Edwards v. Erie Coach Lines Co.

OPINION OF THE COURT

Read, J.

Near Geneseo, New York on January 19, 2005 a charter bus carrying members of an Ontario women’s hockey team plowed into the rear end of a tractor-trailer parked on the shoulder of the highway. Three bus passengers and the tractor-trailer’s driver died; several bus passengers were seriously hurt. We are called upon to decide the choice-of-law issue presented by these six lawsuits, which were brought to recover damages for wrongful death and/or personal injuries.

I.

Nearly a half-century ago, in Babcock v Jackson (12 NY2d 473 [1963]), we abandoned what had long been our choice-of-law rule whereby the law of the place of the tort invariably governed. Because “in nearly all such cases, the conduct causing injury and the injury itself occurred in the same jurisdiction” (id. at 477 n 2), this rule offered “the advantages of certainty, ease of application and predictability,” but at the expense of “the interest which [other] jurisdictions . . . [might] have in the resolution of particular issues” (id. at 478; see also Cooney v Osgood Mach., 81 NY2d 66, 72 [1993] [place-of-the-tort theory “failed to accord any significance to the policies underlying the conflicting laws of other jurisdictions”]).

To “accomodat[e] the competing interests in tort cases with multi-State contacts,” we adopted the “center of gravity” or “grouping of contacts” approach, which gave the “controlling effect to the law of the jurisdiction which, because of its relationship or contact with the occurrence or the parties, ha[d] the greatest concern with the specific issue raised in the litigation” (12 NY2d at 481). This new method of analysis, however, was *319limited to competing loss-allocation — not conduct-regulating— rules.1 As we explained in Babcock,

“[w]here the defendant’s exercise of due care in the operation of his automobile is in issue, the jurisdiction in which the allegedly wrongful conduct occurred will usually have a predominant, if not exclusive, concern. In such a case, it is appropriate to look to the law of the place of the tort so as to give effect to that jurisdiction’s interest in regulating conduct within its borders, and it would be almost unthinkable to seek the applicable rule in the law of some other place” (12 NY2d at 483).

The facts of Babcock illustrate how “grouping of contacts” worked. In that case, a New York passenger in a car operated by a New York driver was injured in an automobile accident that occurred in Ontario during a weekend trip to Canada. We noted that the trip began and was to end in New York, where the car was garaged, licensed and insured, and where the driver-passenger relationship arose (id. at 482-483). The “guest” passenger sued the “host” driver in New York for negligence. At the time, the Ontario guest statute barred the passenger from recovering damages from the driver,2 while New York law did not.

Looking to the “grouping of contacts,” we decided that New York — not Ontario, the place of the tort — possessed “the dominant contacts and the superior claim for application of its law” as to whether the passenger should “recover[ ] for damages for a wrong concededly committed” (id. at 483). We commented that, in this context,

“[although the rightness or wrongness of [the driver’s] conduct may depend upon the law of the particular jurisdiction through which the automobile passes, the rights and liabilities of the parties which *320stem from their guest-host relationship should remain constant and not vary and shift as the automobile proceeds from place to place. Indeed, such a result . . . accords with the interests of the host in procuring liability insurance adequate under the applicable law, and the interests of his insurer in reasonable calculability of the premium” (id. at 483-484 [internal quotation marks omitted]).

Over time, the “grouping of contacts” approach put into place by Babcock evolved into a more explicit “interest analysis.” This method of deciding choice-of-law issues “reject[ed] a quantitative grouping of contacts” because “[c]ontacts obtain significance only to the extent that they relate to the policies and purposes sought to be vindicated by the conflicting laws” (Miller v Miller, 22 NY2d 12, 17 [1968]; see also Cooney, 81 NY2d at 72 [“Of the various, sometimes competing, schools of thought on choice of law, the one that emerged as most satisfactory was ‘interest analysis,’ which sought to effect the law of the jurisdiction having the greatest interest in resolving the particular issue”]).

