Plaintiff John Pieciallo brought suit against his former employer L-C-A Sales Company (LCA) and certain individuals at LCA, alleging wrongful termination based on a violation of New Jersey’s Law Against Discrimination (LAD), N.J.S.A. 10:5-1 to -49. The thrust of plaintiffs claim against LCA was that he was forced out of his position because of his age. This appeal presents the issue whether an “employee exclusion” contained in a comprehensive general liability (CGL) insurance policy precludes a corporate policyholder from securing coverage for damages arising from a claim of wrongful termination.
I
Pieciallo worked as a salesman for LCA for over thirty years until his termination on December 31, 1991. Pieciallo and LCA entered into several employment agreements dining Picciallo’s tenure at the company, the last of which was dated January 1, 1977. It superseded the prior employment agreements and provided that Pieciallo would be given two weeks’ written notice prior to termination.
According to Pieciallo, Joel Schwartz, a partner at LCA, and Steven Hall, an employee, began to harass him in 1990 in an effort to force him into retirement. Pieciallo alleged that a younger employee was hired in June 1991 to assume control over Pieciallo’s sales territory. Pieciallo asserted that Hall began informing LCA customers that the new employee was replacing Pieciallo because of his impending retirement. On December 17, 1991, Pieciallo received a letter from Schwartz dated December 13,1991, informing Pieciallo of the termination of his employment effective two weeks after receipt of the letter. Pursuant to that letter, Piecial-lo’s employment was terminated on December 31, 1991. At the time of his dismissal, Pieciallo was sixty-seven years old.
In April 1992, Pieciallo filed suit against LCA, Schwartz, Ellen Schwartz (another LCA partner), and Hall (collectively “LCA”). The gravamen of Picciallo’s complaint was that LCA violated the *32 LAD by terminating Mm simply because of Ms age. Picciallo also alleged causes of action based on breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith, wrongful discharge, negligence, tortious interference with contract, respondeat superior, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. During discovery, Pic-ciallo asserted that as a result of his wrongful dismissal from LCA he suffered emotional distress with resulting heart palpitations, sleepwalking, loss of libido, decrease in frequency of sex, constipation, bloating, headaches, diarrhea and stomach pains. Picciallo also complained of a loss of appetite that precipitated weight loss, indigestion and loss of cogmtive skills, and alleged that he also suffered a stroke.
The events surrounding Pieciallo’s dismissal occurred at about the same time LCA changed its insurance carrier. From December 28, 1990, to December 28, 1991, LCA was insured under CGL and umbrella liability policies issued by Michigan Mutual Insurance Company (MicMgan Mutual). From December 28, 1991, to December 28, 1992, LCA was msured under a CGL policy issued by American Motorists Insurance Company (American Motorists). During that same period, LCA was also insured under a commercial catastrophe policy issued by Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Insurance Company (Lumbermens). (Because both American Motorists and Lumbermens are part of the Kemper Companies, we refer to them collectively as “Kemper.”) Both CGL policies issued by MicMgan Mutual and Kemper contained a standard employee exclusion clause, providing that the insurance did not apply to “bodily injury” to “[a]n employee of the msured arising out of and in the course of employment by the insured.”
Because the involvement of LCA’s insurers significantly complicated the path of the litigation, we provide a brief summary of the intricate procedural Mstory. LCA filed an answer to Picciallo’s complaint in July 1992, and sought coverage and a defense from Kemper. Kemper disclaimed coverage on several grounds, including the employee exclusion, and filed a declaratory judgment action seeking a determination that no coverage was available *33 under its policy. The Picciallo suit and Kemper’s declaratory judgment action were then consolidated for discovery purposes.
In May 1993, LCA moved for summary judgment against Kemper on the coverage issue, and Kemper cross-moved for summary judgment, asserting for the first time in support of its motion that Picciallo’s dismissal occurred prior to the effective date of its coverage. The trial court denied both motions without prejudice, pending the completion of Picciallo’s deposition. Kem-per later amended its complaint to include Michigan Mutual as a defendant. After Picciallo’s deposition, LCA filed a second motion for summary judgment, and both Kemper and Michigan Mutual responded with their own summary judgment motions. Reversing its prior determination, the trial court ruled that Piceiallo’s cause of action arose prior to December 31,1991, and that both Kemper and Michigan Mutual had a duty to defend LCA. Subsequently, the trial court vacated that decision as well.
