Conflict of Laws Flashcards

1
Q

What law should be applied to determine intestate succession of personal property?

A

Domicile of the decedent

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2
Q

How do you determine which state gets estate taxes upon the estate holder’s death?

A

Whatever state the decedent was domiciled in

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3
Q

In a divorce, which state has subject matter jurisdiction?

A

The state of domicile (for the moving party)

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4
Q

What is required for a state to be someone’s domicile?

A

The person must have:

  • Legal capacity (i.e., ability to fend for themself) when making the domicile choice
  • Physical presence in the state
  • The intent to remain in the state indefinitely
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5
Q

In determining a person’s domicile, what is the rule when a person’s words are different than his actions with respect to their intent?

A

Actions speak louder than words

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6
Q

How many domiciles can a person have?

A

Only one

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7
Q

What happens if a person does not have legal capacity to acquire a domicile of choice?

A

The person will be assigned domicile by operation of law, which will be:

  • Any domicile acquired before becoming mentally incompetent
  • The domicile of the person’s parents or guardians
    • If the parents are divorced:
      • Use the custodial parent that as primary residence with the child
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8
Q

What is the state that hands down a judgment called?

What about the state that is called upon to recognize and enforce that judgment?

A

Rendering state

Recognizing state (i.e., forum state)

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9
Q

When should the judgment of a sister state be recognized and enforced?

A

When the sister state judgment is entitled to full faith and credit, which requires:

  1. Valid jurisdiction in the rendering court over both:
    • Parties (PJ)
    • Subject matter (SMJ)
  2. Final judgment
  3. Judgment on the merits
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10
Q

When can a defendant argue that the judgment of a sister court should not be recognized because it lacked jurisdiction?

A

Only if doing so would not violate the one-attack rule, which prohibits litigating jurisdiction more than once

So, a court’s jurisdiction can only be attacked once - either in the rendering court or the recognizing court, but not both

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11
Q

When is a judgment not final?

What are examples of such judgments?

What is an example of a final judgment?

A

When the judgment was modifiable

Non-final judgments:

  1. Future spousal support
  2. Future child support

Final judgment:

  • Judgments (even relating to spousal or child support) for amounts already accrued and in arrears
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12
Q

What are considered judgments on the merits for full faith and credit purposes?

What are not judgments on the merits?

A

Judgments on the merits

  1. Default judgments
  2. Consent judgments

Not judgments on the merits

  • Judgments based on a statute of limitations
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13
Q

What law controls the three full faith and credit requirements (i.e., valid jurisdiction, final judgment, on the merits)?

A

The law of the rendering state

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14
Q

What are the defenses/escape devices used to avoid recognition of a sister state judgment?

Split them between good defenses and non-defenses

A

Good defenses

  1. Procedure v. substance
    • The forum state will not enforce judgments based on matters of procedure - they are governed by the law of the forum state
  2. Penal laws
    • The forum state will not enforce the penal laws of another state (i.e., laws designed to vindicate the public justice, rather than provide reparation to an individual)
  3. Extrinsic fraud
    • The forum state will not enforce judgments that involve extrinsic fraud - i.e., fraud that could not have been dealt with in the earlier decision
      • E.g., judge was bribed

Non-Defenses

  1. Public policy
    • The forum state will not enforce a judgment that violates its strong public policy - i.e., something more than mere conflicting laws
  2. Mistakes by the judge
    • This won’t work because it should have been raised on appeal in the recognizing state
  3. Inconsistent judgments
    • If two different states entered two different judgments, either can be enforced by the forum
    • Exception: SCOTUS decision are enforced based on whichever one is most recent
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15
Q

Can judgments of foreign countries be enforced in the US?

A

Yes, provided the two-part comity test is satisfied:

  1. Jurisdiction must have been proper
  2. Fair procedures must have been applied

This test is applied using the forum state’s law, which means that the forum state’s ideas of due process (i.e., fundamental fairness and minimal contacts) govern

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16
Q

What is required for subject matter jurisdiction in a divorce case?

A

One of the two spouses must be domiciled in the state rendering the divorce

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17
Q

What are the different types of divorce?

A
  1. Ex-parte
    • Only one of the spouses is validly domiciled where the divorce is granted
  2. Bi-lateral
    • Only one of the spouses is validly domiciled where the divorce is granted, but both are subject to personal jurisdiction there
  3. Consent
    • Both spouses want out of the marriage and go somewhere they are domiciled to get the divorce
18
Q

What is the burden of proof in attacking a divorce, and who bears it?

A

The attacker bears the burden and can introduce any relevant evidence, even if it came into existence after the divorce was granted

19
Q

Who can attack a divorce for lack of subject matter jurisdiction?

A

Any interested person who is not estopped from doing so

Estoppel situations:

  1. Attacker was subject to personal jurisdiction in the earlier divorce proceeding
    • E.g., attacker was the spouse in a bi-lateral divorceproceeding
  2. Attacker played a meaningful role in the earlier divorce proceeding
    • E.g., attacker bought spouse’s plane ticket so she could go to Vegas to get a divorce
  3. Attacker is in privity with a party to the divorce
    • E.g., children
  4. Attacker has remarried in reliance on the earlier divorce
20
Q

Who does a court granting alimony or child support have to have personal jurisdiction over?

