Whilе riding in the rear center seat of a 1990 Volvo sedan (the Volvo) and wearing a two-point lap belt, Kendra M. Heinricher sustained serious injuries in a single-vehicle accident. All of the other seats in the Volvo were equipped with three-point lаp-shoulder harnesses. Kendra and her parents, Darlene and Richard Heinricher, brought a complaint against Volvo Car Corporation, Volvo North America Corporation, and Dalzell Bros., Inc., sounding in negligence and breach of warranty, and asserting that the Volvo was defective because it lacked a three- *314 point lap-shoulder harness in the rear center seat. 3 A judge in the Superior Court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment because he concluded that the Heinricher s’ claims were preempted by Federal stаtute and safety regulations promulgated thereunder that permit automobile manufacturers to equip the rear center seats of their vehicles with either two-point lap belts or three-point lap-shoulder harnesses.
On appeal, we consider whether the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966 (the Safety Act), see 15 U.S.C. §§ 1381-1431 (1988), 4 and Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard 208 (Standard 208), 49 C.F.R. § 571.208 (1990), impliedly preempt State common-law claims for damages sustained as a result of an alleged automotive design defect. Because we cоnclude that the Heinrichers’ State common-law claims are preempted by Federal law, we affirm.
Congress enacted the Safety Act in response to the “soaring rate of death and debilitation on the Nation’s highways.”
5
S. Rep. No. 1301, 89th Cong., 2d Sess. 1 (1966), reprinted in 1966 U.S. Code Cong. & Admin. News 2709. The legislative goal was to reduce injuries and deaths resulting from traffic accidents by authorizing the promulgation of Federal motor vehicle safety standards — mandatory standards that would apply to all new motor vehiсles, would be practicable, would meet the need for motor vehicle safety, and would be stated in objective terms. See 15 U.S.C. §§ 1381, 1392(a) (1988). See also
Wood
v.
General Motors Corp.,
Standard 208 “specifies performance requirements for the protection of vehiclе occupants in crashes.” 49 C.F.R. § 571.208.S1 (1990). Its purpose is “to reduce the number of deaths of vehicle *315 occupants, and the severity of injuries, by specifying vehicle crashworthiness requirements . . . , and by specifying equipment requirements for active and pаssive restraint systems.” 99 C.F.R. § 571.208.S2 (1990). At the time the Volvo was manufactured, Standard 208 permitted manufacturers to install either a two-point lap belt (a “Type 1” system) or a three-point lap-shoulder harness (a “"type 2” system) in the rear center seat of their vehicles. 99 C.F.R. §§ 571.208.S4.1.4 (1990).
The parties do not dispute that the regulatоry scheme set out in Standard 208 provides vehicle manufacturers with passenger restraint options or that Volvo Car Corporation selected the two-point lap belt option, instead of the three-point lap-shoulder harness option, for installation in the Volvo in which Kendra was injured. The Heinrichers contend, however, that the existence of a regulatory “choice” does not automatically foreclose their State common-law claims where, as here, there is no hard evidence of a clear conflict with some Federal purpose. The Heinrichers assert that they merely seek to hold the defendants liable for failing to do more than the minimum required by Standard 208. In other words, they argue that the Volvo was defective because Volvo Car Corporation chose to equip the vehicle’s rear center seat with a two-point lap belt rather than with a three-point lap-shoulder harness. Conversely, the defendants contend that Standard 208, which allowed manufacturers to install only a two-point lap belt in the rear center seat, preempts the Heinrichers’ claims because imposing State common-law liability on the defendants for failing to utilize one of the two рermissible choices conflicts with Federal law by standing as an obstacle to the regulatory scheme of the Safety Act.
The parties’ respective contentions find support in different provisions of the Safety Act. The Act contains a рreemption provision that explicitly preempts any State
legislative
or
regulatory
enactment that covers “the same aspect of performance” as a Federal standard but is not identical to the Federal standard. 15 U.S.C. § 1392(d) (1998). See
Wood
v.
