CLAY, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which KEITH, J., joined. BATCHELDER, J., concurred in Part IV only.
OPINION
Plaintiff, Brownell Combs, II, Administrator C.T.A. of the Estate of Leslie Combs, II, deceased, appeals an order granting Defendant, International Insurance Company, summary judgment against Plaintiffs action in diversity, brought pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332, alleging breach of a directors and officers liability insurance contract, breach of the implied contractual duty of good faith and fair dealing, and bad faith denial of Defendant’s duty to defend under the insurance policy. For the reasons set forth below, we AFFIRM the district court.
FACTS
Decedent founded Spendthrift Farm (“Spendthrift”) in 1937 with 120 acres of land near Lexington, Kentucky. By the early 1980s, the farm encompassed 1800 acres and housed forty-three stallions, including the last two Triple Crown winners. Decedent developed the principal method of stallion management used today. 1
By 1981, Decedent was over eighty years old and became interested in planning his estate so that Spendthrift would continue after his death. During the early 1980s, Decedent tried several different methods to broaden Spendthrift’s ownership. Initial efforts to take the company public failed when the farm could not locate a suitable investment bank. A 1982 effort to distribute forty percent of the ownership interest in Spendthrift failed because of disputes between Plaintiff 2 and potential investors.
Eventually, the farm developed and implemented a private stock placement plan described in a Private Placement Memorandum (“PPM”). The PPM made clear that Decedent and Plaintiff, not Spend *573 thrift, retained exclusive control over the private placement:
All sales are subject to the discretion of the Sellers including the right to accept each unit as purchased or none until the entire offering is purchased. Sellers reserve the right, in their absolute discretion, to accept or reject any offer to purchase, and/or to withdraw the offering either partially or in its entirety.
(J.A. at 842.) Furthermore, the lawyers involved in both the private placement (Charles Hembree, Decedent’s long-time personal counsel), and the contemplated initial public offering (“IPO”) (Frank Wheat of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher), distinguished between the Combs family and Spendthrift Farm. Wheat took steps “to keep Spendthrift out of this private placement” to “protect Spendthrift against claims that might arise out of the placement.” (J.A. at 748.)
Through the PPM, the farm sold blocks of stock to certain investors already involved in the thoroughbred industry, thereby creating a pool of shareholders who could create a board of directors and lead Spendthrift after Decedent’s death. Decedent completed the stock sale in 1983. Decedent personally received $17.5 million from the transaction and Plaintiff received another $17.5 million.
The thoroughbred industry, including Spendthrift, prospered during the early 1980s. Later in the decade, however, the industry suffered a downturn from which it did not fully recover until the mid-1990s. Spendthrift’s problems in the mid-to-late-eighties upset many of the investors in the private placement.
In January of 1984, Defendant issued excess policy no. 524-029517-1, which provided directors’ and officers’ liability coverage to Spendthrift for claims made against the farm from November 17, 1983 through November 17, 1986. The policy provided coverage as follows:
1. INSURING CLAUSE
If during the policy period any claim or claims are made against the Insured (as hereinafter defined) or any of them for a Wrongful Act (as hereinafter defined) while acting in their individual or collective capacities as Directors or Officers, the Insurer will pay on behalf of the Insureds or any of them, their Executors, Administrators, Assigns 95% of all Loss (as hereinafter defined), which the Insureds or any of them shall become legally obligated to pay in excess of the retentions stated in Item IV(a) and (b) of the Declarations, not exceeding the limit of liability stated in Item III of the Declarations.
(J.A. at 34-35.) The policy defined “Wrongful Act” as “ány actual or alleged error or misstatement or breach of duty by the Insureds while acting in their individual or collective capacities, or any matter not excluded by the terms and conditions of this Policy claimed against them solely by reason of their being Directors and Officers of the Company.” Id.
In 1986, while the policy was in effect, Fred L. Fredricks sued Decedent, Plaintiff, and other co-defendants “in their individual capacity and as agents and employees of defendant Spendthrift Farm, Inc.” (J.A. at 1049.) The Northern District of California consolidated the Fredericks case with seven other cases involving substantially similar claims (hereinafter the consolidated “California Litigation”). Approximately half of the California Litigation plaintiffs sued Spendthrift Farm itself for the alleged misrepresentations of its officers, directors and agents with respect to the private placement. The other half sued only the individual agents of the farm involved in the private placement.
*574 Regardless, the substance of all the claims focused primarily- on representations made in the PPM regarding the farm’s financial condition and the value of its assets. Specifically, the plaintiffs in the California Litigation made two allegations: (1) that the PPM relied upon financial statements prepared on a current value basis rather, than a cost basis; and (2) that the current value presentation misled the plaintiffs because it failed to include any provision for income taxes, thereby overstating the value of Spendthrift’s assets by the amount of tax liability that would result from attempting to realize the assets’ full value. According to the plaintiffs, the asset valuations were “substantially inflated and based on unrealistic assumptions about the quality, confirmation and other characteristics of the horses.” Id. The plaintiffs sought rescission pursuant to Section 12 of the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. § 77, along with damages for the allegedly fraudulent misrepresentations.
In a letter dated November 14, 1986, Paul Renne, Plaintiffs counsel in San Francisco, California, notified Defendant that the plaintiffs filed eight complaints against Defendant. Renne’s letter sought reimbursement under the policy and Ren-ne requested that Defendant communicate with him about Decedent’s coverage demand.
In Defendant’s response, Defendant’s New. York counsel explained, inter alia, that the wrongful conduct alleged against Decedent did not involve acts solely in his capacity as a director or officer of Spendthrift, but rather- conduct in his individual capacity as a shareholder selling his shares in Spendthrift- for his personal gain (and Plaintiffs personal gain) of $35 million:
The wrongful conduct alleged ■ against the [Plaintiff and Decedent] in the [California Litigation] arises from the sale of their Spendthrift stock. International has observed from 'a review of the Private Placement Memorandum dated April 1, 1982 (“PPM”), which was distributed along with a supplement thereto dated July 27, 1983 (“PPM Supplement”), in connection with a “private placement” distribution of shares of Spendthrift by the [Plaintiff and Decedent] that the [Plaintiff and Decedent] offered shares in Spendthrift, in units of twenty at $1.75 million per unit, for a total offering of $35 million. All of the proceeds of the offering went to the [Plaintiff and Decedent], and none of the proceeds went to Spendthrift. The PPM states that [Decedent] is selling the portion of stock for the purpose of estate planning, and that [Plaintiff] is selling his portion of stock for estate planning and to diversify his interests ....
As indicated above, the directors and officers of Spendthrift are insured only for loss incurred by them solely in their respective capacities as directors and officers. The wrongful conduct alleged against the [Plaintiff and Decedent] in the [California Litigation] does not involve them solely in their capacity as directors or officers but rather in their capacity as individuals who are selling their shares in Spendthrift for their own personal gain. Accordingly, International declines to afford coverage for any loss incurred by the [Plaintiff and Decedent] in-connection with the [California Litigation].