A

The spouse whose property rights are at issue - e.g., the spouse and/or the child

21
Q

Who does a court granting child custody have to have personal jurisdiction over?

A

The child (i.e., court must be in the child’s home state)

22
Q

What is the divisible divorce doctrine?

A

If a divorce decree has some valid portions and some invalid portions, simply retain the valid and ignore the rest

E.g., the divorce may be valid due to personal jurisdiction over one spouse, but the alimony and child support may not be

23
Q

Do federal and state courts have to recognize one another’s judgments?

A

Yes, this is required by statute

24
Q

How do you determine whether it is appropriate to choose a particular state’s law in a case?

A

The state chosen must have:

  1. Significant contact with the parties of subject matter
  2. Giving it a legitimate interest in seeing its law applied
25
Q

When choosing a particular state’s law to apply, what do you do if another state may have a stronger interest?

A

As long as the state chosen meets the contact-legitimate interest requirement, no weighing is required, even if another state may have a stronger interest

26
Q

What are two situations where a state would not meet the significant contact-leigitimate interest test for choice of law?

A
  1. After the event in question a party moved to the state and that move created the only contact with the state
  2. The only contact with the parties is that the suit was brought in the state
27
Q

What are the different choice of law approaches?

A
  1. Vested rights approach (1st Restatement & Virginia)
  2. Most significant relationship approach (2d Restatement)
  3. Governmental interest analysis approach
28
Q

What is the vested rights approach to choice of law?

What is the process?

A

The law to be applied is the law where the rights of the plaintiff vested and each the law had a rule to answer this

Process:

  1. What is the substantive area of law to be applied?
    • E.g., torts contracts property, family law, etc.
  2. What is the vesting rule for that area of law?
  3. Apply the vesting rule
  4. State the result
29
Q

What is the vesting rule for tort law?

A
  1. Does the legal issue in question involve a rule regulating loss distribution or conduct?
  2. If a rule regulating conduct:
    • Apply the law of the place of the conduct
  3. If a rule regulating loss distribution:
    • Apply the law of the place of the wrong
      • This is not necessarily the place of negligence, it may be the place of the injury
30
Q

What is the vesting rule for contract law?

A
  1. Did the parties validly choose the law to be applied in the contract?
    • Any law can be chosen for contract construction
    • For contract validity:
      • Choice cannot be contrary to fundamental policy of a state with a greater interest
      • Must be substantial relationship between the parties or the transaction and the state chosen
  2. If not, ask:
    • Does the issue fall under the control of the UCC?
      • Apply the forum law assuming it has a sufficient relationship to the transaction
    • Does the issue involve contract construction?
      • Apply the law of the place of performance
    • Does the issue involve contract validity?
      • Apply the law of the place of execution
    • Does the issue involve contract performance?
      • Apply the law of the place of performance
31
Q

What is the vesting rule for real property law?

A
  1. If the issue involves the land sale contract
    • _​​_Apply the vesting approach for contract law
  2. If the issue involves the deed or conveyance
    • _​​_Apply the law of the situs - i.e., property location
32
Q

What is the vesting rule for personal property law?

A
  1. If the issue involves intestacy succession
    • Apply the law of the deceased’s domicile at death
  2. Otherwise
    • Apply the law of the situs - i.e., property location at time of relevant transaction
33
Q

What is the vesting rule for family law?

A
  1. Would the marriage violate the strong public policy of the forum state?
    • If so, may not recognize the marriage even if valid
  2. Otherwise
    • Recognize the marriage as valid
34
Q

What law governs in a divorce?

A

The law of the plaintiff’s domicile

35
Q

What happens if a marriage is void because it failed to comply with some technical requirement of the state where it was performed?

A

It may sitll be recognized if it would have complied with the forum state

36
Q

What are examples of procedural, rather than substantive, law?

A
  • Burden of proof
  • Statutes of limitations
    • Exceptions:
      • Borrowing statute
        • Forum will apply the shorter statute of limitation of the state where the cause of action arose
      • Time limit contained in statute creating right
      • Adverse possession
37
Q

What are examples of substantive, rather than procedural, laws?

A
  • Contributory v. comparative negligence
  • Statute of frauds
  • Parol evidence rule
38
Q

What choice of law rules does a federal court sitting in diversity use?

What if a federal court transfers the case to a different venue for the convenience of the parties?

A

In general

  • The choice of law rules of the state in which it sits

Transfer

  • Transferee court applies law of state where transferor sits
39
Q

Do courts take judicial notice of the law of other states?

A

Yes

But the law of a foreign country is a fact that must be proven

If the law of the foreign country cannot be determined, forum state law will apply

40
Q

How would a Virginia court would address a question of capacity to contract where there is a conflict of laws issue?

A

Under the general common law rule, the law of the place of contracting determines capacity to contract.

However, there are two old Virginia cases that have not been overruled holding that the law of the place of performance governs capacity to contract if it differs from the law of the place of contracting

41
Q

A Virginia resident alleges injury in tort. Virginia is the place of the wrong, but the alleged tortfeasor acted in a second state. In which situation would a Virginia court apply the law of the second state?

A

A Virginia court will apply the law of the second state if the injury is a result of the alleged tortfeasor’s action in a state where that action was required or privileged.