Tridа Miller, executrix of and heir at law to the estate of Rhonda Bishop, appeals from the district court’s award of summary judgment to State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company (“State Farm”), in this diversity action brought to determine the amount potentially payable pursuant to the underinsured motorist prоvision of an insurance policy which State Farm issued to Bishop. The sole issue is whether the district court was correct when it held that, under Ohio’s choice of law rules, Pennsylvania law applies because the instant ease involves the interpretation of a contract executed in Pennsylvаnia by a Pennsylvania resident. We AFFIRM.
I. BACKGROUND
The parties stipulated to the material facts. Plaintiff Miller is an Ohio resident, and her decedent, Bishop, was a Pennsylvania resident. Bishop purchased an insurance policy for automobile liability coverage from State Farm while residing in Pennsylvania. State Farm, which is liсensed to do business in both Pennsylvania and Ohio and which has its principal place of business in Illinois, agreed to provide Bishop with uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage in exchange for premium payments. Under the policy, State Farm would pay Bishop a limit of $100,000 per person and $300,000 per acсident for “damages for bodily injury an in *824 sured is legally entitled to collect from the owner or driver of an ... underinsured motor vehicle.”
Bishop suffered a wrongful death in 1993 as a result of an automobile collision in Monroe Township, Ohio. The underinsured driver of the other vehicle, an Ohio resident, caused the fatal collision and is not a party to this aсtion. Bishop’s insurance policy with State Farm was in full force and effect on the date of the fatal accident.
After exhausting the tortfeasor’s insurance policy, Miller, as executrix of the estate of Bishop, made an underinsured motorist claim against State Farm. The claim requested all damages which Miller was legally entitled to collect from the tortfeasor. State Farm paid Miller $100,000 pursuant to the “per person” clause of the insurance policy, and claimed that that was the entire amount of the damages for which it was responsible. The parties agreed, however, thаt Miller reserved the right to litigate the question of whether the remaining $200,000 of the “per accident” policy limit was available.
Miller eventually sued State Farm in Ohio state court, alleging that State Farm had wrongfully denied full payment under the policy Bishop had purchased. Miller asserts that, under Ohio law, she is entitlеd to the full $300,000 “per accident” limit of the policy. State Farm removed the case to federal district court on diversity grounds, and Miller then amended her complaint to make it a declaratory judgment action. The parties stipulated that “[a] question has arisen as to whether Ohio law or Pennsylvania law should apply to determine the amount payable under the uninsured/underinsured motorist provisions of the policy.”
The importance of this choice of law question is a matter of money. State Farm notes (and Miller does not dispute) that, under Pennsylvania law, Miller would be entitled only to the $100,000 “per person” limit for Bishop’s wrongful death, while under Ohio law, Miller “would arguably be entitled to the $300,000.00 ‘per accident’ limits.” Br. of Appellee at 9 (emphasis added). Thus, State Farm moved for summary judgment, and the court below granted its motion, finding that, under Ohio choice of law rules, Pennsylvania law controlled the amount of coverаge for which State Farm was liable. This appeal followed.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review.
Summary judgment is appropriate if “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and ... the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(c). When considering an appeal from a district court’s grant of summary judgment, we apрly this same test, and our review is plenary.
E.g., Maddox v. University of Tenn.,
B. Choice of Law.
A federal court sitting in its diversity jurisdiction applies the choice of law rules of the forum state.
E.g., Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg.,
The basis of an action — i.e., whether it is deemed to be a tort ease оr a contract case — determines which of the
Restatement’s
interest-analysis tests an Ohio court must apply. If an action is deemed to be a tort action, section 146 applies, and the law of the state where the injury occurred pre
*825
sumptively controls.
Morgan v. Biro Mfg. Co.,
Thus, the question before us is whether, under Ohio law, tort law or contract law applies when determining an insurance company’s liability pursuant to an underinsured motorist policy. Miller, the exеcutrix, argues that we must apply Ohio tort law to determine the potential damages for which State Farm may be held responsible, because the tort which gave rise to this case occurred in Ohio.
The district court, however, found that it was “asked to decide whose law to apply to determinе the amount of coverage
available
to the insured under State Farm’s insurance policy.” Thus, the court reasoned, this case “sounds in contract, not tort,” because it “involves interpretation of a contract executed in Pennsylvania by a Pennsylvania resident.”
See Fiste v. Atlantic Mut. Ins. Co.,
We agree with the district court’s conclusions that this case, under Ohio law, sounds in contract and that it must, under Ohio choice of law rules, be decided under Pennsylvania law. The Supreme Court of Ohio recently stated, “We recognize that аn action by an insured against an insurance carrier for payment of uninsured or underinsured motorist benefits is a cause of action sounding in contract.”
