I have never been able to figure out the public policy reasons behind the principle of Illinois law that holds that the right to seek punitive damages for personal injuries does not survive the death of the injured party. This means that punitive damages are not recoverable in actions brought pursuant to the Illinois Wrongful Death Act and the Survival Act. I first wrote about this anomaly back in 2011. See here.
I call this Illinois rule an anomaly because I don't know of any other jurisdiction that recognizes the right to seek punitive damages in some cases but not in death cases.
I also call it wrong because the policy results in a perverse incentive to cause more harm rather than to deter wrongful conduct, which is one of the main goals of tort law.
Thankfully, after all these years, it is possible this wrongheaded policy might be partially abandoned.
The Illinois General Assembly is currently considering a bill that would allow plaintiffs to seek punitive damages in cases for Wrongful Death and in cases filed under the survival statute. You can read the bill here.
Unfortunately, the bill does not go far enough because it still recognizes an exception for medical and legal malpractice cases. This means that plaintiffs who seek to recover for the death of a decedent will not have access to punitive damages regardless of the degree of negligence or reprehensibility of the conduct of the defendant.
This should change too. But we are moving in the right direction, even if we are doing it one slow step at a time. (The bill also recognizes an exception for claims against the state, but that is not unusual. The Federal Torts Claim Act, as well as typical state versions, do not recognize a right to punitive damages in claims against the state.)
Not surprisingly, organizations dedicated to advocating for the interests of those whose conduct puts others at risk and causes injury, and their insurers, are not happy about this development. Lacking sound policy arguments, as usual, they resort to using insults and exaggerations, calling the proposal a “calamity,” and a “shameless attack on businesses” and referring to the state a “judicial hellhole.” See this post by the American Tort Reform Foundation, for example.
I do agree with the ATRF that the exception for medical and legal malpractice cases does not make sense, but the solution to that disparity is not to reject the proposal altogether, thus depriving the plaintiffs of all access to recovery, but rather to eliminate the exception and thus to provide access to justice to those who deserve it. After all, punitive damages are awarded in a very small minority of cases anyway.
UPDATE August 15, 2023:
Illinois statute eliminates ban on punitive damages in death cases
No comments:
Post a Comment