Lead Opinion
This appeal in a diversity case raises the. question whether New York would apply a Massachusetts damage limitation to the death of a New York domiciliary occurring in Massachusetts. The appeal, taken before final judgment pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1.292(b), is from an order of the district court granting partial summary judgment in favor of the plaintiff in an action for wrongful death,
The relevant facts are simple, the legal issue difficult. The decedent, Dr. Martin C. Rosenthal, was a citizen of New York. Decedent and his wife, who as executrix is plaintiff here, went to Boston where he was examined and diagnosed by Dr. Warren, whom the plaintiff describes as a world-renowned physician and surgeon treating patients from all over the world. On March 27, 1969, eight days after an operation performed by Dr. Warren at the New England Baptist Hospital, decedent died in
Suit, alleging malpractice and asking for $1,250,000 in damages, was brought in New York state court. Jurisdiction of Dr. Warren to the extent of his insurance coverage was obtained by attachment levied on the St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company, a Minnesota corporation doing business in New York, the malpractice insurer of a clinic where Dr. Warren is employed.
It is undisputed that although the hospital is a Massachusetts corporation, approximately one-third of its patients in 1969 came from outside Massachusetts and approximately 8 per cent of its patients in the same year were from New York. Indeed, the hospital claimed in its 1969 annual report that it was “not a local or community hospital in the usual sense because its patients come from literally everywhere.” An affidavit of the head of the casualty underwriting department of the Boston office of St. Paul Fire & Marine, which issued the liability policy under which defendant Warren was covered, indicates that a general surgeon’s liability policy in Massachusetts has a basic limit premium of $192, while a New York City surgeon pays a basic limit premium of $1,139, and that one factor contributing to the difference is the “dollar exposure” in New York, which has no wrongful death limitation. Dr. Warren’s policy, however, makes no reference to coverage limitation in wrongful death cases.
This being a diversity case, it is, of course, elemental that we must look to the choice of law rules of the forum state, that is, to New York law. Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Electric Manufacturing Co.,
In Kilberg v. Northeast Airlines, Inc.,
Kilberg foreshadowed New York’s total break with the wooden rule that the law of the place of the tort inevitably governed. The break became complete in the landmark Babcock v. Jackson,
Analysis of the respective interests underlying the choice of law applicable in tort cases was soon explicitly extended to actions for wrongful death. See Long v. Pan American World Airways, Inc.,
Similarly, in Tooker v. Lopez,
The most recent conflict of laws tort case to reach the New York Court of Appeals, Neumeier v. Keuhner,
Gore v. Northeast Airlines, Inc.,
In Ciprari v. Servicos Aereos Cruzeiro,
This review of the relevant case law
Appellants contend that Massachusetts is the situs of the events leading to this law suit and, in effect, that the intent, either actual or constructive, of the parties was for the Massachusetts limitation on damages to govern in the event of a malpractice claim. This argument fails for many reasons. Quite probably it never occurred to Dr. Rosenthal, Dr. Warren or to the New England Baptist Hospital that a choice of law problem would arise; at least one does not ordinarily think of wrongful death limitations even when undertaking surgery. This is not a case where the conduct of the Massachusetts doctor or hospital vis a vis the decedent was patterned upon the Massachusetts death limitation. It is therefore not unfair to apply New York’s compensatory policy to them. Cf. Babcock v. Jackson, supra,
Even if expectations, real or constructive, could be hypothesized, they would be legally irrelevant. Despite the argument that looking to the expectations of the parties to solve choice of law problems promotes “ ‘an unconscious acceptance of legality and [the] legal order,’ ” Miller v. Miller, supra,
Rather, as we view it, the New York courts would balance against the New York interest in protecting its domiciliaries against wrongful death limitations the interests of Massachusetts in limiting damages for wrongful deaths allegedly caused by Massachusetts citizens or occurring in Massachusetts. Consideration of Massachusetts’ interests in this case should, however, be from the perspective that the damage limitation is not confined to wrongful deaths resulting from medical malpractice but applies to all wrongful deaths however caused. Thus, any interest
That interest we think the New York courts would say is one not based upon logic, reason or social policy, but is really the vestigial remains of the mistaken view that there was no common law action for wrongful death. We say “mistaken,” for Massachusetts has only recently held precisely that, as of now, “the right to recovery for wrongful death is of common law origin .,” Gaudette v. Webb, Mass.,
The constitutional argument, skillfully set forth in the dissent, was not raised by the parties below or on this appeal. We believe that in this case, like Pearson v. Northeast Airlines, Inc.,
We agree with the court below and affirm the judgment.
