This is a consolidated appeal from two Superior Court judgments. The defendant-appellant in each proceeding is Nationwide Mutual Automobile Insurance Company (“Nationwide”). The plaintiffs-appellees in one case'are Christine Peebles and Horace Peebles. The other plaintiffs-appellees are David C. Mayo and Carol J. Mayo.
The single common legal issue in both cases relates to the underinsurance policy issued by Nationwide to each of the plaintiffs. The Superior Court was required to construe the deduction of other policies “available to the insured” that is required by 18 Del.C. § 3902(b)(3). In each ease, the Superior Court held that reduction must be set off against the claimant’s total damages for bodily injury, rather than being set off against the limits of the claimant’s underin-*1375surance policy. The Superior Court concluded that holding was compelled by this Court’s construction of Section 3902(b)(3) in the context of an uninsured claim. Hurst v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co., Del.Supr., 652 A.2d 10 (1995). We agree. The Superior Court’s judgment in each ease is affirmed.
FACTS
Mayo v. Nationwide
On May 5,1992, Carol J. Mayo was injured in an automobile accident caused by the negligence of a third party tortfeasor. The liability insurance carrier for the third party tortfeasor paid the liability policy limits of $25,000 to Carol Mayo in settlement of her claims against the tortfeasor. At the time of the accident, Carol Mayo had $100,000 in uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage with Nationwide.
Because she sustained damages in excess of $25,000, Carol Mayo asserted an underin-sured claim against Nationwide. At a binding arbitration hearing, the arbitration panel determined $135,000 to be the total value of Carol Mayo’s damages. Nationwide paid Mayo $75,000, pursuant to the terms of its underinsurance policy. It arrived at the figure by deducting the $25,000 paid to Mayo by the tortfeasor’s liability insurance carrier from the $100,000 per accident maximum of her underinsured policy limits.
Nationwide then filed a declaratory judgment action in the Superior Court. That action sought a determination of whether the liability limits paid by the tortfeasor’s insurance carrier were to be subtracted from the limits of Mayo’s underinsured motorist policy with Nationwide or the amount of Carol Mayo’s total damages. The Mayos filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings on the basis that the policy provision relied upon by Nationwide was void as a matter of law.
Peebles v. Nationwide
Christine Peebles was injured in three different motor vehicle accidents. The first accident occurred on March 20, 1992. The third accident occurred on October 11,1992.1 In each of those accidents, the motor vehicle being operated by Christine Peebles was struck by an uninsured motorist. The second accident occurred on May 27,1992, when Christine Peebles’s automobile was struck by an insured vehicle, being driven by David Truszcienski (“tortfeasor”). At all times relevant to the three accidents, Christine Pee-bles was insured under the same Nationwide automobile policy. That policy included uninsured and underinsured benefits of $50, 000/$100,000.
In October 1998, the Peebles filed a suit for negligence against the drivers of the other vehicles in each of the three accidents. The Peebles also sued Nationwide for uninsured and underinsured benefits. On March 10,1995, the Peebles and Nationwide entered into a stipulation to resolve the uninsured and underinsured claims through binding arbitration.
That binding arbitration was subject to several stipulated provisions. The parties agreed that the claims regarding the accidents with uninsured motorists in March 1992 and October 1992 “shall be subject to a maximum award of $50,000 for each accident.” The third paragraph of the stipulation provided, with regard to the May 1992 accident involving the tortfeasor, that the claim “shall be subject to the maximum of $50,000. However, any amount awarded over $35,000 shall not be binding” and “either party may litigate in court the entitlement of the plaintiff to receive any amount awarded in excess of $35,000.” This provision was added because Christine Peebles received the tortfeasor’s policy limit of $15,000, as a result of the second accident. The parties also agreed that “if the arbitrator’s [sic] are unable to apportion damages between the three accidents, then Nátionwide shall satisfy the arbitrator’s award by making three equal payments within the coverage limits of the three respective claims subject to the limitations set forth in paragraph three of the stipulation to arbitration.”
*1376On August 24, 1995, the arbitration panel entered an award in favor of Christine Pee-bles in the amount of $165,000 for all three accidents. The panel concluded that her injuries were not apportionable. Nationwide paid Christine Peebles the $50,000 of maximum coverage per accident for each of the two collisions with uninsured drivers and $35,000 for the collision caused by the under-insured tortfeasor, i.e., $135,000 in total. Nationwide arrived at the $35,000 figure by deducting the $15,000 paid to Christine Pee-bles by the tortfeasor’s insurance carrier from the $50,000 maximum per accident of her underinsured policy limits.
After the arbitration, the Peebles filed an amended complaint which added a seventh claim against Nationwide. That claim sought an additional $15,000 payment of underinsurance to Christine Peebles.
Parties’ Contentions Superior Court Holding
The Superior Court held that the amount of underinsured liability coverage to be paid is determined by setting off the money received from the tortfeasor against Carol Mayo’s and Christine Peebles’s respective total bodily injury damages and not against the limits of each applicable underinsured motorist policy. Accordingly, the parties agree that the sole and common legal issue on appeal is whether 18 Del.C. § 3902(b) requires the money received from a tortfeasor’s liability policy to be deducted from the arbitration panel’s total award of damages or from the limits of the claimant’s underinsurance policy. The applicable standard of appellate review is de novo or plenary.
