ILLINOIS OFFICIAL REPORTS
Appellate Court
Home Star Bank & Financial Services v. Emergency Care & Health Organization, Ltd.,
2012 IL App (1st) 112321
Appellate Court HOME STAR BANK AND FINANCIAL SERVICES, Guardian of the
Caption Estate of Edward Anderson, a Disabled Person, and DARBY THOMAS,
Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. EMERGENCY CARE AND HEALTH
ORGANIZATION, LTD., and MICHAEL T. MURPHY, Defendants-
Appellees (Provena Hospitals, d/b/a Provena St. Mary’s Hospital, a
Corporation, Defendants).
District & No. First District, Fifth Division
Docket No. 1-11-2321
Filed December 21, 2012
Held In a negligence action against an emergency room physician who
(Note: This syllabus responded to a “code blue” for a hospital patient and attempted to
constitutes no part of intubate him, summary judgment was improperly entered for the
the opinion of the court physician on the ground that he was immune from liability under the
but has been prepared Good Samaritan Act, notwithstanding the fact that no one was billed for
by the Reporter of the services provided, since the physician was paid to work in the
Decisions for the emergency room and he was not providing his services “without fee” for
convenience of the purposes of the Act.
reader.)
Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 07-L-1340; the Hon.
Review Elizabeth M. Budzinski, Judge, presiding.
Judgment Reversed and remanded.
Counsel on Keith A. Hebeisen, of Clifford Law Offices, of Chicago (Robert P.
Appeal Sheridan, of counsel), for appellants.
Kevin J. Vedrine and Christopher J. Solfa, both of Cunningham, Meyer
& Vedrine, PC, of Warrenville, for appellees.
Panel JUSTICE PALMER delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Presiding Justice McBride and Justice Taylor concurred in the judgment
and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 Plaintiffs Darby Thomas and Home Star Bank & Financial Services, as guardian of the
estate of Edward Anderson, a disabled person, filed suit against defendants Michael T.
Murphy, O.D., and his employer, Emergency Care & Health Organization, Ltd. (ECHO),
alleging Dr. Murphy was negligent in treating Anderson. The trial court granted summary
judgment to defendants, finding Dr. Murphy immune from liability pursuant to section 25
of the Good Samaritan Act (Act) (745 ILCS 49/25 (West 2010)). Plaintiffs appeal, arguing
the court erred in granting summary judgment to defendants as (1) there is a genuine issue
of material fact regarding whether Dr. Murphy’s conduct was in good faith; (2) the Good
Samaritan Act should not apply to Dr. Murphy, a physician compensated to perform services
for patients in a hospital; and (3) there is no other basis for granting summary judgment. We
reverse and remand.
¶2 BACKGROUND
¶3 On August 25, 2001, Dr. Murphy was working as an emergency physician in the
emergency department at Provena St. Mary’s Hospital (St. Mary’s or hospital). During his
shift, he responded to a “code blue” called for Anderson, a patient on another floor who Dr.
Murphy had never met. Dr. Murphy attempted to intubate Anderson and otherwise respond
to the situation. Anderson suffered permanent brain injury. Plaintiffs filed a negligence action
against Dr. Murphy and ECHO, alleging Dr. Murphy’s care and treatment of Anderson were
the cause of Anderson’s injuries.1 Dr. Murphy denied the allegations.
¶4 Dr. Murphy filed a motion for summary judgment on plaintiffs’ third amended complaint,
asserting that section 25 of the Good Samaritan Act barred the negligence action against him.
Section 25 of the Act provides:
“Any person licensed under the Medical Practice Act of 1987 [(225 ILCS 60/1 et seq.
1
Plaintiff also filed suit against assorted other defendants. Those cases were settled and
dismissed and are not at issue here.
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(West 2010))] or any person licensed to practice the treatment of human ailments in any
other state or territory of the United States who, in good faith, provides emergency care
without fee to a person, shall not, as a result of his or her acts or omissions, except willful
or wanton misconduct on the part of the person, in providing the care, be liable for civil
damages.” 745 ILCS 49/25 (West 2010).
Dr. Murphy asserted he was immune from liability under the Act because he had provided
emergency care to Anderson and no one was ever billed for that emergency care. Dr. Murphy
also asserted his conduct in providing the care and treatment to Anderson met the standard
of care applicable to a reasonably well-qualified or careful emergency room physician.
ECHO subsequently joined in the motion.
