OPINION
Union Security Life Insurance Company (“USLIC”) appeals a decision of the district court denying its motion to compel arbitration in its dispute with Jasviro Mun-di, the widow of Decedent Harnam S. Mundi. USLIC issued a life insurance policy to cover a loan taken out by Decedent. The life insurance policy did not contain an arbitration agreement; however, the loan agreement, to which USLIC was not a party, did contain an arbitration provision. The question, therefore, is whether USLIC may enforce the arbitration agreement, even though it is a nonsig-natory to the agreement. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 9 U.S.C. § 16, and we affirm the district court’s denial of USL-IC’s motion to compel arbitration.
I.
In May 2004, Decedent and Gurdip S. Gill obtained a home equity line of credit from Wells Fargo Bank, memorialized in a document called the EquityLine Agreement. Section 25 of the EquityLine Agreement required that “any dispute between me and the Bank, regardless of when it arises or arose, will be settled using the following procedures.” The arbitration provision provided as follows:
A dispute is any unresolved disagreement between the Bank and me that relates in any way to accounts, loans, services or agreements subject to this Arbitration provision. It includes any claims or controversy of any kind, which arise out of or are in any way related to these accounts, loans, services or agreements. It includes claims based on broken promises or contracts, tort (injury caused by negligent or intentional conduct), breach of fiduciary duty or other wrongful actions. It also includes statutory, common law and equitable claim [sic]. A dispute also includes any disagreement about the meaning of this Arbitration Section and whether a disagreement is a “dispute” subject to binding arbitration as provided for in this Arbitration Section. No dispute may be joined in an arbitration with a dispute of any other person or arbitrated on a class action basis. Furthermore, I agree that any arbitration I have with the Bank shall not be considered with any other arbitration and shall not be arbitrated on behalf of others without the consent of both me and the Bank.
*1044 In conjunction with the line of credit, Decedent purchased credit insurance in the amount of $50,000 to cover the amount of the loan. The charges for the insurance were added to the amount of the loan each month. Wells Fargo was the creditor beneficiary of the insurance — the insurance certificate provided that claim payments would be made to the creditor beneficiary “to pay off or reduce your debt.” The certificate contained two questions in a medical application section, and it stated that the life insurance would not be paid if death resulted from a pre-existing condition. The certificate further provided that the insurance would stop on the date the loan stopped, or on the date that the borrower was in default.
Following Decedent’s death, Mundi filed a claim with USLIC, asking the insurer to pay the $50,000 amount that was outstanding on the line of credit. USLIC denied the claim, stating that Decedent had answered “no” to the medical questions on the insurance application, even though he did have treatment for at least one of the pre-existing conditions listed on the application. USLIC explained that it would not have issued coverage if it had been aware of Decedent’s complete medical history and therefore denied coverage. Decedent’s death was not the result of any of these preexisting conditions.
Mundi filed a complaint in state court, alleging that she had been damaged by USLIC’s refusal to pay the $50,000 to Wells Fargo and that USLIC acted in bad faith by unreasonably denying the claim. She sought to recover the costs that she had incurred and sought punitive damages.
USLIC removed the action to federal court and filed a motion to compel arbitration. The district court reasoned that, even though the insurance was purchased in order to repay the loan, Mundi’s claims did not in any other way involve the terms of the EquityLine Agreement. The court further reasoned that the arbitration provision excluded the arbitration of claims of third parties and that USLIC was not an agent of Wells Fargo. The court accordingly denied the motion to compel arbitration. USLIC timely appealed.
II.
The question we must answer is whether USLIC, a nonsignatory to the arbitration agreement contained in the Eq-uityLine Agreement, can require Mundi to arbitrate her claims against USLIC. 1 There is no question that the insurance certificate did not contain an arbitration provision. USLIC argues, however, that Mundi’s claims are subject to the arbitration agreement because they arise from and relate to the EquityLine Agreement, and that equitable estoppel should be applied to compel arbitration.
In determining whether parties have agreed to arbitrate a dispute, we apply “general state-law principles of contract interpretation, while giving due regard to the federal policy in favor of arbitration by resolving ambiguities as to the scope of arbitration in favor of arbitration.”
Wagner v. Stratton Oakmont, Inc.,
The arbitration provision here defines a dispute as a disagreement between Wells Fargo and the borrower that “relates in any way to accounts, loans, services or agreements subject to this Arbitration provision.” Mundi’s dispute with USLIC is not a disagreement between Wells Fargo and Decedent. Although there may be an attenuated relation between the EquityLine Agreement and the dispute
between
USLIC and Mundi, given that the insurance was taken out by Mun-di’s husband to pay off amounts owed under the EquityLine Agreement in the event of his death, this relation is irrelevant. The arbitration agreement is premised on a disagreement between Wells Fargo and the borrower. In the absence of such a disagreement, the arbitration provision does not apply. Thus, any disagreement between the borrower and a third party, such as USLIC, is simply not within the scope of the arbitration agreement, even if it is related in some attenuated way to “accounts, loans, services or agreements” subject to the arbitration provision. Moreover, there is no indication in the arbitration provision that the parties intended to arbitrate or agreed to arbitrate a claim based on the insurance certificate. The face of the contract accordingly indicates that this dispute “is not within the scope of the arbitration provision.”
In re Tobacco Cases,
We turn therefore to USLIC’s argument that arbitration should be compelled on the basis of equitable estoppel. General contract and agency principles apply in determining the enforcement of an arbitration agreement by or against non-signatories.
Comer v. Micor, Inc.,
“Equitable estoppel ‘precludes a party from claiming the benefits of a contract while simultaneously attempting to avoid the burdens that contract imposes.’ ”
*1046
Id.
(quoting
Wash. Mut. Fin. Group, LLC v. Bailey,
Neither line of cases addresses the precise situation we face. Although DuPont addressed the issue of a nonsignatory seeking to enforce an arbitration agreement against a signatory, in that case, it was a nonsignatory who brought claims against the signatory, rather than the signatory bringing claims against a nonsigna-tory. Comer itself addressed whether a signatory to an arbitration agreement could enforce the agreement against a non-signatory. And, in light of the general principle that only those who have agreed to arbitrate are obliged to do so, we see no basis for extending the concept of equitable estoppel of third parties in an arbitration context beyond the very narrow con-fínes delineated in these two lines of cases.
The Second Circuit addressed a situation similar to ours in
Sokol Holdings, Inc. v. BMB Munai, Inc.,
The Fourth Circuit also has addressed the situation of a nonsignatory seeking to compel a signatory to arbitrate its claims against the nonsignatory. In
American Bankers Insurance Group, Inc. v. Long,
*1047
By contrast, in
Brantley v. Republic Mortgage Insurance Co.,
Mundi’s claim that USLIC breached the insurance policy is not “intertwined with the contract providing for arbitration”— the EquityLine Agreement. Sokol,
Notes
. The denial of a motion to compel arbitration is reviewed de novo.
Cox v. Ocean View Hotel Corp.,
. A nonsignatory also can seek to enforce an arbitration agreement as a third party beneficiary.
Comer,
. Because we affirm the district court’s denial of USLIC’s motion to compel arbitration, we need not address USLIC’s challenge to the district court’s finding that USLIC waived its right to seek arbitration.
