Conex Freight Systems, Inc. (“Conex”) appeals from the trial court’s order granting summary judgment to the Georgia Insurers Insolvency Pool (“the Pool”) in this declaratory judgment action. For reasons that follow, we reverse.
Summary judgment is appropriate “whеn there is no genuine issue of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a
The record shows that Georgia General Insurance Company provided liability insurance coverage to Conex’s Atlanta facility under a commercial automobile insurance policy. At some point, however, that insurance company became “insolvent,” as defined by the Georgia Insurers Insolvency Pool Act (“the Act”),
1. The Act provides “a remedy for covered claims under property and casualty insurance policies when the insurer has become insolvent and is unable to perform its contractual obligations.”
(a) The five classes of claims identified in OCGA § 33-36-3 (2) (B) include a claim that “arises out of an insurable event under a property or casualty insurance policy and . . . is . . . [t]he claim of a policyholder or insured who at the time of the insured event was a resi
The Act does not define “resident.” Seeking to place itself within the term, Conex argues that, in other contexts, a corporation can be a resident of more than one state, including a state in which it merely transacts business. Under Georgia’s long arm statute, for example, a foreign corporation authorized to do or transact business in this state is a Georgia resident for purposes of personal jurisdiction.
[a] statute must be construed in relation to other statutes of which it is a part, and all statutes relating to the same subject-matter, briefly called statutes in pari materia, are construed together, and harmonized wherever possible, so as to ascertain the legislative intendment and give effect thereto.11
Construed as a whole, the Act does not support Conex’s claim that OCGA § 33-36-3 (2) (B) (iii) permits multiple states of residency. Indeed, the legislature’s usе of the term “resident” elsewhere in the statutory scheme evidences a contrary meaning. Specifically, in OCGA § 33-36-10 (a), the legislature prohibited “duplicate recoveries of covered claims under [the Act] and an insolvency fund or its equivаlent of any other state.” To prevent such double recovery, the Act provides that, for the type of claim involved in this case, “the sole recovery . . . shall be under the insolvency fund or its equivalent of
Other jurisdictions interpreting comparable legislation have construed the residency requirement in this way. The Iowa Supreme Court, for example, found that “a corporation has only one residence” for purposes of insurer insolvency legislation, in part because the statutory scheme “appears to recognize only one residence for an insured by requiring an insured having a claim against more than one insurance guaranty association to first seek recovery from its state of residence.”
The record farther shows that Georgia is nоt Conex’s one “state of residence.” Without dispute, Conex is a California corporation with its principal place of business in that state. We recognize that Conex is authorized to do and does business here. Many corporations, however, are authorized to do business and operate facilities in multiple states. Allowing a corporation to establish residency under the Act simply by transacting business in a state could lead to numerous states of residency, undermining the singlе residency requirement.
Other jurisdictions differ on whether residency stems from a corporation’s state of incorporation or its principal place of business.
(b) Nevertheless, we agree with Conex that the trial court erred in granting the Pool summary judgment. Under OCGA § 33-36-3 (2) (B) (iv), the term “covered claims” includes a claim that “arises out оf an insurable event under a property or casualty insurance policy and . . . is . . . [t]he claim of a person having an insurable interest in or related to property which was permanently situated in this state.”
On appeal, the Pool argues that this “insurable interest in property” coverage aрplies only to “first-party claims for damage to or destruction of [the] property,” not to liability claims. According to the Pool, a liability claim falls within the Act only if the claimant meets the residency requirement. The Act, however, specifiсally defines “covered claims” as those “within any of the [five] classes of claims under [OCGA § 33-36-3 (2) (B)].”
An “insurable interest” is “[a] legal interest in . . . the protection of property from injury, loss, destruсtion, or pecuniary damage.”
As noted by the trial court, Conex leased its Atlanta facility, which Conex’s president described as 2,500 square feet of offiсe space, 10,000 square feet of warehouse space, and six acres of land. This lease interest provides evidence that Conex had “an insurable interest in . . . property which was permanently situated in this state.”
2. Our decision in Division 1 renders Conex’s remaining enumeration of error moot.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
Dover v. Mathis,
Id.
OCGA § 33-36-1 et seq.
OCGA § 33-36-2.
(Punctuation omitted.) Norman Enterprises Interior Design v. DeKalb County,
OCGA § 33-36-3 (2) (A) (i); see also OCGA §§ 33-36-3 (7); 33-7-3 (“casualty insurance” includes vehicle insurance under OCGA § 33-7-9).
OCGA § 33-36-3 (2) (A) (ii).
OCGA § 33-36-3 (2) (B) (iii).
See Allstate Ins. Co. v. Klein,
Cooper v. Edwards,
(Punctuation omitted.) City of Buchanan v. Pope,
(Emphasis supplied.) OCGA § 33-36-10 (a) (3); see also OCGA § 33-36-10 (a) (1) (“[T]he sole recovery. . . with respect to a workers’ compensation claim[ ] shall bе under the insolvency fund or its equivalent of the state of residence of the claimant”) (emphasis supplied).
See OCGA § 33-36-10 (a); see also Kendall v. Griffin-Spalding County Hosp. Auth., 242 Ga. App. 821, 822 (2) (
See Cherokee Warehouses, supra.
Kroblin Refrigerated Xpress v. Iowa Ins. Guaranty Assn.,
See also Wyoming Ins. Guaranty Assn. v. Woods,
Compare Kroblin Refrigerated, supra (principal place of business), and Woods, supra (same), with Alabama Ins. Guaranty Assn. v. Colonial Freight Systems, 537 S2d 475, 476 (Ala. 1988) (state of incorporation).
Douglass v. Levi Strauss & Co.,
See id.; see also Trans Louisiana Gas Co. v. Louisiana Ins. Guaranty Assn., 652 S2d 686, 691 (La. App. 1995) (“[I]t is not necessary to decide . . . whether place of incorрoration, principal place of business, or an analysis of both should control residency because [the company] does not meet any of the tests. . . . [W]e believe that the legislature certainly did not mean to include within the definitiоn of resident a foreign corporation, with its principal place of business out of [this state], that does business through subsidiaries or operating divisions in other states, merely because it also does substantial business in [this state].”).
See also OCGA § 33-1-2 (5) (the term “рerson” includes corporations).
(Emphasis supplied.) OCGA § 33-36-3 (2) (A) (ii).
Cf. OCGA § 33-36-3 (2) (B) (ii) (second class of covered claims restricted to unearned premium claims of policyholder “under a policy affording coverage for property permanently situated in this state”); OCGA § 33-36-3 (2) (B) (v) (fifth class of covered claims restricted to claims under “a liability or workers’ compensation insurance policy”).
See OCGA § 33-36-3 (2) (B) (iv).
Black’s Law Dictionary (7th ed. 1999), p. 816.
Brown v. Ohio Cas. Ins. Co.,
(Citations omitted; emphasis in original.) Splish Splash Waterslides v. Cherokee Ins. Co.,
See Townsend v. Morris,
OCGA § 33-36-3 (2) (B) (iv).
