dissenting:
¶ 1 Today, this Court gives its imprimatur to the practice of selling multiple medical expense coverages for multiple premiums without advising the purchaser that the coverage is limited to a single policy. The policy’s terms of limitation are ambiguous and this deceptive practice violates the spirit of 36 O.S.1991, § 6092. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
¶ 2 Floyd Simpson had four separate automobile insurance policies issued by Farmers Insurance Company, Inc. Each policy provided coverage for Simpson’s medical expenses in the event he was injured “while occupying or by being struck by a motor vehicle.” Simpson paid a separate premium for the medical expense coverage in each policy. Three of the policies provided a limit *1267of $5,000 for such medical expenses and one policy provided a $2,000 limit or an aggregate of $17,000. In July, 1994, Simpson was injured in an automobile accident involving one of his four automobiles. Simpson’s medical expenses were in excess of $14,000. Farmers paid Simpson $5,000 for his medical expenses. Simpson filed suit against Farmers to recover $9,292.33 for the remaining medical expenses incurred as a result of the accident.
¶ 3 Farmers moved for summary judgment on the undisputed facts that the Other Insurance provisions in Simpson’s policy limited him to medical expense coverage under the policy with the highest limits and that Simpson has been paid $5,000.00, the highest limit of medical expense coverage in a single policy. Farmer’s relied on the authority of Frank v. Allstate Insurance Co., 1986 OK 42, 727 P.2d 577, for the proposition that medical expense coverage may not be stacked. Simpson responded that his claim is not based on a theory of stacking, rather he seeks to enforce four separate insurance contracts for which he paid four separate premiums. Simpson relied on the authority of Aetna Casualty and Surety v. State Board for Property and Casualty Rates, 1981 OK 153, 637 P.2d 1251, for the proposition that the deceptive practice of selling multiple coverage and collecting multiple premiums and then limiting the coverage to a single policy with the highest liability limit violates public policy.
¶ 4 The summary judgment court decided the issue of “whether Defendant may rely on the limitation contained within the ‘Other Insurance’ limitation in the policies and Frank v. Allstate Ins. Co. 727 P.2d 577 (Okla.1986) in capping the limits of medical payment to ‘the limits provided by the single policy with the highest limits of liability.’ ” The summary judgment order summarily reiterates Simpson’s arguments that the Other Insurance provisions are unclear and/or vio-lative of public policy, but makes no specific ruling on them except in determining that the “holding of Frank v. Allstate is not defeated by the distinctions presented in the case at bar.” The summary judgment in favor of Farmers was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals.
¶ 5 The majority opinion affirms the ruling that Frank v. Allstate Insurance Co. applies herein and specifically holds that the unambiguous language in Simpson’s policies prohibits him from stacking the medical expense coverages. I agree with Simpson that Frank v. Allstate Insurance Co. is not the dispositive. I also agree with Simpson that this is a contract interpretation case and that the vague language in the Other Insurance provision, which Farmers reads as limiting the aggregate coverage of all medical expense insurance issued by Farmers to the highest limit of liability provided by a single policy, is ambiguous.
¶ 6 Simpson argued that a reading of the medical expense insurance provisions as a whole renders the Other Insurance provisions ambiguous. This argument requires us to review the terms of the medical expense coverage. The insuring provision provides:
We will pay reasonable expenses for necessary medical services furnished within two years from the date of the accident because of bodily injury sustained by an insured person.
An Insured person is defined as:
1. You or any family member while occupying. or through being struck by. a motor vehicle or trailer, designed for use on public roads. 2. Any other person while occupying your insured car while the car is being used by you, a family member or another person if that person has sufficient reason to believe that the use is with permission of the owner.”
(Underlining added.)
The Exclusions provide:
This coverage does not apply for any bodily injury to any person: 4. Sustained while occupying or when struck by any vehicle (other than your insured car) which is owned by or furnished or available for the regular use of you or any family member.
(Underlining added.)
Your insured car is defined as:
Any additional private passenger car or utility car you acquire during the policy period, but the additional car is your in*1268sured car only during the first 30 days you own it. You must insure all private passenger cars and utility cars you own with a member company of the Farmers Insurance Group of Companies for an additional car to be your insured car. At the end of the 30 day period, any such additional car is no longer your insured car.
(Underlining added.)
¶ 7 The insuring language for the named insured and family members broadly includes bodily injury while occupying any automobile or when struck by any automobile; and it is not susceptible to an interpretation that the coverage for Simpson is tied to the insured automobile involved in the accident. This is particularly so under the definition of Your insured car, which includes all automobiles owned by Simpson and insured by Farmers, and the Exclusion which eliminates coverage when Simpson is occupying or struck by an owned automobile that is not insured by Farmers. Accordingly, the medical expense insurance provisions are not subject to an interpretation that injuries involving other owned automobiles insured by Farmers are outside the coverage as separate risks of loss.1 In this respect, Frank v. Allstate Insurance Co., 1986 OK 42, 727 P.2d 577 is not dispositive.
¶ 8 The provisions at issue are contained in a subsequent section entitled Other Insurance, which read:
If there is other applicable automobile medical insurance on any policy that applies to a loss covered by this part, we will pay only our share. Our share is the portion that our limit of liability bears to the total of all applicable limits.
Any insurance which we provide to any insured person for a substitute or non-owned motor vehicle or trailer, shall be excess over any other collectible insurance vehicle Medical Payments insurance.
If any applicable insurance other than this policy is issued to you by us or any member company of the Farmers Insurance Group of Companies, the total amount payable among all such policies shall not exceed the limits provided by the single policy with the highest limits of liability.
