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The
Civil Justice Reform Act of 2003,1 aimed
at restraining legislatively perceived excesses in
tort litigation, did not transform Arkansas tort law
beyond recognition. The fundamentals of most tort
cases remain the same. However, the law does make
significant changes regarding (1) allocation of responsibility
among parties and nonparties in personal injury and
property damage cases, (2) punitive damages, and (3)
medical injury actions. Attorneys handling cases involving
any of these areas must familiarize themselves with
the new law and its implications. Additionally, venue
requirements are altered for many types of claims.
I. Joint and Several Liability Almost Erased
Probably the single
most important feature of the new statute is that
in personal injury and property damage cases, traditional
joint and several tortfeasor liability is replaced
by a new system in which defendants typically are
liable for only their own share of responsibility
for a plaintiff's harm as determined by the trier
of fact.2 Moreover, as explained more fully
in a forthcoming article,3 in a historic
shift from previous law, the trier of fact is now
required to "consider the fault of all persons
or entities who contributed to the alleged injury
. . . regardless of whether the person or entity was,
or could have been, named as a party to the suit."4
Under this new provision,
the fact finder must divide responsibility for a plaintiff's
injuries not only among the plaintiff and the named
defendants, but also among persons foreign to the
action, if a defendant gives notice at least 120 days
before trial briefly setting out the basis for believing
the nonparties to be at fault.5 These nonparties
to whom fault could be assigned might include out-of-state
or foreign firms that cannot be sued for lack of personal
jurisdiction; persons or entities protected by sovereign,
charitable, or intrafamily immunities; employers whose
negligence was one cause of injury to an employee
suing a third party such as a product manufacturer;
persons or entities without assets, "not worth
suing"; and persons whose location and perhaps
even identity is unknown.6 Since under
the new law defendants' fault "shall be several
only and shall not be joint,"7 this
"empty chair" provision creates powerful
incentives for defendants to dilute their own liability
by contending that nonparties are at least partially
responsible for the plaintiff's injury.
Joint and several liability
is preserved, however, in two situations. The first
is when a person at fault is "acting as an agent
or servant" of a party defendant.8
Thus a non-negligent employer could still be held
vicariously liable for a plaintiff's injury caused
by the negligent driving of an employee on company
business. The second is where a party defendant was
"acting in concert" with a person injuring
the plaintiff. "Acting in concert," however,
is defined more strictly than at common law, as "entering
into a conscious agreement to pursue a common plan
or design to commit an intentional tort and
actively taking part in that intentional tort."9
A defendant engaged in a merely reckless or negligent
joint enterprise with a harm-causing actor can no
longer be held jointly liable for that harm, and would
be severally liable for a portion of it only if the
defendant's own act itself was also a proximate cause
of the harm.
If one defendant's several
share of liability is not reasonably collectible,
the new law provides for at least a partial reallocation
of that share to other tortfeasor defendants. In such
a case the court will increase the share of a defendant
found at least 50% at fault by up to 20%, and the
share of a defendant found to be 10-50% at fault by
up to 10%.10 A defendant receives no increase
in its fault share allocation if it is 10% or less
at fault. Nor does the law provide for any reallocation
to defendants of fault assigned to nonparties. Nonparties'
fault shares in effect are assigned to plaintiffs.
II. Punitive Damages Restricted
Responding to concerns
about large punitive damage verdicts in Arkansas11
and elsewhere, the General Assembly tightened the
standard of proof necessary to support a punitive
damage award, limited the amounts awardable, and created
a bifurcated proceeding for considering punitive damage
claims. Unlike the new law's fault allocation provisions
discussed above, which apply only to personal injury
and property damage cases, the new law's punitive
damage provisions appear to apply to all tort cases.12
This is significant because most punitive damage awards
occur in business tort cases rather than personal
injury cases.
