Andrew McCarrell v. Hoffman-La Roach, Inc.(076524) , 227 N.J. 569 ( 2017 )


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  •                                                       SYLLABUS
    (This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the
    convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please note that, in the
    interest of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized.)
    Andrew McCarrell v. Hoffmann-La Roche, Inc. (A-28-15) (076524)
    Argued October 13, 2016 -- Decided January 24, 2017
    Albin, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
    This appeal raises the question: What are New Jersey’s choice-of law rules in determining the applicable
    statute of limitations in a tort action? Plaintiff Andrew McCarrell timely filed this products-liability action within
    New Jersey’s statute of limitations, but Alabama’s limitations period had expired by the time of the filing. The issue
    is which state’s statute of limitations applies under New Jersey’s choice-of-law jurisprudence.
    At age 24, McCarrell, an Alabama resident, was prescribed a four-month Accutane regimen to treat his
    acne in 1995. In 1996, ten months after he stopped taking Accutane, McCarrell began experiencing intense stomach
    pain and diarrhea and was diagnosed as suffering from inflammatory bowel disease; he underwent multiple, serious
    surgeries to address complications from this condition. McCarrell was prescribed and took Accutane in Alabama
    and received medical treatment in that state. Accutane is produced by defendants Hoffman-La Roche, Inc., and
    Roche Laboratories, Inc. (collectively Roche). Roche was incorporated and maintained its corporate offices in New
    Jersey. Roche designed, manufactured, and labeled Accutane in New Jersey and distributed it from this State.
    In July 2003, plaintiff filed a products-liability action in the Law Division, alleging that Roche had failed to
    provide adequate warnings about the risks and side effects associated with taking Accutane. Roche moved for
    summary judgment, citing Alabama’s two-year statute of limitations. The trial court denied the motion, finding that
    the governmental-interest test set forth in Gantes v. Kason Corp., 
    145 N.J. 478
    , 484 (1996), directed that New
    Jersey’s statute of limitations governs the case. The jury found in favor of McCarrell on the failure-to-warn claim,
    but the Appellate Division reversed based on evidentiary issues. The Appellate Division approved the trial court’s
    application of New Jersey’s statute of limitations to the case, however, and the Court denied Roche’s petition for
    certification. McCarrell v. Hoffman-La Roche, Inc., 
    199 N.J. 518
    (2009).
    After a new trial, a jury found Roche liable for failure to warn, awarding McCarrell $25,159,530. Roche
    challenged the verdict on the ground that the governmental-interest test had been supplanted by the most-significant-
    relationship test of sections 146, 145, and 6 of the Second Restatement of Conflicts of Law and argued that, under
    this test, Alabama’s statute of limitations applied. The trial court denied the challenge as untimely.
    An appellate panel accepted Roche’s argument that P.V. ex rel. T.V. v. Camp Jaycee, 
    197 N.J. 132
    (2008)—which adopted sections 146, 145, and 6 of the Second Restatement for resolving conflicts of substantive
    tort law—altered the landscape of choice-of-law jurisprudence and compelled the application of Alabama’s statute
    of limitations in this case. The panel expressly declined to apply section 142 of the Second Restatement. It vacated
    the jury’s verdict and award, dismissed McCarrell’s complaint as untimely, and did not reach the remaining issues
    raised by Roche on appeal. The Court granted McCarrell’s petition for certification. 
    223 N.J. 555
    (2015).
    HELD: Section 142 of the Second Restatement is now the operative choice-of-law rule in New Jersey for resolving
    statute-of-limitations conflicts because it will channel judicial discretion and lead to more predictable and uniform
    results that are consistent with the just expectations of the parties. Based on a choice-of-law analysis under section 142,
    New Jersey’s limitations period governs, and therefore McCarrell’s action was timely filed. The Court therefore
    reinstates McCarrell’s verdict and damages award and remands to the Appellate Division for consideration of the
    unaddressed issues remaining on appeal.
    1. The first inquiry in any choice-of-law analysis is whether the laws of the states with interests in the litigation are
    in conflict. When a complaint is timely filed within one state’s statute of limitations but is filed outside another’s, a
    true conflict is present. In this case, New Jersey’s and Alabama’s statutes of limitations are in conflict. (pp. 16-18)
    2. Under the common law, the forum state—the state in which a lawsuit was filed—applied its own statute of
    limitations when a choice-of-law issue arose. In Heavner v. Uniroyal, Inc., the Court rejected that inflexible rule.
    
    63 N.J. 130
    , 140-41 (1973). Instead, the Court adopted a new rule that weighed the contacts that each state had to
    the matter in determining the applicable statute of limitations. (pp. 19-21)
    3. In 
    Gantes, supra
    , the Court adopted “a flexible ‘governmental-interest’ standard, which requires application of
    the law of the state with the greatest interest in resolving the particular issue that is raised in the underlying
    
    litigation.” 145 N.J. at 484
    . The Gantes Court evaluated New Jersey’s governmental interests, recognized the
    State’s “strong interest in encouraging the manufacture and distribution of safe products for the public and,
    conversely, in deterring the manufacture and distribution of unsafe products within the state,” and observed that
    meritorious products-liability actions that are timely filed and hold manufacturers accountable for dangerous
    products further that interest. 
    Id. at 490.
    The Gantes Court thus applied New Jersey’s limitations period and
    permitted the lawsuit, which would have been barred under Georgia law, to proceed. 
    Id. at 487,
    499. (pp. 21-24)
    4. The Court had adopted the governmental-interest test to resolve choice-of-law issues concerning substantive tort
    law before Heavner and Gantes adopted that test for statutes of limitations. That test remained the analytical tool for
    deciding choice-of-law issues related to substantive tort law and statutes of limitations until, in Camp 
    Jaycee, supra
    ,
    this Court formally adopted the Second Restatement’s most significant-relationship test in sections 146, 145, and 6
    for deciding the choice of substantive law in tort cases involving more than one 
    state. 197 N.J. at 142-43
    . In Camp
    Jaycee, choosing between this State’s and another state’s statute of limitations was not an issue. The Court now
    establishes a bright-line rule: a conflict of law is present whenever the selection of one statute of limitations over
    another is outcome dispositive. (pp. 24-28)
    5. Camp Jaycee’s adoption of sections 146, 145, and 6 of the Second Restatement to resolve conflicts of substantive
    law in tort actions was not a signal that the Court would apply the same choice-of-law test for statutes of limitations.
    Indeed, the drafters of the Second Restatement did not intend that sections 146 and 145 would be used for statute-of-
    limitations choice-of-law determinations, but rather crafted section 142 to address statutes of limitations as an
    independent issue. Incorporating section 142 into New Jersey’s choice-of-law jurisprudence completes the
    conversion from the governmental-interest standard to the Second Restatement begun in Camp Jaycee. (pp. 28-29)
    6. Under section 142, the statute of limitations of the forum state generally applies whenever that state has a
    substantial interest in the maintenance of the claim. In that circumstance, the inquiry ends unless exceptional
    circumstances would render that result unreasonable. Only when the forum state has “no substantial interest” in the
    maintenance of the claim does a court consider whether “the claim would be barred under the statute of limitations
    of a state having a more significant relationship to the parties and the occurrence” through consideration of the
    factors in section 6. Restatement (Second), supra, § 142(2)(a)-(b). (pp. 29-31)
    7. The Court believes that section 142 benefits from an ease of application; places both New Jersey’s and out-of-
    state’s citizens on an equal playing field, thus promoting principles of comity; advances predictability and
    uniformity in decision-making; and allows for greater certainty in the expectations of the parties. The Court finds
    section 142’s presumption favoring a forum state with a substantial interest in the matter consistent with the holding
    in Gantes and beneficial to New Jersey companies by offering protection against another state’s longer limitations
    period. Section 142 is a less malleable standard than the governmental-interest test and will channel judicial
    discretion to ensure a higher degree of uniformity and predictability in resolving choice-of-law issues. (pp. 31-36)
    8. Applying section 142 to the facts of this case, New Jersey’s statute of limitations governs because the Court
    cannot conclude that “maintenance of the claim would serve no substantial interest” of New Jersey and because
    there are no “exceptional circumstances” that call for the application of Alabama’s limitations period. Restatement
    (Second), supra, § 142(2)(a). (pp. 36-40)
    The judgment of the Appellate Division is REVERSED and the jury’s verdict and damages award are
    REINSTATED. The matter is REMANDED to the Appellate Division for consideration of the unaddressed issues.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, FERNANDEZ-VINA, SOLOMON, and
    TIMPONE join in JUSTICE ALBIN’s opinion. JUSTICE PATTERSON did not participate.