We refined our “interest analysis” so as “to assure a greater degree of predictability and uniformity” in Neumeier v Kuehner (31 NY2d 121, 127 [1972]), a case where a domiciliary of Ontario was killed when the automobile in which he was a passenger collided with a train in Ontario. The vehicle was owned and driven by a resident of New York, who was also killed in the accident. The passenger’s wife and administratrix, a citizen of Canada and a domiciliary of Ontario, brought an action for wrongful death in New York against the driver’s estate and the railway company, both of which interposed affirmative defenses involving the Ontario guest statute.3 The wife, asserting that the Ontario statute was unavailable, moved to dismiss the affirmative defenses, and Supreme Court denied the motion (63 *321Misc 2d 766 [1970]). The Appellate Division reversed (37 AD2d 70 [1971]), and asked us if its order was properly made. We answered, “No.”

Neumeier set up a three-rule framework for resolving choice of law in conflicts settings involving guest statutes, which by definition allocate losses after the tort occurs rather than regulate primary conduct. Under the first Neumeier rule, when the driver and passenger are domiciled in the same state, and the vehicle is registered there, the law of their shared jurisdiction controls (31 NY2d at 128). The second rule addresses the situation where the driver and the passenger are domiciled in different states, and the law of the place where the accident occurred favors its domiciliary. When the driver’s conduct occurs in the state where he is domiciled, which would not impose liability, that state’s law applies. Conversely, if the law of the place where the accident occurred permits the injured passenger to recover, then the driver, “in the absence of special circumstances,” may not interpose a conflicting law of his state as a defense (id.; see also Cooney, 81 NY2d at 73 [“In essence, . . . the second Neumeier rule adopts a ‘place of injury’ test for true conflict guest statute cases”]).

“In other situations, when the passenger and the driver are domiciled in different states, the rule is necessarily less categorical” (31 NY2d at 128). Thus, under the third Neumeier rule, the law of the state where the accident occurred governs unless “it can be shown that displacing that normally applicable rule will advance the relevant substantive law purposes without impairing the smooth working of the multi-state system or producing great uncertainty for litigants” (id.).

Since the passenger in Neumeier was domiciled in Ontario, where the guest statute did not allow recovery, and the driver in New York, the third rule — the law of the place of the tort (i.e., Ontario) — would normally control. We saw no reason to apply the third rule’s proviso since the wife “failed to show that [New York’s] connection with the controversy was sufficient to justify displacing” lex loci delicti, the law of the place of the wrong (id. at 129). The wife did not show that ignoring Ontario’s guest statute in a case “involv[ing] an Ontario-domiciled guest at the expense of a New Yorker . . . further [ed] the substantive law purposes of New York”; and “failure to apply Ontario’s law would impair . . . the smooth working of the multi-state system [and] produce great uncertainty for litigants by sanctioning forum shopping and thereby allowing a party to select a forum *322[countenancing] a larger recovery than [that party’s] own domicile” (id. [internal quotation marks omitted]).

We have routinely applied the Neumeier framework to conflicts in loss-allocation situations not involving guest statutes. For example, the issue in Schultz v Boy Scouts of Am. (65 NY2d 189 [1985]) was whether the doctrine of charitable immunity would apply in a lawsuit brought by plaintiffs domiciled in New Jersey. The plaintiffs were the parents of two boys, one of whom committed suicide. They sued the Boy Scouts of America and the Brothers of the Poor of St. Francis, Inc. for negligent hiring and supervision of a sexually abusive brother (also a defendant), who was supplied by the Franciscan Brothers, pursuant to an agreement with the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark, as a teacher at a school owned and operated by the Archdiocese, and who was a scoutmaster of a Boy Scout troop sponsored by the school and chartered by the Boy Scouts. The plaintiffs’ sons attended the class taught by the brother at the school, and were members of his scout troop.

Acts of sexual abuse were alleged to have taken place mostly during Boy Scout camping outings in New York, but also at the school in New Jersey.4 The Boy Scouts were domiciled in New Jersey; the Franciscan Brothers in Ohio. At the time the plaintiffs’ causes of action arose, New Jersey and Ohio both recognized charitable immunity while New York did not. The Ohio rule, however, denied immunity in actions based on negligent hiring and supervision.5 And the plaintiffs’ claims had already been determined to have been barred by the New Jersey doctrine of charitable immunity in an earlier action brought by the plaintiffs in New Jersey against the Archdiocese. We held that New Jersey law governed, and that the plaintiffs were precluded from relitigating its effect in light of the final determination in their action against the Archdiocese.