Notes
. Mass.Gen.L. ch. 229, § 2 (1959).
. Jurisdiction was obtained under Seider v. Roth,
. See Justice Hatch in Medinger v. Brooklyn Heights R. R.,
. The Babcock “interest analysis” approach has been adopted by other state courts in tort cases. E. g., Beaulieu v. Beaulieu,
The Neumeier court did not fail to note that if it had been a New York domiciliary who was injured, “New York has a deep interest in protecting Us own residents, injured in a foreign state, against unfair or anachronistic statutes of that state . . . .”
. Ciprari is also factually distinguishable from this case for, as the district court noted:
This is not a wrongful death case; the public policy of New York to which the majority in Kilberg referred was a public policy applicable to wrongful death cases.
. New York lower courts have similarly refused to apply out of state limitations to limit recovery for the wrongful deaths of New York domiciliarles. See Mac-Kendrick v. Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co.,
. If this case presented the converse fact situation where the decedent was a Massachusetts domiciliary and defendant doctor and hospital New York based, it is by no means clear a New York court would apply the Massachusetts wrongful death limitation. For, in addition to its interest in providing adequate compensation to those New York domiciliarles who suffer a wrongful demise, the unlimited nature of the possible recovery in New York can be said to deter resident doctors and medical facilities from acts of malpractice. Thus, New York would have an interest in regulating the conduct of the tortfeasors and “it would be almost unthinkable to seek the applicable rule in the law of some other place.” Babcock v. Jackson,
. See Colo.Rev.Stat. Ch. 41, art. 1 § 3 (1963) ($45,000 limit if decedent left no dependent relative; otherwise unlimited recovery); Kan.Stat.Anno., ch. 60, § 1903 (1970) ($50,000 limit); Mo.Rev.Stat. § 537.090 (1966) ($50,000 limit); N.H. Rev.Stat.Anno., ch. 556, § 13 (1971) ($30,000 unless decedent left a relative in which case the limit is $120,000); Va. Code, § 8-636 (1968) ($25,000 limit if no evidence of pecuniary loss to the survivors; $75,000 limit if there is such evidence plus funeral and medical expenses of deceased); Michie’s West Va. Code, ch. 55, art. 7 § 6 (1965) ($10,000 limit if no evidence of pecuniary loss to the dependent survivors; $110,000 limit if there is such evidence).
. E. g., Michie’s Md.Code, art. 93 § 4-401 (n) (1971) ($2,000 limit on recovery for funeral expenses); Wis.Stat. § 895.04 (1971) ($5,000 limit on recovery for loss of consortium).
. E. g., S.C.Code of Laws, tit. 33, § 926 (1962) ($5,000 limit for wrongful death action against a county based on defectively maintained roads).
. See 7A Mass.Anno.Laws ch. 229, § 2 (Supp.1971) ($5,000 to $100,000 limits depending on tortfeasor’s degree of culpability).
. Alabama assesses damages in proportion to the culpability of the tortfeasor but has no limit on maximum recovery. See S. Speiser, Recovery for Wrongful Death 71 (1966).
. After all, as Mr. Justice Reed said in American Stevedores, Inc. v. Porello,
Whatever [the] variances now are or in the past have been, all the [Massachusetts] death statutes have this common, uniform and unaltered characteristic that the amount recoverable is fixed, not on the theory of compensating the surviving relatives of the deceased, but solely on the basis of the quantity of guilt of the defendant under the circumstances of the killing.
Porter v. Sorell,
. “If a man destroy the eye of another man, they shall destroy his eye.” R. P. Harper, The Code of Hammurabi, King of Babylon § 196 (2d ed. 1904).
