Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation appeals summary judgment granted to Tom Scott, Jr., on his indemnification claim against the FDIC. We find that the district court lacked jurisdiction over Scott’s counterclaim because he failed to exhaust his admin *256 istrative remedies with the FDIC, as required by the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989.
I.
This case arises out of the trоubled history of a Mississippi savings and loan association. On August 10, 1989, the Office of Thrift Supervision appointed the Resolution Trust Corporation as receiver for Unifirst Bank for Savings, F.A. The RTC simultaneously organized Unifirst Bank for Savings, A Federal Savings and Loan Association. As receiver for Old Unifirst, the RTC then entered into a Purchase and Assumption Agreement with New Unifirst for the purpose of transferring certain assets аnd liabilities from the old entity to the new.
On June 15, 1990, the OTS appointed the RTC as receiver for New Unifirst. The RTC then entered into a contract of sale with its corporate alter ego, transferring to RTC Corporate all of the rights, title, and interest in the claims of New Unifirst. On December 31, 1995, pursuant to the Resolution Trust Corporation Completion Act, 12 U.S.C. §§ 1441a(m)(l)-(2), RTC Corporate ceased to exist. All of RTC Cоrporate’s assets, including its interest in New Unifirst, were transferred to the FDIC as the manager of the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation Resolution Fund.
On March 22, 1994, the RTC, in its capacity as receiver for New Unifirst, filed a complaint seeking damages from Tom Scott, Jr., the longtime president and chief executive officer of Unifirst. The complaint alleged that Scott had breached various duties to Unifirst in connection with his oversight of several loans the institution had made.
Scott counterclaimed for indemnification. He asserted that an indemnification resolution adopted by the Board of Directors of Old Unifirst entitled him to recoup any award obtained against him, as well as attorneys’ fees and expenses in defending against the FDIC’s suit.
Thereafter, the FDIC 1 moved to dismiss Scott’s countеrclaim on several grounds. First, it argued that the district court lacked jurisdiction to hear Scott’s counterclaim because FIRREA required Scott to exhaust his administrative remedies with the FDIC before proceeding in court. Second, the FDIC asserted that Scott had no grounds for seeking indemnification, either under the Old Unifirst bylaws, OTS regulations, or the Purchase and Assumption Agreement.
In a long series of rulings, the distriсt court disposed of the FDIC’s and Scott’s claims. On April 18, 1995, the court denied the FDIC’s jurisdictional defense to Scott’s counterclaim, reasoning that Scott need not exhaust his administrative remedies with the FDIC because the FDIC’s lawsuit against him demonstrated official bias against his indemnification claim. At the same time, the court ruled that the Purchase and Assumption Agreement was ambiguous as to whether New Unifirst suсceeded to Old Unifirst’s obligation to indemnify Scott, thus requiring a trier of fact to resolve the matter.
Scott moved for summary judgment on the counterclaim, but the district court denied his motion on July 1,1995. After the Mississippi legislature retroactively altered the state’s gross negligence standard, he also moved for partial summary judgment on four of the FDIC’s five breach-of-duty claims against him. On June 8, 1995, the court grantеd this motion, leaving only the FDIC’s claim for gross negligence.
Scott then moved for summary judgment on the FDIC’s remaining claim against him and on his indemnification counterclaim. On May 30,1996, the district court granted summary judgment for Scott on the FDIC’s last claim. Moreover, the court reversed its previous decision on the indemnification issue, concluding that the Partnership and Assumption Agreement was not ambiguous and that New Unifirst hаd acquired Old Unifirst’s liability for indemnification. Accordingly, it granted Scott’s motion for summary judgment on his indemnification counterclaim, and it entered final judgment in the case.
*257 The FDIC timely appealed the district court’s indemnification rulings only. On appeal, the FDIC again argues that FIRREA withdraws jurisdiction from federal courts to hear Scott’s claim until he exhausts his administrative remedies. Alternatively, it contends that Scоtt is not owed indemnification because New Unifirst never acquired Old Unifirst’s liability for indemnification and because OTS regulations requiring indemnification for thrift executives do not apply to Scott.
