Paul P. WHITE, as Special Adm'r of the Estate of Jeanette White, Deceased, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
SUNRISE HEALTHCARE CORPORATION, Defendant-Appellee (Seymon Maslovsky, Defendant).
Appellate Court of Illinois, Second District.
*1364 Andrew Y. Acker, Aldo E. Botti, Peter M. DeLongis, Botti, Marinaccio & DeLongis, Ltd., Oak Brook, for Jeanette V. White.
Michael G. Thomas, Tammera E. Banasek, Thomas & Buckley, Chicago, for Sunrise Healthcare Corporation.
Justice THOMAS delivered the opinion of the court:
This is a permissive interlocutory appeal (155 Ill.2d R. 308) in a suit brought partly under the Nursing Home Care Act (Act) (210 ILCS 45/1-101 et seq. (West 1996)). The question certified for review is whether an amendment to section 3-602 of the Act (210 ILCS 45/3-602 (West 1996) (Act)) applies to a cause of action that accrued before the amendment took effect on July 21, 1995. Formerly, section 3-602 (210 ILCS 45/3-602 (West 1994)) required a licensee to pay treble damages plus costs and attorney fees to a faсility resident for the violation of the resident's rights under article II, part 1, of the Act (see 210 ILCS 45/2-101 et seq. (West 1994)). After the amendment, which took effect upon becoming law on July 21, 1995 *1365 (see Pub. Act 89-197, eff. July 21, 1995 (amending 210 ILCS 45/3-602 (West 1994))), recovery for violations of the Act is limited to actual damages, costs, and attorney fees. 210 ILCS 45/3-602 (West 1996).
We answer the certified question affirmatively. We hold that the amended section 3-602, abolishing triple damages for violations of the Act, applies to a pending suit no matter when the cause of action accrued. We decline to follow the contrary holdings of Hernandez v. Woodbridge Nursing Home,
The facts pertinent to this appeal are as follows. From December 12, 1994, through February 20,1995, Jeanette White resided in Crown Manor Healthcare, a nursing home owned by defendant Sunrise Healthcare (Sunrise). She received treatment from Sunrise's agent, defendant Dr. Seymon Maslovsky. On April 4,1996, Paul White (plaintiff), as Jeanette White's attorney-in-fact (see 755 ILCS 45/2-1 (West 1996)), sued on her behalf. As amended, the complaint alleged that defendants' negligent care of Jeanette White caused her various injuries and that Sunrise violated the Act, requiring treble damages under section 3-602.
Sunrise moved to strike the prayer for treble damages, arguing that the amended section 3-602 applied to this suit. Plaintiff responded that, under authority such as Rivard v. Chicago Fire Fighters Union, Local No. 2, 122 Ill.2d 303,
The trial court granted Sunrise's motion to strike and certified the question for an interlocutory appeal under Supreme Court Rule 308. We granted plaintiff's petition for leave to appeal. After Jeanette White died, plaintiff proceеded as the special administrator of her estate.
The application of new legislation to pending suits or preexisting causes of action is governed by our supreme court's opinion in Armstead. There, the court held that an amendment to the Gasoline Storage Act (430 ILCS 15/4(b)(1)(A) (West Supp.1993)) governed the administrative review of the denial of the plaintiff's request to register its storage tank with the State Fire Marshal. While the administrative review action was pending in the circuit court, the legislature amended the statute by expressly prohibiting registering certain tanks, including those involved in the plaintiff's case.
The supreme court agreed with the appellate court that the amendment governed the case but not with the appellate court's assumptions that (1) the issue was whether to give the amendment "retroactive" effect; and (2) resolution of this question depended on whether the legislature intended such a "retroactivity." Noting that the law in this area was lengthy but inconsistent, the court divined two competing strands of precedent.