    2
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    A-28 September Term 2015
    076524
    ANDREW McCARRELL,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    HOFFMANN-LA ROCHE, INC., and
    ROCHE LABORATORIES, INC.,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    Argued October 13, 2016 – Decided January 24, 2017
    On certification to the Superior Court,
    Appellate Division.
    David R. Buchanan argued the cause for
    appellant (Seeger Weiss, attorneys; Mr.
    Buchanan, Michael D. Hook and Mary Jane
    Bass, members of the Florida bar, on the
    briefs).
    Paul W. Schmidt, a member of the District of
    Columbia bar, argued the cause for
    respondents (Gibbons and Dughi Hewit &
    Domalewski, attorneys; Mr. Schmidt, Michelle
    M. Bufano, Natalie H. Mantell, Russell L.
    Hewit, and Michael X. Imbroscio, a member of
    the District of Columbia bar, of counsel and
    on the briefs).
    Christopher M. Placitella argued the cause
    for amicus curiae New Jersey Association for
    Justice (Cohen, Placitella & Roth,
    attorneys; Mr. Placitella and Jared M.
    Placitella, of counsel and on the brief).
    David R. Kott argued the cause for amicus
    curiae The New Jersey Civil Justice
    Institute (Mr. Kott and Edward J. Fanning,
    Jr., of counsel; Mr. Kott, Mr. Fanning, and
    1
    Gary R. Tulp, on the brief).
    JUSTICE ALBIN delivered the opinion of the Court.
    Over the years, our choice-of-law jurisprudence has striven
    to structure rules that will lead to predictable and uniform
    results that are fair and just and that will meet the reasonable
    expectations of the parties.   In this appeal, we attempt to
    advance that goal.
    Accutane is a prescription medication for the treatment of
    severe cases of acne.   In this products-liability action filed
    in New Jersey, plaintiff Andrew McCarrell, an Alabama resident,
    claims that he developed a virulent form of inflammatory bowel
    disease as a result of taking Accutane.   He also claims that had
    Accutane’s warning labels adequately informed him of the risks
    and dangers associated with Accutane, he would not have taken
    the medication.
    Plaintiff was prescribed and took Accutane in Alabama, and
    he developed and was treated for inflammatory bowel disease in
    that state.   Defendants Hoffmann-La Roche, Inc., and Roche
    Laboratories, Inc., both New Jersey corporations, (collectively
    Roche), designed, manufactured, and labeled Accutane in New
    Jersey and distributed the medication from this State.
    Plaintiff timely filed the products-liability action under
    New Jersey’s statute of limitations, but Alabama’s limitations
    period had expired by the time of the filing.   The issue is
    2
    which state’s statute of limitations applies under New Jersey’s
    choice-of-law jurisprudence.
    The trial court concluded that under the governmental-
    interest test articulated in Gantes v. Kason Corp., 
    145 N.J. 478
    , 484 (1996), New Jersey’s statute of limitations applied.
    In the most recent trial of this case, a jury found Roche liable
    on plaintiff’s failure-to-warn claim and awarded damages.
    The Appellate Division reversed and dismissed the action,
    finding that Alabama’s statute of limitations governed under the
    substantial-relationship test in sections 146, 145, and 6 of the
    Restatement (Second) of Conflicts of Law (1971) (Am. Law Inst.,
    amended 1988) (Restatement (Second)).   The American Law
    Institute crafted that test to determine whether the forum
    state’s or another state’s substantive law applies in a tort
    action.   That test begins with a presumption favoring the law of
    the state where the injury occurred.
    The American Law Institute, however, fashioned a different
    test to resolve choice-of-law determinations involving statutes
    of limitations.   Under section 142 of the Second Restatement,
    the statute of limitations of the forum state -- here, New
    Jersey -- applies if that state has a substantial interest in
    the maintenance of the claim and there are no “exceptional
    circumstances” that “make such a result unreasonable.”
    We hold that section 142 of the Second Restatement is now
    3
    the operative choice-of-law rule for resolving statute-of-
    limitations conflicts because it will channel judicial
    discretion and lead to more predictable and uniform results that
    are consistent with the just expectations of the parties.     The
    adoption of section 142 is also a natural progression in our
    conversion from the governmental-interest test to the Second
    Restatement begun in P.V. ex rel. T.V. v. Camp Jaycee, 
    197 N.J. 132
    (2008), which adopted sections 146, 145, and 6 for resolving
    conflicts of substantive tort law.   The Appellate Division
    mistakenly read Camp Jaycee as suggesting that we would adopt
    the same choice-of-law rule for purposes of both substantive law
    and statutes of limitations.
    An analysis under section 142 of the Second Restatement
    leads to the conclusion that New Jersey’s statute of limitations
    was properly applied to this products-liability action.      Our
    jurisprudence has long recognized that this State has a
    substantial interest in deterring its manufacturers from placing
    dangerous products in the stream of commerce.   Inadequate
    warning labels can render prescription medications dangerous.
    No exceptional circumstances are present that would render the
    application of New Jersey’s limitations period unreasonable.
    Importantly, even were we to apply our previous governmental-
    interest test, the outcome would be no different.
    We therefore reverse and reinstate the jury’s verdict and
    4
    award.   We remand to the Appellate Division for consideration of
    the unaddressed issues remaining on appeal.
    I.
    A.
    In July 2003, plaintiff filed a products-liability action
    in the Superior Court, Law Division, alleging that defendant
    Roche -- the New Jersey manufacturer, marketer, and distributor
    of Accutane -- failed to provide adequate warnings about the
    risks and side effects associated with taking Accutane.
    Plaintiff asserts that had he received proper warnings about the
    potentially devastating side effects of Accutane, he would not
    have taken the medication, which he claims was the proximate
    cause of his inflammatory bowel disease.   Plaintiff also alleges
    that Roche’s mislabeling of Accutane violated the New Jersey
    Consumer Fraud Act, N.J.S.A. 56:8-1 to -20.
    The sole issue before us is whether the statute of
    limitations of New Jersey (the forum state) or Alabama (the
    injury-site state) governs this case.    From the voluminous trial
    and pre-trial record, we recite the facts relevant to address
    that issue.
    B.
    Plaintiff, a resident of Alabama, had suffered from acne
    since high school, and antibiotics proved to be an ineffective
    treatment.    In June 1995, when plaintiff was twenty-four years
    5
    old, his dermatologist prescribed Accutane.    Plaintiff took
    daily doses of the medicine for the next four months.     Four
    weeks into the treatment program, plaintiff experienced dry
    eyes, achy joints, and chapped lips but complained of no other
    adverse side effects.    After completing his regimen of Accutane,
    plaintiff noticed that his skin was clearer.    At a four-month
    post-Accutane review with his dermatologist in February 1996,
    plaintiff reported that the prior side effects had subsided and
    that he had experienced no new health problems.
