When the government sued them for allegedly engaging in Medicare and Medicaid fraud, the appellants asked their insurance companies to provide them with a defense. The insurers promptly and unequivocally disputed their obligation to do so. Still, they agreed to supply a defense, subject to a reservation of rights permitting them to challenge their duty to defend at a later stage and, if successful in that challenge, to recoup the costs they incurred in defending the appellants.
Consistent with their reservation of rights, the insurers eventually brought this lawsuit seeking two things: a declaratory judgment that they had no duty to provide the appellants with a defense under the terms of the applicable insurance policies, and reimbursement of the defense costs they had already expended. The district court ruled that the insurers had no duty to defend, and this court affirmed. Later, on remand, the district court awarded the insurers full reimbursement of their defense costs. Now on appeal once more, the appellants challenge the propriety of this latest ruling. The insurers cross-appeal, submitting that the district court erred in declining to add prejudgment interest to their awards. Finding none of the parties’ various challenges to the district court’s judgment persuasive, we affirm.
I
A
In approaching the case before us, a little background about its parent lawsuit helps. Following an audit of the billing practices of O’Hara Regional Center for Rehabilitation, a long-term care facility in Denver, federal and state officials came to the view that various individuals and entities associated with the Center had provided substandard care to Medicare and Medicaid patients, and had submitted false and fraudulent claims for the care they did provide. Eventually, the relevant governmental agencies brought suit. See United States of America, et al. v. Health Care Mgmt. Partners, Ltd., et al., No. 04-CV-2340-REB-BNB (D.Colo.2004). The defendants included Health Care Management Partners, Ltd.; ORCR, Inc.; Solomon Health Management, LLC; Hersch “Ari” Krausz; David Sebbag; and V. Robert Salazar (collectively, the O’Hara Defendants).
In short order, the O’Hara Defendants contacted their insurance carriers — Zurich, Valley Forge, and certain underwriters at Lloyd’s of London — demanding that the carriers provide them with a defense. Lloyd’s refused to defend the O’Hara Defendants, disclaiming coverage. Zurich and Valley Forge, too, took the position that their policies didn’t afford coverage but, even so, -they agreed to provide a defense. At the same time, Valley Forge and Zurich reserved the right to seek reimbursement for all expenses they incurred in defending the O’Hara Defendants, should a court later agree that their *1090 policies imposed on them no duty to defend.
To reserve its rights, Valley Forge sent the O’Hara Defendants a letter stating that, while it “does not believe that its defense obligations have been triggered, it has decided for now to provide a defense ... subject to a reservation of rights, [including] ... the right to seek a judicial determination of its coverage obligations in advance of the conclusion of the underlying matter, and to recover defense costs it has spent in the event it is determined that it had no defense obligation.” App. Vol. 11 at 2607-08. Zurich sent a similar letter, saying it “reserves its right to deny, reject, contest or disclaim any duty to defend [the O’Hara Defendants]”; “to withdraw from the defense of the ... [l]awsuit in the event it is determined there is no coverage; and to seek and obtain reimbursement of any damages and/or defense[] costs [it] paid.” App. Vol. 11 at 2579. The O’Hara Defendants accepted the defense the insurance companies supplied and apparently never objected to the reservation of rights letters they received. It also appears the O’Hara Defendants were generally aware of the expenses accrued in defending them because, for example, they received copies of their counsels’ litigation budgets.
B
That brings us to the case now before us. While the government’s lawsuit against the O’Hara Defendants carried on, Zurich, Valley Forge, and Lloyd’s filed complaints against the O’Hara Defendants, seeking declarations that they had no duty to defend the O’Hara Defendants against the government’s claims. Zurich and Valley Forge also sought reimbursement of the defense costs that by then they had already expended. The district court consolidated these various cases and, ultimately, issued a declaratory judgment holding that the government’s claims against the O’Hara Defendants were not covered by the relevant insurance policies, so there was no duty to defend (or indemnify). On appeal, this court affirmed the district court’s declaratory judgment and remanded the matter back to the district court to resolve what, if any, amounts Zurich and Valley Forge should recoup for the defense costs they had advanced.
