*1 Before F LAUM , Chief Judge , and C OFFEY and E VANS , Circuit Judges .
F LAUM , Chief Judge . This appeal presents the question whether an underinsured motorist (“UIM”) reducing clause contained in the insurance policies held by the defendants is enforceable under Wisconsin law, and if so, how the clause applies. A severe automobile collision involving an underinsured motorist and Donna E. Keca (“Keca”), Trisha Bontempo (“Bontempo”) and Miranda Bontempo, a minor, led to this action. In dispute is the amount of UIM benefits *2 Keca and Bontempo (collectively “defendants”) are owed by their insurer, Allstate Insurance Company (“Allstate”). Before the district court, Allstate sought a declaratory judgment that it owes no more than the $250,000 in UIM benefits that it has already tendered to Keca and Bontempo under the policies issued to them. The defendants appeal the district court’s ruling allowing an offset from Allstate’s coverage for the payment received by the defendants from the tortfeasor’s insurance company. Allstate cross-appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the defendants on the basis that the benefits Allstate paid to Bontempo may not be offset from other coverage owed to Keca by Allstate. For the reasons stated in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I. Background
On November 21, 2001, Trisha Bontempo was driving her car in which her mother, Donna Keca, and four-year-old daughter, Miranda Bontempo, were passengers. The Bontempo vehicle was struck by a car driven by an intoxi- cated and underinsured motorist, Tina Cogley. The Bontempos and Keca sustained serious injuries as a result of the collision. It is undisputed that collectively their medical bills are in excess of $449,000. As too often is the case with reckless drivers, Cogley did not carry enough insurance to cover the defendants’ injuries. The defendants received only $50,000 under Cogley’s bodily injury liability.
At the time of the accident, both Keca and Bontempo were holders of Allstate automobile insurance policies (the “Keca policy” and the “Bontempo policy” or generally the “Allstate policy”) which included UIM coverage. The Keca policy has applicable UIM limits of $300,000 for each accident and the Bontempo policy has applicable UIM limits of $100,000 for each accident. Keca resides at the same address as the Bontempos, making them “resident relatives” covered under *3 each other’s insurance policies. It is undisputed that for the accident at issue the Bontempo UIM coverage was primary and the Keca UIM coverage was excess. Allstate has tendered to the defendants $50,000 in UIM benefits under the Bontempo policy and $200,000 in UIM benefits under the Keca policy.
Except as to coverage amounts, the Keca and Bontempo policies are virtually identical. The policies are forty-seven pages in length, including the main policy jacket and the added endorsements. The “Auto Policy Declarations” (“declarations”) page, containing a chart that reflects the amounts of coverage, types of coverage, premiums, and deductibles, appears at the beginning of each policy. The declarations page sets forth the amount of UIM limits and lists the documents that comprise the policy, including Amendatory Endorsement form AU 1440-3 (“AU 1440-3”). AU 1440-3 is a standalone document located at the end of each policy that contains changes, amendments, and additions to the provisions contained within the main policy jacket. The heading at the top of page 1 of AU 1440-3 states, “This Endorsement Changes Your Policy—Keep It With Your Policy”. AU 1440-3 contains—within five pages—all the UIM-related provisions. The following basic UIM coverage provisions are set forth on page 12 of AU 1440-3:
Part VII
Underinsured Motorists Coverage Coverage SU
If your policy declarations indicates that you have this coverage, we will pay those damages that an insured person is legally entitled to recover from the owner or operator of an underinsured auto because of bodily injury sustained by an insured person.
The UIM “Limits of Liability” provision, set forth three pages later, states that the coverage limit shown on the policy declarations for “ ‘each accident’ is the maximum we will pay for damages arising out of bodily injury to two or more persons in any one motor vehicle accident.” The UIM reducing clause, which appears immediately below the Limits of Liability provision, states in part as follows:
The limit of Underinsured Motorists Coverage shall be reduced by:
1. all amounts paid by or on behalf of any person or organization that may be legally responsible for the bodily injury for which the payment is made, including, but not limited to, any amounts paid under the bodily injury liability coverage of this or any other insurance policy. . . .
