OPINION
Plaintiff-appellant Jerry Rice appeals the dismissal of his suit pursuant to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq., against defendant-appellee Jefferson Pilot Financial Insurance Company, NKA, Lincoln Financial Group (“Jefferson Pilot”). Rice brought a claim against Jefferson Pilot in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio challenging the denial of his application for long-term disability benefits. The district court granted Jefferson Pilot’s motion for judgment as a matter of law, finding that Rice’s complaint was barred by the applicable contractual limitations period. On appeal, Rice challenges the district court’s determination of the date on which his claim accrued.
For the following reasons, we employ a different analysis than the district court but ultimately affirm the dismissal of Rice’s ERISA claim.
I.
Rice was employed by Rite Rug Company (“Rite Rug”) in Columbus, Ohio as a floor covering installer from October of 1997 through May of 2002. According to Rice, he stopped working because he became disabled on May 22, 2002. He applied for disability benefits from the Social Security Administration (“SSA”), and the SSA determined that Rice was disabled. Jefferson Pilot’s records show that Rice stopped working on June 1, “due to fatigue, headaches, aches/pains and an inability to stay focused secondary to depression and chronic fatigue syndrome.”
Rite Rug established a long-term disability plan insured by Jefferson Pilot for its employees. An employee became eligi *453 ble under the plan for long-term disability benefits if he had been disabled for 180 days. The plan also gave Jefferson Pilot the “sole authority to administer claims, to interpret [plan] provisions, and to resolve questions arising under this [plan] ... includ[ing] ... determining] Employees’ eligibility for insurance and entitlement to benefits.” Significantly for this case, the plan included a limitations period: “No legal action may be brought more than three years after written proof of claim is required to be given.”
After he ceased working, Rice applied for long-term disability benefits under the plan in October of 2002. Jefferson Pilot denied Rice’s claim on December 23, 2002, finding that his medical records did not support a finding that he was “disabled” for purposes of disability benefits under the plan. Rice appealed this decision, and Jefferson Pilot denied his appeal on February 3, 2003. Rice then filed a second appeal, but he declined to submit any additional information to support his application. Jefferson Pilot obtained an opinion from an outside physician, who determined, based on the record, that Rice, was not disabled. Based on this physician’s opinion, Jefferson Pilot denied Rice’s second appeal on September 24, 2003..
Rice filed suit against Jefferson Pilot pursuant to ERISA in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio in November of 2003. While the litigation was pending, the parties filed a joint motion to stay in order that Rice’s claim could be remanded to the claims administrator for re-adjudication. The district court granted the motion. The district court further ruled that if the dispute had not been settled by April 22, 2005, either party could file a notice reopening the case before April 30, 2005. Jefferson Pilot conducted surveillance of Rice and submitted the surveillance report, which noted that “[d]uring the time of our surveillance we did not observe Mr. Rice engaged in any physical activity.” However, Jefferson Pilot received anonymous telephone calls and affidavits from Rice’s brother-in-law and cousin supporting a finding that Rice was not disabled and including statements that Rice had engaged in such physical activities as scuba diving and water skiing. Rice declined to submit .any additional information, and Jefferson Pilot once again denied Rice’s claim on April 20, 2005. Neither party filed a notice to re-open the federal lawsuit.
On June 8, 2007, Rice filed a second complaint in the district court against Jefferson Pilot. Jefferson Pilot filed a motion for judgment as a matter of law, and Rice filed a motion for judgment as a matter of law on the administrative record. Applying the clear repudiation rule, the district court granted Jefferson Pilot’s motion, finding that Rice’s complaint was barred by the applicable limitations period.
Rice v. Jefferson Pilot Fin. Ins. Co.,
No. 2:07-CV-0547,
II.
We review a district court’s determination of a motion for judgment as a matter of law
de novo. See Parker v. Gen. Extrusions, Inc.,
*454 A.
Because ERISA does not contain a statute of limitations for claims seeking benefits, courts normally borrow the most analogous state statute of limitations to apply to ERISA claims.
See Redmon v. Sud-Chemie Inc. Ret. Plan for Union Employees,
The dispute arises over the date on which the three-year limitations period began to run. Rice initially argued before the district court that his claim accrued on September 24, 2003, the date of Jefferson Pilot’s third denial of his application for benefits. The district court viewed the facts in the light most favorable to Rice and agreed that the accrual date was September 24, 2003.