(J.A. at 108-09.) Defendant addressed this letter to Renne, in California, as well as to certain defense counsel (located in California, Ohio, and Kentucky) who had an interest in the Policy because they represented other defendants.
Decedent settled some of the claims against him for $2 million in a court-approved settlement. The trial court dis
*575
missed numerous other claims. A few issues reached a jury, which returned a verdict in favor of the defendants. In a comprehensive opinion explaining the California Litigation in detail, the Ninth Circuit affirmed.
See McGonigle v. Combs,
With respect to the court-approved settlement, Decedent submitted an extensive evidentiary record to persuade the district court that he had only a personal role in the disputed transactions:
(1) there is no evidence that [Decedent] wrote any part of the offering memos or that he was even consulted as to their text; (2) there is no evidence that [Decedent] consciously did anything wrong, or that he is guilty of any moral turpitude in this action; and (3) there is no evidence that [Decedent] personally misled anyone or sought to mislead anyone. [Decedent] is in these cases for one reason only: he was a seller, and there is a claim for recission to which he must respond although there is no evidence of scienter on his part.
(J.A. at 379-80.) The evidence Decedent submitted to the district court in the California Litigation included a due diligence memorandum prepared by counsel following a July 26, 1983 meeting with Decedent and Plaintiff. This memorandum distinguishes between the conduct of Decedent and Plaintiff as sellers, and their conduct as officers or directors for Spendthrift:
On Tuesday morning, July 26, we met with [Plaintiff] to discuss with him the timing of the private placement. [Plaintiff] informed us in rather blunt terms that he had no intention of delaying the private placement. He informed us that he was willing to accept the risks of lack of full disclosure and non-compliance with state securities laws. I advised [Plaintiff] that the risks of lack of going forward could be rather significant as it was my view that prudence called for a delay of the private placement of at least two weeks. [Plaintiff] informed the group that he knew each of the investors personally and had conducted a significant amount of business with them in the past. He informed us that he would give back any monies if the investors complained about the adequacy of the disclosure or non-compliance with Blue Sky laws.
(J.A. at 716-20.) Decedent’s factual submission to the district court in the California Litigation also established that Decedent “was only interested in [the private placement] being done and having his check delivered to him and [Plaintiff] was supposed to take care of everything.” (J.A. at 395.) Decedent quoted Plaintiff as stating that “his father had reached the point in his life where he would not have an attention span sufficient to go through complex legal documents or, for that matter, a conversation that lasted more than five minutes.” (J.A. at 413.) Plaintiff did not dispute any part of the factual record submitted to the district court in support of the settlement in the California Litigation.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Decedent died in April of 1990, before the California Litigation concluded. Decedent had not yet brought an action against Defendant for his defense fees or the settlement payments, and Plaintiff still had not done so on Decedent’s behalf when the California Litigation terminated in 1992. Decedent’s estate was closed four years later, on June 21, 1996. Neither the administrator of the estate at the time, P. Keith Nally, nor the estate’s attorney, *576 Charles Hembree, considered commencing a claim against Defendant on Decedent’s behalf.
In the Spring of 2000, four years after Decedent’s estate closed, Plaintiff reopened the estate and arranged to become the administrator. On June 6, 2000, in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky, Plaintiff commenced the action that is the subject of this appeal. Count I of the complaint asserted a breach of contract claim; Count II alleged a breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing; and Count III asserted a bad faith claim.
Following discovery, Defendant moved for summary judgment on July 2, 2001. Defendant argued (1) that New York’s statute of limitations applied and barred Plaintiffs claims; (2) equitable estoppel barred Plaintiffs claims; and (3) the policy did not cover the Decedent’s role in the private placement. On September 10, 2001, the district court granted Defendant’s motion on the basis that the applicable statute of limitations barred Plaintiffs claims.
See Combs v. Int’l Ins. Co.,
On September 20, 2001, Plaintiff filed a motion under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e) to amend the judgment to certify the statute of limitations issue to the Kentucky Supreme Court. After further briefing, the district court denied Plaintiffs motion on November 16, 2001. On November 29, 2001, Plaintiff timely noticed his appeal.
DISCUSSION
We conduct a
de novo
review of summary judgment.
Eastman Kodak Co. v. Image Technical Servs., Inc.,
[t]he mere existence of a scintilla of evidence in support of the plaintiffs position will be insufficient; there must be evidence on which the jury could reasonably find for the plaintiff. The judge’s inquiry, therefore, unavoidably asks whether reasonable jurors could find by a preponderance of evidence that the plaintiff is entitled to a verdict.
Id.
at 252,
We must decide whether the district court properly ruled that under Ky.Rev. Stat. § 413.320, the Kentucky “borrowing statute,” the New York statute of limitations bars Plaintiffs action. This is a highly uncertain area of state law, forcing us to make an educated “Erie guess.” Plaintiff contends, alternatively, (1) that the Kentucky judiciary would interpret Kentucky’s borrowing statute so as to apply the statute of limitations of the jurisdiction that, considering all the facts, has the most significant connection with the disputed transaction, and (2) even if the locus of accrual is the only relevant consideration, this cause of action accrued in Kentucky, making Kentucky’s statute of limitations applicable.
New York’s statute of limitations for breach of a written contract is six years. N.Y. Civ. Pkao. Law & Rules § 213. Kentucky has a fifteen-year statute of limitations for the breach of a written contract. Ky.Rev.Stat. § 413.090(2). Defendant notified Plaintiff that it would deny coverage on November 14, 1986, and Plaintiff brought suit on June 6, 2000. Thus, if New York’s statute of limitations applies, as opposed to Kentucky’s, Plaintiffs claim is barred.
In accordance with
Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins,
The Seventh Circuit observed that federal courts “must proceed with caution” when making pronouncements about state law.
Lexington,
As the First Circuit explained, federal courts sitting in a diversity case
*578
are in “a particularly poor position ... to endorse [a] fundamental policy innovation .... Absent some authoritative signal from the legislature or the courts of [the state], we see no basis for even considering the pros and cons of innovative theories .... ”
Dayton v. Peck, Stow & Wilcox Co. (Pexto),
I.
As noted, Plaintiff contends that the Kentucky Supreme Court would interpret Kentucky’s borrowing statute so that whenever substantive Kentucky law governs a claim involving multiple jurisdictions, Kentucky will apply the statute of limitations of the forum with the most significant relationship to the dispute.
A borrowing^gtatute is a legislative exception from the general rule that the forum always applies its statute of limitation.
Miller v. Stauffer Chem. Co.,
When a cause of action has arisen in another state or country, and by the laws of this state or country where the cause of action accrued the time for commencement of an action thereon is limited to a shorter period of time than the period of limitation prescribed by the laws of this state for a like cause of action, then said action shall be barred in this state at the expiration of said shorter period.
Ky.Rev.Stat. § 413.320. Thus, if a cause of action arises in a foreign jurisdiction which has a shorter statute of limitations than Kentucky for the same cause of action, Kentucky courts must “borrow” the foreign jurisdiction’s statute of limitations. Almost three-fourths of states have statutes that resemble Kentucky’s. See Ibra-him J. Wani, Borrowing Statutes, Statutes of Limitations and Modem Choice of Law, 57 UMKC L.Rev. 681, 690 (1989); Donna Mae Endreson, Wisconsin’s Borrowing Statute: Did We Shortchange Ourselves?, 70 Maeq. L.Rev. 120, 122-27 (1986).