    In August 1996, ten months after he stopped taking
    Accutane, plaintiff began experiencing intense stomach pain and
    diarrhea.    Over the next several months, plaintiff’s condition
    worsened, and his primary care physician referred him to a
    gastroenterologist.     In November 1996, plaintiff was diagnosed
    as suffering from inflammatory bowel disease.     By the next
    month, as a result of constant bleeding from the rectum,
    plaintiff became anemic.    Plaintiff’s weight had dropped from
    162 pounds, his pre-Accutane weight, to just 114 pounds at this
    point.
    Over the next several years, plaintiff underwent multiple
    surgeries.   Plaintiff’s colon and rectum were removed and
    replaced with a j-pouch -- an artificially constructed reservoir
    at the end of the small intestines -- that is intended to allow
    for ordinary bowel movements.    The j-pouch became inflamed,
    6
    causing plaintiff to suffer persistent and severe
    gastrointestinal pain and flu-like symptoms.    To permit the j-
    pouch to heal, a colostomy bag was attached to plaintiff’s small
    intestine through a surgical procedure.     Plaintiff subsisted
    with the colostomy bag for four-and-one-half years until another
    surgery reconnected the j-pouch to the small intestine.
    Plaintiff continues to suffer from severe abdominal cramping,
    multiple bowel movements every day, and episodes of
    incontinence.
    Plaintiff was prescribed and took Accutane in Alabama and
    was treated for the medical complications related to
    inflammatory bowel disease in that state.
    C.
    Defendants Hoffmann-La Roche, Inc., and Roche Laboratories,
    Inc., were incorporated in New Jersey and maintained their
    corporate offices here.   They designed, manufactured, and
    labeled Accutane in New Jersey and distributed the product from
    this State.
    In 1982, the United States Food and Drug Administration
    approved Accutane, known generically as isotretinoin, for the
    treatment of recalcitrant nodular acne.     At the time that
    plaintiff’s physician prescribed, and plaintiff took, Accutane,
    Roche had provided various warnings about Accutane’s possible
    adverse side effects -- including potential gastrointestinal
    7
    disorders -- by means of product labeling, a patient brochure,
    and a Dear Doctor letter.1
    Plaintiff claims that the Accutane label and other warnings
    conveyed the impression that the listed adverse reactions to
    Accutane would arise while the patient was taking the medication
    and that discontinuing its use would resolve such problems.
    Plaintiff also contends that the warnings did not suggest that
    he could develop an irreversible case of inflammatory bowel
    disease after completion of the Accutane regimen.   He asserts
    that, during the period he took Accutane, Roche knew or should
    have known that Accutane not only could trigger inflammatory
    bowel disease after its use, but that it also could cause
    irreversible damage to his organs, and that Roche failed to
    provide adequate warnings to him and his physician about those
    risks.
    Roche counters that the warnings sufficiently apprised
    defendant of the associated risks of taking Accutane and that
    plaintiff’s use of the medication was not the proximate cause of
    his inflammatory bowel disease.
    D.
    1 A “Dear Doctor letter” is a letter sent to physicians and other
    health-care professionals by a drug manufacturer or the Food and
    Drug Administration advising of substantial new warning
    information. PLIVA, Inc. v. Mensing, 
    564 U.S. 604
    , 615, 131 S.
    Ct. 2567, 2576, 
    180 L. Ed. 2d 580
    , 590 (2011).
    8
    Roche moved for summary judgment to dismiss plaintiff’s
    claims on the basis that they were barred by Alabama’s two-year
    statute of limitations governing personal injury claims.      See
    Ala. Code § 6-2-38(l).   Roche reasoned that because plaintiff’s
    injury occurred in 1996 and his claim was filed in 2003, the
    claim was not filed within the appropriate limitations period.
    In contrast, plaintiff argued that the equitable “discovery
    rule” incorporated into New Jersey’s two-year statute of
    limitations, N.J.S.A. 2A:14-2, was the applicable law.     Under
    the “discovery rule,” the statute of limitations does not begin
    to run “until the injured party discovers, or by an exercise of
    reasonable diligence and intelligence should have discovered
    that he may have a basis for an actionable claim.”   Lopez v.
    Swyer, 
    62 N.J. 267
    , 272 (1973).   Alabama’s statute of
    limitations does not have an equitable tolling provision.     Cline
    v. Ashland, Inc., 
    970 So. 2d 755
    , 760-61 (Ala.) (See, J.,
    concurring), cert. denied, 
    551 U.S. 1103
    , 
    127 S. Ct. 2916
    , 
    168 L. Ed. 2d 244
    (2007).
    The Honorable Carol Higbee, J.S.C., who presided over the
    case, denied Roche’s motion.   Judge Higbee stated that the
    governmental-interest test, as expounded in 
    Gantes, supra
    , 145
    N.J. at 484, directed that New Jersey’s statute of limitations
    governs the case.   She found that Alabama had no discernible
    interest in barring one of its residents from pursuing a claim
    9
    against a New Jersey pharmaceutical company in a New Jersey
    court and that this State had a singularly distinct interest “in
    deterring the manufacture and distribution of unsafe products
    within the state,” quoting 
    id. at 490.
    Judge Higbee determined that plaintiff did not become aware
    that his use of Accutane could have caused his inflammatory
    bowel disease until June 2003.   Because plaintiff filed his
    complaint six weeks after that discovery, Judge Higbee concluded
    that, under New Jersey’s equitable tolling rule, the complaint
    was timely filed.
    E.
    At the conclusion of a four-week jury trial in 2007, the
    court instructed the jury on Alabama’s substantive law,
    including its products-liability law.2   The jury found in favor
    of plaintiff on the failure-to-warn claim and awarded damages in
    the amount of $2,619,000.   The jury rejected plaintiff’s
    consumer-fraud claim.
    The Appellate Division reversed the jury’s failure-to-warn
    verdict based on erroneous evidentiary rulings by the trial
    court and remanded for a new trial.   The Appellate Division,
    however, approved of the trial court’s “sound” reasoning in
    finding that “the competing policy interests at stake” called
    2 Neither party contests in the present appeal that Alabama’s
    products-liability law governs this case.
    10
    for the application of New Jersey’s statute of limitations on
    the failure-to-warn claim.   The Appellate Division also
    concluded that the trial court “had ample factual grounds to
    find that [New Jersey’s] two-year limitation period should be
    equitably tolled to accommodate plaintiff’s lawsuit.”
    We denied Roche’s petition for certification.    McCarrell v.
    Hoffmann-La Roche, Inc., 
    199 N.J. 518
    (2009).
    F.
    Plaintiff’s second trial in 2010 lasted about four weeks.
    The jury found Roche liable on plaintiff’s failure-to-warn claim
    and awarded plaintiff $25,159,530.   Roche moved for a judgment
    notwithstanding the verdict, arguing again that the trial court
    erroneously applied New Jersey’s limitations period.    Relying on
    Camp 
    Jaycee, supra
    , 
    197 N.J. 132
    , and Cornett v. Johnson &
    Johnson, 
    414 N.J. Super. 365
    (App. Div. 2010), aff’d as
    modified, 
    211 N.J. 362
    (2012), Roche maintained that the
    governmental-interest test had been supplanted by the most-
    significant-relationship test of sections 146 and 145 of the
    Second Restatement, which starts with a presumption in favor of
    the substantive law of the state where the injury occurred.
    That test, Roche asserted, compelled the application of
    Alabama’s limitations period.
    Judge Higbee denied the motion, holding that Roche’s
    change-of-law argument was not timely because Roche did not
    11
    argue for adoption of those sections of the Second Restatement
    when it appeared before the Appellate Division, despite the
    availability of the Camp Jaycee decision.3   Judge Higbee,
    moreover, concluded that the decision to apply the New Jersey
    limitations period would be no different if she were to engage
    in an analysis under Second Restatement sections 146, 145, and
    6.
    G.
