Plaintiff-Appellant Alberta Schroeder appeals a grant of summary judgment for the United States in her suit seeking to quiet title in an apartment complex she owns and operates. Under the National Housing Act loan program into which she entered in 1984, Schroeder was required to use her property exclusively as low-income housing until she fully repaid her loans. Schroeder argues that, although the loans have not yet come due, the government must now accept payment in full on her loans, thereby allowing her to terminate her participation in the National Housing Act program. The district court ruled that the Emergency Low Income Housing Preservation Act of 1987 (ELIHPA) forecloses Schroeder’s arguments and declined to grant equitable relief. We affirm the decision of the district court.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
I. The Housing Act of 1949 and the Emergency Low Income Housing Preservation Act of 1987
Congress passed the Housing Act of 1949, 42 U.S.C. §§ 1441-1490, to encourage private investment in housing for elderly and low-income rural residents. Section 515 of Title V of the Housing Act authorized the Department of Agriculture Farmers Home Administration (FmHA) (which was later incorporated into the Ru
In 1987, responding to fears that the supply of affordable rural housing was dwindling because borrowers were prepaying their RHS loans, Congress enacted ELIHPA, 42 U.S.C. § 1472(c).
1
Under ELIHPA, RHS may accept “prepayments” on covered loans only if the property owner first complies with ELIHPA’s “elaborate requirements” designed to preserve low-income housing.
DBSI/TRI IV Ltd. P’ship v. United States,
Under these procedures, the owner must first give notice of intent to prepay. 42 U.S.C. § 1472(c)(3). Then, the government must offer the owner a financial incentive to remain in the program.
Id.
§ 1472(c)(4)(A). If the owner still wishes to prepay, the owner must offer to sell the property to any qualified nonprofit organization or public agency at fair market value.
Id.
§ 1472(c)(5)(A)(i). If the property is not sold within 180 days, RHS may then accept the prepayment from the owner.
Id.
§ 1472(c) (5) (A) (ii);
DBSI/TRI,
In 2002, in response to property owners’ legal challenges to ELIHPA, the Supreme Court held that the Act “effected a repudiation of’ the existing loan contracts.
Franconia,
Because the United States was not acting in its capacity as sovereign in enacting ELIHPA, the government may not assert a sovereign immunity defense in such an action.
Id.
at 141,
II. Schroeder’s Property and Loans
Schroeder currently owns and operates a six-unit lowincome housing project located in Heppner, Oregon, known as the Willow View Apartments. Schroeder’s predecessor, the Midas Company, purchased the property in 1975 using a forty-year, $170,300 loan from the FmHA (the 1975 Loan), the terms of which were evidenced by a promissory note and mortgage on the property.
Schroeder purchased the Willow View Apartments in August 1984, approximately three years before ELIHPA became law. With the government’s consent, Schroeder assumed the 1975 Loan and executed another promissory note, a deed of trust, and a loan agreement as part of a fifty-year, $3500 Housing Act loan (the 1984 Loan). Accordingly, Schroeder became liable for two loans on the property (collectively, the Loans), which respectively became due in 2015 and 2034. Both promissory notes gave Schroeder the unconditional right to prepay in full the principal sums due thereon at any time. However, the deed of trust associated with the 1984 Loan included a provision requiring Schroeder to use the property only for low-income housing for a twenty-year period, beginning in August 1984 (the Loan Covenant). In addition, the 1984 loan agreement (which referenced both of the Loans) included a provision further restricting the use of the property by stating that, “[s]o long as the loan obligations remain unsatisfied, the Borrower shall not use the house for any purpose other than as rental housing and related facilities for eligible [i.e., elderly and low-income] occupants.” Schroeder operated the property for the next twenty years, making regular payments on the Loans.
The Loan Covenant expired on September 1, 2004. That same day, Schroeder attempted to tender the full amount outstanding on both Loans. In her payment request, Schroeder stated that she had difficulty managing the property due to her advanced age and that the property’s rental income was insufficient to permit her to hire a manager. In March 2006, the government sent Schroeder an incentive offer to continue operating the property as low-income housing. In April 2006, Schroeder tendered full payment on both Loans, but her tender was rejected by RHS. Schroeder, in turn, rejected RHS’s incentive offer and attempted to sell the property to a local housing authority at a substantially higher price than RHS’s appraisal value. RHS continued to refuse to allow Schroeder to prepay the remaining debt owed on the Loans, maintaining that ELIHPA prohibits prepayment unless a property owner specifically complies with the Act’s procedural requirements.
III. Procedural History
In May 2006, Schroeder filed this suit in Morrow County, Oregon, Circuit Court, seeking to compel the government to accept her full payment of the Loans, and to quiet title to her property. The government removed the case to federal court.
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Schroeder argued that ELIHPA does not apply to her property because the Loan Covenant had expired in 2004 and because she did not tender a “prepayment” within the meaning of ELIHPA. She also offered equitable arguments in support of her quiet title action.
A magistrate judge recommended granting Schroeder’s motion for summary
JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
We have jurisdiction over this appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment.
See Buono v. Norton,
DISCUSSION
1. The Application of ELIHPA to the Loans
Schroeder first argues that ELIHPA does not apply to her Loans because (A) the final attempted payment on the Loans was not a “prepayment,” which triggers ELIHPA’s procedures but, rather, a regularly scheduled payment; and (B) ELIHPA does not create a new, enforceable restricted-use period. We address these arguments in turn.