Historically, local statutes of limitations governed. At common law, statutes of limitation were procedural, not substantive, a fact which the Second Circuit rightly termed “an accident of history.”
Bournias v. Atl. Mar. Co.,
Before borrowing statutes, when a claim arose outside the forum, courts handled the limitations problem in one of two ways. First, if the forum’s rules barred the claim, the forum’s courts would not hear the claim regardless of its status elsewhere.
See, e.g., Panhandle E. Pipe Line Co. v. Parish,
Lex fori governs procedural rights, but under lex loci (the law of the place), substantive rights are determined according to the law of the place where the cause of action accrued. Lex loci involves a concept of accrual similar to the idea of vesting, which forms the basis for the vested-rights approach to choice of law. Replacing nineteenth-century comity theory but preceding contemporary choice of law paradigms, the vested rights approach dominated the period from 1900 to 1950. Eugene F. ScOLES, Et Al., CONFLICT OF LAWS § 2.7, at 20 (3d ed.2000). According to Professor Joseph H. Beale, the main proponent of vested rights analysis, “[a] right having been created by the appropriate law, that recognition of its existence should follow anywhere.” Joseph H. Beale, 3 Cases on the Conflict of Laws 517 (1901). As Justice Holmes explained:
[W]hen ... a liability is enforced in a jurisdiction foreign to the place of the wrongful act, obviously that does not mean that the act in any degree is subject to the lex fori, with regard to either its quality or its consequences. On the other hand, it equally little means that the law of the place of the act is operative outside its own territory. The theory of the foreign suit is that, although the act complained of was subject to no law having force in the forum, it gave rise to an obligation, an obligatio, which, like other obligations, follows the person, and may be enforced wherever the person may be found. But as the only source of this obligation is the law of the place of the act, it follows that that law determines not merely the existence of the obligation, but equally determines its extent.
Slater v. Mexican Nat’l R.R. Co.,
After most states adopted borrowing statutes, problems in the application of borrowing rules and a torrent of scholarly criticism caused some state high courts to consider interpreting their state’s borrowing statutes so the forum would “borrow” *580 another state’s limitation rule only when the local forum lacked a significant connection to the dispute. Critics of borrowing statutes note that this would be consistent with the Restatement (Second) on Conflict of Laws, which seeks to apply the law of' the forum with the most significant relationship with the parties and the dispute. See Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 6 (1969). The “most significant relationship” test that guides the Second Restatement has at least arguable policy advantages over lex fori because the state with the most significant relationship with the parties and the dispute is probably the state with the greatest interest in the action’s outcome. 4 In fact, one state, Minnesota, repealed its borrowing statute in 1977. See Minn.Stat. § 541.14 (1976), repeated by 1977 Minn. Laws ch. 187 § 1.
Plaintiff cites a number of law review articles arguing that borrowing statutes should be repealed entirely or interpreted to incorporate a “most significant relationship” test. See, e.g., Ibrahim J. Wani, Borrowing Statutes, Statutes of Limitations, and Modem Choice of Law; 57 UMKC L.Rev. 681 (1989); Donna Mae Endreson, Wisconsin’s Borrowing Statute: Did We Shortchange Ourselves?, 70 Marq. L.Rev. 120 (1986); Samuel J. Morley, Applying the Significant Relationships Test to Florida’s Bomtving Statute, 59 Fla. Bar. J. 17 (1985); Donald R. Rigone, The Impact of Significant Contacts on the Pennsylvania Borrowing Statute, 72 DiCK. L.Rev. 598 (1968); David H. Vernon, Statutes of Limitation in the Conflict of Laws: Borrowing Statutes, 32 RoCicy Mtn. L.Rev. 287 (1960). However, none of these law review articles are binding on this Court. For that reason, we will conduct our own inquiry.
II.
Plaintiff highlights five states whose judiciaries have, according to Plaintiff, interpreted borrowing statutes to incorporate a most significant relationship test despite statutory language essentially indistinguishable from Kentucky’s borrowing statute.
A.
Beginning with Wyoming, Plaintiff claims that
BHP Petroleum v. Texaco Exploration Production,
BHP allegedly made an offer to Texaco to change the formula by which the companies calculated royalties.
Id.
BHP sent that letter from Texas to Colorado.
Id.
Texaco allegedly accepted in a response sent from Colorado back to BHP’s office in Texas.
Id.
Later, Texaco sent another letter from Texas to Colorado that disclaimed any intention to recalculate royalty payments.
Id.
Wyoming’s borrowing statute states that “[i]f by the laws of the state or country where the cause of action arose the action is barred, it is also barred in this state.” Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 1-3-117. Colorado had a shorter statute of limita
*581
tions that would have barred BHP’s action; BHP thus argued that Wyoming’s longer limitations period should apply.
We note several points about BHP. First, the BHP court provides scant detail on the nature of the breach. Not only does the court appear skeptical that any breach occurred, the court never defines the dispute with precision. From the facts, it appears the case involved BHP’s attempt to modify the terms of an existing transaction' — something different than Plaintiffs request that Defendant remit (or pledge to remit) certain monies allegedly in accordance with the terms of a Directors and Officers (hereinafter “D & 0”) insurance contract.
Second, BHP urged the court to adopt the Wyoming limitations period because, according to BHP, the court should “focus[ ] upon the location of the subject matter of the contract.” Id. at 1256. Thus, the plaintiff in BHP argued in favor of the limitation period associated with the forum of the subject matter (the Wyoming resources), while the defendant argued for the limitation period associated with the forum of the breach. BHP evidently did not disagree that if the breach was the only relevant consideration, the breach occurred in Colorado, as opposed to Texas, where Texaco posted the letter. The latter scenario, however, is much more akin to the issue we presently face. Plaintiffs counsel sent a letter from California to Defendant’s New York office, and the New York office replied with a letter sent to lawyers in three states — California, Kentucky and Ohio. Thus, as the origin of the letter that allegedly constituted the breach, New York is the analogue of Texas in BHP, not Colorado. No one argues in the instant case that the California statute of limitations might apply.
Finally, BHP never adopted the “substantial relationship” test. According to the BHP decision:
The thread of the argument presented by BHP is tenuous. The essential premise is that in Stanbury v. Larsen,803 P.2d 349 , 355 (Wyo.1990), this Court adopted Restatement (Second) Conflict of Laws § 188 (1971). BHP then contends that since that provision utilizes the “most significant relationship” test, the cause of action arose in Wyoming because the subject matter of the contract is Wyoming minerals. The elements articulated in the “most significant relationship” test include “(a) the place of contracting, (b) the place of negotiation of the contract, (c) the place of performance, (d) the location of the subject matter of the contract, and (e) the domicil, residence, nationality, place of incorporation and place of business of the parties.” Restatement (Second) Conflict of Laws § 188 at 575.
