OPINION
¶ 1 We are invited in this case to expand the scope of products liability actions to include successor corporations not involved in placing the product into the stream of commerce. We decline to do so, determining that any such modification of Arizona law is best left to the legislature.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶2 On June 9, 1997, John Scott Winsor (‘Winsor”) was at a job site installing a pane of glass manufactured by Labrador Glass Specialties, d/b/a, LabGlas, Inc. (“LabGlas”). The pane of glass shattered and Winsor was seriously injured. In 1995, approximately two years prior to Winsor’s injury, LabGlas entered into a purchase agreement to the effect that Glasswerks PHX, L.L.C. (“Glasswerks”) became the owner (with limited exceptions) of all LabGlas’ assets, tangible or intangible. 1 The purchase agreement pro *306 vided that Glasswerks “will not assume or be responsible for any liabilities or obligations of [LabGlas]” except those debts expressly stated. The agreement also provided that it was to “be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of California applicable to contracts made.”
¶ 3 After his injury, Winsor filed a products liability action against Glasswerks as LabGlas’ successor. Glasswerks moved for summary judgment relying on the general rules of successor liability recognized in Arizona.
A. R. Teeters & Assocs., Inc. v. Eastman Kodak Co.,
¶ 4 Winsor did not argue to the trial court under
Teeters,,
and does not argue here, thаt Glasswerks is a “mere continuation” or that the purchase agreement was for the “fraudulent purpose of escaping liability” or that some other exception recognized in Arizona applies. Rather, Winsor argued to the trial court that California law applied and that Glasswerks was liable under the product line exception to the general rule as recognized in California.
Ray v. Alad Corp.,
¶ 5 The trial court determined that Arizona law, rather than California law, applied and granted Glasswerks’ motion for summary judgment. Winsor then filed a motion for reconsideration urging the trial court to expand Arizona law to recognize the product line exception first announced in Ray. The trial court denied the motion. Winsor timely appealed. We have jurisdiction pursuant to Arizona Revised Statutes (A.R.S.) sections 12-120.21 (1992) and 12-2101(C)(1994).
DISCUSSION
¶ 6 This court reviews a summary judgment de novo.
Great Am. Mortg., Inc. v. Statewide Ins. Co.,
1. Choice of Law.
¶ 7 The first issue we must decide is whether Arizona or California law applies in this products liability action. Winsor argues that thе choice of law provision in the purchase agreement between Glasswerks and LabGlas requires that California law apply to his claim. We disagree.
¶ 8 The choice of law provision in this matter applies to the contractual relationship between LabGlas and Glasswerks, not the tort claim brought by Winsor against Glasswerks. The contractual provision provides as follows:
Th[e] Agreement is to be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of California applicable to contracts made and to be performed wholly within such State, without regard to the conflicts of laws principles thereof.
(Emphasis added.)
¶ 9 Arizona courts will apply the law of the state chosen by the parties to govern their
contractual
relationship as long as the chosen law has some nexus with the parties or the contract.
Nanini v. Nanini,
¶ 10 The Ninth Circuit has recognized that contractual choice of law provisions may apply to tort claims under certain circumstances: ‘Whether a [choice of law provision] applies to tort claims depends on whether resolution of the claims relates to interpretation of the contract.”
Manetti-Farrow, Inc. v. Gucci Am., Inc.,
¶ 11 Without an applicable choice of law provision, Arizona courts follow the Rеstatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws (1971) (Conflict of Laws Restatement) to determine the controlling law.
Bates v. Superior Court (Nationwide Ins. Co.),
¶ 12 Application of these factors as follows leads us to conclude that Atizona law should apply. Winsor was injured in Arizona. The conduct causing the injury,
ie.,
the production of allegedly defective glass, occurred in Arizona. Winsor lives in Arizona and Glasswerks does business in Arizona. Athough Glasswerks is incorporated in California, the place of business is generally a more important contact than the place of incorporation, and in cases involving personal injury to the plaintiff, the residence of the plaintiff is given greater weight. Conflict of Laws Restatement § 145(2), cmt. e;
Bates,
¶ 13 Accordingly, applying the factors from the Conflict of Laws Restatement and Bates, we conclude that Arizona has the most significant relationship to both the pаrties and the occurrence with respect to this products liability action. Arizona law applies.