Under one line of cases, whether an amendment applied to an ongoing case depended on whether the legislature intended the amendment to have "prospective" effect; in turn, this determination of intent often hinged on whеther the amendment was substantive or procedural. Substantive amendments enjoyed a presumption of prospectivity, but a change in procedures or remedies would be made "retroactive" if the legislature so intended. Armstead,
*1366 Armstead observed that the "legislative intent" approach has been difficult to use beсause often there is no clear way to decide whether an amendment is "substantive" or "procedural." Armstead,
Although the court in Armstead disapproved of the "legislative intent" approach because it involves elusive distinctions between procedure and substance, the court's adoption of the "vested rights" approach retained a vital role for the substance-procedure dichotomy. The court specified that interests or expectations created by prior law may fall short of being vested rights either "because they are not yet perfected," or "because the amendment is procedural in nature." (Emphasis added.) Armstead,
(Parenthetically, we note that, after Armstead, the court decided People v. Digirolamo,
The Armstead court recognizеd that, although "vested rights" has no precise definition, a right has not vested until it is so perfected, complete, and unconditional that it may be equated with a property interest. Armstead,
Because not all expectations are vested rights, a new law is not retroactive "just because it relates to antecedеnt events, or because it draws upon antecedent facts for its operation." United States Steel Credit Union v. Knight,
Our courts have long recognized that "there can be no vested right in any particular remedy or mеthod of procedure" (Chicago & Western Indiana R.R. Co. v. Guthrie,
The claim of a vested right is most clearly untenable where the remedy eliminated is a statutory penalty that goes beyond what is necessary to compensate the plaintiff. The rule that no party has a vested right in a statutory penalty or punishment is ancient and fundamental. Our courts have cоnsistently viewed any interest in such a penalty as an expectancy that the legislature may negate any time before a final judgment creates a property interest in the award.
In Coles v. County of Madison,
Coles is dated insofar as its specific facts are concerned, but its reasoning is still valid. In the 170 years between Coles and Weimann, our courts routinely refused to award plaintiffs statutory penalties that the legislature saw fit to аbolish before the plaintiffs' rights were reduced to judgment. Thus, it has long been the rule that, where the legislature has changed the penalties for usury, the plaintiff in a pending suit loses any chance to recover the penalties in effect when he filed his suit. The reason is that "there is no principle of law better settled thаn that the legislature can at any time take away the right of action for a penalty. The law recognizes no vested right in a penalty." (Emphasis added.) Parmelee v. Lawrence,
Decisions under numerous other statutes follow the rule that, while a suit is pending, a party has no vested right in a statutory penalty that no longer exists. In People ex rel. Eitel v. Lindheimer,
In Clouse v. Heights Finance Corp.,
Similarly, courts have not hesitated to hold that an existing suit is governed by new legislation denying a municipality the right to include certain court costs in a judgment confirming a special assessment (Gage v. City of Chicago,
Our examination of the case law convinces us that the amended section 3-602 is the sort of legislation that courts routinely apply to pending suits and that to do so here impairs no vested rights. The аmendment is remedial, not substantive: it deprives no party of her cause of action under the Nursing Home Care Act, but merely limits her recovery to her actual damages plus attorney fees and costs. Applying the new law here treats the plaintiff no worse than plaintiffs in the vast majority of lawsuits.
The elimination of damages that go beyond what is needed to make the plaintiff whole does not infringe on a vested right but merely deprives the plaintiff of an inchoate interest in a statutory penalty or punishment. It is settled that what the amendment eliminates is a species of punitive damages. Harris v. Manor Healthcare Corp.,
We recognize that two other districts of the appellate court have held that the former section 3-602 gave plaintiffs a vested right in the treble damages it allowed. Howеver, we believe these opinions misread Armstead and essentially ignore the substantial body of vested rights precedent on which Armstead draws.
Thus, in Weimann v. Meadow Manor, Inc.,
In Hernandez v. Woodbridge Nursing Home,
The order of the circuit court of Lake County is affirmed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings.
Affirmed and remanded.
GEIGER, P.J., and BOWMAN, J., concur.