The new law codifies
existing precedent13 holding that to recover
punitive damages plaintiff must show defendant engaged
in either of two classes of conduct: "(1) the
defendant knew or ought to have known, in light of
the surrounding circumstances, that his or her conduct
would naturally and probably result in injury or damage
and that he or she continued the conduct with malice
or in reckless disregard of the consequences from
which malice may be inferred," or (2) "the
defendant intentionally pursued a course of conduct
for the purpose of causing injury or damage."14
Going beyond mere codification, the law increases
the quantum of evidence required to support this showing.
It replaces "substantial evidence," the
prior standard for purposes of appellate review,15
with "clear and convincing evidence."16
The Civil Justice Reform
Act limits the amount of punitive damages in cases
in which the defendant's conduct was malicious or
reckless (the first class of conduct above), but not
in cases in which defendant's conduct was intentional
(the second class of conduct). The punitive damage
recovery limit for each plaintiff harmed by a defendant's
malicious or reckless conduct is the greater of $250,000
or three times the amount of compensatory damages
up to $1 million, adjusted triennially for inflation.17
Trials involving punitive
damage claims must be bifurcated at the request of
any party. The first part of the trial focuses solely
on liability for compensatory damages. Only if compensatory
damages are awarded may the trial proceed to consideration
of punitive damages, and only during this second stage
can "evidence of the financial condition of the
defendant and other evidence relevant only to punitive
damages" be admitted.18
III. New Rules for Medical Injury Actions
Among the major proponents
of the Civil Justice Reform Act were the Arkansas
Medical Society and the Arkansas Hospital Association,
both concerned about increases in liability insurance
premiums. Several provisions of the new law created
rules specifically benefitting health care providers
in medical injury actions. Among these provisions
are requirements that (a) plaintiff file a medical
expert's affidavit of reasonable cause at the outset
of an action; (b) the action be filed where the allegedly
negligent acts occurred, typically in the defendant's
home county; and (c) plaintiff's expert witnesses
be of the same specialty as the defendant(s). The
new law also rules out vicarious liability theories
adopted in other states shifting some physician liability
to hospitals. It precludes the admissibility of certain
surveys and inspections as part of the plaintiff's,
but not the defendant's, case. It restricts the operation
of the collateral source rule regarding plaintiff's
entitlement to damages reflecting full rather than
discounted costs of medical services. Finally, it
requires periodic rather than lump sum payment of
future damages exceeding $100,000.
Expert Medical Affidavit
Requirement: The General Assembly, concerned about
allegations of frivolous medical malpractice actions,
beefed up existing deterrents against "false
and unreasonable pleadings." The new law provides
that in medical negligence cases in which expert testimony
is required, reasonable cause for the action "shall
only be established by the filing of an affidavit
that shall be signed by an expert engaged in the same
type of medical care as is each medical care provider
defendant."19 The affidavit must state
with particularity the basis for the expert's opinion
that the applicable standard of care was breached,
causing harm. The affidavit must be filed within 30
days after the filing of the complaint, or the action
will be dismissed.20
Venue Limitation:
The new law provides that actions for medical injury
"shall be filed in the county in which the alleged
act or omission occurred."21 This
will generally be in the defendants' home county.