2. Successor Liability in Products Liability Actions.
A. Teeters, the Restatement, and the Majority Rule.
¶ 14 The general rule of successor liability in Arizona, as contained in Teeters, is that a sale of the principal assets of a corporation does not result in imposition of successor liability unless (stated generally) there is (1) an agreement, (2) a merger or consolidation, (3) a “mere continuation” or (4) fraud. Teeters described the rule and exceptions as follows:
[W]hen a corporation sells or transfers its principal assets to a successor corporation, the latter will not be liable for the debts and liabilities of the former unless[:]
(1) there is an express or implied agreement of assumption,
(2) the transaction amounts to a consolidation or merger of the two corporations,
(3) the purchasing corporation is a mere continuation [or reincarnation] of the seller, or
(4) the transfer of assets to the purchaser is for the fraudulent purpose of escaping liability for the seller’s debts.
Teeters,
¶ 15 Winsor claims that Teeters is neither persuasive nor binding as it did not involve policy considerations unique to products lia *308 bility. This argument, however, must be tempered with the realization that the rule specifically formulated for successor liability in products liability actions, Restatement (Third) of Torts: Products Liability (1998) (Restatement) § 12, is essentially the same as that announced earlier in Teeters. Restatement § 12 provides:
A successor corporation or other business entity that acquires assets of a predecessor corporation or other business entity is subject to Lability for harm to persons or property caused by a defective product sold or otherwise distributed commercially by the predecessor if the acquisition:
(a) is accompanied by an agreement for the succеssor to assume such liability; or
(b) results from a fraudulent conveyance to escape liability for the debts or liabilities of the predecessor; or
(c) constitutes a consolidation or merger with the predecessor; or
(d) results in the successor becoming a continuation of the predecessor.
Not only does Restatement § 12 parallel the rule announced in Teeters, it represents the position that a majority of jurisdictions have taken on this issue. See Restatement § 12, Reporters’ note cmt. c. (listing jurisdictions rejecting product line and continuity of enterprise exceptions to the general rule). With regard to this issue, as noted, we do not write on a clean slate. At least thirty-one jurisdictions have considered successor liability in some manner in a products Lability setting. Id. While we decline to enter into the debate as to exactly how many jurisdictions have rejected the proposed exceptions, the substantial majority have concluded that an approach similar to Teeters and the Restatement is appropriate. 2
¶ 16 The key principles on which the majority rule and the Restatement are based, and with which Teeters is consistent, are (1) *309 the fundamental principle that those who are responsible for manufacturing and marketing the product — placing the product into the stream of commerce — bear liability for its defects, (2) long established principles of corporate liability, upon which commerce relies, should be given thorough consideration, and (3) a solution to the successor liability issue is best left to the legislature.
B. Product Line and Continuity of Enterprise Exceptions.
¶ 17 Winsor asks us to adopt the product line exception, the continuity of enterprise exception, or both. Both exceptions have similаr underpinnings.
¶ 18 The product line exception was first established in
Ray.
¶ 19 In
Ray,
the court concluded that under the traditional rules of successor liability, the plaintiff in that case would not be able to recover because none of the recognized exceptions applied.
(1) the virtual destruction of the plaintiffs remedies against the original manufacturer caused by the successor’s acquisition of the business,
(2) the successor’s ability to assume the original manufacturer’s risk-spreading rule, and
(3) the fairness of requiring the successor to assume a responsibility for defective products that was a burden necessarily attached to the original manufacturer’s goodwill being enjoyed by the successor in the continued operation of the business.
Id.
at 8-9;
see also Garcia v. Coe Mfg. Co.,
¶20 The focus of the continuity of enterprise exceptiоn is to expand the traditional “mere continuation” exception that is part of the general rule.
3
The traditional “mere continuation” exception applies “only when there is a common identity of officers, directors and stock between the selling and purchasing corporations, and only one corporation after the transfer.”
Dawejko,
(1) There was basic continuity of the enterprise of the seller corporation, including ... a retention of key personnel, assets, general business operations, and even the [product] name.
(2) The seller corporation ceased ordinary business operations, liquidated, and dissolved soon after distribution of a consideration received from the buying corporation.
(3) The purchasing corporation assumed those liabilities and obligations of the seller ordinarily necessary for the con *310 tinuation of the normal business operations in the seller corporation.
(4) The purchasing corporation held itself out to the world as the effective continuation of the seller corporation.
