OPINION OF THE COURT
This is an appeal of the trial court’s order entered on January 27,1989 granting summary judgment in favor of defendant Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company (“Lumbermens”) and against the plaintiff-appellant, Hospital Support Services, Ltd. (“HSS”) and of the February 24, 1989 order of the district court denying appellant’s motion for reconsideration of the January 27 order. Based on our prediction of Pennsylvania law, we will affirm the judgment of the district court.
I.
The facts relevant to this appeal are undisputed. HSS owns and operates mobile CAT scan equipment, some of which was insured with Lumbermens. When a dispute arose regarding coverage of four failed x-ray tubes, HSS initiated a declaratory judgment action against Lumbermens and Kemper Group, Inc. (“Kemper”) on April 8, 1988. Specifically, HSS sought a declaration that Lumbermens and Kemper were required to indemnify HSS in the amount of $35,473.50 in connection with alleged losses. 1 Thereafter, Lumbermens filed its answer along with affirmative defenses, including the defense that HSS’s claims were barred because the litigation was not commenced within one year of the alleged loss as required by the policy of insurance. 2
The parties then agreed to a set of stipulated facts and filed cross motions for summary judgment. According to the stipulation, the policy requires the filing “with the Company or its agent within ninety (90) days from date of discovery of such loss, damage or occurrence, a detailed sworn proof of loss.” App. at 7, 8. The policy also requires that any lawsuit brought to enforce a claim be commenced “within twelve (12) months next after discovery by the Insured of the occurrences which gives rise to the claim_” App. at 8.
The parties stipulated that HSS submitted its first claim under the policy for loss arising from use of the x-ray equipment on May 5,1987 and that Lumbermens denied this claim. App. at 9. On April 8, 1988, HSS initiated the present litigation against Kemper and Lumbermens. The parties agree that “HSS did not give Lum-bermens a sworn, written proof of loss within 90 days of the occurrence of its loss” nor did “HSS ... commence the present action within twelve (12) months of the occurrence of its loss.” App. at 9.
II.
HSS submits on this appeal that the district court erred in not extending the rule enunciated in the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decision in
Brakeman v. Potomac Ins. Co.,
The question thus presented on this appeal is whether the rationale of
Brakeman
should apply to limitation of suit clauses as well as to notice of loss provisions. Because the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has never squarely addressed the issue, our task is one of predicting Pennsylvania law.
See Compagnie Des Bauxites de Guinee v. Insurance Co. of N. Am.,
III. DISCUSSION
In
Brakeman,
the Pennsylvania Supreme Court held that an insured’s noncompliance with a notice of loss provision bars a claim only if the carrier can show that it has been prejudiced. Two theoretical underpinnings form the basis for the holding. First, the departure from a strict contractual approach was deemed appropriate since such notice provisions are seldom subject to negotiation. Rather, “[t]he only aspect of the contract over which the insured can ‘bargain’ is the monetary amount of coverage,”
Second, the court, in analyzing the purpose of such notice provisions, found that “[t]he purpose of a policy provision requiring notice of an accident or loss to be given within a certain time is to give the insurer an opportunity to acquire, through an adequate investigation, full information about the circumstances of the case, on the basis of which, it can proceed to disposition, either through settlement or defense of the claim.”
Two lines of cases can be explained in terms of these theoretical underpinnings. First, in light of
Brakeman’s
characterization of insurance contracts as contracts of adhesion and its departure from a strict contractual approach, several courts have held
Brakeman
to be inapplicable to limita
Second, with regard to the prejudice requirement being based on the purpose of the notice of loss provision, other courts have held that the reasoning supportive of the
Brakeman
“notice” rule should not extend to limitation of suit clauses, and that
Brakeman,
therefore, does not apply to limitation of suit clauses.
See Brandywine One Hundred Corp. v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co.,
However, we note that the lines of authority are not so neatly drawn. At least one federal court has concluded that
Brakeman
applies to limitation of suit clauses generally, whether or not such clauses have been required by law.
See ACF Produce, Inc. v. Chubb/Pacific Indem. Group,
In
Leone v. Aetna Casualty & Sur. Co.,
Because this Court in Leone found assertions in the insured’s complaint which could have tolled the limitation of suit clause, i.e., the alleged lack of good faith by the insurer, it did not have to resolve the question of whether prejudice must also be shown in order to toll a limitation of suit clause. Instead, we explicitly reserved decision stating that:
[Wjhether an insurer must show prejudice before obtaining exoneration of liability because of violation of the suit limitation clause is not an issue concretely before us; it may be unnecessary to resolve in this case and we deem it of sufficient importance to be reserved for resolution at a time when it is necessarily presented.
Leone,
Judge Hunter, however, in a strong dissent states that “the
Diamon
case, which is the sole basis for the majority’s decision to reverse the judgment of the district court [does not] accurately represent ] Pennsylvania law.”
This suit limitation clause has been examined by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Lardas v. Underwriters Ins. Co.,426 Pa. 47 ,231 A.2d 740 (1967), and General State Authority v. Planet Insurance Co.,464 Pa. 162 ,346 A.2d 265 (1975). In Lardas, the Supreme Court concluded that such a clause is ‘valid and reasonable,’426 Pa. at 50 ,231 A.2d at 741 , and held that ‘[t]he failure of [the insured] to abide by the [suit limitation] provision ... constitutes an absolute bar to [the insured’s] claim. To hold otherwise, in the factual matrix of this litigation would render meaningless this provision.’ Id. at 53,231 A.2d at 742-43 . Similarly, in General State Authority, the court ‘recognize[d] the validity and binding nature’ of the one year limit,464 Pa. at 168 ,346 A.2d at 269 .