The law does not specify where the action should be
filed if a course of treatment takes place in more
than one county, as in a case where a patient alleges
misdiagnosis by a practitioner in one county, referral
to a specialist or hospital in another county, and
injury resulting from negligent treatment there and
from negligence in the operation of the managed care
plan, headquartered in a third county, with which
all the individual providers are affiliated.22
Expert Witness Limitations:
Under the new law, except for cases in which the asserted
negligence can be understood as a matter of common
knowledge, plaintiffs are required to prove the standard
of care and breach of that standard through expert
witnesses "of the same specialty as the defendant."23
This provision is partly a response to concern about
"hired gun" plaintiffs' experts testifying
in areas in which they do not practice. The provision
overturns prior case law allowing a general practitioner,
in the trial judge's discretion, to testify about
the standard of skill of a specialist if the issue
relates to a question within the general practitioner's
area of expertise.24 The provision might
also be read to prevent a specialist from testifying
about the standard of care for a general practitioner
defendant. Plaintiff's expert on causation issues,
by contrast, does not have to be within the defendant's
specialty.25
Restriction on Vicarious
Liability Theories: Many jurisdictions have adopted
theories permitting vicarious liability actions against
a hospital for negligence committed at the hospital
by non-employee physicians with staff privileges to
use the hospital's facilities and personnel in treating
their patients. These theories limit or reject the
hospital's traditional defense that the negligent
physician is an independent contractor for whose acts
the hospital has no responsibility. The theories are
typically based on the contention that the physician
is an apparent agent of the hospital, on the hospital's
right to control key aspects of the physician's work,
or on the premise that the work negligently performed
(for example, in the emergency room) is an "inherent
function" of the hospital.26 Proponents
of these theories argue that they reflect the reality
that medical care is team care, and that focusing
liability on the organization rather than blaming
the individual physician promotes a more coordinated
approach to error prevention and higher quality health
care overall.
The Civil Justice Reform
Act, in contrast, attempts to restrict vicarious liability
of hospitals to situations in which the plaintiff
proves the allegedly negligent medical care provider
is an employee of the hospital, when "the only
reason for naming the facility as a defendant is that
the defendant medical care provider practices in the
facility."27 This language does not
apply to claims against the hospital based on the
hospital's own institutional negligence, for example
in credentialing or infection control.
Inspection Report
Admissibility: The Civil Justice Reform Act includes
a provision limiting admissibility of surveys and
inspections by state and federal regulators and by
accrediting bodies such as the Joint Commission on
Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. The new
law makes such materials admissible only if "relevant
to the plaintiff's injury"28 (as opposed,
perhaps, to other issues in the case such as the standard
of care or the propriety of punitive damages). The
provision applies only to surveys and inspections
offered by plaintiffs. Defendants' use of such materials
is unaffected.
Collateral Source
Rule Restriction: The new law provides that damages
for the cost of a plaintiff's medical care are limited
to "costs actually paid" and costs
"which remain unpaid and for which the plaintiff
or any third party shall be legally responsible."29
This provision reverses prior case law holding that
the amount by which medical services are discounted
constitutes a benefit from a collateral source, similar
to an expense covered by an insurance policy, which
under the collateral source rule is not taken into
account to diminish plaintiff's damages.30
Periodic Payment
of Future Damages: The new law requires the court,
at the request of either party, to order that future
damages exceeding $100,000 be paid in whole or in
part by periodic payments rather than in a lump sum.31
This changes the prior statute giving the court discretion
in the matter.
IV. Conclusion
The provisions of the
Civil Justice Reform Act outlined above, and a few
others discussion of which is precluded by space limitations,32
together constitute a set of significant changes but
not a revolution in Arkansas tort law. As proponents
of the new law have pointed out, recent tort legislation
in some other states has been considerably more radical.
The overall impact of the new law will certainly favor
defendants and their liability insurers as a class.
Instances of injustice likely to arise under the law
are not hard to imagine,33 and one can
expect challenges to some of its provisions on separation
of powers and other constitutional grounds. While
the courts work through these issues, attorneys handling
Arkansas tort cases are well advised to give close
attention to the new law's language and structure.
Endnotes
1. 2003 Ark. Acts 649 (effective
March 25, 2003). The new law is codified in Ark. Code
Ann. §§ 16-55-201 to -220, 16-114-206, and
16-114 208 to -212 (Michie Supp.
2003).
2. Ark. Code Ann. §
16-55-201. These provisions concerning fault allocation
do not apply to actions
not involving personal injury or property damage,
for example, actions
based on theories of defamation, privacy violation,
trespass, nuisance,
interference with contractual relationships, malicious
prosecution, deceit,
conversion, nonmedical professional malpractice, or
unfair competition. See
id. § 16-55-201(a).Whether the new provisions
on fault allocation apply to claims
of outrage, breach of warranty, false imprisonment,
and other theories bordering
on personal injury may depend on the facts of individual
cases and will require
judicial interpretation.
