OPINION
Plaintiff Rachel Fleeger, a resident of Pennsylvania, took hormone medication manufactured by defendants Wyeth, Wyeth Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Wyeth) and Greenstone, Ltd. Neither defendant is a Minnesota resident; however, both defendants admit that Minnesota courts have general personal jurisdiction over them. Fleeger filed her lawsuit in the United States District Court, District of Minnesota, and the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation (MDL) transferred the case to the United States District Court, Eastern District of Arkansas (the MDL court). Pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 480.065, subds. 3, 4 (2008), the MDL court certified a question of law to this court, which we accepted and reformulated as follows:
In a case commenced in Minnesota, does the Minnesota statute of limitations apply to the personal injury claims of a non-Minnesota resident against a defendant not a resident of Minnesota, where the events giving rise to the claims did not occur in Minnesota and took place before August 1, 2004?
We answer the certified question “yes.”
From 1995 to 2001, Fleeger took Prema-rin and Prempro, two hormone therapy
In 2002, a study by the Woman’s Health Initiative (WHI) related hormone therapy to an increased risk of breast cancer and heart disease. Subsequent studies by WHI also concluded that hormone therapy may be linked to an increased risk for breast cancer. In the wake of the 2002 study, thousands of plaintiffs nationwide, including Fleeger, sued Wyeth and other defendants, alleging that hormone therapy caused their breast cancer. For purposes of answering the certified question, we will assume that Fleeger’s claim accrued upon the release of the WHI study. 1
Fleeger filed her case in the United States District Court, District of Minnesota in 2007. Fleeger does not claim that she has any significant connections to Minnesota. Neither Wyeth nor Green-stone are incorporated or have their principal place of business in Minnesota. Pennsylvania’s 2-year statute of limitations barred Fleeger’s claim, 42 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. § 5524 (West 2009), but Minnesota’s 6-year statute of limitations did not, Minn.Stat. § 541.05 (2008). More than 4,000 other plaintiffs in the MDL proceedings have filed cases in Minnesota against Wyeth or Greenstone, despite not being residents of Minnesota. The federal mul-ti-district panel transferred Fleeger’s case and thousands of others to the MDL court, which asks us to resolve the question of whether Minnesota’s statute of limitations applies to this case.
From the early days of statehood until 1977, Minnesota had a “borrowing statute” — a statute that adopted the statute of limitations of the state where the claim arose, with an exception for Minnesota resident plaintiffs. See Minn.Stat. § 541.14 (1976). In 1977 the Minnesota Legislature repealed the borrowing statute. Act of May 20, 1977, ch. 187, § 1, 1977 Minn. Laws 310. Available legislative history suggests that the legislature acted because it believed we would adopt a choice-of-law analysis in statute of limitations cases different from the one we had historically applied. See Hearing on S.F. 380, S. Judiciary Comm., 70th Minn. Leg., Mar. 9, 1977 (remarks of S. Davies), cited in Willard L. Converse & Pamela Converse Zenn, Minnesota’s Choice of Law Dinosaur: Still in the Jurassic Period When it Comes to Statutes of Limitations, Minnesota Defense, Summer 1996, at 2, 3.
The legislature’s impression that our choice-of-law jurisprudence was changing arose in part from our decision in
Milkovich v. Saari,
The next year, in
Myers v. Government Employees Insurance Co.,
Despite the legislature’s assumption that we would apply the Lefler analysis to all choice-of-law cases, we declined to do so in
Davis v. Furlong,
In
Davis,
we did not discuss whether statutes of limitation were procedural or substantive, but we did clearly affirm that the law of the forum applies to procedural conflicts.
Id.
The holding that the law of the forum applies to procedural conflicts was consistent with our long-standing treatment of statute-of-limitations issues not governed by the borrowing statute. In
Fletcher v. Spaulding,
In
Whitney v. Daniel (In re Estate of Daniel),
In other circumstances, we have also described statutes of limitations as procedural.
See Weston v. McWilliams & As
socs.,
Inc.,
In 2004, the legislature enacted a new borrowing statute based on the Uniform Conflict of Laws-Limitations Act. Minn. Stat. § 541.31 (2008). 2 The new statute, which would require application of Pennsylvania’s statute of limitations if it controlled in this case, only applies to “claims arising from incidents occurring on or after August 1, 2004.” Minn.Stat. § 541.34 (2008). Because the parties agree, for purposes of the certified question, that Fleeger’s claim arose in 2002, the statute does not determine the outcome here. Rather, the common law does.
The common law in Minnesota is clear. When directly faced with the issue, we have considered statutes of limitations to be procedural without exception. 3 As a result, because we apply the lex fon to procedural conflicts, we have applied the Minnesota statute of limitations to cases properly commenced here regardless of whether those cases have any connection to this state. The question before us is whether that common law rule should continue to guide us.
But the situation presented here differs dramatically from the situations presented to those other state courts, as our legislature has already acted to change the law.
See
MinmStat. § 541.34. When considering changes in our common law, we are mindful of the importance of the rule of stare decisis. Although we are not bound to “unsound principles,” following precedent promotes stability, order, and predictability in the law.
Oanes v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
Here, we do not have a compelling reason to overrule our long-standing precedent that the Minnesota statute of limitations applies in cases properly commenced here. The new borrowing statute became effective on August 1, 2004, and all cases arising after that date are subject to it. A prospective change in the common law would apply only to cases commenced between the date of this decision and August 1, 2010. And a retroactive change would only affect cases that arose before August 1, 2004, which have not yet been finally resolved. Such a limited effect does not present the compelling reason necessary to overrule our precedent.
Certified question answered in the affirmative.
Notes
. We recognize that there is a dispute over whether the claim arose at the release of the WHI study or whether it arose earlier. Under Minnesota law, a cause of action accrues when it can be brought in a court of law without being dismissed for failure to state a claim.
MacRae v. Group Health Plan, Inc.,
. The statute states:
Subdivision 1. General, (a) Except as provided by subdivision 2 and section 541.33, if a claim is substantively based:
(1) upon the law of one other state, the limitation period of that state applies; or
(2) upon the law of more than one state, the limitation period of one of those states chosen by the law of conflict of laws of this state applies.
(b) The limitation period of this state applies to all other claims.
Subd. 2. Action arising out of state; resident plaintiff. If a cause of action arises outside of this state and the action is barred under the applicable statute of limitations of the place where it arose, the action may be maintained in this state if the plaintiff is a resident of this state who has owned the cause of action since it accrued and the cause of action is not barred under the applicable statute of limitations of this state.
. We have noted on more than one occasion that statutes of limitation have both procedural and substantive aspects.
See State v. Lemmer,
