The Court of Appeals, in certifying the herein action to this court, divided the issue to be considered into three discrete queries: “(1) whether R.C. 2315.19, effective June 20, 1980, is substantive or procedural and remedial in nature; (2) if procedural and remedial, should R.C. 2315.19 be applied retrospectively or prospectively; and (3) would prospective application include application to negligence cases arising prior to the effective date of the statute, but tried after the effective date.” We find our determination that R.C. 2315.191 affects substantive rights and must be applied prospectively dispositive of the questions which the appellate court has raised.
Section 28 of Article II of the Ohio Constitution, in stating that “[t]he general assembly shall have no power to pass retroactive laws * * *,” expressly forbids retrospective legislation. R.C. 1.48 provides that: “A statute is presumed to be prospective in its operation unless expressly made retrospective.” The General Assembly has thusly codified the time-honored common law principle that statutes are to be prospectively applied.2 In construing R.C. 1.48, however, this court has consistently held that the application of a statute, which affects procedural rather than substantive rights, to causes arising prior to the statute’s effective date but tried thereafter is not an impermissible retroactive application. Denicola v. Providence Hospital (1979), 57 Ohio St. 2d 115 [11 O.O.3d 290]; Kilbreath v. Rudy (1968), 16 Ohio St. 2d 70 [45 O.O.2d 370]. Indeed, the application of statutes affecting procedural rights to all causes tried after the effective date of the statute constitutes prospective operation as, in such instances, the date of the trial is the reference point from which prospectivity and retroactivity are measured.
As R.C. 2315.19 contains no explicit language permitting retroactive application, the statute must be presumed to operate prospectively. Appellees argue that this presumption has been overcome as the General Assembly in enacting the statute wished to give immediate effect to the more lenient, at least as it relates to plaintiffs, comparative negligence standard. However, this naked, unsupported assertion does nothing to evidence the legislative in
In delineating the scope of procedural and substantive statutes, this court has formulated an eminently effective distinction. As we stated in State, ex rel. Holdridge, v. Indus. Comm. (1976), 11 Ohio St. 2d 175, 178 [40 O.O.2d 162]:
“It is doubtful if a perfect definition of ‘substantive law’ or ‘procedural or remedial law’ could be devised. However, the authorities agree that, in general terms, substantive law is that which creates duties, rights, and obligations, while procedural or remedial law prescribes methods of enforcement of rights or obtaining redress. * * *”
Appellees contend that this court’s analysis in Denicola v. Providence Hospital, supra, compels a finding that R.C. 2315.19 affects the litigant’s procedural rights and, therefore, may be applied to causes tried subsequent to the effective date of the statute. According to appellees, R.C. 2315.19 implicates only procedural rights. In support of their assertion, appellees cite the fact that the statute is placed in the “Trial Procedure” chapter of the Revised Code and argue that the statute affects only remedies and not the actual or expected rights of the defendant by permitting a contributorily negligent plaintiff to recover where formerly he could not.
First, the location of R.C. 2315.19 in the Code offers no guidance in determining the nature, substantive or procedural, of the statute. R.C. 1.01 provides, in pertinent part, that “Title, Chapter, and section headings and marginal General Code section numbers do not constitute any part of the law as contained in the ‘Revised Code.’ ” The General Assembly has, thus, quite explicitly stated that the substance of a statute is not to be gleaned from its appellation.