¶5 Plaintiffs responded that the Good Samaritan Act did not immunize Dr. Murphy from
liability for his services to Anderson. As relevant to this appeal, plaintiffs agreed Dr. Murphy
provided emergency care to Anderson but asserted that, as a matter of law, he did not provide
emergency care “without fee” as required by the Act. Plaintiffs argued that Dr. Murphy was
not a “volunteer” providing emergency care “without fee” because, as the emergency
physician working in the emergency room at St. Mary’s, it was his job to respond to the code
called for Anderson and he was paid hourly for his services at the hospital, which included
responding to codes. Again as relevant to this appeal, plaintiffs argued, in the alternative, that
there was a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether the failure to bill for Dr.
Murphy’s emergency care to Anderson was in “good faith.”
¶6 Exhibits and discovery depositions were filed by both parties in support of their
pleadings. The “exclusive emergency room services agreement” between ECHO and St.
Mary’s showed that, in exchange for a monthly stipend, ECHO agreed to provide physician
services to staff the emergency room at St. Mary’s 24 hours a day and 7 days a week. The
agreement stated that “[t]he primary obligation of ECHO’s physicians when in service at [St.
Mary’s] emergency room shall be to care for any and all patients presenting themselves for
treatment at the emergency room.” ECHO physicians would “not furnish follow-up care to
emergency patients except on an emergency basis or when requested by the Chief Executive
Officer or Executive Committee of the Medical Staff of [St. Mary’s].” Physicians covered
by the agreement were to discharge their duties in accordance with the bylaws, rules,
regulations and policies of the hospital and its medical staff. ECHO would bill and collect
fees directly from patients and/or third-party payors for the services of its emergency room
physicians.
¶7 An “independent contractor agreement” between ECHO and Dr. Murphy provided that
ECHO engaged Dr. Murphy to provide “emergency medical services” at St. Mary’s. An
attachment to the agreement described the “emergency medical services” as follows:
“The Physician shall provide such professional services ordinarily provided by
emergency physicians in a hospital, including but not limited to the following:
Physician shall provide emergency medical care for the following classes of patients
***:
1. Emergency Department
***
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2. Inpatient
Physician shall not provide any general or routine care of patients already
hospitalized under the care of another physician.
However, in dire emergencies, [i.e.], cardiorespiratory (or impending) arrest,
Physician may render service to any patient, as long as there is not an emergency
department patient requiring his/her immediate presence, and only until the
patient[’]s personal physician has assumed ongoing care.”
The agreement provided that Dr. Murphy would be paid hourly and the hourly fee would be
the “sole amount” he would receive for his services. Dr. Murphy agreed to abide by and
render emergency medical services in accordance with the bylaws, rules and regulations of
the hospital and departmental policies and procedures, using his professional judgment.
¶8 A typed “Clinical Operations/Nursing” department policy titled “Code Blue and Cardiac
Arrest Team” set out the “standardized response” for a patient suffering a cardiopulmonary
arrest at St. Mary’s. The policy provided that it affected assorted departments, including the
emergency department, and identified “ER Physician” as a code blue team member with the
duty to “[r]espond[ ] to all Code Blues in the hospital. Direct[ ] [the] Code Blue Team.” A
typed “Clinical Operations/Nursing” department policy titled “Power Outage Emergency
Code Blue” directed that “[s]hould a Code Blue occur [during a power outage], the unit that
has the emergency will send a runner to: *** [t]he E.R. for the physician.”
¶9 It is uncontested that ECHO billed Anderson for services its physicians provided to him
during a previous emergency room visit on August 22, 2001, but did not bill for Dr.
Murphy’s services in responding to the code blue on August 25. St. Mary’s billed Anderson
for supplies used during the code blue but not for any physician’s services.
¶ 10 By deposition, Dr. Murphy testified that the emergency room physician on duty at St.
Mary’s was the physician who would be expected to respond to a code blue. He was the only
emergency room physician working at St. Mary’s on the night of Anderson’s code blue. As
soon as he was notified of the code, he went to Anderson’s room. Dr. Murphy stated it was
part of his job in the emergency room at St. Mary’s to respond to a code. He had been
involved in “a lot” of codes at St. Mary’s.
¶ 11 Joseph Danna, M.D., the president and chief executive officer of ECHO, testified ECHO
was an independent contractor for St. Mary’s, with an exclusive contract with the hospital
to provide emergency room physician services to the hospital. Only ECHO physicians staffed
St. Mary’s emergency department. Dr. Murphy was one of those physicians under an
independent contractor agreement he had with ECHO.
