Tuesday, August 15, 2023

Illinois statute eliminates ban on punitive damages in death cases

 Back in May I reported that the Illinois General Assembly was considering a bill that would allow plaintiffs to seek punitive damages in cases for Wrongful Death and in cases filed under the survival statute.  In that post I explained why I thought the bill was a good idea (and why the old doctrine it sought to replace was wrong).  See here.

Today, I am here to report that just a few days ago, on August 11, Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker signed the bill into law.  The new law allows the recovery of punitive damages in wrongful death and survival actions.  

However, as I argued in my previous post, the bill did not go gar enough because punitive damages still are not recoverable in actions against doctors, lawyers, and public entities.

Wednesday, August 9, 2023

Rudy, I told you that's not how things work!

 Last Friday I posted a story about how Rudy Giuliani attempted to prevent having to comply discovery in a defamation case by conceding all the elements of the cause of action against him and, at the same time, trying to raise defenses in the case.  And, after explaining the situation I concluded "Unfortunately for Giuliani, that’s not how anything works."  My original story is here.

I fully expected Giuliani's tactic to be rejected and that is just what happened.  Reportedly, the judge overseeing the case has given Giuliani the following options.  He can:

1.  submit a new stipulation conceding liability to the claims “all factual allegations ... as to his liability for plaintiffs’ defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and civil conspiracy claims, and his liability as to plaintiffs’ claim for punitive damages” and that a default judgment as to his liability is appropriate, or

2.  explain why he is declining to submit such a stipulation by clarifying “what precisely his original stipulation conceded regarding the plaintiffs’ factual allegations and legal claims.”

Should Giuliani fail to choose one or two, the judge will convene a hearing (on August 15) to determine how, if at all, he has complied with her prior order to search and produce all materials responsive to the plaintiffs' discovery requests. 

Stay tuned!

MSNBC has coverage here.  TechDirt has a comment here.