Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, Inc. (“HPHC”), an ERISA plan administrator, appeals from a district court judgment directing it to defray its pro rata share of the legal fees expended by plan members Michael and Wendy Harris (“the Harris-es”) in obtaining an earlier tort action settlement, part of which settlement the Har-rises were contractually obligated to remit to the plan. For their part, the Harrises cross-appeal from district court orders (i) directing them to reimburse the plan for medical benefits previously received, and (ii) dismissing their state-law action for unfair or deceptive trade practices.
I
BACKGROUND
After Michael Harris sustained personal injuries in a 1991 motorcycle accident, HPHC remitted $102,874.29 toward his medical costs pursuant to the ERISA plan. Thereafter, the Harrises sued' the party allegedly responsible for the accident. HPHC in turn filed a $102,874.29 1 state-law lien against any award the Harrises might obtain in their legal action. The HPHC lien was predicated principally on the subrogation provision in the ERISA plan:
H.4. SUBROGATION. If another person or entity is, or may be, responsible to pay for expenses or services related to the Member’s illness and/or injury which [HPHC] paid or provided, then [HPHC] is entitled to subrogation rights against such person or entity. [HPHC] shall have the right to proceed in the name of the Member, with or without his or her consent, to secure right of recovery of its cost, expenses, or the value of services rendered under this Agreement. [HPHC] is also entitled to recover from a Member the value of services provided, arranged, or paid for, when the Member was reimbursed for the cost of care by another party.
H.5. MEMBER COOPERATION. The Member agrees to cooperate with [HPHC], and to provide all requested information, and to assign to [HPHC] any monies received for services provided or arranged by [HPHC]. The Member will do nothing to prejudice or interfere with the rights of [HPHC].
(Emphasis added.); see also Mass. Gen. Laws Ann. ch. Ill, § 70A. 2
The Harrises eventually settled their lawsuit for $737,500, $264,727.31 of which was for their attorney fees and costs. Their attorney purportedly settled the suit at two-thirds its estimated value after assessing the risks of litigation, particularly allegations that Harris had been intoxicated and exceeding the speed limit at the *277 time of the accident. HPHC took no part in the settlement.
In their 1997 lawsuit, the Harrises alleged that the HPHC lien was excessive because the reimbursement requirement in the ERISA plan ought not take effect unless and until the Harrises were made whole by the settlement, whereas they had received only two-thirds of their estimated damages from the settlement. Second, the Harrises claimed, under the equitable common-fund doctrine HPHC should bear its proportionate share of the $264,726 attorney fee incurred by the Harrises in generating the settlement fund from which HPHC demanded reimbursement. Finally, the Harrises argued that the excessive lien claim asserted by HPHC constituted a breach of contract and violated the Massachusetts unfair or deceptive trade practices act. See Mass. Gen. Laws Ann. ch. 93A. HPHC thereafter counterclaimed for lien enforcement and the parties submitted cross-motions for summary judgment.
The district court ruled that: (1) the breach of contract and chapter 93A claims brought by the Harrises were preempted,
see Harris v. Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, Inc.,
HPHC appeals the second and fourth rulings; the Harrises cross-appeal the first and third rulings.
II
DISCUSSION
A. The HPHC Appeal
HPHC claims that the district court erred in adopting, as federal common law, the rule that an ERISA-plan subrogee is liable for its proportionate share of the attorney fees expended by a plan member in generating the settlement fund. It argues that ERISA requires deference to the plain language of the subrogation clause contained in the ERISA plan, which in this instance neither mentions attorney fees specifically, nor qualifies its general language that HPHC is entitled to recover “the value of services provided, arranged, or paid for.” 3
The issue thus presented is one of first impression in this circuit. Among the courts of appeals which have considered it, the majority view is that an ERISA plan need not contribute to attorney fees where its plain language gives it an unqualified right to reimbursement.
See, e.g., Walker v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
The majority of courts construing state laws which regulate non-ERISA insurance contracts have read the common-fund doctrine into contractual clauses giving insurers an unqualified right to reimbursement from their insureds.
