Esther B. HULIN, et al., Plaintiffs,
Susan H. Berry; Thomas Hulin; Sally H. Blanchard; Mary
Desselle Romano; Joseph G. Hulin; Janet M. Hulin,
Plaintiffs-Appellants;
v.
FIBREBOARD CORPORATION, et al., Defendants,
American Tobacco Company, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 97-30734.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.
June 9, 1999.
George R. Covert, Sean D. Fagan, Baton Rouge, LA, for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Robert E. Winn, Sally A. Shushan, Joy Goldberg Braun, John William Hite, III, Sessions & Fishman, New Orleans, LA, Bruce G. Sheffler, Thomas E. Bezanson, Chadbourne & Parke, New York City, for Defendant-Appellee.
David Edmund Redmann, Jr., Lemle & Kelleher, Thomas W. Tyner, Troy Nathan Bell, Aultman, Tyner, McNeese, Ruffin & Laird, New Orleans, LA, for Garlock Inc., Amicus Curiae.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana.
Before DeMOSS, PARKER and DENNIS, Circuit Judges.
DENNIS, Circuit Judge:
The district court granted the defendants a summary judgment dismissing the plaintiffs' diversity products liability actions based on Louisiana law on the grounds that the decision of the Supreme Court of Louisiana in Halphen v. Johns-Manville Sales Corp.,
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On January 7, 1986, Esther B. Hulin, Susan H. Berry, Thomas Hulin, Sally H. Blanchard, Mary H. Deselle, Joseph G. Hulin, and Janet M. Hulin ("plaintiffs") filed suit against American Tobacco Company ("American Tobacco") and various manufacturers of asbestos-containing products ("defendants") alleging that the defendants' products contributed to the lung cancer and June 3, 1985 death of Lenes J. Hulin, Jr., husband and father of the plaintiffs. In their complaint, the plaintiffs sought recovery under the theories of strict liability, ultrahazardous activities, and negligence. Six weeks after the complaint was filed, the Louisiana Supreme Court in Halphen answered the certified question asked by this federal court of appeals, by interpreting and applying the Louisiana Civil Code and its jurisprudence thereunder, and concluding that if plaintiff proves that the product was unreasonably dangerous per se, i.e., if a reasonable person would conclude that the danger-in-fact of the product outweighs its utility, whether because of defective design or another kind of defect, or unreasonably dangerous in construction or composition, a manufacturer may be held liable for injuries caused by the product even though the manufacturer did not know and reasonably could not have known of the danger. Halphen,
On November 23, 1987, the plaintiffs amended their complaint to add a products liability claim alleging that tobacco is unreasonably dangerous per se, i.e., because a reasonable person would conclude that the danger-in-fact of tobacco outweighs its utility.
In April 1994, the district court in this case granted American Tobacco's motion for summary judgment and dismissed all of the plaintiffs' claims except their allegation that the defendants' products were unreasonably dangerous per se. On July 29, 1996, American Tobacco filed a motion in limine to determine the applicability of Halphen to this suit. On December 9, 1996, the district court issued its Ruling on Motion in Limine To Determine Applicability of Halphen, declaring that Halphen could not be applied retroactively to this case. In a separate ruling on that date, the court granted American Tobacco's motion for summary judgment and dismissed it from this case after concluding that the plaintiffs' sole remaining claim, that the defendants' products were unreasonably dangerous per se, was inapplicable in light of the court's nonretroactivity ruling. The plaintiffs appealed from this judgment.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
A district court's decision of a question of state law is subject to de novo review by this court. Salve Regina College v. Russell,
III. DISCUSSION
A. Federal Courts Must Apply The Law of the State, Except in
Matters Governed By the Federal Constitution Or By
Acts of Congress
In Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins,
Except in matters governed by the Federal Constitution or by Acts of Congress, the law to be applied in any case is the law of the state. And whether the law of the state shall be declared by its Legislature in a statute or by its highest court in a decision is not a matter of federal concern. There is no federal general common law. Congress has no power to declare substantive rules of common law applicable in a state whether they be local in their nature or "general," be they commercial law or a part of the law of torts. And no clause in the Constitution purports to confer such a power upon the federal courts.