    In an unpublished opinion, an appellate panel accepted
    Roche’s change-of-law argument -- the argument that Camp Jaycee
    altered the landscape -- and held that Alabama’s two-year
    statute of limitations governed under sections 146, 145, and 6
    of the Second Restatement.   It noted that plaintiff received his
    inflammatory bowel disease diagnosis on November 26, 1996, but
    did not file his claims until July 23, 2003.   Because Alabama’s
    statute had no equitable tolling provision, the panel vacated
    the jury’s verdict and award and dismissed plaintiff’s complaint
    as having been filed out of time.
    The panel held that under section 146 of the Second
    Restatement, “the law of the state where the injury occurred” --
    here, Alabama -- applies “unless another state has a more
    3 Camp Jaycee was decided six days before oral argument in the
    Appellate Division and three-and-one-half months before the
    Appellate Division rendered its decision.
    12
    significant relationship to the issue” based on an analysis of
    the factors enumerated in Second Restatement sections 145 and 6.
    After analyzing those factors, the panel concluded that the
    injury-site presumption had not been overcome.   It focused on
    the fact that Alabama is where plaintiff resided, where he was
    prescribed and took Accutane, and where he developed and was
    treated for inflammatory bowel disease.   The panel took the view
    that “New Jersey has little interest in protecting the
    compensation right of [an out-of-state] resident,” quoting
    
    Cornett, supra
    , 414 N.J. Super. at 381.
    The panel expressly declined to apply section 142 of the
    Second Restatement -- a section specifically crafted to resolve
    the choice-of-law issue that arises when the forum state’s and
    another state’s statutes of limitations are in conflict.     Under
    section 142, the limitations period of the forum state applies
    unless it has “no substantial interest” in maintaining the claim
    in its courts.
    The panel did not reach the remaining issues raised by
    Roche on appeal.4
    We granted plaintiff’s petition for certification.
    4 Roche also claimed that the trial court erred in limiting
    defendant from calling certain expert witnesses; in allowing the
    case to be submitted to the jury in the absence of sufficient
    evidence establishing proximate causation; and in not granting a
    new trial or, alternatively, a remittitur because of the
    excessiveness of the damages award.
    13
    McCarrell v. Hoffmann-La Roche, Inc., 
    223 N.J. 555
    (2015).    We
    also granted the motions of the New Jersey Association for
    Justice and the New Jersey Civil Justice Institute to
    participate as amici curiae.
    II.
    A.
    Plaintiff argues that the Appellate Division erred by not
    applying section 142 of the Second Restatement, entitled
    “Statute of Limitations of Forum.”   That section, he notes, is
    specifically designed to decide choice-of-law questions
    governing the timeliness of a tort action when two or more
    interested states have conflicting statutes of limitations.
    Plaintiff asserts that had the appellate panel in this case
    applied section 142 and its presumption favoring the forum
    state’s statute of limitations, it would have upheld the trial
    court’s finding that this State’s limitations period applies.
    Plaintiff further maintains that, even if Restatement sections
    146, 145, and 6 govern, along with the presumption favoring the
    injury-site state, a proper weighing of the factors would
    indicate that New Jersey, not Alabama, has the “most significant
    relationship” to this products-liability action.   Under either
    analysis, plaintiff submits, New Jersey’s statute of limitations
    applies.
    14
    Amicus New Jersey Association for Justice urges this Court
    to adopt section 142 of the Second Restatement, reasoning that
    142’s presumption favoring the forum state’s statute of
    limitations will allow for more uniform and predictable choice-
    of-law decision-making and advance New Jersey’s strong interest
    in regulating its manufacturers.
    B.
    Roche argues that the proper choice-of-law analysis for
    determining the applicable statute of limitations is set forth
    in sections 146, 145, and 6 of the Second Restatement.      Roche
    submits that viewing New Jersey’s and Alabama’s respective
    interests through the lens of those Restatement sections leads
    to the conclusion that plaintiff did not overcome the
    presumption favoring use of the injury-site state’s statute of
    limitations.   Roche therefore asserts that the Appellate
    Division correctly dismissed plaintiff’s action under Alabama’s
    limitations period.
    Roche asserts that plaintiff -- by advancing section 142 as
    the governing choice-of-law modality -- is attempting to revive
    the now-defunct common-law rule that the forum state’s statute
    of limitations prevails as a matter of procedure.   That
    approach, Roche insists, was rejected by this Court in Heavner
    v. Uniroyal, Inc., 
    63 N.J. 130
    (1973).
    15
    Roche further asserts that, even if this Court were to
    apply section 142 to the choice-of-law issue in this case, the
    outcome would be no different; Alabama’s statute of limitations
    would govern because nearly all of the significant events
    related to this litigation occurred in Alabama.
    Amicus New Jersey Civil Justice Institute also asks this
    Court to reject plaintiff’s invitation to adopt section 142 of the
    Second Restatement.    The Civil Justice Institute expresses concern
    that ratifying section 142’s framework will encourage forum
    shopping by out-of-state residents seeking to sue New Jersey
    pharmaceutical companies in our courts.
    III.
    When a civil action is brought in New Jersey, our courts
    apply New Jersey’s choice-of-law rules in deciding whether this
    State’s or another state’s statute of limitations governs the
    matter.   
    Gantes, supra
    , 145 N.J. at 484.    This appeal raises the
    question:     What are our choice-of-law rules in determining the
    applicable statute of limitations in a tort action?     The trial
    court used the governmental-interest test expounded in Gantes,
    and the Appellate Division used the significant-relationship
    test found in sections 146, 145, and 6 of the Second Restatement
    -- a test intended to determine which state’s substantive law
    will apply.    Now, plaintiff argues that we should use the
    analytical framework set forth in section 142 of the Second
    16
    Restatement, which was specifically designed to determine
    whether the forum state’s or another state’s statute of
    limitations will govern.
    The analytical framework for deciding how to resolve a
    choice-of-law issue is a matter of law.   See Mastondrea v.
    Occidental Hotels Mgmt. S.A., 
    391 N.J. Super. 261
    , 283 (App.
    Div. 2007).   Because the trial court and Appellate Division have
    no better insight than this Court in determining such matters,
    we are not bound by their legal conclusions and therefore our
    review is de novo.   See Zaman v. Felton, 
    219 N.J. 199
    , 216
    (2014).
    We begin with a brief discussion of some general choice-of-
    law principles governing statutes of limitations.
    A.
    The first inquiry in any choice-of-law analysis is whether
    the laws of the states with interests in the litigation are in
    conflict.   
    Gantes, supra
    , 145 N.J. at 484.   When application of
    the forum state’s or another state’s statute of limitations
    results in the same outcome, no conflict exists, and the law of
    the forum state governs.   Rowe v. Hoffmann-La Roche, Inc., 
    189 N.J. 615
    , 621 (2007).   In contrast, when a complaint is timely
    filed within one state’s statute of limitations but is filed
    outside another state’s, then a true conflict is present.     See
    Schmelzle v. ALZA Corp., 
    561 F. Supp. 2d 1046
    , 1048 (D. Minn.
    17
    2008).   In other words, a true conflict of law arises when
    choosing between one or another state’s statute of limitations
    is outcome determinative.   See 
    ibid. In that circumstance,
    a
    court must decide, under the appropriate choice-of-law rule,
    which jurisdiction’s statute governs.    In this case, New
    Jersey’s and Alabama’s statutes of limitations are in conflict.
    Plaintiff’s lawsuit is only timely if New Jersey’s limitations
    period applies.
    The history of our evolving choice-of-law jurisprudence
    will provide context to the issue before us.
    B.
