OPINION OF THE COURT
This matter arises out of a dispute over whether a policy for life insurance was in force upon the death of James West, Jr. The insurer, Appellee Lincoln Benefit Life Company (“Lincoln Benefit”), argues that Mr. West’s policy had lapsed for nonpayment of premiums and had not been reinstated. Because the policy was not in force at the time of Mr. West’s death, Lincoln Benefit submits, it is not obligated to pay benefits under the policy terms. Appellant Patricia West, James West’s wife and beneficiary of the policy, argues that Pennsylvania law imposed a temporary contract of insurance when, after notice of lapse, she sent an application for reinstatement and payment of overdue premiums. For the reasons that follow, we agree with Lincoln Benefit and will affirm summary judgment in its favor.
I.
On April 4, 1998, Mr. West obtained a life insurance policy from Allstate Insurance Company. On the application for the policy, he stated that he was taking medicine for high blood pressure. After medical testing or examination by Allstate, the
The Policy terms are as follows: the insured must remit a quarterly payment of $228.51 to remain insured. If a premium payment is not received by its due date, a grace period of sixty-one days goes into effect. At the end of sixty-one days, if the premium is still outstanding, the Policy is terminated. After termination but before the death of the insured, however, the Policy may be reinstated provided that the insured: 1) requests reinstatement within five years of the date that the Policy entered the grace period; 2) gives Lincoln Benefit “the proof [it] require[s] that the insured is still insurable” in the payment class under which the Policy was issued; 3) pays an amount large enough to cover the unpaid monthly deductions for the grace period; 4) makes a payment sufficient to keep the policy in force for three subsequent policy months; and 5) pays or asks Lincoln Benefit to reinstate any outstanding loan, with interest. (R. at 60a.)
Lincoln Benefit addressed all correspondence to Mr. West at his home address. Mr. West would open the mail addressed to him, then give Mrs. West any mail that required a response, including bills and notices of payment due issued by Lincoln Benefit. Mrs. West would respond or write a check for payment, as appropriate, and maintain the file of insurance documents. Mrs. West recalled two occasions when Mr. West gave her a notice from Lincoln Benefit that the premium payment was overdue and coverage would terminate unless payment was made by a particular date. Both times she sent a check immediately to continue the policy in force. She saw only the correspondence from Lincoln Benefit that Mr. West gave to her. She does not know if there were letters or bills from Lincoln Benefit sent to her husband that he did not then pass on to her. The Wests paid all premiums due through February 17, 2004.
On April 1, 2004, Lincoln Benefit sent Mr. West a reminder that his next premium was due on May 1, 2004. On May 3, 2004, because it had not received payment, Lincoln Benefit sent Mr. West a letter informing him that the Policy had entered the grace period. His Policy would terminate on July 3, 2004 if the premium was not received on or before that date. On May 11, 2004, Lincoln Benefit sent Mr. West a second notice that his May premium was due. 1
Mrs. West recalls having read only the first sentence of the second paragraph of the letter, “[t]o continue your valuable coverage, complete the Application for Reinstatement form on the back and return it with your payment of $228.51.” She interpreted it to mean.that if she filled out the form and sent it to Lincoln Benefit with payment, Mr. West’s insurance would be reinstated. Mrs. West did not read, or does ■ not remember reading, any of the language in the letter or the application stating that underwriting approval was required before reinstatement would be effective.
The application asked ten questions regarding the applicant’s medical history. Mrs. West filled out the application on Mr. West’s behalf. She answered nine questions in the negative, indicating that Mr. West had' no medical issues relating to those questions. She answered “yes” and “no” to one question — whether, in the past ten years or during the time Mr. West was insured under the Policy, he had been “diagnosed with, sought or received treatment or advice for: heart attack, disease of coronary arteries or other blood vessels, other heart disorder, high blood pressure, diabetes or stroke.” (Id.) In the blank provided for an explanation of “full details, including diagnosis, severity, treatment, name and address of doctors, hospitals, and clinics,” she wrote “controlled with medication.” (Id.) She answered “yes” because Mr. West still had the high blood pressure disclosed on his initial application for life insurance with Allstate. She knew Mr. West to be in good health because he was taking medication to control his blood pressure and he had recently passed a physical exam with no medical problems. Thus, she believed that Lincoln Benefit would approve the application for reinstatement immediately upon receipt of the application and payment.