Id. at 78,
The Court has stated that, in determining the content of the state law to be applied:
the underlying substantive rule involved is based on state law and the State's highest court is the best authority on its own law. If there be no decision by that court then federal authorities must apply what they find to be the state law after giving "proper regard" to relevant rulings of other courts of the State.
Commissioner v. Estate of Bosch,
B. Louisiana Judicial Retroactivity Doctrine Declared By The
State's Highest Court And Derived From Civil,
Common, and Constitutional Law Sources
Louisiana jurisprudential principles, doctrines, and traditions are derived from Anglo-American constitutional and common law models, as well as European civil law sources. Louisiana courts adhere to and apply the same constitutional principles of separation of powers, justiciability, case or controversy, and equal protection of laws as the federal and other state courts. Under Louisiana's Constitution, the power to make substantive laws is vested exclusively in the legislature. Under the State's constitution and Civil Code, Louisiana courts cannot make law but are bound to decide cases according to their best understanding of the law established by legislation and custom. The overwhelmingly prevalent norm in Louisiana, as in the common law, the federal courts, and civil law jurisdictions, is that judicial decisions must be applied retroactively.
In accordance with that authoritative standard, the Supreme Court of Louisiana has declared that the general rule is that, unless a judicial decision specifies otherwise, it is to be given both retrospective and prospective effect. Succession of Clivens,
The law as construed in an overruled case is considered as though it had never existed, and the law as construed in the last case is considered as though it has always been the law. As a general rule, the law as construed in the last decision operates both prospectively and retrospectively, except that it will not be permitted to disturb vested rights.
Id. at 858. See also Construction Materials, Inc. v. American Fidelity Fire Ins. Co.,
The legislative power of the State of Louisiana is vested in the Legislature. LA. CONST. art. III, § 1. Except as expressly provided by the constitution, no other branch of government, nor any person holding office in one of them, may exercise the legislative power. Id. art. II, §§ 1, 2. See Board of Comm'rs of the Orleans Levee Dist. v. Department of Natural Resources,
Under the Louisiana Civil Code, legislation and custom are the only authoritative sources of law. LA.CIV.CODE art. 1; A.N. YIANNOPOULOS, CIVIL LAW SYSTEM 117 (2d ed.1999). Jurisprudence, doctrine, conventional usages, and equity are merely persuasive sources of law. YIANNOPOULOS, supra at 117. Hence, the Louisiana Supreme Court consistently has held that judicial decisions interpreting and applying the provisions of the Civil Code operate both retroactively and prospectively because they "are not the law, but only the evidence of what the court thinks is the law." Norton,
In Louisiana and other civil law jurisdictions, the judicial method of applying Civil Code principles by analogy to facts unforeseen by the Code always has been used and considered as judicial interpretation of law and not law making. See Ardoin v. Hartford Accident and Indem. Co.,
In most cases, however, when the Louisiana Supreme Court interprets and applies Civil Code principles by analogy to cases unforeseen by the Code, the issue of the temporal effect of the decision is not raised, because it is so well understood that whatever the court now holds to be the law of the Civil Code becomes what has always been the law, even if the new holding overrules or modifies an earlier decision of the court.1 One striking example is the Louisiana Supreme Court's use of the Code articles relating to servitudes by analogy to develop a complete body of mineral law to regulate and accommodate property interests created or affected by the unforeseen phenomenon of oil and gas production. See, e.g., Frost-Johnson Lumber Co. v. Salling's Heirs,
What Francois Terre has said with respect to jurisprudence in French civil law is generally true in the Louisiana and other civil law systems:
"[A] new jurisprudential rule is always applied in all new actions, without any consideration of the date on which the facts of the action occurred and even when these facts occurred prior to the change in the jurisprudence." That is so for a very simple reason. When it confers a certain sense on a [legislative] rule, the jurisprudence becomes part and parcel of [fait corps avec ] that rule. As a result, this rule is thought to have always had this signification. More than retroactive the jurisprudence is, in the image of interpretative laws, declarative.
