Public Act 90-0111 of the 90th General Assembly

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Public Act 90-0111

HB0297 Enrolled                                LRB9000213PTcw

    AN ACT concerning court proceedings.

    Be it enacted by the People of  the  State  of  Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:

    Section  3.  The Liquor Control Act of 1934 is amended by
changing Section 6-21 as follows:

    (235 ILCS 5/6-21) (from Ch. 43, par. 135)
    Sec. 6-21.  (a) Every person who is injured  within  this
State, in person or property, by any intoxicated person has a
right of action in his or her own name, severally or jointly,
against  any person, licensed under the laws of this State or
of any other state to sell alcoholic liquor, who, by  selling
or giving alcoholic liquor, within or without the territorial
limits of this State, causes the intoxication of such person.
Any  person  at least 21 years of age who pays for a hotel or
motel room or facility knowing that the room or  facility  is
to  be  used  by  any  person  under  21 years of age for the
unlawful  consumption   of   alcoholic   liquors   and   such
consumption  causes  the  intoxication of the person under 21
years of age, shall be liable to any person who is injured in
person or property by the intoxicated person under  21  years
of age. Any person owning, renting, leasing or permitting the
occupation  of  any  building or premises with knowledge that
alcoholic liquors are to  be  sold  therein,  or  who  having
leased  the  same  for other purposes, shall knowingly permit
therein the sale of any alcoholic liquors  that  have  caused
the intoxication of any person, shall be liable, severally or
jointly,  with  the  person  selling  or  giving the liquors.
However, if such building or premises belong to  a  minor  or
other  person  under guardianship the guardian of such person
shall be held liable instead of the ward. A married woman has
the same right to bring the action and to control it and  the
amount recovered as an unmarried woman. All damages recovered
by  a minor under this Act shall be paid either to the minor,
or to his or her parent, guardian or next friend as the court
shall direct. The unlawful sale or gift of  alcoholic  liquor
works  a  forfeiture  of  all  rights of the lessee or tenant
under any lease or contract of rent upon the  premises  where
the  unlawful  sale  or  gift  takes  place.  All actions for
damages under this Act may be by any  appropriate  action  in
the circuit court. An action shall lie for injuries to either
means  of support or loss of society, but not both, caused by
an intoxicated person or in consequence of  the  intoxication
of  any  person  resulting  as  hereinabove set out. "Loss of
society" means the mutual benefits that  each  family  member
receives  from  the  other's  continued  existence, including
love, affection,  care,  attention,  companionship,  comfort,
guidance,   and   protection.    "Family"   includes  spouse,
children, parents, brothers, and sisters.  The action, if the
person from whom support or society was furnished is  living,
shall be brought by any person injured in means of support or
society  in  his  or  her name for his or her benefit and the
benefit of all other persons injured in means of  support  or
society.  However, any person claiming to be injured in means
of support or society and not included in any action  brought
hereunder  may  join  by  motion made within the times herein
provided  for  bringing   such   action   or   the   personal
representative  of the deceased person from whom such support
or society was furnished may so join. In  every  such  action
the  jury  shall  determine  the  amount  of  damages  to  be
recovered  without regard to and with no special instructions
as to the dollar limits on recovery imposed by this  Section.
The  amount  recovered  in  every  such  action  is  for  the
exclusive benefit of the person injured in loss of support or
society  and  shall  be  distributed  to  such persons in the
proportions determined by the verdict  rendered  or  judgment
entered  in  the action. If the right of action is settled by
agreement with the  personal  representative  of  a  deceased
person  from whom support or society was furnished, the court
having jurisdiction of the  estate  of  the  deceased  person
shall  distribute  the amount of the settlement to the person
injured in loss of support or society in the  proportion,  as
determined by the court, that the percentage of dependency of
each such person upon the deceased person bears to the sum of
the  percentages  of  dependency of all such persons upon the
deceased person. For all causes of action  involving  persons
injured,   killed,   or   incurring  property  damage  before
September 12,  1985,  in  no  event  shall  the  judgment  or
recovery  under  this  Act for injury to the person or to the
property of any person as hereinabove set out exceed $15,000,
and recovery under this Act for  loss  of  means  of  support
resulting  from  the  death  or  injury  of  any  person,  as