Lincoln Benefit received the application for reinstatement on July 15, 2004, along with Mr. West’s check for $228.51. On July 19, 2004, Lincoln Benefit deposited the check pursuant to its standard .practice.
Mr. West died on July 24, 2004, and Lincoln Benefit received notice of his death two days later. The Underwriting Department had not completed its review of the application and had not made a decision on whether to reinstate his Policy. Because Lincoln Benefit did not consider Mr. West’s Policy to be in effect at the time of his death, on July 30, 2004, the company denied Mrs. West’s claim for payment of benefits and refunded the premium payment of $228.51 that had accompanied the application for reinstatement.
II.
The District Court had subject matter jurisdiction to hear this claim pursuant to
Because subject matter jurisdiction is based on diversity of citizenship, we look to the substantive law of Pennsylvania to determine the rights and obligations of the parties.
Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins,
III.
The facts of this case implicate a specific area of insurance law — reinstatement of a lapsed policy of life insurance — and general principles of insurance law as declared by the Pennsylvania courts. We will address each paradigm in turn.
A. The Law of Reinstatement
Pennsylvania’s Insurance Department Act of 1921 was enacted to protect the insurance-buying public.
Collister v. Nationwide Life Ins. Co.,
[T]he holder of a policy shall be entitled to have the policy reinstated, upon written application therefor, [1] at any time within three years from the date of default in premium payments, unless the policy has been duly surrendered or the extension period expired, [2] upon the production of evidence of insurability satisfactory to the company, ... [3] payment of all overdue premiums with interest at a rate to be specified in the policy ... and [4] the payment of any other indebtedness to the company upon said policy with interest....
§ 510(k).
The conjunctive phrasing of § 510(k) makes it clear that each requirement must be satisfied — mere payment of overdue premiums is not sufficient to effect reinstatement.
Fisher v. Am. Nat’l Ins. Co.,
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court was presented with an opportunity to interpret the meaning of “evidence of insurability satisfactory to the insurer” in
Riebel.
A man applied for life insurance and received a policy.
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court held that the insurer was clearly within its rights to deny reinstatement under the statutory predecessor to § 510(k), the insurance policy, and the application for reinstatement, when no satisfactory evidence of the insurability of the lapsed insured was provided.
2
Id.; see
Best,
supra,
As demonstrated by
Riebel,
evidence of insurability satisfactory to the company must, in fact, be satisfactory to the company. If this evidence is not provided, or is not satisfactory, the insurer need not reinstate.
Id.; Stager,
The method of proof of insurability may vary. Insurers often rely initially on forms to provide evidence of insurability. These forms require the insured or an examining physician to answer questions about the insured’s health.
See Stager,
B. Subsequent Developments in Insurance Law
In the late 1970s, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court issued decisions that demonstrated its consumer-oriented approach to insurance law by allowing the expectations of the insured rather than the plain terms of a policy to control insurance disputes. None of these decisions involved reinstatement of a lapsed policy; none purport to interpret or modify the law governing reinstatement described supra.
In
Rempel v. Nationwide Life Insurance Co., Inc.,
A year later, in
Collister,
the Pennsylvania Supreme Court considered the question of whether a temporary contract of insurance arose when a proposed insured submitted a new application for insurance and contemporaneously paid his first premium.
The Court held that “the proper resolution of questions such as that presented by the instant appeal depends upon an analysis of the totality of the transaction involved.” Id. at 1353. It further held that
[i]n situations where the circumstances of the transaction do not indicate that the insurer intended to provide interim insurance, but nevertheless show that the insurer accepted payment of the first premium at the time it took the application, it is then up to the insurer to establish by clear and convincing evidence that the consumer had no reasonable basis for believing that he or she was purchasing immediate insurance coverage.