See Zurich Am. Ins. Co. v. O’Hara Reg’l Ctr. for Rehab.,
After extensive summary judgment briefing on remand, the district court held Zurich and Valley Forge entitled to recoup all of the costs they had incurred on behalf of the O’Hara Defendants. The district court rejected, however, Zurich and Valley Forge’s claim that they were also entitled to prejudgment interest on those recovered sums. The O’Hara Defendants now appeal, asking us to hold that the district court erred in granting summary judgment to the insurance companies. For their part, Zurich and Valley Forge cross-appeal the district court’s denial of prejudgment interest. We first address the O’Hara Defendants’ appeal, before turning to Zurich and Valley Forge’s cross-appeal.
II
The O’Hara Defendants’ appeal proceeds in two essential movements. First, they say, an insurer cannot recoup the defense costs it expended under a reservation of rights letter unless a right of recoupment is also expressly mentioned in the parties’ underlying insurance policy. And, they say, the insurance policies they signed with Valley Forge and Zurich contain no language discussing the recoupment of defense costs in these circumstances. Accordingly, the O’Hara Defendants conclude, Zurich and Valley Forge may not, as a matter of law, recover the defense funds they spent — even though, as the district court and this *1091 court have already held, the insurance contracts never required them to provide a defense in the first place. Second, assuming the insurers are lawfully entitled to recoup something, the O’Hara Defendants argue that genuine issues of material fact still remain over the amount the insurers are owed, thus precluding the entry of summary judgment.
A
In the O’Hara Defendants’ view, Zurich and Valley Forge cannot recover the defense costs they expended for the simple reason that no provision in the parties’ insurance contracts contemplates that possibility. This result pertains, the O’Hara Defendants argue, even though the insurance companies did send “reservation of rights”' letters when they agreed to provide a defense — and even though the O’Hara Defendants do not dispute the clear import of those letters, apparently never objected to them at the time, and accepted the defense their insurers provided. This result pertains because, in the O’Hara Defendants’ view, “[ajllowing an insurer to recover defense costs expended under a reservation of rights, without a contractual basis in its insurance policy providing a right of recoupment, would be contrary to Colorado law and public policy.” Opening Br. 23. In support of their position, the O’Hara Defendants point us to
General Agents Insurance Co. of America, Inc. v. Midwest Sporting Goods Co.,
Zurich and Valley Forge respond that Colorado has taken a different tack than Illinois and the other jurisdictions cited by the O’Hara Defendants. To balance the interests of insureds and insurers, Zurich and Valley Forge say, Colorado law
requires
an insurer to pay defense costs, but at the same time provides the insurer with this assurance: if it pays defense costs pursuant to a reservation of rights letter, as Zurich and Valley Forge did here, the insurer may later seek and obtain recoupment of its defense costs if the facts at trial prove the claim against the insured wasn’t covered by the policy. Zurich and Valley Forge submit that this much can be discerned from a pair of Colorado Supreme Court decisions,
Hecla Mining Co. v. New Hampshire Insurance Co.,
From all this, it can be fairly gleaned that state courts are divided on how best to handle insurers’ recoupment claims. The O’Hara Defendants urge us to adopt their view, and that of the Illinois courts, as the sounder one. But this case comes to us through diversity jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. § 1332, and the parties agree Colorado’s substantive law controls its resolution. So the question we must answer isn’t what we think to be the better rule of law, but what Colorado law says on the subject. And on that score, Zurich and Valley Forge have the sounder view. Hecla and Cotter clearly indicate that the Colorado Supreme Court recognizes an insurer’s entitlement to reimbursement of defense costs in the event it is later determined the insurer did not have a duty to *1092 defend. And Hecla and Cotter both premise the insurer’s entitlement to reimbursement on its having reserved that right when it provided a defense to its insured, not on any reimbursement provision in the insurance contract itself.