II.
As a threshold matter, we must first determine whether the district court properly exercised jurisdiction. Because we find that it did not, we need not reach the merits of Scott’s indemnification counterclaim.
A.
In еnacting FIRREA, Congress established a comprehensive administrative procedure for the resolution of claims against a failed financial institution held in receivership by the FDIC. All creditors or other persons having such claims must first present them to the receiver for an administrative determination of whether they should be paid. 12 U.S.C. §§ 1821(3) — (13). Congress explicitly deprived federal courts of subject mаtter jurisdiction over claims not so presented:
(D) Limitation on judicial review
Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, no court shall have jurisdiction over—
(i) any claim or action for payment from, 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 Corрoration may acquire from itself as such receiver; or
(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). The other circuits have uniformly held that in § 1821(d)(13)(D), Congress established an administrative exhaustion requirement; before a litigant may bring a claim in court against the receiver, the FDIC must first administratively deny the claimant relief.
See, e.g., Simon v. FDIC,
The classification of the exhaustion requirement in § 1821(d)(13)(D) as being of congressional or judicial origin is of major consequence.
See Information Resources, Inc. v. United States,
However, where Congress has not explicitly mandated exhaustion, “courts are guided by congressional intent in determining whether application of the [exhaustion] doctrine would be consistent with the statutory scheme.”
Patsy v. Board of Regents,
Despite the unanimity among the circuit courts in finding that Congress in § 1821(d)(13)(D) explicitly mandated exhaustion, the district court below construed the major Fifth Circuit case on the issue,
Meliezer v. RTC,
In Meliezer, this court dismissed for lack of jurisdiction thе claims of two mortgage assumers who had brought suit against the RTC but had not exhausted their administrative remedies under FIRREA. We held that Congress unambiguously crafted an exhaustion requirement in FIRREA:
Typically, exhaustion of administrative remedies is required where Congress imposes such a requirement. If the statutory language is not explicit, courts are guided by congressional intent in determining whether exhaustion is required. Althоugh FIRREA does not explicitly mandate exhaustion of administrative remedies before judicial intervention, the language of the statute and indicated congressional intent make clear that such is required____ [SJection 1821 (d)(13)(D) clearly establishes a statutory exhaustion requirement.
Id.
at 882 (citations omitted). The district court, pointing to our phrase, “FIRREA does not explicitly mandate exhaustion,” cоncluded that administrative exhaustion under FIR-REA must be of judicial rather than legislative origin. Relying on
McCarthy,
it reasoned that the
Meliezer
court, in looking to congressional intent and statutory language, must necessarily have been creating an exhaustion requirement by judicial implication, not enforcing one as mandated by congressional direction.
See McCarthy,
We must disagree with this characterization of
Meliezer.
Our statement in
Meliezer,
“FIRREA does not explicitly mandate exhaustion,” was meant only to indicate that the statute did not employ the express term, “administrative exhaustion.” Yet we did not hesitate to recognize that FIRREA’s exhaustion requirement fell into the first, jurisdictional category of exhaustion requirements, as the structure of thе statute evidences Congress’s intent to erect an administrative exhaustion regime.
See Meliezer,
Thus, Meliezer, in finding an exhaustion requirement, found one that was of intentional congressional design. Accordingly, we lack jurisdiction to entertain Scott’s counterclaim against the FDIC until Scott exhausts his administrative remedies. Although Scоtt’s resort to administrative channels may be futile, we are powerless to waive a con *259 gressionally-imposed exhaustion requirement.
At oral argument, Scott advanced a new argument: the administrative exhaustion requirement in the statute does not apply to post-receivership claims that arise after FIRREA’s ninety-day, statutory bar date for bringing actions against a receivership. Although the statutory bar date in the ease elapsed before Scott brought his counterclaim, the FDIC has an internal claims procedure that allows claimants to file “late claims” that arise after the bar date.