General Motors Corp., supra
at 398. However, the Act’s express preemption provision does not operate as a bar to
common-law
actions. A “savings” clause of the Safety Act provides that compliance with a Federal
*316
motor vehicle safety standard “does not exempt any рerson from any liability under common law.” 15 U.S.C. § 1397(k) (1988). Such language “preserves those actions that seek to establish greater safety than the minimum safety achieved by a federal regulation intended to provide a floor.”
Geier
v.
American Honda Motor Co.,
It is well established that Federal law preempts State law when an actual conflict exists between them. See
Attorney Gen.
v.
Brown,
Central to resolution of the instant preemption issue is Geier v. American Honda Motor Co., supra, on which both parties rely. There, the Unitеd States Supreme Court considered whether Standard 208 preempted a State common-law tort action in which the petitioner claimed that the defendant automobile manufacturer, which had chosen not to install airbags in some of its vehicles, as allowed by Standard 208, should nonetheless have equipped the particular vehicle with airbags. See id. at *317 864-865. After thoroughly examining the rule-making history of Standard 208, the Supreme Court concluded that in promulgating Standard 208 the United States Departmеnt of Transportation (DOT) had not merely set forth minimum safety standards beyond which a State could require more, but rather had expressed a comprehensive regulatory scheme that allowed manufacturers to choose among various рassenger restraint options. See id. at 874-875. The petitioner’s lawsuit would have established a rule of State tort law that effectively required manufacturers to install an airbag in every vehicle. See id. at 881. Because such a rule would have conflicted with DOT’S judgment that “safety would best be promoted if manufacturers instаlled alternative protection systems in their fleets rather than one particular system in every car,” ibid, (citation omitted), the Supreme Court concluded that the petitioner’s State tort claims were preempted.
In a case nearly identical to the present one, the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit in
Griffith
v.
General Motors Corp.,
Other courts that have considered this preemption issue have reached a similar conclusion. See
Wood
v.
General Motors Corp.,
In the context of the present case, we agree with the cogent analysis of Griffith v. General Motors Corp., supra, and analogous cases that have recognized the preеmptive effect of Standard 208 on State common-law claims. We also agree that under the rationale of Geier the preemptive effect of Standard 208 is not a function of a distinction between passive and manual restraint systems, but encоmpasses the two alternative manual restraint systems at issue here. As part of a comprehensive safety scheme, Federal law plainly provided Volvo Car *319 Corporation with the option of installing either a two-point lap belt or a three-point lap-shoulder harness in the rear center seat of its vehicles. Volvo Car Corporation complied with this safety scheme by availing itself of one of the two designated options. The Heinrichers’ action would hold the defendants liable for choosing one Federally-approved passеnger restraint system over another. Their cause of action, if successful, would establish a rule that, to avoid liability in Massachusetts, manufacturers must install three-point lap-shoulder harnesses in the rear center seats of all of their vehicles. As such, the passenger restraint options specifically afforded manufacturers by Congress would be foreclosed. 6 This result would conflict with and stand as an obstacle to the implementation of the comprehensive safety scheme prоmulgated in Standard 208. Accordingly, the Heinrichers’ State common-law claims are preempted as matter of law.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
DarIene and Richard Heinricher also asserted claims for loss of consortium against the defendants.
On July 5, 1994, Congress recodified the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966 without substantive change. See Pub. L. No. 103-272, § 1(a), (d), 108 Stat. 745, 940 (1994). The recodified provisions are set forth in 49 U.S.C. §§ 30101-30169 (2000).
“When framing the Safety Act, Congress indicated clearly its intention that the primary responsibility for setting standards rеgulating the national automobile manufacturing industry rested upon the federal government, not the states.”
Wood
v.
General Motors Corp.,
One of the reasons that the DOT decided to implement a rear seat lap-shoulder harness option, rather than a requirement, was its desire not to hinder the development of other safety advancements. See 52 Fed. Reg. 22,819 (1987) (“Requiring significant industry and agency resources to be spent for relatively little safety gain can result in a lost opportunity to better improve vehicle safety through other means, such as improved frontal or side impact protection”).
