ORDER
This is a suit by former depositors (the uninsured depositors) of the Oakwood Deposit Bank Company (Oakwood Bank), a depository institution for which third party defendant the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC or the Corporation) served as receiver. In its capacity as receiver, the FDIC transferred certain assets from Oakwood Bank to the defendant State Bank and Trust Company (State Bank) via a purchase and assumption agreement (P & A agreement). 1
Under the P & A agreement, State Bank assumed the FDIC’s insured deposit liabilities (liabilities that the FDIC had as a function of its corporate relationship with Oakwood Bank) and agreed to purchase some, but not all, of Oakwood Bank’s assets from the FDIC as receiver. The plaintiffs’ uninsured deposits with State Bank were not among those that the FDIC transferred to State Bank. The FDIC as receiver agreed to indemnify State Bank for any claims made against it that might be based on liabilities of Oakwood that State Bank did not assume.
Plaintiffs claim that State Bank is liable for the amount of the uninsured deposits because of State Bank’s alleged: 1) status as a successor to Oakwood bank; 2) role in aiding and abetting the FDIC’s alleged breach of fiduciary duty to the uninsured *733 depositors; 3) position as a constructive trustee; and 4) breach of contract with the uninsured depositors. Following the submission of numerous briefs supporting and opposing motions for dismissal, summary judgment and remand, these matters are decisional.
For the following reasons, plaintiffs’ motion to remand [Doc. 26] is denied and defendants’ motions for summary judgment [Docs. 10, 11] are granted.
Background
In accordance with its P & A agreement with the FDIC, State Bank assumed certain insured deposits and liabilities of Oak-wood Bank. But it did not assume the plaintiffs’ uninsured deposits.
Thereafter, the uninsured depositors participated in the receivership process, filing claims with the FDIC. The FDIC, in turn, issued Receiver’s Certificates as to the uninsured depositors’ claims. Though able to do so under 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(6), plaintiffs never requested administrative review of their claims or filed suit based on the FDIC’s treatment of such claims.
Instead, the uninsured depositors sued State Bank in the Paulding County, Ohio, Court of Common Pleas. Their complaint alleged that the FDIC’s transaction with State Bank — particularly State Banks’s assumption of funds that Oakwood Bank’s Vice President had not recorded in Oak-wood Bank’s books but which the FDIC nonetheless identified as insured deposits — breached the Corporation’s duties to the plaintiffs. They contended that, as a result of the bank’s dealings with the FDIC, they were worse off than if those dealings had never occurred.
On learning of the plaintiffs’ suit against State Bank, the FDIC sought to intervene in the state court action as a matter of right and to substitute itself as the only proper or necessary party defendant. Thereafter, but before the state court had ruled on the motion to intervene, the FDIC removed the case to this court. In addition, it sought summary judgment in this court.
I initially remanded the matter to state court because, in view of the lack of ruling on its motion in state court to intervene, the FDIC was not a party to the case. But on reconsideration, I dismissed the action, granting summary judgment to the FDIC.
Village of Oakwood v. State Bank and Trust Co.,
In reaching my decision, I cited portions of Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act (FIRREA) which bars this court’s jurisdiction over most claims involving depository institutions in federal receivership unless the claimant follows the time and venue provisions of that Act. Id.
The Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit reversed my decision.
Village of Oakwood v. State Bank and Trust Co.,
Following remand, defendant State Bank brought a third party claim against the FDIC, alleging a right to indemnification under the P & A agreement. On June 12, 2007, the FDIC again removed the ease to this court.
Discussion
A. Jurisdiction is Proper
The uninsured depositors argue that the Tucker Act (28 U.S.C. § 1491) provides *734 exclusive jurisdiction in the Federal Court of Claims for State Bank’s indemnification claims against the FDIC. 2 While the Tucker Act provides potential jurisdiction, it does not provide the only forum in which State Bank can present its third party plaintiff claims against the FDIC.
The uninsured depositors correctly contend that claims, if brought under the Tucker Act for over $10,000, must be brought in the Court of Claims. This third party complaint, however, is not brought under the Tucker Act; instead, State Bank sues — and seeks jurisdiction in this Court — under the “sue and be sued” clause of FIRREA (12 U.S.C. § 1819(a)(Fourth)).
3
This clause “provides an independent basis for district court jurisdiction in this case.”