Based on these provisions, Allstate calculates the amount it owes to the defendants as follows: the $50,000 received from the tortfeasor, Cogley, was offset against the UIM limits of both policies, leaving $50,000 in UIM benefits under the Bontempo policy, which Allstate tendered, and $250,000 in UIM benefits under the Keca policy. The $50,000 in UIM benefits Allstate tendered under the Bontempo policy was offset against the $250,000 UIM coverage under the Keca policy, leaving $200,000 in UIM benefits under that policy, which Allstate also tendered. It is Allstate’s position that it has fulfilled its UIM coverage obligations under the plain language of both insurance policies. The defendants contend that the reduction clause is unenforceable and they are entitled to $100,000 in UIM benefits under the Bontempo policy and $300,000 in UIM benefits under the Keca policy, for a combined total of $400,000 in Allstate UIM benefits.
Allstate commenced this action seeking a declaratory judgment that the UIM reducing clauses in the Keca and Bontempo policies are enforceable, and therefore, no *5 benefits beyond the $250,000 already tendered is owed to the defendants by Allstate. The district court had jurisdic- tion over the action, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a), because there was complete diversity of citizenship between the parties, and the amount in controversy was in excess of $75,000. Both parties filed motions for summary judgment. In its order denying summary judgment to Allstate and granting judgment in part to the defendants, the district court rejected Allstate’s bid to reduce Keca’s UIM benefits by the $50,000 paid under the Bontempo policy. However, the district court also found that Allstate’s reducing clause was not ambiguous in the context of the policy as a whole and therefore approved the $50,000 reduction Allstate made to each policy as a result of the payment tendered by Cogley’s liability carrier. Allstate now appeals the former decision, and the defendants appeal the latter.
II. Discussion
A federal court sitting in diversity has the obligation to
apply the law of the state as it believes the highest court of
the state would apply it if presented with the issue.
See
Lexington Ins. Co. v. Rugg & Knopp, Inc.
,
Prior to 1995, a number of Wisconsin courts found
reducing clauses void because they rendered purported UIM
coverage illusory.
See, e.g.
,
Kuhn v. Allstate Ins. Co.
, 510
N.W.2d 826, 827 (Wis. Ct. App. 1993). Courts deemed UIM
coverage subject to a reducing clause illusory because the
full coverage amount would never actually be paid by the
insurer (as the underinsured motorist would always be
contributing some portion of the payment).
See, e.g.
,
id.
at
830. In 1995, the Wisconsin Legislature passed a statute,
Wis. Stat. § 632.32(5)(i), specifically allowing for UIM re-
ducing clauses that operate to decrease the amount of the
insured’s total damages subject to UIM coverage from the
insurer by any amounts received from the underinsured
tortfeasor. Since the statute’s passage, considerable litiga-
tion relating to the validity and enforceability of reducing
clauses has continued to occur in Wisconsin courts. The
Wisconsin Supreme Court itself described UIM coverage as
a “ ‘legal iceberg,’ a seemingly straightforward area of the
law, which in fact can prove to be nettlesome to analyze.”
Badger Mut. Ins. Co. v. Schmitz
,
In Dowhower , the Wisconsin Supreme Court concluded that Wis. Stat. § 632.32(5)(i) does not violate substantive due process under the state or federal constitutions. Id. at 565. It also held that the type of reducing clauses autho- rized by the statute are neither ambiguous nor against public policy. Id. at 562. Two years later, in Schmitz , the Wisconsin Supreme Court explained that although a reducing clause may itself be clear, courts must still consider whether it is unambiguous in the context of the entire policy. 647 N.W.2d at 233. In that case, the court invalidated an otherwise unambiguous reducing clause that did not, when viewed in the context of the entire policy, clearly set forth that the insured was purchasing a fixed *7 level of UIM recovery arrived at by combining payments from all sources. Id. at 238. In reaching this decision, the court stated that the reducing clause “must be crystal clear in the context of the whole policy.” Id. at 233.
Focusing on the “crystal clarity” language, a number of
appellate courts post-
Schmitz
invalidated reducing clauses
after finding that they were contextually ambiguous.
See
Gohde v. MSI Ins. Co.
,
After
Folkman
was released, the Wisconsin Supreme
Court summarily vacated and remanded a series of appel-
late court decisions for further consideration in light of
*8
Folkman
.
See Gohde v. MSI Ins. Co.
