The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has certified two questions regarding Indiana's choice-of-law rules. We hold that there is a true conflict between the choice of law rules of Indiana and the District of Columbia because Indiana does not engage in dépecage and has not adopted the policy analysis component of the Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws approach. In so saying, we restate the Indiana choice of law analysis outlined in Hubbard Manufacturing Co. v. Greeson,
Statement of Facts
This case involves a wrongful death suit brought against the United States by the estates of individuals killed in the crash of a small private aircraft. The flight began in Pennsylvania, included an overnight stop in Ohio, and ended in Kentucky while attempting to land at the Somerset Airport. The plane never flew through Indiana airspace. Two of the passengers lived in Pennsylvania and one lived in Georgia; the pilot lived in New Jersey but worked in Pennsylvania. The plane was owned by a Delaware-based, wholly-owned subsidiary of a company incorporated in Pennsylvania, where the plane was han-gared.
Relying on a chart published by the Federal Aviation Administration in Washington, D.C., the pilot sought clearance to complete a Simplified Directional Facility (SDF) approach due to the poor weather conditions. FAA air traffic controllers based at Indianapolis cleared the approach
Plaintiffs filed four wrongful death complaints in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania against the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA). They alleged (1) negligence in the publication at Washington of a chart incorrectly showing that a long-inactive instrument landing approach at the airport was active; and (2) the negligence of Indiana-based air traffic controllers in clearing the pilot for an approach that was out of service, neglecting to monitor the radar during the flight's landing approach, failing to alert the pilot that he was in peril of striking an obstacle, and failing to respond to the pilot's last-minute radio communications. (App. at 52-57).
Of these cases, two have settled. The remaining two, which were brought on behalf of the pilot and one of the passengers from Pennsylvania, are the subject of an interlocutory appeal to the Third Circuit. To facilitate its resolution of that appeal, the Third Circuit certified the following questions to us:
1.) Whether a true conflict of law exists between Indiana's and the District of Columbia's choice-of-law rules; and
2.) If a true conflict exists and Indiana's choice-of-law rules therefore control per the "last significant act" test, how should a split among the choice-of-law factors identified in Hubbard Manufacturing Co., Inc. v. Greeson,515 N.E.2d 1071 (Ind.1987), be resolved in choosing a jurisdiction's substantive law when one factor points toward Indiana, another toward Pennsylvania, and the third is indeterminate, and which jurisdiction's substantive law would Indiana apply under the facts of this case?
Simon v. United States,
I. Does a true conflict exist between the choice-of-law rules of Indiana and the District of Columbia?
Under the FTCA, a court should apply the whole law, including choice-oflaw rules, of the place where the acts of negligence occurred. 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2674; Richards v. United States,
A. Dépecage
Dépecage is the process of analyzing different issues within the same case separately under the laws of different states. Although Indiana allows different claims to be analyzed separately, it does not allow issues within those counts to be analyzed separately. For example, an Indiana court might analyze a contract claim and a tort claim independently but would not separately analyze and apply the law of different jurisdictions to issues within each claim. Dépegage has not been part
Under our history as a lex loct delecti state, Indiana courts applied the law of the state in which the tort was committed. Hubbard Manufacturing Co. v. Greeson,
This argument is unpersuasive. First, our opinion in Hubbard made it clear that the Second Restatement factors listed in Hubbard were mere examples of factors that courts might consider. We cited the Restatement as the source of the listed contacts, but the list was not an exclusive one. We did not adopt the Restatement's approach to resolving conflicts. Second, the Hubbard language relied on by plaintiffs, though similar to the language used in the Restatement, does not amount to an adoption of dépecage, a matter not even contemplated in the resolution of that appeal. The language at issue is the Court's instruction that "[these factors should be evaluated according to their relative importance to the particular issues being litigated." Hubbard,
Moreover, because Indiana is still primarily a lex loct state and lex loci analysis does not allow for the application of dépe-gage, most cases necessarily would not deploy dépecage. It would be illogical, therefore, to incorporate it into the second step of the Hubbard analysis.
On the simple merits of dépecage as a judicial technique, we find ourselves unimpressed. By making separate determinations for each issue within a claim, the process amalgamates the laws of different states, producing a hybrid that may not exist in any state. This is a problem for several reasons. First, legislatures "may enact a given law only because of its expected interaction with a complementary law." Erin A. O'Hara & Larry E. Rib-stein, From Politics To Efficiency In Choice-Of-Law, 67 U. Chi. L.Rev. 1151,
Dépecage may also produce unfair results because the hybrid law may be more favorable to one party than another, allowing a result that could not be reached if the laws of any one state were applied. As Brainerd Currie said, a party "should not be allowed to put 'together half a donkey and half a camel, and then ride to victory on the synthetic hybrid.'" Christopher G. Stevenson, Depecage: Embracing Complexity to Solve Choice-of-Law Issues, Note, 37 Ind. L.Rev. 303, 320 (2008) (quoting Frederick K. Juenger, How Do You Rate a Century?. 37 Williamette L.Rev. 89, 106 (2001) (quoting Brainerd Currie)). Moreover, dépecage compounds the advantage of parties with greater access to legal resources because it requires a separate analysis of each issue for each state involved.