In
Hecla,
the Colorado Supreme Court held as a matter of state law that, where the allegations in a complaint against an insured state a claim that “potentially or arguably [falls] within the policy coverage,” “the insurer
must
accept the defense of the claim.”
The O’Hara Defendants protest that
Hecla
spoke only of permitting an insurer to
seek
reimbursement based on a reservation of rights letter. This, they say, is different than recognizing an
entitlement
to reimbursement. And so, they argue, it remains an open question whether an insurer must also reserve the right of recoupment in its underlying insurance contract in order to recover its defense costs. But this strikes us as an unduly parsimonious reading of
Hecla.
The
Hecla
court expressly considered and contemplated a condition to reimbursement — a reservation of rights letter. The fact that it did not mention any other comparable condition— such as specific contractual language — cannot be so easily ignored. It’s the dog that didn’t bark.
Cf. Chisom v. Roemer,
More clues confirming the point appear in Hecla’s successor, Cotter. There, the Colorado Supreme Court explained that
[I]n Hecla ... [w]e attempted to balance the interest of both the insurers and insureds by ensuring that the broad rule basing the duty to defend on the complaint will not require insurers to pay defense costs if coverage ultimately does not exist under the policies.... [W]e ... attempted to create a remedy for insurers that provided defenses to insureds when coverage ultimately did not exist.
The O’Hara Defendants reply that
Hecla
and
Cotter's
discussions about the legal rights and remedies of insureds and insurers are, at best, no more than
dicta.
But even supposing that’s a fair characterization, our task in diversity cases is to predict how the state supreme court would rule.
See Vanover v. Cook,
Perhaps seeing the writing on the wall, the O’Hara Defendants reply that, at the very least, Hecla and Cotter require an insurer to wait until after the underlying ease against the insured is resolved before seeking a declaratory judgment that it owes no duty to defend and deserves reimbursement. And, they add, Zurich and Valley Forge failed to do this much; instead, the insurers sought a declaration that they had no duty to defend while the underlying Medicare-Medicaid fraud suit against the O’Hara Defendants was still pending. This failure to follow the procedure outlined in Hecla and Cotter, the O’Hara Defendants submit, bars Zurich and Valley Forge from recouping their defense costs.
Again, we cannot agree. Zurich and Valley Forge emphasize that the O’Hara Defendants didn’t raise this particular argument in the district court and ask us to disregard it on that basis. But whether the failure to present this argument earlier amounts to waiver or forfeiture, we need not decide. We also don’t have to decide the question, unbriefed by the parties but surely lurking behind the scenes, whether a state law rule purporting to prevent parties from seeking a declaratory judgment until a specified time could bind a federal district court and limit its congressionally-granted authority under the Declaratory Judgment Act.
See Farmers Alliance Mut. Ins. v. Jones,
Despite this clear rule, the O’Hara Defendants have not identified any prejudice they suffered from the alleged prematurity of Zurich’s and Valley Forge’s suits. Neither do the O’Hara Defendants dispute that the insurers’ declaratory judgment actions were “independent of and separable from” the government’s suit against them. Id. In this light, then, we can discern no possible error on the part of the district court in permitting the declaratory judgment actions to proceed before resolution of the underlying suit, and then awarding Zurich and Valley Forge reimbursement.
Finally, the parties expend considerable time and effort debating what doctrinal label best describes Colorado’s rule permitting insurers to recoup their costs when they reserved the right to do so by letter. Is the rule best viewed as an equitable one, based on the fact that allowing an insured to retain the benefits of an unbargained-for defense would constitute unjust enrichment, as some courts elsewhere have suggested?
