Abstract
Clifford Beaulieu, a guest in his father's automobile, was injured when the vehicle struck a telephone pole in Massachusetts. Both parties were residents of Maine. The trip had originated in Maine and was to terminate there. The son filed an action against his father in the Maine Superior Court, alleging negligent operation of the vehicle. On an agreed statement of facts, the case was reported to the Maine Supreme Judicial Court where the defendant argued for dismissal of the action on the grounds that the doctrine of lex loci delictus, the law of the place of the tort, was applicable and that the Massachusetts guest statute barred recovery. Plaintiff argued that the lex loci doctrine should be abandoned and that the court should adopt an interest analysis approach to choice-of-law issues. The court accepted the plaintiff's argument and held that in tort conflicts cases Maine courts must analyze the competing governmental interests of the involved states. By adopting interest analysis, the court recognized the necessity in every conflicts case of weighing and balancing the policies of the interested states, with the result that neither the law of the forum nor the law of the place of the tort will necessarily always apply. Thus, in Beaulieu v. Beaulieu, Maine law, which imposed a full due care duty on the host, had to be applied both because all relevant governmental interests were centered in Maine and because, correspondingly, Massachusetts had no interest in applying its law to the suit. The court, in finding this approach preferable to the more mechanical traditional doctrine, overruled Maine's lex loci delictus precedents. In bringing Maine conflicts law into line with the interest analysis approach first adopted by the New York courts in Babcock v. Jackson, Beaulieu became an extremely important case in Maine jurisprudence. Beaulieu, however, was a relatively simple case, and the Maine courts must now confront the more difficult task of developing a workable methodology for solving complex conflicts problems in all areas of the law.
First Page
239
Recommended Citation
David C. Shonka,
Beaulieu v. Beaulieu: An Obituary for Lex Loci and An Approach to Interest Analysis,
23
Me. L. Rev.
239
(1971).
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.mainelaw.maine.edu/mlr/vol23/iss1/12