Rice,
In determining whether an argument is waived, the “general rule [is] that an issue not raised before the district court is not properly before us.”
Foster v. Barilow,
In this ease, Rice not only failed to argue that the accrual date was April 20, 2005, before the district court, but he vehemently argued that his claim accrued on a different date — September 24, 2003. Furthermore, the district court, “errfing] on the side of caution,”
agreed
to accept Rice’s proposed date of accrual.
Rice,
*455
Even if the argument were not waived, we find that the limitations period expired before Rice filed the instant case. The contractual language binds the parties further than the three-year limitations period; the policy specifically states that “[n]o legal action may be brought more than three years after
proof of claim is required to be given.”
(emphasis added.) The district court and the parties, however, looked outside of the contract and to the Eighth Circuit for guidance. In
Wilkins v. Hartford Life & Accident Insurance Co.,
Wilkins,
however, does not apply to this case for two reasons. First, it is not binding on our court.
See DaimlerChrysler Corp. Healthcare Benefits Plan v. Durden,
While it is well-established that parties may contract for the length of the limitations period,
see id.,
the narrow question we must address is whether parties can also contract for the date on which an ERISA claim accrues. We have specifically emphasized the freedom of parties to contract for the details of ERISA claims: “[T]he plain language of an ERISA plan should be given its literal and natural meaning.... [FJederal courts may not apply common law theories to alter the express terms of written benefits plans.”
Health Cost Controls v. Isbell,
This result is in accord with several other circuits, which have upheld contractual accrual dates almost identical to the one in the contract before us.
See, e.g., Doe v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield United of Wis.,
Indeed, in an unpublished disposition, we upheld contractual language similar to that at issue here.
Clark,
Similarly, in this case, Rite Rug’s plan authorized suit within three years of the time written proof of claim was required to be given. Rice alleges that he became disabled on May 22, 2002. He submitted written proof of claim in October of 2002; Jefferson Pilot thus argued before the district court that Rice had until October of 2005 to file suit, i.e., three years after he actually gave proof of claim. The contract, however, prohibits “legal action brought more than three years after written proof is required to be given.” (emphasis added.) The limitations period began to run not when Rice submitted written proof, but on the last day written proof was allowed to be submitted. See Clark, 3 Fed-Appx. at 503.
Proof of claim, as defined in the contract, must be given within 90 days after the end of the Elimination Period, which is defined as 180 days of disability. In other words, Rice’s claim accrued 270 days from the alleged onset of his disability. Rice claims that he became disabled on May 22, 2002, so his claim accrued on February 16, 2003. He then had three years from the date his claim accrued to bring legal action against Jefferson Pilot. This three-year period expired on February 16, 2006. 1 Rice filed the current ERISA claim in federal court on June 8, 2007, more than *457 one year after the limitations period expired. 2
B.
Rice argues that the limitations period was tolled while his first case was pending in the district court, from November 26, 2003, through December 4, 2005, rendering his 2007 filing timely. Rice claims that because his first complaint was timely filed and the district court had subject matter jurisdiction over the claim, the first case tolled the statutory filing period. We have consistently held, however, that a dismissal of a suit without prejudice usually does not toll the statute of limitations:
It is generally accepted that a dismissal without prejudice leaves the situation the same as if the suit had never been brought, and that in the absence of a statute to the contrary a party cannot deduct from the period of the statute of limitations the time during which the action so dismissed was pending.
Wilson v. Grumman Ohio Corp.,
Alternatively, Rice claims that the interests of justice require tolling his claim. The Supreme Court has held that to prevail on an equitable tolling claim, a plaintiff must show “(1) that he has been pursuing his rights diligently, and (2) that some extraordinary circumstance stood in his way.”
Pace v. DiGuglielmo,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. Jefferson Pilot’s records indicate that Rice’s Elimination Period began on June 1, 2002, *457 the day on which he stopped working. Even with the benefit of Jefferson Pilot’s later date, Rice’s claim accrued on February 26, 2003, and the limitations period expired on February 26, 2006.
. The contract authorizes that if it was not reasonably possible to submit written proof of claim during the required period, employees may file proof up to one year from the end of the Elimination Period. Even under this extended time period, the limitations period began on November 18, 2003 — and ended on November 18, 2006, almost six months before Rice filed this action.