See, e.g., Cincinnati Ins. Co. v. Grand Pointe, LLC,
B
Having decided this much, one question in the O’Hara Defendants’ appeal remains:
how much
can the insurers lawfully recoup under
Hecla
and
Cotter’s
rule? Put differently, are they entitled to recover
all of
the defense costs they actually expended? Or might the amount be limited in some way? The O’Hara Defendants argue that Zurich and Valley Forge should, at most, be permitted to recover “reasonably and necessarily incurred” defense costs, Response and Reply Br. 36-37, or perhaps only the “fair value” of the defense provided, App. Vol. 11 at 2650. Zurich and Valley Forge counter they are entitled to recoup everything they spent.
See generally Century Sur. Co. v. 350
W.A.,
LLC,
No. 05-1548,
While Hecla and Cotter do not appear to address this question, at least squarely, its answer makes no difference to the outcome of the case before us and so (once again) we need not and will not decide it. Even assuming (without deciding) that the O’Hara Defendants are entitled to contest the reasonableness, or the fair value, of the expenses incurred in their defense, this case comes to us on summary judgment and, reviewing the record de novo as we must, we discern no genuine dispute of fact suggesting that the fees the insurers actually incurred in this case shouldn’t be repaid.
The O’Hara Defendants seek to suggest otherwise by pointing to an affidavit submitted by their expert witness. Having considered that summary judgment affidavit de novo, however, we do not see how it raises any material dispute of fact. To be sure, a party can oppose summary judgment by submitting an affidavit that “set[s] out specific facts showing a genuine issue for trial.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e)(2). But the affidavit before us simply identifies various materials one might consider and questions one might ask when assessing the reasonableness of an attorney’s bills. So, for example, the affidavit notes that Zurich and Valley Forge separated the O’Hara Defendants into different groups and appointed different attorneys for each group; the affidavit then proceeds to state that discovery could reveal whether work was duplicated. But the affidavit does not opine that any work was actually and unreasonably duplicated, nor does it provide any fácts to support such a conclusion. Most tellingly, in the final paragraph of the affidavit, the O’Hara Defendants’ expert states that “the above described discovery must be undertaken before I will be able to ... prepare an expert report setting forth my opinion as to the overall reasonableness and necessity of the fees charged.” App. Vol. 11 at 2651 (emphasis added). 2
Perhaps recognizing this infirmity, the O’Hara Defendants submit that their expert’s affidavit, at the very least, complied with Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(f) and thus required the district court to defer decision on summary judgment to allow for the discovery the expert sought. Zurich and Valley Forge disagree; the affidavit, they argue, did not comply with the requirements of Rule 56(f).
*1096
We review a district court’s decision denying a Rule 56(f) discovery request for abuse of discretion.
Price ex rel. Price v. W. Res., Inc.,
In this circuit, a party seeking to defer a ruling on summary judgment under Rule 56(f) must provide an affidavit “explaining] why facts precluding summary judgment cannot be presented.”
Comm. for the First Amendment v. Campbell,
The affidavit before us falls short against this yardstick. The affidavit lists various additional materials and information the O’Hara Defendants seek. But the affidavit fails to identify what efforts the O’Hara Defendants had made already to obtain the information they sought, or why at least some of that information wasn’t already available to them. The affidavit, for example, requests additional time to study the “nature and length of the professional relationship” between the O’Hara Defendants and the attorneys who represented them. App. Vol. 11 at 2651. And the affidavit seeks the engagement letters between the O’Hara Defendants and their retained counsel. Yet the affidavit makes no attempt to explain why the O’Hara Defendants lack this evidence or how they’ve tried but so far failed to obtain it.
The affidavit doesn’t explain, for example, why the O’Hara Defendants were themselves unable to provide the expert with evidence about the nature and length of their relationship with their attorneys, or to supply copies of their engagement letters. Neither does it explain what, if anything, prevented the O’Hara Defendants from asking their defense attorneys, who owe them certain duties of communication and candor, to supply the information they sought. Though the O’Hara Defendants believe they could have unearthed persuasive evidence had the district court granted their Rule 56(f) request, we simply cannot say in these circumstances that it was an abuse of discretion for the court to deny their request.