BHP,
B.
Plaintiff next cites New York law and
Global Financial Corp. v. Triarc Corp.,
The court concluded that the breach occurred in Delaware because, under New York’s borrowing statute, “a cause of action accrues at the time and in the place of injury,” and “[w]hen an alleged injury is purely economic, the place of injury is usually where the plaintiff resides and sustains the economic impact of the loss.” Id. at 485 (citations omitted). The Global Financial court did not adopt a “most substantial relationship” analysis of New York’s borrowing statute. In fact, the court rejected the more holistic “center of gravity” test, writing that the goals of New York’s borrowing statute are “better served by a rule requiring the single determination of a plaintiffs residence than by a rule dependent on a litany of events relevant to the ‘center of gravity’ of a contract dispute.” 5 Id. at 486.
Equally important, the notion that the cause of action accrues where the injury is sustained is not particularly helpful in this case because it begs the question of where the plaintiff sustained the injury. Plaintiffs action involves an abstract injury — -by allegedly breaching its promise to pay in a letter Defendant mailed from New York to three jurisdictions, Decedent was not reimbursed for litigation expenses accumulated primarily in California but related to a Kentucky enterprise. Asking where Decedent “got hurt” does not help us. 6
C.
Citing
National Heritage Life Ins. Co. v. Frame,
Following this rule, however, has not led Missouri courts to always conclude that a cause of action “originates” in the forum where the injury appears to occur. In
Finnegan v. Squire Publishers, Inc.,
The Finnegan -court reached its conclusion in part because the “[p]laintiffs reputation interest is invaded at the time of publication, and arguably that is the time when his damage is sustained.” Id. at 706. Thus, at least in Missouri, the location of the wrong is determined by where the plaintiff first sustains any damage, not where he sustains the most damage. Also significant, the Finnegan decision recognized the problems inherent in attempting to determine the location of an intangible injury, like an injury to reputation. Id. at 706-07. The court refused “to adopt the assumption that an attorney’s reputation can only be injured in the state where the attorney is licensed to practice law.” Id. at 706. Rhetorically, the court wondered, “[w]hat would result if plaintiff is licensed in more than one state or by a federal court or agency? Should a court look to the place of first injury, any injury, or the place of greatest injury?” Id. This discussion shows that Missouri courts seem sensitive to the pitfalls inherent in determining accrual based on where the injury purportedly occurred.
Another case,
Harris-Laboy v. Blessing Hospital, Inc.,
D.
Plaintiff next emphasizes Illinois law and
Employers Insurance of Wausau v. Ehlco Liquidating Trust,
In 1982, pursuant to the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (“CERCLA”), 42 U.S.C. § § 9601-9675, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) sent Hines a letter notifying Hines that it faced potential liability for cleanup costs at the Arkansas site.
Illinois has a borrowing statute similar to Kentucky’s. Like Kentucky’s, the Illinois statute states that “[w]hen a cause of action has arisen in a state or territory out of this State, or in a foreign country, and, by the laws thereof, an action thereon cannot be maintained by reason of the lapse of time, an action thereon shall not be maintained in this State.” 735 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/13-210. Arkansas’ statute of limitations barred Ehlco’s action, but Ehl-co could proceed under Illinois’ longer limitations period.
the issuance of the insurance policies to Hines in Illinois, the location of Hines’s principal place of business in Illinois, and the licensing of Wausau to do business in Illinois. Additional contacts with Illinois include the fact that correspondence relative to the EPA lawsuit was directed to Hines in. Illinois; Hines’s requests to Wausau for defense originated in Illinois; Wausau’s responses to those requests were sent to Hines in Illinois; and Hines’s legal counsel that provided Hines’s defense with respect to the EPA proceedings was located in Illinois and would have billed its defense fees to Hines in Illinois. Finally, any monies found to be owing Hines by Wausau as a result of the counterclaim would have been due Hines in Illinois.
Ehlco II,
Furthermore, the
Ehlco II
court was careful to “note that the inquiry as to
*586
where the cause of action arose presupposes that the cause of action has in fact arisen.”
This assumption, required by the Illinois Supreme Court, probably had the unintended effect of obscuring the potential significance of the forum in which the cause of action accrued. According to the Illinois Supreme Court, no cause of action arose against Wausau unless and until Wausau had actual notice of the “trigger[ ],” which was the EPA lawsuit.
Ehlco I,
Additionally, the
Ehlco II
Court noted that “the location of the subject matter of the contract, such as the location of the risk insured by an insurance policy, is entitled to little weight when the subject matter or risk is located in more than one state.”
As already alluded to, it is hard to determine where the risks a D & 0 policy insures against are located. It would be simplistic to conclude that a risk is always located in the insured’s state of residence because insurance protects only against financial loss, which is ultimately felt at a person’s residence or a corporation’s headquarters. A policy can cover risks in multiple states, as the Second Restatement suggests, see Restatement (Seoond) of ConfliCT of Laws § 193, cmt. b (1971), and the Second Restatement cautions against focusing on the location of the risk when risks are dispersed across forum boundaries, see id., which means the residence of someone insured under a D & 0 policy like the one Decedent held should make little difference. This is further underscored by the fact that many D & 0 policies cover multiple directors and officers, each potentially residing in different fora. The limited importance given to risk location in the Ehlco litigation does not support the outcome Plaintiff urges.
E.
Florida is the final jurisdiction whose law Plaintiff asks us to consider. Like Kentucky, Florida’s borrowing statute provides that “[w]hen the cause of action arose in another state or territory of the United States, or in a foreign country, and its laws forbid the maintenance of the action because of lapse of time, no action shall be maintained in this state.” Fla. Stat. § 95.10. Plaintiff first cites
Bates v. Cook,
With respect to contract disputes, Plaintiff cites
Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Co. v. August,
Florida courts continue to apply the “most significant relationship” test to torts only, not contract actions.
See, e.g., Allstate Ins. Co. v. Clohessy,
Most important for the purposes of the instant
Erie
problem, in
Pledger v. Burnup & Sims, Inc.,
Unquestionably, Florida has the most significant contacts with the issue presented .... Appellant has presented a question on which he has cited no authority, in Florida or elsewhere: that is, in view of the [Florida] Supreme Court’s adoption of Restatement (Second) Conflict of Laws § 145, did the cause of action arise in New York, or in Florida, which has the most significant relationship?
Id. The court found New York’s limitations period would apply because the Florida legislature, not the judiciary, should make the decision that the “most significant relationship” test should apply to Florida’s borrowing statute. Id. The Pledger court explained:
The Legislature has not amended [the borrowing statute] since the [Florida] Supreme Court opinion in Bishop. We have no hint of the legislative will on the question of determining where a cause of action arises. They may have assumed the Bishop conflicts rule would determine where a cause of action arises. They might equally have assumed that Bishop, a case dealing exclusively with the rights and liabilities of the parties, had nothing to do with the procedural borrowing statute.