    Under the common law, the forum state -- the state in which
    a lawsuit was filed -- applied its own statute of limitations
    when a choice-of-law issue arose.    See, e.g., Smith v. Smith, 
    90 N.J.L. 282
    , 286-87 (E. & A. 1917) (“A foreign judgment is
    subject to the statute of limitations of the lex fori[,] . . .
    the law of the place where the action is instituted.” (citation
    omitted)).   That approach was based on the common-law notion
    that statutes of limitations are “procedural in nature and
    therefore subject to the law of the forum.”    Marshall v. Geo. M.
    Brewster & Son, Inc., 
    37 N.J. 176
    , 180 (1962); accord
    Restatement (Second) of Conflicts of Law § 142 (Am. Law Inst.
    18
    1971).5
    In Heavner v. Uniroyal, Inc., we rejected the inflexible
    common-law rule of always applying our own statute of
    limitations in choice-of-law matters merely because limitations
    periods were denominated as procedural.   
    63 N.J. 130
    , 140-41
    (1973).   We held that we were not bound to follow a rule based
    solely on historical tradition when no sound rationale remained
    for keeping the rule.   See 
    id. at 135-40.
      Instead, we adopted a
    new rule that weighed the contacts that each state had to the
    matter in determining the applicable statute of limitations.6
    
    Id. at 141.
    Heavner involved a products-liability action brought in New
    5Indeed, the 1971 version of Second Restatement section 142
    adhered to this common-law approach. The original version of
    section 142 instructed that “[a]n action will not be maintained
    if it is barred by the statute of limitations of the forum” and
    that “[a]n action will be maintained if it is not barred by the
    statute of limitations of the forum, even though it would be
    barred by the statute of limitations of another state.”
    Restatement (Second) of Conflicts of Law § 142 (Am. Law Inst.
    1971) (emphasis added). In light of evolving choice-of-law
    jurisprudence and scholarship, the American Law Institute
    revised section 142 in 1988, reframing it to include a
    rebuttable presumption favoring the forum state. Restatement
    (Second) of Conflicts of Law § 142 (1971) (Am. Law Inst.,
    amended 1988).
    6 By this time, this Court had also abandoned the lex loci
    delicti approach to resolve conflicts of substantive law,
    instead favoring the governmental-interest analysis. See Mellk
    v. Sarahson, 
    49 N.J. 226
    , 234-35 (1967) (criticizing First
    Restatement choice-of-law analysis as “unvarying and mechanical”
    approach that frustrated state public policy).
    19
    Jersey.   The plaintiff, a North Carolina resident, was driving a
    truck purchased in North Carolina when the truck’s tire blew
    out, causing an accident in North Carolina.    
    Id. at 133-34.
       The
    allegedly defective tire was mounted in North Carolina by the
    defendant Pullman, a Delaware corporation, which also sold the
    truck to the plaintiff.   
    Id. at 134.
       The defendant Uniroyal, a
    New Jersey corporation, was the manufacturer and distributor of
    Uniroyal tires but was not alleged to have manufactured the
    defective tire in New Jersey.   Ibid.; see also 
    Gantes, supra
    ,
    145 N.J. at 487.   Both of the defendant corporations did
    business throughout the United States.    
    Heavner, supra
    , 63 N.J.
    at 134.
    We found that the only connection between New Jersey and
    the products-liability action was Uniroyal’s incorporation in
    this State.   
    Id. at 134
    n.3.   In short, “New Jersey ha[d] no
    substantial interest in the matter.”     
    Id. at 141.
      We concluded
    that, despite the fact New Jersey was the forum state, North
    Carolina’s statute of limitations should apply because that was
    where all the parties were located, where the cause of action
    arose, and where all relevant incidents occurred.      
    Id. at 134
    n.3, 141.   The plaintiff’s complaint was time barred under North
    Carolina law and therefore dismissed.    
    Id. at 141-42.
    Importantly, we stressed that our ruling was limited to the
    “factual pattern” in Heavner and that “there may well be
    20
    situations involving significant interests of this state where
    it would be inequitable or unjust to apply the concept we here
    espouse.”7    
    Id. at 141.
    In Gantes v. Kason Corp., 
    145 N.J. 478
    (1996), we further
    refined our choice-of-law rules guiding the selection of the
    appropriate statute of limitations among states with interests
    in the litigation.    Relying on the animating principles of
    Heavner, we declared that “New Jersey’s rule applies a flexible
    ‘governmental-interest’ standard, which requires application of
    the law of the state with the greatest interest in resolving the
    particular issue that is raised in the underlying litigation.”
    
    Id. at 484.
       To determine the state with the greatest interest,
    we instructed courts to “identify the governmental policies
    underlying the law of each state and how those policies are
    affected by each state’s contacts to the litigation and to the
    parties.”    
    Id. at 485
    (quoting Veazey v. Doremus, 
    103 N.J. 244
    ,
    7 The Heavner Court specifically cited Marshall v. Geo. M.
    Brewster & Son, Inc. as one example in which New Jersey’s
    “significant interests” would warrant application of New
    Jersey’s statute of limitations, though noting that that case
    was affirmed using New Jersey’s old common-law procedural
    approach. 
    Heavner, supra
    , 63 N.J. at 141 n.6. In Marshall, the
    decedent was fatally injured at a Pennsylvania railroad
    improvement project involving New Jersey contractors, who had
    their principal places of business in this State. 
    Ibid. New Jersey’s statute
    of limitations applied to that wrongful death
    action brought in this State, despite the fact that decedent and
    his representative were nonresidents and the injury occurred in
    another state. 
    Ibid. 21 248 (1986)).
    Gantes involved a Georgia resident who died as a result of
    an allegedly defective moving part in a Georgia processing
    plant.   
    Id. at 481-82.
      Her estate and heirs filed a wrongful
    death and survivorship products-liability action in this State
    against the New Jersey company that manufactured, distributed,
    and sold the part.     
    Ibid. The complaint was
    filed after
    Georgia’s statute of repose had expired but within New Jersey’s
    two-year statute of limitations, which had been equitably tolled
    by the discovery rule.    
    Id. at 485
    -87.
    The obvious conflict between New Jersey’s and Georgia’s
    limitations periods required an analysis of the two states’
    interests in resolving the dispute.      
    Ibid. In assessing Georgia’s
    interests, the Court observed that Georgia’s
    legislature enacted its ten-year statute of repose “to eliminate
    stale claims and stabilize products liability underwriting.”
    
    Id. at 486
    (quoting Chrysler Corp. v. Batten, 
    450 S.E.2d 208
    ,
    212 (Ga. 1994)).     Georgia’s statute of repose, however, was not
    implicated because it “is intended only to unburden Georgia
    courts and to shield Georgia manufacturers from claims based on
    product defects long after the product has been marketed or
    sold.”   
    Id. at 496.
      The Court emphasized that a New Jersey
    lawsuit against a New Jersey manufacturer did not raise concerns
    of “‘open-ended liability’ on [Georgia’s] insurance industry and
    22
    stale claims on its courts.”    
    Id. at 494.
        Georgia’s public
    policy, moreover, would not be frustrated by allowing, under New
    Jersey’s statute of limitations, a Georgia resident’s wrongful
    death action to proceed against a New Jersey manufacturer in a
    New Jersey court.   
    Id. at 498.
    In evaluating New Jersey’s governmental interests, the
    Court recognized this State’s “strong interest in encouraging
    the manufacture and distribution of safe products for the public
    and, conversely, in deterring the manufacture and distribution
    of unsafe products within the state.”        
    Id. at 490.
      Meritorious
    products-liability actions that are timely filed and hold
    manufacturers accountable for dangerous products further that
    interest.   
    Ibid. In Gantes, the
    plaintiffs invoked the New
    Jersey court system to litigate a claim that had a material link
    to this State.   
    Id. at 492.
      Unlike Georgia’s statute of repose,
    New Jersey’s statute of limitations not only discourages the
    filing of stale claims, but also, through its discovery rule,
    advances “flexible, equitable considerations based on notions of
    fairness to the parties and the justice in allowing claims to be
    resolved on their merits.”     
