OPINION OF THE COURT
MANSMANN, Circuit Judge.In this appeal, we are asked to predict whether the Pennsylvania Supreme Court would permit an employee injured in an on-the-job automobile accident to recover from both workers’ compensation as well as from an uninsured motorist plan that his employer voluntarily purchased. The district court held that workers’ compensation was the employee’s exclusive remedy. Shortly after that ruling, the Pennsylvania Superior Court held that state law did not bar an employee’s recovery from both workers’ compensation and an uninsured motorist plan. Because the Superior Court’s reasoning is persuasive, we will reverse.
I.
In May of 1994, Joseph N. DiBartolo was injured while occupying an automobile owned by his employer, Knight-Ridder, Inc.1 At the time of the accident, DiBartolo was acting in the course and scope of his employment. Subsequently, DiBartolo recovered workers’ compensation and medical benefits from Knight-Ridder’s insurer, Travelers Indemnity Co. of Illinois. Thereafter, he sought uninsured motorist benefits under an automobile insurance policy issued by Travelers to Knight-Ridder, which had voluntarily purchased the policy. Travelers responded by bringing this action for declaratory judgment.
Travelers asked the district court to hold that DiBartolo’s recovery of workers’ compensation benefits after an on-the-job automobile accident precluded his later recovery on the uninsured motorist plan purchased by his employer. In the alternative, Travelers asked the district court to hold that Knight-Ridder had waived uninsured motorist cover*345age in Pennsylvania. After a pre-trial conference, the district court instructed the parties to file motions solely on the issue of the exclusivity of workers’ compensation in Pennsylvania. In its Amended Order of November 25, 1996, the district court granted Travelers’ motion for summary judgment. The court did not issue an opinion, but it cited Ducjai v. Dennis, 431 Pa.Super. 366, 636 A.2d 1130 (1994) (en banc), aff'd, 540 Pa. 103, 656 A.2d 102 (1995), in its order. DiBartolo took a timely appeal.2
II.
A.
This appeal requires us to determine the effect of the Pennsylvania legislature’s 1993 repeal of Section 17353 and Section 17374 of the Motor Vehicle Financial Responsibility Law (MVFRL). Travelers argues that the repeal of these sections of the MVFRL indicated a clear legislative intent. Indeed, when these statutes are read, they seem to have clearly authorized the collection of both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits. Therefore, the repeal of these statutes would seem to have unambiguously reinstated the general rule that workers’ compensation is the exclusive remedy available to employees injured on the job. See 77 Pa. Cons.Stat. § 481(a).5
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decision in Hackenberg v. Southeastern Pa. Transp. Auth., 526 Pa. 358, 586 A.2d 879 (1991), suggests, however, that Travelers’ isolated, straightforward reading of Sections 1735 and 1737 is misguided. First, according to the Court in Hackenberg, Section 1737— the statute that, of the two, seemed to extend unequivocally to employees the privilege of receiving both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits — never affected employers such as DiBartolo’s (Knight-Rid-der, Inc.) who voluntarily purchased uninsured motorist plans. As the Court noted in Hackenberg, Section 1737 was enacted several years after Section 1735. Id. at 880 n. 3. Prior to the enactment of Section 1737, the Court held, Section 1735 did not authorize employees of self-insured employers to receive both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits. Id. at 885.
In its earlier resolution of Hackenberg, the Pennsylvania Superior Court had noted that state law differentiated between self-insured employers and employers who purchased uninsured motorist plans. Hackenberg v. SEPTA 384 Pa.Super. 335, 558 A.2d 860, 864 (1989). Under its view of the law, injured employees who had received workers’ compensation benefits could also recover on uninsured motorist plans that had been purchased by their employers. Id. Nonetheless, injured employees were barred from recovering both types of benefits when their employers were self-insured. Id. The Supreme Court agreed with the Superior Court’s analysis, holding that self-insured employers — in the absence of Section 1737— were under a different set of obligations than were employers who purchased plans. Hackenberg, 586 A.2d at 883-84. The clear implication of Hackenberg is that prior to the enactment of Section 1737, employees could receive workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits from employers’ purchased plans. Id. at 883 (discussing insurance policies). If the Pennsylvania Supreme Court *346had thought the Superior Court erred , in making the distinction that undergirded its opinion, surely the Supreme Court would have said so. It is clear, however, that the Supreme Court’s majority accepted the distinction between self-insured employers and employers who purchased plans. See id. at 885-86 (Cappy, J., concurring and dissenting, arguing that the majority’s distinction between self-insured and other employers was irrational and not dictated by law).
