Real Estate Sales Center, Inc.,
The Ninth Circuit further referred to an owner’s or officer’s “non delegable duty” not to discriminate in light of the Act’s “overriding societal priority.”
“[A] nondelegable duty is an affirmative obligation to ensure the protection of the person to whom the duty runs.”
General Building Contractors Assn., Inc.
v.
Pennsylvania,
Neither does it help to characterize the statute’s objective as an “overriding societal priority.”
III
A
Respondents, conceding that traditional vicarious liability rules apply, see
supra,
at 289, argue that those principles themselves warrant liability here. For one thing, they say, California law itself creates what amounts, under ordinary common-law principles, to an employer/employee or principal/agent relationship between (a) a corporate officer designated as the broker under a real estate license issued to the corporation, and (b) a corporate employee/salesperson. Brief for Respondents 6-8, 13-36. Insofar as this argument rests
solely
upon the corporate broker/officer’s
right to control
the employee/salesperson, the Ninth Circuit considered and accepted it.
B
The Ninth Circuit did not decide whether
other
aspects of the California broker relationship, when added to the “right to control,” would, under traditional legal principles and consistent with “the general common law of agency,”
Burlington Industries, Inc.
v.
Ellerth,
Respondents also point out that, when traditional vicarious liability principles impose liability upon a corporation, the corporation’s liability may be imputed to the corporation’s owner in an appropriate case through a “‘piercing оf the corporate veil.’ ”
United States
v.
Bestfoods,
The Ninth Circuit nonetheless remains free on remand to determine whether these questions were properly raised and, if so, to consider them.
* * *
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is vacated, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
