This appeal involves the question whether “stacking” of medical payment coverage under three separate insurance policies is permitted under Georgia law. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant-insurer, finding Georgia law does not permit stacking. We disagree and therefore reverse.
I. FACTS
The material facts of this case are undisputed. Appellee State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company (“State Farm”) issued three separate policies of insurance to appellant Edward Provau. The first policy insured a 1980 Dodge pickup, and the medical payment coverage was $5,000.00. The second policy insured a 1980 Jeep, and the medical payment coverage was $25,-000.00. The third policy insured a 1977 Ford Thunderbird, and the medical payment coverage was $25,000.00.
On November 21, 1982, appellant was involved in an accident while driving the Dodge pickup with an uninsured motorist and sustained injuries in excess of $100,-000. 00. 1 State Farm paid appellant the $5,000.00 medical payment coverage under the policy insuring the Dodge pickup. Appellant then requested State Farm to “stack” the medical payment coverage under the remaining two policies, and State Farm refused appellant’s request.
The policy insuring the Thunderbird contained the following language:
“Coverage C — Medical Payments To pay reasonable medical expenses incurred for services furnished within one year from the date of the accident: Division 1. to or for the first person named in the declarations and, while residents of his household, his spouse and any relative of either who sustains bodily injury, caused by accident
Exclusions, Section 1
This Insurance Does Not Apply Under:
(j) Coverages C and M, to bodily injury to any person: ...
(2) while occupying or through being struck by any land motor vehicle or trailer if such vehicle is owned by the named insured or, if residents of his household, his spouse or the relatives of either, and is not an owned motor vehicle;
Limits of Liability
Coverage C. The limit of liability stated in the declarations as being applicable to each person is the limit of the company’s liability for medical expenses incurred for each person who sustains bodily injury in any one accident.
Financial Responsibility Laws— Definitions — Section I ...
Owned Motor Vehicle — means the motor vehicle or trailer described in the declarations ____”
The policies insuring the other two cars contained the following pertinent provisions:
“Medical Payments — Coverage C— Persons for Whom Medical Expenses are Payable
We will pay medical expenses for bodily injury sustained by:
l.a. the first person named in the declarations;
These persons have to sustain the bodily injury:
a. while they operate or occupy a vehicle covered under the liability section;
We will:
1) pay damages ... caused by an accident resulting from the ownership, maintenance or use of your car; ... Coverage For the Use of Other Cars The liability coverage extends to the use, by an insured, of a newly-acquired car, a temporary substitute car, or a non-owned car.
Your car means the car ... described on the declarations page.
Non-Owned Car — as used in Sections I and II means a car not:
1. owned by,
2. registered in the name of, or
3. furnished or available for the regular or frequent use of:
you, your spouse, or any relatives.
What is not covered under Coverage C There is no coverage: ...
4. for medical expenses for bodily injury:
a. sustained while occupying or through being struck by a vehicle owned by you, your spouse, or any relative, which is not insured under this coverage____”
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The appellate court may independently review an order granting summary judgment.
Mayo v. Engel,
III. THE LAW
A. Which law?
Under
Erie Railroad v. Tompkins,
B. “Stacking”
Four Georgia cases have dealt with the issue whether medical payment coverage may be stacked.
See State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Johnson,
The law is clear that where, as in the instant case, the state supreme court has not addressed the issue, “[a] federal court applying state law is bound to adhere to decisions of the state’s intermediate appellate courts absent some persuasive indication that the state’s highest court would decide the issue otherwise.”
Silverberg v. Paine, Webber, Jackson & Curtis, Inc.,
The thrust of appellee’s argument is that Georgia law does not permit stacking where it is prohibited by the language of the insurance policy. In support of its argument, appellee cites the following language from the Travelers case:
If the insurance company had decided to exclude payments for injuries received by [the insured] while occupying any automobile other than an automobile particularly described in the policy, it could very easily have said so.
Travelers,
In
Travelers,
the Georgia Court of Appeals held that the insured was entitled to combined medical payments under a single policy which insured two automobiles. The policy in
Travelers
excluded from coverage any injury sustained “while occupying an automobile ... other than an automobile defined herein as an owned automobile.”
Id.
at 102-04,
Hansen,
Regardless of the number of ... automobiles or trailers to which this policy applies, ... (B) the limit for Medical Expense Coverage stated in the declarations as applicable to ‘each person’ is the limit of the company’s liability for all medical expense incurred by or on behalf of each person who sustains bodily injury as the result of any one accident; ...
Id.
at 529,
The court held that this language was plain and unambiguous and clearly limited coverage.
Id.
at 530,
In
Ramsden,
Johnson,
Appellee contends that Johnson is distinguishable on the ground that Johnson involved a newly-acquired automobile. This is a distinction without a difference. We note that the court in Johnson denied stacking only as to the policy which had been issued for the newly-acquired automobile. The fact remains that Johnson holds that stacking is permitted under the same language as is contained in the older form of the State Farm policy, which covered the Thunderbird in the instant case. Moreover, we believe that the language in the two policies at issue here are substantially similar, and therefore Johnson governs as to both policies.
It should be apparent from our review of the four Georgia cases which have addressed the stacking issue that resolution of the problem is far from obvious. Nevertheless, because we believe that the language in the policies in Johnson is virtually indistinguishable from that in the policies at issue here, coupled with the fact that Johnson is the most recent Georgia case to speak on the subject, we must conclude that a Georgia court, if presented with the instant facts, would permit stacking.
C. Collateral Estoppel
Appellant contends that the district court abused its discretion, when it did not apply offensive collateral estoppel to the instant facts. Appellant claims that the exact issue litigated here was presented and decided in the Johnson case. Hence, the district court should have invoked the doctrine of collateral estoppel and precluded the defendant from relitigating the issue of stacking. Appellee contends that appellant has failed to satisfy two of the prerequisites to the application of collateral estop-pel and that it would be unfair to invoke the doctrine in this case.
“The offensive use of collateral estoppel raises particular judicial concerns; it
The district court did not address the issue of collateral estoppel in its order granting summary judgment to appellee. We assume that the court, once it had concluded that Johnson was distinguishable, decided that the resolution of the collateral estoppel issue was unnecessary. This is difficult to understand but the record is not absolutely clear.
Having found that the Georgia law dictates a ruling in appellant’s favor, we pre-termit resolution of this issue. Appellant’s request for a remand in this regard is now moot.
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is REVERSED and the matter REMANDED for entry of a judgment in accord with this opinion.
Notes
. For purposes of its motion for summary judgment only, State Farm admitted that appellant sustained injuries in excess of $100,000.00.
