Iris DARDEEN, Adm'r of the Estate of Alma Head, Deceased, Appellant,
v.
HEARTLAND MANOR, INC., Appellee.
Supreme Court of Illinois.
*828 J.C. Mitchell, Mitchell & Bradley, Marion, for Iris Dardeen.
Richard C. Hayden, Mattoon, for Heartland Manor, Inc.
Justice McMORROW delivered the opinion of the court:
At issue in this appeal is whether an amendment to section 3-602 of the Nursing Home Care Act (Act) (210 ILCS 45/3-602 (West 1996)) should be given retroactive effect. Prior to the amendment, section 3-602 required a licensee to pay treble damages plus costs and attorney fees to a facility resident for a violation of the resident's rights under article II, part 1, of the Act (see 210 ILCS 45/2-101 et seq. (West 1994)). Public Act 89-197 (Pub. Act 89-197, § 90, eff. July 21, 1995) repealed the treble damages *829 provision contained in section 3-602, limiting recovery for violations of the Act to actual damages, costs, and attorney fees.
The trial court granted defendant's motion to strike the portion of plaintiff's complaint requesting treble damages. Pursuant to a motion by plaintiff, the trial court also certified the following question of law to the appellate court, as provided in Supreme Court Rule 308 (155 Ill.2d R. 308):
"Shall treble damages be stricken from actions brought under the Illinois Nursing Home Act, 210 ILCS 45/3-602, where the alleged facts supporting said actions occurred before the enactment of Public Act 89-0197 on July 21, 1995, and the pleadings to recover said damages are filed subsequent to the enactment of said Public Act?"
The appellate court, Fourth District, answered this certified question in the affirmative.
BACKGROUND
Alma Head was a resident of the Heartland Manor Nursing Home, which was owned and operated by defendant, Heartland Manor, Inc. On June 25, 1997, plaintiff, Iris Dardeen, as administrator of the estate of Alma Head, filed in the circuit court of Clark County a multicount complaint against defendant, alleging that defendant violated the Nursing Home Care Act (210 ILCS 45/1-101 et seq. (West 1994)) by negligently causing Head's death on June 26, 1995. Count I of plaintiff's complaint, which is the only count at issue in this appeal, alleged that Head developed serious respiratory problems one week before her death, and that, although defendant was aware of Head's medical condition, it negligently failed to provide Head with necessary medical treatment until June 25, 1995. The complaint indicates that Head died of bronchial pneumonia on June 26, 1995. Count I of the complaint alleged that defendant's negligence was a proximate cause of Head's death.
The prayer for relief in count I of the complaint requested an award of treble damages pursuant to section 3-602 of the Act (210 ILCS 45/3-602 (West 1994)). At the time of Head's death, section 3-602 allowed awards of treble damages for a nursing home's negligent failure to provide adequate medical care when this failure resulted in a physical injury to a resident. Section 3-602 read as follows:
"The licensee shall pay 3 times the actual damages, or $500, whichever is greater, and costs and attorney's fees to a facility resident whose rights, as specified in Part 1 of Article II of this Act, are violated." 210 ILCS 45/3-602 (West 1994).
Effective July 21, 1995, section 3-602 of the Act was amended by Public Act 89-197 (Pub. Act 89-197, § 90, eff. July 21, 1995). This amendment repealed the treble damages provision. As amended, section 3-602 provides:
"The licensee shall pay the actual damages and costs and attorney's fees to a facility resident whose rights, as specified in Part 1 of Article II of this Act, are violated." 210 ILCS 45/3-602 (West 1996).
The amendment included no savings clause preserving treble damages for pending cases, nor did it contain provisions addressing whether the amendment's application was to be prospective or retroactive.
Based upon the amendment to section 3-602, defendant filed a motion to strike the prayer for treble damages in count I of plaintiff's complaint. On November 13, 1997, the trial court granted defendant's motion. In a docket entry, the trial court judge noted that plaintiff's complaint was filed over two years after the date of the repeal of the treble damages provision, and found that "no vested rights are involved because plaintiff had not perfected her claim by filing suit before the law was changed. A vested right is an expectation that is so far perfected that it may be equated with a property interest and cannot *830 be taken away by the legislature; that is not the circumstance here."