Karstens Products, Inc. v. F.D.I.C.,
No. 95-1392,
Therefore, based on 12 U.S.C. § 1819(b)(2)(A) and 28 U.S.C. § 1331, this court has jurisdiction over the entire dispute. 12 U.S.C. § 1819(b)(2) (deeming all suits to which the FDIC is a party to arise under federal law and explaining how the FDIC may remove such cases to federal court);
see also Village of Oakwood, supra,
Therefore, Village of Oakwood’s motion for remand shall be denied.
B. The Uninsured Depositors’ Claims
The FDIC is a third party defendant in this case because the uninsured depositors bring all their claims against State Bank— the entity that assumed the insured deposits of the failed Oakwood Bank — and none against the FDIC. While it is not clear that the FDIC served the uninsured depositors in the best manner possible, see infra Section C, the plaintiffs’ efforts to obtain redress through a suit against the State Bank are severely misplaced. Yet it is clear why the uninsured depositors have picked State Bank as the sole target of their allegations; having failed to make claims against the FDIC via the required administrative process, plaintiffs recognize *735 they will be barred from making such claims at this late date. Unfortunately for them, they are also barred from bringing the same claims against State Bank.
1. Statutory Structure: 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(6) and (d)(13)
The FIRREA is, to say the least, “a complex statute.”
Brady Dev. Co., Inc. v. Resolution Trust Corp.,
Among the statute’s several functions, it “sets forth a detailed series of rules under which all claims involving an insolvent institution are received and handled.”
Id.
at 1003. These rules — contained in 12 U.S.C. §§ 1821(d)(3)-(6) — apply to all federal and state chartered banks and thrifts and require: 1) the receiver to post notice of the depository institution’s failure in a newspaper and mail notices to creditors; 2) creditors to file claims within approximately ninety days of the notice; 3) the receiver to make a determination with regard to the claim within 180 days of the date of filing (unless there is an extension); and 4) creditors to be able to seek administrative review or file suit in district court within sixty days of the receiver’s denial of their claims or the receiver’s failure to make a determination as required. 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(3)-(6);
see also Simon v. F.D.I.C.,
If a party fails to follow these procedures within the prescribed time periods, the “claim shall be deemed to be disallowed (other than any portion of such claim which was allowed by the receiver) as of the end of such period, such disallowance shall be final, and the claimant shall have no further rights or remedies with respect to such claim.” 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(6)(B)(ii). 4
As if to highlight that the process outlined in § 1821(d)(6) is the only means of review available to claimants, Congress also included a jurisdictional limitation in the FIRREA. This section explains that “[ejxcept as otherwise provided in [§ 1821(d) ]” no court has jurisdiction over “(i) any claim or action for payment from, *736 or any action seeking a determination of rights with respect to, the assets of any depository institution for which the Corporation has been appointed receiver, including assets which the Corporation may acquire from itself as such receiver;” as well as “(ii) any claim relating to any act or omission of such institution or the Corporation as receiver.” 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(13)(D)(i)-(ii).
As already noted, the uninsured depositors did not raise their claims, seek administrative review, or bring suit in district court within the timetable outlined in 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(5)-(6). The uninsured depositors assert that they had no opportunity to do so because the claims at bar— directed at State Bank rather than the FDIC — could not be pursued via the administrative procedures of § 1821(d)(6). State Bank counters that this court must dismiss the uninsured depositors claims regardless of whether any portion of § 1821 provides a means of review because the plaintiffs’ claims are clearly related to an “act or omission of ... the Corporation as receiver.” 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(13)(ii).
While State Bank’s textual reading of § 1821(d)(13) appears accurate on its face, the statute demands a more thorough analysis. Other courts have noted that claims that are “not ‘against a depository institution’ ” but that are restricted by the language of § 1821(d)(13) could “foreclose judicial jurisdiction altogether, a result troubling from a constitutional perspective and certainly not the goal of FIRREA.”
Auction Co. of Am. v. F.D.I.C.,
As if to broaden this narrow reading of (d)(13), courts have also found that the “claim[s]” described in (d)(6) and (d)(13) include claims against the receiver itself and not just claims for which the receiver stands in the shoes of the failed depository institution.
McCarthy v. F.D.I.C.,
348
*737
F.3d 1075, 1081 (9th Cir.2003) (joining “the majority of courts in holding that claimants ... who challenge conduct by the FDIC as receiver, must exhaust administrative remedies before seeking judicial review”);
Stamm v. Paul,
In support of this broader interpretation of (d)(6), courts point out that “the FDIC has interpreted § 1821(d)(5)(C)(ii), which permits claimants who did not receive notice of the receiver’s appointment to file after the bar date imposed by FIRREA has passed, also to permit late filing by those whose claims do not arise until after the deadline has passed.”
