In this Florida diversity action, plaintiff, injured in an automobile accident, seeks to recover against the uninsured motorist provision of her own policy for bodily injury damage which exceeded the insurance liability coverage of the offending driver.
Although plaintiff settled with the adverse carrier for $8,500, the coverage being $10,000, her alleged damages amounted to $250,000. Since the adverse motorist was not sufficiently insured to cover her alleged damages, plaintiff claims the uninsured motorist provisions of her own policy should cover the difference up to the amount of its coverage.
Plaintiff would have won her case before Judge Charles Scott of the Middle District of Florida in 1975. Townsley v. Hartford *563 Accident & Indemnity Co., No. 74-49 Civ. J-S (M.D.Fla., January 15,1975). That decision was certified for appeal to us pursuant to 28 U.S.C.A. § 1292(b), but the appeal was not pursued. At that time there were no authoritative Florida decisions in point.
By the time plaintiff filed her complaint in federal court, however, two Florida appellate courts had resolved the issue against her position.
Summers v. Jackson,
Our only alternative to affirming the dismissal on motion of plaintiff’s complaint would be to certify the question to the Florida Supreme Court. The decision to certify is discretionary with this Court. We decline to certify in this case. Although not all Florida District Courts of Appeal have decided the question and the matter may be finally resolved as a matter of Florida law by the Florida Supreme Court, the Second District Court of Appeal has decided the matter. American Fire & Casualty Co. v. Dawson, supra. A state action by this Lee County plaintiff would have been reviewed by the Second District. Undoubtedly the trial court and the Second District would have followed the recent Second District opinion. Thus, the same law has been applied in federal court as would have been applied in the specific courts available to plaintiff in the state system.
Further, plaintiff filed the suit in federal court. It is not the proper office of the certification procedure to permit a party, by choosing a federal over a state forum, to get the Florida Supreme Court’s attention through this Court to issues which that Court has refused to accept from state litigants. This Court has previously spoken of the value to the administration of justice of the Florida Supreme Court’s permitting the certification procedure.
See, e. g., Allen v. Estate of Carman,
AFFIRMED.
