MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff, Dora Tucker, commenced this diversity action against Norfolk and Western Railway for personal injuries allegedly sustained in a grade crossing collision between its train and an automobile driven by her husband, Thomas Tucker. Norfolk and Western impleaded Thomas for contribution or indemnification, alleging primarily negligence, gross negligence, and last clear chance.
Thomas brought this motion for summary judgment, arguing that he is immune from suit under Ohio’s rule of interspousal immunity. He argues that under Michigan conflicts rules, the law of the place of the wrong governs negligence actions; therefore, because the accident was in Ohio, the law of Ohio would govern. He reasons that because Dora would be unable to maintain an action against him under Ohio law, Norfolk and Western likewise should be barred from impleading Thomas as a third party defendant.
This conflicts problem arises because while Ohio continues to adhere to the doctrine of interspousal immunity,
Lyons v. Lyons,
*1373
Michigan’s conflicts of laws rule for tort actions is that the law of the place of the wrong governs.
Abendschein v. Farrell,
This is a case that does involve intrafamily litigation, and
Abendschein
therefore does not govern. Rather, the law which determines the applicability of intra-family immunities is the law of the state of the parties’ domicile.
Haumschild v. Continental Casualty Co.,
In
Kircher v. Kircher,
Since Kircher, Michigan has abolished interspousal immunity. See Hosko, supra; Cooperrider, Torts, 1971 Ann.Survey of Mich.Law, 18 Wayne L.Rev. 503, 529-35 (1972). Thus the question now is whether Michigan’s present policy permitting suits between spouses is the same kind of “public policy” referred to in Kircher and specifically excepted from the rule of lex loci delicti in Abendschien, although it is opposite in result. The court holds that it is, and accordingly rejects the rule of lex loci in favor of the law of Michigan, the domicile of the parties.
The rule, stated in Emery, Haumschild, and the Restatement (Second), is that the domiciliary state’s overwhelming interest in the spousal relationship requires deference to its law in determining the applicability of spousal immunities. Kircher, although not so stating, actually reflects that rule. In Kircher, the Michigan supreme court, by its holding, if not its doctrine, established that the entire subject of spousal immunity is a matter of this state’s public policy. Michigan’s rejection of immunity in Hosko is no less a matter of public policy than its adherence to it in earlier years. The construction placed upon the statute in Hosko reflects a determination that the modern spousal relationship is capable of bearing, and ought to bear, certain legal responsibilities that in an earlier time were foreclosed by the legal unity of husband and wife.
It is fair to say that the decision in Kircher, the holding in Hosko, and the exception in Abendschein indicate that Michigan has taken a small but definite step away from its long expressed view that lex loci should be the conflicts of laws rule in all tort actions.
Thomas’ motion for summary judgment is therefore denied.
So ordered.