Id. at 1330-31 (emphasis added). Thus, Florida does not use the test Plaintiff advocates and one Florida court emphasized that modifying a borrowing statute is a legislative prerogative. A federal court forced to make an Erie guess should pause before reinterpreting a state statute if the state law is one that is better modified legislatively. Whether or not the Kentucky courts could reinterpret Kentucky’s borrowing statute instead of the Kentucky legislature despite the separation of powers concerns expressed in Pledger, the reinterpretive process raises much more problematic federalism concerns when a federal court construes a state statute.
Although Plaintiffs citations to Wyoming, New York, Missouri, Illinois and Florida law are somewhat illuminating, none of this information makes clear that the Kentucky Supreme Court would interpret Kentucky’s borrowing statute as Plaintiff suggests.
III.
As cited above, Plaintiff references various scholarly works that urge courts to *589 construe borrowing statutes in a manner that incorporates the “most significant relationship” test. Despite these academic exhortations, we recognize that borrowing statutes interpreted in accordance with the accrual approach produce several meaningful policy advantages. 10
First, borrowing statutes impede forum shopping. As one federal court sitting in diversity explained, the objective of Pennsylvania’s borrowing statute is “simply to insure that a plaintiff who sues in Pennsylvania obtains no greater rights than those given in the state where his cause of action arose.”
Wilt v. Smack,
An accrual-based approach makes forum shopping impossible because the statute of limitations that governs in the forum where the cause of action accrued will apply no matter where the plaintiff files suit. In contrast, allowing plaintiffs to file suit in any state that has significant contacts with the dispute encourages plaintiffs to shop for the forum with the longest statute of limitations. Although limiting the operation of a borrowing statute to only those instances where a state has the
most
significant connection with the lawsuit helps make forum shopping somewhat more difficult, many modern commercial transactions transcend state boundaries. If a contract is negotiated in Michigan between an Ohio company and a Kentucky company, with performance scheduled in Tennessee, determining which state has the “most” significant contacts becomes difficult and subjective enough for enterprising attorneys to capitalize on differences between limitations periods. State courts’ desire to discourage forum shopping is significant enough that in at least one instance, the New Jersey Supreme Court applied a foreign jurisdiction’s limitation period even though New Jersey does not have a borrowing statute.
See Heavner v. Uniroyal, Inc.
Second, strictly enforcing borrowing statutes best serves the purpose of statutes of limitation and repose. 11 Most *590 states, including Kentucky, have tolling statutes that stall the running of the applicable limitations period if a cause of action accrues against a state resident not present in the jurisdiction when the cause of action accrues. Kentucky law explains that “[i]f, at the time any cause of action mentioned in Ky.Rev.Stat. 413.090 to 413.160 accrues against a resident of this state, he is absent from it, the period limited for the commencement of the action against him shall be computed from the time of his return to this state.” Ky. Rev.Stat. § 413.190(1). Furthermore,
When a cause of action mentioned in KRS 413.090 to 413.160 accrues against a resident of this state, and he by absconding or concealing himself or by any other indirect means obstructs the prosecution of the action, the time of the continuance of the absence from the state or obstruction shall not be computed as any part of the period within which the action shall be commenced.
Id.
§ 413.190(2). Since tolling statutes eliminate a defendant’s ability to flee the jurisdiction and return after the statute of limitations expires, tolling statutes can inadvertently create perpetual liability for a defendant legally residing in Kentucky accused of a tort or breach of contract that occurred in another jurisdiction. If the defendant is not present in Kentucky when the cause of action accrues against him, he will face liability upon his return to the State even if he returns decades later.
See id.
The borrowing statute minimizes this problem by using the foreign state’s statute of limitations when the cause of action accrues in the foreign state, thereby eliminating the problem of perpetual liability in those circumstances.
See George v. Douglas Aircraft Co.,
Relieving potential defendants of uncertainty is one of the historical purposes of statutes of limitations. As the Supreme Court explained, “[sjtatutes of limitations, like the equitable doctrine of laches, in their conclusive effects are designed to promote justice by preventing surprises through the revival of claims that have been allowed to slumber until evidence is lost, memories have faded, and witnesses have disappeared.”
Order of R.R. Telegraphers v. Ry. Express Agency,
It is a well-settled principle that a statute of limitations is the law of the forum, and operates upon all who submit themselves to its jurisdiction.... Of late years, the courts, in England and in this country, have considered statutes of limitations more favorably than formerly. They rest upon sound policy, and tend to the peace and welfare of society. The courts do not now, unless compelled by the force of former decisions, give a strained construction to evade the effect of those statutes. By requiring those who complain of injuries to seek redress by action at law, within a reasonable time, a salutary vigilance is imposed, and an end is put to litigation.
McCluny v. Silliman,
Third, borrowing statutes reflect respect for state sovereignty. A cause of action is an attempt by the plaintiff to vindicate what he believes is a-legal right or obligation owed. Legal rights and obligations vest when the last event necessary to create the cause of action occurs. • The law of the state where the final event occurs determines the parties’ rights and responsibilities at that point because each state has sovereignty over that which occurs within in its territory. See, e.g., Restatement OP CONFLICT of Laws §§ 377-388. As discussed, the application of the law of the place of the injury is why this system is sometimes called the lex loci approach. Justice Story argued,
[E]very nation possesses an exclusive sovereignty and jurisdiction within its own territory.The direct consequence of this rule is, that the laws of every state affect, and bind directly all property, whether real or personal, within its territory; and all persons, who are resident within it ...; and also all contracts made, and acts done within it.
Joseph StoRY, Commentaries on the Conflict of Laws, Foreign and Domestic 18 (2d ed. 1841) (hereinafter “Commentaries”);
see also Renfroe v. Eli Lilly & Co.,
Borrowing statutes embody the idea that the foreign jurisdiction’s law should control out of respect for that jurisdiction’s territorial sovereignty.
See, e.g., Devine v. Rook,
The true foundation of which the administration of international law must rest is , that-the rules which are to govern are those which arise from mutual interest and utility, from a sense of the inconveniences which would result from a contrary doctrine, and from a spirit of moral necessity to do justice, in order that justice may be done to us in return.
Commentaries, at 34. If Kentucky fails to respect that a cause of action accrues in a foreign jurisdiction, like New York, although the final event necessary for the cause of action occurred in New York, Kentucky shows disrespect for New York’s territoriality in derogation of comity principles that the Kentucky Supreme Court may value.
Without a borrowing statute, New York could establish a cause of action to remedy a particular wrong, but reach a legislative judgment about the significance of the problem and the importance of finality, and choose to attach a short statute of limitations to the new cause of action. By failing to recognize New York’s decision, Kentucky would effectively undermine a quasi-substantive component of New York law — not something we should lightly assume the Kentucky Supreme Court would choose to do.
Thus, despite Plaintiffs attempt to capitalize on the scholarly pressure to interpret Kentucky’s borrowing statute as inef *592 fective when Kentucky does not have the “most significant relationship” with the dispute, adopting Plaintiffs approach might encourage forum shopping, work against the purposes of statutes of limitations and repose, and demonstrate an inappropriate disregard for another state’s sovereignty.
IV.
