RULING ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
On July 19, 1980, plaintiff and his wife, now deceased and for whose estate he is the executor, were passengers in an automobile owned by Richard Whelan, a Connecticut resident, when it was in a collision in Connecticut with an automobile owned by Richard Nowakowski. The accident resulted in numerous personal injuries and the death of Mrs. Hoffman. 1
Nowakowski had liability insurance of $20,000 per person and $40,000 per accident with Travelers Insurance Company (“Travelers”). Whelan had underinsured motorist insurance coverage of $50,000 per person and $100,000 per accident with Hanover Insurance Company (“Hanover”) on two vehicles. Thus, under Connecticut law, that coverage was stacked so as to provide coverage of $100,000 per person and $200,-000 per accident.
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Ferrante,
Plaintiff, a Maryland resident, for himself and his wife’s estate instituted this action seeking the benefit of the “Excess Coverage” provision of the insurance policy on their two automobiles. Defendant’s policy provided underinsured motorist coverage of $300,000 per person and $500,000 per accident. 3
Defendant moves for summary judgment on the following issues: Should defendant’s obligation under plaintiff’s policy be reduced by (1) the amounts paid to him by the liability insurer (Travelers) and the primary underinsured motorist insurer (Hanover); (2) the additional $50,000 underin-sured motorist coverage limits, as stacked, in the Hanover policy; and (3) the difference between the unstacked Hanover uninsured policy limits and the amount plaintiff recovered from Hanover?
1. Reduction By Amounts Paid the Liability and Primary Insurers
Plaintiff agrees that defendant’s policy limits should be reduced by the $5393.28 he *924 received from Travelers and the $8300.79 from Hanover, a total $13,694.07. Plaintiff’s Memorandum in Opposition to Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment at 7. Accordingly, summary judgment will enter on this issue. Local Rule 9(a).
2. Reduction By Policy Limits in the Stacked Primary Insurer’s Policy
Defendant claims that its policy limit 4 should be reduced not only by the $13,-694.07, but also by the $50,000 additional per person coverage available under the stacked Hanover policy. Defendant’s liability to plaintiff is governed by its policy which provides:
[w]ith respect to bodily injury to an insured while occupying a highway vehicle not owned by the named insured, this insurance shall apply only as excess insurance over any other similar insurance available to such insured and applicable to such vehicle as primary insurance, and this insurance shall then apply only in the amounts by which the limit of liability for this coverage exceeds the applicable limit of liability of such other insurance.
Contract at § VI, ¶ 6 (emphasis added).
Choice of Law
A federal court sitting in diversity must apply the applicable choice-of-law rules of the forum state.
Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co.,
Definition of “Available” 7
“Insurance policies, like other forms of contracts, are interpreted as a reasonable man would understand them. The terms of policies are construed in their plain, ordinary, and popular sense. This policy has been referred to as the ‘principle of reasonable expectations.’ ” Appleman, 6B
Insurance Law and Practice,
§ 4254 at 25 (1979 & Supp.1987) (citations omitted). The word “available” is ambiguous and, therefore, must be construed against the insurer.
Id.
(“Ambiguous provisions in insurance policies must be construed against the insurer.”). The word “available” could mean anything from “in hand” or “actually received” to “within reach” or “conceivably obtainable.” Webster’s Third World New International Dictionary at 150 (1981) defines available as what is accessi
*925
ble or obtainable. What is available, or accessible or obtainable, can range widely depending on what conduct or events are necessary to bring the tangible object into possession or the intangible objective to fruition. As the extent of those events or conduct is not defined, the word is ambiguous. A number of courts have found that, because of this ambiguity, the word should be construed strictly against the insurer.
See Benzer v. Iowa Mut. Tornado Ins. Ass’n.,
It is beyond dispute that under Connecticut law, the Hanover policy could have been stacked and that plaintiff could have sought all or a portion of the extended policy limits.