Therefore, we learn from Hackenberg that the ability of employees to recover both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits via employers’ purchased plans did not stem from Section 1737. Employees had that ability prior to Section 1737. Indeed, it may be that, if anything, Section 1737 was enacted to ensure that employees whose employers were self-insured would not be penalized by the distinction drawn in Hackenberg and other cases such as Lewis v. School Dist. of Phila., 517 Pa. 461, 538 A.2d 862 (1988) (holding that employees of self-insured employers could not, under the pre-MVFRL Uninsured Motorist Act, collect uninsured motorist benefits). See also Hackenberg, 586 A.2d at 883 n. 9 (speculating that the legislative purpose behind Section 1737 was to ensure that all employees be able to receive both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits). In any event, as Section 1737 did not affect employers who purchased uninsured motorist plans, Hacken-berg suggests that the repeal of Section 1737 could not have had any impact on employees such as DiBartolo.
In Hackenberg, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court also made clear that Section 1735 was not the source of the ability of employees to recover from employers’ purchased uninsured motorists plans as well as from workers’ compensation. There the Court specifically rejected a suggestion' that Section 1735 was designed to ensure an employee’s access to both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits, Hackenberg, 586 A.2d at 883 & n. 9. Instead, the Court held, Section 1735 was a restriction on what insurers could include in their uninsured motorist plans— plans that employers were then required by law to have, in the absence of self-insurance. Id. at 883. Therefore, the repeal of Section 1735 was required by the legislature’s decision to make uninsured motorist plans optional. If, as the Hackenberg opinion suggests, Section 1735 was not the source of an injured employee’s recovery of both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits, its repeal could not have precluded DiBartolo’s recovery of both types of benefits.
B.
Despite its analysis in Hackenberg, the Supreme Court offered a different view of the legislative repeal of Sections 1735 and 1737 in Ducjai v. Dennis, 540 Pa. 103, 656 A.2d 102 (1995). There an employee filed negligence actions against a co-worker and the driver of another vehicle involved in an on-the-job accident. Ducjai, 656 A.2d at 103. In sweeping language, the Superior Court had held “that worker’s compensation benefits .are the sole and exclusive remedy available to employees injured in a motor vehicle accident in the course and scope of their employment.” Ducjai, 636 A.2d at 1131.
On appeal, the Supreme Court affirmed the Superior Court’s holding. Ducjai, 656 A.2d at 107. It phrased the final result in much narrower terms, however, holding “that an employee may not recover both workers’ compensation benefits from her employer as well as damages at common law from her co-employee ... when injured in an [on-the-job] automobile accident.” Id. (emphasis added). Nevertheless, in the course of its opinion, the Supreme Court agreed with the Superior Court that the repeal of Sections 1735 and 1737 had greatly affected the ability of employees to collect from sources other than workers’ compensation for on-the-job automobile accidents. Id. at 106. The Supreme Court approvingly cited the Superior Court’s observation that “[t]he legislature has tried time and again to make it clear that worker’s [sic] compensation benefits are to be the exclusive remedy for employment-related injuries, save for those intentionally inflicted.” Id. Indeed, the Supreme Court specifically suggested that the legislative repeal had effectively overturned Superior Court decisions—Chatham v. Aetna Life & Cas. Co., 391 Pa.Super. *34753, 570 A.2d 509 (1989), and Ferry v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 392 Pa.Super. 571, 573 A.2d 610 (1990)—which had permitted employees to recover both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits. Ducjai 656 A.2d at 106. In striking contrast to Hacken-berg, Ducjai suggests that the repeal of Sections 1735 and 1737 should bar DiBartolo’s recovery of both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits.
