OPINION
{1 Plаintiff One Beacon American Insurance Co. (One Beacon) appeals the district court's denial of its motion for summary judgment and grant of summary judgment to Defendant Huntsman Polymers Corporation (Huntsman). We affirm.
BACKGROUND
T2 This case involves a dispute between One Beacon and Huntsman over the amount One Beacon, the insurer, is required to indemnify Huntsman, the insured, for defense against and settlement of a wrongful death lawsuit. In particular, the parties contest when liability coverage is triggered under a commercial general liability (CGL) insurance policy for bodily injury in the form of an asbestos-related progressive disease. The issue before us is whether Utah law or Texas law should be applied to interpret the CGL insurance policy and resolve this contractual dispute.
I. The Wrongful Death Lawsuit
[ 3 The wrongful death lawsuit that underlies this dispute arose from the death of Edward Whetsell. From 1963 to 1975, Whetsell was employed at a petrochemical plant in Texas that produced products allegedly containing asbestos. This facility was then owned and operated by El Paso Products Company, a Texas corporation. While employed at the Texas facility, Whetsell allegedly inhaled asbestos fibers.
T 4 Whetsell was diagnosed with mesotheli-oma in 2004. He eventually died from the illness, and his family filed a wrongful death lawsuit in Texas against Huntsman, a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in Utah, which had purchased El Paso Products in 1997. In 2007, Huntsman and Whetsell's family settled the wrongful death lawsuit.
IL The Insurance Claim and the Action for Declaratory Judgment
T5 Following the settlement, Huntsman sought indemnification under a CGL insurance policy that its predecessor, El Paso Products, had entered into with One Beacon.
1
From 1963 through 1977-almost the exact time period that Whetsell was employed at the Texas facility-One Beacon, a Massachusetts corporation, insured El Paso Products. During this time period, One Beacon annually issued a CGL insurance policy to El Paso Products with each policy covering a period of one year. Under the policy, One Beacon agreed to "pay on behalf of [El Paso Products] all sums which [El Paso Products] ... become{s] legally obligated to pay as damages because of ... bodily injury ... caused by an occurrence." The policy defined "bodily injury" as "bodily injury, sickness or disease sustained by any person" and defined an "occurrence" as "an accident, including injurious exposure to conditions, which results, during the policy period, in bodily injury." The policy also provided that "all bodily injury ... arising out of continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the same general is] considered as arising out of one occurrence.
2
The CGL insurance policy covered the Texas facility where Whetsell worked, as well as additional facilities located
16 El Paso Products was subsequently insured by another company from 1977 to 1993. However, beginning in 1986, that insurer excluded from coverage asbestos-related bodily injury. As a result, El Paso Products, and accordingly, Huntsman, have had no insurance coverage for bodily injury caused by asbestos since 1986.
17 As a successor in interest to El Paso Products, Huntsman submitted an insurance claim to One Beacon, requesting that One Beacon fully indemnify it for the defense and settlement costs of the wrongful death lawsuit. One Beacon paid only about 61% of the total amount of the defense and settlement costs. Huntsman requested that One Beacon pay the remainder, but One Beacon refused. One Beacon later recalculated and decided that it should only have paid Hunstman about 34% of the total defense and settlement costs. One Beacon then requested that Huntsman reimburse the difference between the 61% that One Beacon had already paid and the 34% it believed it was obligated to pay. Huntsman refused and reiterated its demand for full reimbursement.
18 In 2009, One Beacon brought this action, seeking a declaratory judgment that it had overpaid Huntsman and was entitled to recoup the overpayment or, alternatively, that it had paid in full the entire amount it owed to Huntsman. Huntsman filed a counterclaim against One Beacon, alleging that One Beacon had underpaid what it owed to Huntsman and seeking full reimbursement for the defense and settlement costs.