FRANCOIS TERRe, INTRODUCTION GeNeRALE AU DROIT 247 n. 228 (4th ed.1998) (quoting PAUL ROUBIER, LE DROIT TRANSITOIRE CONFLITS DES LOIS DANS LE TEMPS 24 n. 7 (2d ed. 1960)) (Translation by J.R. Trahan, Associate Professor of Law, L.S.U. Paul M. Hebert Law Center).
The technique of applying judicial decisions prospectively but not retroactively is inconsonant with the basic civil law tenet that courts interpret but do not make law. "It would certainly be in violation of Article 5 of the French Civil Code ... and incompatible with the ideas of the redactors of the Louisiana Civil Code." YIANNOPOULOS, supra at 151. "No attempt has been made in France or Germany to develop a technique permitting such a disposition of a case. In view of the position taken by accepted French and German theory that a decision does nothing more than dispose of the case before the court, its development would be very difficult." ARTHUR TAYLOR VON MEHREN & JAMES RUSSELL GORDLEY, THE CIVIL LAW SYSTEM 1160 (2d ed.1977) (footnotes omitted).
In the relatively small number of cases in which the Louisiana Supreme Court has limited the retroactive effect of its own decisions, it has expressly done so in the same opinion that announced the decision. See, e.g., In re Adoption of B.G.S.,
In Succession of Clivens,
It is well established that the effect of even a fully retroactive jurisprudential decision is limited by certain independent overriding legal principles. In both civil and common law systems, the fully retroactive effect of every judicial decision is barred by independent legal principles of law designed to place limits on litigation in the interest of legal stability. In the continental civil law systems, jurists recognize that the principle of causae finitae--extinguished actions--prevents retroactive legislation or judicial decisions from affecting litigation that has been terminated by a final judgment, closed by compromise, or extinguished by prescription. See ROUBIER, supra at 32; PATRICE LEVEL, ESSAI SUR LES CONFLITS DE LOIS DANS LE TEMPS 33 n. 19, 161-62 n. 90 (1959) (Translation by Prof. J.R. Trahan); JACQUES GHESTIN & GILLES GOUBEAUX, TRAITe DE DROIT CIVIL: INTRODUCTION GeNeRALE 415 n. 462 (3d ed. 1990) (Translation by Prof. J.R. Trahan). That res judicata, statutes of limitation, and other independent legal principles have this effect in federal and common law is illustrated by the Supreme Court's decisions in James B. Beam Distilling Co. v. Georgia,
An overriding independent legal principle established by Article 14, § 26 of the 1974 Louisiana Constitution provides that, subject to exceptions not here pertinent, the constitution is not retroactive and does not create any right which did not exist under the previous constitution based upon actions or matters occurring prior to the effective date of the 1974 constitution. The acknowledged illegitimate child's cause of action in Succession of Brown arose before the 1974 constitution upon the death of her father in 1971. When the 1974 Louisiana Constitution became effective on January 1, 1975, its new guarantee of equality for illegitimate children contained in Article 1, § 3 repealed or rendered unconstitutional Civil Code Article 919, which had denied such equality, prospectively from that effective date. Because, as provided by Article 14, § 26, the 1974 Louisiana Constitution generally did not create new rights retroactively, the court's decision in Succession of Brown, recognizing new rights granted illegitimate children by Article 1, § 3, necessarily was limited in its retroactive effect to intestate successions opened after the effective date of the constitution on January 1, 1975.