McCarthy, supra,
2. Application of 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(6) and (d)(13)
The uninsured depositors raise several constitutional arguments with regard to the provisions of FIRREA limiting this court’s jurisdiction. The first of these arguments stems from a concern that this court will cite § 1821(d)(13)’s judicial review limitation as an outright bar to jurisdiction over any and all claims “relating to any act or omission of such [depository] institution or the Corporation as receiver” rather than as an exhaustion requirement. 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(13).
Such an interpretation, the uninsured depositors allege, would interfere with claimants’ Fifth Amendment due process rights because claims against an assuming bank cannot be raised via § 1821(d)(6). Further, the plaintiffs argue that any interpretations to the contrary — d.e. forcing claimants to request the FDIC review of the actions of assuming banks — would violate the role of the federal courts under Article III of the Constitution.
See N.
*738
Pipeline Const. Co. v. Marathon Pipe Line Co.,
I do not interpret the limitations of 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(13) as an outright bar to jurisdiction. But I am not persuaded that all the uninsured depositors’ claims could not have been brought via the process outline in 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(6).
While the prevailing interpretation of (d)(13) as an exhaustion requirement came into being, in part, to avoid barring claims that could not come into court via § 1821(d)(6), that does not mean that all claims not “against a depository institution” must be resolved outside the mandate of § 1821(d)(6).
See Auction Co. of Am., supra,
In addition to pursing claims via the administrative process, claimants can “file suit on such claim (or continue an action commenced before the appointment of the receiver) in the district or territorial court of the United States for the district within which the depository institution’s principal place of business is located or the United States District Court for the District of Columbia (and such court shall have jurisdiction to hear such claim).” 12 U.S.C. § 1821 (d)(6)(A)(ii). Thus, nothing would have stopped the plaintiffs — on discovering (if it is indeed the case) that they could not obtain redress via administrative proceedings — from filing suit in district court as allowed under § 1821(d)(6).
The plaintiffs were on notice of the receivership. When the receiver took the actions that underlie the uninsured depositors claims — claims that are clearly relate to an “act or omission of ... the Corporation as receiver” — the uninsured depositors should have sought their remedies within sixty days via the options available under § 1821(d)(6). See 12 U.S.C. §§ 1821(d)(6)(A), (13)(D)(ii). As there is no evidence that the plaintiffs either sought administrative review or filed their claims in the appropriate district court, the claims are disallowed. Consequently, the claimants have no further rights (and thus no right to a hearing in this court) with regard to the claims.
The alternative — to permit claimants to avoid the provisions of (d)(6) and (d)(13) by bringing claims against the assuming bank — would encourage the very litigation that FIRREA aimed to avoid.
See, e.g., Brady Dev., supra,
This broader view of the requirements of § 1821(d)(13) best harmonizes § 1821(d)(6) with § 1821(d)(13). It also encourages claimants to seek redress in a timely manner; waiting and seeking an initial hearing in federal court will not provide any advantage. If the uninsured depositors are correct, and the FDIC cannot review claims against the assuming bank, then those claims should be brought in federal court within the timetable explicated in § 1821(d)(6) and stayed until any required findings are resolved via the administrative review process.
Accordingly, the defendants’ motions for summary judgment shall be granted.
*739 3. The Four Claims Against State Bank
Notwithstanding the previous holding, it is important to point out that many of the uninsured depositors claims would fail even if I did not apply § 1821(d)’s exhaustion requirement. The foundations on which the plaintiffs base their claims wholly ignore the legal role of State Bank in the receivership process. That most of the claims are premised on actions taken by the FDIC, rather than the defendant State Bank, indicates that the plaintiffs know them case would be stronger if they had a means of bringing it against the FDIC.
a. Successor Liability
The uninsured depositors allege that State Bank is liable to them as the successor institution to Oakwood Bank. When the FDIC became receiver for Oak-wood Bank it immediately assumed ownership of all deposit and accountholder claims against Oakwood Bank and all the failed bank’s assets. 12 U.S.C. § 1821 (d)(2)(A)(i). Shortly thereafter, the FDIC entered into the P & A agreement with State Bank. Through this agreement, the FDIC transferred some liabilities to State Bank, but State Bank did not assume liability for uninsured deposits or the actions of the FDIC. Any application of the law making State Bank a successor for these liabilities would prevent the FDIC from transferring distinct assets or liabilities and would, in effect, make every failed bank resolution a merger. Compare 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(2)(G)(i)(I) (explaining that the FDIC may “merge the insured depository institution with another insured depository institution”), with 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(2)(G)(i)(II) (explaining that the FDIC may “transfer any asset or liability of the institution in default”).