1 9 In asserting their respective claims, the parties dispute the amount One Beacon owes Huntsman under the CGL insurance policy for the settlement and defense of the wrong ful death lawsuit At a more basic level, however, the parties' dispute raises the question of when a progressive or cumulative disease, such as the development of mesothe-lioma due to the inhalation of asbestos fibers, becomes a bodily injury that triggers coverage under a CGL insurance policy. This issue has been the subject of much litigation, and to understand the parties' respective arguments and aid in the following legal analysis, it is helpful to review the legal background of this issue as explained in other jurisdictions.
III. Legal Background
10 "[There is universal agreement that excessive inhalation of asbestos can and does result in disease." Insurance Co. of N. Am. v. Forty-Fight Insulations, Inc.,
1 12 The policy language at issue here has generally been interpreted as "clearly pro-vid{ing] that an "injury, and not the 'occurrence' that causes the injury, must fall within a policy period for it to be covered by the [insurance] policy." Keene,
113 The difficulty in determining when coverage of a progressive disease is triggered under a CGL insurance policy commonly arises in attempting to interpret the term "bodily injury." See generally id. at 1042, 1048-44 (interpreting a CGL insurance policy to determine when an injury occurs in the context of a progressive disease so as to trigger coverage); Forty-Eight Insulations,
114 Based on these varying interpretations of the term "bodily injury," several theories have emerged on how to determine the type of bodily injury that triggers coverage of progressive diseases under CGL insurance policies. The three most prominent theories are the manifestation trigger theory, the exposure trigger theory, and the continuous trigger theory.
6
The manifestation trigger theory is not directly relevant to this case but is nonetheless helpful in understanding the continuous trigger theory, which is an amalgam of the manifestation and exposure trigger theories. Under the manifestation
T15 In contrast, under the exposure trigger theory, the term "bodily injury" is interpreted to be "the subclinical tissue damage that occurs on inhalation of ... asbestos [fibers]," which is assumed to occur during the injured person's "period оf employment in an asbestos-laden environment." Azrock,
{16 Finally, the continuous trigger theory is a composite of the manifestation theory and the exposure theory, and it construes the term "bodily injury" to encompass the sub-clinical tissue damage caused by inhalation of asbestos fibers, see Forty-Eight Insulations,
17 Unfortunately, the extensive litigation to determine when insurance coverage is triggered under CGL insurance policies in the context of progressive diseases "has resulted in irreconcilable holdings" arising from interpretations occurring "under different sets of facts, [and] against the backdrop of the contra proferentem doctrine," which requires that if an insurance "policy is [ambiguous and] susceptible of more than one reаsonable interpretation, the court must resolve the uncertainty by adopting the construction that most favors the insured." Azrock,
€18 Having addressed the relevant legal background, we now turn to the parties' arguments that are premised on these legal principles.
IV. The Parties' Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment
{19 In October 2009, One Beacon and Huntsman filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Because the insurance contract did not include a choice of law provision, the parties each proposed application of the law of a different state to determine the trigger theory that would be applied to interpret the CGL insurance policy.
20 In support of its motion for summary judgment, One Beacon argued that Utah law
121 In contrast, Huntsman's cross-motion for summary judgment urged application of Texas law, which it argued requires application of the exposure trigger theory. (Citing Azrock,
122 In order to resolve the parties' competing motions for summary judgment, the
ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
€{23 One Beacon challenges the district court's denial of its motion for summary judgment and the grant of summary judgment to Huntsman. Whether the district court appropriately granted or denied summary judgment is a question of law, reviewed for correctness. See American Nat'l,
"124 One Beacon challenges the district court's basis for its grant of summary judgment, namely, its determination that under the most significant relationship analysis, articulated in section 188 of the Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws, Texas law controls this contractual dispute. Proper application of the most significant relationship analysis is a question of law, which we review for correctness. See id. (explaining that in conducting its choice of law analysis, the court "examine[d] only issues of law," which are reviewed for correctness). One Beacon also challenges the district court's conclusion that Texas law requires application of the exposure trigger theory to bodily injury claims. "[When reviewing an application or interpretation of law we use a correction of error standard," giving no deference to the lower court's decision. See Avis v. Board of Review of Indus. Comm'n,
ANALYSIS
I. Summary Judgment
1 25 "[Slummary judgment is proper when there are no disputed issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." American Nat'l,
One Beacon argues that the district court erred in denying its motion for summary judgment and granting summary judgment to Huntsman. Specifically, One Beacon asserts that the district court erroneously determined that Texas law governs this dispute, arguing that Utah is the state with the most significant relationship to this dispute. One Beacon further argues that Utah law requires application of the continuous trigger theory rather than the exposure trigger theo
A. Choice of Law 10
127 The parties agree that this case involves a contractual dispute requiring interpretation of an insurance contract. See generally Waddoups v. Amalgamated Sugar Co.,
128 Section 188 of the Restatement (See-ond) of Conflict of Laws generally controls the most significant relationship analysis as applied to contractual disputes, providing that "[in the absence of an effective choice of law by [contracting] parties," the "rights and duties of the parties with respect to an issue in contract are determined by the local law of the state which, with respect to that issue, has the most significant relationship to the transaction and the parties." Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 188(1)-(2). To determine which state has the most significant relationship to the transaction and the parties in a contractual dispute, section 188 requires consideration of several contacts a contract may have to the states involved in the matter:
(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 place of incorporation and place of business of the parties.
