In an insurance market where the most frequent categories of conflict involve coverage questions, the absence in a policy of a provision addressing what happens
*537
when an underlying insurer becomes insolvent is curious, especially since this very issue has required considerable appellate attention lately. See
Northmeadow Tennis Club, Inc.
v.
Northeastern Fire Ins. Co. of Pa.,
On December 19, 1985, John W. MacNeill was felled by a hydraulic liftgate attached to the rear of a truck he was planning to drive. As a result, MacNeill became paraplegic and brought a tort action in the Superior Court in 1987. His wife, Annis MacNeill, joined in the action with a loss of consortium claim. The truck was owned by Metropolitan Leasing, Inc. (Metropolitan), and leased to Casey and Hayes, Inc. (Casey), both named as defendants in the action.
At the time of the accident Metropolitan and Casey were insured under three general liability policies: first, a primary policy issued by Liberty Mutual (Liberty) with limits of $1,000,000; second, an umbrella or excess policy issued by Integrity Insurance Company (Integrity) with coverage between $1,000,000 and $11,000,000; and third, an excess insurance policy issued by Pacific Employers Insurance Company (Pacific) for the layer of liability between $11,000,000 and $21,000,000. While the underlying case against Metropolitan and Casey was pending, the second-level excess insurer, Integrity, became insolvent, opening the question whether Pacific’s third-level excess coverage “drops down,” i.e., provides coverage for Metropolitan and Casey in the event the base policy of $1,000,000 becomes inadequate to cover their potential exposure.
Metropolitan and Casey brought a declaratory judgment action (G. L. c. 231 A) to establish the liability of the third-level carrier, Pacific. Cross motions for summary judgment were filed in October 1991. After a hearing, in January 1992, a Superior Court judge determined that language in
*538
Pacific’s policy created an ambiguity along the lines of the policy analyzed in
Northmeadow,
However, the last judicial words on the subject had not been written. Shortly after the judge’s decision in the instant case, the Supreme Judicial Court, in
Vickodil
v.
Lexington Ins. Co.,
The ambiguity, as perceived by the judge, is described in her memorandum:
“The first document which must be examined is Pacific’s Certificate of Excess Insurance (‘the Certificate’), which does not expressly address the consequences of the insolvency of the primary insurer. Item 5 of the certificate identifies Integrity as the primary carrier which is providing $10,000,000 (umbrella liability) in primary insurance. Item 6 describes excess insurance as $10,000,000. The certificate contains the following relevant provisions:
‘B. NOW, this certificate is to indemnify the Insured in accordance with the applicable insuring agreements, exclusions and conditions of the primary insurance for excess loss as specified in Item 6 (Description of Excess Insurance) of the declarations.
*539 ‘F. This certificate may be cancelled by the Insured by surrender thereof to [Pacific] or any of its authorized agents, or by mailing to [Pacific] written notice stating when thereafter such cancellation shall be effective, it being agreed, however, that in the event of cancellation or termination of the primary insurance, this certificate, to the extent of such cancellation or termination, shall cease to apply at the same time without notice to the Insured.' (emphasis added).
“Paragraph F is the only portion of the Certificate to address the obligation of the excess insurer to the extent of the absence of the primary insurance. It provides that the excess insurance shall ‘cease to apply’ in the event of cancellation or termination ‘to the extent of such cancellation or termination.’ Although the certificate does not define these terms, the usual and ordinary meaning of the terms cancellation and termination does not encompass absence of insurance coverage due to insolvency. . . .”
We learn from the
Vickodil
case that a mere failure of the excess policy to deal with the consequences of insolvency does not, by itself, create ambiguity.
Vickodil, supra
at 135. Rather, the specific language of the policy provisions bearing on the subject should determine whether ambiguity exists. See
Massachusetts Insurers Insolvency Fund
v.
Continental Cas. Co.,
1.
Paragraph F of the Pacific policy.
Paragraph F of Pacific’s “Certificate of Excess Insurance” is the only section of the Pacific policy which speaks to the obligation of the excess insurer in the absence of the second-level carrier. Metropolitan and Casey compare the Paragraph F language to the language of the excess insurance policies quoted in
Massachusetts Insurers Insolvency Fund
v.