,
Accordingly, in Folkman , the Wisconsin Supreme Court clarified that “crystal clear” is not the standard for review- ing UIM reducing clauses in insurance contracts, and following this clarification, the appellate courts have been more reluctant to invalidate such clauses. While Schmitz may have caused a momentary rush at the intermediate level towards finding contextual ambiguity, Folkman has clearly turned back this tide. The defendants submit that the law on this issue is in a state of flux in Wisconsin and request that we certify the issue of whether Allstate’s UIM reducing clause is enforceable to the Wisconsin Supreme Court. However, we conclude that the rules of decision in this case have been clearly set out by the Wisconsin Su- preme Court in Schmitz and Folkman and nothing would be gained through certification.
Against this backdrop, we now turn to the Allstate policy. The declarations page in the policy specifically lists *9 “Underinsured Motorists Insurance for Bodily Injury” and the monetary limits for such coverage. The defendants argue that ambiguity is created because there is no indica- tion on the declarations page that the UIM maximum coverage may be subject to further limitations due to the reducing clause appearing later in the policy. However, Wisconsin courts have expressly, and wisely, rejected this argument. See, e.g. , Sukala v. Heritage Mut. Ins. Co. , 622 N.W.2d 457, 461 (Wis. Ct. App. 2000) (“A declarations page is intended to provide a summary of coverage and cannot provide a complete picture of coverage under a policy.”). The declarations page in the Allstate policy lists many coverages (e.g., bodily injury, property damage) without describing all applicable coverage benefits and restrictions set forth in the policy jacket and endorsements. A detailed description on the declarations page of all of the policy’s coverage benefits and restrictions would arguably only create confusion.
After the declarations page, UIM coverage is not men-
tioned again for nearly forty pages, at which point the UIM
endorsement is found within AU 1440-3. The defendants
argue that ambiguity arises from the omission of references
to UIM coverage on various pages throughout the policy
appearing before the UIM endorsement. We disagree.
Insurers routinely add new coverages to their insureds’
policies by way of endorsement. Wisconsin courts have
found that the fact that UIM provisions appear in an
endorsement instead of the policy jacket does not create
ambiguity.
See, e.g.
,
Vorbeck
,
Although it is undisputed that the reducing clause itself is unambiguous, defendants argue that other provisions included in the UIM endorsement as well as the endorse- ment’s structure create confusion and ambiguity. Again, we disagree. The Limits of Liability subsection of the UIM endorsement explains that the coverage limit shown on the declarations page ($300,000 per accident for Keca, $100,000 per accident for Bontempo) is the “maximum that we will pay for damages arising out of bodily injury . . . .” The reducing clause is located directly below the “Limits of Liability” subsection. Thereafter, the “If There Is Other Insurance” subsection appears and states in part: “If more than one policy applies on a primary basis to an accident involving your insured auto, we will bear our proportionate share with other collectible underinsured motorists insur- ance . . . . If the insured person was in, on, getting into or out of a vehicle you do not own which is insured for this coverage under another policy, we will pay up to your policy limits only after all other collectible insurance has been exhausted.”
A reasonable insured reading these provisions would
understand that the insured purchased a fixed level of UIM
recovery which will be arrived at by combining payments
made from all sources.
See Schmitz
,
B. Application of Reducing Clause
The next question we consider is whether Allstate is allowed to reduce the UIM limits of the Keca policy by the $50,000 in UIM limits it tendered under the Bontempo policy. Again, the reducing clause in the Keca and Bontempo policies states that UIM coverage shall be reduced by:
1. all amounts paid by or on behalf of any person or organization that may be legally responsible for the bodily injury for which they payment is made, includ- ing, but not limited to, any amounts paid under the bodily injury liability coverage of this or any other insurance policy.
(emphasis added).
Finding that Allstate may not offset benefits paid under
the Bontempo policy from payments it owes to Keca, the
district court accepted the reasoning of a Wisconsin appel-
late court decision that addressed a similar question.
See
Janssen v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.
,
The court in
Janssen
supported its decision with prece-
dent set by the Wisconsin Supreme Court in
Employers
Health Ins. v. General Cas. Co.
,
In the absence of authority from Wisconsin’s highest court or a compelling indication that it would hold to the con- trary, there is no reason for us to deviate from this reasoned *13 position. Accordingly, the district court correctly required Allstate to pay an additional $50,000 in UIM benefits under the Keca policy.
III. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we A FFIRM the judgment on the district court.
A true Copy:
Teste:
________________________________ Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit USCA-02-C-0072—5-20-04