Id. § 188(2).
T 29 One Beacon argues that Utah has the most significant relationship to this dispute
130 Ultimately, we agree with Huntsman that Texas has the most significant relationship to this dispute as the intended place оf performance at the time of contracting and as the location of the insured risk. We begin our analysis by briefly addressing the contacts we consider to be inconclusive-namely, the place of negotiation and the place of contracting. We then consider the parties' arguments concerning the place of performance and the principal place of business. We finally address the location of the subject matter of the contract, also described as the location of the insured risk.
1. Place of Negotiation and Place of Contracting
{31 With regard to the place of negotiation, the district court reasoned that "there is little to no evidence about how the contract was negotiated, who negotiated the contract, or where it was signed." One Beacon agrees, explaining that "[the [pllace of [nle-gotiation is because "(there is no evidence in the record regarding where [the parties] may have met or corresponded," nor is there "evidence that [the parties] met anywhere to bargain over particular terms of the insurance policies and reach agreement." Huntsman also generally concedes that "there is no direct evidence of where One[ Beacon and El Paso [Products] discussed the terms of the [insurance] policies." We agree with the parties that this contact is inconclusive and do not consider it further.
182 As to the place of contracting, "a contract between parties in different states is made where the last act necessary to make the contract valid and binding occurs." Surety Underwriters v. E & C Trucking, Inc.,
2. Place of Performance and Principal Place of Business
133 We next consider together the place of performance and the parties' place of
34 Huntsman generally does not dispute that its principal place of business and the place of actual performance is Utah; rather, Huntsman attempts to minimize the importance of these combined contacts to Utah and, instead, argues that the principles underlying these contacts favor application of Texas law. Huntsman emphasizes that it is a successor in interest to the original party that contracted with One Beacon for insurance coverage, El Paso Products, a Texas corporation.
12
Huntsman thus argues that "at the time of contracting," the original contracting "parties could not have anticipated that insurance payments for claims arising at a Texas facility, [then] owned by a Texas corporation, ... might be sent to Utah some 40 years later." As a result, argues Huntsman, the actual place of performance and "the current residence of the parties does not add much meaningful consideration to the choice of law analysis" because it "is a mere fortuity" that One Beacon eventually fulfilled its contractual obligations to "a Delaware company that happens to have its principal place of business in Utah."