hereinabove set out, shall not exceed $20,000. For all causes
of  action  involving  persons  injured, killed, or incurring
property damage after September 12, 1985 but before  July  1,
1998,  in  no event shall the judgment or recovery for injury
to the person or property of any person  exceed  $30,000  for
each  person  incurring  damages, and recovery under this Act
for loss of means of support  resulting  from  the  death  or
injury of any person shall not exceed $40,000. For all causes
of  action  involving  persons  injured, killed, or incurring
property damage on or after July 1, 1998, in no  event  shall
the judgment or recovery for injury to the person or property
of  any  person  exceed  $45,000  for  each  person incurring
damages, and recovery under this Act for either loss of means
of support or loss of society resulting  from  the  death  or
injury  of  any person shall not exceed $55,000. Beginning in
1999,  every  January  20,  these  liability   limits   shall
automatically  be increased or decreased, as applicable, by a
percentage equal to the percentage  change  in  the  consumer
price  index-u  during  the preceding 12-month calendar year.
"Consumer price index-u" means the  index  published  by  the
Bureau of Labor Statistics of the United States Department of
Labor that measures the average change in prices of goods and
services purchased by all urban consumers, United States city
average,  all items, 1982-84 = 100.  The new amount resulting
from each  annual  adjustment  shall  be  determined  by  the
Comptroller  and  made  available  to the chief judge of each
judicial circuit. The liability limits at the time  at  which
damages  subject to such limits are awarded by final judgment
or settlement shall be utilized by  the  courts.  Nothing  in
this  Section  bars  any  person  from making separate claims
which, in the aggregate, exceed  any  one  limit  where  such
person  incurs  more  than  one  type  of compensable damage,
including personal injury, property damage, and loss to means
of support or society.  However, all persons claiming loss to
means of support or society shall be limited to an  aggregate
recovery not to exceed the single limitation set forth herein
for  the  death or injury of each person from whom support or
society is claimed.
    Nothing in this Act shall be construed to confer a  cause
of  action  for  injuries  to  the  person or property of the
intoxicated person himself, nor shall anything in this Act be
construed to confer a cause of action for loss  of  means  of
support  or  society  on the intoxicated person himself or on
any person claiming  to  be  supported  by  such  intoxicated
person or claiming the society of such person. In conformance
with  the  rule  of  statutory construction enunciated in the
general Illinois saving provision in Section 4 of "An Act  to
revise  the  law  in  relation  to  the  construction  of the
statutes", approved March 5, 1874, as amended,  no  amendment
of this Section purporting to abolish or having the effect of
abolishing a cause of action shall be applied to invalidate a
cause   of   action   accruing  before  its  effective  date,
irrespective of whether the amendment was  passed  before  or
after the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1986.
    Each  action  hereunder  shall be barred unless commenced
within one year next after the cause of action accrued.
    However, a licensed  distributor  or  brewer  whose  only
connection  with  the furnishing of alcoholic liquor which is
alleged to have caused intoxication  was  the  furnishing  or
maintaining of any apparatus for the dispensing or cooling of
beer  is  not liable under this Section, and if such licensee
is named as a defendant, a proper motion to dismiss shall  be
granted.
    (b)  Any  person licensed under any state or local law to
sell alcoholic liquor, whether or not a citizen  or  resident
of  this  State, who in person or through an agent causes the
intoxication, by the sale or gift of alcoholic liquor, of any
person who, while intoxicated, causes injury to any person or
property in  the  State  of  Illinois  thereby  submits  such
licensed  person,  and, if an individual, his or her personal
representative, to the jurisdiction of  the  courts  of  this
State  for  a  cause  of  action arising under subsection (a)
above.
    Service of process upon any person who is subject to  the
jurisdiction of the courts of this State, as provided in this
subsection,  may  be  made  by personally serving the summons
upon the defendant outside this State,  as  provided  in  the
Code  of  Civil  Procedure, as now or hereafter amended, with
the  same  force  and  effect  as  though  summons  had  been
personally served within this State.
    Only causes of action arising under subsection (a)  above
may  be  asserted  against  a defendant in an action in which
jurisdiction over him or her is based upon this subsection.
    Nothing herein contained limits or affects the  right  to
serve  any  process  in  any  other  manner  now or hereafter
provided by law.
(Source: P.A. 84-1308; 84-1380; 84-1381; 84-1438.)