In the present case, of course, we are not seeking to determine the "true" reason for the court's decision in Succession of Clivens or even to prove that it reached the correct result. See Katherine Shaw Spaht, Developments in the Law (Successions), 47 LA. L.REV. 471, 471-79 (1986) (suggesting that Succession of Clivens cannot be reconciled with Trimble v. Gordon,
Additionally, it should be noted that the Louisiana Supreme Court has established by jurisprudence constante another independent legal principle in its consistent holdings that, where an injury has occurred for which the injured party has a cause of action, that cause of action is a right which is protected by the guarantee of due process. See Soloco, Inc. v. Dupree,
The Louisiana Supreme Court first recognized a strict products delictual liability theory of recovery under Louisiana civil law in Weber v. Fidelity & Casualty Insurance Co.,
By the mid-1980s, the Louisiana Supreme Court had identified and applied a body of products liability principles by analogy within the framework of the Civil Code which included theories of recovery for manufacturing defects, risk/utility design defects, and failures to give adequate warnings. See, e.g., Hunt v. City Stores, Inc.,
In 1985, this federal court of appeals certified to the Louisiana Supreme Court the question: May a manufacturer be held liable for injuries caused by an unreasonably dangerous product if the manufacturer establishes that it did not know and reasonably could not have known of the inherent danger posed by its product? Halphen v. Johns-Manville Sales Corp.,
In reaching its conclusions, the state supreme court in Halphen applied its previously developed products liability jurisprudence and, by analogy, as it had done in Hunt and DeBattista, the principle of legal fault or strict liability under Civil Code articles 2317-2322. Id. at 116. In its landmark decision in Loescher v. Parr,
The Louisiana Supreme Court in Halphen noted that the principle of strict products liability is analogous to the principle underlying Civil Code articles 2317-2322. Consequently, after fully describing the similarities, e.g., the custodian and the manufacturer both are in the best position to control unreasonable risk to others by the thing or the product, the court concluded that when a plaintiff proves that a product is badly defective because it is unreasonably dangerous in construction or composition, or because its utility is outweighed by its danger-in-fact due to its design or intrinsic nature, the producer should be held strictly liable to the innocent consumer regardless of scientific inability to know or avoid the danger. Otherwise, the liability of a manufacturer who distributes large numbers of such unreasonably dangerous products causing multiple injuries and deaths to innocent consumers would be less strict than that of an ordinary homeowner for the act or defect of his child, animal, or tree.2 Halphen,
Subsequently, the Louisiana Supreme Court and the Louisiana courts of appeal have applied the jurisprudential Civil Code interpretations expressed in Halphen retroactively to a large number of cases.3
Considering the decisions of the Supreme Court of Louisiana and all pertinent material available, we conclude that the highest court of the State of Louisiana would continue to consider that its decision in Halphen v. Johns-Manville Sales Corp.,
The principal thrust of the district court's opinion and the defendant-appellee's position on appeal is that the Louisiana Supreme Court's decision in Halphen made substantive laws, and that, therefore, those laws must be applied prospectively only as if they were legislation enacted by the legislature. The argument is in diametric contradiction with the Louisiana Supreme Court decisions, the Louisiana Constitution, the Louisiana Civil Code, and civil law adjudicative retroactivity doctrine.
Under the distribution of powers by the Louisiana Constitution of 1974, the powers of government of the State are divided into three separate branches. LA. CONST. art. II, § 1. Except for provisions not applicable in the present case, the constitution provides that no one of these branches, nor any person holding office in one of them, shall exercise power belonging to either of the others. LA. CONST. art. II, § 2. The legislative power of the State is vested in a legislature, consisting of a Senate and a House of Representatives. LA. CONST. art. III, § 1. The judicial power is vested in a supreme court, courts of appeal, district courts, and other courts authorized by the constitution. LA. CONST. art. V, § 1. The supreme court may establish procedural and administrative rules for the judiciary not in conflict with law. LA. CONST. art V, § 5(A). Consequently, the Louisiana Supreme Court does not have the legislative power to make substantive laws of general application in the nature of legislation. See Orleans Levee Dist.,
Consistently with the constitution, and based on its own civil law tradition, Article 1 of the Louisiana Civil Code provides that the sources of law are legislation and custom. In other words, Louisiana judicial decisions are not sources but interpretations of law.