In a diversity case, the Kentucky statute of limitations will be applied as interpreted by this Court.
Atkins v. Schmutz Mfg. Co.,
A.
The statutory language supports Defendant’s position. The “fundamental rule of statutory construction” in Kentucky “is to determine the intent of the legislature, considering the evil the law was intended to remedy.”
Beach v. Commonwealth,
When a cause of action has arisen in another state or country, and by the laws of this state or country where the cause of action accrued the time for the commencement of an action thereon is limited to a shorter period of time than the period of limitation prescribed by the laws of this state for a like cause of action, then said action shall be barred in this state at the expiration of said shorter period.
Ky.Rev.Stat. § 413.320. Nowhere in the statutory language does the “most significant relationship” test appear. We are “not at liberty to add or subtract from the legislative enactment nor discover meaning not reasonably ascertainable from the language used.”
Commonwealth v. Gaitherwright,
B.
Kentucky last amended its borrowing statute in 1942, at a time when Kentucky still followed the vested rights approach to substantive choice of law questions.
See
Ky.Rev.Stat. § 413.320. Prior to 1967, all Kentucky case law applied
lex loci. See, e.g., Ansback v. Greenberg,
In
Lewis v. American Family Ins. Group,
C.
Willits v. Peabody Coal Co., 188 F.3d
510,
In
Willits,
the plaintiffs asserted a breach of contract claim alleging,
inter alia,
improper calculation of royalties under coal mining agreements.
The Kentucky borrowing statute requires a three step analysis: (1) we must determine whether the cause of action accrued in another state; (2) if the cause of action did accrue in another state, we must determine whether that state’s statute of limitations for the particular cause of action is shorter than Kentucky’s; (3) if the accrual state’s statute of limitations is shorter than Kentucky’s, we apply the statute of limitations of the accrual state; however, if the statute of limitations for the cause of action in that state is longer than Kentucky’s, we apply Kentucky’s shorter statute.
Id. at *12. The second and third parts of this process are fairly simple: if the cause of action accrued in a foreign state, then determine that state’s statute of limitations, and if the foreign state has a shorter limitations period than Kentucky, borrow the foreign state’s shorter rule. The trouble occurs in reaching the second and third components of the analysis because, as Willits correctly observed, “there is little or no law in Kentucky concerning where a breach of contract action accrues.” Id. (emphasis in original).
To help ascertain how the Kentucky judiciary might determine where a cause of action accrues,
Willits
noted that Kentucky’s statute of limitations for contracts of sale under the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) provides: “ ‘A cause of action accrues when the breach occurs, regardless of the aggrieved party’s lack of knowledge of the breach.’ ”
Willits,
Plaintiff offers three challenges to the reasoning offered in
Willits
and to the application of
Willits
to the matter presently before us. First, Plaintiff notes that the district court applied
Willits
to the instant action in part because of Wisconsin jurisprudence the district court found useful. Wisconsin has a borrowing statute similar to Kentucky’s, but Plaintiff complains that the Wisconsin cases cited by the district court do not clearly establish what the Kentucky Supreme Court would do. The district court initially cites
Abraham v. General Cas. Co. of Wisconsin,
The district court also relied on
Ristow v. Threadneedle Ins. Co.,
Plaintiffs second direct challenge to the application of
Willits
to the instant problem depends upon Kentucky venue jurisprudence. Plaintiff cites a series of cases
*595
interpreting Kentucky’s venue statute, Ky. Rev.Stat. Ann. § 452.450.
See, e.g., T.C. Young Constr. Co. v. Hartford Accident & Indem. Co.,
Third, in an attempt to minimize the importance of Willits as applied to the facts of his case, Plaintiff presents us with this hypothetical:
Buyer buys a used car from Seller using a contract that calls for a full-sized spare and shortens the statute of limitations to one year (as allowed by [Ky.Rev.Stat.] 355.2-725). The contract also provides a one year warranty for all electrical components, which requires Buyer to submit a claim form for any repair. Eleven months later, the alternator fails, and Buyer submits a warranty claim form. Two months after that, Buyer has a flat and discovers that there is no spare at all. Three months after the flat, the warranty company delivers a letter claiming that the alternator is not an electrical component.
Buyer’s breach action for the lack of a spare fails because the breach occurred at delivery, as Seller could have put the spare in at any time until then. Buyer could have discovered the spare within the year, but did not and is barred. By not requiring actual knowledge, the statute [of limitations] places the burden on Buyer to examine the goods on delivery, and limitations begin at the point he should have known of the breach. This concept of accrual when the plaintiff should have known of the injury is found both in other limitations statutes and case law. See [Ky.Rev.Stat. Ann.] 413.140(2); Ky. Title Trust Co. v. Weil,281 Ky. 763 ,136 S.W.2d 1097 (1939).
Buyer’s action for breach of the warranty, however, does not accrue under the statute until he receives the letter denying his claim, sixteen months after the purchase, and five months after the alternator failed. Buyer could not sue the warranty company when the alternator failed because he had not complied with the condition precedent of submitting the claim form at that point. The breach is only discovered when the Buyer receives the letter denying the claim and, under the statute [of limitations], the cause accrues at that point in time and (under the analysis in Willits) space.
(Pl.’s Br. at 18-19) (emphasis in original). This hypothetical is somewhat deceptive.
*596 Plaintiff implies that the warranty in this hypothetical is like the D & 0 policy. Presumably, Plaintiff intends the hypothetical to demonstrate the difference between the breach of contract action based on the spare tire (which the hypothetical concedes the statute of limitations would bar) and the breach of warranty action based on the failed alternator. Plaintiffs analysis of the spare tire issue is correct because Buyer could have discovered the breach at any time after the sale and brought suit accordingly. Of course, Plaintiff could (but does not) explain it this way: as soon as Seller sold the car without the spare tire, the breach of contract claim “accrued” because selling the car without the spare was the final act necessary to create the cause of action.
Plaintiff wants us to confuse the “final act” notion of accrual with a discovery concept more favorable to his position in this case. In the hypothetical, Plaintiff assumes that Buyer had no warranty action until he
received
the letter from the warranty company declaring that an alternator does not qualify as an electrical component. Only then, argues Plaintiff, did Buyer discover his cause of action. Yet the final act necessary to create the cause of action was the warranty company’s decision to deny the claim — a judgment that most likely transpired where the company posted the letter, not where Buyer received it. Quoting one of this Court’s earlier decisions,
Willits
notes that “[t]he
final act
which transforms the liability into a cause of action necessarily has aspects of time and place. It occurs at a certain time and in a certain geographical spot.”
Although Willits is an unpublished opinion that constitutes only persuasive authority, Willits supports Defendant, not Plaintiff.
D.
As already discussed, the judicial activity in other states does not constitute particularly persuasive evidence that the Kentucky Supreme Court would reinterpret Kentucky’s borrowing statute to limit its function when Kentucky has the “most significant relationship” to the disputed transaction. Although a few state judiciaries have interpreted their borrowing statutes somewhat progressively, Plaintiffs references to the law in other jurisdictions are too equivocal to form a sound basis for an Ene guess.
