delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this сase, we must decide whether the Texas Standard Personal Auto Policy obligates an insurer to compensate a policyholder for a vehicle’s diminished market value when the car has been damaged but adequately repaired. We hold that it does not, and accordingly reverse the court of appeals’ judgment.
I
Gary Schaefer purchased a standard automobile insuranсe policy 1 from American Manufacturers Mutual Insurance Company (AMM). Part D of the policy, entitled “Coverage for Damage to Your Auto,” provides that AMM will pay for “direct and accidental loss to your covered auto ....” The payment obligation is subject to a contractual limitation of liability that reads, in pertinent part, as follows:
LIMIT OF LIABILITY
Our limit of liability for loss will be the lesser of the:
1. Actual cash value of the stolen or damaged property; or
2. Amount necessary to repair or replace the property with other of like kind and quality; or
3. Amount stated in the Declarations of this policy.
The policy also provides for the method of paying the loss:
PAYMENT OF LOSS
We may pay for loss in money or repair or replace the damaged or stolen property.
In October 1995, Schaefer’s vehicle was involved in an accident. It was inspected by an AMM adjuster, and the insurance company elected to repair the vehicle. Schaefer does not dispute the quality or adequacy of thе repairs. Instead, he maintains that its value decreased $2,600 due to market perceptions that a damaged and subsequently repaired vehicle is worth less than one that has never been damaged. Schaefer claims that the policy obligates AMM to compensate him for that diminished value.
Schaefer filed this class action against AMM and several other insurance companiеs that issue policies containing the same standard language. 2 He claims that AMM’s refusal to compensate him for his vehicle’s diminished market value violated the Texas Insurance Code and breached the insurance contract. Before any class was certified, Schaefer filed a motion for partial summary judgment arguing that AMM was liable for his vehicle’s diminished value as a matter of law. AMM resрonded and filed a cross-motion for summary judgment on the same issue. The trial court granted AMM’s motion and denied Schaefer’s.
The court of appeals reversed the trial court’s summary judgment in AMM’s fa
*157
vor, holding that Schaefer could seek diminished-value damages under the policy and that the jury should determine if the repairs did or could restore the vehicle to “substantially the same condition and value” it had prior to the accident.
II
We interpret insurance policies in Texas according to the rules of contract construction.
Tex. Farmers Ins. Co. v. Murphy,
The parties dispute whether the policy language obligates AMM to pay Schaefer for the diminished value of his fully repaired vehicle. Schaefer argues that a vehicle’s diminished market value is a “direct or accidental loss” that AMM is required to compensate under the policy’s insuring provision. Schaefer contends that construing the policy otherwise frustrates its underlying purpose to fully indemnify the insured. Citing as authority a number of eases from Texas and other jurisdictions, Schaefer contends that the policy language requiring AMM to pay the amount necessary “to repair or replace” with “other of like kind and quality” contemplates the payment of diminished value. 3 AMM’s payment obligation is further *158 evidenced, Schaefer claims, by the policy’s failure to exprеssly exclude diminished value from coverage under the policy’s “Exclusions” section.
While Schaefer focuses on the “loss” language of the policy’s insuring provision, AMM emphasizes the limitation of liability and payment provisions. AMM does not dispute that the term “loss” could encompass diminished value, but contends that the insuring language must be construed in light of the “Limit of Liability” section, which limits the insurer’s liability to the lesser of the vehicle’s actual cash value or the amount necessary to repair or replace it. According to AMM, the term “repair or replace” does not encompass any concept of “value.” Like Schaefer, AMM cites cases from Texas and other jurisdictions that support its position. 4 AMM also urges our consideration of the Texas Department of Insurance’s interpretation of the policy language as not obligating an insurer to pay for a fully repaired vehicle’s diminished value. See Tex. Dep’t of Ins. Commissioner’s Bulletin, No. B-0027-00 (Apr. 6, 2002) (“[A]n insurer is not obligated to pay a first party claimant for diminished value when an automobile is completely repaired to its pre-damage condition. The language of the insurance policy does not require payment for, or refer to, diminished value.”).
Ill
Wе agree with AMM that the policy’s plain language, when read in context, giving effect to all contractual provisions, is unambiguous and does not require payment for diminished value when a vehicle has been fully and adequately repaired. While a vehicle’s diminished value may be a “direct loss” under the policy’s insuring provision, AMM’s obligation to compensate the insured for that loss is circumscribed by the рolicy’s “Limit of Liability” section. That section states, in pertinent part, that AMM’s liability for loss is limited to the damaged vehicle’s “actual cash value” or the amount needed “to repair or replace” the vehicle, whichever is less. We must give the policy language its ordinary and generally accepted meaning unless the policy shows that the words used are intended to impart a techniсal or different meaning.
Sec. Mut. Cas. Co. v. Johnson,
The concept of “repair” with regard to a vehicle connotes something tangible, like removing dents or fixing parts.