    Id. at 487.
       Our Court noted that
    New Jersey’s substantial interest in deterrence outweighed any
    countervailing concerns about “burdens on domestic manufacturers
    or [about] fears of forum shopping and increased litigation in
    the courts of this State.”     
    Id. at 493.
    23
    Accordingly, our Court applied New Jersey’s limitations
    period and permitted the wrongful death lawsuit to proceed.       
    Id. at 499.
    C.
    This Court had adopted the governmental-interest test to
    resolve choice-of-law issues concerning substantive tort law
    before Heavner and Gantes adopted that test for statutes of
    limitations.   See 
    Mellk, supra
    , 49 N.J. at 234-35 (finding that
    advantages of uniformly applying law of state where injury
    occurred “must yield when an unvarying and mechanical
    application of this rule would cause a result which frustrates a
    strong policy of this state while not serving the policy of the
    state where the accident occurred”); see also Camp 
    Jaycee, supra
    , 197 N.J. at 139 (noting that “[i]n 1967, we joined with
    other jurisdictions in abandoning the First Restatement approach
    to tort cases, embracing the modern governmental interest
    analysis”).    Significantly, our jurisprudence recognized that
    the application of the governmental-interest test might lead to
    different choice-of-law results concerning substantive law and
    statutes of limitations.    For example, in 
    Gantes, supra
    , this
    Court recognized that Georgia’s substantive products-liability
    law governed and, yet, found that New Jersey had the greater
    governmental interest in applying its statute of 
    limitations. 145 N.J. at 492-93
    , 495.
    24
    The governmental-interest test remained the analytical tool
    for deciding choice-of-law issues related to substantive tort
    law and statutes of limitations until P.V. ex rel. T.V. v. Camp
    Jaycee, 
    197 N.J. 132
    (2008).   In Camp Jaycee, this Court
    formally adopted the Second Restatement’s most-significant-
    relationship test in sections 146, 145, and 6 for deciding the
    choice of substantive law in tort cases involving more than one
    state.   
    Id. at 142-43.
      We considered the most-significant-
    relationship test to be a more nuanced approach than the
    governmental-interest test.    
    Id. at 142
    n.4 (noting that Second
    Restatement’s “most significant relationship test embodies all
    of the elements of the governmental interest test plus a series
    of other factors deemed worthy of consideration”).
    We noted, generally, in Camp Jaycee that one of the
    benefits of the Second Restatement is the use of “presumptions
    and detailed considerations that bear on conflicts analyses” in
    deciding choice of law.   
    Id. at 140
    (emphasis added).   Indeed,
    “a set of presumptions” is the starting point for judges under
    the Second Restatement.   
    Ibid. (quoting William L.
    Reynolds,
    Legal Process and Choice of Law, 
    56 Md. L
    . Rev. 1371, 1388
    (1997)); see, e.g., Restatement (Second), supra, § 142 (setting
    presumption for choice of statutes of limitations in tort
    cases); Restatement (Second), supra, § 146 (setting presumption
    for choice of substantive tort law); Restatement (Second),
    25
    supra, § 188 (setting presumption for choice of contract law).
    In Camp 
    Jaycee, supra
    , we held that in a personal-injury
    action, the substantive law of the place of injury is presumed
    to be the governing law under section 
    146. 197 N.J. at 141
    .
    That presumption is not overcome unless some other state has a
    more significant relationship with the parties and the
    occurrence based on an assessment of each state’s contacts under
    section 145 and the guiding principles enunciated in section 6.8
    
    Id. at 144-45.
      Absent another state having a more significant
    relationship, the substantive law of the injury-site state
    applies.   
    Id. at 145.
    The Camp Jaycee Court was well aware that the Second
    Restatement had crafted different presumptions to apply in
    various other scenarios.    See 
    id. at 140-41.
      In Camp Jaycee,
    choosing between this State’s and another state’s statute of
    limitations was not an issue.   If it were an issue, we surely
    would have acknowledged section 142, which is entitled, “Statute
    of Limitations of Forum.”   The Court, therefore, had no reason
    to appraise the Second Restatement’s presumption that favors
    8 The section 145 factors are: “(a) the place where the injury
    occurred, (b) the place where the conduct causing the injury
    occurred, (c) the domicil, residence, nationality, place of
    incorporation and place of business of the parties, and (d) the
    place where the relationship, if any, between the parties is
    centered.” Restatement (Second), supra, § 145. The section 6
    factors are listed infra at 31.
    26
    applying the forum’s statute of limitations in tort cases.       See
    Restatement (Second), supra, § 142.
    In Cornett v. Johnson & Johnson, 
    211 N.J. 362
    (2012), the
    Court did not adopt the Appellate Division’s use of the injury-
    site presumption of Restatement section 146 in determining
    whether New Jersey’s or Kentucky’s statute of limitations
    applied in that products-liability case.   See also Cornett v.
    Johnson & Johnson, 
    414 N.J. Super. 365
    , 378-83 (App. Div. 2010),
    aff’d as modified, 
    211 N.J. 362
    (2012).    Instead, by finding
    that there was no conflict between the statutes of limitations
    of the two states, the Court elided the issue of whether the
    governmental-interest test or the Second Restatement would
    govern.9   
    Cornett, supra
    , 211 N.J. at 377-78.
    9 In Cornett, the plaintiffs’ lawsuit expired under Kentucky’s
    one-year statute of limitations, despite its equitable tolling
    provision, whereas the lawsuit was viable under New Jersey’s
    two-year statute and its equitable discovery rule. 
    Cornett, supra
    , 211 N.J. at 374, 377-78. The appellate panel in Cornett
    assumed for purposes of its choice-of-law analysis that there
    was a conflict. 
    Cornett, supra
    , 414 N.J. Super. at 378.
    Compare Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 413.140(1)(a), and Perkins v. Ne.
    Log Homes, 
    808 S.W.2d 809
    , 818-19 (Ky. 1991), with N.J.S.A.
    2A:14-2, and Baird v. Am. Med. Optics, 
    155 N.J. 54
    , 65-66
    (1998). Our Court concluded that, because the two states had
    equitable tolling provisions, the differences in their
    limitations periods did not “create a true conflict of laws”
    because the differences were not “offensive or repugnant to the
    public policy of this 
    state.” 211 N.J. at 377
    . Going forward,
    to avoid any confusion, we are establishing a bright-line rule:
    a conflict of law is present whenever the selection of one
    statute of limitations over another is outcome dispositive. See
    
    Schmelzle, supra
    , 561 F. Supp. 2d at 1048 (“An actual conflict
    exists if choosing the [statute of limitations] of one state or
    27
    D.
    Camp Jaycee’s adoption of sections 146, 145, and 6 of the
    Second Restatement to resolve conflicts of substantive law in
    tort actions with an injury-site presumption was not a signal
    that we would apply the same choice-of-law test for statutes of
    limitations.   Indeed, the drafters of the Second Restatement did
    not intend that sections 146 and 145 would be used for statute-
    of-limitations choice-of-law determinations.    That is so because
    the American Law Institute crafted section 142 of the Second
    Restatement precisely to address statutes of limitations as an
    independent issue for choice-of-law purposes.   The rationales
    for whether the forum state’s substantive law or statute of
    limitations should govern are different.   That was evident in
    
    Gantes, supra
    , where Georgia’s products-liability law governed,
    but New Jersey’s statute of limitations 
    applied. 145 N.J. at 492-93
    , 495-96.