See, e.g., York Ins. Group of Maine v. Van Hall,
By contrast, however, ERISA creates precisely the opposite presumption: unqualified plan provisions need not explicitly rule out every possible contingency in order to be deemed unambiguous. ERISA merely requires that covered plans be “ ‘sufficiently accurate and comprehensive to reasonably apprise such [“average plan”] participants and beneficiaries of their rights and obligations under the plan.’ ”
Walker,
Notwithstanding the great weight of contrary authority, the district court was persuaded — mistakenly in our view — by the decision in
Waller v. Hormel Foods Corp.,
Furthermore, reimbursement and subrogation are distinct remedies. Subrogation empowers the plan to stand in the shoes of its member, and thus to enforce the plan
member’s
rights and remedies against third parties through litigation. By contrast, reimbursement affords the plan a direct right of recovery against the plan member.
See Provident Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Williams,
The Harrises rely as well on several district court decisions which have held that the common-fund, fee-sharing doctrine may be read into otherwise unqualified ERISA subrogation provisions.
See, e.g., Hartenbower v. Electrical Specialties Co. Health Benefit Plan,
“A
primary
purpose of ERISA is to ensure the integrity and primacy of the written plans ... [so that] the plain language of an ERISA plan should be given its literal and natural meaning.”
Health Cost Controls,
Nor does the rule we adopt today threaten to undermine any other ERISA goal. At least in cases like the present, where the settlement amount exceeds the sum total of the attorney fees incurred by the plan member
and
the plan’s reimbursement claim, the member will have a continuing incentive to pursue settlements to his own net financial benefit, even assuming the plan will not be contributing to the attorney fees.
See Bollman,
For the foregoing reasons, the district court order directing HPHC to defray a pro rata share of the Harrises’ attorney fees must be vacated. 5
*280 B. The Harrises’Cross-Appeal
1. The “Make Whole” Doctrine
The Harrises further contend that the district court erred in declining to adopt the so-called “make whole” doctrine as federal common law under ERISA. Under the “make whole” doctrine, an insurer-subrogee may receive reimbursement for benefits previously paid to the insured only if the insured has obtained a settlement or judgment that
fully
compensates for the total losses sustained by the insured; otherwise, the insured would not owe the insurer any reimbursement, or at most would owe a
pro rata
share of its partial tort recovery.
See Cagle v. Bruner,
Their contention presents yet another issue of first impression in this circuit. Some courts of appeals have held that an ERISA plan, which affords the plan administrator an unqualified right to reimbursement for all ERISA benefits paid to a plan participant, unambiguously precludes importation of the common-law “make whole” doctrine.
See Waller,
Although the “make whole” doctrine could be imported as federal common law under ERISA,
see Pilot Life,
First, as with the attorney-fee question,
see supra
Section II.A, generally speaking ERISA does not superimpose substantive provisions on covered plans. Where an ERISA plan
requires
— without
qualification
— that plan participants reimburse the plan for benefits paid, the plan should not be construed to depend upon an implied contingency such as the “make whole” doctrine, particularly since ERISA specifically envisions that covered plans be written in straightforward language comprehensible by the average plan participant.
See Sunbeam-Oster,
Moreover, there are cogent arguments for the view that ERISA objectives could be disserved if the “make whole” doctrine were to be adopted as the ERISA default rule. Although plan members like the Harrises would benefit financially, ultimately the costs would be borne by all other plan members in the form of higher *281 premiums for coverage. See id. at 1376 n. 23.
The “make whole” doctrine entails other undue burdens as well. For example, though the Harrises settled their tort claims in order to eliminate the risks and burdens of litigation, the “make whole” doctrine would necessitate that their claims nonetheless be litigated in the district court—including the contentious contributory negligence claim—in order to determine whether the Harrises were fully or only partially compensated by the $737,-500 tort settlement.
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that where the terms of an ERISA plan confer upon it an unqualified entitlement to reimbursement for the value of the services provided to a member, the ERISA plan administrator need not demonstrate that the settlement fund, from which reimbursement is sought, fully compensated the plan member.
