Cover of: The Torts Chapter of the Third Conflicts Restatement: An Introduction
Symeon C. Symeonides

The Torts Chapter of the Third Conflicts Restatement: An Introduction

Section: Aufsätze
Volume 88 (2024) / Issue 1, pp. 7-59 (54)
Published 30.01.2024
DOI 10.1628/rabelsz-2024-0001
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    CC BY 4.0
  • 10.1628/rabelsz-2024-0001
Summary
This article presents the torts chapter of the Restatement (Third) of Conflict of Laws, as approved by the American Law Institute in May 2023. That chapter steers a middle ground between the broad, inflexible rules of the First Restatement of 1934 and the exceedingly equivocal directives of the Second Restatement of 1971. It accurately captures the judicial decisional patterns emerging in the more than forty US jurisdictions that have abandoned the old lex loci delicti rule and joined the choice-of-law revolution of the 1960s. It recasts them into new, narrow, and »smart« rules that incorporate the revolution's methodological advances but without reproducing its excesses. The most noteworthy features of these rules are: (1) the distinction between conduct-regulating and loss-allocating tort rules; (2) the application of the law of the parties' common domicile in loss-allocation conflicts; (3) a rule giving victims of cross-border torts the option of requesting the application of the law of the state of injury, if the occurrence of the injury there was objectively foreseeable; and (4) the general notion that the choice of the applicable law should depend not only on a state's territorial contacts, but also on the content of its law.