C.
Although the pertinent observations in the Supreme Court’s Ducjai holding were dicta,6 the Court indicated its view that Pennsylvania law now completely precludes an employee’s recovering both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits. Despite Ducjai two opinions of the Superior Court issued after the district court’s ruling interpreted the legislative repeal of Sections 1735 and 1737 much differently. In Warner v. Continental/CNA Ins. Co., 455 Pa.Super. 295, 688 A.2d 177, 179 (1996), allocatur denied, 548 Pa. 660, 698 A.2d 68 (1997), the Superior Court held that an employee injured in an on-the-job automobile accident could collect both workers’ compensation and underinsured motorist benefits. There the court concluded that the exclusivity provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act (“WCA”) could not, for several reasons, operate to bar claims on uninsured/underinsured motorist policies. First, the court noted that the WCA had always been interpreted to bar employees’ claims for uninsured motorist benefits only from employers who were self-insured. Id. 688 A.2d at 182. Employees’ claims on uninsured motorist policies purchased by the employer had not been barred by the WCA. Id.
Secondly, the court rejected the suggestion that the legislature’s repeal of Sections 1735 and 1737 indicated an intent to bar recovery of both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits. Id. at 182-83. Instead, the Superior Court observed that the repeal of Sections 1735 and 1737 had taken place alongside the legislature’s repeal of the portion of Section 1720 that had previously prevented subrogation against a claimant’s tort recovery by a workers’ compensation insurance carrier. Id. at 183. According to the court, these repeals should be understood as part of a single plan:
Thus, before the amendment, a claimant could not recover amounts paid or payable under workers’ compensation and, balanced against that provision, a workers’ compensation carrier had no right of sub-rogation for workers’ compensation benefits. By contrast, after the 1993 amendments, a plaintiffs recovery is not reduced by the amount of workers’ compensation benefits, and the workers’ compensation carrier has the right of subrogation for any benefits paid in connection with the action.
Id. (quoting Schroeder v. Schrader, 453 Pa.Super. 59, 682 A.2d 1305 (1996)). This, of course, is a much different understanding of the legislature’s intent than that expressed in Ducjai
Finally, the Warner court noted that legislative intent must be especially clear for it to conclude the legislature had intended to forbid employers from buying optional uninsured/underinsured motorist policies for the benefit of employees. Warner, 688 A.2d at 183. The court noted that the Supreme Court has held that such fringe benefits are “voluntarily bargained for and have an independent contractual vitality.” Id. at 184 (quoting Wagner v. National Indem. Co., 492 Pa. 154, 422 A.2d 1061, 1067 (1980)). See also Panichelli v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Group, 543 Pa. 114, 669 A.2d 930, 932-33 (1996) (holding that an injured employee’s recoveiy of workers’ compensation as well as sick pay and social security benefits was not unlawful “double dipping”). Moreover, according to the Superior Court, a claim on a policy purchased by the employer is not a claim against the employer; therefore, the uninsured mo*348torist carrier cannot “borrow” the employer’s immunity from suit. Warner, 688 A.2d at 184 (quoting Boris v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 356 Pa.Super. 532, 515 A.2d 21, 24 (1986)).
The Superior Court did not discuss in Warmer its prior Ducjai holding or the Supreme Court’s affirmance, which contained the strong, pertinent dicta about uninsured motorist benefits. In a post-Warrcer case, however, the Superior Court narrowly read Ducjai as precluding only an employee’s negligence action against a co-employee. Gardner v. Erie Ins. Co., 456 Pa.Super. 563, 691 A.2d 459, 463-64 (1997). An action against the co-employee’s uninsured motorist carrier, said the court, was not subject to the WCA’s exclusivity provisions and was not precluded. Id. at 464. That was so because the injured employee’s suit was not against the employer or any source attributable to the employer; instead, the suit was analogized to one against “a third-party tortfeasor’s liability insurance.” Id. See also id. at 464-65 (noting that a suit against even the employer’s uninsured motorist carrier is not, under Warner, a suit against the employer). Under the Superior Court’s analysis, as enunciated in Warner and Gardner,7 there is no legal barrier to DiBartolo’s receipt of both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits.