See
Blaoic’s Law Dictionajry 1298 (6th ed.1990) (defining “repair” as “to
*159
mend, remedy, restore, renovate; to restore to a sound or good state after decay, injury, dilapidation or partial destruction”);
see also Siegle v. Progressive Consumers Ins. Co.,
A number of other state courts interpreting similar or identical policy language have expressly relied on the definition of “repair” articulated in
Carlton. See, e.g., Pritchett v. State Farm Mut. Ins. Co.,
In addition to applying the plаin meaning of the policy’s language, we must also read the policy as a whole, giving effect to each provision.
Kelley-Coppedge,
Inserting the сoncept of diminished value into the repair provision would similarly render the policy’s “Payment of Loss” section meaningless. Under this section of the policy, the insurer has an option to pay the insured in “money or repair or replace[ment].” (emphasis added). Including diminished value in the concept of repair would force an insurer that chooses to compensate a loss by exercising the repair option to also pay money, ignoring the clause’s disjunctive language.
Schaefer also points to modifying language in paragraph two of the policy’s Limitation of Liability provision, which refers to the
[ajmount necessary to repair or replace the property with other of like kind and quality.
(emphasis added). He contends that the phrase “of like kind and quality” modifies both “repair” and “rеplace,” and obligates the insurer to compensate for a damaged vehicle’s pre-accident value because the word “quality” encompasses the concept of value. But whether or not intrinsic value generally inheres in the word “quality,” and assuming without deciding that the phrase “of like kind and quality” modifies both “repair” and “replace,” we must look to the ordinary meaning of the words that are modified. We have said that the words “repair” and “replace,” with regard to a vehicle, connote something tangible, like removing dents, fixing parts, or replacing the vehicle with a comparable substitute. Thus, if an insurer elects to repair a vehicle and must replace parts in doing so, it must use parts “of like kind and quality.” Likewise, if an insurer elects to replace the vehicle, it must do so with a vehicle “of like kind and quality.”
See Great Tex. County Mut. Ins. Co. v. Lewis,
Schaefer also contends that the policy covers diminished-value damages because they are not expressly excluded in the policy’s “Exclusions” section. But an exclusion’s purpose is to remove from coverage an item that would otherwise have bеen included. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. v. Am. Employers Ins. Co., 556 S.W.2d 242, 245 (Tex.1977). Absence of an exclusion cannot confer coverage. Because the policy’s language does not obligate AMM to pay for the diminished value of a car that has been fully and adequately repaired, the failure to include diminished-value damages in the policy’s Exclusion section is immaterial.
Schaefer agrees that his claim is governed by the contract language, but contends that the court of appeals correctly interpreted the policy. However, the court of appeals did not perform a thorough analysis of the policy language and instead relied principally on its previous decision in
Smith v. American Fire Casualty Co.,
In affirming the jury’s market-value differential award, the
Smith
court applied a tort measure of damages that is generally designed to make an injured third party, to whom the insured may be liable, whole.
See Thomas v. Oldham,
Schaefer claims, and the court of appeals agreed, that our decision in
Superior Pontiac Co. v. Queen Insurance Co.,
Schaefer claims that, until the Fourteenth Court of Appeals issued its decision in
Carlton,
“[f]or seventy years the overwhelming weight of Texas authority had found coverage for diminished value in first-party auto cases.”
See Fid. & Cas. Co. of N.Y. v. Underwood,
We note that diminished value claims have taken different forms.
See Smither v. Progressive County Mut. Ins. Co.,
IV
Schaefer’s standard automobile insurance policy does not obligate AMM to compensate Schaefer for his fully repaired vehicle’s diminished market value. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and render judgment in favor оf AMM.
Notes
. The Legislature requires the State Board of Insurance to promulgate standard and uniform insurance policies for those who write insurance in Texas for private passenger automobiles. See Tex. Ins. Code Ann. art. 5.06(1). The State Board of Insurance is now known as the Texas Department of Insurance, which is composed of the Commissioner of Insurance and other officers and employees. See Tex. Ins. Code Ann. arts. 31.003, 31.007.
. Schaefer also sued Kemper National Insurance Companies, Lumbermen’s Mutual Casualty Company, American Motorists Insurance Company, and American Protection Insurance Company. All claims against these companies were dismissed and they are not parties to this appeal.
. For cases finding coverage for diminished value,
see Hyden v. Farmers Ins. Exch., 20
P.3d 1222 (Colo.Ct.App.2000);
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Mabry, 274
Ga. 498,
. For cases finding no coverage for diminished value,
see Manguno v. Prudential Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co.,
. We note that the Texas Department of Insurance recognizes this distinction in interpreting an insurer’s obligation under the standаrd policy to pay diminished-value damages. After stating its position that "an insurer is not obligated to pay a first party claimant for diminished value,” the Commissioner states:
An insurer also may be obligated to pay a third party claimant for any loss of market value of the claimant’s automobile, regardless of the completeness of the repair, in a liability claim that the third party claimant may have against a policyholder.
Tex. Dep’t of Ins. Commissioner’s Bulletin, No. B-0027-00 (Apr. 6, 2002).
