(By special assignment pursuant to RSA 490:3.) This case raises familiar conflicts of law questions arising from inter-spousal suits. The plaintiff, Lois Gordon, filed suit on November 1, 1976, against her husband, Robert, for injuriеs she sustained in a car accident on Route 95 in Hampton, New Hampshire on July 2, 1971. At the time of the accident both parties were married domiciliaries and residents of Chicopee, Massachusetts. Robert Gordon’s connection with the Air Force required frequent relocations and in the interim between the accident and institution of this suit both partiеs lived in numerous other jurisdictions including some time in New Hampshire. Prior to suit the parties moved to North Berwick, Maine, and have been domiciled there at all relevant times sincе.
Defendant’s motion to dismiss on the grounds that this suit was barred by Maine’s interspousal immunity rule and, in the alternative, the Massachusetts two-year statute of limitations, was granted. Plaintiff’s exceptions to this ruling were reserved and transferred by Mullavey, J. We reverse.
New Hampshire, site of the accident and interim domicile of the parties, has long allowed interspousal suits.
Morin v. Letourneau,
As between Massachusetts and New Hampshire, no conflict exists in permitting interspousal tort actions, for each jurisdiction would arrive at the same result by application of the same rule, R. Leflar, American Conflicts Law, 237 (1968); 55 Calif. L. Rev. 74, 106 (1967), and as between these two jurisdictions we are free to follow our rule allowing a wife to sue her husband.
Maine, the domicile of the parties at the time of the suit, adheres reluctantly to interspousal immunity.
Moulton v. Moulton,
Choice of law governing interspousal immunity is controlled by the relevant considerations summarized in
Clark v. Clark,
Predictаbility of results is of limited concern in automobile accident cases because they are not planned occurrences.
Clark v. Clark supra.
In
Johnson v. Johnson,
We have frequently voiced our preference for.the rule allowing interspousal suits.
Doiron v. Doiron,
We affirm our position that the New Hampshire rule is the better one and are bolstered in this conclusion by our observation that Maine’s adherence to the rule stems more from abidance with the principle of stare decisis than belief in the continuing soundness of the rule.
This case is factually similar to
Doiron
in the analysis of the interests at stake in making a choice of law. In
Doiron
we ruled that domiciliaries of New Hampshire could sue in New Hampshire for injuries sustained here even though they had become Massachusetts domiciliaries at the time of the suit. Since a cause of action accrued under New Hampshire law to a New Hampshire domiciliary, we would not “under the guise of promоting federal felicity, subscribe to a view that the law of the domicile of the parties when an action is instituted should bar a suit by a wife against her husband instituted in New Hampshire to enforсe a right of action which arose here from conduct of one spouse toward the other when they were domiciled in this state.”
Doiron v. Doiron,
Defendant argues that our decisions in
Schneider v. Schneider,
Maine, as a recently adopted domicile of the parties, does not have the same interest in seeing its law applied that Massachusetts had in Schneider. It has no interest in protecting insurance companies from collusive lawsuits as did Massachusetts in Johnson and Schneider. Schneider is further distinguishable because, there New Hampshire’s interest was predicated on the site of the accident; here, in addition to that interest, there also exists the intеrest of Massachusetts, domicile of the parties at the time of accident, in seeing its rule applied.
Domicile alone, however, is not the controlling factor. Only аnalysis of the underlying reasons behind competing rules and their relevance in a given factual context can answer the question of which law applies, and we hold in this case that the New Hampshire rule applies.
The final question raised is whether the then applicable two-year limitation on actions, 1948 Mass. Acts, ch. 274, § 2
amended by
Mass. Gen. Laws, Ch. 260, sec. 2A (Supр. 1976) bars the plaintiff. We have long followed the general rule that a statute of limitations is a matter of procedure and as such the law of the forum applies.
Moylan v. Lamothe,
Exceptions sustained; remanded.
