OPINION OF THE COURT
This appeal concerns the legal status under Pennsylvania law of an insurance policy’s limitations on underinsured motorist coverage. The district court, after denying plaintiffs motion to dismiss a counterclaim for declaratory relief, entered an order granting summary judgment in favor of the defendant insurance company. We will affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Appellant Kevin Myers was a passenger in an automobile owned and operated by Michael Joniec when that vehicle was involved in a single car collision on July 5, 1985. As a result, Myers sustained severe injuries. Prior to the collision, Joniec had been issued an automobile insurance policy by appellee State Farm Insurance Company (“State Farm”). This policy provided liability and underinsurance coverage, each in the amount of $15,000 for the claims of any one person arising out of any accident and $30,000 for injuries sustained by two or more individuals in any one accident. As a passenger, Myers was an “insured” under the terms of the policy. He was also an insured under a policy issued by Metropolitan Insurance Company, which contained first party medical coverage and underinsured motor vehicle coverage.
State Farm paid the full $15,000 in liability coverage to Myers, 1 but it refused to pay his claim for underinsurance benefits, arguing that such a claim was precluded by the terms of the policy. Thereafter, Myers commenced an action in the Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County on July 9, 1986 by filing a petition for the appointment of arbitrators. State Farm responded by petitioning to remove Myers’s action to the district court. This petition, which was based on diversity of citizenship between Myers and State Farm, was granted. Thereafter, Myers filed a motion to remand his action to state court. The district court denied this motion.
On October 8, 1986, State Farm filed an answer to Myers’s petition for the appointment of arbitrators and a counterclaim seeking a declaratory judgment that State Farm was not obligated under the policy to pay Myers’s claim for underinsurance benefits. Myers moved to dismiss the counterclaim on October 16, 1986. He alleged that State Farm had failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted because the insurance policy provided for arbitration rather than judicial resolution of Myers’s claims for benefits under the policy.
Although Myers had not answered the counterclaim, State Farm filed a motion for summary judgment on October 31, 1986, in compliance with the district court’s directive that all motions for summary judg
II. DIVERSITY JURISDICTION
We begin by addressing Myers’s claim that there is no diversity of citizenship jurisdiction pursuant to the provisions of 28 U.S.C. § 1332(c) (1982).
2
As the district court properly determined, this lawsuit is not a direct action within the meaning of section 1332(c). Myers, as an injured third party, brings this suit based on State Farm’s failure to settle within the policy limits and not, as contemplated by section 1332(c), as a result of State Farm’s status as “payor of a judgment based on the negligence of one of its insureds.”
Velez v. Crown Life Ins. Co.,
III. ARBITRABILITY
Myers also argues that the district court misconstrued the insurance contract when it granted State Farm’s summary judgment motion rather than directing the parties to submit this matter to arbitration pursuant to the arbitration provision of the insurance policy. 4 State Farm claims in response that the plain language of this clause limits its applicability to disagreements concerning fault and amount, and that it does not mandate arbitration of disputes over coverage.
State Farm’s position is correct. It is well-settled law in Pennsylvania that,
when a party to an agreement seeks to enjoin the other from proceeding to arbitration, judicial inquiry is limited to the question of (1) whether an agreement to arbitrate was entered into and (2) whether the dispute involved comes within the ambit of the arbitration provision.
[t]he Pennsylvania Supreme Court has held that[,] although the parties to an arbitration agreement must submit a dispute within the scope of that agreement to an arbitration panel, “[t]he issue of whether [a] dispute is one that is covered by the terms of the arbitration agreement is one for the court to determine.” 5
Id.
at 691 (quoting
Women’s Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals v. Savage,
IV. PENNSYLVANIA INSURANCE LAW
In granting summary judgment in favor of State Farm, the district court determined that, under Pennsylvania law, a guest passenger who is an insured under the terms of a motor vehicle insurance policy applicable to the host vehicle and who sustains injuries in a single car collision may not recover the policy’s underin-surance benefits when the passenger has already received the limits of the liability coverage under that same policy. Myers contends that this is an improper construction of Pennsylvania law.
At the time the district court rendered its decision, no Pennsylvania appellate court had addressed this precise legal question. After we heard argument in this case, however, the Pennsylvania Superior Court directly resolved this issue in the same way that the district court had.
See Wolgemuth v. Harleysville Mut. Ins. Co.,
— Pa.Super. —,
Myers concedes that the district court properly concluded that the terms of the State Farm policy preclude his recovery of underinsurance benefits. 7 The State Farm policy defines an “underinsured motor vehicle” as
a land motor vehicle ... the ownership, maintenance or use of which is insured or bonded for bodily injury liability at the time of the accident; and ... whose limits of liability for bodily injury liability ... are less than the amount of the insured’s damages; or ... have been reduced by payments to persons other than the insured to less than the amount of the insured’s damages.
Appendix at A-66 (original emphases). The policy also provides that an underin-sured motor vehicle “does not include a land motor vehicle ... insured under the liability coverage of this policy....” Id. Since Joniec’s vehicle was insured under the liability coverage of the State Farm policy, it was not an underinsured motor vehicle that could create for Myers a legal entitlement to underinsured benefits. Myers argues, however, that the exclusionary language in the State Farm insurance policy violates public policy because it is more restrictive in scope than is the Pennsylvania Motor Vehicle Financial Responsibility Law, 75 Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. §§ 1701-36 (Purdon 1984).
Wolgemuth
concluded that “[t]his argument reflects a misapprehension of the nature of underinsured motorist coverage.” — Pa.Super. at —,
[t]he legislature, in establishing $15,-000/$30,000 as the minimum permissible liability coverage, unquestionably realized that in many instances an accident victim would be insufficiently compensated by the tortfeasor even though the tortfeasor was insured. But the legislature, with the passage of the Motor Vehicle Financial Responsibility Law, did ensure that every insured individual who is injured by a negligent, underinsured motorist, will have recourse to at least $15,000 of underinsured motorist benefits either (1) pursuant to the policy of insurance applicable to the vehicle in which the individual was a passenger (if the vehicle was not at fault), or (2) pursuant to a policy of insurance under which the injured claimant is an insured person.
— Pa.Super. at —,
Guided by the reasoning of the unanimous
en banc
Superior Court opinion in
Wolgemuth,
which we predict the Pennsylvania Supreme Court will follow, we conclude that the exclusion does not improperly limit the scope of the underinsurance coverage mandated by Pennsylvania law. Rather, the exclusion in the State Farm policy achieves the purposes of Pennsylvania’s Motor Vehicle Financial Responsibility Law by requiring Myers, once he had recovered up to the limits on the negligent vehicle’s liability coverage, to obtain any underinsurance benefits pursuant to some other policy that insured him. “To permit appellant to recover underinsured motorist benefits from appellee ... would be to convert essentially first party underinsured motorist coverage into third party liability coverage.”
Wolgemuth,
— Pa.Super. at —,
V. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. In exchange for payment of this liability claim, Myers executed a release discharging Joniec from any claims arising from the accident. State Farm was also part of this exchange. It agreed not to raise the release as a defense to Myers's claims against it for either underinsured motor vehicle benefits or first party medical benefits.
. This statute provides that,
[f]or the purposes of this section and section 1441 of this title, a corporation shall be deemed a citizen of any State by which it has been incorporated and of the State where it has its principal place of business: Provided further, That in any direct action against the insurer of a policy or contract of liability insurance, whether incorporated or unincorporated, to which action the insured is not joined as a party-defendant, such insurer shall be deemed a citizen of the State of which the insured is a citizen, as well as of any State by which the insurer has been incorporated and of the State where it has its principal place of business.
28 U.S.C. § 1332(c) (1982) (original emphases).
. In Velez, the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit noted that a legislative report pertaining to the enactment of section 1332(c) indicates
that Congress enacted this amendment specifically to eliminate from diversity jurisdiction tort claims in which both parties are local residents, but, which under a state direct action statute, are brought against a foreign insurance company without joining the local insured as a defendant. [White v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty,356 F.2d 746 ,] 747 [ (1st Cir.1966) ].... "The report then makes clear that the words ‘direct action’ were used [in section 1332(c) ] to refer to statutes such as those in Louisiana and Wisconsin which allow a party injured by the negligence of an insured to pursue his right of action against the insurer alone.” Id. at 747-48.
Velez,
.The arbitration clause addressed the issue of
Deciding Fault and Amount[.]
Two questions must be decided by agreement between the insured and us:
1. Is the insured legally entitled to collect damages from the owner or driver of the ... underinsured motor vehicle; and
2. If so, in what amount?
If there is no agreement, these questions shall be. decided by arbitration at the request of the insured or us. The Pennsylvania Uniform Arbitration Act, as amended from time to time, shall apply.
Appendix (“App.”) at A-66 (original emphases).
. In
Wetherill,
we concluded that the automobile involved in the collision was not an "uninsured vehicle” within the meaning of the policy and, therefore, that there was no basis to compel arbitration.
. We reject Myers's argument that summary judgment was inappropriate because the actual monetary value of his claim is undetermined. The amount of damages he may have suffered is not a fact material to the issue of coverage. It thus cannot defeat entry of summary judgment. Moreover, his failure to file an answer to State Farm’s counterclaim within 20 days from the filing of the claim does not preclude summary judgment. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(a).
. The State Farm policy provides underinsured motorist coverage as follows:
We will pay damages for bodily injury an insured is legally entitled to collect from the owner or driver of ... an underinsured motor vehicle. The bodily injury rtiust be caused by accident arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of ... an underinsured motor vehicle.
App. at A-65 (original emphases). The policy defines an insured, inter alia, as "any other person while occupying ... your car_” Id. at A-66 (original emphases).
. The Act defines the term underinsured motor vehicle as a "motor vehicle for which the limits of available liability insurance and self-insurance are insufficient to pay losses and damages.” 75 Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. § 1702 (Purdon 1984).