Id. Ultimately, courts were directed to “examine the dynamics of the insurance transaction to ascertain what are the reasonable expectations of the consumer” and give effect to those expectations, regardless of the ambiguity or clarity of the language of an insurance contract. Id. at 1353-54.
Following
Rempel
and
Collister,
however, insurance case law appeared to diverge under two subsequent decisions by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court:
Standard Venetian Blind Co. v. American Empire Insurance Co.,
manifested by the language of the written instrument. Where a provision of a policy is ambiguous, the policy provision is to be construed in favor of the insured and against the insurer, the drafter of the agreement. Where, however, the language of the contract is clear and unambiguous, a court is required to give effect to that language. In the absence of proof of fraud, failure to read the contract is an unavailing excuse or defense and cannot justify an avoidance, modification or nullification of the contract or any provision thereof.
Standard Venetian Blind,
The facts of that case, however, did not permit such deviation because the policy limitation at issue was clearly worded and conspicuously displayed. Id. The insured, upon application for the policy, requested “full coverage on everything we have.” Id. at 565. The policy contained standard exclusion provisions, which were clear, unambiguous, and not contrary to law. Id. at 566. The insurer did not describe the limitations of the policy, but neither did it misrepresent that the policy had no exclusions or that the exclusions were anything other than what they purported to be. See id. To allow the insured “to avoid application of the clear and unambiguous policy limitations in these circumstances would [have required the Supreme Court] to rewrite the parties’ written contract,” which the court would not do. Id. Instead, it sought to “accord proper significance to the written contract, which has historically been the true test of parties’ intentions.” Id. at 567.
By contrast,
Tonkovic
focused on the reasonable expectations of the insured rather than the clear language of the contested policy because the insured specifically requested disability insurance, but was issued a policy that did not include disability insurance.
The cases that follow reflect the
Tonkovic
distinction. In the absence of an affirmative misrepresentation by the insurer or its agent about the contents of the policy, the plain and unambiguous terms of
An analysis of the reasonable expectations of the insured is rightly employed when a claimant alleges that the insurer engaged in deceptive practices toward the insured, either to misrepresent the terms of the policy or to issue a policy different than the one requested by the insured and promised by the insurer.
Matcon Diamond, Inc. v. Penn Nat’l Ins. Co.,
We believe that this synthesized standard is the truest statement of Pennsylvania law. We have applied it in the past,
Tran v. Metro. Life Ins. Co.,
IV.
The parties have asked us to determine which source of law determines their rights and obligations to one another: the law governing reinstatement or the law governing the reasonable expectations of the insured. Considering the evolution of the case law under the “reasonable expectations” standard, we believe that the outcome of this matter is the same no matter which law we choose. Lincoln Benefit is not obliged to pay benefits on Mr. West’s lapsed Policy.
We believe that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court would decide this matter under 40 Pa. Cons.Stat. Ann. § 510(k), its interpretive precedent, and the reinstatement terms of the Policy. The burden of proving compliance with all conditions precedent to reinstatement of the Policy is thus on Mrs. West.
See, e.g., Sykes,
Lincoln Benefit had the right, statutorily and under the terms of the Policy, to decide whether the evidence provided by the Wests was satisfactory proof of Mr. West’s insurability.
See Riebel,
Mrs. West argues, however, that her expectation that coverage would exist upon submission of the application and payment should control the outcome.
5
Under the reasonable expectations analysis, Mrs. West “may not complain that [her] reasonable expectations were frustrated by policy limitations which are clear and unambiguous.”
See Frain,
Yet even the most clearly-written policy limitation will not bind Mrs. West if Lincoln Benefit misrepresented the terms and conditions under which reinstatement would be effected and created a reasonable expectation that coverage would be immediate. The only communication from Lincoln Benefit to the Wests on the topic of reinstatement was by letter. If Lincoln Benefit, in those letters, created a reasonable expectation that Mr. West would be insured immediately upon payment of the past-due premium, Lincoln Benefit would be required to pay benefits. 6
In the reasonable expectations analysis, the insurer must demonstrate that the insured did not have a reasonable expectation of coverage.