Under the first Neumeier rule, New Jersey law clearly controlled the plaintiffs’ claim against the Boy Scouts because the plaintiffs and this defendant had “chosen to identify themselves in the most concrete form possible, domicile, with a jurisdiction that [had] weighed the interests of charitable tort-feasors and their victims and decided to retain the defense of charitable *323immunity” (id. at 199-200). But because this was “the first case for our review [where] New York [was] the forum-locus rather than the parties’ common domicile,” we examined “the reasons most often advanced for applying the law of the forum-locus and those supporting application of the law of the common domicile” (id. at 200).

We identified those reasons “most often urged” to favor the forum-locus as “(1) to protect medical creditors who provided services to injured parties in the locus State, (2) to prevent injured tort victims from becoming public wards in the locus State and (3) the deterrent effect application of locus law [would have] on future tort-feasors in the locus State” (id. at 200). We opined that the first two reasons shared “common weaknesses,” since neither “necessarily require[d] application of the locus jurisdiction’s law, but rather invariably mandate[d] application of the law of the jurisdiction that would either allow recovery or allow . . . greater recovery” (id.). As a result, they were “subject to criticism ... as being biased in favor of recovery” (id.). Further, we observed, neither consideration was relevant in Schultz since there was no evidence of unpaid medical creditors or that the plaintiffs were about to become wards of the state. As for the third reason, we acknowledged that although it was “conceivable that application of New York’s law in this case would have some deterrent effect on future tortious conduct” in New York, our “deterrent interest [was] considerably less because none of the parties [was] a resident and the rule in conflict [was] loss-allocating rather than conduct-regulating” (id.).

On the other side of the ledger, we toted up “persuasive reasons for consistently applying the law of the parties’ common domicile.” These included (1) reduced opportunities for forum shopping; (2) rebuttal of “charges that the forum-locus is biased in favor of its own laws and in favor of rules permitting recovery”; (3) “the concepts of mutuality and reciprocity support consistent application of the common-domicile rule” since “[i]n any given case, one person could be either plaintiff or defendant and one State could be either the parties’ common domicile or the locus, and yet the applicable law would not change depending on their status”; and (4) such a rule was “easy to apply and [brought] a modicum of predictability and certainty to an area of the law needing both” (id. at 201).

We then turned our attention to the plaintiffs’ claim against the Franciscan Brothers. We evaluated choice of law with *324respect to this defendant under the third Neumeier rule “because the parties [were] domiciled in different jurisdictions with conflicting loss-distribution rules and the locus of the tort [was] New York, a separate jurisdiction”; and the law of the place of the tort would “normally apply” (id.). We decided, however, that this situation fit the proviso to the third rule “[f]or the same reasons stated in our analysis of the action against” the Boy Scouts; namely, this result “would further [New Jersey’s] interest in enforcing the decision of its domiciliaries to accept the burdens as well as the benefits of that State’s loss-distribution tort rules and its interest in promoting the continuation and expansion of [the Franciscan Brothers’] charitable activities in that State” (id.). In addition,

“although application of New Jersey’s law may not affirmatively advance the substantive law purposes of New York, it will not frustrate those interests because New York has no significant interest in applying its own law to this dispute. Finally, application of New Jersey law will enhance the smooth working of the multi-state system by actually reducing the incentive for forum shopping and it will provide certainty for the litigants whose only reasonable expectation surely would have been that the law of the jurisdiction where plaintiffs are domiciled and defendant sends its teachers would apply, not the law of New York where the parties had only isolated and infrequent contacts as a result of [the brother’s] position as Boy Scout leader” (id. at 201-202).

Finally, we rejected the plaintiffs’ argument that New York public policy foreclosed application of the New Jersey charitable immunity statute. We emphasized the difficulty of upsetting the choice of law in a conflicts situation on this basis; specifically, the proponent of a public policy bar would have to “establish that to enforce the foreign law ‘would violate some fundamental principle of justice, some prevalent conception of good morals, some deep-rooted tradition of the common weal’ expressed in them” (id. at 202). Further, “the proponent must establish that there [were] enough important contacts between the parties, the occurrence and the New York forum to implicate our public policy and thus preclude enforcement of the foreign law” (id.). We concluded that we did not need to decide whether enforcement of New Jersey’s charitable immunity statute offended *325New York public policy “because there [were] not sufficient contacts between New York, the parties and the transactions involved to implicate our public policy and call for its enforcement” (id. at 203).

