Shortly after they purchased a new car, Luke DeGrand and Karen Kies DeGrand were involved in an automobile accident in Evanston, Illinois. Karen sustained a severe and permanent ankle injury as a result of the two-car collision; to obtain compensation for Karen’s injuries, the DeG-rands sued the driver of the other car. Unfortunately, that driver carried only minimal bodily injury liability coverage — $50,-000 — which was insufficient to compensate Karen.
Karen and Luke DeGrand turned to their own automobile insurance policy to determine whether their policy covered the excess damage. When they discovered that it did not, they sued their insurer, Motors Insurance Corporation (“MIC”), in state court for reformation of their insurance contract, claiming that MIC had violated Illinois law by failing to offer them under-insured motorist coverage in an amount equal to their bodily injury liability coverage. MIC removed the action to federal district court, which, pursuant to its diversity jurisdiction, granted MIC’s motion for summary judgment. This appeal followed.
I.
On February 8, 1986, the DeGrands purchased a 1986 Chevrolet Nova from Ruby Chevrolet in Chicago. Before driving their new car from the lot, the DeGrands applied for and received automobile insurance from MIC. Their insurance policy provided bodily injury and property damage coverage of $100,000 per person/$300,000 per occurrence. The policy also provided uninsured motorist coverage of $15,000 per person/$30,000 per occurrence 1 and — al *1101 though allegedly unknown to the DeG-rands — underinsured motorist coverage in the same amounts. Indeed, the DeGrands claim that they never knew about the underinsured motorist coverage until after their accident. There is no question, however, that the DeGrands had sufficient knowledge (whether actual or imputed) of their tminsured motorist coverage. Luke DeGrand’s signature appears underneath the following text in the insurance application: “I acknowledge that I have been provided an opportunity to purchase uninsured motorists coverage up to the limits of my bodily injury limits.” Approximately one month after their new automobile rolled off Ruby Chevrolet's lot, the DeGrands were involved in the accident that led to this lawsuit.
Put simply, the question presented by these facts is whether Illinois law requires insurers to offer underinsured motorist coverage to automobile purchasers who opt for minimum uninsured motorist coverage. The DeGrands argue that MIC’s failure to offer them underinsured motorist coverage — irrespective of their policy’s provision of underinsured motorist coverage in the same amount as uninsured motorist coverage — constituted a breach of its legal responsibilities under the Illinois Insurance Code. MIC, on the other hand, counters that recent amendments to the Illinois Insurance Code make such an offer unnecessary when an individual elects minimum uninsured motorist coverage: so long as the policy contains an equivalent amount of uninsured and underinsured coverage, as it did in this ease, Illinois law does not require insurers to offer additional underin-sured motorist coverage. The district court sided with MIC and granted MIC’s motion for summary judgment, explaining that the Illinois Insurance Code did not require insurers to offer additional underin-sured motorist coverage when individuals elect uninsured motorist coverage at the statutory minimum:
Because plaintiffs' insurance policy provided uninsured motorist coverage at the minimum limit, MIC was under no statutory duty to make an offer of underinsured motorist coverage. As of July 1, 1983, an insurer’s obligation to include — not merely offer — underinsured motorist coverage turns on whether the policy provides for uninsured motorist coverage in excess of the statutory minimum. Since plaintiffs’ policy was issued after July 1,1983 and provided uninsured motorist coverage only at the statutory minimum level, their claim against MIC must fail.
Opinion at 5,
II.
The parties do not dispute that before July 1, 1983, Illinois law required insurers to offer underinsured motorist coverage in an amount commensurate with the policy limits governing bodily injury liability. This requirement is clear from the face of the statute itself; Section 143a-2 of the Illinois Insurance Code provides, in pertinent part:
(1) Required offer of additional uninsured motor vehicle coverage. No policy insuring against loss resulting from liability imposed by law for bodily injury or death suffered by any person arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of a motor vehicle shall be renewed or delivered or issued for delivery in this State unless uninsured motorist coverage as required in Section 143a of this Act is offered in an amount up to the insured’s bodily injury liability limits.
(3) Required offer of underinsured motorist coverage. Until July 1, 1983, any offer made under subsection (1) of this Section shall also include an offer of underinsured motorist coverage.
