OPINION
This case presents an insurance coverage issue courts throughout the country are addressing: Is an insurer obligated to pay a first party claim for the inherent diminished value of an insured vehicle following adequate and complete repair of the damaged vehicle? Two distinct lines of authority have emerged on the issue. Following precedent from this court, we find that under the unambiguous terms of the auto insurance policy, the insurer has no obligation to pay inherent diminished value after adequate and complete repairs. We affirm the trial court’s summary judgment in favor of the insurer.
I. Factual And Procedural Background
Appellant Julia Smither purchased a standard Texas Personal Automobile Insurance Policy from appellee Progressive County Mutual Insurance Company. During the policy period, Smither was involved in a traffic accident that damaged her car. Smither’s car was repaired to its pre-acci-dent condition and to Smither’s full satisfaction. Progressive paid the costs of the repairs less the deductible. Although Smither does not challenge the adequacy or quality of the repairs, she alleges the value of her automobile was diminished as a result of the loss and that Progressive is obligated to pay this diminution in value under the terms of the insurance policy.
Smither filed an individual claim against Progressive as well as a class-action lawsuit as proposed class representative of all similarly-situated Progressive insureds. In her suit, Smither alleged Progressive owed her the difference between the pre-accident value of her insured automobile and its value after being properly and adequately repaired. She claims Progressive is obligated to pay this inherent diminished value because it is a loss covered under her auto insurance policy. Smither filed a motion for partial summary judgment on this coverage issue. A few months later, Progressive filed a cross-motion for summary judgment on the ground that inherent diminished value is *721 not a loss covered under the policy and that it had satisfied its contractual obligations to Smither by paying for the cost of repairs less the deductible. Before deciding whether to certify this suit as a class action, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Progressive and denied Smither’s motion for partial summary judgment.
II.Issues Presented on Appeal
In three issues, Smither contends the trial court erred in granting summary judgment for Progressive and in denying her motion for partial summary judgment. 1 Specifically, she challenges the trial court’s ruling that Progressive is not obligated to pay for the diminished value of her vehicle under the standard Texas Personal Automobile Insurance Policy.
III.STANDARD OP REVIEW
In reviewing a traditional motion for summary judgment, we take as true all evidence favorable to the non-movant, and we make all reasonable inferences in the non-movant’s favor.
Rhone-Poulenc, Inc. v. Steel,
IV.Analysis
There is a split of authority, both in Texas and around the country, on the extent of an insurer’s obligation to pay a first party claim for the diminished value of an insured’s damaged automobile after full, complete, and adequate repairs. We addressed this precise issue in
Carlton v. Trinity Universal Insurance Company,
where we held that inherent diminished value is not recoverable under the standard Texas Personal Automobile Insurance Policy.
Until very recently, this court was the only Texas court to have addressed this precise issue in construing the language of the standard Texas Personal Automobile Insurance Policy. Earlier this year, the Ninth Court of Appeals in Beaumont confronted the identical issue in
Schaefer v. American Manufacturers Mutual Insurance Company
and reached the opposite result, reversing the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the insurance company.
The Beaumont Court of Appeals based its analysis on its half-century-old-case,
Smith v. American Fire & Casualty Company,
It is apparent from a review of diminished value cases that diminished value claims take various forms and can arise under a number of scenarios. For example, diminished value claims can result from improper, faulty, or inferior repairs. 6 Diminished value claims may also arise if the insurer elects to repair the vehicle when it should instead declare it a total loss. 7 Neither the claims in Carlton and Schaefer nor the claim Smither makes in this case involve these types of diminished value claims. The claimants in these cases made no complaint about the adequacy or quality of the repairs, nor did they claim to have suffered loss of vehicle market value due to insurance-claims practices or a failure to provide for proper repairs. Rather, their claims relate solely to inherent or perceived diminished value — that is, the consumer’s perception that a damaged and repaired vehicle is not as valuable as the same vehicle that has never been damaged. This form of diminished value exists regardless of the quality or adequacy of the repair work and is based on the notion that the vehicle will never regain its pre-loss value, even after proper and adequate repair. Even though Schaefer did not involve repair or insurance-related diminished value, the Schaefer court relied on several cases that involved these types of diminished value claims and ultimately based its decision on a “long history of permitting a plaintiff to seek damages for diminished value.” Schaefer, 65 S.W.3d at 808 (citations omitted).
The
Schaefer
court did not undertake a contract analysis or address the meaning of the policy language.
See id.
(noting “none of the cases prior to
Carlton
treated the issues as ‘a matter of law’ ”). In
Carlton,
this court applied a pure contract analysis in deciding whether diminished value was a covered loss under the unambiguous terms of the standard Texas Personal Automobile Insurance Policy. Focusing on the ordinary meaning of the policy language, we held the “repair or replace” limitation of liability under the Texas Personal Automobile Insurance Pol
*724
icy is the amount necessary to return the damaged vehicle to substantially the same physical, operating, and mechanical condition as existed immediately before the loss.
Carlton,
Moreover, we note that since our decision in
Carlton,
several other jurisdictions have addressed the same issue and found
Carlton
persuasive.
See Pritchett v. State Farm Mut. Ins. Co.,
V. Conclusion
Smither cannot recover inherent diminished value under the unambiguous terms of the standard Texas Personal Automobile Insurance Policy as a matter of law.
See Carlton,
Notes
. Because Smither’s motion was a motion for partial summary judgment, the trial court’s ruling on that motion is not before us.
See CU Lloyd’s of Texas v. Feldman,
. Smither's insurance policy covers "direct and accidental loss to [her] covered auto, including its equipment less any applicable deductible shown in the Declarations.” It provides further that Progressive may discharge its liability under the policy by paying for the loss in money or by repairing or replacing damaged or stolen property. Progressive's obligations under the policy, however, are subject to a contractual limitation of liability. This limitation-of-liability provision reads in pertinent part: "Our limit of liability for loss will be the lesser of the: 1. Actual cash value of the stolen or damaged property; 2. Amount necessary to repair or replace the property with other of like kind and quality; or 3. Amount stated in the Declarations of this policy.” Progressive elected the second option, i.e., to pay the ”[a]mount necessary to repair or replace the property with other of like kind and quality.” This is the same language that was at issue in
Carlton. See Carlton,
.The
Schaefer
court relied upon the following cases:
N.W. Nat’l Ins. Co. v. Cope,
.See, e.g., Higgins v. Standard Lloyds,
.See Superior Pontiac Co. v. Queen Ins. Co. of Am.,
.
See, e.g., Am. Std. County Mut. Ins. Co. v. Barbee, 262
S.W.2d 122, 123-24 (Tex.Civ.App.-Fort Worth 1953, no writ),
rav’d on other grounds by Luna v. North Star Dodge Sales, Inc.,
.
See, e.g., Fid. & Cas. Co. of N.Y. v. Underwood,