13
Huntsman further asserts that the place of performance contact is less concerned with the place where actual performance ultimately occurs but is more appropriately focused "on the intended place of performance at the time of contracting." See id. (providing that greater weight is given to the place of performance when it is known "at the time of contracting"); Ace Rent-A-Car,
135 It is not irrelevant that Utah, as Huntsman's principal place of business, is the actual place of performance because Utah, as the place where the contract was actually performed, "has an obvious interest in the nature of the performance." See Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws $ 188 emt. e. And we are mindful of One Beacon's position that we should construe these contacts by considering "where performance occurred in reality, as opposed to" making a "guess that the original parties to the insurance contracts ... would have expected performance to occur in Texas." However, as Huntsman points out, at the time of contracting, neither of the contracting parties could have reasonably foreseen that performance would someday occur in Utah. See id. ("[The place of performance can bear little weight in the choice of applicable law when ... at the time of contracting it is ... uncertain or unknown. ..."). Rather, Texas would naturally have been the expected place of performance. And the expected place of performance only changed decades later, long after the CGL policies had been issued and had expired. Under the cireumstances, to construe the related principal place of business and place of performance сontacts as favoring application of Utah law would be to ignore the parties' intent at the time of contracting and would further contravene an important principle underlying any choice of law analysis arising in the context of a contractual dispute-to protect the justified expectations of the contracting parties See id. § 6(2)(d) (explaining that one of seven overarching choice of law principles is "the protection of justified expectations"); see also Equine Assisted Growth & Learning Ass'n v. Carolina Cas. Ins. Co.,
3. Location of the Contract's Subject Matter or the Location of the Insured Risk
(36 Finally, we consider the location of the subject matter of the contract. "When the contract deals with a specific physical thing ... or affords protection against a localized risk, ... the locatiоn of the thing or of the risk is significant" and the "state where the thing or the risk is located will have a natural interest in transactions affecting it." Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 188 emt. e (1971). "Indeed, when the thing or the risk is the principal subject of the contract, it can often be assumed that the parties ... would expect that the local law of the state where the thing or risk was located would be applied to determine many of the issues arising under the contract." Id.
37 With regard to contracts for casualty insurance, however, section 188 refers to seetion 198, which specifically addresses disputes arising out of insurance contracts, such as the CGL insurance policy at issue here. See id. Section 198 provides that
[the validity of a contract of ... casualty insurance and the rights created thereby are determined by the local law of the state which the parties understood was to be the principal location of the insured risk during the term of the policy, unless ... some other state has a more significant relationship ... to the transaction and the parties.
1 38 Comment b further elaborates on the weight that should be afforded this contact, providing that "[the location of the insured risk will be given greаter weight than any other single contact in determining the state of the applicable law." Id.; see also American Nat'l Fire Ins. Co. v. Farmers Ins. Exch.,
39 One Beacon does not engage in any meаningful analysis of section 198 but simply dismisses it as having no significance to the present analysis based on a very narrow reading of comment b's statement that the location of the insured risk "has less significance ... where the policy covers a group of risks that are seattered throughout two or more states." Id. § 198 emt. b. One Beacon thus argues that because it insured "risks [for El Paso Products] throughout the world ... (the fact[ ] that the alleged exposure [to asbestos] in the underlying lawsuit took place in Texas and that [the wrongful death lawsuit was] filed in Texas are fortuities and are therefore irrelevant." In making this argument, One Beacon ignores other pertinent language in comment b, as well as comments a and f, which together require a much more nuanced approach to the location of the risk contact in the context of multiple risk policies, such as the one before us. See generalty id. § 198 emt. a (providing that comment f controls multiple risk policies); id. § 198 cmt. £ (explaining how to identify the location of the insured risk in the context of multiple risk policies).
1 40 Generally, under section 198, the location of the insured risk is determinative in identifying the law that controls a dispute over a contract for casualty insurance. See id. § 198 (explaining that the law controlling a dispute over a contract for casualty insurance is "determined" by the location of the insured risk); see also id. § 198 emt. b ("The location of the insured risk will be given greater weight than any other single contaсt in determining the state of the applicable law. ..."). However, according to comment b, the weight this contact merits will increase or decrease to the extent "that the risk can be located, at least principally, in a single state." Id. § 198 emt. b. In a situation such as this where an insurance "policy covers a group of risks that are seattered throughout two or more states," the location of the insured risk can be of "less significance," but only to the extent that the particular risk in question cannot be located in a single state.