While the Pennsylvania Superior Court applied Brakeman in Diamon, and although this Court relied on Diamon in Leone, Judge Hunter, the only member of the Court in Leone to consider the Brakeman issue, stated that Brakeman should not apply to limitations of suit clauses as a general rule. He states:
On appeal, Leone contends that Brakeman v. Potomac Ins. Co.,472 Pa. 66 ,371 A.2d 193 (1977), requires reversal. In Brakeman, the Supreme Court held that a suit to collect on an automobile liability policy may not be dismissed for failure to comply with the notice of loss provision of the policy absent a showing of prejudice to the insurer. Leone claims that the prejudice test also applies here,so that his complaint may not be summarily dismissed. For the reasons so well expressed by the district court in Brandywine One Hundred Corp. v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 405 F.Supp. 147 (D.Del.1975), aff'd588 F.2d 819 (3d Cir.1978), I do not believe that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court would apply Brakeman in the context of a suit limitation clause, the purpose of which is totally distinct from that of a notice of loss provision.
Thus, the only member of this Court to consider the issue has expressed the view that Brakeman’s second theoretical basis — that the purpose of the notice of loss clause is to prevent prejudice to the insurer — cannot justify application of the prejudice rule to limitation of suit clauses.
We agree and believe the better view is that the
Brakeman
rule does not apply to limitation of suit clauses. Neither of the purported justifications for
Brakeman’s
departure from a strict contractual approach apply to suit limitations clauses. We recognize that “[s]uch clauses were completely acceptable and enforceable at common law without any demonstration of prejudice.”
Hamilton Bank v. Export-Import Bank of U.S.,
Perhaps more importantly, as our task is one of predicting Pennsylvania law, we note that the general application of
Brakeman
by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania in
ACF Produce
has been criticized and rejected not only by the Pennsylvania Superi- or Court in
Petraglia v. American Motorists Ins. Co.,
Although the Pennsylvania Superior Court’s more recent decision in Petraglia involved a statutorily mandated limitations of suit clause — and thus, the holding can be explained on this narrow basis — we believe that the court intended to express a more general reluctance to extend Brakeman to limitation of suit clauses. The Pennsylvania Superior Court in Petraglia states:
We decline to follow the decision of the federal court in ACF Produce. Unlike the timely notice of accident provision in Brakeman, the one-year suit limitation clause has been statutorily approved. Act of May 17, 1921, P.L. 682 § 506, added August 23, 1961, P.L. 1081, § 1, 40 P.S. § 636 (setting forth the required form of standard fire insurance policies). Additionally, the plurality opinion in Diamon, citing Brakeman, does not apply in this context because there was no allegation by the insurer of criminal conduct by the insured. Accordingly, we choose not to extend the rationale of Brakeman to an action commenced in violation of the one-year suit limitation clause. Cf. Brandywine One Hundred Corp. v. Hartford Fire Insurance Co.,405 F.Supp. 147 , 151 (D.Del.1975) (declining to extend Delaware case requiring prejudice in notice context to suit limitation clause), aff'd mem.,588 F.2d 819 (3d Cir.1978). We note that the unbroken line of authorities up-holding the contractual limitation clause has continued even after Brakeman and Diamon. E.g., Brooks v. St. Paul Insurance Co. supra [264 Pa.Super. 157 ,399 A.2d 714 (1979)]. We believe that courts should be reluctant to overrule such wellsettled [sic] principles where to do so would vitiate a legislatively approved provision of a standard fire insurance policy. Moreover, if such a change is to be made, we believe that the decision is more appropriately left to our Supreme Court. Consequently, we hold that the lower court did not err in finding the one-year suit limitation clause to be valid and enforceable absent waiver or estoppel.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, we find that the district court did not err. The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.
Notes
. On July 12, 1988, the district court dismissed Kemper upon obtaining consent of the parties.
. There is no question presented on this appeal as to the scope of the coverage afforded by the policy. The sole issue, therefore, relates to HSS’s failure to file a claim within the time limitations set out in the policy.
. In Diamon, the Pennsylvania Superior Court applied Brakeman to a statutorily mandated limitation of suit clause. The insured had been prosecuted at the insurer’s request for allegedly filing a false proof of loss. After being erroneously convicted, the district attorney entered a nolle prosequi. The insured then waited until the end of the five year criminal statute of limitations to bring suit on his fire insurance policy. The Superior Court held that the insurer’s mistaken charge of criminal liability tolled or suspended the suit limitation clause. Without any discussion regarding the propriety of applying Brakeman, the Superior Court, assuming its applicability, found no prejudice resulting from the insured’s late filing but indicated that the record to be developed on remand could indicate otherwise.
. The district court also implied that a limitation of suit clause must be enforced absent some showing that the insurer caused the failure to timely file the claim. Significantly, it found that HSS did not allege "any conduct on the part of Lumbermens which induced it to wait to commence suit such as a negligently conducted investigation.” Id. Nor did it find any “overreaching by Lumbermens in including a twelve-month limitation clause in the poli-cy_” App. at 74. Additionally, the district court found that "HSS has not offered any extenuating circumstances for failing to commence suit within the twelve-month period.” Id. Accordingly, the district court found the limitation of suit clause to be enforceable.