To summarize, Wyoming has not adopted the Second Restatement’s approach.
See BHP,
*597
There is also relevant information from jurisdictions Plaintiff neglects to mention. Minnesota repealed its borrowing statute, but a federal court sitting in diversity dutifully applied Minnesota’s borrowing statute before the Minnesota legislature revoked it.
See Devine v. Rayette-Faberge, Inc.,
The opinions from other jurisdictions that Plaintiff cites do not make a compelling case upon which we can make a judicious Eñe guess. If anything, developments elsewhere tend to affirmatively indicate that the Kentucky Supreme Court would not limit the application of its borrowing statute to those situations in which Kentucky has the “most significant relationship” with the dispute.
E.
Although the Kentucky Supreme Court might heed the scholarly criticism of borrowing statutes interpreted in accordance with the accrual theory, the Kentucky Supreme Court might just as easily choose to respect the strong policy interests borrowing statutes serve: they impede forum shopping, effectuate the goals of statutes of limitations and repose, and demonstrate respect for other states’ sovereignty.
This Court has a circumspect role when sitting in diversity and should not unduly speculate about what a state court might conclude, nor should we impose whatever rule we think best. Given (1) the borrowing statute’s language; (2) Kentucky’s focus on vested rights in interstate contract litigation; (3) our unpublished Willits decision; (4) Plaintiffs inability to construct a strong argument based on the law of other jurisdictions; and (5) the policy interests supported by leaving Kentucky’s borrowing statute unadulterated by the Second Restatement, we conclude that the Kentucky Supreme Court would apply the borrowing statute by focusing only on where the cause of action accrued, not on which state has the greatest interest in the dispute.
V.
Having decided that the Kentucky Supreme Court would determine the applicable statute of limitations by looking only to where the cause of action accrued, we must now attempt to apply that rule to the facts of the case before us.
A.
Where an insurance policy is breached depends in part on whether the contract is a liability policy or an indemnity policy. “[U]nder a liability policy a cause of action accrues when liability attaches, whereas under an indemnification policy there is no cause of action until the liability has been discharged, as by payment of the judgment by the insured.”
*598
Quinlan v. Liberty Bank & Trust Co.,
Plaintiffs D & 0 policy defines “loss” as “any amount which Insureds are legally obligated to pay for a claim or claims against them for Wrongful Acts.” (J.A. at 16.) As the Eighth Circuit described a similarly-worded D & 0 policy issued by American Casualty Company:
The definition of “Loss” unequivocally includes defense costs, and seems to require American Casualty to pay these costs when the insureds are “legally obligated to pay” them, i.e., when the costs are incurred, and not, as American Casualty appears to suggest, when the lawsuit is finally disposed of and American Casualty has determined that the claims were covered. This is clearly a liability policy, despite American Casualty’s attempt to treat it as an indemnity policy. The significance of this distinction is that under a liability policy, whenever a covered “loss” occurs (i.e., the insureds are “legally obligated to pay”), American Casualty must pay that amount-payment by the insurer is not conditioned upon a previous payment by the insured, as in an indemnity policy.
McCuen v. Am. Cas. Co.,
Assuming Defendant had an obligation to pay under the policy’s language, Defendant had no responsibility before Decedent himself became “legally obligated to pay” attorney’s fees, settlements, or other related sums. The two-page letter sent from Plaintiffs California counsel to Defendant is simply a list of the eight different lawsuits filed in the California Litigation. Renne, Plaintiffs California counsel, made clear in the text that “this letter constitutes a claim by [the officers and directors of Spendthrift] under the terms of the above-captioned policy and they will look to you [Defendant] for reimbursement of all costs and damages which may be assessed against them.” 15 (J.A. at 102.) Thus, at the moment Defendant received Renne’s letter, Defendant had no obligation to reimburse Decedent — the letter did not include any demand for the reimbursement of a specific amount of money. Rather, it notified Defendant that the Spendthrift directors would attempt to recoup from Defendant “all costs and damages which may be assessed against them.” Id.
B.
Since Defendant renounced the D
& O
policy (with respect to the California Litigation) before Defendant had any obligation to make payments pur
*599
suant to the policy, Defendant’s behavior constituted an anticipatory repudiation.
16
As the Supreme Court explained, “[i]t has always been the law that where a party deliberately incapacitates himself or renders performance of his contract impossible, his act amounts to an injury to the other party, which gives the other party a cause of action for breach of contract.”
Roehm v. Horst,
The repudiation must be absolute or unequivocal.
Thunder Basin Coal Co. v. Southwestern Pub. Serv. Co.,
There is some disagreement as to whether the doctrine of anticipatory repudiation applies only to bilateral contracts,
see, e.g., Saewitz v. Epstein,
To limit anticipatory repudiation to bilateral contracts makes little sense. The theory, presumably, is that if the first party has already performed when the second party announces his intention to breach, the first party (the injured party) has nothing to gain through an immediate aetion for damages based on anticipatory breach. Yet “[t]he harm caused to the plaintiff is equally great [whether or not he has already performed]; and it seems strange to deny to a plaintiff a remedy [for anticipatory breach] merely on the ground that he has already fully performed as his contract required.” 9 Arthur L. Corbin, Corbin on Contracts § 962, at 767 (interim ed.1979).
Furthermore, courts have frequently recognized anticipatory repudiation in insurance coverage disputes, and insurance policies are unilateral agreements.
See, e.g., N.Y. Life Ins. Co. v. Viglas,
C.
We acknowledge that the question of where an anticipatory repudiation occurs “ha[s] not yet been clearly settled.” 9 ARTHUR L. CORBIN, CORBIN ON CONTRACTS § 988, at 851 (interim ed.1979). Nevertheless, there are a few cases involving disputes over where a repudiation occurred when the repudiating party sent the renunciation from one jurisdiction to the non-repudiating party in a second jurisdiction. The limited available jurisprudence strongly suggests that a repudiation occurs in the place where the repudiator posts the renunciation, not where the other party received notice.
See Auglaize Box Bd. Co. v. Kansas City Fibre Box Co.,
These cases ultimately derive their holdings from a series of nineteenth-century British and Irish decisions that reached similar conclusions. In Cherry v. Thompson, 7 Q.B. 573 (1872), for instance, the court found that the anticipatory breach of a contract to marry occurred in Germany when the defendant mailed a letter from Germany withdrawing from the engagement. As Judge Blackburn explained:
In this case the receipt of the letter by the plaintiff in England furnished him with evidence that the defendant had in Germany renounced [their] relation. *602 Had his letters followed him to Ireland he would have received the evidence in Ireland. But the act which he had the option to treat as a breach took place in Germany, and in Germany alone.
Id. at 579 (emphasis added). Similarly, in Hamilton v. Barr, [1886] 18 L.R. Ir. 297, the plaintiff made a contract in Scotland with the defendant to act as the defendant’s agent in Ireland. Later, the defendant mailed a letter to his agent in Scotland abrogating their agreement in advance. As Chancellor Naish explained, “I consider that the dismissal took place in Glasgow by the posting of the letter in Glasgow. The dropping of the letter in to the post office there was, I think, the act of dismissal.” Id. at 301. Chancellor Porter agreed that the contract ended “the moment the notice of dismissal had left the hands and control of the defendant, which it did in Glasgow.” Id. at 302.