Courts have endorsed the transfer of assets without liabilities in similar contexts.
Kennedy v. Mainland Sav. Ass’n,
The uninsured depositors’ argument that the current situation is different because the claims arose after the FDIC became receiver is unpersuasive. What matters is not when the claims accrued but, rather, whether liability for the claims ever transferred from Oakwood Bank to State Bank or from the FDIC to State Bank. There was never a relationship between Oakwood and State Bank allowing for any transfer of liabilities. There is, likewise, no dispute that the P & A agreement between the FDIC and State Bank did not transfers any liabilities.
Ohio state law is not to the contrary. The uninsured depositors’ cite
Wei-
*740
co
Industries, Inc. v. Applied Cos.,
Of the four exceptions recited in Welco, 5 the plaintiffs appear to rely on the exception for transactions entered into fraudulently for the purpose of escaping liability. But a mere assertion that the P & A agreement was illegal is not the same as a factual allegation that the agreement was designed to enable any of the parties fraudulently to escape liability.
In any case, such allegation would appear to implicate the FDIC as the culpable party seeking to avoid liability by transferring assets. To the extent that the plaintiffs had an opportunity via 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(6) to bring a claim against the FDIC and failed to do so, the allegation is not a basis for recovery against State Bank.
Plaintiffs’ claim of successor liability is not well taken. Having failed to bring their claims against the FDIC under § 1821(d)(6), conventional principles protecting successors against the liabilities of predecessors except in limited circumstances precludes such claim against State Bank.
b. Aiding and Abetting
The uninsured depositors assert that State Bank is liable for aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty by the FDIC. This claims also fails “because Ohio law is unsettled whether this cause of action exists.”
Pavlovich v. Nat’l City Bank,
Furthermore, the uninsured depositors fail to raise any triable issues of material fact. To prove that State Bank aided and abetted the FDIC’s breach, plaintiffs must show: 1) the FDIC owed a duty to the defendants; 2) the FDIC breached that duty; 3) State Bank knew that the FDIC was breaching that duty; and 4) State Bank gave substantial assistance to the FDIC in breaching that duty. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 876(b) (1979).
Besides pointing to State Bank’s assumption of deposits as part of the P & A agreement, the uninsured depositors offer no facts supporting the allegation that State Bank had knowledge of the FDIC’s alleged breach of duty, nor how it even could have obtained such knowledge.
See Pavlovich, supra,
c. Constructive Trust
The uninsured depositors appear to argue that the remedy of a constructive trust should serve as a separate claim for *741 relief. The plaintiffs never fully explain this confusing allegation. However, because I do not believe that the property in question was acquired by fraud, a constructive trust is neither an appropriate claim for relief nor an appropriate remedy.
d. Breach of Contract
The uninsured depositors breach of contract claim also fails on the merits. The plaintiffs do not allege that they had a contract with State Bank but only that their claims “relate to deposits State Bank assumed and then rejected.” 6 (Doc. 12 at 19). Yet there are no factual allegations to support the claim that State Bank assumed and then rejected any of plaintiffs uninsured deposits. There are also no allegations of any contractual relationship between the uninsured depositors and State Bank. Accordingly, uninsured depositors’ contract claim fails.
C. The Legality of the P & A Agreement
Three of the plaintiffs four claims appear to rely on the assertion that the FDIC’s P & A agreement with State Bank violated the National Depositor Preference Law and breached the FDIC’s fiduciary duty to Oakwood Bank’s uninsured depositors. The uninsured depositors cite pre-FIRREA receivership cases—namely
First Empire Bank v. F.D.I.C.,
As the plaintiffs appear to acknowledge in their brief in opposition to the motion to dismiss [Doc. 14, at 3, n. 2], the law entitles depositors to a pro rata payment of dividends on their Receiver’s Certificates after the receiver accounts for the expenses of conducting the receivership. Only after depositors are fully paid can the general creditors and subsequent classes obtain payment. 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(ll)(A).
