Accord & Satisfaction Is an Affirmative Defense, Not a Stand-Alone Claim:
Commentary on Wood v. North Mississippi Health Services,
No. 24-60546 (5th Cir. Aug. 8, 2025)
1. Introduction
In Wood v. North Mississippi Health Services, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit tackled a familiar but increasingly contentious subject: “surprise” balance billing for out-of-network medical care. Although the case began as a sweeping putative class action asserting federal and state claims, the appeal narrowed to three Mississippi tort and contract theories— breach of contract, fraud/misrepresentation, and civil conspiracy— arising from nearly $50,000 in medical bills that plaintiffs Stanley and Chastity Wood believed were illegally collectible.
The Court’s unanimous, unpublished opinion ultimately affirmed summary judgment for the healthcare providers and their related collection entities (collectively, “Health Providers”). Along the way, however, the panel clarified an important point of Mississippi law with broader ramifications: “Accord and satisfaction” is only an affirmative defense and cannot be pleaded as an independent cause of action. The decision also tightens pleading expectations under Rule 8 when a plaintiff alters theories mid-litigation, underscores the requirement that balance-billing prohibitions must derive from either contract or statute, and reiterates that civil conspiracy claims fail absent an underlying tort.
2. Summary of the Judgment
- Breach of Contract – Affirmed. Plaintiffs recast their theory late in the litigation, invoking an alleged “accord and satisfaction” between the providers and the health plan, but the Court held that Mississippi treats accord and satisfaction solely as an affirmative defense. Because no valid cause of action existed, summary judgment stood.
- Fraud & Misrepresentation – Affirmed. Plaintiffs could not marshal clear and convincing evidence that the Health Providers made knowingly false statements or concealed material facts; the erroneous “Tax-Time Deal” was characterized as a clerical mistake, not deception.
- Civil Conspiracy – Affirmed. With the underlying tort theories dismissed, no independent wrongful act remained to support conspiracy.
- Catch-All Challenges – Because the above claims failed, ancillary arguments attacking contract clauses and the providers’ reliance on accord and satisfaction were moot.
3. Analysis
3.1 Precedents Cited & Their Influence
The opinion canvasses both Supreme Court and Fifth Circuit doctrine on pleadings and summary judgment, while also anchoring its reasoning in Mississippi substantive law:
- Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544 (2007) – reiterated the Rule 8 “fair notice” standard; used to decide whether the Woods’ evolving breach theory remained within the pleadings.
- Cutrera v. Bd. of Supervisors of LSU, 429 F.3d 108 (5th Cir. 2005) – stands for the proposition that new claims may not be raised for the first time at summary judgment; distinguished because the Woods’ new theory still involved the same claim and parties.
- Hutzel v. City of Jackson, 33 So. 3d 1116 (Miss. 2010); Triangle Construction Co. v. Fouche & Assocs., 218 So. 3d 1180 (Miss. Ct. App. 2017); and Sherwin-Williams Co. v. Sarrett, 419 So. 2d 1332 (Miss. 1982) – collectively confirm that accord and satisfaction is an affirmative defense.
- House v. Holloway, 258 So. 2d 251 (Miss. 1972) – cited for the rule that threats of future legal action do not constitute actionable fraud.
- Goswami v. American Collections Enterprises, Inc., 377 F.3d 488 (5th Cir. 2004) – plaintiffs’ principal authority; distinguished because it turned on FDCPA misrepresentations, not common-law fraud.
- Aiken v. Rimkus Consulting Group, Inc., 333 F. App’x 806 (5th Cir. 2009) – confirmed Mississippi’s requirement that conspiracy claims depend on an underlying tort.
3.2 Court’s Legal Reasoning
(a) Breach of Contract & Accord/Satisfaction
The Woods originally alleged that the Health Providers breached a contract by balance billing contrary to an “assignment of benefits” clause. At summary judgment, they pivoted: when the providers deposited the Plan’s conditional payments they allegedly formed an accord and satisfaction, making the Woods third-party beneficiaries to the new agreement.
The panel held that, under Mississippi law, accord and satisfaction can only defend against collection of the original debt; it is not a sword for affirmative relief. Because no Mississippi authority creates a free-standing claim for breach of an accord and satisfaction, the theory failed as a matter of law.
(b) Fraud / Misrepresentation
Applying Hobbs Auto. v. Dorsey’s nine-factor test and the clear-and-convincing standard, the Court found:
- No false statement about legality of balance bills – plaintiffs cited no statute or contract term actually prohibiting balance billing.
- The Tax-Time Deal error was clerical – absent knowledge of falsity and intent to deceive, fraud could not be inferred.
- No injury – plaintiffs never paid the inadvertently omitted $8,936.05; injury is an indispensable element under Koury v. Ready, 911 So. 2d 441 (Miss. 2005).
(c) Civil Conspiracy
Because both the breach and fraud counts failed, no independent tort supported the conspiracy theory. Mississippi’s “piggy-back” rule therefore compelled dismissal.
3.3 Potential Impact of the Decision
- Pleading strategy: Plaintiffs must plead traditional contract elements; “creative” affirmative-defense inversions (such as suing on accord & satisfaction) are unlikely to survive a motion to dismiss or summary judgment.
- Balance-billing litigation: Absent a statutory bar (e.g., federal No Surprises Act for certain emergencies) or explicit contractual prohibition, providers in Mississippi may continue out-of-network balance billing. Plaintiffs bear the burden of pointing to an actual legal restriction.
- Healthcare-collection practices: Clerical mistakes in discount letters are not automatically fraudulent. Debtors must show intent and injury to prevail.
- Conspiracy jurisprudence: Reaffirms that Mississippi courts will disallow civil conspiracy claims standing alone; litigants must anchor them to a viable tort.
4. Complex Concepts Simplified
- Accord and Satisfaction – A negotiated agreement to settle a disputed debt. The creditor’s acceptance of consideration (often a check marked “paid in full”) discharges the original obligation. It is a defensive tool; one cannot sue someone for having created an accord.
- Balance Billing – Charging a patient the difference between the provider’s billed amount and what the insurance plan paid. Unless restricted by contract (in-network agreements) or statute, it is generally lawful.
- Third-Party Beneficiary – A non-signatory who may enforce a contract if the contracting parties clearly intended to benefit that person.
- Summary Judgment (Rule 56) – Judgment entered by a court for one party without a full trial when no genuine disputes of material fact exist and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
- Civil Conspiracy – A joint agreement to commit a wrongful act. Liability depends on proof of the underlying wrong.
5. Conclusion
Wood v. North Mississippi Health Services may look narrow on its facts, but its doctrinal contribution is significant. The Fifth Circuit has now squarely stated—albeit in an unpublished opinion—that accord and satisfaction cannot be weaponized as an independent cause of action under Mississippi law. The ruling also underscores that balance-billing disputes must hinge on express contractual terms or statutory prohibitions, and that plaintiffs rely on robust, clear-and-convincing evidence to survive fraud scrutiny. Finally, the decision exemplifies how federal courts policing diversity actions will apply state substantive law while remaining disciplined about federal procedural standards, particularly those governing pleadings and summary judgment.
Going forward, litigants challenging medical debts in Mississippi—and the attorneys advising them—must calibrate their strategies accordingly: focus on demonstrable contract language, statutory rights, and tangible injury; avoid repackaging defenses as claims; and remember that without a viable underlying tort, civil conspiracy claims collapse.
© 2025. Prepared for educational purposes only. Not legal advice.
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