The district court and the defendant-appellee disregarded the substantial body of Louisiana Supreme Court decisions expressly holding that under the state constitution and Civil Code, judicial decisions are not law but the judges' interpretations of the law, and that a judicial decision is to be applied retroactively unless the court rendering it specifies otherwise. They pay no heed to any of the other authorities contrary to their position, such as the decisions of the United States Supreme Court and the learned works of civil- and common-law scholars. Instead, the district court and the defendant-appellee rely exclusively on a state court of appeal opinion that uncritically accepts a manufacturer-defendant's argument which is based on nothing more than a flawed syllogism of word-logic.4 The statement in the court of appeal opinion, which was not determinative of the outcome in that case, should be disregarded because of the other persuasive data that the Louisiana Supreme Court would decide the matter in a different fashion. A federal court has a duty to determine state law as it believes the State's highest court would. The decision of an intermediate appellate court may guide, but it is not necessarily controlling upon, a federal court when determining what the applicable state law is. FDIC v. Abraham,
C. Background and Recent Developments Of the United States
Supreme Court's Retroactivity Doctrine
Although Louisiana judges are called upon to think and act as civil-law jurists when deciding cases under the Louisiana Civil Code, at the same time they are judges in the Anglo-American tradition who are more often engaged in the interpretation and application of law derived from American state, federal, and other Louisiana law sources outside the ambit of the Civil Code. Consequently, the nature of the entire Louisiana judicial process is also heavily influenced by common-law traditions, United States Supreme Court decisions, and the laws and jurisprudence of other states. The Supreme Court of Louisiana, like courts of other states, gives careful attention to the United States Supreme Court's opinions explaining common-law traditions and constitutional principles that influence the role of the judiciary and the temporal effects of judicial decisions. Accordingly, we must take those opinions into account in our effort to ascertain the probable course of future developments in the Louisiana doctrine of retroactivity.
The general principle that statutes operate prospectively and judicial decisions apply retroactively had been followed by the common law and the Supreme Court's decisions "for near a thousand years." Kuhn v. Fairmont Coal Co.,
In the federal noncriminal law context, the Supreme Court similarly recognized that a judicial decision could be applied nonretroactively if it established a new principle of law, if such a limitation would avoid substantial inequitable results, and if retrospective application would not retard the purpose and effect of the new rule. Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson,
In Griffith v. Kentucky,
In James B. Beam Distilling Co. v. Georgia,
Justice Souter, whose lead opinion garnered the most support, reasoned that the equality principle of Griffith (that similarly situated litigants should be treated the same) carries comparable or greater strength in the civil context, requiring that: (1) the possibility of selective prospectivity be rejected in civil cases; and (2) when a court has applied a new rule of law to the litigants in the case before it, that application necessarily is a retroactive application of the rule to a cause of action based on events predating its adjudication, and therefore must be applied with equality to all similarly situated litigants, except as to rights acquired by them through the operation of res judicata or statutes of limitation, due to the need for finality and an end to litigation. Three justices dissented, defending the practices of both pure and selective prospective application of decisions and the continued viability of the Chevron Oil test. Id. at 549,
In Harper v. Virginia Department of Taxation,
When this Court applies a rule of federal law to the parties before it, that rule is the controlling interpretation of federal law and must be given full retroactive effect in all cases still open on direct review and as to all events, regardless of whether such events predate or postdate our announcement of the rule. This rule extends Griffith's ban against "selective application of new rules." Mindful of the "basic norms of constitutional adjudication" that animated our view of retroactivity in the criminal context, we now prohibit the erection of selective temporal barriers to the application of federal law in noncriminal cases. In both civil and criminal cases, we can scarcely permit "the substantive law [to] shift and spring" according to the "particular equities of [individual parties'] claims" of actual reliance on an old rule and of harm from a retroactive application of the new rule. Our approach to retroactivity heeds the admonition that "[t]he Court has no more constitutional authority in civil cases than in criminal cases to disregard current law or to treat similarly situated litigants differently."