¶ 9 The first two provisions above expressly concern multiple medical expense coverages. The first allows the liability to be apportioned among the multiple coverages on a pro-rata basis and the second declares the medical expense coverage to be excess coverage where Simpson’s injuries occur while he occupies or is struck by a non-owned or a substitute vehicle. The third provision does not expressly relate to medical expense insurance, rather it relates to any other applicable insurance and purports to limit the total liability of Farmers-issued insurance other than this policy to the highest limits provided by a single policy. That is, it is not a limitation on the medical expense coverage of the policy containing the limitation; it is a limitation on other Farmers-issued policies. It appears to be an attempt to limit the preceding pro-rata and excess provisions to an aggregate liability of Farmers equal to the highest limit of a single other insurance policy, and if so, it is inconsistent with the insuring provisions, the definitions, and the exclusions. Although the language is vague, its intent is unavoidable. It is the linchpin of Farmers’ unscrupulous practice of collecting multiple premiums for multiple medical expense coverages from the owner of multiple automobiles and then eliminating all but a single coverage. Nevertheless, this language does not plainly eliminate all other medical expense insurance nor does it plainly limit Simpson’s recovery to the $5,000 limit of medical expense coverage under the policy insuring the automobile involved in the accident, as the majority opinion holds. It is suscéptible to a reading that it limits, as the section title suggests, other Farmers-issued insurance, so that Simpson would be entitled to a total of $10,000 — $5,000 under the policy insuring the automobile involved in the accident and $5,000 under the highest limit pro*1269vided by other applicable Farmers-issued insurance.
¶ 10 Were I writing for the Court, I would find that the “highest limits of a single policy” language is subject to more than one interpretation, and therefore ambiguous.2 I would construe the language within the context of the pro-rata and excess clauses.3 Consequently, I would interpret the medical expense coverage in Simpson’s policies purchased with liability insurance on his three automobiles not involved in the accident to be excess coverage under which Farmers is liable on a pro-rata basis for Simpson’s medical expenses which exceed the $5,000 medical expense coverage purchased with the liability insurance on the automobile involved in the accident.4
¶ 11 Such an interpretation is consistent with our extant jurisprudence. In Aetna Casualty and Surety Company v. State Board for Property and Casualty Rates, 1981 OK 153, 637 P.2d 1251, 1257, we said that enactment of § 6092 of Title 36 of the Oklahoma Statutes5 indicates that medical payment coverage be afforded special treatment and that provisions allowing subrogation or setoff are ambiguous and deceptive in that they purport to offer coverage for medical expenses when in fact the coverage is reduced or eliminated by the conditions in the policy. The “highest limits of a single policy” language in the Other Insurance provisions of Simpson’s medical expense coverage effectively operates as a setoff against any other medical expense coverage in an equal or lesser amount, contrary to the spirit of § 6092.
¶ 12 On the other hand, Aetna Casualty and Surety Company v. State Board for Property and Casualty Rates, concluded that § 6092 does not prohibit an excess clause as to other available medical expense coverages so long as the excess clause does not prevent the insured from recovering the actual amount of medical expense within the aggregate limits of the policies. And, Starrett v. Oklahoma Farmers Union Mutual Insurance Company, 1993 OK 30, 849 P.2d 397, determined that § 6092 did not prohibit an express exclusion from medical expense coverage in an automobile policy for workers’ compensation medical payments and that the plain and unambiguous terms of the exclusion were enforceable. The “highest limits of a single policy” language in the Other Insurance provisions is not a plain and unambiguous exclusion and it prevents Simpson from recovering the actual amount of medical expense within the aggregate limits of his policies, contrary to the teachings of Aetna and Starrett.
¶ 13 Farmers intentionally sold Simpson four separate medical expense coverages for four separate premiums. The $5,000 payment made to Simpson does not satisfy Farmers’ liability under the four policies, however, treating Simpson’s other medical expense insurance as excess coverage liable on a pro-rata basis provides Simpson with the multiple coverage he paid for and requires Farmers to fulfill its responsibility under all of its policies. Accordingly, I *1270would not adopt Farmers’ reading of the vague exculpatory terms of the “highest limits of a single policy” clause in Simpson’s four policies.
. The majority opinion concludes that Simpson paid all but a single premium for medical expense coverage " 'for additional and separate risk of loss which did not occur.' Frank, 1986 OK 42 at ¶ 5, 727 P.2d 577.” The holding of Frank v. Allstate Insurance Co. is expressly limited to the facts, i.e., the policy provisions, involved in that case, which the district court recognized were different from the policy provisions at issue herein.
. Whether an insurance policy is ambiguous is a matter of law for the court to decide; and a genuine ambiguity exists when provisions in an insurance policy are subject to more than one interpretation. Dodson v. St. Paul Insurance Co., 1991 OK 24, 812 P.2d 372.
. Insurance policies are contracts of adhesion which must be construed consistent with the object sought to be accomplished so as to give reasonable effect to all provisions. Dodson v. St. Paul Insurance Co., supra.
. When an insurance contract provision is ambiguous, words of inclusion will be liberally construed in favor of insured and words of exclusion will be strictly construed against insurer. Phillips v. Estate of Greenfield, 1993 OK 110, 859 P.2d 1101.
.36 O.S.1991, § 6092 provides:
No provision in an automobile liability policy or endorsement for such coverage effective in this state issued by an insurer on and after the effective date of this act which grants the insurer the right of subrogation for payment of benefits under the expenses for the medical services coverage portion of the policy, lo a named insured under the policy, or to any relative of the named insured who is a member of the named insured's household shall be valid and enforceable; provided that such policy or endorsement may provide for said insurer’s rights of subrogation and setoff upon such payments to any person who is not a named insured under the policy or a relative of the named insured who is a member of the named insured's household.