MEMORANDUM OPINION
I.
The motion at bar presents the question of what state law to apply in Federal Tort Claims Act (“FTCA”), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2671-2680, cases, when the act of negligence and the accident resulting from the negligence occur in two different states. Aso presented is whether the choice of law rule for the substantive issues operates also to determine the appropriate remedies or measure of damages. For the reasons set forth here, the doctrine of lex loci delicti controls substantive issues, while the doctrine of lex fori controls matters relating to remedies. And more specifically, the nature of damages available under wrongful death statutes, including parents’ inability to recover nonpeeu-niary losses for the death of adult children, are substantive issues analyzed under lex loci delicti.
II.
On October 21, 1988, a single-engine Piper PA-28 aircraft flown by plaintiffs’ decedent, Ronald L. Spring, crashed into the Blue Ridge Mountains at Gambrill State Park, Maryland. 1 Decedent, a licensed pilot, was returning to Frederick, Maryland from a flight to Louisville, Kentucky. After being cleared for his final approach into Frederick, decedent wandered off the published approach procedure and crashed.
Plaintiffs claim that negligence of the air traffic controllers at Dulles International Airport (“Dulles Approach”) and at Baltimore-Washington International Airport (“Balti
In the motion at bar, the government asks that Maryland’s state law be designated as controlling in this matter. Plaintiffs oppose this motion, arguing that Virginia law applies. This choice of law dispute matters because Maryland’s wrongful death statute limits the recovery of parents for the death of an adult child to pecuniary loss, 3 while Virginia’s wrongful death statute contains no such limitation. 4
III.
In allowing certain claims to be asserted against the United States, the FTCA specifies that these claims be determined “in accordance with the law of the place where the act or omission occurred.” 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). The Supreme Court has interpreted this language to mean that in multi-state FTCA actions, courts must apply the whole law of the state where the negligent or wrongful acts occurred.
Richards v. United States,
The second solution to this FTCA multi-state choice of law problem is, as the Seventh Circuit put it, to choose the whole law of “the place of the last act or omission having a causal effect, or the place of the act or omission having the most significant causal effect.”
Bowen v. United States,
As it happens, the same is true here. Virginia and Maryland follow the rule of lex loci deliciti, 6 which means that both states, in this instance, would apply the law of the state where the wrong occurred. Thus, it matters not here whether this Court follows the first solution and applies the law of both Virginia and Maryland or follows the second solution and applies the law of the state where the last or most significant omission occurred. 7 In both instances, lex loci delicti would govern the choice of law, leading, as we shall see, to the conclusion that this dispute is governed by Maryland substantive law, no matter which state’s whole law is initially consulted. Similarly, because both Maryland’s and Virginia’s choice of law rules include lex foii, 8 Virginia procedural law, as the law of the forum state, will apply regardless of which state’s whole law is initially chosen.
Under
lex loci delicti
the applicable state substantive law is the law of the “place of the wrong.” Courts have interpreted “the place of the wrong,” for purposes of
lex loci delicti
as the place where “the last event necessary to make an [actor] liable for an alleged tort takes place.”
Quillen v. Int’l Playtex, Inc.,
IV.
Yet, the inquiry does not end here. Still to be resolved is the question whether the doc
Under Virginia law, “questions of substantive law are governed by the law of the place of the transaction or the place where the right is acquired
(lex
loci), while questions of procedure and remedy are governed by the law of the place where the action is brought
(lex
fon).”
Frye v. Commonwealth,
The answer to this question is not immediately apparent.
10
On reflection, the answer is found in an understanding of the right to recover for wrongful death. No such right or cause of action existed in common law.
See, e.g., Overstreet v. Kentucky Cent. Life Insur. Co.,
Under Maryland law, statutory definitions of the damages recoverable are clearly recognized as substantive.
See Black v. Leatherwood Motor Coach Corp.,
While there is no dispositive, controlling Virginia authority,
11
analogous authority points convincingly to the same conclusion. For example, Virginia courts have held that statutes of limitations contained in wrongful death statutes are substantive, as opposed to remedial in nature. In recognizing the statute of limitations contained in the Virginia wrongful death act as substantive, the Fourth Circuit stated that “[wjhen the legislature creates a right of action that did not exist at common law, the limitations specified in the statute operate as a substantive limit on the right to recover.”
Overstreet v. Kentucky Cent. Life Ins. Co.,
Also analogously supportive is
Walters v. Rockwell Int’l Corp.,
Accordingly, the definitions of, and limitations on, wrongful death damages are substantive in nature and are therefore controlled by the law of Maryland, the place of the wrong.
An appropriate order will issue.
Notes
. Decedent, a resident of Pennsylvania, was the plaintiffs' adult child.
.An initial element of Spring's complaint alleged that the FAA negligently allocated responsibility for the Frederick airspace to Baltimore Approach, rather than to Dulles Approach. Because this allocation decision appears to have fallen within the FAA's discretionary functions, this allegation was dismissed with prejudice pursuant to the stipulation and order of partial dismissal executed by the parties on September 21, 1993.
See United States v. Varig Airlines, 467
U.S. 797,
. Md.Cts. & Jud.Proc.Code § 3-904(e) (1992). This limitation applies if the child is over 21 years of age or if the child did not receive at least fifty percent of her support from her parents.
. See Va.Code § 8.01-50 to -56 (1992).
. At least one case following
Bowen
has focused on the "most significant causal effect” in determining the applicable state law.
See Andrulonis v. United States,
.
See McMillan v. McMillan,
. Even so, it is worth noting that were an election necessary, the second solution, embodied in Bowen, is the more appealing. This solution prudently recognizes the potential for conflict when more than one state’s law is applied and sensibly opts for the whole law of the state most closely tied or related to the wrong.
.
See Frye v. Commonwealth,
. In Quillen, the Fourth Circuit’s panel decision misquotes Miller, substituting "act” for "actor.”
. As any first year law student knows from wrestling with the murky substantive/procedure dichotomy, framing a legal test in terms of this dichotomy often begs the question.
See Sibbach v. Wilson & Co.,
.
In
Virginia, "[t]he court of the
Forum state
determines according to its own conflict of laws rules whether a question of law is substantive or procedural.”
Willard,
