Schools play a key role in democracies, but that does not justify the current arrangement in which tax dollars are allocated exclusively to public...
Abigale Lebron, et al., Appellees, v. Gottlieb Memorial Hospital et al., Appellants
The Illinois Supreme Court ruled on February 4, 2010 that caps limiting non-economic damages in medical malpractice cases are unconstitutional.
The court held a 2006 state law capping non-economic damages, such as pain and suffering, at $500,000 in cases against doctors and $1 million in cases against hospitals violated the Separation of Powers clause of the Illinois Constitution.
On two previous occasions--in 1976 and 1997--the court also has held such caps are unconstitutional. The Illinois legislature tried again, in 2006. A Cook County Circuit Court judge found that law unconstitutional, and a direct appeal to the state supreme court followed.
Proponents of the cap say soaring jury verdicts for non-economic damages in medical malpractice cases have jeopardized the health care available to Illinois residents. Until the 2006 reforms, doctors were being driven out of high-risk practices and even out of state due to skyrocketing medical malpractice insurance premiums resulting from high awards for non-economic damages. Their patients, particularly pregnant women facing high-risk deliveries and victims of emergency head trauma, faced the prospect of limited availability of medical care--and sometimes no care at all--as doctors fled Illinois.