Tonkovic,
The chronology of correspondence between Lincoln Benefit and Mr. West demonstrates that the Wests did not have a reasonable expectation of immediate coverage upon submission of the application for reinstatement and payment of the overdue premium. Lincoln Benefit sent Mr. West notices of payment approximately one month before each premium was due. On eleven occasions, when the premium was not received by its due date, Lincoln Benefit sent follow-up letters stating that his policy value was insufficient to cover the costs of his insurance. These letters requested payment of the overdue premium as soon as possible. They noted that without the premium payment, his Policy would terminate. On six occasions, when the Wests still did not remit payment, Lincoln Benefit sent a second notice of payment due. Each second notice asked again for payment of the premium. Because the Policy was in grace period, the only necessary action to keep the Policy in effect was to pay the overdue premium.
On April 1, 2004, Lincoln Benefit sent Mr. West a notice of payment due informing him that his quarterly premium payment was due on May 1, 2004. The premium was not paid by that date. On May 3, 2004, Lincoln Benefit sent a follow-up letter like the ones described above, informing him that his Policy would terminate on July 3, 2004, if his premium was not paid. It asked him to submit payment as soon as possible, preferably within ten days. On May 11, 2004, Lincoln Benefit sent Mr. West a second notice of premium due.
On July 5, 2004, Lincoln Benefit sent Mr. West a letter stating that “[t]he grace period for premium payment on your policy has expired.” (R. at 183a.) It advised that Mr. West could apply for reinstatement. The letter stated, “[t]o continue your valuable coverage, complete the Application for Reinstatement form on the back and return it with your payment of $228.51. Upon underwriting approval, and receipt of the sufficient payment, coverage will continue uninterrupted.” (Id.) Mr. West showed Mrs. West the document. Mrs. West read only the first sentence of the excerpt quoted and interpreted the language “to continue your valuable coverage” to mean “to continue [uninterrupted] your valuable coverage” rather than “to [restart after cessation] your valuable coverage.” (West Dep. 43:24-44:2); see Webster’s 3d New Int’l Dictionary 493 (1981). She thought that if she “filled out the form and sent in the money, the policy would continue.” (West Dep. 45:2^1) Mrs. West did not read, or does not remember reading, the language in the letter clearly stating that underwriting approval of the application was a condition precedent to reinstatement.
Mrs. West then turned to the application on the reverse of the letter. She filled out the blanks at the top for the policy number and the name of the insured. She then read and answered questions below regarding Mr. West’s health. She did not read the paragraph immediately below the blanks for the policy number and the name of the insured that she filled out, and immediately above the questions that she read and answered, which stated, “I (each undersigned) request that the Company reinstate this policy.... Coverage will not start again until this request is approved by the company and all required premiums and interest are paid. If this request is
Lincoln Benefit did not misrepresent the conditions precedent to reinstatement. The text of the letter and of the application clearly state that underwriting approval by Lincoln Benefit was required before coverage would begin again. This statement is entirely consistent with the clear language of the Policy itself and the statute, supra, governing applications for reinstatement. Mrs. West may not avoid these conditions with the mere assertion that she expected coverage to begin immediately because of a single sentence in the letter and application for reinstatement.
Moreover, the record of the previous correspondence from Lincoln Benefit to Mr. West regarding payment of overdue premiums demonstrates that it was unreasonable to expect that submission of payment and a completed application would result in immediate reinstatement. When the Wests were late in paying their premium but still within the grace period, immediate payment was, in fact, all that was required for Mr. West’s Policy to remain in effect. Each notice from Lincoln Benefit stated exactly that. The reinstatement letter was different, however. It was accompanied by an application with questions about Mr. West’s health — something Lincoln Benefit had never before required to keep the Policy in force. Thus, simply by the nature of the transaction, the Wests were on notice that this time, there was at least one additional level of review that would take place before the Policy would be effective. Further, Mrs. West’s testimony indicates that she did not believe that the application would be denied. This demonstrates an understanding that the application was something that Lincoln Benefit had the power to accept or deny, and not simply a ministerial exercise that effected reinstatement immediately.