*1102
Ill.Ann.Stat. ch. 73, ¶ 755a-2 (Smith-Hurd Supp.1989) (footnote omitted). Under this statutory scheme, Illinois required the insurer to make a meaningful offer of under-insured motorist coverage that could then be accepted or rejected by each insured individual. Ill.Ann.Stat. ch. 73, ¶ 755a-2(4) (Smith-Hurd Supp.1989);
Cloninger v. National Gen. Ins. Co.,
Illinois lawmakers substantially altered this scheme in August 1982, P.A. 82-920, by amending the Illinois Insurance Code. That amendment provides, again in pertinent part:
(5) On or after July 1, 1983, no policy insuring against loss resulting from liability imposed by law for bodily injury or death suffered by any person arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of a motor vehicle shall be renewed or delivered or issued for delivery in this State with respect to any motor vehicle registered or principally garaged in this State unless underinsured motorist coverage is included in such policy in an amount at least equal to the total amount of uninsured motorist coverage provided in that policy where such uninsured motorist coverage exceeds the limits set forth in Section 7-203 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
Ill.Ann.Stat. ch. 73, ¶ 755a-2 (Smith-Hurd Supp.1989). Put simply, the statute seems to state that whenever an individual purchases uninsured motorist coverage in an amount greater than the statutory minimum, the insurer must also provide under-insured motorist coverage in the same amount. The insurer must provide and the insured must accept the underinsured motorist coverage; Illinois law, after July 1, 1983, did not permit the insurer or the insured to reject this coverage.
This new statutory scheme provided, by operation of law, additional coverage for many individuals purchasing automobile insurance after July 1, 1983. This result seems to be consistent with the legislature’s purpose in enacting the statute’s predecessor; as the Illinois Supreme Court observed in Cloninger,
[T]he legislature recognized that soaring medical costs often left injured parties only partially compensated for their injuries. The legislature was obviously concerned with adequately compensating injured parties. As stated by Representative Epton during a House debate on what would later be codified as section 143a-2(3): “[Tjhis Bill is in behalf of the consumer.” House Debate, June 20, 1980, at 48.
But here we are presented with an anomaly. Seemingly, according to the language of the statute, any automobile owner who purchases the minimum amount of uninsured motorist coverage is entitled neither to an offer of underinsured motorist coverage nor to automatic inclusion of such coverage in an amount commensurate with uninsured motorist coverage. The former entitlement apparently applies only to those policies purchased before July 1, 1983; the latter apparently applies only to those policies that include uninsured motorist coverage in an amount greater than the statutory minimum.
We cannot discern any reason why Illinois lawmakers left this apparent window of underinsured motorist non-coverage for owners of automobiles who have the least amount of uninsured motorist coverage.
2
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The legislative history supporting the amendment does not shed clear light on the matter, nor does either party to the appeal offer cogent reasons why the legislature would have adopted this course. Instead, the parties focus upon Illinois case law to interpret this statutory language. Since this is a diversity case, such focus is proper.
Cf. United States v. Thirty-Seven Photographs,
III.
Few Illinois courts have considered the operation of section 755a-2 as it relates to underinsured motorist coverage. The district court’s opinion in this case examines only three:
Petersen v. Allstate Insurance Co.,
The district court relied primarily on
Ov-erbey
and
Krska
to conclude that insurers need not
offer
underinsured coverage to motorists. The Illinois Appellate Court wrote in
Overbey
— an “offer” case involving a pre-1983 policy — that the “required offer of underinsured motorist coverage and the right to elect or reject such coverage were only effective until July 1, 1983.”
A careful review of the statutory development of underinsured motorist coverage indicates that until July 1, 1983, insurers were required to offer underin-sured motorist coverage to their insureds. After July 1, 1983, policies including uninsured motorist coverage in excess of the statutory minimum must include at least equal amounts of under-insured motorist coverage.
Id.
at 601,
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On the other hand, the district court simply dismissed
Petersen
as incorrectly decided under the statute. The Illinois Appellate Court in
Petersen,
which seems to present facts nearly identical to those presented by the DeGrands, concluded that Allstate violated paragraph 755a-2 by not properly offering underinsured coverage to motorists possessing the statutory minimum amount of uninsured coverage. The
Petersen
court seems to have concluded that the “meaningful offer” requirements of
Cloninger
(a pre-1983 case) survived the amendments to the Illinois Insurance Code.