II.

The charter bus’s driver (Ryan A. Comfort), his employer (Erie Coach Lines Company), and the company that leased the bus (Trentway-Wagar, Inc.) are Ontario domiciliaries, as are (or were) all the injured and deceased passengers. The tractor-trailer driver (Ernest Zeiset) was a Pennsylvania domiciliary, as are his employer (Joseph French, doing business as J&J Trucking) and the companies that hired the trailer (Verdelli Farms, Inc. and VF. Transportation, Inc.). The injured passengers and the representatives of those who died (collectively, plaintiffs) filed multiple wrongful death and personal injury lawsuits in Supreme Court.

These split-domicile lawsuits presented an obvious choice-of-law issue because Ontario caps noneconomic damages where negligence causes catastrophic personal injury,6 while New York does not cap such damages in a no-fault case involving serious injury. Following extensive discovery, Erie Coach, Trentway7 and Comfort (collectively, the bus defendants) and J&J Trucking, the administratrix of Zeiset’s estate, Verdelli Farms and VF. Transportation (collectively, the trailer defendants) moved for orders from Supreme Court determining that, under New York’s choice-of-law principles, Ontario law applied to “all loss allocation issues” in these cases.

On March 23, 2009, Supreme Court granted both motions, noting that the Supreme Court of Canada had capped noneconomic damages at CDN $100,000 in 1978 dollars, which was *326then equivalent to US $310,000. In reaching its decisions, the court concluded that “[p]roper analysis” began with Neumeier. Citing the third Neumeier rule, the judge stated, without elaboration, that “[a]pplying Ontario loss allocation laws [would] not impair the smooth working of the multi-state system, and [would] advance the relevant substantive law purposes of the jurisdiction having the most significant connections to the allocation of loss”; and that Ontario “clearly [had] the predominant interest[ ] in applying its loss allocation laws to its citizens, whereas New York [had] no such interest.” Further, Supreme Court discussed Schultz, which it regarded as analogous; it saw no reason to consider Pennsylvania law since none of the parties requested this.

The trial of these cases was bifurcated, and, during the course of the jury trial on liability, the parties reached a settlement of that issue. In the stipulation of settlement, placed on the record on June 17, 2009, the bus defendants agreed to 90% and the trailer defendants to 10% liability. Meanwhile, plaintiffs had appealed Supreme Court’s orders determining that Ontario law would govern any award of noneconomic damages to be made at a damages trial. The Appellate Division affirmed (72 AD3d 1581, 1586, 1587, 1588, 1589 [4th Dept 2010]; 74 AD3d 1813, 1814 [4th Dept 2010]).

“As a preliminary matter,” the Appellate Division decided that Supreme Court “did not abuse its discretion by taking judicial notice of Ontario law . . . despite the failure of defendants to raise [its] applicability ... as an affirmative defense and to provide the substance of the law in their pleadings in accordance with CPLR 3016 (e)” (72 AD3d at 1583). The court subscribed to the Third Department’s view, expressed in Burns v Young (239 AD2d 727, 728 [3d Dept 1997]), that “because CPLR 4511 (b) permits . . . judicial notice of the laws of foreign countries that are presented ‘prior to the presentation of any evidence at the trial,’ ” a court has discretion to apply the law of a foreign country notwithstanding “a party’s failure to comply with the requirement in [CPLR] 3016 (e) that the substance of such laws shall be set forth in the pleading” (72 AD3d at 1583). Further, the court rejected plaintiffs’ argument that the Ontario cap was procedural rather than substantive, citing Davenport v Webb (11 NY2d 392, 393 [1962]) for the “well established” proposition that “the measure of damages is substantive” (72 AD3d at 1583).

The Appellate Division agreed with Supreme Court’s bottom-line conclusion that the Ontario cap applied to damages *327recovered from the bus and trailer defendants, but conducted separate choice-of-law analyses. With respect to the bus defendants, the court looked to the first Neumeier rule, which directs that the law of the parties’ common domicile — here, Ontario— governs. The court observed that applying the law of a shared domicile reduced the risk of forum shopping; rebutted the charge of local bias; and served “ ‘the concepts of mutuality and reciprocity,’ ” which are “ ‘supported by the] consistent application of the common-domicile law’ ” (id. at 1584, quoting Schultz, 65 NY2d at 201).