¶ 12 Dr. Danna testified it was “not an inherent part of [Dr. Murphy’s] work, of his job,” to
respond to code blues at the hospital but, “if there were a dire emergency somewhere in the
hospital where there was no one else available to respond, we would respond in the manner
a good Samaritan would respond to that dire emergency.” Dr. Danna had no understanding
with the hospital that ECHO’s emergency physicians were part of the standard code blue
response team. He considered his physicians one of many available resources and, without
exception, they were “the last person” the hospital would call and would do so only if the
private physician, cardiologist, pulmonologist, surgeon or anaesthesiologist did not “show
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up.” Dr. Danna assumed Dr. Murphy responded to the code called for Anderson because “he
was available to” and no other doctor was available that night. He was aware that other
emergency room physicians had responded to codes at the hospital in the past but felt they
were not obligated to respond.
¶ 13 Dr. Danna testified he knew “very little” about the Good Samaritan Act but understood
it to protect him if he were driving home and stopped to help at the scene of an accident or
if he responded to a dire emergency at the hospital. He thought the Good Samaritan Act
applied to emergency room physicians responding to emergencies outside the emergency
room.
¶ 14 Dr. Danna explained that ECHO contracted with an outside company, Per-Se
Technologies, to do the billing for any of ECHO physicians’ services.2 ECHO only billed for
services its physicians provided in the emergency department. Dr. Danna testified that ECHO
“never billed” when its emergency room physicians responded to codes outside the
emergency department. He stated ECHO understood there would be “circumstances beyond
anyone’s control where a patient might need [them] because there was nowhere else to go.”
ECHO had never received payment for any services Dr. Murphy rendered to Anderson
because it had never billed for those services. ECHO had sent no such bill; Dr. Murphy was
not allowed to bill Anderson or any patient; and the hospital would never bill for the services
of ECHO’s doctors. Dr. Danna testified ECHO might decide not to charge a patient if the
patient “was particularly unhappy with the emergency department care,” such as where a
patient waited hours to be seen and left because he was not happy. Typically the emergency
room physician would have to make such a request.
¶ 15 Heather Cluver, the office manager for Echo Management and Consulting, an ECHO
affiliated company, and Richard K. Mullin, founder of Abrix Emergency Billing Services,
LLC, testified that Abrix did the billing for the services of ECHO’s emergency room
physicians from 1999 to 2003; it was up to ECHO whether to send a bill to a patient; and
there were situations in which a physician would call Dr. Danna and request that a patient
who had been seen in the emergency room not be billed.
¶ 16 Paula Jacobi, the president and chief executive officer of St. Mary’s in 2001, testified that
the exclusive emergency room service agreement with ECHO provided for overall
compensation to ECHO for the services of its doctors and that the doctors were independent
contractors and not employees of the hospital. There was no reference in the agreement to
emergency room doctors responding to code blue calls. For the 20-plus years Jacobi had
worked at the hospital, first as a nurse and then as an administrator, the emergency room
doctors “were the one[s] responding to codes.” Jacobi testified the agreement with ECHO
did not address whether the doctors were to respond to code blues because she assumed the
long-standing practice at St. Mary’s that the emergency room physician on duty would
respond to a code blue would continue. She considered responding to a code blue to be “part
of [the ECHO emergency department physicians’] responsibilities” and stated a code blue
2
In 2001, at the time of Anderson’s code blue, Abrix Emergency Billing Services, LLC, did
the billing for ECHO.
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is an emergency.
¶ 17 Jacobi testified that if a patient used services in the emergency department, ECHO would
bill for the services of its emergency department physicians and the hospital would bill for
the facility charges, such as supplies and overhead. Jacobi testified that a code blue was a
billable event for St. Mary’s. The hospital had, therefore, billed for the drugs and equipment
used in the resuscitation of Anderson during the code blue. The hospital was not involved
in any billing by ECHO and Jacobi did not know whether ECHO billed for the services of
its physicians during a code blue.
¶ 18 Jacobi testified that the “Clinical Operations/Nursing” department “Code Blue and
Cardiac Arrest Team” policy, as it had for many years, stated that it was the responsibility
of emergency room physicians to respond to code blue calls. She did not know whether there
was anything else in writing that would inform a physician directly of the requirement that
the emergency room doctors respond to codes. She clarified that it was up to the emergency
room doctor to determine whether he should leave a patient he was treating in the emergency
room to attend to a code, depending on which patient had the more emergent needs.