Miller v. Progressive Casualty Ins. Co.,
We are aware that the Ohio cases in this area evince some confusion. We believe, however, that a close reading of the cаses shows that they do not conflict. Rather, they are distinguishable by virtue of the questions they resolve.
For example, Miller chiefly relies on the case of
Kurent v. Farmers Insurance of Columbus, Inc.,
Conversely, in the instant case, there is no question that Miller is “legally entitled to recover” underinsured motorist benefits under the policy State Farm issued. Miller has already exhausted the tortfeasor’s insurance, and State Farm has paid her what it believes is the full amount due under its policy. There is no need to look to the tort law of the state where the accident occurred, as the
*826
Kurent
court did, to determine whether Miller is “legally entitled to recover” from the tortfeasor and thus is also due underinsured motorist benefits. That substantive tort law question has already been answered in the affirmative.
Cf. Motorists Mut. Ins. Co. v. Howard,
No. 1-95-83,
Moreover, the substantive tort question of the precise amount of damages due Miller is not before us. Were that the question, we would obviously follow
Kurent
and apply Ohio law, because the tort in the instant case occurred in Ohio. As the Ohio Court of Appeals has stated when confronted with cases where the type and amount of damages were at issue, “[T]he measure of damages from an automobile accident is a substantive question to be decided based upon principles of tort law.”
Mayse v. Watson,
No. E-85-8,
The question before us, as heretofore indicated, does not cоncern the measure of damages from the underlying accident; rather, it concerns the limits on the amount of coverage which State Farm must provide under the policy it issued to Bishop. Given that, we agree with the district court that this case is more analogous to the
Fiste
case,
The Fiste court agreed with the insurance company and looked to the law of Ohio, where the insurance contract was made. In so doing, it dealt with the same issue confronting us: whether tort or contract law applied to the case.
Although the triggering event to this cause of action was the automobile accident which occurred in Canada, because Fiste’s cause of action herein is against his own insurer, as to Auto Club’s contractual obligation to Fiste himself, and involves interpretation of a contract executed in Ohio by Ohio residents, this matter sounds in contract and not in tort____
[Pjayment to Fiste under the medical payments section of his policy with Auto Club is not dependent upon the location of the accident or the nationality of the tortfeasor but, instead, is a contractual obligation owed Fiste by Auto Club, and dependent only upon a showing by Fiste that he was involved in an accident and sustained injuries requiring medical treatment.
Id. (citations omitted) (emphases added).
Likewise, we view the instant case as one that sounds in contract and not in tort. This *827 is a suit brought by the insured’s executrix against the insurer. Moreover, the true heart of the matter — i.e., whether to apply the “per person” or “per accident” limit stated in the policy — involves the interpretation of an insurance contract executed in Pennsylvania by a Pennsylvania resident, with a company licensed to do business in Pennsylvania.
We also find guidance in the aforementioned case of
Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co. v. Ferrin,
The threshold issue before the Ohio Supreme Court was whether Ohio or Florida law applied to determine the insurer’s liability. The court held that Florida law applied because (1) the insurance contract was delivеred in Florida, (2) the policy bore the trucking company’s Florida address, and (3) the company employed Ferrin in Florida and sent him from Florida to Michigan to deliver the yacht. Id. Thus, in deciding whether the insurer was liable on the policy, the Ferrin court looked to the law of the state where the
insurance contract was made. This is an entirely different question from the issue of tortfeasor liability presented in the Kurent case, and it is the question analogous to the one presented in the case at bar.
Thus, we agree with the district court that, under
Ferrin
and
Fiste,
Pennsylvania law must be applied to interpret the coverage available in State Farm’s policy in the instant ease.
2
Bishop, a Pennsylvania resident, purchased the policy from State Farm in Pennsylvania. The policy was delivered to her there, and she made her premium payments there. Though the case comes to us because of a “triggering event” that occurred in Ohio,
Fiste,
III. CONCLUSION
Because we agree with the district court’s conclusions that this case sounds in contract and must be decided under Pennsylvania law, we AFFIRM.
Notes
. We note that, in
Nationwide Insurance Co. v. Fiyer,
. Miller argues that
Kurent
impliedly rejected
Ferrin,
but we agree with the district court that this argument lacks merit. The
Kurent
court does not cite
Ferrin,
and Ohio courts have since followed
Ferrin. E.g., Fiste,
