delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff, Adolf Lo, M.D., sued defendant, Provena Covenant Medical Center, for breach of contract. He alleged defendant had violated the medical-staff bylaws (bylaws) by restricting his clinical privileges without granting him a hearing.
Soon after the filing of the complaint, defendant took a more severe corrective action, summarily suspending plaintiff’s clinical privilege to perform open-heart surgery. Plaintiff moved for an order temporarily restraining defendant from enforcing the suspension. The trial court granted the motion, defendant appealed, and we reversed the temporary restraining order. Lo v. Provena Covenant Medical Center,
On remand, defendant filed a motion to dismiss the complaint with prejudice pursuant to section 2 — 619(a)(9) of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2 — 619(a)(9) (West 2002)). Defendant relied on two affirmative grounds for dismissal: (1) its immunity under section 10.2 of the Hospital Licensing Act (Act) (210 ILCS 85/10.2 (West 2002)) and (2) our previous decision in this case. The trial court granted the motion, and plaintiff appeals.
The complaint seeks two kinds of relief: an injunction and damages. The prayer for an injunction is moot, and section 10.2 of the Act bars an award of damages. Therefore, we affirm the judgment.
I. BACKGROUND
In his complaint, which he filed on December 3, 2002, plaintiff alleges he is a licensed physician specializing in cardiovascular surgery. For many years, he has had the clinical privilege to perform cardiovascular surgery at defendant’s hospital and its predecessor institutions. On or around September 25, 2002, defendant allegedly violated the bylaws by “reduc[ing] and restricting] [plaintiff’s] medical[-]staff privileges without granting him the right to a hearing.” Defendant thereby damaged him financially and harmed his medical practice and professional reputation. In conjunction with his prayer for damages, he demanded a trial by jury. He also prayed for an order “immediately enjoining [defendant *** from continuing to reduce and restrict [his] privileges in violation of the [b]ylaws.”
On February 17, 2003, plaintiff filed a motion for a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction. See 735 ILCS 5/11 — 101 (West 2002). In his motion, he alleged that on February 15, 2003, defendant summarily suspended his clinical privilege to perform open-heart surgery. He attached to his motion a letter he had received from defendant’s chief executive officer and president. The letter said the suspension was due to “significant quality concerns *** as reflected in the November 27, 2001, external [cardiovascular] peer review.” Plaintiff argued that because neither the chair of a department, the president of the medical staff, nor an officer of the medical staff had recommended the summary suspension, defendant lacked the power to impose it under the bylaws. The trial court agreed with plaintiff and entered an order temporarily restraining defendant from suspending his clinical privileges “until such time as [defendant] complied] with [the bylaws].”
We reversed the temporary restraining order, holding that because an independent peer review had raised concerns about the quality of plaintiffs cardiovascular services and the medical staff had failed or refused to make a recommendation one way or the other, defendant’s board of directors, the entity ultimately responsible for the quality of care, had the inherent authority to summarily suspend plaintiff’s clinical privilege in order to prevent an imminent danger to patients. Lo,
On October 22, 2003, on remand, defendant filed its motion to dismiss the complaint with prejudice pursuant to section 2 — 619(a)(9). Defendant asserted two grounds for dismissal: (1) its immunity under section 10.2 of the Act (210 ILCS 85/10.2 (West 2002)) and (2) our statement in Lo,
This appeal followed.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
A motion to dismiss under section 2 — 619(a)(9) raises “affirmative matter avoiding the legal effect of or defeating the claim.” 735 ILCS 5/2 — 619(a)(9) (West 2002). Rather than negate the essential facts of the cause of action, a section 2 — 619 motion admits those facts, and we take them to be true along with any reasonable inferences one could draw in the plaintiff’s favor. In re Estate of Krevchena,
B. Request for an Injunction
Defendant argues this appeal is moot. We have subject-matter jurisdiction over this appeal only if an actual, live controversy still exists between the parties, as opposed to an abstract or hypothetical controversy that the parties are no longer in a position to care about. See In re Andrea F.,
According to defendant, three events have made this appeal moot. The first event was plaintiffs alleged agreement to the restrictions of which he complains. Defendant confuses the merits of a case with the situation in which a case becomes moot. Plaintiff alleges in his complaint that on or around September 25, 2002, defendant involuntarily restricted his clinical privileges. Defendant denies doing so and insists that plaintiff agreed to the restrictions as an alternative to defendant’s imposing them involuntarily (with a resulting report to the National Practitioner Data Bank (see 42 U.S.C. § 11133(a)(1)(A) (2000))). That sounds to us like an actual controversy. Instead of pointing to an intervening event (see In re Marriage of Deem,
The other two events, by contrast, are intervening and factually undisputed. In February 2003, defendant summarily suspended plaintiff’s privilege to perform open-heart surgery. Also, in January 2004, after the (suspended) privilege expired, plaintiff applied for its renewal, and defendant denied the application. The bylaws required plaintiff to request a hearing before the hearing committee within 30 days after receiving notification of any adverse decision on his clinical privileges. Because plaintiff missed the deadlines for requesting hearings on the summary suspension and the nonrenewal, defendant argues he has “waived” his right to a hearing on either decision. “There is no point in litigating whether plaintiff should have a supervising cardiac surgeon,” defendant argues (supervision of his surgeries was one of the restrictions), “because there will be no surgery to supervise.”
