Helen Marra, a resident of New York, brought this diversity action in the District Court for the District of Vermont against appellant Esther Bushee, a Vermont resident, to recover for the loss of consortium resulting from appellant’s alienation of the affections of and criminal conversation with Allan Marra, the plaintiff’s husband. The jury found in the plaintiff’s favor and awarded her some $9,000 in damages. For the reason set forth below, we reverse and remand for a new trial.
During the latter years of their marriage Allan and Helen Marra seldom shared thе same home, 1 According to *1283 the plaintiff’s testimony, her spouse’s carousing, cohabitation with other women and shifting employment took him from one locale to another, with only brief intervаls of residence in her home. In July, 1968 Allan Marra returned to his wife’s Granville, New York farm but left soon thereafter to take up residence in the Manchester, Vermont home of defеndant Esther Bushee. During the months that followed, the defendant and the plaintiff’s husband, ostensibly a boarder in the Bushee home, frequented the Granville taverns. But Allan Marra did not, as before, return to his wife.
At the close of the plaintiff’s case, and again at the conclusion of all the evidence, the defendant moved for a directed verdict contending, inter alia, that under the applicable Vermont conflict-of-laws principle 2 the law of New York, which has abolished causes of action arising from interference with the marital relationship, 3 governed the substantive rights and liabilities of the litigants. It was the defendant’s position that liability must be determined by the law of the place where the injury was incurred and that, in this instance, the loss of consortium occurred in New York, the state of the matrimonial domicile.
The district court disagreed and, after the jury’s verdict, denied defendant’s motions for a directed verdict and for judgment n. o. v. The court ruled that under either the
lex loci delicti
test, or the modern significant relationship test, set out in the Restatement (Second) Conflict of Laws (1969) and adopted by the Vermont Supreme Court for application to contractual choice-of-law problems,
4
the forum court should apply the domestic rule of the state in which the decisive portion of the defendant’s conduct had occurred. Marra v. Bushee,
Although no Vermont decision has considered the choice-of-law rule applicable in an alienation of affection dispute involving multi7state conduct, the district court properly determined that Vermont would, in this instance, employ the law of the state in which the defendant’s conduct primarily occurred. The traditional approach to the choice of law determined the applicable law by locating territorially the “place of the wrong,” defined in the context of negligent torts as the place of the injury, Restatement, Conflict of Laws § 377 (1934); H. Goodrich, Conflict of Laws § 93 (3d ed. 1949), and in the context of intentional torts as the place оf the wrongful conduct. Ehrenzweig, The Place of Acting in Intentional Multistate Torts, 36 Minn.L.Rev. 1, 5 (1951). With respect to the tortious interference with the marital relationship other jurisdictions have unifоrmly applied the law of the place of the defendant’s conduct. See, e. g., Gordon v. Parker,
“The local law of the state where the conduct complained of principally occurred determines the liability of one who interferes with a marriage relationship, unless, with respect to the particular issue, some other state has a more significant relationship under the principles stated in § 6 to the occurrence and the parties, in which event the local law of the other state will be applied.” 5
Territorial location of Esther Bushee’s alluring conduct required a factual determination. Although the defendant did not deny that Allan Marra resided in her Vermont homе, every other incident of alleged alienation about which there was testimony at trial occurred in New York. This factual determination was not, however, a jurisdictional consideration within the fact-finding province of the trial court. Although the issue whether any of the wrongs alleged in plaintiff’s complaint gave rise to tort liability turned upon resolution оf the choice-of-law question, personal and subject matter jurisdiction had been independently established. See 5 Moore’s Federal Practice ¶ 38.36 at 290-95. Because the plaintiff made a general demand for a jury trial, the defendant was entitled to the jury’s consideration of every issue properly triable to it. Fed.R.Civ.P. 38(a), (c); Dairy Queen, Inc. v. Wood,
Although there was sufficient evidence to support a finding that Esther Bushee’s conduct occurred primarily in Vermont, a review of the extensive evidence of New York conduct makes clear that the court was not in a positiоn to direct the jury to make such a determination. The defendant did not request a charge requiring the jury to make an initial determination territorializing the decisive portion of thе allegedly tortious conduct. But a request for this instruction immediately after the trial court had reserved decision on defendant’s motion to dismiss, which framed squarely *1285 the choice of law issue, would have been a duplication of procedural effort. Defendant is not, therefore, precluded from raising this error on appeal.
We have сonsidered the other points raised by the appellant and conclude that they do not have sufficient substance to constitute reversible error. But because the dеfendant was entitled to the jury’s finding of the facts which were determinative of the choice of law principles, the judgment of the district court is reversed and the case remanded for a new trial.
Notes
. The Marras were married September 25, 1945 in Salem, Washington County, New York and resided in that county for the years that followed. In 1956 the family moved to Connecticut. A sеries of repeated separations and reconciliations be *1283 gan two years later and continued until during the summer of 1968, both spouses returned to the Granville, New York residence.
. Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co.,
. N.Y.Civil Rights Law, McKinney’s Consol.Laws, c. 6, §§ 80-a-84.
. Pioneer Credit Corp. v. Carden,
. Statement (Second), Conflict of Laws § 154, comment b (1968) explains that this “rale furthers the choice-of-law [value] of application of the local law of the state of dominant interest * * * since the basic purpose of tort rules imposing liability for interference with a marriage relationship is not so much to compensate the plaintiff for his loss as to punish the defendant and to deter others from following his example.”