Similarly groundless is appellees’ argument that R.C. 2315.19 is merely remedial. Although semantic formulations can be devised to understate the obvious, it is patently clear that the statute markedly affects substantive rights. Where before a defendant was shielded from liability by a plaintiff’s contributory negligence, this defendant no longer enjoys such protection. Where before a plaintiff who was contributorily negligent was denied recovery, he is now—as long as his misfeasance is not the predominant cause of his injury—entitled to damages. To characterize, as appellees do, such a fundamental change in the law as affecting only trial procedure and the mode by which a remedy is effected defies logic. The application of R.C. 2315.19 to
Appellees also argue that appellants’ substantive rights are undisturbed by the statutory introduction of the doctrine of comparative negligence since both Dunlap and his defacto insurer, J. C. Penney, could not realistically have relied on the later availability of the complete defense of contributory negligence in calculating their actions. Several state courts, in determining that statutes codifying the doctrine of comparative negligence affect substantive rights, have addressed the identical contention. Costa v. Lair (1976), 241 Pa. Super 517, 363 A.2d 1313; Joseph v. Lowery (1972), 261 Ore. 545, 495 P. 2d 273. In this respect we find the Oregon Supreme Court’s pronouncement in its landmark Lowery decision persuasive. In holding that the Oregon comparative negligence statute could only legitimately be applied to causes arising after its effective date, the court stated:
“Certainly, no one has an accident upon the faith of the then existing law. However, it would come as a shock to someone who has estimated his probable liability arising from a past accident, and who has planned his affairs accordingly, to find that his responsibility therefor is not to be determined as of the happening of the accident but is also dependent upon what the legislature might subsequently do. Every day it is necessary in the conduct of the affairs of individuals and of businesses to make a closely calculated estimate of the responsibility or lack thereof resulting from an accident or from other unforeseen and unplanned circumstances and to act in reliance on such estimate.” Joseph v. Lowery, supra, at 551. Certainly, in the instant case appellants calculated their probable liability arising from any accident on the basis of the existence of the contributory negligence defense.
Moreover, by asserting that appellants have no “vested right” in the continuance of the contributory negligence defense, appellees further obfuscate the issue of whether R.C. 2315.19 affects substantive or procedural rights. .Appellees err by even implying that only vested rights are substantive and, thus, immune from retroactive application of the law. Certainly, appellants have no vested right in or entitlement to the endurance of the common law defense of contributory negligence, but, at least in the present context, no such entitlement is necessary.
Substantive and vested rights, the latter being complete, consummated and subject to involuntary divestiture only upon due process of law,3 are not synonymous. Substantive rights exist in counterpoise to procedural rights and include all privileges and obligations arising from the legal nature of transactions and relationships but separate from the means of effectuating those privileges and enforcing those obligations. Although none of appellants’ vested rights are implicated in the instant action, the application of R.C.
“We do not wish this opinion [finding the Pennsylvania comparative negligence statute to be substantive] to be construed as holding that there is a vested right to the defense of contributory negligence. We hold solely that the retroactive application of the Act would affect the legal character of past actions in a substantive, rather than a procedural, manner. Thus, we believe that a vested right and a substantive right are not necessarily identical * * *.” Costa v. Lair, supra, at 520, fn. 4.
As the Ohio comparative negligence statute is substantive in nature and effect, Denicola, supra, offers no guidance in the present action. In Denicola, we held that a statute establishing competency requirements for an expert medical witness may be applied to all causes of action tried after the statute’s effective date. The subject statute in Denicola was clearly procedural in nature. Laws regulating the qualifications of witnesses affect only the means of effectuating a remedy. No one, with the obvious exception of potential expert witnesses themselves, contemplates the required statutory qualifications of such a witness before committing to a particular course of action. The element of faith which appellants herein reposed in the pre-R.C. 2315.19 legal consequences of operating a motor vehicle is utterly lacking in the claims of the appellees who sought to apply the analysis in Denicola to their cause.
In addition to invoking Denicola, appellees have also urged this court to adopt the reasoning of our sister courts in Rhode Island, Oregon and Washington, which have interpreted their respective comparative negligence standards as procedural.4 We decline to do so. Unlike R.C. 2315.19, both the Rhode Island and Oregon statutes explicitly delineate the cases to which they are to apply. R. I. Gen. Laws Section 9-20-4 expressly provides for its application to “all actions hereafter brought.” Similarly, ORS 18.470, as amended by the Oregon legislature after Lowery, supra, by its very language “governs all actions tried subsequent to its effective date.” (1975 Ore. Laws 1413.) Thus, the intent of both the Rhode Island and Oregon lawmakers to apply the comparative negligence standard to all cases brought or tried, respectively, after the enactment of the statutes is apparent. No such intent on the part of our General Assembly, however, is anywhere in evidence.