Turner v. Bituminous Cas., Co.,
¶ 21 The underlying policy considerations behind both exceptions are (1) the predecessor is no longer available and the successor is “in a better position than the consumer” to absorb the costs of the injury from the product, (2) the successor has benefitted from the “good will” of the predecessor by cоntinuing to market the same product, and (3) the underlying fairness in requiring a successor corporation to be responsible for the predecessor’s products when it continues to manufacture the same product.
E.g., Cyr v. B. Offen & Co.,
C. Mоdification of Successor Liability Laws is Best Left to the Legislature.
¶22 We find it unnecessary to discuss in detail the competing policy concerns involved in modifying Arizona’s successor liability laws. It is clear to us, regardless of the relative merits of both the present rule and the proposed exceptions, that this issue is best left to the legislature.
¶ 23 We do not suggest that we are without the judicial power to broaden successor liability as requested. Rather, our holding is only that in this particular case we should refrain from exercising that power, and defer to the legislature in its representative capaсity, because (i) the core issue is one of policy for the legislature, (ii) predictability in our commerce should be encouraged, (iii) the proposed exceptions modify or minimize fundamental principles of tort liability, and (iv) our present rule already allows for liability against certain successor corporations. We elaborate below.
(i). The Core Issue is One of Policy for the Legislature.
¶24 The core problem that makes successor liability an issue is that the manufacturer of the product is not financially viable. Thus, the policy issue is whether the costs of injury should be shifted from thе original manufacturer to its successor. As other courts have recognized, this is the type of policy issue “best handled by legislatures with their comprehensive machinery for public input and debate.”
Leannais v. Cincinnati, Inc.,
Whether or not a successor corporation has the ability to gauge the risks of liability, insure against those risks, and spread the costs among the consuming public depends upon a wide variety of factors, such as the potential size and economic strength of successor corporations, the availability of commercial insurance, and the cost of the insurance.
Id. The Illinois Court of Appeals has similarly ruled:
[W]hile the Illinois courts have been struggling with this issue, none have adopted the approach and most have looked to the legislature for direction in this area. The legislature’s role in this situation is especially important in light of the other statu *311 tory prerogatives governing corporations doing business in the state of Illinois.
Myers,
¶ 25 That the issue is one of policy for the legislature is also evidenced by the argument that the best solution to the underlying problem may be one that only the legislature is empowered to implement. For instance, one proposed solution is that “some form of bond or other security [could be] posted by the predecessor manufacturer in an amount not to exceed the net value of the predecessor at time of transfer.” Restatement § 12, Reporters’ Note, cmt. b;
see
Michael D. Green,
Successor Liability: The Superiority of Statutory Reform to Protect Product Liability Claimants,
72 Cornell L.Rev. 17 (1986) (recommending a statutory solution to the problem by requiring dissolving corporations to provide potential produets-liability plaintiffs with adequate protection). Without considering whether such a proposal is or is not appropriate, this proposal addresses the core problem but does not modify fundamental principles of liability. This, however, is an avenue of relief that the court is simply unable to provide; it is one clearly left for legislative сonsideration. More importantly, it is an example of why the policy of successor liability in Arizona should not be determined by an evaluation of one case presented for judicial review, but by a thorough consideration of the broader social policies and costs that is entrusted to the legislature in its representative capacity.
See
Ariz. Const, art. 4, pt. 1, § 1 (“The legislative authority of the State shall be vested in the Legislature ...”);
Adams v. Bolin,
(ii). Predictability in our Commerce.
¶ 26 Another reason that courts have deferred to legislatures is the “drastic departure from traditional corрorate law” that the exceptions represent.
Johnston,
(iii). The Proposed Exceptions Modify or Minimize Fundamental Principles of Tort Liability.
¶ 27 We recognize, of course, that the doctrine of products liability in Arizona had its origin in the courts.
O.S. Stapley Co. v. Miller,
¶28 Since Arizona first recognized products liability actions, the causal connection between the chain of distribution and the responsibility to compensate those injured by a product has been fundamental. Without embarking on a full-scale tour of Arizona’s products liability cases, we note that, historically, the concept of products liability was first adopted in Arizona in
Colvin.
¶ 29 Arizona’s subsequent cases are consistent with this causal link between liability and placing the product into the stream of commerce.