III.
A.
As a federal court sitting in diversity, we must apply the substantive law as decided by the state’s highest court.8 Orson, Inc. v. Miramax Film Corp., 79 F.3d 1358, 1373 & n. 15 (3d Cir.1996). Because the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has not directly addressed the issue before us now, we must forecast how the Supreme Court would resolve the issue. Clark v. Modern Group Ltd., 9 F.3d 321, 326 (3d Cir.1993). Applicable decisions of the Superior Court must be accorded significant weight. Rolick v. Collins Pine Co., 925 F.2d 661, 664 (3d Cir.1991). The “carefully considered statements]” of the Supreme Court in dicta in Ducjai also inform our prediction. McKenna v. Ortho Pharm. Corp., 622 F.2d 657, 662 n. 21 (3d Cir.1980). Although it is a close case, we are ultimately persuaded by the Superior Court’s compelling reasoning in Warner.9
B.
First, we note with approval that the Warner court considered the larger context surrounding the repeal of Sections 1735 and 1737. In particular, the Superior Court saw the repeal of Section 1735 as directly related to the contemporaneous repeal of Section 1720. Warner, 688 A.2d at 183. Thus, the Superior Court understood the legislature to have been exchanging one comprehensive system for another. In the previous arrangement, a workers’ compensation carrier had no right to subrogate against an employee’s claim and the employee could not recover from the uninsured motorist carrier any amounts payable under workers’ compensation. Id. In the new arrangement, the employee’s recovery from the uninsured motor*349ist carrier is not to be reduced by the amount of any workers’ compensation benefits payable, but the workers’ compensation carrier is given the right of subrogation for any benefits paid to the employee under workers’ compensation. Id.
According to the Warner court, the repeal of Sections 1735 and 1720 effected a single plan. Under the post-repeal law, the injured employee is permitted to recover both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits, including a possible recovery from each of these two sources for the same injury. The collection by the employee of the uninsured motorist benefits, however, merely creates a fund against which the workers’ compensation carrier can exert a subrogation lien for amounts it paid the employee for the already-recompensed injury. Id.; Gardner, 691 A.2d at 465. Understood in this broader context, the repeal of Section 1735 — like the repeal of Section 1737 — did not affect the ability of employees to recover both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits.10 Indeed, the repeal of Section 1735 permitted the injured employee to recover more from these sources, although the workers’ compensation carrier may ultimately be the beneficiary — -by the use of its subrogation lien — of any double recovery. See Gardner, 691 A.2d at 466 (Hudock, J., concurring).
We note that the Superior Court’s interpretation of Section 1735 in Warner is consistent with the Supreme Court’s statement in Hackenberg that 1735 was only a limitation on what lands of policies uninsured motorist carriers could write. Hackenberg, 586 A.2d at 883. Travelers argues that Section 1735 actually authorized the employee’s recovery of both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits. This is not an outrageous claim, given the Supreme Court’s dicta in Ducjai that the repeal of Sections 1735 and 1737 ended the recovery of both types of benefits. Ducjai, 656 A.2d at 106. This interpretation, however, is inconsistent with the Court’s prior treatment of Section 1735 in Hackenberg. Given this unexplained inconsistency and the fact that the Supreme Court did not have the issue directly before it in Ducjai (as did the Supreme Court in Hackenberg and the Superior Court in Warmer), we are persuaded by the Superior Court’s analysis of the repeal of Sections 1735 and 1737.
