delivered the opinion of the court:
On May 4, 1994, the plaintiff, Sue Harraz, individually and as administratrix of the estate of Mohamed Harraz, voluntarily dismissed, without prejudice, the wrongful death and survival complaint brought against the defendants, Dr. Edward J. Snyder III, and Glendale Heights Hospital, Inc., n/k/a Glen Oaks Medical Center (Glen Oaks or hospital), pursuant to section 2—1009 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Code) (735 ILCS 5/2—1009 (West 1994)). The amended complaint filed in 1992 alleged that the defendants negligently failed to diagnose and treat the abdominal hemorrhage suffered by the decedent, Mohamed Harraz, in February 1989, at Glen Oaks. The original complaint had been filed in Cook County on December 27, 1990.
The hospital maintained below that it was not vicariously liable for the conduct of Dr. Snyder, the treating surgeon, because, it asserted, Snyder was not its employee but an independent contractor who had staff privileges at the hospital. Upon motion for summary judgment filed by the hospital, certain nurses and employees (other medical personnel) were dismissed with prejudice from the original action.
The plaintiff refiled her complaint on May 4, 1995, within the one-year extension of the limitations period provided by section 13—217 of the Code (735 ILCS 5/13—217 (West 1994)). On June 12, 1995, Glen Oaks filed a motion to dismiss the refiled case. The hospital argued that, based on the doctrine of res judicata, the plaintiff was barred from relitigating the dismissal with prejudice of the other medical personnel since the court had already ruled as to them. Notwithstanding our supreme court’s decision holding that a hospital may be found vicariously liable for the conduct of an independent contractor-physician who is shown to be an apparent or ostensible agent under certain defined conditions (Gilbert v. Sycamore Municipal Hospital,
"Does the modification of hospital apparent agency liability found in 735 ILCS 5/2—624 apply to a cause of action refiled after a voluntary dismissal where:
(a) the original cause of action was filed prior to the enactment of said sec. 2—624 and
(b) said section 2—624 applies to causes of action filed on or after its enactment.”
The hospital first argues on appeal that the trial court should have dismissed the cause for failure to state a cause of action premised on the hospital’s vicarious liability because the complaint was insufficient to meet the more stringent requirements for apparent agency set up in section 2—624 of the Code, which became effective on March 9, 1995. In Gilbert,
Prior to the effective date of the Amendments, the plaintiff had to show the following judicially defined elements of a cause of action against a hospital to prevail under the doctrine of apparent authority: (1) the hospital, or its agent, acted in a manner that would lead a reasonable person to conclude that the individual who was alleged to be negligent was an employee or agent of the hospital; (2) where the acts of the agent create the appearance of authority, the plaintiff must also prove that the hospital had knowledge of and acquiesced in them; and (3) the plaintiff acted in reliance upon the conduct of the hospital or its agent, consistent with ordinary care and prudence. Gilbert,
The Gilbert court explained that the element of "holding out” on the part of the hospital did not require an express representation by the hospital that the person alleged to be negligent was an employee. Rather, the element would be satisfied if the hospital held itself out as a provider of care without informing the patient that the care was provided by independent contractors. Gilbert,
By contrast, in a case against a hospital or medical care providers involving a claim of apparent agency, section 2—624 of the Code requires the plaintiff to allege with specific facts and prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, the following more stringent elements:
"(i) that the alleged principal affirmatively represented to the party that the alleged agent was the alleged principal’s actual agent;
(ii) that the party reasonably relied upon the alleged principal’s representations that the alleged agent was the alleged principal’s actual agent; and
(iii) that a reasonable person would not have sought goods or services from the alleged principal if that person was aware that the alleged agent was not the alleged principal’s actual agent.” Pub. Act 89—7, eff. March 9, 1995 (adding 735 ILCS 5/2—624 (West Supp. 1995)).
The new provision states that it "applies to causes of action filed on or after its effective date.” Pub. Act 89—7, eff. March 9, 1995 (adding 735 ILCS 5/2—624 (West Supp. 1995)). Even the most casual comparison of the elements of apparent agency found in Gilbert with those found in section 2—624 of the Code readily discloses that the elements are indeed quite different and that the new statute abrogates the judicially developed law of apparent agency as applied to hospitals and other medical care providers.
On appeal, the defendant initially attempts to challenge, in rather conclusory fashion, the sufficiency of the plaintiff’s complaint. In this permissive interlocutory appeal, we are not called upon to review the court’s ruling on the merits of the complaint, and we will avoid considering issues not directly related to the question certified. See Williams v. Chicago Osteopathic Medical Center,
PROSPECTIVE VERSUS RETROACTIVE APPLICATION
We conclude that the new statutory requirements do not apply to this case retroactively but are to be applied only prospectively. In order to prevail, the plaintiffs pleadings and proofs must conform to the common-law elements of the doctrine of apparent agency as stated in Gilbert,
Whether a statute is to be applied prospectively or retrospectively is frequently the subject of conflicting judicial opinions, rationales, and theories. See, e.g., Orlicki v. McCarthy,
SUBSTANTIVE CHANGES
Generally, statutory amendments relating to substantive rights must be applied prospectively, while amendments relating to remedies or procedures are generally applied retroactively. In re Pronger,
"[W]hen a change of law merely affects the remedy or matters of procedure, an amendment will be construed as retroactive so long as that is what the legislature intended, and absent a saving clause as to existing litigation, all rights of action will be enforceable under the new procedure, without regard to whether they accrued before or after such change or whether the action has been instituted, unless this would result in deprivation of a vested, constitutionally protected right.” (Emphasis added.) Moshe,199 Ill. App. 3d at 598 .
