OPINION
¶ 1 Plaintiff Amparo Hernandez-Gomez sustained severe injuries when the 1981 Volkswagen Rabbit in which she was riding as a front-seat passenger veered off the road, flipped over, and landed. on its roof. Plaintiff sued Volkswagen of America, Inc., and Volkswagenwerk Aktiengesellschaft (collectively, Volkswagen), claiming that her injuries had resulted from the vehicle’s negligently or defectively designed passive restraint system. The restraint system for the front-seat passenger consisted primarily of an automatic shoulder belt that moved diagonally across the passenger’s chest when the door was shut. The system did not include a manual lap belt, which plaintiff asserted would have prevented her injuries.
¶ 2 After our supreme court twice decided that federal law did not preempt plaintiffs tort claim,
Hernandez-Gomez v. Leonardo,
¶ 3 Federal law preempts state law under the Supremacy Clause when Congress expressly so provides, the federal law so thoroughly occupies the field that it leaves no room for state law, or state law actually conflicts with federal law.
Cipollone v. Liggett Group, Inc.,
¶4 Volkswagen has contended from the outset that the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966, Pub.L. 89-563, 80 Stat. 718, (Safety Act) and Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard 208 (FMVSS 208), which was promulgated pursuant to the Safety Act, expressly or implicitly preempt plaintiffs state tort claim. The version of FMVSS 208 applicable here allowed manufacturers to choose one of three options for a safety restraint system; generally, the first option required a “[cjomplete passive protection system,” the second required a “head-on passive protection system,” and the third a “lap and shoulder belt protection system with belt warning.” 49 C.F.R. § 571.208, S4.1.2. 1, S4.1.2. 2, and S4.1.2.3 (1980) (italicizing deleted). Volkswagen chose to equip the 1981 Rabbit with an option two system, S4.1.2.2(b), which did not require a lap belt. As a result, Volkswagen has consistently argued that federal law preempted plaintiffs state tort claim that the vehicle’s restraint system was negligently or defectively designed because it had no lap belt.
¶ 5 Our supreme court first rejected Volkswagen’s argument in
Hernandez-Gomez I,
concluding that the “Safety Act’s savings clause expresses Congress’ intent to allow state common-law claims against automobile manufacturers whose safety restraint systems comply with federal minimum performance standards but are unreasonably dangerous to consumers.”
¶ 6 The court later addressed the issue, however, in
Hernandez-Gomez II,
after the United States Supreme Court granted Volkswagen’s petition for certiorari in
Hernandez-Gomez I,
vacated the opinion, and remanded the case for reconsideration in light of the Court’s intervening decision in
Myrick. See Volkswagen of America, Inc. v. Hernandez-Gomez,
¶ 7 Then, based on
Myrick,
the court considered whether federal law implicitly preempted plaintiffs state tort claim and found that it did not. The court first found that FMVSS 208 established only minimum equipment, not design, performance standards for frontal crash protection and, therefore, was “not a comprehensive regulation that occupies the entire field.”
Hernandez-Gomez II,
¶ 8 Thus, based on its analysis of the relevant provisions of the Safety Act and FMVSS 208, our supreme court concluded that there was “neither express nor implied preemption of Plaintiffs claim.”
Id.
The court’s conclusion is, of course, binding on this court,
see Myers v. Reeb,
¶ 9 In
Geier,
the driver of a 1987 Honda Accord was seriously injured when the vehicle collided with a tree. She and her parents filed a lawsuit in a federal district court, alleging under common law that her injuries had resulted from the vehicle’s negligent and defective design because it lacked a driver’s side airbag. The district court dismissed the lawsuit based on express preemption, and the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed but did so based on implied preemption.
Geier v. American Honda Motor Co., Inc.,
¶ 10 In so holding, the majority rejected the dissent’s position that FMVSS 208 set “a minimum airbag standard.”
Id.
at 874,
clear that the standard deliberately provided the manufacturer with a range of choices among different passive restraint devices. Those choices would bring about a mix of different devices introduced gradually over time; and FMVSS 208 would thereby lower costs, overcome technical safety problems, encourage technological development, and win widespread consumer acceptance — all of which would promote FMVSS 208’s safety objectives.
Id.
at 875,
¶ 11 The Court then reviewed the history of FMVSS 208 and the considerations that had shaped the standard and determined that it “deliberately sought variety — a mix of several different passive restraint systems.”
Id.
at 878,
¶ 12 The basic question, said the Court, was “whether a common-law ‘no airbag’ action like the one before us actually conflicts with FMVSS 208”; the Court held that the action did.