Ultimately, the trial court granted summary judgment to both insurance companies, holding that the language of the employee exclusion was clear and precluded coverage for Pieciallo’s claim. On the same date, Picciallo settled with LCA for $130,000, of which LCA agreed to pay $25,000, and LCA assigned to Picciallo its rights, if any, to coverage for the balance of Picciallo’s claim.
In an unreported decision, the Appellate Division affirmed the grant of summary judgment in favor of Kemper and Michigan Mutual, but held that coverage was not precluded by the employee exclusion. Extending the reasoning of
Cairns v. City of East Orange,
267
N.J.Super.
395,
We granted LCA’s petition for certification, Picciallo’s petition for certification, Kemper’s cross-petition for certification, and Michigan Mutual’s cross-petition for certification. 151
N.J.
468,
II
The Michigan Mutual and Kemper CGL policies each contain an exclusion for workers’ compensation claims, and an employee exclusion, that state:
This insurance does not apply to:
d. Any obligation under a workers’ compensation, disability benefits or unemployment compensation law or any similar law.
e. “Bodily injury” to:
(1) An employee of the insured arising out of and in the course of employment by the insured____
Additionally, each policy provides that the employee exclusion applies “[wjhether the insured may be liable as an employer or in any other capacity____”
The employee exclusion contained in the Kemper and Michigan Mutual policies is the standard form of employee exclusion first introduced by insurers in the 1970s. See Jonathan S. Reed, Shredding the Employment Exclusion, 152 N.J.L.J. 324 (April 27, 1998). As the number of employment-related discrimination and harassment claims has increased in recent years, the insurance industry strengthened the employee exclusion by inserting specific language barring coverage for injuries arising out of discrimination, termination and harassment of employees. Ibid. We note that that form of expanded employee exclusion clause was used by Michigan Mutual in the umbrella policy it issued to LCA. Insurers have also begun to offer separate Employment Practices Liability Insurance (EPLI) policies, .which provide coverage for employment-related claims. Ibid.; see also Paul E.B. Glad & Richard V. *35 Rupp, Employment-Related Liability Claims and Insurance, 716 PLI/Comm 121, 124 (1995)(describing advent of employment exclusions and recent development of EPLI policies).
Michigan Mutual and Kemper assert that the Appellate Division erred in finding the employee exclusion to be inapplicable. According to the insurance companies, the facts underlying Piceiallo’s complaint clearly arose out of his employment and thus bring the claim within the plain language of the employee exclusion. They contend that the Appellate Division’s conclusion that the employee exclusion bars coverage only for workers’ compensation claims ignores the effect of the separate workers’ compensation exclusion contained in each policy.
Pieciallo and LCA argue that because Picciallo’s bodily injury resulted not from his work for LCA, but from his wrongful termination, his claim did not arise out of and in the course of his employment and therefore is not subject to the exclusion. They also note that Pieciallo filed suit after his dismissal, and therefore assert that his status as a former employee avoids the effect of the exclusion because his claim was not brought “in the course of his employment.” They point to the availability of insurance policies containing more specific employee exclusions, and the presence of such an exclusion in Michigan Mutual’s umbrella policy, to bolster the argument that the employee exclusion in Michigan Mutual’s CGL policy does not apply.
The critical phrase “arising out of,” which frequently appears in insurance policies, has been interpreted expansively by New Jersey courts in insurance coverage litigation. “The phrase ‘arising out of has been defined broadly in other insurance coverage decisions to mean conduct ‘originating from,’ ‘growing out of or having a ‘substantial nexus’ with the activity for which coverage is provided.”
Records v. Aetna Life & Cas. Ins.,
294
N.J.Super.
463, 468,
Only one reported New Jersey decision has addressed the “arising out of’ language in the context of an employee exclusion contained in a CGL policy. In
Schmidt v. Smith,
294
N.J.Super.
569, 574-75,
Simultaneously with the filing of this opinion, we affirmed the judgment of the Appellate Division.
Schmidt v. Smith,
155
N.J.