¶ 19 Nancy Frizzell, RN, was the nursing supervisor at St. Mary’s on the night of Anderson’s
code blue. Frizzell testified it was part of her job to be part of a code team. When a code was
“announced overhead,” she would respond. She had responded to over 100 codes. She stated
the “Code Blue and Cardiac Arrest Team” policy was a nursing policy but every employee
of the hospital was expected to follow it. It was Frizzell’s understanding and experience that
“during the night the ER physician normally comes to codes”; the emergency room doctor
would “drop” what he was doing in the emergency room to respond to a code; and, even
when physicians on the unit responded to a code, the emergency room doctor would still
come “when [he] can.”
¶ 20 Kenneth Johnston, M.D., a laryngologist, testified that Anderson was his patient. In the
early morning of August 25, Dr. Johnston received a call at home from the hospital. He was
told Anderson was having serious respiratory problems and Dr. Murphy, the emergency room
doctor, was trying to intubate him. It was Dr. Johnston’s understanding that an “in-house
emergency room physician” was available 24 hours a day at the hospital and would respond
to an emergency such as a code.
¶ 21 Eunice Riemer, a certified registered nurse anesthetist at St. Mary’s, attended the code
blue called for Anderson. She testified she was not told why she was called to the code but
assumed it was because “the emergency physician could not access the airway so requested
help from someone else” because this was “the standard in the hospital.” Riemer had worked
at St. Mary’s since 1994 and it was her understanding that “when code blues were called that
the emergency room physician would respond.” She testified that she assumed the emergency
room physician was in charge of the code because “they’re usually there first, and then they
call us.”
¶ 22 On May 8, 2009, following a hearing, the trial court granted summary judgment to both
Dr. Murphy and ECHO. The court found no evidence that ECHO ever billed Anderson or
his insurer for Dr. Murphy’s services or that the decision not to bill was done in bad faith.
It held that Dr. Murphy’s actions were, therefore, immune under the Good Samaritan Act.
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¶ 23 The court gave plaintiffs leave to file an amended complaint in order to allege wilful and
wanton misconduct. Plaintiffs filed fourth and fifth amended complaints, alleging wilful and
wanton misconduct. Plaintiffs moved for a Rule 304(a) (Ill. S. Ct. R. 304(a) (eff. Feb. 26,
2010)) finding with respect to the order of summary judgment, asserting Dr. Murphy and
ECHO were the only remaining defendants and the facts underlying the wilful and wanton
counts were the same as those underlying the dismissal of the negligence counts under the
Good Samaritan Act. The court granted the motion on August 12, 2011, finding no just
reason to delay the appeal or enforcement of the order. Plaintiffs timely appealed on August
15, 2011.
¶ 24 ANALYSIS
¶ 25 Plaintiffs argue summary judgment should be reversed as (1) a genuine issue of material
fact exists regarding whether Dr. Murphy’s conduct in failing to bill for his emergency care
of Anderson was in good faith; (2) the Good Samaritan Act does not apply to people such
as Dr. Murphy who are hired and paid to work in hospitals; and (3) there is no merit to Dr.
Murphy’s alternate basis for summary judgment that, as a matter of law, he did not deviate
from the standard of care.
¶ 26 A motion for summary judgment is a drastic means of disposing of litigation and should
be “granted only when ‘the pleadings, depositions, and admissions on file, together with the
affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the
moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.’ ” (Internal quotation marks
omitted.) Axen v. Ockerlund Construction Co., 281 Ill. App. 3d 224, 229 (1996) (quoting
Purtill v. Hess, 111 Ill. 2d 229, 240 (1986)). The purpose of summary judgment is not to try
a question of fact but to determine whether one exists or if reasonable people could draw
different inferences from the undisputed facts. Golden Rule Insurance Co. v. Schwartz, 203
Ill. 2d 456, 462 (2003); Wood v. National Liability & Fire Insurance Co., 324 Ill. App. 3d
583, 585 (2001). When ruling on a motion for summary judgment, we construe the
pleadings, depositions, admissions and affidavits strictly against the moving party and
liberally in favor of the respondent. Gauthier v. Westfall, 266 Ill. App. 3d 213, 219 (1994).
