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General Electric Co. (“GE”) sought
coverage for more than 100 different environmental
claims under policies issued between 1959 and 1967. At
the time, the insurer, Electric Mutual Liability
Insurance Company, Ltd., was based in Massachusetts and
GE was based in New York. The policies did not contain
choice of law provisions.
Massachusetts and New York insurance law
differ in two ways important to resolution of this
dispute. First, in Massachusetts, an insurer who asserts
that the insured provided to it late notice of a claim
must also prove actual prejudice resulting from the late
notice. That is not true under New York law. Second,
under Massachusetts law, if multiple policies cover a
claim, the insured may still recover policy limits from
any one of the applicable policies. Under New York law,
the insured can only obtain pro rata coverage from any
one insurer. |
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Because Massachusetts is the forum state,
the court applied its choice of law rules. Massachusetts
uses a “functional choice-of-law approach.” In the
insurance context, “[t]he location of the insured risk
will be given greater weight than any other single
contact in determining the state of the applicable law.”
This factor pointed to New York as the “home to the
plurality of the insured risk.” The court also discussed
WR Grace & Co. v. Hartford Acc. & Indem. Co., 407
Mass. 572 (1990), which emphasized the domicile of the
insured in complex, multi-state coverage disputes.
The court nevertheless did not find these
factors conclusive, and also analyzed the factors
provided in Section 188 of the Restatement (Second)
of Conflict of Laws to determine which state had the
more significant relationship to the issues. The court
discussed each factor and concluded that New York law
would govern the dispute.
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