Admissibility of vehicle impact photographsBy Timothy W. KellyFebruary 2010The standard for the admissibility of photographs of a motor vehicle collision depicting minimal damage to the vehicles in a personal injury trial has been debated since the First District Appellate Court’s opinion inDicosola v. Bowman, 342 Ill. App. 3d 530 (1st Dist. 2003).
Condition, cause AND foreseeabilityBy Albert E. DurkinApril 2010When an attorney is faced with questions as to when conduct is a cause and when it is only a condition, close attention must be paid to a plaintiff’s conduct.
Editor’s noteBy John L. NisivacoSeptember 2010An introduction to the issue from Editor John L. Nisivaco.
Editor’s noteBy John L. NisivacoApril 2010An introduction to this issue from editor John Nisivaco.
Editor’s noteBy John L. NisivacoFebruary 2010Thank you to all of the contributors. The articles are excellent and we hope you find the materials helpful.
Editor’s noteBy John L. NisivacoJanuary 2010This edition’s article, written by Daniel Wurl, provides an in-depth discussion of the confusion surrounding the Supreme Court Committee’s current, revised version of Illinois Pattern Instruction Civil No. 105.01, which defines the duty owed by professionals for claims of professional negligence.
Editor’s notesBy John L. NisivacoMarch 2010An introduction to this issue from the newsletter's editor.
IPI No. 105.01: Did the Supreme Court Committee fix it or break what wasn’t broken?By Daniel P. WurlJanuary 2010A look at the reasons for the revisions made to the IPI 105.01 by the Supreme Court Committee, the appellate court decisions on which the Committee relied for the revisions, and the four appellate court cases that have addressed IPI 105.01 since the 2006 revisions were made.
A procedural look at the exclusive remedy defenseBy Kingshuk K. RoySeptember 2010A brief overview of the exclusive remedy defense and its procedural application in light of the recent Fifth District decision of Reed v. White.
Recovering the value of “free” caretaking by an adult’s parentsBy Dennis M. LynchMarch 2010A tortfeasor cannot seek to shirk responsibility for caretaking services because the caretaking was provided by the adult’s parents, and not by some third party.
Shared interest negotiationBy Hon. Bruno J. TassoneMarch 2010A good agreement is one that is efficient, improves or at least does not damage the relationship, and meets the bona fide interests of each party.
Tort immunity in medical malpractice casesBy Thomas Q. Keefe, III & Thomas Q. Keefe, Jr.February 2010Public entities and public employees are immune from allegations of failure to diagnose and misdiagnosis, as well as allegations of failure to perform adequate exams (but not for improper treatment after diagnosis).
What hath Hudson wrought?By Patricia A. ZimmerApril 2010If you decide that you must take a voluntary dismissal in the face of a prior dismissal on the merits of some claim in your suit, an Agreed Order of voluntary dismissal should reference Hudson and state that the defendants are waiving the res judicatadefense should plaintiff decide to refile.