Id. at 97,
Justice O'Connor, joined by the Chief Justice, dissented from the Court's rejection of the use of prospective retroactivity under the Chevron Oil test, and expressed concern that the forgoing language and another statement in Justice Thomas's majority opinion "intimates that pure prospectivity may be prohibited as well." Id. at 115,
The Supreme Court in Reynoldsville Casket Co. v. Hyde,
held that, when (1) the Court decides a case and applies the (new) legal rule of that case to the parties before it, then (2) it and other courts must treat that same (new) legal rule as "retroactive," applying it, for example, to all pending cases, whether or not those cases involve predecision events.
Hyde,
Thus, a court may find (1) an alternative way of curing the constitutional violation, or (2) a previously existing, independent legal basis (having nothing to do with retroactivity) for denying relief, or (3) as in the law of qualified immunity, a well-established general legal rule that trumps the new rule of law, which general rule reflects both reliance interests and other significant policy justifications, or (4) a principle of law, such as that of "finality" present in the Teague context, that limits the principle of retroactivity itself. But, this case [where a concern about reliance alone has led the Ohio court to create what amounts to an ad hoc exemption from retroactivity [id. at 758,
Id.
Evidently, the Supreme Court has concluded that the Linkletter and Chevron Oil departures from traditional retroactivity doctrine proved unsatisfactory. The Court's most recent decisions substantially reject those departures and return to the general rule of adjudicative retroactivity, leaving only an indistinct possibility of the application of pure prospectivity in an extremely unusual and unforeseeable case. See Jill E. Fisch, Retroactivity and Legal Change: An Equilibrium Approach, 110 HARV.L.REV. 1056, 1059 (1997).
D. Halphen Is Circuit Diversity Precedent
"Ordinarily, a state court's answer to a certified question is final and binding upon the parties between whom the issue arose." Sifers v. General Marine Catering Co.,
In Halphen v. Johns-Manville Sales Corp.,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons assigned, we conclude that the Louisiana Supreme Court will continue to apply its general rule under which a judicial decision must be given retroactive effect unless the rendering court specifies otherwise or such application is barred by prescription or res judicata. Under that rule, which is the generally accepted norm in all common and civil law jurisdictions, the Halphen decision, which was silent as to its temporal application, must be applied retroactively, consistently with prescription and res judicata provisions. Further, because Halphen was applied to the parties in that and subsequent cases, it is circuit precedent and must be applied to the present case.
The judgment and ruling of the district court appealed from by the plaintiffs-appellants are REVERSED and the case is REMANDED to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
Cf. Paul J. Mishkin, Foreword: The High Court, The Great Writ, And The Due Process of Time and Law, 79 HARV.L.REV. 56, 57 (1965) ("Most likely the [United States Supreme Court's] failure to respond in terms, [to pre-Linkletter suggestions that particular new holdings be given only prospective or limited retroactive effect], ... rested on the belief that no answer was really necessary, that is so 'obvious' as to be taken for granted that whatever the Court now holds to be the law of the Constitution becomes 'what has always been the law'--even if the new holding overrules an earlier decision of the Court.")
Subsequent to Halphen, the Louisiana Supreme Court, in Ross v. La Coste de Monterville,
See, e.g., Toups v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
In Young v. Logue,
Clemco correctly points out that in Gilboy v. American Tobacco Co.,
We conclude that this is correct.