3. Robert B Leflar, The
Civil Justice Reform Act and the Empty Chair,
2003 Ark. L. Notes 67.
4. Ark. Code Ann. §
16-55-202(a).
5. Id. § 16-55-202(b).
6. Defendants settling out
before trial could also receive fault allocations,
as allowed under current
Arkansas practice. See id. § 16-55 202(b)(1);
Henry Woods & Beth
Deere, Comparative Fault § 13:15 at 285 86, §
13:19 at 300-01 (3d
ed. 1996).
7. Ark. Code Ann. §
16-55-201(a).
8. Id. § 16-55-205(a).
9. Id. § 16-55-16-55-205(b)(1)
(emphasis added).
10. Id. § 16-55-203.
These reallocations apply only to compensatory, not
punitive, damages. Id.
§ 16-55-203(f).
11. See, e.g., Advocat,
Inc. v. Sauer, ___ Ark. ___, 111 S.W.3d 346 (Ark.
2003) ($63 million punitive
award against corporate owner of Mena nursing home,
reduced by two-thirds
by Supreme Court shortly after conclusion of legislative
session).
12. Unlike other sections
of the new law, which contain explicit limitations
on their scope of application,
see Ark. Code Ann. § 16-55-201 (virtually abolishing
joint liability in personal
injury and property damage cases only) and §
16-55- 213 (restricting
venue in specified classes of cases, not limited to
personal injury and
property damage cases), the punitive damage sections
contain no such limitations.
See §§ 16-55-206 to 211.
13. See Ark. Model
Jury Instructions (Civil) 2218 (4th ed. 1999) (formerly
AMI 2217); National
By-Products v. Searcy House Moving Co., 292 Ark. 491,
731 S.W.2d 194 (1987).
14. Ark. Code Ann. §
16-55-206.
15. See Stein v. Lucas,
308 Ark. 74, 78-79, 823 S.W.2d 832, 834 (1992); Renfro
v. Swift Eckrich, Inc.,
53 F.3d 1460, 1465 (8th Cir. 1995).
16. Ark. Code Ann. §
16-55-207.
17. Id. § 16-55-208.
18. Id. § 16-55-211.
19. Id. § 16-114-209(b)(1).
The experts signing the affidavits do not have to
be within the same specialties
as the medical care defendants. Compare id.
§
16-114-206(a)(1) & (2).
20. Id. § 16-114-209(b)(2)
& (3).
21. Id. § 16-55-213(e).
22. The law provides new
venue rules for other types of actions, including
tort actions, and these
rules permit claims to be brought where the plaintiff
resides, where an defendant
individual resides or where a defendant entity has
its principal place
of business, or where "a substantial part of
the events or omissions
giving rise to the claim occurs." Id.
§ 16-55-213(a). However, actions for
medical injury are explicitly excluded from the operation
of this provision.
23. Id. § 16-114-206(a)(1)
& (2).
24. Cathey v. Williams, 290
Ark. 189, 718 S.W.2d 98 (1986).
25. See Ark. Code
Ann. § 16-114-206(a)(3).
26. See generally
Barry R. Furrow et al., Health Law § 7-2 (2d
ed. 2000).
27. Ark. Code Ann. §
16-114-210.
28. Id. § 16-114-211.
29. Id. § 16-114-208(a)(1)(B)
(emphasis added).
30. Montgomery Ward &
Co. v. Anderson, 334 Ark. 561, 976 S.W.2d 382 (1998).
31. Ark. Code Ann. §
16-114-208(c)(1).
32. Among the law's other
provisions are changes in venue rules, id. §
16-55-213, see supra
note 22; protection for medical directors of nursing
homes against liability
reallocations, § 16-55-204; and tolling of the
statute of limitations
under certain conditions in medical injury actions,
§ 16-114 212.
33. See, e.g., Leflar,
supra note 3.
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