Because D.C.'s choice-of-law rules permit dépecage 3 and Indiana's do not, there is a true conflict between the choice-oflaw rules used by D.C. and Indiana.
B. Role of Policy
Although Indiana and the District of Colombia consider the same basic contacts when analyzing a conflict-of-law problem, we approach the problem from different perspectives. "D.C. implements a hybrid of the governmental interest' and Restatement (Second) methodologies that identifies the governmental policies underlying the applicable laws and determines which state's policy would be most advanced by having its laws applied to the facts of the case." Simon,
This difference in approach may or may not lead to the selection of different states in a given case. We need not determine whether the difference is a false conflict in this case, however, because the difference
II. Indiana's Choice-of-law Rules
The second certified question asks us to determine whether the substantive law of Indiana or Pennsylvania would apply under Indiana conflicts law. Assuming that Indiana's choice-of-law rules apply, the court should apply Indiana substantive law.
As Judge Calabresi said so famously, we live in an age that is "choking on statutes." Guido Calabresi, A Common Law for the Age of Statutes 1 (1982). Rules about choice of law are among the few fields still dominated by judge-made doctrine. Some seventeen years ago, this Court concluded that Indiana's tradition of adherence to lex loci served well in many cases, but not in. all. Saying that rigid application of lex loci could lead to absurd results, we set out to liberalize our approach. Hubbard,
The second Restatement thus was a hodgepodge of all theories. A court was to compare apples, oranges, umbrellas, and pandas, and determine which state's law to apply by the relative importance assigned to these factors. The supposed virtue of the second Restatement was the freedom it provided courts to weigh all conceivably relevant factors and then tailor the choice of law to the cireum-stances of the case. That very flexibility was, however, equally its vice: courts could arrive at any outcome applying its factors, and no one could predict in advance what state's law governed their actions. The problem was not merely that courts were afforded the opportunity to be manipulative; the problem was that even a court without such desire could find in the second Restatement no guidance as to how it was to decide a case after identifying the factors in play.
Michael H. Gottesman, Draining the Dismal Swamp: The Case for Federal Choice of Law Statutes, 80 Geo. LJ. 1, 8 (1991) (footnote omitted).
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Accordingly, we saw some value in using lex loct as a starting point and said that it would govern unless the state where the tort occurred "is an insignificant contact." Hubbard,
Thus, in tort cases Indiana choice-of-law analysis now involves multiple inqui
This presumption is not conclusive, however. It may be overcome if the court is persuaded that "the place of the tort 'bears little connection' to this legal action." Id. at 1074.
-If the location of the tort is insignificant to the action, the court should consider other contacts that may be more relevant, "such as: 1) the place where the conduct causing the injury occurred; 2) the residence or place of business of the parties; and 3) the place where the relationship is centered." Id. at 1073-74 (citing Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 145(2) (1971)). These factors are not an exclusive list nor are they necessarily relevant in every case. All contacts "should be evaluated according to their relative importance to the particular issues being litigated." Id. at 1074. This evaluation ought to focus on the essential elements of the whole cause of action, rather than on the issues one party or the other forecasts will be the most hotly contested given the anticipated proofs.
The parties argue that either Indiana or Pennsylvania substantive law should be applied in this case. First, we must determine whether there is a true conflict between the laws of the two states. Because Indiana does not employ dépe-gage, we consider the wrongful death cause of action as a whole. The Third Cireuit determined that this case is essentially about damages and identified three areas where the applicable Indiana law differed from Pennsylvania law: (1) "Pennsylvania allows joint-and-several liability and right of contribution, while Indiana does not;"
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(2) unlike Pennsylvania, "Indiana does not permit recovery for both wrongful death and survival damages;
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and (3) "unlike Indiana, Pennsylvania damages include the decedent's conscious pain and suffering from the moment of injury to the time of death." Simon,
Because there is a conflict between the laws of Indiana and Pennsylvania that is important enough to affect the outcome of the litigation, we must determine which law to apply. The presumption is that the law of the place of the tort applies because in a "large number of cases, the place of the tort will be significant and the place with the most contacts." Hubbard,
Next, we must examine whether the place of the tort "bears little connection" to the legal action. Hubbard,
Because we hold that the place of the tort is insignificant to this action, we reach the second step from Hubbard and must consider what other contacts exist and evaluate them according to their relative importance to the litigation at hand. Id. We apply the law of the state with the most significant relationship to the case. Hubbard suggests three factors that might be relevant: "1) the place [or places] where the conduct causing the injury occurred; 2) the residence or place of business of the parties; and 3) the place where the relationship is centered." Id. This is not a comprehensive list, of course, and other relevant factors may be considered, though we see no others that are particularly pertinent in this case. "These factors should not be applied mechanically; rather, they are to be 'evaluated according to their relative importance to the particular issues before the court."" Jean v. Dugan,
As with many difficult choice-of-law cases, in this instance the contacts are splintered: the injury occurred in a different state than the allegedly negligent conduct, which occurred in a different state than where the plaintiffs reside. The gravamen of this case is the allegedly negligent conduct.