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting):
The majority has concluded that the New York courts, on the facts of this case, would refuse to apply the Massachusetts wrongful death damage limitation. Accordingly, it has held that the federal district court, sitting in diversity, correctly refused to apply the Massachusetts damage limitation. From this holding I must dissent both because I do not agree that this a proper appraisal of applicable New York law and because I believe that the full faith and credit clause of the United States Constitution bars the New York courts, and federal district courts sitting in diversity, from refusing to apply the Massachusetts limitation on the fajits of this case.
In effect, the majority has concluded that, as a matter of policy, the New York courts would decline to apply such a damage limitation when the plaintiff, or the decedent, is a New York resident. Although such a per se rule would be consistent with the dictum of the New York Court of Appeals in Kilberg v. Northeast Airlines,
The majority purports to decide this case on interest-analysis grounds. However, the sole interest that it has found in New York emanates from the facts of plaintiff’s and decedent’s New York residence. Such an analysis simply proves too much; for it is tantamount to a per se rule that the courts will not apply such foreign damage limitations when the plaintiff is a resident of the forum state. Thus, I believe the majority’s approach amounts to an insupportable abandonment of interest-analysis principles with regard to foreign damage limitations.
Appellee has correctly noted that the New York courts have never honored a foreign damage limitation such as that in issue. However, it is also true that the New York courts have never considered a case in which the interests of New York, in relation to those of the foreign state, were as minimal as they are here. The incident at the root of this litigation, the alleged malpractice of Dr. Warren, does not have the inter-state flavor of the Kilberg facts — death caused while in transit from one state to another. Here the decedent made a deliberate choice to undergo the operation in Massachusetts at defendant hospital. Hence, he journeyed into Massachusetts and registered in defendant hospital
In my opinion the Massachusetts interests and contacts with the occurrence underlying this litigation should predominate. In addition to its interest in protecting its citizens and institutions from excessive recoveries, an important consideration behind the Massachusetts limitation is its policy of keeping liability premiums as low as possible for its residents. The significant differential that the majority has noted between malpractice insurance premiums in New York and those in Massachusetts is some testimony to the success of this policy. This interest of Massachusetts is fortified by the fact that the insurance policy from which any recovery will be paid was issued in Massachusetts. The fact that the policy has no coverage limitation in wrongful death cases, as noted by the majority, is irrelevant; for the difference in premiums makes it clear that the Massachusetts damage limitation is considered by insurance companies in calculating premiums for liability insurance issued in Massachusetts. Therefore, if we are to take the New York courts at their word that they follow an interest-analysis approach to torts conflict of laws problems, I can see no escape from the conclusion that Massachusetts interests predominate here and that the New York Court would on these facts be impelled to apply the Massachusetts damage limitation.
This court, in Ciprari v. Servicos Aereos Cruzeiro, affirming
In any event, even if the majority were correct that the New York courts would refuse to apply the Massachusetts damage limitation against a New York plaintiff, I would hold that such an approach, when applied to a case in which the contacts with Massachusetts are as great as they are here, violates the full faith and credit clause of the United States Constitution. In Pearson v. Northeast Airlines,
We may concede that the Wrongful Death Statute of Massachusetts, almost certainly designed with an eye toward the regulation of occurrences transpiring wholly within Massachusetts, should be honored fully and completely when the incident under litigation is a local one. Such, we take it, is the import of Home Insurance Co. v. Dick (citation omitted). But we cannot concede that Massachusetts has a constitutionally protected claim to the unqualified application of its statute in cases where there is an overwhelmingly interstate flavor, (p. 561).
I cannot see how the alleged malpractice and subsequent death of plaintiff’s decedent can be classified as anything other than a local incident. Therefore, it appears to me that the clear import of this court’s language in Pearson is that, in a case such as that presently before us, the full faith and credit clause would mandate the New York courts to apply the Massachusetts Wrongful Death Statute in its entirety, including the damage limitation. Hence, even if the majority and the district court are correct in their appraisal of New York law, the district court was nevertheless in error in refusing to apply the Massachusetts damage limitation to this case.
Accordingly, I would reverse the order of the district court.