But this arrangement does not mean that
First Empire Bank v. F.D.I.C.,
Based on the information before me, it is difficult, if not impossible, to assess whether the uninsured depositors will actually receive their pro rata share of the value of Oakwood Bank’s assets, if the bank had been liquidated, via their Receivership Certificates. Nevertheless, the FDIC was not, as the plaintiffs assert, required to treat all depositors equally.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, it is therefore,
ORDERED THAT:
1. Plaintiffs’ motion for remand [Doc. 26] be, and the same hereby is denied; and
2. The defendants’ motions for summary judgment [Does. 10, 11] be, and the same hereby are, granted.
So ordered.
Notes
. The FDIC serves two primary roles when a bank fails. As explained in
F.D.I.C.
v.
Rahn,
On one hand, the FDIC acts as receiver of a failed bank, marshaling its assets in order to pay the bank's creditors. On the other hand, the FDIC-Corp. acts as an insurer of member banks. In its corporate capacity, the FDIC must make the most of the assets purchased from the FDIC as receiver.
FDIC-Corporate and FDIC-Receiver act independently of one another and are distinct legal entities.
See, e.g., Texas Am. Bancshares, Inc.
v.
Clarke,
. The relevant section states:
The United States Court of Federal Claims shall have jurisdiction to render judgment upon any claim against the United States founded either upon the Constitution, or any Act of Congress or any regulation of an executive department, or upon any express or implied contract with the United States, or for liquidated or unliquidated damages in cases not sounding in tort.
28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1).
. The relevant text of the statutes states: “Upon June 16, 1933, the Corporation shall become a body corporate and as such shall have power — ... Fourth. To sue and be sued, and complain and defend, by and through its own attorneys, in any court of law or equity, State or Federal.” 12 U.S.C. 1819(a)(Fourth).
. 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(6) in its entirety provides:
(A) In general
Before the end of the 60-day period beginning on the earlier of—
(i) the end of the period described in paragraph (5)(A)(i) with respect to any claim against a depository institution for which the Corporation is receiver; or
(ii) the date of any notice of disallowance of such claim pursuant to paragraph (5)(A)(i), the claimant may request administrative review of the claim in accordance with sub-paragraph (A) or (B) of paragraph (7) or file suit on such claim (or continue an action commenced before the appointment of the receiver) in the district or territorial court of the United States for the district within which the depository institution’s principal place of business is located or the United
States District Court for the District of Columbia (and such court shall have jurisdiction to hear such claim).
(B) Statute of limitations
If any claimant fails to—
(i) request administrative review of any claim in accordance with subparagraph (A) or (B) of paragraph (7); or
(ii) file suit on such claim (or continue an action commenced before the appointment of the receiver),
before the end of the 60-day period described in subparagraph (A), the claim shall be deemed to be disallowed (other than any portion of such claim which was allowed by the receiver) as of the end of such period, such disallowance shall be final, and the claimant shall have no further rights or remedies with respect to such claim.
. The four exceptions are: "(1) the buyer expressly or impliedly agrees to assume such liability; (2) the transaction amounts to a de facto consolidation or merger; (3) the buyer corporation is merely a continuation of the seller corporation; or (4) the transaction is entered into fraudulently for the purpose of escaping liability.”
Welco Indus., Inc. v. Applied Cos.,
. In this claim, the plaintiffs may be alluding to a post-closing practice in which an assuming bank assumes all of a failed bank's assets and then the receiver repurchases assets that it needs or the assuming bank has the option to "put back” assets to the receiver within thirty or sixty days. See Managing the Crisis: The FDIC and RTC Experience, 1980-1994 at 79-80, 220. There were apparently some puts in operation in the agreement between the FDIC and State Bank, though there is no evidence that the bank assumed, and then executed an option to put back, any uninsured deposit liabilities.
. The relevant portion of FIRREA, codified at of 12 U.S.C. § 1821(f), provides:
(1) In general
Notwithstanding any other provision of Federal law or the law of any State and regardless of the method which the Corporation determines to utilize with respect to an insured depository institution in default or in danger of default, including transactions authorized under subsection (n) of this section and section 1823(c) of this title, this subsection shall govern the rights of the creditors (other than insured depositors) of such institution.
*742 (2) Maximum liability
The maximum liability of the Corporation, acting as receiver or in any other capacity, to any person having a claim against the receiver or the insured depository institution for which such receiver is appointed shall equal the amount such claimant would have received if the Corporation had liquidated the assets and liabilities of such institution without exercising the Corporation’s authority under subsection (n) of this section or section 1823 of this title.