We review the trial court’s entry of summary judgment de novo. Golden Rule Insurance Co.,
203 Ill. 2d at 462.
¶ 27 1. “Without Fee”
¶ 28 Plaintiffs first argue summary judgment should be reversed because a genuine issue of
material fact exists regarding whether the failure to bill for Dr. Murphy’s services to
Anderson was in good faith. Since we agree with plaintiffs’ second contention on appeal that
the legislature did not intend section 25 of the Good Samaritan Act to apply to the facts of
this case, we need not reach the question of whether Dr. Murphy acted in good faith when
he did not bill for the emergency care he provided to Anderson.
¶ 29 Barring wilful and wanton misconduct, a physician who, “in good faith, provides
emergency care without fee to a person,” is immune from liability for that emergency care
pursuant to section 25 of the Good Samaritan Act. 745 ILCS 49/25 (West 2010). State courts
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have historically found that a physician claiming immunity under the Act must show that he
or she in good faith (1) provided “emergency care” and (2) “did not charge a fee.” Estate of
Heanue v. Edgcomb, 355 Ill. App. 3d 645, 648 (2005). Courts have applied the Act to protect
physicians who provided emergency care without fee in hospital and medical clinic settings.
Estate of Heanue, 355 Ill. App. 3d 645 (in hospital); Blanchard v. Murray, 331 Ill. App. 3d
961 (2002) (in hospital); Rivera v. Arana, 322 Ill. App. 3d 641 (2001) (in medical center);
Johnson v. Matviuw, 176 Ill. App. 3d 907 (1988) (in hospital).
¶ 30 The most recent state law development regarding the “without fee” requirement occurred
in Estate of Heanue, 355 Ill. App. 3d 645, where the court held that unless a physician has
billed specifically for the emergency care services, he has not charged “a fee” as
contemplated by the legislature in section 25 of the Act. Estate of Heanue, 355 Ill. App. 3d
at 650.
¶ 31 In Heanue, a physician provided emergency care to a patient when the patient’s own
doctor was not available. The physician was a member of the same surgical practice as the
patient’s own doctor and treated the patient at the request of the practice. He did not charge
a fee for the emergency care he provided and claimed immunity under the Act. The plaintiffs
asserted the physician was not immune because (1) as a member and compensated agent of
the practice, he had a preexisting duty to treat a patient of the practice; and (2) he did not
provide the emergency care “without fee” because the practice received thousands of dollars
from the patient and, as a member of the practice, he benefitted financially from the
practice’s relationship with the patient.
¶ 32 The Heanue court found the first argument was foreclosed, because “ ‘a physician need
not prove the absence of a preexisting duty to render aid to the patient in order to be
immunized under section 25 of the Act.’ ” Estate of Heanue, 355 Ill. App. 3d at 648 (quoting
Neal v. Yang, 352 Ill. App. 3d 820, 829 (2004)). With regard to the second argument,
accepting for purposes of appeal that the physician benefitted financially from the practice’s
relationship with the patient, the court “nevertheless” concluded this financial relationship
did “not constitute charging a fee for services as contemplated by the Act.” Estate of Heanue,
355 Ill. App. 3d at 649.
¶ 33 The court found that the mere fact that the physician received some economic benefit
from the relationship was not sufficient to remove him from the protection of the Act where
he did not charge a fee specifically for the services at issue. Estate of Heanue, 355 Ill. App.
3d at 649-50. Looking to the plain and ordinary meaning of the word “fee,” the court found
definitions of the word “envision a very specific sort of relationship where the economic
benefit is derived directly from the service performed. In other words, a fee is generated by
and tied to the service performed.” Estate of Heanue, 355 Ill. App. 3d at 649. As a matter of
first impression, the court held “the legislature contemplated that section 25 would apply
except where a doctor charges a fee specifically for the services at issue.” Estate of Heanue,
355 Ill. App. 3d at 650.
¶ 34 In Heanue, the physician had not billed specifically for the emergency care he provided.
The court, therefore, found the physician had not charged “a fee” as contemplated by the
legislature and the question of whether the physician acquired some economic benefit from
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the patient’s relationship with the surgical group immaterial. Estate of Heanue, 355 Ill. App.
3d at 650. The court then remanded for a determination regarding whether the physician’s
decision not to charge a fee was made in good faith. Estate of Heanue, 355 Ill. App. 3d at
651. It explained: “[a]s it appears in the statute, ‘good faith’ modifies both ‘provides
emergency care’ and ