Dems move to allow punitive damage awards in wrongful death lawsuits
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[May 20, 2023]
By HANNAH MEISEL
Capitol News Illinois
hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Democrats in the General Assembly this week pushed through
a measure that would allow state courts to award punitive damages in
wrongful death lawsuits – a departure from the status quo for more than
a century in Illinois.
Illinois is one of 16 states that does not allow for the recovery of
punitive damages in wrongful death cases, although the state does allow
for plaintiffs in personal injury cases to seek punitive damages.
“It's only when the plaintiff has died from his or her injuries that
punitive damages are precluded,” Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak
Park, said Thursday during a brief debate on House Bill 219. “The
awarding of punitive damages should not turn on whether the injuries
were severe enough to kill the plaintiff.”
HB 219 would take the standards for seeking punitive damages in personal
injury cases and apply them to Illinois’ Wrongful Death Act. The bill is
an initiative of the Illinois Trial Lawyers Association, which has
historically been an ally to Democrats.
The state’s business community mounted a swift but ultimately
ineffective opposition campaign against the bill after it popped up
earlier this week, citing increased liability costs. The bill passed
with only Democratic votes in both the Senate and House this week and
will soon be sent to Gov. JB Pritzker for his approval.
ITLA President Pat Salvi Jr., a managing partner at prominent
Chicago-based personal injury law firm Salvi, Schostok & Pritchard, told
a Senate panel this week that allowing punitive damages only when a
victim survives is “a defect in the law.”
“We believe it is time to fix what the Illinois Supreme Court noted is
‘the often-repeated adage that it is cheaper to kill your victim than to
leave him maimed,’” Salvi said, quoting from a 1983 opinion from the
state’s high court that affirmed punitive damages are not allowed in
wrongful death cases. “That cannot be.”
Punitive damages exceedingly rare
While compensatory damages are meant to compensate a victim or victim’s
family for anything from lost wages and hospital bills to pain and
suffering, punitive damages are meant to punish a defendant and deter
the type of reckless action that led to injury or death.
Punitive damages are rarely asked for and even more rarely granted.
According to ITLA, in the last decade, Illinois juries have awarded
punitive damages of more than $10,000 in only 18 personal injury cases.
The most recent nationwide study on the matter from the U.S. Department
of Justice in 2005 found that, among successful cases, punitive damages
were awarded in just 3 percent of the most common types of personal
injury cases.
Punitive damages for product or premises liability and car crashes were
awarded in 1 percent or fewer cases according to the DOJ’s report. The
study was based on a survey of courts in the nation’s 75 most populous
counties, including Illinois’ Cook and DuPage counties.
At the time of the DOJ report 18 years ago, the median punitive damage
award in all successful tort cases was $55,000; adjusted for inflation,
that figure would be just under $85,000 now.
Still, business groups said increasing opportunities for punitive
damages could deter companies from moving to or expanding in Illinois
due to increased liability. The insurance lobby also registered its
opposition to the bill, and Republicans repeated the groups’ concerns
during House and Senate debates this week.
“We could end up shutting down a business because of one or two bad
actors,” Rep. Dan Ugaste, R-Geneva, said during debate in the House.
“And I’m not defending the bad actors at all. I’m just saying there’s
other people to consider here.”
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Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak Park,
is pictured during floor debate of a measure that would allow state
courts to award punitive damages in wrongful death lawsuits.
(Capitol News Illinois photo by Andrew Adams)
Ugaste went on to imagine the ripple effects of shuttered businesses on
workers and their families. But he also lamented that HB 219 didn’t
contain any caps on punitive damages.
“The Supreme Court in Illinois has ruled that they’re unconstitutional,”
Rep. Jay Hoffman, D-Swansea, told Ugaste, saying the legislature’s hands
were tied as to including hard caps in the bill.
But Hoffman did note that the state’s high court has ruled that any
punitive damages exceeding 10 times the amount of compensatory damages
would be considered a violation of due process, in essence putting a
soft limit on punitive damages.
According to ITLA, caps are in place in only nine of the 34 states that
already allow punitive damages in wrongful death cases.
‘Grisly mathematics’
Even if placing caps on punitive damages was constitutionally feasible,
Harmon maintained that writing caps into state law would set up a
perverse incentive system for companies to do the “grisly mathematics”
of a cost-benefit analysis. He cited the legal debacle over the Ford
Pinto in the 1970s, when the company delayed recalling 1.5 million cars
despite knowing about a dangerous design defect that caused gas tanks to
explode even in low-speed crashes.
The company’s apparent cost-benefit analysis found it would be less
expensive for the company to settle cases with victims than to recall
the cars and prevent the deadly explosions they were causing.
“Imagine someone sitting in a corporate boardroom saying we can kill 127
drivers before it's more expensive to recall the car than it is to
simply pay the capped punitive damages,” Harmon said.
In September, a Cook County jury granted $325 million in punitive
damages – on top of $38 million in compensatory damages – to Sue Kamuda,
who developed breast cancer in 2007 after living near the Willowbrook
Sterigenics medical supply sterilization plant for years. It was the
state’s largest punitive damage award in recent history.
The jury found the Oak Brook-based company did not invest in
emissions-curbing technology, which would have reduced the amount of
carcinogenic gas emitted from its Willowbrook plant, despite knowing the
cancer risk ethylene oxide posed to neighbors.
Kamuda is one of hundreds of nearby residents who’ve filed similar
claims since 2018, when the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
published research that found people who lived in the area around the
facility faced some of the highest cancer risks in the U.S. The state of
Illinois ordered the plant to close temporarily in early 2019, and
Sterigenics later voluntarily shuttered the plant permanently.
Salvi represented Kamuda in the case, and in an interview with Capitol
News Illinois this week, he said despite the eye-popping figure his
client was awarded in punitive damages, her case was one of only “five
or six” times in his 16-year legal career that he’s filed for punitive
damages.
And if punitive damages had been an option in wrongful death cases over
that same time period, Salvi said he’d likely only have sought punitive
damages in “less than five” additional cases, nearly all in suits
involving deaths due to drunk drivers.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
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