Ferrante,
Absent such a showing of reasonableness and given the decision in Fer-rante, defendant’s coverage must be reduced by the amount of the additional coverage that was available to plaintiff under the stacked Hanover policy — $50,000. Although the claims of Mrs. Hoffman and Whelan might have impinged on plaintiff’s sole claim to that additional $50,000, plaintiff has not established that fact in the record. Absent such a showing, defendants excess coverage will be reduced by $50,000, the other similar available insurance.
3. Reduction By Policy Limits for the Unstacked Primary Insurer’s Policy
Resolution of this issue requires an analysis under Maryland law of the language
and this insurance shall then apply only in the amounts by which the limit of liability for this coverage exceeds the applicable limit of liability of such other insurance.
Contract, § VI ¶ 6.
Defendant argues that this case is controlled by
Yarmuth v. Government Employees Ins. Co.,
Assuming that Whelan, plaintiff, and his wife were all injured to the same degree, then each would have been entitled to coverage of $33,333.33 from Hanover. However, in this case, as is almost always the case, all claims were not equal. It is assumed that the different amounts received by the three claimants reflected the severity of the injury that each suffered.
10
As such, as to plaintiff, the applicable limit was the amount of insurance he actually received because that was all that was available to him. Had plaintiff been the sole party injured and received, via a settlement, only a fraction of the $50,000 coverage provided by the primary carrier, then defendant might be justified in claiming a reduction of its excess coverage by the amount of insurance he could have had but did not receive, i.e., the difference between what he actually received and what he argues was the full value of his claim.
Cf.
Appleman, 8A
Insurance Law and Practice,
§ 4909 at 390-93 (1979 & Supp.1987), citing
U.S. Fire Ins. Co. v. Lay,
Accordingly, defendant’s motion is granted in part and denied in part. Plaintiffs potential entitlement under defendant’s underinsured coverage is limited to $186,-305.93 ($250,000 — the $500,000 per accident less the $250,000 by which defendant’s coverage was paid or credited against the claim of the Estate of Mrs. Hoffman — minus $5393.28 received from Travelers, $8300.79 received from Hanover, and $50,-000 representing the amount available under the stacked Hanover policy).
SO ORDERED.
. Although Maryland has recognized the validity of the excess coverage clause, the parties have not provided any Maryland authority construing this term nor has the court found any.
Notes
. Defendant’s motion was originally directed to both Kenneth Hoffman in his individual capacity and as Executor of the Estate of Sandra Hoffman. Subsequent to the filing of that motion, Kenneth Hoffman as Executor of the Estate of Sandra Hoffman settled with defendant. Accordingly, this ruling will solely decide defendant’s motion as it applies to Kenneth Hoffman in his individual capacity.
. It is not clear from the record whether the Hanover policy limits were exhausted either on a per/person or per/accident basis nor to what extent Whelan recovered under that policy.
. The question of whether Maryland would recognize stacking in this situation was certified to the Maryland Court of Appeals which ruled against stacking.
Hoffman v. United Serv. Automobile Ass’n,
. The Estate of Sandra Hoffman received $250,-000 in settlement from defendant’s policy. There remains $250,000 subject to Kenneth Hoffman’s claim.
. Connecticut would adopt the Restatement II approach to choice-of-law problems in the event application of the vested rights approach would yield an arbitrary and capricious result.
Economu
v.
Borg-Warner,
. By referencing the availability of other insurance, which would cover the insured as a passenger in a vehicle other than his own, § VI ¶ 6 of defendant’s contract implicitly recognizes that the laws of states other than Maryland might affect the amount of "other similar insurance available” to the insured.
. Although the Connecticut Supreme Court cited these cases with approval,
Fidelity & Cas. Co. v. Darrow,
. It is fully realized that with a form policy, the parties do not negotiate the contract’s language and thus a policy is to be construed as meaning what the parties reasonably could have understood the language to mean, giving the benefit of the doubt to the insured.
. This analysis assumes that the unstacked Hanover per accident limit ($100,000) was exhausted. Defendant makes no claim or showing to the contrary, as it must, if it is to prevail in the showing of other available insurance.