Id. at 53. The reasoning in Young is faulty at several points. The Louisiana Supreme Court in Gilboy could not, and, correctly read, did not purport to transform its prior decision in Halphen into substantive law. Gilboy merely held that the LPLA was a substantive law enacted by the legislature that, under Civil Code Article 6, applied prospectively only because it contained no contrary legislative expression. Halphen was a judicial interpretation of the Civil Code, a substantive law enacted by the legislature, and Halphen applies retroactively because the court in Halphen did not say otherwise. Thus, it simply does not follow that, because the LPLA is substantive legislation applying prospectively only, Halphen cannot be a retroactively applicable judicial interpretation of previously enacted substantive legislation. Louisiana law and jurisprudence are to the contrary.
Justice Scalia, concurring in Harper v. Virginia Department of Taxation,
The conception of the judicial role that [Chief Justice John Marshall] possessed, and that was shared by succeeding generations of American judges until very recent times, took it to be "the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is," Marbury v. Madison,
In Teague v. Lane,
Justice Souter explained the methodology of retroactive, selectively prospective, and purely prospective applications of judicial decisions as follows:
As a matter purely of judicial mechanics, there are three ways in which the choice-of-law problem may be resolved. First, a decision may be made fully retroactive, applying both to the parties before the court and to all others by and against whom claims may be pressed, consistent with res judicata and procedural barriers such as statutes of limitations. This practice is overwhelmingly the norm, and is in keeping with the traditional function of the courts to decide cases before them based upon their best current understanding of the law. It also reflects the declaratory theory of law, according to which the courts are understood only to find the law, not to make it. But in some circumstances retroactive application may prompt difficulties of a practical sort. However much it comports with our received notions of the judicial role, the practice has been attacked for its failure to take account of reliance on cases subsequently abandoned, a fact of life if not always one of jurisprudential recognition.
Second, there is the purely prospective method of overruling, under which a new rule is applied neither to the parties in the law-making decision nor to those others against or by whom it might be applied to conduct or events occurring before that decision. The case is decided under the old law but becomes a vehicle for announcing the new, effective with respect to all conduct occurring after the date of that decision. This Court has, albeit infrequently, resorted to pure prospectivity, although in so doing it has never been required to distinguish the remedial from the choice-of-law aspect of its decision. This approach claims justification in its appreciation that "[t]he past cannot always be erased by a new judicial declaration," and that to apply the new rule to parties who relied on the old would offend basic notions of justice and fairness. But this equitable method has its own drawback: it tends to relax the force of precedent, by minimizing the costs of overruling, and thereby allows the courts to act with a freedom comparable to that of legislatures.
Finally, a court may apply a new rule in the case in which it is pronounced, then return to the old one with respect to all others arising on facts predating the pronouncement. This method, which we may call modified, or selective, prospectivity, enjoyed its temporary ascendancy in the criminal law during a period in which the Court formulated new rules, prophylactic or otherwise, to insure protection of the rights of the accused. On the one hand, full retroactive application of holdings such as those announced in Miranda v. Arizona, Escobedo v. Illinois, and Katz v. United States, would have "seriously disrupt[ed] the administration of our criminal laws[,] ... requir[ing] the retrial or release of numerous prisoners found guilty by trustworthy evidence in conformity with previously announced constitutional standards." On the other hand, retroactive application could hardly have been denied the litigant in the law-changing decision itself. A criminal defendant usually seeks one thing only on appeal, the reversal of his conviction; future application would provide little in the way of solace. In this context, without retroactivity at least to the first successful litigant, the incentive to seek review would be diluted if not lost altogether.
But selective prospectivity also breaches the principle that litigants in similar situations should be treated the same, a fundamental component of stare decisis and the rule of law generally. For this reason, we abandoned the possibility of selective prospectivity in the criminal context in Griffith v. Kentucky, even where the new rule constituted a "clear break" with previous law, in favor of completely retroactive application of all decisions to cases pending on direct review. Though Griffith was held not to dispose of the matter of civil retroactivity, selective prospectivity appears never to have been endorsed in the civil context. This case presents the issue.
Id. at 535-38,
See e.g., Robertson v. Superior PMI, Inc.,