See, e.g., Garcia v. U.S. Air Force,
III
Having resolved the O’Hara Defendants’ appeal, we still face Zurich and Valley Forge’s cross-appeal. There, the insurers contend the district court erred as a matter of law when it denied their request for prejudgment interest on the *1097 amounts it awarded in reimbursement. Zurich and Valley Forge submit that Section 5-12-102(1) of the Colorado Revised Statutes expressly authorizes prejudgment interest in these circumstances. That section provides, in relevant part, that “creditors shall receive [prejudgment] interest” at eight percent “[w]hen money ... has been wrongfully withheld.” C.R.S. § 5-12-102(1). Because the O’Hara Defendants had no right to the defense funds expended on their behalf, Zurich and Valley Forge argue, the defense costs they (the insurers) spent were effectively and “wrongfully withheld” from them since the time those costs were incurred.
In support of their argument, Zurich and Valley Forge emphasize that money can be “wrongfully withheld,” and so subject to prejudgment interest, even if the withholding party did nothing tortious or otherwise opprobrious in taking it. In this vein, the insurers point us to
Mesa Sand & Gravel Co. v. Landfill, Inc.,
where the Colorado Supreme Court directed that Section 5-12-102(1) should be given a “liberal construction,” and held that the phrase “wrongfully withheld” does not require proof of “tortious conduct” on the part of the withholding party.
We do not question that Zurich and Valley Forge’s view, that Section 5-12-102 applies equally in the circumstances now before us, is at least a plausible reading of the statute. But neither can we dispute that it lacks a meaningful rejoinder. The O’Hara Defendants point out that Zurich and Valley Forge have not cited us a single Colorado case that has awarded prejudgment interest to an insurer recovering defense costs. What’s more, awarding prejudgment interest in such cases might, at least arguably, conflict with the rationale underlying the Colorado Supreme Court’s
Hecla
and
Cotter
rule. Those cases, after all, impose on insurers a broad duty to defend in order to protect, even in questionable cases, an insured’s “legitimate expectation of a defense.”
Hecla,
It is notable, too, that
Rodgers,
on which Zurich and Valley Forge heavily rely, may be distinguishable from this case — or at least arguably so.
Rodgers
dealt with an employer’s payment of money to its employee pursuant to an administrative order that was later reversed, and the court’s award of prejudgment interest was premised on the fact that the employee “was
never entitled
to” that money.
In the absence of any Colorado authority applying Section 5-12-102(1) to an insurer’s recoupment claim, and in light of the parties’ plausible conflicting arguments about the statute’s applicability, we are unable to conclude that the insurers have met their burden of establishing that Colorado law requires an award of prejudgment interest in these circumstances. This isn’t to prejudge how the Colorado courts or legislature may decide the question. It is to say only that, in these murky circumstances, “we believe it proper to leave any further development of [state] law on this point to” state authorities. Russo v. Ballard Med. Prods., 550 F.3d 1004, 1023 (10th Cir.2008).
* * *
The judgment of the district court is Affirmed.
Notes
. The O'Hara Defendants ask us to certify to the Colorado Supreme Court the reimbursement question they raise in this appeal. Because, as we explain above,
Hecla
and
Cotter
provide clear guidance on this question, we deny that request.
See Pino v. United States,
. In their reply brief, the O'Hara Defendants argue for the first time that the declaration of Mr. Salazar, one of the individual defendants, creates a genuine issue of fact over the reasonableness of Zurich and Valley Forge's decision to engage three different law firms to represent the O’Hara Defendants. Reply Br. at 35. In that declaration, Mr. Salazar submits that he "believefs] ... a single lawyer could have represented all of the Defendants in the Underlying Action.” Vol. 12 at 2680. Even assuming this argument hasn’t been waived by its tardy appearance in these proceedings,
see Hill v. Kemp,