The appellate court, Fourth District, accepted the question of law certified by the trial court, and answered this question in the affirmative. Relying upon this court's decision in First of America Trust Co. v. Armstead,
We granted plaintiff's petition for leave to appeal. 166 Ill.2d R. 315.
ANALYSIS
In First of America Trust Co. v. Armstead,
We explained in Armstead that "where an amendment does not reach back and interfere with vested rights, there is no truly retroactive impact." Armstead,
At issue in this appeal is whether applying the amended section 3-602 to plaintiff's pending cause of action would affect a vested right within the meaning of Armstead. The First District, fourth division, and the Fifth District of our appellate court have concluded that application of the amended statute would impair a plaintiff's vested rights to treble damages under section 3-602 prior to the enactment of Public Act 89-197. See Hernandez v. Woodbridge Nursing Home,
In the cause at bar, the appellate court explicitly disagreed with the holdings in Hernandez and Weimann that the plaintiffs had a vested right in the recovery of treble damages, and rejected the reasoning that the timing of the filing of the complaint was determinative in assessing whether a plaintiff possessed a vested right in the treble damages remedy. Instead, the appellate court ruled that because "[t]here is no vested right in any particular remedy or procedure," it follows that "[a] change in law affecting the remedy or procedure will be employed without regard to whether the cause of action accrued before or after the change in the law or when the suit was instituted unless there is a savings clause as to existing legislation."
Similar to the appellate court in the instant cause, appellate panels in the Second and Third Districts have also explicitly rejected the reasoning employed in Hernandez and Weimann, and have concluded that a plaintiff has no vested right in seeking treble damages. See Ditsworth v. Kankakee Terrace Partnership,
According to plaintiff, the appellate court in the matter at bar erred when it found that the repeal of the treble damages provision in section 3-602 of the Act constituted a remedial act of the legislature which did not deprive plaintiff of a vested right. Plaintiff urges us to adopt the reasoning of Hernandez and Weimann, and thereby allow her to recover treble damages pursuant to the preamended version of section 3-602.
*832 We hold that the amendment to section 3-602 of the Act repealing the treble damages provision is related solely to a remedy and does not affect a vested right. As explained in Armstead, not all expectations rise to the level of vested rights. Where a statutory amendment is procedural in nature, no vested rights are involved, and the amendment is properly applied to an existing controversy. Armstead,
Plaintiff contends that the legislature's abolition of the right to recover treble damages pursuant to section 3-602 "deprive[s][her] of a substantial right of action." According to plaintiff, the statutory amendment "alters the elements to be proved in order to recover" on her claim, and denies her the opportunity "to recover punitive damages upon proof of negligence * * * as opposed to proof of intentional or wilful misconduct." Contrary to plaintiff's assertions, the repeal of the treble damages provision by the legislature as a result of Public Act 89-197 does not interfere with plaintiff's substantive right to recover against defendant for violations under the Nursing Home Care Act. In order to recover under the Act, a violation of a resident's rights, as enumerated in part 1 of article II of the Act, must be established. See 210 ILCS 45/2-101 through 2-113 (West 1996). The grounds for recovery have remained unchanged both before and after the amendment to section 3-602, and, therefore, plaintiff's substantive rights have also remained unaffected. Furthermore, plaintiff's claim that she has been deprived of a substantive cause of action because the amended section 3-602 raises the burden of proof a plaintiff must meet in order to recover punitive damages is misplaced. The repeal of one of the remedies available to plaintiff under the Act does not deprive plaintiff of her cause of action. As stated, the amendment alters neither the substance nor the elements of a violation under the Act. The amendment to section 3-602 pertains only to the remedies available to plaintiff once plaintiff has proved her cause of action. Under the amended version of the statute, plaintiff may recover actual damages and attorney fees upon proof of defendant's negligent violations of the Act, and may additionally recover common law punitive damages upon proof of willful and wanton misconduct on the part of defendant.
Plaintiff's reliance on Hogan v. Bleeker,
It is well established that a plaintiff has "no vested right in the mere continuance of a law." Armstead,
*833 CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that amended section 3-602 of the Nursing Home Care Act does not affect vested rights. Accordingly, the amendment is to be applied to pending claims arising under the Act. The judgment of the appellate court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
