James Shaw broke both legs and his back, shattered his ankles, and lost one-third of his right heel when he fell from the roof of a building. Because he could no longer work, Shaw submitted a claim to National Union Fire Insurance Company for “permanent total disability” benefits under an insurance policy issued in Florida the previous year. After National Union denied Shaw’s claim, he sued, and National Union removed the case to federal court. 1 The question before us is whether the policy’s definition of permanent total disability unambiguously made dismemberment, blindness, or paralysis a condition of Shaw’s eligibility for benefits.
I
The question here turns on the meaning of the word and in two riders to Shaw’s insurance policy, which promised him monthly and lump-sum benefits if he became “permanently totally disabled.” The riders define that condition in substantively identical ways, and we reproduce the lump-sum rider’s definition in its entirety here:
Permanently Totally Disabled/Permanent Total Disability as used in this rider means:
1. That the Insured has suffered any of the following:
a. loss of both hands or feet; or
b. loss of one hand and one foot; or
c. loss of sight in both eyes; or
d. Hemiplegia;or; or [sic]
e. Paraplegia; or
f. Quadriplegia
“Loss of a hand or foot” means complete severance through or above the wrist or ankle joint. “Loss of sight in both eyes” means total and irrecoverable loss of the entire sight in both eyes.
“Hemiplegia” means the complete and irreversible paralysis of the upper and lower Limbs of the same side of the body. “Limb(s)” means entire arm or entire leg. “Paraplegia” means the complete and irreversible paralysis of both lower Limbs. “Quadriplegia” means the complete and irreversible paralysis of both upper and both lower Limbs, and
2. the Insured is permanently unable to perform the material and substantial duties of any occupation for which he or she is qualified by reason of education, experience or training. However, with respect to an Insuredfor whom an occupational definition of Permanently Totally Disabled/Permanent Total Disability is not appropriate, Permanently Totally Disabled/Permanent Total Disability means, as used in this Rider, that the Insured is permanently unable to engage in any of the usual activities of a person of like age and sex whose health is comparable to that of the Insured immediately prior to the accident; and
3. the Insured is under the supervision of a Physician unless the Insured has reached his or her maximum point of recovery. 2
The and that matters here is the one between numbered paragraphs 1 and 2. Shaw argues that the riders’ punctuation, spacing, and context support a “disjunctive” or “cumulative” reading of that and. In other words, Shaw argues that he was entitled to benefits as long as he satisfied the conditions in either paragraph 1 or paragraphs 2 and 3. By contrast, National Union contends that the and must be read “conjunctively” — in other words, that the policy required Shaw to satisfy the conditions in all three numbered paragraphs. Because Shaw concedes that he suffered none of the injuries listed in paragraph 1, National Union argues that he is ineligible for the policy’s disability benefits.
The district court rejected Shaw’s interpretation of the policy language as “strain[ed]” and granted National Union’s motion for summary judgment.
3
Shaw appeals, arguing that the district court should have construed the policy in favor of coverage because it was ambiguous. We review the district court’s summary judgment
de novo
and interpret the terms of Shaw’s insurance policy according to Florida law.
State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Steinberg,
II
“Under Florida law, insurance contracts are construed according to their plain meaning. Ambiguities are construed against the insurer and in favor of coverage.”
Taurus Holdings, Inc. v. U.S. Fid. & Guar. Co.,
We initially note that National Union’s interpretation of the policy is a reasonable one. Shaw argues that the riders’ suggestion, in paragraph 2, that “an occupational definition” of
permanent total disability
may not always be “appropriate” implies that paragraph 1 contains its own, stand-alone definition of the term. Accordingly, Shaw contends that having satisfied the conditions of paragraphs 2 and 3,
Shaw also argues that National Union’s interpretation would conflict with the monthly rider’s provision for the cessation of benefits payments if “the Insured ceases to be Permanently Totally Disabled.” 5 According to Shaw, because an insured could never cease to be irrevocably blind, irreversibly paralyzed, or an amputee, reading the conditions in all three numbered paragraphs as joint prerequisites to benefits eligibility would render the cessation provision superfluous. But despite the semantic awkwardness of the phrase “eeas[ing] to be Permanently Totally Disabled” (emphasis added), we find Shaw’s argument on this point unpersuasive. Under National Union’s interpretation of the policy, an insured must satisfy the requirements of all three paragraphs, and although a “permanently totally disabled” insured could never regrow a lost arm, he could, in theory, regain the ability to work.
Our task, then, is to decide whether the and in question, read properly in the context of the policy as a whole, is susceptible to more than one reasonable interpretation. In short, can the and between paragraphs 1 and 2 reasonably be read in a way that allows Shaw to qualify for benefits without being blind, dismembered, or paralyzed?
Ill
The parties’ dispute here highlights a recurring problem:
“[E]very
use of ‘and’ or ‘or’ as a conjunction involves
some
risk of ambiguity.” Maurice B. Kirk,
Legal Drafting: The Ambiguity of “And” and “Or” 2
Tex. Tech. L.Rev. 235, 253 (1971). As we have recognized in our cases, “[i]t is an established principle] that ‘the word “or” is frequently construed to mean “and,” and
vice versa,
in order to carry out the evident intent of the parties.’ ”
Noell v. Am. Design, Inc.,
The problem with
and
is that “ehameleonlike, it takes its color from its surroundings.”
