Wеstern Securities Company made a $73,000 home mortgage loan to a veteran in 1980. The Veterans’ Administration (now the Department of Veterans Affairs) guaranteed a portion of the loan. The veteran later sold the property to Becky Shaw, who resold it to a couple who defaulted on thе mortgage. Western notified the Veterans’ Administration of intention to foreclose on the mortgage. The Administration responded by notifying Western that Western was not to forgo seeking deficiency judgments against any persons who were liable on the mortgage note. Western’s letter was dated October 2 and the Veterans’ Administration’s response October 23, but we do not know when either letter was actually mailed or received.
It was not until February of the following year that Western instructed its attorney to foreclose on the mortgage and to seek any other relief that might be obtainable. Included in the paсket of documents that it transmitted to the attorney was the Veterans’ Administration’s letter of October 23. The attorney decided, however, that Shaw had not assumed the mortgage when she bought the property and therefore was not liable on the note, and so rather than seek a deficiency judgment agаinst her he released her from liability.
The foreclosure sale resulted in a loss to Western, which then turned to the Veterans’ Administration to make good on its guaranty. The Administration refused, citing a regulation it has promulgated which provides that “the release of the personal liability of any obligor on a guaranteed or insured obligation resultant from the act or omission of any holder [of the guaranty] without the prior approval of the [Veterans’] Administrator shall release the obligation of the Administrator as guarantor or insurer.” 38 C.F.R. § 36.4324(f). Western sued the Administrator in state court under 38 U.S.C. § 1820(a)(1) for $25,002, the amount of money Western allegedly had lost as a result of the refusal to honor the loan guaranty. The suit claimed that Shaw was not an obligor on the loan and that, in any event, the defense based on the regulation was barred by the Administration’s failure to have notified Western, within fifteen days of being informed that Western intended to foreclose, of the Administration’s desire that Western preserve personal liability on the mortgage note. For the regulation from which we quoted makes an exception to the release of the Administrator if, “after receiving [the required] notice, the Administrator shall have failed to notify the holder within 15 days to proсeed in such manner as to effectively preserve the personal liability of the parties liable.” The Veterans’ Administration concedes that it missed the deadline by six days. The concession is a bit curious, since the record contains no evidence either of when Western’s notice was received, which would have started the Veterans’ Administration’s clock running, or of when the Veterans’ Administration’s response was mailed, which by analogy to notification requirements in other commercial settings would have stopped the clock. See UCC § 1-201(26) and Official Comment 26. It is not the only curiosity in the case.
The Administratоr removed the case to federal court under 28 U.S.C. § 1442(a)(1) (removal by federal officer), producing a host of questions that the parties did not address in their original briefs but that in response to our request have addressed in supplementary briefs. The first question is whether the suit really was removable under section 1442(a)(1). Suits against federal agencies are not,
International Primate Protection League v. Administrators of Tulane Educational
*1279
Fund,
— U.S. -,
So we must consider whether the federal district court had original jurisdiction. At first glance the answer is a resounding “no.” Western has a contraсt claim against the United States for more than $10,000, and the jurisdiction of federal district courts over such claims is limited to claims that do not exceed that amount, the larger claims being within the jurisdiction not of the district courts but of the Claims Court, in Washington. Tucker Act, codified at 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(a)(2), 1491(a)(1);
Lomas & Nettleton Co. v. Pierce,
It is true that 38 U.S.C. § 1820(a)(1) empowers the Veterans’ Administrator to sue or be sued in any court, state or fеderal, of competent jurisdiction. It was under the authority of that statute that Western filed this suit — in state court, remember — initially. But that statute, in contrast to 15 U.S.C. § 634(b)(1), construed in
General Railway Signal Co. v. Corcoran, supra,
We need not pursue these questions. Jurisdiction is saved by the fact that Western’s suit, being a suit against the Veterans’ Administration to enforce the loan guaranty, arises under federal law and is therefore within the original jurisdiction of the federal district court by virtue of 28 U.S.C. § 1331 (the general federal-question jurisdictional statute), making objection to removal waivable. Suits to enforce contracts with federal agencies are governed by federal common law,
Clearfield Trust Co. v. United States,
The Veterans’ Administration loan-guaranty program, 38 U.S.C. §§ 1801
et seq.,
empowers the federal courts to create in common law fashion such interpretive, suppletive, and interstitial principles as may be necessary to the sound administration of the program, cf.
Powers v. U.S. Postal Service, supra,
We do not think it should be objected that this interpretation of section 1331 disrupts the allocation of jurisdiction between
*1281
the district courts and the Claims Court. That allocation is the creation of the Tucker Act, which waives sovereign immunity for contract claims against the government that are not waived by other statutes.
United States v. Mitchell,
So we have jurisdiction. But wе invite Congress’s attention to the hole that Primate Protection League has made in the consistent congressional policy of allowing the federal government to insist that suits .against it be litigated in federal court because state courts might be tempted to treat the U.S. Treasury as the ultimate deep-pocket litigant. As a result of thе interaction between 38 U.S.C. § 1820(a)(1) and Primate Protection League, the government can no longer remove a suit against the Department of Veterans Affairs under 28 U.S.C. § 1442(a)(1). This is not a problem in a case like this which arises under federal law, because such a suit is removable under section 1441, which was unaffected by Primate Protection League. But it cannot be assumed that all suits against the Veterans’ Administration will arise under federal law.
We come at last to the merits. After a bench trial that, pursuant to agreement of the parties, was limited to documentary evidence, the district court held that Shaw was indeed an obligor and that while the Veterans’ Administration had violated the regulation by missing the fifteen-day deadline, Western could not complain, because the violation had not harmed it. In our court, Western does not challenge the holding that Shaw was an obligor. Nor does it contend that it was harmed by the fact that the Veterans’ Administration missed the deadline. It could not argue that. It did not rеlease Shaw until many months after it had received the Veterans’ Administration’s untimely notification to preserve personal liability. Its lawyer had the Administrator’s notification in hand when he released Shaw; he just thought, erroneously as it turned out, that Shaw wasn’t liable. There was no causal connection between the delay in notification and the release of the obligor and consequent release of the Veterans’ Administration’s guaranty.
Yet the regulation, read literally, conditions the release of the Veterans’ Administration’s guaranty on the Administration’s making timely notification of its desire that personal liability be preserved, and timely is defined as fifteen days. The literal interpretation of the regulation would result, however, in a grossly excessive sanction for inevitable if regrettable bureaucratic ineptitude. Sanctions should be proportioned to the gravity of the misconduct,
Lorenzen v. Employees Retirement Plan,
Case law is replete with instances in which the missing of deadlines, whether by government agencies subject to statutory deadlines or by private parties subject to deadlines set in contracts, does
not
lead to costly forfeitures. A few examples are
Brock v. Pierce County,
Affirmed.