T41 Under the cireumstances of this case, the location of the insured risk, alone, is not determinative of the state with the most significant relationship to this contractual dispute because the CGL insurance policy at issue covers multiple risks located in several states. However, this contact is nonetheless an important component of the most significant relationship analysis to the extent that the insured risk can be located in a single state, particularly if there is no other state with a more significant relationship to the contractual dispute. In applying comment f here, it is apparent that the location of the insured risk can "be located, at least principally, in a single state." See Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 198 emt. b (1971); of. Ace Rent-A-Car, Inc. v. Empire Fire & Marine Ins. Co.,
{42 The CGL insurance policy at issue here obligated One Beacon to indemnify El Paso Products for "all sums which [El Paso Products] ... become{[s] legally obligated to pay as damages because of ... bodily injury . caused by an occurrence." Although not the only risk or location covered, the parties contracted to cover a risk of "bodily injury . caused by an occurrence" at El Paso Product's facility located in Texas. The insured risk of bodily injury that the parties antiсipated might occur at the Texas facility did, in fact, occur when Whetsell allegedly inhaled asbestos fibers during his twelve-year employment at the Texas facility. It is this risk of bodily injury that was contemplated by the insurance contract that is the heart of this dispute between the contracting parties. Thus, in accordance with comment f to section 193, we treat the CGL insurance policy as if "insuring an individual risk" in Texas. We therefore conclude that, under the facts of this case, the location of the insured risk is Texas.
T 43 One Beacon, however, takes issue with this approach, emphasizing that this dispute has been appropriately characterized as one of contract, see supro 127, and argues that considering the location of the risk, as we have done here, impermissibly allows the state with the most significant relationship to a contractual dispute to be determined based on contacts that are relevant only to a dispute sounding in tort, namely the location of the underlying bodily injury or tort. See Waddoups v. Amalgamated Sugar Co.,
$44 In making this argument, however, One Beacon misperceives the nature of the location of the insured risk contact. A CGL insurance policy insures against the risk of liability for bodily injury, and the injuries that trigger such coverage are typically the result of the conduct of the insured or its employees or representatives. Naturally, those injuries occur at locations identified in the policy that are covered by the insurance contract. That an anticipated location of an insured risk coincides with the place where an injury actually occurs is incidental; and the location of the insured risk contact does not transform into a location of the underlying tort contact by virtue of those two contacts being associated with the same place. 15 Further, it is expected that Texas "will have a natural interest in transactions affecting" a risk that was located and that actually occurred within its boundaries, and it is also reasonable to "assume[ ] that the parties ... would expect that" Texas law "would be applied to determine many of the issues arising under thе contract" that concern such an injury. See id. § 188 emt. e; see also id. § 6(2)(c)-(d) (listing other factors relevant to a choice of law analysis, such as "the relevant policies of other interested states and the relative interests of those states in the determination of the particular issue" as well as "the protection of justified expectations"). One Beacon's arguments on this matter are therefore unpersuasive.
4. Summary of Most Significant Relationship Analysis
145 Having considered the pertinent contacts under section 188, we conclude that Texas is the state with the most significant relationship to this contractual dispute. Because this case involves a multiple risk policy, the location of the insured risk is not wholly determinative here. Nonetheless, the location of the insured risk has considerable weight in the choice of law analysis because the insured risk "can be located, at least principally, in a single state," see Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 193 emt. b (1971). That weight is enhanced because this is not a case where "some other state has a more significant relationship ... to the [contract] and the parties" than Texas, see id. § 198. In particular, One Beacon has not persuaded us that Utah has a more significant relationship to this contractual dispute than Texas. Indeed, any relationship Utah has to this dispute as Huntsman's principal place of business and the actual place of performance is, in the end, fortuitous because
T 46 In the end, we conclude that the place of negotiation and place of contracting contacts are indeterminative; the place of performance and principal place of business contacts indicate ties to both Texas and Utah but, ultimately, weigh in favor of Texas; and the location of the insured risk weighs in favor of Texas. We therefore conclude that the district court was correct in deciding that Texas has a more significant relationship to this dispute than Utah and, therefore, correctly applied Texas law to interpret the insurance contract.
{ 47 We now turn to the question of whether the district court was correct in deciding that Texas law requires application of the exposure trigger theory under the cireum-stances of this case.
B. Application of the Exposure Trigger Theory Under Texas Law
148 One Beacon argues that, even if we conclude that the district court correctly applied Texas law to this dispute, the district court nevertheless erred in concluding that Texas law requires application of the exposure trigger theory to determine when coverage of a progressive disease is triggered under a CGL insurance policy. In support of its position, One Beacon cites Don's Building Supply, Inc. v. OneBeacon Insurance Co.,
T 49 In explaining that its decision did not "explore ... when coverage is triggered on bodily injury claims under CGL and other policies," the court in Dow's Building Supply cited without criticism Guaranty National Insurance Co. v. Azrock Industries Inc.,
1 50 The Don's Building Supply court also cited Pilgrim Enterprises, Inc. v. Maryland Casualty Co.,
$51 There is good reason for the Texas Supreme Court to emphasize that its decision in Don's Building Supply did not reach the issue of which trigger theory it would apply in bodily injury cases. In addition to the general distinction between property damage and bodily injury cases, progressive disease cases are recognized as being further distinguishable from ordinary bodily injury cases. See supra 112; see also Azrock, 211 F.8d at 247 (stating that distinguishing cumulative diseases from other kinds of bodily injury and property damage cases "is relevant" because "[clu-mulative disease cases are different from the ordinary accident or disease situation," and treating cases where other trigger theories have been applied "in entirely different contexts, particularly property damage cases" as inapposite (emphasis added)); Insurance Co. of N. Am. v. Forty-Eight Insulations, Inc,
1 52 Ultimately, we agree with the district court that "no Texas court has specifically adopted the continuous trigger theory ...
CONCLUSION
53 As the intended place of performance at the time of contracting and the location of the insured risk, Texas has the most significant relationship to this dispute. As the state with the most significant relationship to this dispute, Texas law applies and requires application of the exposure trigger theory to determine the bodily injury that triggers the coverage provided by the CGL insurance policy in thе context of a progressive disease. Because the exposure trigger theory applies here, One Beacon is required to fully indemnify Huntsman for 100% of the defense costs and settlement of the wrongful death lawsuit. We therefore conclude that the district court correctly granted Huntsman's motion for summary judgment.
54 Accordingly, we affirm.
€ 55 WE CONCUR: J. FREDERIC VOROS JR., Associate Presiding Judge, and WILLIAM A. THORNE JR., Judge.
Notes
. To be precise, El Paso Products contracted for insurance coverage with Commercial Union Insurance Company, which is One Beacon's predecessor.
. As we will explain, see infra 1 10, the nature of the injury at issue here is "considered as arising out of one occurrence" due to "continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the same general condition[]." Thus, because the covered bodily injury here constitutes a single occur
. In addition to insuring the Texas facility, the policy included several endorsements adding coverage for facilities located in New Mexico, Ohio, Wyoming, North Dakota, Idaho, Tennessee, Oklahoma, and Utah, providing coverage for the "portion of the risk located in said state."
. In OneBeacon Insurance Co. v. Don's Building Supply, Inc.,
. To be precise, some of the authority cited herein involves interpretation of comprehensive general liability insurance policies, while this case involves a commercial general liability insurance policy. For the purposes of this decision, the distinction is unimportant, and the relevant policy language is substantially the same.
. There are multiple variations of these core trigger theories that we need not address.
. Although One Beacon presents Sharon Steel Corp. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.,
. In its original response to Huntsman's insurance claim, One Beacon excluded the eighteen years from 1986 to 2004 that El Paso Products and Huntsman were not insured and based its calculation on only the twenty-three years El Paso Products was insured from 1963 to 1986. As a result, One Beacon initially concluded that it was obligated to indemnify Huntsman for approximately 61% of the defense and settlement costs of the wrongful death lawsuit. However, One Beacon later determined that it was only obligated to indemnify Huntsman for about 34% of the defense and settlement costs of the wrongful death lawsuit. It arrived at this lower figure by including the eighteen years that El Paso Products was not insured, therefore basing its calculation on the entire forty-one-year time period from 1963 to 2004. Under this approach, One Beacon treats El Paso Products and Huntsman as self-insured for the eighteen years that the companies were not insured for asbestos-related bodily injury. In addition, under either aрproach, the other insurance company that provided coverage to El Paso Products for asbestos-related bodily injury from 1977 to 1986 would be responsible for its respective time on the risk.
