OPINION
Defendant-Appellant, Ralph Isbell, appeals the grant of summary judgment for Plaintiff Health Cost Controls (“HCC”), the legal agent of an ERISA plan (the “Plan”) administrator. HCC sued Isbell for reimbursement of medical benefits the Plan provided for Isbell’s dependent daughter, a Plan beneficiary, after she recovered from a third party tortfeasor for her injuries. Isbell asserted an offset to the reimbursement for his legal costs attributable to recovery of the medical benefits. The district court found for HCC, holding that the terms of the Plan required full reimbursement and did not otherwise apportion attorney’s fees. The district court also reasoned that state common law and general principles of equity should not undermine the express language of an ERISA plan. We AFFIRM.
I. BACKGROUND
Isbell is a member of a self-funded employee group medical plan administered by Continental Assurance Company (“CNA”). Is-bell’s daughter, a dependent beneficiary of the Plan, was injured in an accident and received $145,000 of medical benefits from the Plan. Defendant then sued the third-party tortfeasor and settled for $1,000,000. CNA knew of the suit but did not intervene.
After Isbell settled, he did not voluntarily reimburse the Plan. Rather, HCC, representing CNA, sued Isbell for reimbursement of the medical benefits. HCC relied on the Plan’s reimbursement provision, which required a beneficiary to agree to reimburse the Plan for benefits for which a third-party may be liable. The Plan specified:
[I]n no event will the amount of reimbursement to the Insurance Company exceed the lesser of:
1. The amount actually paid under the Plan, or
2. The amount actually recovered from that part of the judgment or settlement in excess of the amount necessary to fully reimburse the Employee or dependent for out-of pocket expenses incurred, including attorney fees.
Initially, the district court reduced HCC’s reimbursement claim from $145,000 to about $86,500, holding that the Plan must bear a proportional share of the legal expenses that Isbell incurred. The district court reasoned that without Isbell’s legal expenses the Plan would not have been reimbursed at all and that it was only fair that the Plan share in the costs. On rehearing, however, the district court reversed itself and did not apportion the attorney’s fees because the Plan did not specifically provide for it. The district court relied upon
Ryan by Capria-Ryan v. Federal Express Corp.,
II. DISCUSSION
This Court must decide whether HCC’s right to reimbursement should be equitably reduced by a proportional share of Isbell’s legal costs in obtaining the recovery from which Isbell will reimburse HCC. Unlike state courts, federal courts are “not general common-law courts and do not possess a general power to develop and apply their own rules of decision.”
Tassinare v. American Nat’l Ins. Co.,
Here, the Plan expressly requires Ml reimbursement of the Plan for medical benefits when a beneficiary recovers sufficient damages from a third party tortfeasor. Further, the Plan does not offset the reimbursement by the beneficiary’s legal costs attributable to recovery of the medical benefits. Thus, Is-bell does not have an affirmative contractual right under the Plan to a set-off for legal costs attributable to recovering the amount of the medical benefits. Moreover, Isbell has not identified to this Court that application of a set-off under a equitable common fund doctrine would advance any explicit statutory purpose of ERISA. Rather, we find that it would undermine the express terms of the Plan that require full reimbursement for medical benefits.
Accordingly, we AFFIRM the district court.