Thus, we conclude that neither Section 1735 nor Section 1737 was the source of the ability of employees to collect both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits. Although it is not clear when employees began to be able to collect both types of benefits, it is clear that the ability to collect both types was judicially recognized and was independent of Sections 1735 and 1737. See, e.g., Chatham, 570 A.2d at 512 (1990), aff'd, 529 Pa. 494, 605 A.2d 329 (1992) (noting that an employee could apparently have collected both types of benefits even in the absence of Section 1735). See also State Farm Ins. Cos. v. Ridenour, 435 Pa.Super. 463, 467-70, 646 A.2d 1188, 1190-91 (1994) (collecting cases). Given this case law11 and the inapplicability *350of Sections 1735 and 1737, we view the repeal of Sections 1735 and 1737 as irrelevant to the issue we must decide. See Warner, 688 A.2d at 183 (noting that “[i]n light of the prior case law which the legislature was well aware of when it enacted [the repeals], we are unable to conclude that the legislature intended that the [exclusivity] provisions of the WCA would preclude recovery”). To end the recovery of both types of benefits, the legislature would have to take clearer action than the silent repeal of inapplicable sections.
C.
We also find convincing the Superior Court’s emphasis in Warner on the fact that uninsured motorist coverage is now optional, and we predict the Supreme Court would adopt the Superior Court’s analysis. Because uninsured motorist coverage is no longer mandated by the state, the Warner court viewed an employer’s voluntary purchase of such coverage as a decision to provide employees with a fringe benefit. Id. at 184. We agree. When viewed as a fringe benefit that employers provide their employees (or that employees demand as a condition of employment), uninsured motorist coverage cannot be subject to the exclusivity provisions of the WCA. Wagner, 422 A.2d at 1067 (the Supreme Court noting that an employer or insurance carrier is “precluded from asserting” immunity for fringe benefits because of their “independent contractual vitality”).12 Since the coverage is purchased for the employee’s benefit and not to protect the employer from any of its own wrongdoing, there is no immunity for the workers’ compensation carrier to borrow from the employer. Warner, 688 A.2d at 184. Moreover, as the Supreme Court recently noted, an employee’s collection of a fringe benefit does not *351“result in double dipping,” the harm the exclusivity provision of the WCA is designed to prevent. Panichelli, 669 A.2d at 932.13
Travelers suggests that employers likely; purchase uninsured motorist plans only to protect (i) their clients and customers who ride in company vehicles and (ii) their employees when they drive company vehicles outside the course and scope of their employment. While it is obvious that employers might well purchase uninsured motorist plans for the reasons Travelers lists, there is no reason why employers might not also purchase plans to benefit their on-the-job employees. Indeed, employers may do so because workers’ compensation covers only a small portion of the types of damages an injured worker might suffer. Selected Risks Ins. Co. v. Thompson, 520 Pa. 130, 552 A.2d 1382, 1388 (1989); Chatham, 570 A.2d at 512. Uninsured motorist plans can cover pain and suffering, wage loss, and consequential damages that are unavailable under workers’ compensation. Selected Risks, 552 A.2d at 1388. Travelers does not offer any explanation why Pennsylvania would wish to bar employers from attempting to shield their employees from all of the types of on-the-job injuries the-employees might. suffer. Since DiBartolo’s employer voluntarily purchased uninsured motorist coverage, we are satisfied that this fact would cause the Supreme Court to view the insurance policy as a fringe benefit. As a fringe benefit, the policy has “independent contractual vitality,” and DiBartolo’s recovery under the policy is not barred by the exclusivity provisions of the WCA. Wagner, 422 A.2d at 1067.
IV.
In this appeal, we are faced with a difficult choice. On one hand, there is the clear, recent dicta in Ducjai, suggesting the Supreme Court would view the repeal of Sections 1735 and 1737 as dispositive. On the other hand, there is the even more recent Superior Court opinion, Warner, that places the legislative repeal in a larger and much different context. We are persuaded by the Superior Court’s opinion, both because of the depth of its analysis and because Warner is consistent with the Supreme Court’s own discussion of the repealed sections in Hack-enberg. We find particularly persuasive the Warner court’s reasoning that uninsured motorist coverage is best viewed as a fringe benefit now that uninsured motorist plans are optional.