    Section 5.  The Code of Civil  Procedure  is  amended  by
changing Sections 2-1008 and 13-209 as follows:

    (735 ILCS 5/2-1008) (from Ch. 110, par. 2-1008)
    Sec. 2-1008.  Abatement; change of interest or liability;
substitution of parties.
    (a)  Change  of  interest  or  liability. If by reason of
marriage,  bankruptcy,  assignment,  or   any   other   event
occurring  after  the  commencement of a cause or proceeding,
either  before  or  after  judgment,  causing  a  change   or
transmission  of  interest  or liability, or by reason of any
person interested coming into existence after commencement of
the action, it becomes necessary or desirable that any person
not already a party be before the court, or that  any  person
already a party be made party in another capacity, the action
does  not  abate,  but on motion an order may be entered that
the proper parties be substituted  or  added,  and  that  the
cause  or proceeding be carried on with the remaining parties
and new parties, with or without a change in the title of the
cause.
    (b)  Death. If a party to an action dies and  the  action
is  one  which  survives,  the proper party or parties may be
substituted by order of court upon motion as follows:.
         (1)  If no petition for letters of  office  for  the
    decedent's estate has been filed, the court may appoint a
    special  representative  for the deceased for the purpose
    of prosecuting the action.  The appointment shall  be  on
    verified  motion  of  any  party  who appears entitled to
    participate in the deceased's estate, reciting the  names
    and  last  known  addresses  of  all  known heirs and the
    legatees and executor named in any  will  that  has  been
    filed.   The  court's determination that a person appears
    entitled to participate in the deceased's estate shall be
    solely for purposes of this Section and not determinative
    of rights in final disposition.   Within  90  days  after
    appointment,  the special representative shall notify the
    heirs and legatees of the following information by  mail:
    that an appointment has been made, the court in which the
    case   was   filed,  the  caption  of  the  case,  and  a
    description of the  nature  of  the  case.   The  special
    representative  shall publish notice to unknown heirs and
    legatees as provided in the Probate Act of  1975.   If  a
    will is filed within 90 days after the appointment of the
    special representative, the same notice shall be given to
    any  additional executors and legatees named in the will.
    At  any  time  that  an   estate   is   opened   with   a
    representative other than the special representative, the
    court  may  upon motion substitute the representative for
    the special representative.  In  this  case,   the  court
    shall   allow  disbursements  and  fees  of  the  special
    representative and his or her attorney as a claim against
    any proceeds received.  The proceeds of any  judgment  or
    settlement  shall  be distributed under the provisions of
    the Probate Act of 1975.  This  paragraph  (1)  does  not
    apply to actions pending under the Wrongful Death Act.
         (2)  If  a  person  against  whom an action has been
    brought dies, and the cause of action survives and is not
    otherwise barred,  his  or  her  personal  representative
    shall be substituted as a party.  If no petition has been
    filed  for  letters  of office for the deceased's estate,
    the court, upon the motion of a person bringing an action
    and after the notice to the party's heirs or legatees  as
    the  court  directs  and  without  opening an estate, may
    appoint a special representative for the  deceased  party
    for  the  purposes  of  defending the action.  If a party
    elects to have a special representative  appointed  under
    this  paragraph (2), the recovery shall be limited to the
    proceeds of any liability insurance protecting the estate
    and shall not bar the estate from  enforcing  any  claims
    that might have been available to it as counterclaims.
    If  a  motion  to  substitute is not filed within 90 days
after the death is suggested of record,  the  action  may  be
dismissed as to the deceased party.
    If the death of a party to a personal action is suggested
of  record  and  no petition for letters of office for his or
her estate has been filed, the court, upon motion  and  after
such  notice  to  the  party's heirs or legatees as the court
directs, and without opening of  an  estate,  may  appoint  a
special  administrator for the deceased party for the purpose
of  prosecuting  or  defending  the  action.   If   a   legal
representative is appointed for the estate before judgment is
entered, and his or her appointment is suggested of record in
the  action, the court shall order that the representative be
substituted for the special administrator.
    If a judgment is entered or  the  action  is  settled  in
favor   of   the  special  administrator,  he  or  she  shall
distribute the proceeds as provided by law,  except  that  if
proceeds  in excess of $1,000 are distributable to a minor or
person  under  legal  disability,  the  court   shall   allow
disbursements  and  fees to the special administrator and his
or her attorney and the balance  shall  be  administered  and
distributed  under the supervision of the probate division of
the court.
    In the event of the death of a  party  in  an  action  in
which the right sought to be enforced survives only as to the
remaining  parties  to the action, the action does not abate.
The death shall be suggested of record and the  action  shall
proceed in favor of or against the remaining parties.
    No action brought for the use of another abates by reason
of  the  death of the plaintiff whose name is used but may be
maintained by the party for whose use it was brought  in  his
or  her  own name upon suggesting the death of record and the
entry of an order of substitution.
    (c)  Legal disability. If a party is  declared  to  be  a
person  under  legal disability, that fact shall be suggested
of record and the prosecution or defense shall be  maintained
by  his  or  her  representative,  guardian  ad litem or next
friend, as may be appropriate.
    (d)  Trustees; public officers. If  any  trustee  or  any
public  officer  ceases  to hold the trust or office and that
fact is suggested of record,  the  action  shall  proceed  in
favor of or against his or her successor.
    (e)  Service  of  process. Parties against whom relief is
sought, substituted under subsection  (a)  hereof,  shall  be
brought  in  by  service  of  process.  Service of process on
parties substituted  under  subsections  (b),  (c),  and  (d)
hereof  is  not  required,  but  notice shall be given as the
court may direct.
(Source: P.A. 83-707.)