2. Preemption of State-Law Claim
Finally, the Harrises contend that the district court incorrectly ruled that ERISA preempts their state-law claims, particularly their claim that HPHC’s lien recovery policies and procedures constitute unfair or deceptive trade practices. See Mass. Gen. Laws Ann. ch. 93A. Specifically, the Harrises argue that HPHC unfairly files reimbursement liens for “any medical charge that could be caused by the accident,” without consulting medical authorities to ensure that the charges were in fact attributable to the accident at issue. Thus, HPHC originally attempted to assert a lien for $136,384.80, rather than $102,874.29. See supra note 1. The Har-rises further allege that HPHC knowingly refrains from disclosing to plan members that it will pursue full reimbursement for all charges under the plan’s subrogation/reimbursement clause, without any reduction to reflect (i) that the plan participant has not been made whole by the settlement, or (ii) the pro rata share of the attorney fees expended by HPHC in achieving the settlement.
The district court ruling that ERISA preempts state-law causes of action is reviewed
de novo. See Demars v. CIGNA Corp.,
The Harrises nonetheless insist that since the ERISA plan is silent as to HPHC’s lien policies, the terms of the ERISA plan are immaterial to their Chapter 93A claim. As previously noted, however, supra Sections II.A & II.B.l, the HPHC plan is not silent on these matters. Rather, its subrogation provision places the average plan participant on plain notice that HPHC will seek full reimbursement, ie., without any offset either for attorney fees or for the “make whole” doctrine.
Accordingly, the state-law claims for unfair and deceptive trade practices are preempted by ERISA. 6
Ill
CONCLUSION
As the subrogation clause in the ERISA plan did not require that HPHC defray *282 any attorney fees incurred by the Harris-es, the portion of the district court order which directs otherwise is vacated. 7 In all other respects, the district court judgment is affirmed. The parties shall bear their own costs.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. HPHC initially filed its lien for $136,384.80, but later revised the amount upon notification that $102,874.29 was the entire amount attributable to injuries sustained in the motorcycle accident.
. Section 70A provides, in pertinent part:
[A]ny health maintenance organization which has furnished health services ... to a person injured in ... an accident shall, subject to the provisions of [§ 70B], have a lien for such benefits, upon the net amount payable to such injured person, his heirs or legal representative out of the total amount of any recovery or sum had or collected or to be collected, whether by judgment or by settlement or compromise, from another person as damages on account of such injuries.
. As the HPHC plan does not vest the administrator with discretion to interpret its terms, the district court interpretation was plenary,
see Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bruch,
. The Harrises argue that the plan language involved in some of these cases was more prohibitive than Section H.4 of the HPHC plan in this case.
See, e.g., Ryan,
. Since we affirm the district court ruling that the plan entitled HPHC to full reimburse *280 ment, we need not reach the "alternative'' argument raised by HPHC: that ERISA does not preempt the Massachusetts lien statute. See supra note 2.
. To the extent the Harrises rely on the fact that HPHC originally valued its lien at $136,-
384.80—i.e.,
$33,510.51 more than its revised lien of $102,874.29—they assert no cognizable claim for damages under Chapter 93A, since they do not contend that the revised lien included any amounts not attributable to medical services received by Michael Harris on account of the motorcycle accident.
See Warner-Lambert Co.
v.
Execuquest Corp.,
. Prior to oral argument, HPHC assertedly submitted a motion to strike the Harrises’ addendum summarizing the holdings in several ERISA decisions, as an attempt to circumvent the limitations in Fed. R.App. P. 32(a)(7)(B)(i) (setting 14,000-word limit on party's "principal brief”). The Clerk’s office has no record of such a filing, however. Moreover, the Harrises claim they never received notice of the filing. Although we grant HPHC’s motion on its merits, we emphasize that counsel are to take reasonable steps to verify that pertinent motions are docketed and served on opposing counsel before oral argument. We note, however, that our decision would have been no different had the materials in the Harrises’ addendum been entitled to consideration.