In both cases on appeal, Nationwide’s policy provision for underinsured coverage provides that the underinsured motorist limit “will be reduced by any sums paid by or for any liable parties.” Accordingly, Nationwide contends it is entitled to a credit against the underinsurance policy limits for the money paid on behalf of the tortfeasor. The plaintiffs argue that underinsured claims and the reduction permitted by Section 3902(b)(3) are controlled by this Court’s holding in Hurst v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co., Del. Supr., 652 A.2d 10 (1995). Thus, the plaintiffs submit that a tortfeasor’s payment is to be set off against the claimant’s total damages for bodily injury and that any provision in the underinsurance policy to the contrary is unenforceable. In response to that argument, Nationwide contends that this Court’s holding in Hurst is distinguishable, because it related to the validity of a reducing clause for uninsured coverage rather than underin-sured coverage.
Kenner/Hurst Section 3902 Construed
This Court has closely examined the statutory intent and public policy of Section 3902(b) in two prior opinions. The first opinion to construe the statutory issue of set-offs in uninsured and underinsured coverage (“UM/UIM coverage”) was Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. Kenner, Del.Supr., 570 A.2d 1172 (1990), an underinsured motorist case. In Kenner, the tortfeasor’s liability limits totaled $100,000 and the plaintiffs’ UM/UIM coverage equaled $300,000. Id. at 1173. The majority opinion in Kenner concluded that Section 3902(b) established both a floor and a ceiling for an insured’s recovery when an accident involves an underinsured motorist. Therefore, the Kenner majority opinion held that Nationwide was permitted to deduct the $100,000 paid by the tortfeasor from the $300,000 limits of its UM/UIM coverage. Id. at 1176-77.
The operation of uninsured motorist coverage was decided in Hurst v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co., Del.Supr., 652 A.2d 10 (1995). This Court noted, however, that “[t]he issue in the present case, whether payments ‘by or for any liable parties’ may be deducted from the Nationwide Policy limits, is the same issue that divided this Court in Kenner.” Id. at 13. Accordingly, in deciding the issue of uninsured coverage in Hurst, this Court re-examined its underin-sured coverage holding in Kenner.
This Court concluded that the majority’s decision in Kenner was “contrary to the express terms of Section 3902 and inconsistent with the other decisions of this Court.” Id. at 15. Accordingly, this Court stated that a “careful re-examination of Section 3902 and other decisions of this Court leads us now to *1377adopt the construction of Section 3902 taken by the dissent in Kenner, even in the face of unambiguous policy language to the contrary.” Id. at 13 (citing State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Washington, Del.Supr., 641 A.2d 449 (1994); Adams v. Delmarva Power & Light Co., Del.Supr., 575 A.2d 1103 (1990); Frank v. Horizon Assurance Co., Del.Supr., 553 A.2d 1199 (1989)). Therefore, the Court in Hurst held that Section 3902(b) mandates that any reduction provided for by Section 3902(b)(3) must be deducted from the total amount of the insured claimant’s bodily injuries and not from the limits of the insured claimant’s uninsured coverage. Id. at 13-14. Consequently, to the extent Kenner was inconsistent with the majority opinion in Hurst, Kenner was overruled. Id. at 11, 15.
Section 3902
Underinsurance Coverage
The Superior Court correctly concluded that this Court’s construction of Section 3902(b) in Hurst controlled the disposition of Mayo’s and Peebles’s underinsurance claims against Nationwide. The ratio decidendi of the majority opinion in Hurst concerning uninsured coverage is clearly applicable to underinsured coverage. Otherwise, it would have been unnecessary in Hurst to overrule the construction of Section 3902 in Kenner, which was an underinsurance case.
The logical operation of Section 3902(b) with regard to uninsurance, as described by this Court in Hurst, applies a fortiori to underinsurance coverage as that term is defined in subsection 3902(b)(2). See Hurst v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co., Del.Supr., 652 A.2d 10 (1995). Once again, we begin our construction of the statute with the mandate in Section 3902(b) to extend an offer of uninsured motorist coverage to each insured in an amount not to exceed the limits of the insured’s basic liability policy. That introductory statutory mandate is followed by a sentence which states that the offer of “[s]uch additional insurance shall include un-derinsured bodily injury liability coverage.” 18 Del.C. § 3902(b) (emphasis added).
Section 3902(b)(1) then provides that, if the offer of additional coverage is accepted, it shall “pay for bodily injury damage that the insured ... [is] legally entitled to recover from the driver of an underinsured motor vehicle.” (Emphasis added.) Section 3902(b)(2) defines an underinsured vehicle as one which has total insurance “applicable at the time of the accident ... less than the limits provided by the [insured’s] uninsured motorist coverage.” Finally, Section 3902(b)(3) provides that the underinsured motorist coverage insurer does not have to make any payment until' the limits of all bodily injury insurance policies or bonds available to the insured have been exhausted. Nevertheless, when the underinsured policy is activated, it must respond in an amount up to its policy limits “for bodily injury damage that the insured or his legal representative are legally entitled to recover from the driver of an underinsured motor vehicle.” 18 Del.C. § 3902(b)(1) (emphasis added).