44,
In concluding that Pieciallo’s claim did not arise out of or in the course of his employment and was therefore not precluded from coverage by the employee exclusion, the Appellate Division relied on
Cairns, supra,
267
N.J.Super.
395,
However,
Cairns
is distinguishable from the issue presented by this appeal because it dealt with the interpretation of the Workers’ Compensation Act rather than the application of an employee exclusion in a CGL insurance policy. Indeed, the holding of
Cairns
was based largely on the “underlying policy considerations rather than the clear language of the Act.”
Id.
at 399,
More instructive is the clear weight of authority from other jurisdictions that favors enforcement of the employee exclusion to bar coverage for claims similar to that advanced by plaintiff. In
Meadowbrook v. Tower Ins. Co.,
In
McLeod v. Tecorp International, Ltd.,
318
Or.
208,
Other federal and state courts that have addressed this issue have reached the same conclusion.
See, e.g., Western Heritage Ins. Co. v. Magic Years Learning Ctrs. & Child Care, Inc.,
Ill
We have observed that “[i]n general, insurance policy exclusions must be narrowly construed; the burden is on the insurer to bring the ease within the exclusion.”
Princeton Ins. Co. v. Chunmuang,
151
N.J.
80, 95,
Picciallo’s amended complaint alleged that in 1990, Joel Schwartz, Steven Hall and LCA began harassing him to induce him to retire, harassment that was “motivated by an intention to create an environment under which plaintiff would not continue to work and would be forced to resign____” Discovery revealed that the facts alleged by plaintiff in support of his claim included humiliation of Piceiallo at a June 1990 sales meeting, frequent inquiries by supervisory personnel about when Piceiallo would *42 retire, harassing telephone calls, and LCA’s hiring of a young employee who was introduced to customers as Picciallo’s “replacement” while Picciallo was still on the job. As the record demonstrates, Picciallo’s cause of action for wrongful termination based on age discrimination unquestionably arose out of and in the course of his employment, as did the essential factual allegations on which the cause of action was predicated. We agree with the Minnesota Supreme Court’s observation that it would be “incongruous to hold that such a claim can arise anywhere but in the course and scope” of employment. Meadowbrook, supra, 559 N.W.2d at 420.
We note that whether specific acts of harassment or discrimination took place outside the workplace, such as harassing telephone calls to Pieciallo’s home, is of no consequence because such conduct nevertheless would have arisen out of the employment relationship between Picciallo and LCA. See ibid, (noting that acts occurring outside the workplace did not change nature of claim for hostile work environment); Continental Ins. Co., supra, 604 N.Y.S.2d at 400 (applying employee exclusion although some alleged acts of harassment occurred outside workplace). We also reject the argument that because Picciallo is a former employee, the “in the course of employment” language of the employee exclusion renders the exclusion inapplicable.
Aside from the plain language of the employee exclusion, the presence of the workers’ compensation exclusion immediately preceding the employee exclusion demonstrates that the objective of the CGL policy was to exclude from coverage all claims — whether falling within or beyond the workers’ compensation system— “arising out of and in the course of’ Picciallo’s employment. Were the employee exclusion interpreted only to bar coverage for workers’ compensation claims, the workers’ compensation exclusion in LCA’s CGL policy would be redundant. See
Omark Indus., supra,
590
F.Supp.
at 120 (disputing notion that “underlying claims must be covered under workers’ compensation in order to fall within an employee exclusion clause”);
Meadowbrook, su-
*43
pro,
We emphasize that because the relevant contract is a CGL policy rather than a workers’ compensation policy, the public policy considerations underlying the workers’ compensation system are not implicated. See
Schmidt, supra,
155
N.J.
at 52,
Our resolution of the applicability of the employee exclusion is dispositive of this appeal. Therefore, we decline to address the remaining issues concerning the date of the occurrence, whether Kemper’s delay in raising the date of the occurrence estops it from denying coverage on that basis, and whether LCA’s delay in *44 notifying Michigan Mutual of Piceiallo’s claim bars LCA from seeking coverage from Michigan Mutual.
IV
As modified, the judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed.
For modification and affirmance — Chief Justice PORITZ and Justices HANDLER, POLLOCK, O’HERN, GARIBALDI,
STEIN COLEMAN — 7.
Opposed — None.