. It is interesting that in this case the insured, Huntsman, seeks application of a trigger theory that generally minimizes the period of potential coverage, while the insurer, One Beacon, proposes application of a trigger theory that generally maximizes the period of potential coverage. Indeed, the continuous trigger theory advocated here by One Beacon is typically viewed as favoring the insured because it most broadly defines the concept of injury under the terms of an insurance policy and maximizes the period of coverage. See Azrock,
. Typically, a choice of law analysis is preceded by a determination of whether there is a true conflict between the laws of those states that are interested in the dispute. See, eg., American Nat'l Fire Ins. Co. v. Farmers Ins. Exch.,
. One Beacon acknowledges that the parties dispute whether it fully performed under the insurance contract. One Beacon asserts, however, that it is uncontested that it partially performed by paying a portion of the insurance claim to Huntsman. One Beacon therefore construes the place of performance based on its performance thus far under the insurance contract, whether that performance is ultimately deemed to be partial or in full.
. As previously explained, see supra 15 n. 1, One Beacon is also a successor in interest to the original contracting insurer. However, One Beacon makes no argument concerning any comparable effect of its predecessor being the original contracting party.
. Huntsman also argues that the parties' place of incorporation and principal place of business do not cluster in Utah as exclusively as One Beacon portrays because Huntsman is a Delaware corporation and One Beacon is a Massachusetts corporation.
. For example, under comment f to section 193, if "(a) single policy ... insure[s multiple risks] located in states X, Y, and Z" and a covered risk occurs in state X, then "the rights and obligations of the parties under the policy" could be determined "in accordance with the local law of [state] X." Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 193 cmt. f (1971).
. It may be worth noting that, even as applied to contractual disputes, the location of the underlying tort or bodily injury is not a contact that is wholly irrelevant to the most significant relationship analysis; but when taken into consideration, it is not determinative and is of negligible weight. See generally American Nat'l Fire Ins. v. Farmers Ins. Exch.,
In addition, although here the cost of defending against the wrongful death lawsuit is also covered by the CGL insurance policy, the location of the underlying lawsuit is of negligible importance in identifying the location of the insured risk because the insured risk is better identified by the occurrence that triggеrs coverage under the insurance contract rather than the place where litigation arising from that occurrence may subsequently be filed. Ace Rent-A-Car, Inc. v. Empire Fire & Marine Ins. Co.,
. The court in Pilgrim did this despite the court in Azrock explaining that, under Texas law, the manifestation trigger theory had typically been applied to property damage cases. See generally Mathews Heating & Air Conditioning LLC v. Liberty Mut. Fire Ins. Co.,
. Our decision here is also consistent with the widely-recognized contra proferentem doctrine, which provides that if an insurance policy "is susceptible of more than one reasonable interpretation, ... the uncertainty [must be resolved] by adopting the construction that most favors the insured." Guaranty Nat'l Ins. Co. v. Azrock Indus. Inc.,
One Beacon and Huntsman dispute which trigger theory applies because of the resulting difference in coverage: if the continuous trigger theory is applied, One Beacon is only obligated to cover either 61% of 34% of the total defense costs and settlement; but if the exposure trigger theory is applied, One Beacon is obligated to cover 100% of the total defense costs and settlement. Inasmuch as the exposure trigger theory favors coverage in this case, such an interpretation of the ambiguous policy language is the preferable result under the contra proferentum doctrine. We emphasize, however, that because application of this doctrine has a distinct tendency to lead to result-oriented conclusions, its use is one of the reasons for the inconsistencies that plague this area of the law. For this reason, we do not rely on the contra proferentum doctrine as a basis for our decision but simply acknowledge that its application is consistent with the decision we have already reached.