Because we predict that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court would hold that Pennsylvania law does not preclude an employee’s recovery under both worker’s compensation and an employer’s voluntarily-purchased uninsured motorist plan, we will reverse and remand this matter to the district court for further proceedings.
. The material facts are not in dispute.
. The district court properly exercised subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332. Our appellate jurisdiction lies pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
. Section 1735 had provided that ”[t]he coverage required by this subchapter [mandatory uninsured motorist coverage] shall not be made subject to an exclusion or reduction in amount because of any workers’ compensation benefits payable as the result of the same injury.” 75 Pa. Cons.Stat. § 1735 (repealed).
. Section 1737 had provided that ”[n]otwith-standing anything contained in the Act of June 2, 1915 (P.L. 736, No. 338), known as the Pennsylvania Workmen's Compensation Act, no employee who is otherwise eligible shall be precluded from recovery of uninsured or underinsured motorist benefits from an employer’s motor vehicle policy under this Chapter....” 75 Pa.Cons.Stat. § 1737 (repealed).
. This statute, the exclusivity provision of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, states that ”[t]he liability of an employer under this Act shall be exclusive and in place of any and all other liability to such employes [sic] ... in any action at law or otherwise on account of any injury or death as defined....” 77 Pa.Cons.Stat. § 481(a).
. As noted, Ducjai involved the issue of whether one employee is immune from a common-law suit for damages brought by another employee injured in the course of employment. Ducjai, 656 A.2d at 102-03. Therefore, the Court’s discussion of uninsured motorist coverage was not necessary for its decision. The Superior Court soon noted that this language from the Supreme Court’s opinion was dictum. Palmosina v. Laidlaw Transit Co., 445 Pa.Super. 121, 664 A.2d 1038, 1041 (1995).
. The dissent repeatedly suggests that Warner is the only Superior Court case that is at odds with the dicta from Ducjai. It is clear from Gardner, however, that the Superior Court recognized its disagreement with the Supreme Court’s dicta but concluded that its reasoning, first enunciated in Warner, was more sound.
. The district court’s interpretation of state law is subject to plenary review. Salve Regina College v. Russell, 499 U.S. 225, 239, 111 S.Ct. 1217, 1225, 113 L.Ed.2d 190(1991).
. Citing McKenna, the dissent states that in making our prediction of state law we must examine “in order of priority: the decisional law of the highest state court in analogous cases; the dicta of that court; and to a lesser degree, the deci-sional law of lower state courts.” The dissent, however, overstates its argument. McKenna does not hold that the dicta of a state's highest court must necessarily trump the better-reasoned decisions of the state’s intermediate courts. Indeed, we note that McKenna explicitly warned that "a federal court should be circumspect in surrendering its own judgment concerning what the state law is on account of dicta.” 622 F.2d at 662. The rule of McKenna is that we "must consider relevant state precedents, analogous decisions, considered dicta, scholarly works, and any other reliable data...." Id. at 663. McKen-na provided no rigid hierarchy that requires us to enforce the Supreme Court’s dicta in the face of a better-reasoned, subsequent decision of the Superior Court.
. Travelers contends the Warner court misunderstood the significance of the legislature’s decision to allow workers’ compensation carriers the right of subrogation against a' claimant's tort recovery. It suggests that permitting the workers’ compensation carrier to subrogate against the motor vehicle insurer is irrational. Travelers would limit the workers’ compensation carrier’s ability to subrogate to situations where a third-party tortfeasor has injured the employee.
We do not see a difference between subrogat-ing against a tortfeasor and a motor vehicle insurer. See Gardner, 691 A.2d at 463-64. In both instances, the workers’ compensation carrier is trying to recover what it already paid out as a result of harm to an employee caused by some third party. There is no legal significance to whether that third party was an uninsured motorist or some other malefactor. If there is such significance. Travelers has not pointed it out.
Here Travelers serves as both the workers' compensation carrier and the motor vehicle insurer for DiBartolo’s employer. In many circumstances, however, one insurance company will not perform both roles. We agree with DiBartolo that it is only Travelers’ dual role that makes it appear that DiBartolo wants to "rob Peter to pay Paul.” In any event, if Travelers finds the current arrangement economically inefficient or unduly complicated, its remedy lies with the legislature.