Id.
at 874,
¶ 13 The Court’s analysis in
Geier
leads to the same conclusion here. As already noted, the applicable version of FMVSS 208 gave Volkswagen three options for equipping its 1981 Rabbit with a safety restraint system. Volkswagen chose an option two system for the front-seat passenger,
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S4.1.2.2(b), which did not require a lap belt. Other options also did not require a lap belt for the front-seat passenger, such as options S4.1.2.1(a) and (c)(1) under option one. Plaintiff maintains, however, that the 1981 Rabbit was negligently or defectively designed because it did not have a passenger lap belt. But this would impose a duty on Volkswagen to include that belt in all such vehicles to avoid tort liability. Accordingly, as in
Geier,
plaintiffs common-law tort claim presents “an obstacle to the variety and mix of devices that [FMVSS 208] sought,”
id.
at 881,
¶ 14 Plaintiff nonetheless argues in her supplemental brief that her claim is not preempted because the 1981 Rabbit “failed to provide her as a front seat occupant with reasonable rollover crash protection.” In support of her argument, she points to the following: the option Volkswagen chose applies only to frontal crashes; one of her experts testified at trial that “it was technologically feasible to add a manual lap belt to the [Rabbit’s] passive shoulder belt system”; the Department of Transportation told Volkswagen, in 1974 that it could equip its vehicles with “additional safety belts” if its vehicles satisfied FMVSS 208; our supreme court observed in
Hemandez-Gomez II
that the option Volkswagen chose “did not prohibit additional, manually-activated or automatic devices to provide protection in other types of crashes, including rollovers,”
¶ 15 Although the FMVSS 208 at issue here did not expressly prohibit manufacturers from adding other safety equipment to any of the available options, we read
Geier
as holding that FMVSS 208 gave manufacturers an unfettered choice among those options and precluded a common-law action requiring additional safety equipment not otherwise called for by the chosen option. And, because only one of the available options in FMVSS 208 addressed rollover crash protection, S4.1.2.1(c)(l), any other reading of
Geier
would force manufacturers to add rollover protection to any other option they chose in order to avoid common-law liability. This would, in our opinion, pose an obstacle to alternative choices “the federal regulation sought.”
¶ 16 In our view, the conclusion in Hemandez-Gomez II that federal law does not implicitly preempt plaintiffs state law tort claim is not compatible with Geier. We therefore disagree with plaintiffs assertion that Hemandez-Gomez II “is entirely consistent with and supported by Geier and remains the law of this case.” And we believe the distinctions drawn in Hemandez-Gomez II between performance and design standards and between front-end and rollover accidents do not survive Geier.
¶ 17 Numerous courts have considered Geier’s impact on various state tort actions. Plaintiff relies on the following three cases to support her position:
Leipart v. Guardian Industries, Inc.,
¶ 18
Leipart
addressed whether the Consumer Product Safety Act preempted the plaintiffs’ state tort claims against a glass shower door manufacturer. The court found no preemption, concluding that the Act created a minimum safety standard “above which state common law requirements were permitted to impose further duties.”
¶ 19
Harris
involved FMVSS 108, a standard promulgated under the Safety Act for trailer lamps and reflective devices. The plaintiffs claim alleged that the trailer her husband’s vehicle had struck at night was defectively manufactured because the trailer’s rear end did not have reflective tape. The court observed that FMVSS 108 provided that “ ‘each vehicle shall be equipped with
at least
the number of lamps, reflective devices, and associated equipment specified,’” but “did not
require
the use of reflective tape to make trailers more conspicuous.”
¶20 The court in
Choate
used a similar analysis in finding no preemption of the plaintiffs’ action against defendants for their failure to install a smoke detector with a battery-powered back-up in a manufactured home. The court noted that, under the Manufactured Housing Act, the applicable standard “only requires
‘(a)t least
one smoke detector (which is hard wired to the general electrical circuit).’ ”
Under the plaintiffs’ claim asserted in [Geier], manufacturers should have used airbags instead of the other options presented. This would have effectively eliminated use of the other choices offered under the federal standards....
The rule of law sought by [the plaintiffs], on the other hand, would not eliminate the chosen federal method of providing smoke detection in manufactured homes. It would simply increase the effectiveness of that method.
Id.
at 796 (citation omitted). Other courts have reached similar conclusions in post-Gei
er
cases that did not involve FMVSS 208.
See Green v. Fund Asset Management, L. P.,
¶ 21 In contrast, the post-Geier cases that specifically involve FMVSS 208 have all held, based on
Geier,
that the federal standard implicitly preempted the plaintiffs claims. Representative is
Hurley v. Motor Coach Industries, Inc.,
¶ 22 Accordingly, Geier compels us to conclude that federal law implicitly preempts plaintiffs state tort claim that the 1981 Rabbit was negligently or defectively designed. *147 We therefore vacate the judgment entered against Volkswagen.
