State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company (“State Farm”) appeals the district court’s award of $10,000 to Jewel Welborn for damages arising from a car accident. State Farm argues that only $5,000 of Uninsured Motor Vehicle (“UM”) coverage is owed because of a prior payment to Welborn under her Medical Payment (“Med Pay”) coverage. For the following reasons, we reverse the district court.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Welborn, a citizen of Mississippi, filed suit against Hilda Watkins, a citizen of Mississippi, in Mississippi state court on September 16, 2002. Welborn later amended the complaint to include State Farm, a corporate citizen of Illinois, as a defendant. Welborn settled her claims with Watkins, receiving $10,000 from Watkins’s insurance company. State Farm also paid Welborn $5,000 under her Med Pay coverage for her medical expenses. *687 After Watkins’s dismissal from the suit, State Farm removed the case to federal court. A jury determined that Welborn’s damages from the accident totaled $20,000. The trial court entered a final judgment against State Farm, Welborn’s UM carrier, in the amount of $10,000, declining to reduce the amount by the $5,000 that State Farm had previously paid. State Farm appeals, contending that Welborn should only recover $5,000 in UM payments.
II. DISCUSSION
Our review of the district court’s determination of Mississippi law is de novo.
Am. Reliable Ins. Co. v. Navratil,
The question in this case is whether a provision that allows an insurance company to avoid double payment of medical expenses under a UM policy is enforceable in Mississippi. The Mississippi Supreme Court has not directly addressed this question. In
Tucker v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.,
The State Farm provision at issue here operates the same way. Welborn’s State Farm policy included up to $300,000 of stacked UM coverage and $5,000 of Med Pay coverage. If Welborn’s damages had been assessed at $307,000, she would be entitled to recover the full limits of her UM policy under the provision at issue in this case. Even once the $5,000 of expenses covered by the Med Pay benefits were deducted, Welborn would still have $302,000 worth of damages, entitling her under both the provision and Mississippi law to the full amount of her UM policy. Here, State Farm merely argues that since Welborn is only entitled to $20,000 in damages, that is all she should get. Under the district court’s judgment as it currently stands, Welborn recovers $25,000, a $5,000 windfall. We are bound by Tuckers assessment of the law of Mississippi that State Farm’s provision preventing this windfall is valid, absent any intervening Mississippi case law or statutory amendments.
There are three cases that arguably address issues of law similar enough to affect the outcome of this case:
Talbot v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
The insured argues strongly that
Garri-ga
renders
Tucker
void, but we disagree. In
Garriga,
the Mississippi Supreme Court held that a provision requiring offset of benefits received from workers’ compensation was unenforceable under Mississippi law.
The clause at issue here does not operate the same way. The clause provides that “[n]o person for whom medical expenses are payable under this coverage shall recover more than once for the same medical expense under this or similar vehicle insurance.” (emphasis added). The purpose of this clause is to limit the amount of an insured’s damages to the amount of damage that is actually suffered. Here, Welborn was adjudged to have $20,000 worth of damages. She had already received $15,000 from other sources, including $5,000 from State Farm for medical expenses. This clause would not operate to deny Welborn the limits of her UM policy if her damages had been high enough; instead, it only operates to prevent a double payment for exactly the same damages. This is unlike the provision in Garriga which provided that workers’ compensation benefits would always be deducted from the UM benefits regardless of the damages sustained by the insured. Therefore, Garriga does not overturn Tucker for the provision at issue in this case.
Finally, the district court also relied on
Earnest,
which emphasized that the “use of offset provisions to escape statutory minimum levels of UM coverage” is not allowed under Mississippi law.
III. CONCLUSION
We reverse the district court and order that judgment be entered against State Farm in the amount of $5,000.
