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38 Ariz. L. Rev. 953 (1996)
Tort-Liability Insurance System and Federalism: Everything in Its Own Time, The

handle is hein.journals/arz38 and id is 973 raw text is: THE TORT-LIABILITY INSURANCE SYSTEM
AND FEDERALISM: EVERYTHING IN ITS OWN
TIME
Roger C. Henderson*
If for a moment we could wipe the slate clean with regard to the present
system of state-based tort law and, at the same time, not worry about our
current federal system of representative goverment, I would like to pose a
question. The question is this: Is there anything inherent in tort law that would
prevent, or even significantly work against, our having a national system of tort
law in the United States?
In trying to formulate an answer to this question, several things come to
mind. The first thing that occurs to me is the origin of tort law in North
America. We inherited lots of things, legal and otherwise, from England. Even
though not all colonists were from England, as it turns out much of what
endures in our legal system is traceable to that country-traceable either
because our ancestors embraced the English legal system or rebelled against it.
Probably our greatest legacy from the English system is the common law, a
system that prevails in every jurisdiction of the United States, save Louisiana.
And, of course, it was the common law process that gave birth to and brought
to maturity the body of law that passes under the head of American tort law
today. Yet, all one has to do is to think about the British Empire in the 18th and
19th centuries to realize that all of the Empire was pretty much subject to the
same body of tort law with the London-based House of Lords and Privy
Council as the ultimate arbiters. Whether the country was England, Ireland,
Scotland, Canada, Australia, or whatever, there was in general one body of
jurisprudence governing liability for personal injury and property damage-
sort of a portmanteau of tort law-for all the subjects of the realm. In fact, it
was not until relatively recently that countries such as Canada and Australia
opted to end the right to petition the Privy Council to resolve tort and other
issues. More importantly, for purposes of my point, one of the legacies of the
British system is that today both Canada and Australia have federal systems of
tort law, with their respective national courts of last resort, the Supreme Court
of Canada and the High Court of Australia, possessing the final common law
authority on the subject.
Even though the American colonists revolted and threw off their English
yoke and set themselves on a different governmental course, I would submit
that there is nothing inherent in tort law or its common law source that would
have prevented, or even seriously impeded, the development of a national body
Professor of Law, University of Arizona, College of Law; B.B.A., University of
Texas, 1960; LL.B., University of Texas, 1965; LL.M., Harvard, 1969.

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