Peacock v. Lubbock Compress Co.,
Yet the potential for confusion does not mean that every occurrence of the word and is ambiguous. On the contrary, the context in which the word appears often resolves any superficial uncertainty. In the phrase, “medical and burial expenses,” for example, and is necessarily used severally: because no single expense can be both “medical” and “burial,” interpreting and jointly would make no sense.
The general rule in this circuit— and in Florida — is that “unless the context dictates otherwise, the word ‘and’ is presumed to be used in its ordinary sense, that is, [jointly].”
Am. Bankers Ins. Group v. United States,
For the forfeiture clause to have meaning [if and were read jointly], an employee would first have to be guilty of theft, fraud or embezzlement, he would then have to disclose or release to third parties the employer’s trade secrets, andthen he would have to go to work for a competitor. It would be unreasonable to conclude that an employer, who has provided its employees with benefits in excess of those required by law, would place such an onerous burden on itself with respect to the termination of the benefits.
Id.
at 833. Similarly, in
Peacock v. Lubbock Compress Co.,
We reached the opposite conclusion in
American Bankers,
In light of these authorities, we agree with National Union that the
and
in this case must be read jointly: Shaw cannot be “permanently totally disabled” without suffering one of the injuries listed in paragraph 1. Despite Shaw’s arguments regarding syntax and punctuation, we cannot say the context here “dictates” a several reading of
and. Am. Bankers,
We find each of Shaw’s arguments against this conclusion unavailing. First, he argues that the period at the end of paragraph 1 in the lump-sum rider “establishes the disjunction between Paragraphs 1 and 2.” But paragraph 1 contains a series of sentences separated by periods, and we do not believe that the inclusion of a similar period at the close of the paragraph’s final sentence effects a “disjunctive” break. In addition, because the final period does not appear in the monthly-benefit rider, Shaw’s reading would have the two riders apply in different contexts. We will not assume from minor inconsistencies in punctuation that the parties intended two materially identical provisions of the same insurance policy to apply at different times.
Shaw’s second argument is that we implicitly held in
American Bankers
that the
and
separating two paragraphs in 26 U.S.C. § 4252(b) had a several meaning. The factual premise of this argument is correct, but the inference Shaw draws is not. Section 4252(b) defines
toll telephone service
as (1) a service for which the charge “varies in amount with the distance and elapsed transmission time of each individual communication ... and” (2) a service with a flat, periodic charge for unlimited calls. Because the
and
between subsections (1) and (2) connects two mutually exclusive concepts, we had to read it severally.
See OfficeMax,
Finally, Shaw argues that a joint reading of the
and
between paragraphs 1 and 2 would render National Union’s policy inconsistent with “standard” disability-insurance policies. But this is a red herring; the parties to an agreement are bound by the contract into which they enter, not according to the contractual ob
Because Shaw has not suffered the dismemberment, blindness, or paralysis unambiguously required by his disability-insurance policy, we AFFIRM the summary judgment in National Union’s favor.
Notes
. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 1332(a), 1441(a).
. The monthly-benefit rider's definition o£ permanent total disability differs from that of the lump-sum rider in three minor ways. First, the monthly rider does not contain the lump-sum rider’s typographical errors (";or; or”) in paragraph 1(d). Second, the monthly-benefit rider lacks a period at the end of the last sentence in paragraph 1 (following "Limbs"). Finally, the monthly rider lacks the additional carriage return before the and separating paragraphs 1 and 2.
. In addition to the district court in this case, federal district courts in Texas and Wisconsin have concluded that similar definitions of
permanent total disability
require an insured to satisfy the conditions in all three paragraphs.
Tolbert v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh,
No. 3:08-CV-1112-N (N.D. Tex. June 24, 2009) (unpublished);
Nichols v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh,
. See either rider at paragraph 2: "[WJith respect to an Insured for whom an occupational definition ... is not appropriate, Permanently Totally Disabled/Permanent Total Disability means ... that the Insured is permanently unable to engage in any of the usual activities of a person of like age and sex.
. The text of the relevant provision reads: "The benefit is payable monthly as long as the Insured remains continuously Permanently Totally Disabled due to that Injury, but ceases on the earliest of: (1) the date the Insured ceases to be Permanently Totally Disabled. ...”
. Not all observers have celebrated the frequency of this principle's application.
See MacDonald, v. Pan Am. World Airways, Inc.,
. In
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. The corresponding difficulty with or is that it can be used in both an “inclusive" sense ("A or B [or both]”) and an "exclusive” sense (“A or B [but not both]”). Kirk, supra, at 237-38. Compare the phrase, "if you are a husband or a father, you’ll understand,” with, "you may eat an apple or an orange.” In the first example, the or is probably inclusive (people who are both husbands and fathers will probably understand, too), but in the second, it is probably exclusive (you are probably not allowed to eat both fruits). Note that the inclusive sense of or overlaps with the several sense of and.
. We eschew the parties’ conjunctive-disjunctive dichotomy because of its potential to mislead. The word
and
always serves some "conjunctive” function; the question in a particular context is what other words the
and
is connecting, and how.
Cf. OfficeMax,
. The dispute in the
Auto-Owners
case concerned the scope of a limitation-of-liability clause. The Florida Supreme Court held that the clause was ambiguous, in part because other insurance policies contained different clauses that "clearly and unambiguously” limited insurer liability.
