This is an action to recover for the wrongful death of William Maguire, late of Kittery, Maine, who died as a result of an accident at Seabrook, New Hampshire, while in the employ of McKenna Associates, a Portsmouth, New Hampshire firm, engaged in a survey to dеtermine the height of electricity lines owned by the defendant. Plaintiff’s decedent was killed on June 26, 1969, when a metal rod he was holding came in contact with a power line owned by the defendant. William Maguire was twenty-four years old on the date of his death and was not survived by a widow, minor children, or dependent father and mother.
The Trial Court (.Mullavey, J.) transferred in advance of trial the question whether the issue of damаges was controlled by the law of New Hampshire or the law of Maine. On the date of the accident, Laws 1967, ch. 344 amending RSA 556:13 was in effеct in New Hampshire and limited damages in a death action when there are no dependents to twenty thousand dollars. The Mainе death statute contained no limitation on recovery. We hold that the law of New Hampshire governs the issue of damages in this case.
Since this court abandoned the place of accident rule as the sole determinative factor for choice of law in tort actions in
Clark v. Clark,
Clark v. Clark
determined that choice of law decisions should be based on relevant choice-influencing considerations. These factors were discussed at some length in the
Clark
case and summarized in
Doiron v. Doiron,
In the present case the accident hapрened in New Hampshire and involved a New Hampshire defendant. The decedent was a Maine resident employed by a New Hampshire employer. Unlike automobile accidents and airplane accidents where the place of accident has been characterized as “fortuitous”
(Tiernan v. Westext Trans., Inc.,
In the choice of law factors, only the concern of Maine that the heirs of the decedent receive fаir and adequate consideration is a factor. While this may well be a major factor
*592
in an automobile accident in a Stаte with limitation of recovery involving residents of another State having no limitation of recovery
(Fox v. Morrison Motor Freight, Inc.,
A consideration listed in the relevant choice-influencing considerations in
Clark v. Clark,
While the choice of the better law is an important consideration when the choice is open to us, we have not applied our law even where we thought it to be the “better law”, when other factors outweighed its applicаtion.
Johnson v. Johnson,
The recent case of
Rosenthal v. Warren,
Remanded.