See Heno v. FDIC,
B.
Perhaps anticipating our response to the lower court’s exhaustion ruling, Scott attempts to rescue jurisdiction by escaping from the express language of 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(13)(D). Section 1821(d)(13)(D) bars federal courts from entertaining any “claim” made against a receiver, unless the claimant has exhausted all administrative remedies. Scott contends that his action for attorneys’ fees is not a “claim” under FIR-REA and thus exhaustion does not apply tо him. We reject this argument as well.
Whether an indemnification action is a “claim” under FIRREA is a matter of first impression for our circuit. The other courts that have addressed the issue have divided over it.
Compare RTC v. Titan Fin. Corp.,
We fail to see, however, how the temporal character of an indemnification action affects the exhaustion question. True, Scott’s basis for indemnity did not originate until after he was sued by the FDIC. Recently, however, we held in
Home Capital Collateral, Inc. v. FDIC,
Admittedly, Scott’s counterclaim for indemnity is related to the litigation that the counterdefendant, the FDIC, initiated. Yet that relationship does not alter the fact that Scott’s request for indemnity is an independent claim. In the end, Scott is suing to enforce his rights under Old Unifirst’s bylaws. This indemnity suit, therefore, is an independent claim for relief, not an affirmative defense or thе like.
2
See A& B Constr.,
*260
Inc. v. Atlas Roofing & Skylight Co.,
That Scott’s indemnification claim is subject to FIRREA’s exhaustion requirement is made clear by the language of the statute. FIRREA withdraws jurisdiction, absent exhaustion, from district courts for any claim or action for payment from the assets of the receivership. 12 U.S.C. § 1821(d)(13)(D)(i). Were Scott to prevail on his counterclaim, his attorneys’ fees wоuld come from the receivership’s assets. Although Scott also advances an argument premised on OTS regulations, he bases his primary claim for indemnification upon a bylaw that Old Unifirst’s Board of Directors approved in 1984, providing for indemnification for Old Unifirst’s officers and directors. We liken this bylaw to a contractual provision for indemnity between two parties, as Scott has the power to enforce it. As we held in
Interfirst Bank Abilene, N.A. v. FDIC,
Furthermore, FIRREA denies jurisdiction to federal courts over “any claim relating to any act or omission” of the receivership. § 1821(d)(13)(D)(ii). Here, Scоtt’s claim arises from an “act” of the FDIC in its capacity as receiver — its lawsuit against him. Thus, the plain language of the statute dictates that Scott must first bring his claim administratively.
Scott contends, however, that classifying attorneys’ fees as a “claim” under the statute would lead to wasteful and inefficient piecemeal litigation.
See Western Techs.,
III.
We recognize that our holding today makes for an inefficient FDIC claims process. Although we do not decide the issue, counsel at oral argument instructs us that once this appeal is disposed of, Scott is not barred from making his administrative demand, seeing it get rejected, and then promptly refiling his claim. Before long we may find both parties back before this court, once again asking us to resolve the merits of Scott’s indemnification claim. Congrеss intended to create an efficient system for resolving claims arising from the disastrous failure of savings and loan companies. However, the statute here makes waste. Regardless, it is not within our province to rewrite statutes simply to make them more efficient.
For the foregoing reasons, we VACATE the judgment of the district court and REMAND the ease to the district court with instructions to dismiss for want of jurisdiсtion.
Notes
. After the FDIC succeeded to the RTC's interests in New Unifirst, the district court entered an order replacing the "RTC” as the plaintiff in this action with the "FDIC as Manager of the FSLIC Resolution Fund.” We hereinafter refer to the plaintiff as the "FDIC.”
. Other courts have divided on the issue of whether affirmative defenses are subject to FIR-REA’s exhaustion requirement.
Compare RTC v. Midwest Federal Sav. Bank,
. Because we dispose of this matter on jurisdictional grounds, however, we do not express an opinion on the merits of any indemnification claim that might be brought by Scott.