Another panel of the Illinois Appellate Court reached the opposite conclusion in
Eipert,
a case decided after the district court considered the DeGrands’ claim. There, the appellate court held that an insurer need not offer or provide any under-insured coverage to motorists who have only the minimum amount of uninsured coverage required by law.
IV.
We are left, then, with a number of plausible (yet, in many ways, contradictory) interpretations of the same statute from Illinois appellate courts without a controlling precedent from the state supreme court. Our lack of guidance is exacerbated by the fact that we can discern no policy reasons for the passage of a statute that, despite being enacted to increase motorist awareness of underinsurance, 6 may undermine that goal by arguably removing the meaningful offer requirement.
It is precisely this type of case that is appropriate for certification under Circuit Rule 52.
See, e.g., Shirkey v. Eli Lilly & Co.,
V.
We respectfully request the Illinois Supreme Court to answer the following question of law:
Does Illinois law require insurers to offer underinsured motorist coverage (and, if so, in what amount) to automobile purchasers who opt for uninsured motorist coverage at the minimum statutory level?
QUESTION CERTIFIED.
Notes
. At the time the DeGrands purchased their insurance, Illinois Annotated Statute chapter 95'A paragraph 7-203 required automobile drivers to *1101 possess at least this amount of uninsured motorist coverage.
. Of course, we recognize that any insurance company that provides a driver who possesses the statutory minimum amount of uninsured motorist coverage with the same amount of underinsured motorist coverage is providing virtually worthless underinsured coverage:
[U]nderinsured coverage in the minimum limits of 15/30 is indeed illusory because it would never be payable when recovery is sought from another Illinois motorist. Furthermore, it would not be payable in instances where the at-fault driver is insured in other States which have financial responsibility lim *1103 its equal to or greater than those required in Illinois.
Glazewski v. Allstate Ins. Co.,126 Ill.App.3d 401 , 407-08,81 Ill.Dec. 349 , 354,466 N.E.2d 1151 , 1156 (1st Dist.1984), aff'd in part, rev’d in part,108 Ill.2d 243 ,91 Ill.Dec. 628 ,483 N.E.2d 1263 (1985). Since MIC sold the DeGrands precisely this combination of insurance — underinsured motorist coverage in an amount commensurate with the minimum uninsured motorist coverage required by law — the DeGrands claimed that the underinsurance coverage was virtually worthless. They therefore included within their complaint a cause of action under the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Trade Practices Act, Ill. Ann.Stat. ch. 121‘A §§ 261 et seq. (Smith-Hurd Supp.1989).
Glazewski, however, does not directly resolve our question. The language of the statute does not seem to require insurers to issue or offer any underinsurance to drivers who elect minimum uninsured motorist coverage. Such un-derinsurance would not be illusory to drivers who purchase underinsured motorist coverage in an amount greater than the minimum amount of uninsured motorist coverage required by law.
. Of course, we do grant
some,
but not total, deference to the district court’s interpretation of state law.
Instituto Nacional de Comercializacion Agrícola (INDECA) v. Continental Ill. Nat'l Bank & Trust Co„
. Of course, since the court in Overbey addressed an insurance policy predating the July 1, 1983 enactment date, its analysis of post-1983 policies is dicta and does not bind us. It does, however, provide some insight into the court's construction of the statute.
. We do not believe, however, that Krska is so straightforward. The Illinois Appellate Court’s opinion there does not clearly specify whether the motorist opted for the minimum amount of uninsured motorist coverage as required by law *1104 at the time of the original offer. There is no question that he requested additional uninsured and underinsured coverage at a later time, but the court's discussion in Krska of the insurer’s obligations under paragraph 755a-2 may be affected by the amount of the original policy. See Appellants' Reply Brief at 12 & n. 1.
Further, the appellate court reads "sections 143a-2(l) and 143a-2(5) together [to determine] that the defendant was required
to offer
under-insured motorist coverage in an amount equal to the plaintiffs bodily injury liability limit.” 162 III.App.3d at 553,
. See Appellants’ Reply Brief at 7 (quoting Illinois Senate Debate, June 22, 1982 (“Part of the problem is people are not aware that there is underinsurance ... and this obviously is going to make them aware of it because the law provides that they have to have uninsured motorists and included within that policy now if ... if this passes, will be this underinsurance motorist coverage as well. So everybody would be aware of it and the public will be better served and protected-”) (Statement of Sen. D’Arco)).