In light of the totality of these circumstances, the evidence is clear and convincing: it was unreasonable for the Wests to expect the Policy to be in force at the time they mailed the overdue premium and application for reinstatement. Thus, even under the reasonable expectations analysis, Lincoln Benefit has no obligation to pay benefits on James West, Jr.’s lapsed policy of life insurance.
V.
For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the order of the District Court.
Notes
. According to Lincoln Benefit's records, Mr. West was sent eleven reminder letters substantially identical to the one he received on May 3, 2004. He was sent six second notices of payment due, like the one he received on May 11, 2004. Janet Dever, a Claim Consultant for Allstate Life Insurance Company with authority to act for Lincoln Benefit, submitted an affidavit in support of Lincoln Benefit’s motion for summary judgment. She averred that the correspondence described in this opinion was sent to Mr. West in due course of business for Lincoln Benefit on or about the date reflected on each item. Mrs. West testified that she never saw any of this correspondence (aside from the two times she admits to having seen similar notices) and therefore denies that Lincoln Benefit sent these letters. In the alternative, she claims that her husband never received them. Mrs. West admits, however, that she is without knowledge as to whether Mr. West received these letters. Mrs. West's admitted lack of knowledge is insufficient to rebut the presumption that correspondence mailed in the ordinary course of business is received.
See West v. Lincoln Benefit Life Co.,
No. 05-561,
.
An earlier case held that even when an insurance company
approved
an application for reinstatement after the applicant had died, the company was not liable for death benefits.
Meerbach v. Metro. Life Ins. Co.,
. Even if Lincoln Benefit had evaluated the information on the application, the information would not have provided satisfactory proof of Mr. West's continued insurability. The application asked, in the past ten years or for the time during which Mr. West was insured under the Policy, whether he had been “diagnosed with, sought or received treatment or advice for: heart attack, disease of coronary arteries or other blood vessels, other heart disorder, high blood pressure, diabetes, or stroke.” Mrs. West's answers of both "yes” and "no” are conflicting in themselves. Moreover, when asked for “full details, including diagnosis, severity, treatment, name and address of doctors, hospitals, and clinics,” she wrote "controlled with medication.” Her answer was not responsive to the question asked and did not provide the additional details requested by Lincoln Benefit to assist the company in determining Mr. West's continued insurability. Even if Lincoln Benefit had reviewed the application, Mrs. West’s answer would have been insufficient for immediate reinstatement.
See Stager,
. We are urged to apply the specific holding in
Collister,
such that by accepting the Wests’ payment of $228.51 before deciding whether to reinstate, a temporary contract of insurance arose between Lincoln Benefit and Mr. West that Lincoln Benefit may not now disclaim.
See
The clear difference is that statutory and contractual obligations, described
supra,
govern an application for reinstatement and simply do not apply to an application for a new policy. Upon lapse of an insurance policy, the contractual provisions governing reinstatement remain in force until the allotted time to apply for reinstatement has passed.
Rothschild,
. We have very little direct information as to what the insured, Mr. West, expected regarding reinstatement or whether he expected anything at all. It is unknown whether he read the Policy. All correspondence from Lincoln Benefit was addressed to him, which he then gave to his wife to handle. Pennsylvania courts appear to have allowed the beneficiary’s expectations to inform the court’s decision on what the insured expected,
see Bierer,
. Mrs. West argues that she and Mr. West expected coverage to start immediately upon submitting payment for the overdue premium because there was no reason to believe that his application would be denied. The Wests knew that Mr. West disclosed both his high blood pressure and the medicine he was taking to control it on his initial application for life insurance. He received a physical exam within six to eight months before the Wests filed the application for reinstatement and his blood pressure was fine. According to Mrs. West, "I just assumed that since I sent the money that [the Policy] would have been reinstated because nothing had changed as far as his health....” (West Dep. 55:18-56:3.) This subjective belief is not pertinent to our evaluation of their expectations of insurance coverage, however. Pennsylvania courts look only to whether the insurer created in the insured a reasonable expectation of coverage,
not
whether the insured came to an independent conclusion that coverage existed or would exist.
Matcon Diamond, Inc.,