As between plaintiffs and the trailer defendants, the Appellate Division applied the third Neumeier rule, which prefers the law of the place of the tort. Invoking the proviso to the third rule, the court decided, however, that Ontario law should govern, reasoning that “while applying Ontario law ‘[might] not affirmatively advance the substantive law purposes of New York, it [would] not frustrate those interests because New York has no significant interest in applying its own law to this dispute’ ” (72 AD3d at 1585, quoting Schultz, 65 NY2d at 201). The court also commented that New York law created great uncertainty for the litigants because the trailer defendants were only 10% liable for the accident pursuant to the parties’ settlement. If the trailer defendants’ exposure to noneconomic damages was unlimited while the bus defendants’ liability for this item of damages was capped, the trailer defendants might end up paying far more than their stipulated share.

Finally, the Appellate Division concluded that plaintiffs failed to meet the “ ‘heavy burden’ of establishing that the application of Ontario law violate[d] the public policy of New York” (72 AD3d at 1585, quoting Schultz, 65 NY2d at 202). The court pointed out that “ ‘resort to the public policy exception should be reserved for those foreign laws that are truly obnoxious’ ” (id., quoting Cooney, 81 NY2d at 79), which was not the case here. In any event, the Appellate Division decided that the parties’ contacts were too few and limited in scope to implicate New York’s public policy (72 AD3d at 1585, citing Schultz, 65 NY2d at 201-202).

The Appellate Division granted plaintiffs permission to appeal, and asked us whether its orders were properly made (2010 NY Slip Op 76969[U] [4th Dept 2010]). For the reasons that follow, we answer “No” with respect to the trailer defendants.

*328III.

On this appeal, plaintiffs again contend that the lower courts were foreclosed from engaging in choice-of-law analysis because defendants did not raise the Ontario cap in their answers. In our view, defendants’ motions were properly entertained. As the Appellate Division mentioned, CPLR 4511 (b) vests Supreme Court with discretion to take judicial notice of foreign law prior to the presentation of evidence at trial. This provision states that the court shall take judicial notice of specified matters (which include the laws of foreign countries or their political subdivisions) if a party so requests; furnishes the court sufficient data to enable it to take judicial notice; and advises adverse parties of its intent to ask the court to take judicial notice. This third requirement — notice to adverse parties — must be “given in the pleadings or prior to the presentation of any evidence at the trial, but a court may require or permit other notice” (CPLR 4511 [b] [emphasis added]). Defendants complied with these three conditions when they made their pretrial motions.

Plaintiffs rely on CPLR 3016 (e), however, which provides that “[w]here a cause of action or defense is based upon the law of a foreign country or its political subdivision, the substance of the foreign law relied upon shall he stated” (emphasis added). But CPLR 3016 (e) must be read together with CPLR 4511 (b). As a result, while “[o]bedience to [CPLR 3016 (e)’s] pleading requirement . . . would seem ipso facto to satisfy the trio of requirements necessary to compel judicial notice” under CPLR 4511 (b), “omission to plead the foreign law . . . need prove no more fatal, or serious, than any other omission under CPLR 3015 or 3016,” and “the fact that the court can on its own volunteer to give the foreign law judicial notice under CPLR 4511 (b) should further divest CPLR 3016 (e) of any undue rigidity” (see Connors, Practice Commentaries, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 7B, CPLR C3016:8 [emphasis added]). Further, we do not detect the complained-of unfairness or prejudice. A split-domicile lawsuit, such as this one, always presents a choice-of-law dilemma where loss-allocation rules conflict. This issue may have lain dormant during discovery, but there was no reason for plaintiffs to assume that it had vanished.8

*329Next, plaintiffs press for what they call a “single, joint Neumeier analysis” in cases, such as this one, with multiple tortfeasors. As a result, the Edwards plaintiffs argue, the trial judge “properly analyzed both sets of Defendants — those related to the bus and those related to the tractor trailer— together,” although he reached the wrong conclusion. In our view, however, the correct way to conduct a choice-of-law analysis is to consider each plaintiff vis-a-vis each defendant, which is essentially the approach taken by the Appellate Division. More to the point, this is the path we ourselves have already traveled: in Schultz, the plaintiffs likewise demanded judgment, jointly and severally, against multiple defendants, and we applied the Neumeier rules separately in relation to the New Jersey-domiciled Boy Scouts and the Ohio-domiciled Franciscan Brothers.9 The rules in the Neumeier framework, in fact, by their very nature call for a plaintiff-by-defendant inquiry.10