    The essential purpose of substantive tort law is to provide
    a remedy to a party who has been wronged, see Fu v. Fu, 
    160 N.J. 108
    , 123 (1999), whereas the essential purpose of a statute of
    the other is outcome determinative.” (citation omitted)); see
    also Spence-Parker v. Del. River & Bay Auth., 
    656 F. Supp. 2d 488
    , 497 (D.N.J. 2009) (reinforcing that only if “there is no
    divergence between the potentially applicable laws” is court not
    presented with conflict). To be clear, when a lawsuit is filed
    timely under one state’s statute of limitations but not under
    another’s, a conflict of law exists, and a choice-of-law
    analysis is required.
    28
    limitations is to encourage litigants to file timely claims and
    to bar the litigation of stale claims, see 
    Gantes, supra
    , 145
    N.J. at 486.    Those differences were recognized in the common
    law and are recognized by the presumptions in Second Restatement
    sections 146 and 142.
    There are strong policy reasons for this Court to adopt
    section 142 as the choice-of-law rule for statutes of
    limitations.    Incorporating section 142 into our choice-of-law
    analysis for tort purposes completes the conversion from the
    governmental-interest standard to the Second Restatement begun
    in Camp Jaycee.
    We therefore turn to a discussion of section 142 of the
    Second Restatement.
    E.
    The Second Restatement recognizes that when the forum state
    has a substantial interest in litigation brought in its courts,
    the forum state’s statute of limitations, ordinarily, will
    apply.   Section 142 provides:
    Whether a claim will be maintained against the
    defense of the statute of limitations is
    determined under the principles stated in § 6.
    In    general,    unless    the    exceptional
    circumstances of the case make such a result
    unreasonable:
    (1)   The forum will apply its own statute of
    limitations barring the claim.
    (2)   The forum will apply its own statute of
    29
    limitations permitting the claim unless:
    (a)    maintenance of the claim would serve
    no substantial interest of the
    forum; and
    (b)    the claim would be barred under the
    statute of limitations of a state
    having    a     more    significant
    relationship to the parties and the
    occurrence.
    [Restatement (Second), supra, § 142.]
    Section 142’s presumption, like other presumptions in the
    Second Restatement, channels judicial discretion and advances
    notions of uniformity and predictability.      Under section
    142(2)(a), the statute of limitations of the forum state
    generally applies whenever that state has a substantial interest
    in the maintenance of the claim.       See Restatement (Second),
    supra, § 142(2).     In that circumstance, the inquiry ends for
    statute-of-limitations purposes, unless exceptional
    circumstances would render that result unreasonable.
    Restatement (Second), supra, § 142.       Only when the forum state
    has “no substantial interest” in the maintenance of the claim
    does a court consider section 142(2)(b) -- whether “the claim
    would be barred under the statute of limitations of a state
    having a more significant relationship to the parties and the
    occurrence.”   Restatement (Second), supra, § 142(2)(a)-(b).       In
    determining whether another state has a more significant
    relationship to the parties and the occurrence, a court must
    30
    then consider overarching choice-of-law principles embodied in
    the factors in section 6:
    (a)   the   needs   of  the    interstate   and
    international systems,
    (b)   the relevant policies of the forum,
    (c)   the relevant policies of other interested
    states and the relative interests of
    those states in the determination of the
    particular issue,
    (d)   the     protection       of    justified
    expectations,
    (e)   the   basic  policies    underlying   the
    particular field of law,
    (f)   certainty, predictability and uniformity
    of result, and
    (g)   ease in the determination and application
    of the law to be applied.
    [Restatement (Second), supra, § 6(2).]
    Section 142 benefits from an ease of application; places
    both this State’s and out-of-state’s citizens on an equal
    playing field, thus promoting principles of comity; advances
    predictability and uniformity in decision-making; and allows for
    greater certainty in the expectations of the parties.
    Second Restatement section 142 makes clear that when New
    Jersey has a substantial interest in the litigation and is the
    forum state, it will generally apply its statute of limitations.
    See Restatement (Second), supra, § 142(2).   That rule is
    consistent with our holding in 
    Gantes, supra
    , in which we
    31
    allowed an out-of-state citizen to pursue a products-liability
    action against a New Jersey manufacturer in our state courts
    because of New Jersey’s substantial interest in ensuring the
    manufacture and distribution of safe 
    products. 145 N.J. at 490
    .
    When claims are timely filed by a New Jersey or another state’s
    resident, and New Jersey has a substantial interest in the
    litigation, providing parity between an in-state and out-of-
    state citizen makes perfect sense in a system sensitive to
    interstate comity.
    This rule also benefits New Jersey companies.    Under the
    Appellate Division’s application of Second Restatement sections
    146 and 145, the statute of limitations of the state where the
    injury occurred would presumptively apply even when the New
    Jersey limitations period had expired.   In that circumstance,
    the out-of-state citizen could proceed with a claim when a New
    Jersey resident could not if the injury had occurred in this
    State.   That deprives New Jersey companies of the protections of
    this State’s statute of limitations against another state’s
    longer limitations period.
    A New Jersey company, generally, should not have to defend
    against a claim that is stale under this State’s statute of
    limitations in our courts, whether that claim is brought by a
    New Jersey resident or a citizen of another state.   When a
    plaintiff from another state with a longer limitations period
    32
    seeks to press a claim against a New Jersey manufacturer in our
    state courts after New Jersey’s statute of limitations has
    expired, section 142 ordinarily will not permit the claim to
    proceed.    See Restatement (Second), supra, § 142(1) (stating
    that absent “exceptional circumstances” that would make result
    “unreasonable,” “[t]he forum will apply its own statute of
    limitations barring the claim”).       Moreover, when New Jersey has
    no substantial interest in the litigation, under section 142,
    our courts will not apply our State’s statute of limitations to
    save a claim when another state has a more significant
    relationship to the case.     See Restatement (Second), supra,
    § 142(2).
    Pitcock v. Kasowitz, Benson, Torres & Friedman, LLP, 
    426 N.J. Super. 582
    (App. Div. 2012), illustrates this point.       In
    that case, the plaintiff -- a former partner in a New York City
    law firm -- filed a malicious-abuse-of-process lawsuit against
    the law firm.   
    Id. at 585.
      By the time the lawsuit was filed,
    New York’s one-year statute of limitations had expired, but New
    Jersey’s two-year limitations period had not.       
    Ibid. In light of
    Camp Jaycee’s adoption of the Second
    Restatement to resolve substantive tort law conflicts, the
    appellate panel predicted that this Court would “apply the ‘most
    significant relationship’ test of section 142 in determining the
    applicable statute of limitations” in tort cases.       
    Id. at 589.
    33
    Although the plaintiff was a New Jersey resident, the firm’s
    primary office was in New York, where the plaintiff worked.         
    Id. at 584.
       Previously, the firm had filed an action in New York
    Supreme Court claiming that the plaintiff breached contractual
    and fiduciary duties based on his allegedly improper conduct in
    New York.   
    Ibid. The firm’s New
    York claim ultimately was
    dismissed, which led to the malicious-abuse-of-process lawsuit
    filed by the plaintiff in New Jersey.      
    Id. at 584-85.
    In an opinion authored by Judge Skillman, the panel
    concluded that New Jersey did not have a substantial interest in
    “protecting its residents from financial harm arising from their
    professional activities in another state” and that New York
    “clearly ha[d] ‘a more significant relationship to the parties
    and the occurrence’ than New Jersey.”      
    Id. at 589-90
    (quoting
    Restatement (Second), supra, § 142(2)(b)).      Accordingly, the
    panel affirmed the dismissal of the action, applying New York’s
    one-year statute of limitations.      
    Id. at 591.
      Also of interest
    is Judge Skillman’s observation that application of section 142
    in that case did “not generally differ substantially from the
    ‘governmental interest’ test the Court used in Heavner and
    Gantes.”    
    Id. at 589.