Continental Cas. Co.,
We conclude that the policies in those cases contain language unlike the policy at issue in this case. In
Massachusetts Insurers Insolvency Fund
v.
Continental Cas. Co.,
In the
Lincoln
policy, quoted in the margin, postoccurrence events affected the policy’s excess coverage lower limit.
Gulezian
v.
Lincoln Ins.,
Taken out of context, the insureds’ reading of these two cases is plausible. When, however, the policy provisions are compared, we think that Pacific’s policy certificate cannot reasonably be construed to provide for excess coverage in amounts different from those specifically stated on the schedules. See
Vickodil
v.
Lexington Ins. Co.,
Furthermore, the Pacific policy contained no “drop down” provision, in contrast to the Continental and Lincoln policies which had ambiguous “drop down” provisions. This distinction is "fatal to the insureds’ argument. Although the meaning of the clause: “to the extent of such termination or cancellation,” is unclear, the subsequent modifying phrase, “shall cease to apply,” contemplates a loss of excess coverage upon certain conditions subsequent, not an extension of excess coverage into the realm of the scheduled underlying insurers. 4 The language may be imprecise but it is clear that the coverage does not “drop down,” nor is it otherwise affected by a second-level insurer’s insolvency.
*542
2.
Excess insurance description.
In
Vickodil
v.
Lexington Ins. Co.,
The Vickodils, who sought excess coverage under the Lexington policy, argued unsuccessfully that the ambiguity was created by the descriptive words attached to the word “excess” (“of the total limits of all Underlying Insurance”). They contended that this phrase meant that if the underlying insurance dropped to zero, the excess insurance would cover the entire loss. The court rejected this interpretation. Id. at 135.
By comparison, because there is no clause in the Pacific certificate modifying the words “excess loss,” that language alone cannot avail the insureds. The unadorned words “excess loss,” cannot be construed to mean that the coverage will drop down.
*543 3. Following form language. We mention briefly one other argument made by Metropolitan and Casey. They contend that because the Pacific policy “follows form” 6 to Integrity’s second-level excess policy, and that because, the Integrity policy is ambiguous and would, therefore, drop down in the event of insolvency of the primary insurer, the Pacific policy should also drop down into the place of the Integrity policy.
Pacific, on the other hand, contends that the “following form” language means only that the policy covers the same risks as the underlying insurer, and has nothing to do with the excess policy’s lower limits or the events which trigger its applicability.
We need only look to the “following form” provision of the Pacific certificate to determine the effect that language may have on Pacific’s liability. Paragraph B of the Pacific certificate, the “following form” clause, provides, “NOW, this certificate is to indemnify the Insured in accordance with the applicable insuring agreements, exclusions and conditions of the primary insurance for excess loss as specified in Item 6 . . . of the declarations” (emphasis added). Because of the insolvency, the Integrity policy no longer has any effect and cannot be invoked to provide coverage. We do not think this translates into an applicable insuring agreement. The potential ambiguity of the Integrity policy notwithstanding, its form is not followed with regard to the “drop down” provision under the express terms of the Pacific policy. 7
*544 Accordingly, the judgment is reversed. A new judgment is to enter declaring that Pacific’s coverage does not drop down to fill the void created by Integrity’s insolvency.
So ordered.
Notes
The Continental policy construed in
Massachusetts Insurers Insolvency Fund
v.
Continental Cas. Co..
In relevant part, the Lincoln policy in
Gulezian
v.
Lincoln Ins. Co.,
This clause is more like a “following form” clause than a “drop down” clause. It anticipates the underlying insurers terminating or cancelling all coverage, or just some type or aspect of coverage. The Pacific contract would follow that form, and cancel or terminate “to the [same] extent” as the underlying insurers. See n.6 infra.
The policy in
Vickodil
v.
Lexington Ins. Co.,
A policy which “follows form” “provide [s] coverage in accordance with the terms and provisions of the . . . primary [or underlying] policy.”
Industrial Risk Insurers
v.
New Orleans Pub. Serv., Inc.,
At best, if the Pacific “following form” clause did incorporate the “drop down” ambiguity of the Integrity policy, the Pacific coverage would drop down to the first level, not the second level. Cf.
Armstrong World Indus., Inc.
v.
Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.,