Plaintiff argues the 30-day period for requesting a hearing never started running with respect to either the summary suspension or the nonrenewal because each time defendant made an adverse decision regarding his clinical privileges, the bylaws required the chief executive officer to serve a notice upon him by certified mail. The bylaws also prescribed the contents of the notice. After the summary suspension and also after the nonrenewal, defendant either failed to serve a notice upon him by certified mail or the notice lacked all the prescribed contents. Plaintiff argues that until defendant complies with the procedural requirements of the bylaws with respect to notice, the 30-day clock for requesting a hearing does not begin to run.
Putting the summary suspension and the nonrenewal in brackets, in a purely theoretical way, really does not address defendant’s argument. A court cannot sensibly order defendant to lift the restrictions from a clinical privilege that no longer exists. If, because of a nonrenewal that plaintiff does not challenge in this lawsuit, the privilege to perform cardiovascular surgery has vanished altogether, so have the restrictions of that privilege. “A case on appeal [becomes] moot where ‘the issues involved in the trial court no longer exist’ ***.” A Minor,
C. Request for Damages
According to defendant, an injunction is the only permissible remedy for plaintiffs cause of action, and because the prayer for an injunction is moot, the case is moot in its entirety. Defendant denies that the bylaws created a contract between defendant and plaintiff and, therefore, denies the right to damages for any violation of the bylaws. We hold that the bylaws did indeed create a contract between plaintiff and defendant.
Although defendant admits that procedures in bylaws are enforceable by injunction, defendant does not explain under what legal theory one could enforce them if not under a theory of contract. The rule of limited judicial review, whereby we review the reductions of clinical privileges only for procedural compliance with the bylaws (Knapp v. Palos Community Hospital,
The bylaws in this case are entitled the “MedicalHStaff Bylaws.” Plaintiff does not sue the medical staff; he sues defendant. See Head,
If defendant had promised procedures that the law already required, and nothing more, then, arguably, the preexisting-duty rule would prevent the formation of a contract between defendant and the medical staff. See White v. Village of Homewood,
“The principal legal remedy to enforce a promise is a judgment awarding a sum of money.” E. Farnsworth, Farnsworth on Contracts § 12.2, at 156 (3d ed. 2004). Defendant invokes the immunity to damages in section 10.2.
In reliance on Szczerbaniuk v. Memorial Hospital for McHenry County,
Section 10.2 now provides:
“[N]o hospital *** shall be liable for civil damages as a result of the acts, omissions, decisions, or any other conduct, except those involving wilful or wanton misconduct, of *** any *** committee or individual whose purpose, directly or indirectly, is internal quality control ***, or for the purpose of professional discipline ***. *** For the purposes of this [s]ection, ‘wilful and wanton misconduct’ means a course of action that shows actual or deliberate intention to harm or that, if not intentional, shows an utter indifference to or conscious disregard for a person’s own safety and the safety of others.” (Emphasis added.) 210 ILCS 85/10.2 (West 2002).
If we were applying the ordinary definition of “wilful and wanton misconduct” — i.e., great carelessness or gross negligence — it would be a question of fact whether defendant’s alleged conduct met that definition. Plaintiff alleges that defendant involuntarily restricted his clinical privileges without giving him a chance to be heard, thereby violating not only the bylaws but also statutory law (see 210 ILCS 85/ 10.4(b)(2)(C) (West 2002)). Considering the grave implications that involuntary restrictions could have for plaintiffs career, a jury could, at a minimum, find such an omission to be careless. “Under the facts of [a] case, willful and wanton misconduct may be only degrees more than ordinary negligence ***.” Ziarko v. Soo Line R.R. Co.,
In this case, however, we are dealing not with the ordinary meaning of “wilful and wanton misconduct” but with a statutory definition. “In construing statutes the ordinary, usual[,] and commonly accepted definitions of the words employed therein are to be taken as the correct definitions of such words, unless the statute gives special definitions to the contrary ***.” (Emphasis added.) Wahlman v. C. Becker Milling Co.,
A court has discretion to order the specific performance of a contract if “perfect justice cannot be done at law.” Dixon v. City of Monticello,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s judgment. Affirmed.
TURNER and STEIGMANN, JJ., concur.