    We agree that the results in Heavner and Gantes would be no
    different under a Second Restatement section 142 analysis than
    the actual results reached by the Court in those cases using the
    34
    governmental-interest test.    But there are meaningful
    distinctions between section 142 and the governmental-interest
    test.   Section 142’s presumption in favor of a forum state with
    a substantial interest in the litigation can be overcome only by
    exceptional circumstances that would render that result
    unreasonable.   Under the governmental-interest test, a forum
    state’s substantial interest in the litigation is a significant
    factor -- but not a conclusive one -- to be weighed against the
    interests of another state connected with the parties or the
    occurrence.    Section 142 is a less malleable standard than the
    governmental-interest test.    For all practical purposes, under
    section 142, once a court finds that the forum state has a
    substantial interest in the litigation, the inquiry is at an
    end.
    It bears mentioning, however, that, under both tests, when
    the forum state has no interest in the litigation and the claim
    is barred by another state’s statute of limitations, the forum
    state generally should not entertain the claim.    Restatement
    (Second), supra, § 142 cmt. g; see also 
    Heavner, supra
    , 63 N.J.
    at 134 n.3, 141.    “[E]gregious examples of forum shopping” will
    be discouraged when a forum state that has no interest in the
    litigation declines to apply its favorable statute of
    limitations.    Restatement (Second), supra, § 142 cmt. g.
    We are persuaded that section 142, with its presumption
    35
    favoring a forum state with a substantial interest in the
    matter, will channel judicial discretion to ensure a higher
    degree of uniformity and predictability in resolving choice-of-
    law issues.
    We now apply the principles of section 142 to the facts of
    this case.
    IV.
    In this failure-to-warn products-liability action filed in
    New Jersey, plaintiff presented evidence that (1) defendants
    Hoffmann-La Roche, Inc., and Roche Laboratories, Inc., were New
    Jersey corporations, which maintained their corporate offices in
    this State; (2) defendants designed, manufactured, distributed,
    and labeled the prescription drug Accutane in New Jersey; (3)
    defendants’ labeling inadequately warned plaintiff of the
    potential risks associated with the taking of Accutane; (4)
    plaintiff, an Alabama resident, relied on the inadequate
    warnings when his physician prescribed, and he took, Accutane to
    treat his acne in Alabama; and (5) the taking of Accutane
    proximately caused his inflammatory bowel disease, which led to
    multiple surgeries and other treatment modalities in Alabama.
    Under section 142 of the Second Restatement, New Jersey, as
    the forum state, presumptively applies its own statute of
    limitations unless (1) New Jersey has no significant interest in
    the maintenance of the claim and Alabama, whose statute has
    36
    expired, has “a more significant relationship to the parties and
    the occurrence,” Restatement (Second), supra, § 142(2)(a)-(b);
    or (2) given “the exceptional circumstances of the case,”
    following the Second Restatement rule would lead to an
    unreasonable result, Restatement (Second), supra, § 142.       In
    light of section 142, if New Jersey has a substantial interest
    in the litigation, the inquiry ends, and New Jersey applies its
    statute of limitations, provided there are no “exceptional
    circumstances” making that “result unreasonable.”    Restatement
    (Second), supra, § 142.   Therefore, we first turn to whether New
    Jersey has a significant interest in the products-liability
    claim filed by plaintiff against Roche.
    New Jersey has a substantial interest in deterring its
    manufacturers from developing, making, and distributing unsafe
    products, including inadequately labeled prescription drugs.
    See 
    Gantes, supra
    , 145 N.J. at 490.   Our State’s interest
    extends to protecting not just the citizens of this State, but
    also the citizens of other states, from unreasonably dangerous
    products originating from New Jersey.     Cf. 
    id. at 497-98.
      We
    have never taken the parochial attitude that the health and
    safety of our State’s citizens are of greater concern or worth
    than the health and safety of citizens of another state.       Our
    national compact and our interstate system suggest that we
    should treat the citizens of other states as we treat our own.
    37
    It would make little sense, if we were to find that New Jersey
    had a substantial interest in the maintenance of a lawsuit, to
    discriminate against an out-of-state plaintiff whose lawsuit was
    filed within our limitations period.    We cannot conclude that
    “maintenance of the claim would serve no substantial interest”
    of this State.   Restatement (Second), supra, § 142(2)(a).
    Only if we found that New Jersey had “no substantial
    interest” would we address the second issue, which is whether
    “the claim would be barred under the statute of limitations of a
    state having a more significant relationship to the parties and
    the occurrence.”    Restatement (Second), supra, § 142(2)(a)-(b).
    Were we to address that issue, we would recognize that Alabama
    has a significant relationship to the parties and the
    occurrence.    But, even in light of the section 6 factors, it
    would not be self-evident that Alabama has a more significant
    relationship than that of New Jersey.    See Restatement (Second),
    supra, § 6(2)(a)-(g).
    Clearly, Alabama has a substantial interest in ensuring
    that pharmaceutical products entering its borders are safe for
    use by its citizens.    See Casrell v. Altec Indus., Inc., 
    335 So. 2d
    128, 131 (Ala. 1976) (“[D]efendants must pay the consequences
    of placing an unreasonably dangerous or defective product on the
    market.”).    But Alabama’s statute of limitations is intended
    primarily to protect its manufacturers, and others, from stale
    38
    claims brought in its courts.   See Travis v. Ziter, 
    681 So. 2d 1348
    , 1355 (Ala. 1996) (noting that statutes of limitations
    “promote[] stability by protecting defendants from stale
    claims”); see also Restatement (Second), supra, § 142 cmt. f (“A
    state has a substantial interest in preventing the prosecution
    in its courts of claims which it deems to be ‘stale.’” (emphasis
    added)).   Alabama does not have an interest in depriving one of
    its citizens of securing redress from a pharmaceutical company
    in another state where the statute of limitations has an
    equitable tolling feature.   Cf. 
    Gantes, supra
    , 145 N.J. at 493-
    98.   Stated differently, Alabama has no interest in denying one
    of its injured citizens the same relief an injured New Jersey
    citizen could obtain for the same wrong in a New Jersey court.
    Last, the Second Restatement provides that, even when the
    forum state’s statute of limitations would apply under a section
    142(a) and (b) analysis, the Court retains a small window of
    discretion to override that outcome.   Restatement (Second),
    supra, § 142.   A court is not required to apply the forum
    state’s limitations period if there are “exceptional
    circumstances” that will “make such a result unreasonable.”
    
    Ibid. In this case,
    no such “exceptional circumstances” are
    present.
    In summary, New Jersey’s statute of limitations governs
    because we cannot conclude that “maintenance of the claim would
    39
    serve no substantial interest” of this State and because there
    are no “exceptional circumstances” that call for the application
    of Alabama’s limitations period.    Restatement (Second), supra,
    § 142(2)(a).
    Although we are adopting a different choice-of-law
    framework for determining whether the forum state’s or another
    state’s statute of limitations will apply, had we conducted a
    governmental-interest test, the result here would be no
    different -- New Jersey’s statute of limitations would govern.
    We nevertheless believe that our adoption of section 142 is a
    further refinement of our choice-of-law jurisprudence that will
    guide judicial discretion toward more predictable and just
    outcomes.
    V.
    For the reasons expressed, we reverse the judgment of the
    Appellate Division, which dismissed plaintiff’s verdict and
    damages award and extinguished his cause of action because the
    Alabama statute of limitations had expired.    We hold that, based
    on a choice-of-law analysis under section 142 of the Second
    Restatement, New Jersey’s limitations period governs, and
    therefore plaintiff’s action was timely filed.   We also note
    that the trial court arrived at the same outcome using the then-
    prevailing governmental-interest test.   We therefore reinstate
    plaintiff’s verdict and damages award and remand to the
    40
    Appellate Division for consideration of the unaddressed issues
    remaining on appeal.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, FERNANDEZ-
    VINA, SOLOMON, and TIMPONE join in JUSTICE ALBIN’s opinion.
    JUSTICE PATTERSON did not participate.
    41