Saturday, March 15, 2014

Florida Supreme Court Makes History by Rejecting Medical Malpractice Damage Caps on Noneconomic Damages in Wrongful Death

The Florida Supreme Court has sent shockwaves through the legal world with its recent pronouncement that the state's cap on noneconomic damages in medical malpractice cases is unconstitutional when applied to wrongful death actions.

The case involves a young woman who died shortly after giving birth due to a series of medical errors made during the delivery. Her estate filed a wrongful death lawsuit in federal court under the Federal Tort Claims Act, since the woman received her medical care at a clinic on a U.S. Air Force Base as an Air Force dependent.

The United States District Court for the Northern District of Florida applied Florida law, namely the Florida Wrongful Death Act, to determine the liability of the doctors and the amount of damages owed. In its 2009 Order and Final Judgment, the court awarded slightly under $1 million in economic damages and $2 million in noneconomic (pain and suffering) damages, with $500,000 of that amount going to the infant child and the other $1.5 to the deceased woman's parents. However, applying the Florida damages caps, the court was forced to cut the noneconomic damage award in half from $2 million to $1 million.

The plaintiffs argued that the damages cap was unconstitutional on several grounds. The District Court did not have authority to ask the Florida Supreme Court to rule on the constitutionality of the law, but stated that it did not believe the court would overturn the caps.

The case was appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, which in 2011 upheld the application of the damages cap by the District Court. The court held that the damages cap did not violate the Equal Protection clause or Takings clause of U.S. Constitution or the Takings clause of the Florida Constitution. As to the rest of the plaintiff's constitutional arguments, the Court certified those questions to the Florida Supreme Court, asking it to rule on the constitutionality of Florida's statute in relation to Equal Protection, Access to Courts, Trial by Jury, and Separation of Powers under the Florida Constitution.

The case was argued to the Florida Supreme Court in 2012, which after deliberating for two years, finally released its decision earlier this month. The court held "that the cap on wrongful death noneconomic damages provided in section 766.118, Florida Statutes, violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Florida Constitution." The court quoted Article I, Section 2 of the Florida Constitution, which states that "All natural persons, female and male alike, are equal before the law." Since it found the caps to be unconstitutional on equal protection grounds, the court did not need to address the other questions certified by the Eleventh Circuit.


According to the court, the cap on wrongful death noneconomic damages imposes "unfair and illogical burdens" in cases involving multiple claimants as compared to cases with only one claimant. Not only is this disparity arbitrary, it does not bear any rational relationship to the legislature's stated reason for adopting caps in the first place, which was to address an alleged crisis in Florida medical malpractice insurance. The court went on to question whether such a crisis ever actually existed or was merely manufactured to provide a premise for enacting "tort reform."