See Rivard,
A truly retroactive law is defined as " 'one that takes away or impairs vested rights acquired under existing laws, or creates a new obligation, imposes a new duty, or attaches a new disability in respect of transactions or considerations already past.’ ” United States Steel Credit Union v. Knight,
At this juncture, it clearly appears to us that the new legislative enactment effected a substantive change in the law. It alters the obligations and liabilities between the parties by modifying significantly the elements to be pleaded (and proved) in order to make the hospital a party to the suit; and it imposes a new disability upon the plaintiff with respect to a transaction that had already occurred. This creates a presumption that the statute is to be applied prospectively rather than retrospectively.
Furthermore, the language of the statute does not expressly state that it must be applied retroactively to accrued causes of action. The statute merely states that it applies to "causes of action filed” on or after its effective date. Arguably, it applies to all causes of action regardless of the date of accrual. It is silent regarding previously filed or previously accrued causes of action, or even "refiled” complaints that were voluntarily dismissed. Although the provision does not state whether it applies only to causes of action accrued after the effective date, that is one plausible interpretation of the provision since the statute speaks in terms of "causes of action” filed after the effective date rather than "complaints.” Because the provision is susceptible to more than one construction and is silent as to retroactive application, we cannot say with certainty that there is a necessary implication that it must be applied retroactively to an accrued cause of action.
VESTED RIGHTS APPROACH
The parties dispute whether the plaintiff acquired a vested right in her accrued cause of action. It appears that our supreme court now favors a "vested rights” analysis where it will avoid problems in determining legislative intent or in distinguishing between substantive and procedural changes in the law. See Armstead,
Vested rights are interests protected from legislative interference by our due process clause. Armstead,
Whether a particular expectation rises to the level of a vested right is not capable of precise definition, but it is one that is so far perfected that it cannot be taken away by legislation, and it may consist of "a complete and unconditional demand or exemption that may be equated with a property interest.” Armstead,
In Armstead, the supreme court noted that there is no vested right to the mere continuance of the statute because the legisláture has a right to amend a statute. In that case, the change in the statute did not create a new obligation or duty with respect to a past transaction; the plaintiff’s registration process was ongoing at the time of the amendment, and the plaintiff had not yet met all of the prerequisites for compensation, including registration, and had not alleged any release of petroleum or incurred any clean-up cost in reliance on access to the fund. There was no immediate and fixed right to compensation; thus, the plaintiff did not have a reasonable expectation or a vested right to reimbursement, and the amended statute was held to govern the plaintiff’s application for registration.
Here, by contrast, we believe the plaintiff’s accrued cause of action became a vested right and the statute cannot be applied retroactively to impair that right. Based on their relationship and their respective conduct, both the plaintiff and the hospital became subject to the common-law rules of liability stemming from the apparent agency that was alleged to have existed at the time of the injury. The rights and obligations of the parties became vested at the time of the occurrence, a time at which the hospital had the capacity to be sued. See Zielnik v. Loyal Order of Moose, Lodge No. 265,
In the present case, the injury had already occurred and the plaintiff took steps to perfect her claim against the hospital by filing her original complaint well before the effective date of the statute. The plaintiff voluntarily dismissed her original complaint in accordance with and in reliance on the extended statute of limitations and the well-established "absolute” right to refile the action provided by the Code of Civil Procedure. See Wold v. Bull Valley Management Co.,
In Chemrex, Inc. v. Pollution Control Board,
The Chemrex court concluded that the tank owner had established a vested right to reimbursement from the fund prior to the change in the law. Chemrex had discovered, reported, and set about repairing the releases from .the affected tanks immediately after the leaks occurred and filed progress reports and plans as required, prior to the effective date of the amendment. See Armstead,
EQUITABLE GROUNDS
The hospital argues that "any apparent unfairness” in the legislature’s changing the law could easily have been alleviated had the plaintiff refiled the action before March 9, 1995, the date the amendment became immediately effective. In response, the plaintiff argues that newly enacted section 2—624 should not be applied retroactively to her cause of action because of the equitable rule that, where a statute decreases the time in which a prior existing claim may be filed, the amended statute will not be retroactively applied unless there exists a reasonable amount of time after its effective date to file claims which existed prior to the amendment (Balzer v. Inland Steel Co.,
This equitable rule is ordinarily applied in circumstances where the statute of limitations abruptly cuts off an accrued cause of action. Our supreme court has applied the rule even to an "inchoate” right of action. The court deemed a plaintiff’s claim of injury in a medical malpractice case to have existed before it was discovered or had "accrued” and invoked the equitable rule to permit a complaint to be filed within a reasonable time after the limitations period had been shortened abruptly by amendment. Moore v. Jackson Park Hospital,
In DeSeve v. Ladd Enterprises, Inc., in considering whether the repeal of a savings clause would bar the plaintiff’s personal injury claim which arose 38 days prior to the repeal, the court stated the rule that "even where the legislative intent is clear that a statute be given retroactive effect, the enactment will not be so applied when to do so would lead to unreasonable or unjust results.” DeSeve v. Ladd Enterprises, Inc.,
We believe that it would be unjust and inequitable to read into the new section 2—624 a retrospective application of the requirements so as to bar instantaneously the plaintiff’s accrued cause of action against the hospital. The substantive right to hold the hospital liable arose at the time of the alleged injury under the judicially developed rules then in effect, and the new statute did not give the plaintiff a reasonable time to file her claim after its effective date. She refiled her claim within eight weeks of that date. Since her cause of action had accrued and she took steps to perfect her right in reasonable reliance on the laws previously in effect, including her right to refile the complaint, we believe such a slight delay should not bar the action. See Bonfield,
Affirmed and remanded.
McLaren, P.J., and HUTCHINSON, J„ concur.