Here, the Ontario cap controls any award of noneconomic damages against the bus defendants because they share an Ontario domicile with plaintiffs. We described the relevant choice-of-law principle and its rationale in Cooney:

“Under the first Neumeier rule, when [the plaintiff and the defendant] share a common domicile, that law should control. Indeed, when both parties are from the same jurisdiction, there is often little reason to apply another jurisdiction’s loss allocation *330rules. The domiciliary jurisdiction, which has weighed the competing considerations underlying the loss allocation rule at issue, has the greater ‘interest in enforcing the decisions of both parties to accept both the benefits and the burdens of identifying with that jurisdiction and to submit themselves to its authority’ . . . Moreover, this rule reduces opportunities for forum shopping because the same law will apply whether the suit is brought in the locus jurisdiction or in the common domicile, the two most likely forums” (81 NY2d at 73, quoting Schultz, 65 NY2d at 198).

We had earlier made the same point at least as forcefully in Schultz, where we stressed that “the locus jurisdiction has at best a minimal interest in determining the right of recovery or the extent of the remedy in an action by a foreign domiciliary for injuries resulting from the conduct of a codomiciliary that was tortious under the laws of both jurisdictions” (65 NY2d at 198 [emphasis added]). We cited substantial precedent — Tooker v Lopez (24 NY2d 569, 576 [1969]), Miller (22 NY2d at 18-19) and Babcock (12 NY2d at 482) — to support this proposition.

In sum, Ontario has weighed the interests of tortfeasors and their victims in cases of catastrophic personal injury, and has elected to safeguard its domiciliaries from large awards for nonpecuniary damages. In lawsuits brought in New York by Ontario-domiciled plaintiffs against Ontario-domiciled defendants, New York courts should respect Ontario’s decision, which differs from but certainly does not offend New York’s public policy (see Schultz, 65 NY2d at 202 [emphasizing the “heavy burden” borne by a party seeking to show that a foreign law contravenes New York public policy]).

Finally, we look to the third Neumeier rule to decide whether the Ontario cap controls with respect to the trailer defendants. Critically, the third rule establishes the place of the tort — here, New York — as the “normally applicable” choice in a conflicts situation such as this one, where the domicile of plaintiffs, the domicile of the trailer defendants and the place of the tort are different. Initially, the fact that the trailer defendants declined to advocate for Pennsylvania law does not permit them to take advantage of the Ontario cap. To rule otherwise would only encourage a kind of forum shopping. Moreover, the stipulation of settlement on liability is not relevant to “interest analysis,” which seeks to recognize and respect the policy *331interests of a jurisdiction in the resolution of the particular issue where a conflict of law exists.

The trailer defendants contend that Schultz controls, meaning that their situation is comparable to that of the Franciscan Brothers, and so the law of New York should not govern, even though the accident occurred there. We do not agree. While New York employs “interest analysis” rather than “grouping of contacts,” the number and intensity of contacts is relevant when considering whether to deviate from lex loci delicti under the third Neumeier rule — i.e., whether even to analyze if displacing this “normally applicable” choice would “advance the relevant substantive law purposes without impairing the smooth working of the multi-state system or producing great uncertainty for litigants” (Neumeier, 31 NY2d at 128).

In Schultz, New Jersey was the state where the Franciscan Brothers supplied teachers for a New Jersey school, where some of the acts of sexual abuse allegedly took place, where one of the boys committed suicide, where the two boys allegedly suffered from and were treated for psychological injuries, where the Franciscan Brothers were said to have hired and failed to fire the brother. Under these circumstances, there was every reason to evaluate, under the proviso to the third Neumeier rule, whether New Jersey law should displace New York law with respect to the negligent hiring and supervision claim asserted against the Franciscan Brothers in the plaintiffs’ lawsuit. Here, by contrast, there was no cause to contemplate a jurisdiction other than New York, the place where the conduct causing injuries and the injuries themselves occurred. The trailer defendants did not ask Supreme Court to consider the law of their domicile, Pennsylvania, and they had no contacts whatsoever with Ontario other than the happenstance that plaintiffs and the bus defendants were domiciled there.