Nationwide contends that Section 3902(b)(2) not only defines underinsurance but also sets a maximum ceiling on recovery at the limits of the underinsurance policy. Thus, Nationwide argues that it does not have to pay the limits of the underinsurance policies to Mayo and Peebles even though an underinsured driver caused each of them bodily injuries in excess of the limits in the underinsurance policies they purchased from Nationwide. That argument is completely contrary to the statutory mandate in Section 3902(b)(1) that requires underinsurance coverage for the purpose of paying “bodily injury damage that the insured or his legal representative are legally entitled to recover from the driver of an underinsured motor vehicle.”
Nationwide’s argument was adopted in Kenner but overruled in Hurst, when this Court concluded that Kenner had misconstrued Section 3902. The majority opinion in Kenner equated the limits of underinsurance which must be offered with the operation of those limits as a ceiling on underinsurance recovery. The majority opinion in Hurst concluded that such a construction defeated the General Assembly’s avowed purpose of providing innocent Delaware motorists with an opportunity to protect themselves from impecunious tortfeasors. Hurst v. Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co., 652 A.2d at 12.
*1378Kenner’s construction of Section 3902 permitted the insurance carrier to use the definition of underinsurance in Section 3902(b)(2) as more than a predicate for activating coverage. By construing Section 3902(b) to require Section 3902(b)(3)’s deductions to be made from the underinsurance policy limits rather than the insured’s total bodily injuries, the otherwise innocuous definition of underinsurance in Section 3902(b)(2) becomes a sword to pierce the shield of mandatory insurance coverage in Section 3902(b)(1). Instead, Section 3902(b)(1) was intended to pay the claimant for bodily injury damage that the insured driver was entitled to recover from the driver of an underinsured vehicle, if full compensation for those injuries had not been received after the deductions required by Section 3902(b)(3).
The introductory section of Section 3902(b) correlates the offer of underinsurance with the limits of the insured’s basic liability policy. Section 3902(b)(1), however, correlates the operation of that underinsurance coverage to the amount the insured is legally entitled to receive from the underinsured driver, after maMng the deductions for other coverage as required by Section 3902(b)(3). Section 3902(b)(2) simply defines underinsurance for the purpose of triggering that form of coverage. Accord Allstate Ins. Co. v. Gillaspie, Del.Super., 668 A.2d 757 (1995), aff'd, Del.Supr., No. 327, 1995, Hartnett, J., 1996 WL 21056 (Jan. 10, 1996) (ORDER).2 Accordingly, we hold that Section 3902(b) mandates that any reduction provided for by Section 3902(b)(3) must be deducted from the total amount of the insured claimant’s bodily injuries and not from the limits of the insured claimant’s underinsurance coverage.3 The contrary provisions in the Nationwide policies issued to Mayo and Peebles are vio-lative of the statutory mandate and unenforceable.
Conclusion
The judgments of the Superior Court are affirmed.
. Christine Peebles was accompanied during the third accident by the other plaintiff, her husband, Horace Peebles. Compensation for his injuries from that accident are not an issue in this appeal.
. Although Gillaspie is factually distinguishable from the cases sub judice and from Hurst, its holding is consistent with this opinion. The statute defines an underinsured driver as a tortfeasor with liability policy limits that are less than the insured’s uninsured motorist coverage. 18 Del.C. § 3902(b)(2). Unlike Hurst, Mayo, and Peebles, the limits of Gillaspie’s uninsured coverage were equal to the tortfeasor’s liability limits. In Gillaspie, the Superior Court held that because the tortfeasor's liability coverage was not less than Gillaspie’s uninsured motorist cover-, age, Gillaspie did not meet the unambiguous statutory definition of being injured by an "un-derinsured'’ driver. Gillaspie, 668 A.2d at 762-63. Therefore, the Superior Court concluded that it was not required to apply this Court’s holding in Hurst to Gillaspie's underinsurance claim. Id. This Court affirmed that judgment. In this opinion, we again hold that the presentation of record evidence which comports with the unambiguous definition in Section 3902(b)(2) is a condition precedent to pursuing an underinsurance claim. See id.
. The Peebles case on appeal was decided by the same Superior Court jurist who decided Gillas-pie. In Peebles, however, the limits of the tortfea-sor’s liability coverage are less than "the limits provided by [Peebles’s] uninsured motorist coverage.” 18 Del.C. § 3902(b)(2). Accordingly, the Superior Court held that disparity between Pee-bles’s coverage and the tortfeasor’s limits triggered the statutory definition of underinsurance in Section 3902(b)(2). The Superior Court further held that this Court’s construction of Section 3902(b)(1) and (b)(3) in Hurst, with regard to uninsurance coverage, was applicable to Pee-bles’s proper claim for underinsurance coverage. This opinion affirms that judgment.