A. Schroeder’s Attempted Payment Constituted a Prepayment.
Schroeder argues that the Loans’ maturity dates are the dates by which the total loan balances would be paid based on the loan documents’ monthly installment schedules (the installment dates). Using this approach, she maintains, her 1975 and 1984 loans matured in 1995 and 1993, respectively, and thus, her 2004 attempted payment was not a “prepayment” under ELIHPA and should have been allowed. 2 The government contends that the maturity dates are instead the dates the loan documents identify as the “due and payable” dates, i.e., 2015 and 2034, respectively (the horizon dates).
Schroeder’s novel argument fails. In interpreting contractual terms under federal common law, we give effect to the parties’ intentions as ascertained from the terms themselves.
Flores v. Am. Seafoods Co.,
First, at the time of the notes’ execution, the horizon dates were the only dates certain. At that point, the parties could not have known the exact date by which the monthly installments would ultimately satisfy the principals because the dates were subject to unpredictable factors (e.g., the total rent received from tenants, which in
Second, Schroeder’s interpretation linking the installment dates to the maturity dates would effectively nullify the prepayment clause. The promissory notes’ clauses explicitly permit prepayments at the borrower’s option. Therefore, under Schroeder’s theory, the final payments would necessarily coincide with — indeed, they would establish — the maturity dates. Under this reading, no final payment could constitute a prepayment, and the language permitting prepayments would essentially be a nullity. Consistent with common law principles of contract interpretation, we assume that the agreement’s drafters did not intend such a result.
Cf. Matsuo Yoshida v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
Third and finally, under common law property standards, a mortgage instrument’s prepayment clause generally accompanies, and is distinct from, the specified loan maturity date.
See, e.g., Trident Ctr. v. Conn. Gen. Life Ins. Co.,
Having determined as much, it is apparent that Schroeder’s 2004 payment tender constituted a “prepayment” under ELIHPA. The regulations interpreting ELIHPA define a loan “prepayment” as “[p]ayment in full of the outstanding balance on an Agency loan prior to the note’s originally scheduled maturity date.” 7 C.F.R. § 3560.11. Schroeder cites no authority contrary to this reasonable regulatory interpretation, to which we must defer,
see Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council,
The Eighth Circuit recently confronted a similar scenario and came to the same conclusion.
See Charleston Hous. Auth. v. U.S. Dep’t of Agric.,
B. ELIHPA Created a New Restricted-Use Period.
Schroeder next contends that ELIHPA does not extend the Loan Covenant and, thus, she had the right to pay the balance on her Loans as of September 2004. The relevant provision in the 1984 deed of trust states:
The borrower and any successors in interest agree to use the housing for the purpose of housing people eligible for occupancy as provided in Section 515 of Title V of the Housing Act of 1949 and FmHA regulations then extant during this 20 year period beginning August 31, 1984. No person occupying the housing shall be required to vacate prior to the close of such 20 year period because of early repayment.
Thus, Schroeder contends, she was free to discontinue offering § 515 housing upon the expiration of the aforementioned twenty-year period. Schroeder’s argument, however, overlooks the fact that the deed of trust is not the only document imposing obligations on the use of the property; the loan agreement, which she voluntarily executed in 1984, imposes additional restrictions. That agreement requires her to use the property as low-income housing “so long as the loan obligation remains unsatisfied.” Under ELIHPA, Schroeder may not repay the loans — and thus the “loan obligation[will] remain[] unsatisfied” — until either: (1) she completes the prepayment procedures outlined in ELIHPA; or (2) the loan period expires.
See Franconia,
It is undisputed that Schroeder has not completed ELIHPA’s procedures and that the latter of the Loan terms will not expire until 2034. Therefore, Schroeder is still bound by the requirements, as imposed by the loan agreement and ELIHPA, to use the property as low-income housing. The district court did not err in so holding.
II. The District Court Did Not Abuse its Discretion in Declining to Quiet Title to Schroeder’s Property.
Finally, Schroeder argues that the district court abused its discretion in declining to quiet title to her property. As stated above, because this suit involves contracts with the federal government, federal common law applies.
See Clearfield Trust Co. v. United States,
We assume, without deciding, that a quiet title remedy is available to Schroeder under federal common law.
See Kimberly Assocs.,
First, equitable relief is not appropriate where an adequate remedy exists at law.
Mort v. United States,
Second, Sehroeder has not shown that the equities favor relief. In declining to grant equitable relief, the district court concluded that “the importance of preserving that which ELIHPA seeks to preserve 0ie., a reduction in Section 515 mortgage repayments, a reduction in the loss of low-income housing units, and a reduction in the displacement of Section 515 residents) outweighs the burden to Plaintiff of complying with ELIHPA.” We agree.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the district court did not err in holding that ELIHPA applies to Schroeder’s property. Moreover, the district court did not abuse its discretion in declining to quiet title to Schroeder’s property.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. ELIHPA originally applied only to loans entered into with RHS before December 21, 1979.
See Franconia,
. The government argues that Schroeder is making this argument for the first time on appeal and, therefore, she has waived it.
See O'Rourke v. Seaboard Sur. Co. (In re E.R. Fegert, Inc.),
.
Charleston Housing Authority’s
interpretation of the "unmistakability doctrine” differed from our approach in
Kimberly. See DBSI/TRI,