In Holland v. Bennett, 1 K.B. 867 (1902), the proprietor of a periodical who resided in France employed a London correspondent. The proprietor discharged the plaintiff in a letter mailed from Italy. Justice Williams concluded that “[t]he effect is that there was a complete breach of the contract when the letter giving notice of dismissal was posted abroad.” Id. at 869. Finally, Matthews v. Alexander, [1873] Ir. R.-C.L. 573, involved a wholesale tea dealer residing in London who hired a salesman and sent him to Ireland. Id. at 575. The salesman received a letter of dismissal before he could begin his work. Id. at 576. The message arrived in Dublin, but the letter was posted in London. Id. According to Judge Whiteside, “[t]he act in this case was done in England. The letter informs the Plaintiff that the Defendant in England had renounced the relation that had subsisted between them; and if that was a breach of contract, it took place in England.” Id. at 579. This view is shared by the Restatement of Contracts, which explains that the repudiation occurs “as of the time when and the place where the letter or telegram is dispatched.” Restatement of CONTRACTS § 321. Williston also felt that repudiation by letter is a breach “as of the time when and the place where the letter or telegram is dispatched.” 11 Williston on ContkaCts § 1332, at 174 (3d ed.1968).
Thus, although the jurisprudence is fairly sparse, the available information strongly indicates that an anticipatory breach occurs where the breaching party posts its letter of renunciation. 19 Since Defendant posted the message in New York, the breach occurred in New York. Under Kentucky’s borrowing statute, Ky.Rev.Stat. § 413.320, the Kentucky Supreme Court would apply New York’s statute of limitations, rendering Plaintiffs claim eight years late. Consequently, the district court properly ruled that under Ky.Rev. Stat. § 413.320, the New York statute of limitations bars Plaintiffs action.
For the aforementioned reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s decision.
Notes
. The parties never define "stallion management,” but evidently prices at Spendthrift Farm are as high as $1 million per visit.
. Plaintiff is Decedent’s son and administrator of Decedent's estate.
. Plaintiff evidently does not contest this con-elusion on appeal.
. “Lex fori,'' in this sentence, also refers to the place where the cause of action accrued {lex loci), because borrowing statutes effectively merge the two concepts. Borrowing statutes are substantive laws that determine which state's statute of limitations (a procedural rule) will apply.
. If Decedent’s residence were the only relevant consideration under Kentucky law, then the Kentucky statute of limitations would apply and Plaintiff's action could proceed. Although we must weigh
Global Financial
when making our
Erie
guess, the case represents only one source among many. As already observed, we consider "all relevant data,”
Kingsley Associates,
. This case presents an unusually tricky problem because it involves an economic injury. If, for instance, a defendant's tortious conduct causes a General Motors plant to explode, one can easily locate the injury. But General Motors is corporate entity — in effect, a state-created legal fiction with assets, employees, customers and shareholders around the world — which makes finding the locus of an intangible loss difficult. If a breach of contract causes General Motors’ stock to decline, determining where the company "got hurt” is not so easy.
Cf. Leroy v. Great W. United Corp.,
. Under Missouri's rule, Plaintiff could have learned of Defendant’s decision at any moment after Defendant made its choice. Since, for instance, one of Plaintiff's attorneys in California or Kentucky could have contacted Defendant's New York office by telephone (or flown to New York) and learned that Defendant did not plan to cover Plaintiff’s litigation expenses, that shows the injury occurred in New York — just as the plaintiff in
Harris-Laboy
was injured in Illinois because that was where she could have, at least theoretically, first learned of her injury.
Harris-Laboy,
. Neither decision discusses where Wausau may have received notice of the suit, which is what the Illinois Supreme Court ordered the trial court to investigate. There is no published history after Ehlco II, so research does not reveal what the trial court determined.
It is also unclear that the reasoning of
Ehl-co II
is sound under a “most significant relationship” analysis. The Illinois Court of Appeals applied Illinois' statute of limitations even though, assuming a cause of action accrued, the EPA "triggered the possibility of accrual” in Arkansas by filing suit there,
see Ehlco I,
. The Bishop Court explained the issue before it:
The District Court of Appeal, First District, affirmed the ruling of the trial court but certified the following question for our consideration:
Does the lex loci delicti rule govern the rights and liabilities of the parties in tort actions, precluding consideration by the Florida courts of other relevant considerations, such as the policies and purposes underlying the conflicting laws of a foreign jurisdiction where the tort occurred, and the relationship of the occurrence and of the parties to such policies and purposes?
. The "accrual approach” is a concise moniker for the interpretation Defendant advocates — a judicial focus exclusively on where the cause of action accrued, not which state has "the most significant relationship.”
. Borrowing statutes apply to both foreign statutes of limitation and statutes of repose, because both kinds of laws serve to limit the period in which a plaintiff may initiate an action. Statutes of limitations and repose are frequently confused, but both serve similar purposes. "A statute of limitations focuses on time measured from an injury; a statute of repose rests on the time from some initiating event unrelated to an injury.”
Roskam Baking Co., Inc. v. Lanham Mach. Co., Inc.,
. Significantly, Willits also mentions the problems presented by defining accrual in a manner related to where the plaintiff or plaintiffs suffer damages. The Willits Court wrote: To the extent that the calculations and the resulting payments were a breach of Peabody's obligation, that breach occurred in the office in Missouri. It would he unworkable and iirational to hold that the cause of action accrued wherever each Plaintiff happened to receive his or her deficient check.
. Plaintiff also cites
Allstate Insurance Co. v. Napier,
. In 1966, Pennsylvania's borrowing statute had language similar to that in Kentucky's borrowing provision: "When a cause of action has been fully barred by the laws of the state or country in which it arose, such bar shall be a complete defense to an action thereon brought in any of the courts of this commonwealth.” 12 Pa Cons.Stat. § 39.
. Note how Renne uses the future tense: "[My client] will look to you ... for reimbursement." (J.A. at 102) (emphasis added).
. The phrases "anticipatory breach,” "anticipatory repudiation,” and "renunciation" are used interchangeably. See 17B C.J.S. Contracts § 534, at 196 (1999).
.
Warren v. Confederation Life Ass’n.,
. The insured has not made any promise but, rather, has performed. Thus, the contract fits within the standard definition of a unilateral contract:
A unilateral contract consists of a promise or group of promises made by one of the contracting parties only, usually assented to by the other. There are many cases in which such an assent is not required. A bilateral contract consists of mutual promises, made in exchange for each other by each of the two contracting parties. In the case of a unilateral contract, there is only one promisor.... In a bilateral contract, both parties are promisors and both parties are promisees.
1 Arthur L. Corbin, Corbin on Contracts § 1.23, at 87 (1993).
. This rule nicely avoids the problem of determining where an anticipatory breach- occurred when the letter is posted in one jurisdiction but received in multiple places.
