MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
NOW bеfore the Court are Defendant, National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pa.’s Motion for Summary Judgment, filed on March 15, 1993, Plaintiffs response to this motion and National Union’s reply to the response. Having considered these filed materials, the summary judgment evidence and the applicable law, the Court *261 determines that National Union’s motion should be, and hereby is, GRANTED.
This ease is a dispute over insurance coverage between, on the one hand, insurers that issued directors and officers liability insurance policies and, on the other, the insured. Plaintiff VHA and one of its subsidiaries, VHA Enterprises, along with certain individual оfficers and directors, were sued by a class of shareholders in a derivative action, hereinafter the “Ryan action,” which ultimately settled. Ryan’s suit was prosecuted with the active assistance of Thomas Reed, a former officer and director of VHA Enterprises. VHA reimbursed its officers and directors for claims against them in the Ryan action and also paid their legal fees. VHA now seeks reimbursement for thе amounts it expended relating to that lawsuit. The total amount sought exceeds $8,000,000.
National Union moves the Court to grant summary judgment in its favor based on the “insured v. insured” exclusion in the policy. This provision states аs follows:
The Insurer shall not be liable to make any payment for Loss in connection with any claim or claims made against the Directors or Officers ... which are brought by any Insured or the Company; or which аre brought by any security holder of the Company whether directly or derivatively, unless such claim(s) is instigated and continued totally independent of, and totally without the solicitation of, or assistance of, or active participation of, or intervention of, any Insured or the Company; provided, however, this exclusion shall not apply to wrongful termination of employment claims brought by a former employee other than a former employee who is or was a Director of the Company....
With this language in mind, National Union points out the following definitions in the policy: “ Tnsured(s)’, or ‘Director(s) or Offi-eer(s)’, mеans any past, present or future duly elected or appointed Directors or Officers of the Company_” The policy defines “company” as the “Named Corporation [VHA] ... and any Subsidiary thereof.” National Union argues that because Reed, a former officer and director of a VHA subsidiary, assisted Ryan, a security holder of the company, in the Ryan action, the insured v. insured exclusion exonеrates it from payment and therefore entitles it to summary judgment. VHA argues that the definition of “insured” in the policy is ambiguous and therefore susceptible of the introduction of extraneous evidence tо explain its meaning: If true, this assertion would mandate the denial of National Union’s motion.
The Court predicates its subject matter jurisdiction on diversity of citizenship, 28 U.S.C. § 1382, and therefore looks to state law аs the rule of decision for substantive matters. 28 U.S.C. § 1652;
Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins,
The movant in a summary judgment context must show the absence of any genuine issue of material fact and entitlement to judgment as a matter of lаw.
Slaughter v. Southern Talc Co.,
Whether the policy’s definition of “insured” is ambiguous is a question of law.
Watkins v. Petro-Search, Inc.,
VHA asserts that National Union’s practice of lifting the definition of “insured” from the policy and inserting it wherever the word “insured” is used in the policy leads to nonsensical rеsults. As an example, VHA leads the Court to the policy’s Section 8, which requires that “[t]he Company or the Insureds shall, as a condition precedent ... give written notice to the Insurer ... of any claim made against the Insureds.” VHA states that
[t]o make any sense of this provision, the global definition of “insured” must be narrowed to include only those directors and officers who have been sued and are seeking coverage under the policy — no other directors or officers would have need to give notice. However, under National Union’s interpretation, all former directors and officers who had not beеn sued and were not seeking coverage would be obligated to give notice because they are insureds. Indeed, since notice is a condition precedent to coverage, the fаilure of all former directors and officers (all of whom are “insureds” according to National Union) to give notice would negate coverage and give National Union another vehicle tо avoid responsibility under its policy.
(Pl.’s Br.Opp’n at 9) (emphasis in original).
However, as National Union notes, VHA’s' exegesis ignores the narrowing effect of the definite article “the” preceding “insured” in its examples concerning Section 8 as well as Section 9 of the policy. Eliding that article, one might reasonably arrive at VHA’s conclusion; yet neither the Court nor the parties may cancel certain words in the contract in ordеr to produce a result different from what would otherwise obtain from the language’s plain meaning. The word “insured” on which VHA focuses in the policy other than in the insured v. insured exclusion makes reasonablе sense in only one way, and it is the same and singular reasonable sense of the definition of “insured” as applied to the insured v. insured exclusion. As National Union explains:
Obviously, the term “the Insured” refers to a specific insured — the one against whom a claim has been made. Section 8 can only reasoTiably be read one way: to impose an obligation to give notice of a *263 claim on the specific past, present or future director or officer against whom the claim has been made, but not on all other persons who are insured by the Policy against whom no claim has bеen made, as Plaintiff suggests. Plaintiffs argument blatantly ignores the fact that Section 8 uses the definite article “the,” and therefore ignores basic English grammar.... Replacing the term “Insureds” with its definition does not also allow Plaintiff to rewrite the rest of Section 8, as Plaintiff does by replacing the definite article “the” with indefinite articles “an” or “any.”
(Def.’s Reply at 3) (emphasis in original).
As Judge Goldberg recognized when the wave of poststrueturalist criticism began to lap interdisciplinarily over its literary basin, “[ujnlike the deconstructionists at the forefront of modern literary criticism, the courts still recognize the possibility of an unambiguous text.”
Ideal Mut. Ins. Co. v. Last Days Evangelical Ass’n,
The parties do not dispute that Reed assisted Ryan in the Ryan action; nor do they dispute that Reed was a former director and officer of a VHA subsidiary as contemplated by the pokey’s language. Because the insured v. insured еxclusion is reasonably susceptible of only one meaning and is therefore unambiguous, National Union has demonstrated the applicability of that exclusion and therefore its entitlement to summary judgment. The Court therefore grants National Union’s motion.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e).
