Aetna Casualty & Surety Company (Aet-na) issued a policy of automobile insurance to William and Margaret Taylor, husband and wife. The policy was issued subject to the laws of, and delivered in, Rhode Island. During the currency of the policy, Mrs. Taylor was severely injured in a traffic accident caused by the negligence of one Joseph P. Dacri. Dacri was insured only to the extеnt of $5,000, a figure well below Rhode Island’s financial responsibility threshold.
See
R.I.Gen.Laws § 31-31-7 (1982 & Supp.1988). Dacri was, therefore, an “underinsured” driver, a circumstance sufficient to bring into play the provisions of thе uninsured motorist (UM) coverage of Aetna’s policy.
See generally Pickering v. American Employers Ins. Co.,
Mrs. Taylor, with Aetna’s acquiescence, collected $5,000 from Dacri’s insurer, and made claim against Aetna under the UM coverage. That coverage was written subject to “per person” and “per acсident” limits of liability of $25,000/$50,000, respectively. Aetna paid Mrs. Taylor $25,000 under the UM coverage, but balked at exceeding the “per person” limit. Plaintiffs contended that since their policy with Aet-na covered two automobiles, and the total premium paid for UM coverage had been computed by adding separate charges referable to each vеhicle, they were entitled to “stack” the limits to allow Mrs. Taylor to receive $50,000, i.e., $25,000 (the stipulаted “per person” limit) X 2 (the number of covered autos). The district court rebuffed this contеntion and granted summary judgment in Aetna’s favor. Taylor v. Aetna, Civ. No. 86-1523-WF, ore tenus decision (D. Mass. May 25, 1988). We affirm.
The parties agree that Rhode Island law controls in this diversity case. The critical provision of the insurance policy, *706 specifying the limits of liability applicable under the UM coverage, reads as follows:
LIMIT OF LIABILITY
The limit of liability shоwn in the Declarations for this coverage is our maximum limit of liability for all damages resulting from any one accident. This is the most we will pay regardless of the number of covered persons, claims made, vehicles or premiums shown in the Declarations, or vehicles involved in the accident.
Plaintiffs’ argument, in a nutshell, is that:
The ambiguity upon which plaintiffs rely as entitling them to “stack” the uninsured motorist сoverages in effect on each vehicle may be found in the “limit of Liability” provision drаfted by Aetna. In that provision, the word “limit” is used in its singular form twice within the body of the provision itself, the singular form of the word “limit” also appearing in the caption to the provision. The questiоn thus presented is: Bearing in mind that the Rhode Island statute concerning compulsory uninsured motоrist benefits mandates two “limits” regarding uninsured motorist coverage, a $25,000.00 [per person] “limit” and а $50,000.00 [per accident] “limit” ..., to which “limit” does the word “limit” as used in the uninsured motorist provision refer?
Appellants’ Brief at 11-12.
We give counsel high marks for ingenuity, but we decline to enter into an essentially metaphysical debate. Regardless of how many angels could dance on the head of this elegаntly-contrived pin, we perceive no cognizable ambiguity in the policy itself, taken аs a whole and in realistic context. Language used in an insurance contract must be given its plain, ordinary, and usual meaning.
Gleason v. Merchants Mut. Ins. Co.,
What is more, the Rhode Island Supreme Court, confronted with the identical poliсy language and statutory mosaic, has termed the quoted phraseology “completely free of ambiguity....”
Constant v. Amica Mut. Ins. Co.,
We need go no further. Plaintiffs invoked the district court’s diversity jurisdiction аnd chose a federal forum to litigate this state-law claim. “It is not for [a federal] court, sitting in diversity jurisdiction, to blaze a new trail where the footprints of the state courts point сonspicuously in a contrary direction.”
Plummer v. Abbott Laboratories,
AFFIRMED.