. Travelers argues that the law prior to the legislature's enactment of Sections 1735 and 1737 did not permit an employee’s recovery of both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits.
Travelers interprets Hackenberg as holding that no employee can collect both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits. As we *350have noted, the Superior Court held in Hacken-berg that only self-insured employers are immune from providing uninsured motorist benefits. See, e.g., Hackenberg, 586 A.2d at 885 (holding is limited to "self-insured” employers); Hacken-berg, 586 A.2d at 885-86 (Cappy, J., concurring and dissenting on the ground that the court’s distinction between self-insured and other employers was irrational). Indeed, Hackenberg makes clear that neither Section 1735 nor Section 1737 can be fairly understood as the source of an employee’s ability to recover both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits. Id. at 883 & n. 9.
In addition, Travelers argues that the appellate cases that have allowed an employee to recover both types of benefits have misinterpreted the Supreme Court’s opinion in Selected Risks Ins. Co. v. Thompson, 520 Pa. 130, 552 A.2d 1382 (1989). See also Ducjai, 656 A.2d at 106 (questioning the use of Selected Risks by the Superior Court). As Travelers correctly points out, Selected Risks involved an unusual fact pattern, where the disputed uninsured motorist plan could not fairly be said to be the employer's. Hackenberg, 586 A.2d at 882-83 n. 8. To the extent the Superior Court has relied on Selected Risks, however, it has not strongly relied on a misapprehension that the disputed policy in Selected Risks was an employer’s. In Chatham, 570 A.2d at 512, for instance, the Superior Court relied instead on the logic of Selected Risks (that workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits do not provide for the same types of damages and that there is no public policy against employers acquiring policies that more fully cover employees) — not on a belief that Selected Rislcs was controlling. See also id. (noting that Selected Rislcs spoke to its issue only "in glancing terms”). The cases that followed Chatham relied on it, not directly on Selected Risks. See, e.g., Ferry, 573 A.2d at 611.
In the end, Travelers’ quibbles are not with the Superior Court’s Warner decision but, instead, with the Supreme Court’s own decision in Hack-enberg, where it sanctioned a distinction between self-insured employers and' employers who purchase uninsured motorist plans. 586 A.2d at 881 & n. 4, 884-85. See also id., 586 A.2d at 885-86 (Cappy, J., concurring and dissenting). Although the Supreme Court seemed in Ducjai to have qualms about the Superior Court’s reliance on Selected Rislcs, the Court did not repudiate its previous decision in Hackenberg. As Hackenberg and Warner more squarely presented the issue now before us, those holdings are more persuasive than the Ducjai dicta.
. Travelers argues that the Supreme Court’s decision in Wagner supports its contention that the law never permitted recovery of both workers’ compensation and uninsured motorist benefits. That opinion, however, interpreted the state’s No-Fault Motor Vehicle Insurance Act, which preceded the MVFRL. Wagner did hold that employees could not receive both types of benefits, but that holding was premised on the fact that the No-Fault Act mandated both no-fault and workers’ compensation coverage. Wagner, 422 A.2d at 1067. As uninsured motorist coverage became optional as the result of legislative actions including the repeal of Section 1735. Wagner may counsel that uninsured motorist coverage is now a fringe benefit that can benefit employees because of its "independent contractual vitality.” Id. In any event, case law interpreting the No-Fault Act is no longer controlling. Hackenberg, 586 A.2d at 884.
. Indeed, in this regard, DiBartolo notes that he is not seeking benefits for the injuries covered by workers’ compensation; instead, he is seeking coverage for the additional injuries he suffered, injuries that are covered only by the uninsured motorist plan.
Even if DiBartolo received a "double recovery," the repeal of Section 1720 of the MVFRL mandates that the workers’ compensation carrier would have a subrogation lien on any amounts paid the employee for any already-recompensed injury. Warner, 688 A.2d at 183.