We must also reject the Supreme Court of Washington’s decision in Godfrey v. State (1975), 84 Wash. 2d 959, 530 P. 2d 630, as a guide to our decision. With only a single exception, state and federal courts which have ruled on the application of comparative negligence statutes, silent on the issue of retroactive operation, have found them to control only causes arising after the
Finally, we reject appellees’ entreaty to follow the lead of state courts which have judicially implemented the comparative negligence standard and applied it retroactively.7 This court’s duty in the instant cause is to enforce the will of the General Assembly. We may not, consonant with that obligation, ignore the clear dictates of R.C. 2315.19. In construing a statute codifying the doctrine of comparative negligence, we lack the freedom enjoyed by courts that have affected the regime of contributory negligence by modifying the common law, the exclusive bailiwick of the judiciary.
In addition to the comparative negligence issue, the Court of Appeals’ reversal of the trial court’s judgment in the herein cause was based on the latter’s erroneous instructions on proximate cause. Our decision today, however, obviates the need for any determination to be made of appellants’ negligence.
Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals in its entirety.
Judgment reversed.
1.
R.C. 2315.19(A)(1) provides, in pertinent part:
“In negligence actions, the contributory negligence of a person does not bar the person or his legal representative from recovering damages that have directly and proximately resulted from the negligence of one or more other persons, if the contributory negligence of the person bringing the action was no greater than the combined negligence of all other persons from whom recovery is sought. However, any damages recoverable by the person bringing the action shall be diminished by an amount that is proportionally equal to his percentage of negligence * *
2.
The presumption that laws are to be applied prospectively can be traced from the Roman Corpus Juris Civilis through Bracton and Coke in the English common law. See Smead, The Rule Against Retroactive Legislation: A Basic Principle of Jurisprudence, 20 Minn. L. Rev. 775.
3.
See Ostrander v. Preece (1935), 129 Ohio St. 625 [3 O.O. 24], and Scamman v. Scamman (1950), 56 Ohio Law Abs. 272, for a discussion of vested rights.
4.
See Raymond v. Jenard (R.I., 1978), 390 A. 2d 358; Hall v. Northwest Outward Bound School, Inc. (1977), 280 Ore. 655, 572 P. 2d 1007; Godfrey v. State (1975), 84 Wash. 2d 959, 530 P. 2d 630.
5.
See Burkes v. Koppers Company, Inc. (Tex. Civ. App. 1978), 567 S. W. 2d 540; Crutsinger v. Hess (D.C. Kan. 1976), 408 F. Supp. 548; Dunham v. Southside National Bank of Missoula (1976), 169 Mont. 466, 548 P. 2d 1388; Rice v. Wadkins (1976), 92 Nev. 631, 555 P. 2d 1232; Edwards v. Walker (1973), 95 Idaho 289, 507 P. 2d 486; Scammon v. Saco (Me. 1968), 247 A. 2d 108; Reddell v. Norton (1956), 225 Ark. 643, 285 S. W. 2d 328; Brewster v. Ludtke (1933), 211 Wis. 344, 247 N.W. 449; Fuller v. Ill. Cent. RR. Co. (1912), 100 Miss. 705, 56 So. 783; Costa v. Lair, supra; Joseph v. Lowery, supra.
6.
See Woods, The Negligence Case: Comparative Fault; Section 16:3.
7.
Appellees in their brief cite Hoffman v. Jones (Fla. 1973), 280 So. 2d 431; Li v. Yellow Cab Co. (1975), 13 Cal. 3d 804, 532 P. 2d 1226; Kaatz v. State (Alaska 1975), 540 P. 2d 1037; Kirby v. Larson (1977), 400 Mich. 585, 256 N. W. 2d 400.