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Consequently, the most
Here, the negligent conduct occurred in both Indiana and D.C. The conduct in Indiana was more proximate to the harm, and none of the parties are arguing that D.C. law should apply. The residence or place of business of a party, while important in cases involving family law or asset distribution, is not a particularly relevant contact in this case. People do not take the laws of their home state with them when they travel but are subject to the laws of the state in which they act. Moreover, it is the conduct of the FAA and the air traffic controllers that is at issue, not the conduct of the plaintiffs. Finally, in a case such as this where the contact between the allegedly negligent party and the injured party is fleeting, there is no real relationship and therefore no place where that relationship could be centered.
Consequently, we hold that Indiana has a more significant relationship with the case and, therefore, under Indiana choice-of-law rules, Indiana law would apply.
Conclusion
In conclusion, a true conflict exists between the choice-oflaw rules of Indiana and the District of Columbia, and assuming that Indiana choice-of-law rules apply, Indiana would apply Indiana substantive law.
Notes
. In fact, we could find only one case decided in Indiana that even mentions the word, and it was decided by a federal district court applying Arizona conflict of law rules under the Federal Tort Claims Act. See Estate of Sullivan v. United States,
. Cases decided since Hubbard have also followed this approach. See Allen v. Great American Reserve Ins. Co.,
. "It is clear that D.C.'s choice-oflaw rules permit depegage." Simon,
. The Seventh Circuit calls this approach the "maddeningly indefinite 'interest-balancing' approach to conflicts issues." Carter v. United States,
. See, e.g., Jean v. Dugan,
. See also, Douglas Laycock, Equal Citizens of Equal and Territorial States: The Constitutional Foundations of Choice-of-Law, 92 Colum. L.Rev. 249, 253 (1992) ('Trying to be all things to all people, it produced mush."); Friedrich K. Juenger, A Third Conflicts Restatement?, 75 Ind. LJ. 403, 405 (2000) ("Many courts seem to like the 'mishmash,' or 'kitchen-sink,' concoction the restaters produced; after all, it enables judges to decide conflicts cases any which way they wish. To be sure, the Second Restatement's unprincipled eclecticism has done little to strengthen the intellectual underpinnings of our discipline."); Symeon C. Symeonides, The Judicial Acceptance of the Second Conflicts Restate ment: A Mixed Blessing, 56 Md. L.Rev. 1248, 1281 (1997) (''The Restatement (Second) was intended to be and was 'a transitional work.'").
. Ind.Code Ann. § 34-51-2-12 (West 1999). To the extent that the long-standing principle of joint and several liability may have been rejected in Indiana, this is so only for claims governed by the Indiana Comparative Fault Act. See Control Tech., Inc. v. Johnson,
. Cahoon v. Cummings,
. See, e.g., Allen v. Great American Reserve Ins. Co.,
. See Consolidated Rail Corp. v. Allied Corp.,
. Cf. Jean,
. This principle is nearly universal.
Even under the modern methods there are certain issues for which courts continue to apply the law of the place where the tort occurred. The most notable of these issues are those concerning a party's conduct. If the state of conduct has a law regulating how the tortfeasor or victim is supposed to act in the particular situation, courts will apply that standard rather than the law of the parties' residence. In fact, this preference for the conduct-regulating law of the conduct state is virtually absolute, winning out even over the law of other interested states. Courts as a practical matter recognize a conduct-regulating exception' to the normal interest-based choice-oflaw methods.
John T. Cross, The Conduct-Regulating Exception In Modern United States Choice-Of-Law, 36 Creighton L.Rev. 425, 425 (2003) (footnote omitted). This is also true in Indiana. As the Seventh Circuit said when applying Indiana law in Judge v. Pilot Oil Corporation:
The facts of this wrongful death case demonstrate that the last act necessary to make the defendant liable, the shooting of David, took place in Indiana. Furthermore, the parties' conduct in Indiana that resulted in David's death will be the key element to determine if the defendants should be held accountable for David's death. The conduct of Pops and David will be governed by Indiana law; if there is any justification for Pops shooting David, it will be determined under Indiana law. With all this, Indiana, the place of injury, cannot be said to be insignificant.205 F.3d 335 , 337 (7th Cir. 2000) (emphasis added).