Torres v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.,
¶ 30 Arizona products law, as well as products law generally, has broadly construed the reach of products liability for those “who are involved in the chain of production or distribution of the product.”
Torres,
¶ 31 In short, a fundamental tenet of our prоducts liability law is that compensation for injury is tied to those who have a causal connection to placing the product into the stream of commerce. The product line and continuity of enterprise exceptions at issue overlook or minimize this causal link. As another court stated in analyzing this issue:
[T]he Restatement reaffirms the notion of a causal relationship between the defendant’s acts and the plaintiff’s injury — a concept that is fundamental to tort law. The corporate successor theory as espoused by Michigan [continuity of enterprise] and California [product line exception] brush aside this bedrock requirement and impose liability on entities which in fact had no connection with the acts causing injury.
Polius,
¶ 32 Accordingly, we agree that in considering the two exceptions “[s]ueh a profound change in tort law is appropriately the subject of legislation, not judicial fiat.”
Polius,
(iv.) Our Present Rule Allows for Liability Against Certain Successor Corporations.
¶33 Another factor we consider in deferring to the legislature is that our present rule of liability for successor corporations allows for liability of successors under certain circumstances. In particular, where “the purchasing corporation is a mere continuation [or reincarnation] of the seller,”
Teeters,
¶ 34 Successor liability will also result in circumstances when “the transfer of assets to the purchaser is for the fraudulent purpose of escaping liability for the seller’s debts.”
Teeters,
¶35 Both these considerations — allowing for successor liability where there is a “mere continuation” or a transfer for the fraudulent purpose of avoiding predecessor liability— are consistent with our supreme court’s pronouncement in
Torres v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.
as to corporate form.
¶ 36 We note that in the matter at hand there is no allegation that the transfer of assets was done with the intent of depriving Winsor of his claim. Indeed, Winsor’s claim did not rise until some two years after Glasswerks made the purchase. Thus, by leaving this matter to the legislature we do not impair a party’s ability to seek redress when corporate form is being fraudulently used.
CONCLUSION
¶ 37 We decline the invitation to expand Arizona products liability law to include successor corporations not involved in placing the product into the stream of commerce.. For the reasons set forth above, whether successor corporations should take on the risk-spreading role оf the original manufacturer is a matter best left to the legislature. Accordingly, we affirm.
Notes
. Glasswerks, L.L.C., a California corporation, and LabGlas entered into an asset purchase agreement. Glasswerks, L.L.C. formed LabGlas, L.L.C., a wholly owned subsidiary, to receive the assets of LabGlas. LabGlas, L.L.C. was subsequently dissolved and its assets incorporated into defendant Glasswerks PHX, L.L.C. LabGlas retained its cash on hand, accounts receivable, and
*306
cash deposits. Glasswerks paid $875,000 to LabGlas, which took the form of Glasswerks assuming an $875,000 debt that LabGlas owеd to M & I Thunderbird Bank. To the extent that there are factual discrepancies in the record, we take the facts in the light most favorable to Winsor, the party against whom summary judgment was granted.
Estate of Hernandez v. Flavio,
. We make no attempt to compile an exhaustive, current listing of cases considering the proposed exceptions, as it is not critical to our analysis. The cases collected in this footnote are considered to support the Restatement and
Teeters
rule.
But see
Richard L. Cupp, Jr.,
Redesigning Successor Liability,
1999 U. III. L.Rev. 845 (1999) for a contrary view of certain of the cases. As noted in
Savage Arms Inc. v. Western Auto Supply Co.,
. Glasswerks argues that Winsor has waived this argument by failing to raise it below. Winsor claims he preservеd this issue by presenting evidence that Glasswerks acquired and maintained LabGlas as an on-going business. However, the substance of Winsor’s response below fails to address the continuity of enterprise exception. The absence of this argument below is made clear when contrasted with Winsor’s thorough treatment of this theory in his appellate briefs.
Although we generally do not consider issues raised for the first time on appeal, this rule is not jurisdictional. Jimenez v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,183 Ariz. 399 , 406-07 n. 9,904 P.2d 861 , 868-69 n. 9 (1995). We have discretion to consider new arguments on appeal where the issue is of statewide importance. Id.; Aldrich and Steinberger v. Martin,172 Ariz. 445 , 447,837 P.2d 1180 , 1182 (App.1992). We consider the issue here as the issue has been fully briefed and our analysis is similar to our analysis of the product line exception.
