PRIL Renvoi
PRIL Renvoi
PRIL Renvoi
Testatrix is domiciled in Testatrix should first comply with formal steps to acquire
France French domicile
Mrs. Price has no personal liability on the note, The case is governed by Michigan
recoverable from her separate estate lawBurr Case
Burr v. Beckler: the wife, who was in Florida, executed a note and trust
deed in Florida to her husband who was in Chicago. As the note was
complete when delivered from Florida (thus, already completed in Florida),
Florida law would apply, and since Florida law holds that she is not
competent to enter into a contract, her note and trust deed were void.
-Burr case and this case:
*manual delivery complete: already signed when delivered to the mortgagee
*no engagement to make the loan prior to delivery (money cashed after
execution of mortgage)
*no advance payment of money
HELD: MICHIGAN LAW applies. MRS. PRiCE NOT LIABLE. A married woman
cannot bind her separate estate through personal engagement for the
benefit of others.
***
University of Chicago v. Dater case is sound:
-Michigan protected Michigan wife; Illinois not interested in applying
its law
-application of renvoi promoted uniformity of results inspite of
discrepancies in the choice-of-law rules
OBJECTIONS TO RENVOI
1 CON: place the court in a perpetually enclosed circle from which it
would never emerge and that it would never find a suitable body of
substantive rules to apply to a particular case - only workable if 2
states does not have same renvoi theory and if only 1 rejects renvoi
PRO: Dean Griswold
>False premise: the "chain" would stop if remission is to the state's
INTERNAL LAW ALONE
>Allowed for necessity and expediency
1 CON: Courts may be unnecessarily burdened w/ the task of
identifying the choice-of-law rules of another state
PRO: forum court would not use renvoi if it cannot ascertain what the
conflict-of-law rules of the foreign state in the first place
INAPPLICABILITY OF RENVOI IN A FALSE CONFLICT
False conflict: where only 1 state is interested in applying its law, the
other state has no issue in its law not being applied
-Renvoi was held inappropriate in Pfau v. Trent Aluminum Co.:
NJ and Connecticut have identical substantive laws, Iowa has no
interest in ensuring that its law be applied -so false conflict, no need
to resort to renvoi as the application of NJ law is like applying also
Connecticut law
PFAU v. TRENT ALUMINUM CO.
Pfau
-domiciled in Connecticut
-Student of Iowa (Parsons College, Iowa)
Trent
-domiciled in NJ
-also a student of Iowa (Parsons College)
-Trent agreed to drive Pfau to Missouri using a car registered in NJ, insured
in NJ, and insured by a carrier in NJ
-car collision (NJ registered car driven by Trent collided with Joseph Davis
car when Trent failed to negotiate a curve) occurred in IOWA. Pfau incurred
injuries.
-Pfau sues before an NJ court
IOWA Guest Statute NJ and Connecticut Guest Statute