    (735 ILCS 5/13-209) (from Ch. 110, par. 13-209)
    Sec. 13-209. Death of party.
    (a) If a person entitled to bring an action  dies  before
the  expiration  of  the  time  limited  for the commencement
thereof, and the cause of action survives:,
         (1)  an action  may  be  commenced  by  his  or  her
    representative  before  the  expiration  of that time, or
    within one year from his or her death whichever  date  is
    the later;
         (2)  if  no  petition  for letters of office for the
    decedent's estate has been filed, the court may appoint a
    special representative for the deceased for  the  purpose
    of  prosecuting  the action.  The appointment shall be on
    verified motion of any  party  who  appears  entitled  to
    participate  in the deceased's estate, reciting the names
    and last known addresses  of  all  known  heirs  and  the
    legatees  and  executor  named  in any will that has been
    filed.  The court's determination that a  person  appears
    entitled to participate in the deceased's estate shall be
    solely for purposes of this Section and not determinative
    of  rights  in  final  disposition.  Within 90 days after
    appointment, the special representative shall notify  the
    heirs  and legatees of the following information by mail:
    that an appointment has been made, the court in which the
    case  was  filed,  the  caption  of  the  case,   and   a
    description  of  the  nature  of  the  case.  The special
    representative shall publish notice to unknown heirs  and
    legatees  as  provided  in the Probate Act of 1975.  If a
    will is filed within 90 days after the appointment of the
    special representative, the same notice shall be given to
    any additional executors and legatees named in the  will.
    At   any   time   that   an   estate  is  opened  with  a
    representative other than the special representative, the
    court may upon motion substitute the  representative  for
    the  special  representative.   In  this  case, the court
    shall  allow  disbursements  and  fees  of  the   special
    representative and his or her attorney as a claim against
    any  proceeds  received.  The proceeds of any judgment or
    settlement shall be distributed under the  provisions  of
    the Probate Act of 1975.
    (b)  If  a  person  against whom an action may be brought
dies before the  expiration  of  the  time  limited  for  the
commencement  thereof,  and the cause of action survives, and
is not otherwise barred:,
         (1)   an action may be commenced against his or  her
    personal  representative after the expiration of the time
    limited for the commencement of the action, and within  6
    months after the person's death;
         (2)  if  no  petition  has been filed for letters of
    office for the deceased's estate,  the  court,  upon  the
    motion  of a person entitled to bring an action and after
    the notice to the party's heirs or legatees as the  court
    directs  and  without  opening  an  estate, may appoint a
    special representative for the  deceased  party  for  the
    purposes  of  defending the action.  If a party elects to
    have  a  special  representative  appointed  under   this
    paragraph  (2),  the  recovery  shall  be  limited to the
    proceeds of any liability insurance protecting the estate
    and shall not bar the estate from  enforcing  any  claims
    that might have been available to it as counterclaims.
    (c)  If  a  party  commences an action against a deceased
person whose  death  is  unknown  to  the  party  before  the
expiration  of the time limited for the commencement thereof,
and the cause  of  action  survives,  and  is  not  otherwise
barred,  the  action  may  be  commenced against the deceased
person's personal representative  if  all  of  the  following
terms and conditions are met:
         (1)  After learning of the death, the party proceeds
    with  reasonable diligence to move the court for leave to
    file an  amended  complaint,  substituting  the  personal
    representative as defendant.
         (2)  The party proceeds with reasonable diligence to
    serve process upon the personal representative.
         (3)  If  process  is served more than 6 months after
    the issuance of  letters  of  office,  liability  of  the
    estate is limited as to recovery to the extent the estate
    is protected by liability insurance.
         (4)  In  no  event  can  a  party commence an action
    under   this   subsection   (c)   unless    a    personal
    representative  is  appointed and an amended complaint is
    filed  within  2  years  of  the  time  limited  for  the
    commencement of the original action.
(Source: P.A. 86-793; 86-815; 86-1028.)

    Section 99.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect  upon
becoming law.

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