Accordingly, the orders in these cases should be modified, without costs, in accordance with this opinion and as so modified, affirmed, and the certified questions answered in the negative.

. Loss-allocation rules “prohibit, assign, or limit liability after the tort occurs,” whereas conduct-regulating rules “have the prophylactic effect of governing conduct to prevent injuries from occurring” in the first place (Padula v Lilarn Props. Corp., 84 NY2d 519, 522 [1994] [emphasis added]).

. This statute provided that “the owner or driver of a motor vehicle, other than a vehicle operated in the business of carrying passengers for compensation, is not liable for any loss or damage resulting from bodily injury to, or the death of any person being carried in . . . the motor vehicle” (see Highway Traffic Act of Province of Ontario [Ontario Rev Stat (1960) ch 172], § 105 [2], quoted in Babcock, 12 NY2d at 477).

. When we handed down Neumeier, the Ontario guest statute provided that the owner or driver of a motor vehicle was not liable for damages for the injury or death of a guest-passenger in the absence of gross negligence (see Highway Traffic Act of Province of Ontario [Ont Rev Stat (1960) ch 172], § 105 [2], as amended by Ont Stat 1966, ch 64, § 20 [2], discussed in Neumeier, 31 NY2d at 124). We noted in Neumeier that although in Babcock we considered that the statute’s sole purpose was to protect Ontario defendants and their insurers from collusive lawsuits, “[fiurther research . . . revealed the distinct possibility that one purpose, and perhaps the only purpose [of the statute], was to protect owners and drivers against suits by ungrateful guests” (31 NY2d at 124 [citations and internal quotation marks omitted]).

. We observed that “both parties and the dissent implicitly assume[d]” that “the locus of the tort. . . [was] New York because most of [the brother’s] acts were committed [there]” (Schultz, 65 NY2d at 195).

. We speculated that it was for this reason that the Franciscan Brothers never claimed that Ohio law governed (Schultz, 65 NY2d at 195).

. The clearest statement of Canada’s rule appears in Andrews v Grand & Toy Alberta, Ltd. ([1978] 2 SCR 229 11 98; see also Thornton v Prince George School Dist. No. 57, [1978] 2 SCR 267 H 38; Arnold v Teno, [1978] 2 SCR 287 ¶¶108-109). The cap apparently applies only to “catastrophic personal injury cases” arising from negligence and medical malpractice (see Young v Bella, [2006] 1 SCR 108 ¶¶ 62-66 [Supreme Court of Canada rejected a nonpecuniary cap for defamation damages (¶ 65); stated that cases other than catastrophic personal injury cases do not raise the same policy considerations (id.); and left open the question whether policy considerations might warrant a cap in other circumstances (¶ 66)]).

. Parent companies originally listed as defendants (Coach Canada, Inc., Stagecoach Group, PLC and Coach USA, Inc.) successfully moved for dismissal.

. With respect to another preliminary matter raised by the Roach plaintiffs — whether the Ontario cap is “procedural” or “substantive” — we *329conclude that, however the cap may be characterized, it is a loss-allocation rule subject to “interest analysis” under New York’s choice-of-law principles.

. The dissent seeks to distinguish Schultz from this case on the ground that the torts alleged in the former “were distinct acts occurring at different times” while here “the causes of action arise from a single incident” (dissenting op at 333). But regardless of the factual dissimilarities between the two cases, the defendants in Schultz were — just like defendants in this case— subject to joint and several liability for their separate allegedly tortious acts.

. The dissent opines that “[alpplying a single Neumeier analysis to jointly and severally liable defendants and having them subject to the same laws would further the goals of predictability and uniformity” (dissenting op at 333). Making multiple defendants ultimately subject to the same loss-allocation rules might make management of a case simpler for the courts and the parties. A “single . . . analysis,” however, would not guarantee “predictability and uniformity.” For one thing, under this approach the choice of law for loss allocation in a multi-state, multi-tortfeasor case would depend on which potential defendants a plaintiff chose to sue. The fact is, when we departed from lex loci delicti in Babcock, we knowingly sacrificed a degree of certainty so as to honor our sister states’ interests in enforcing their own loss-allocation rules with respect to their own domiciliaries (see Babcock, 12 NY2d at 478; Cooney, 81 NY2d at 72).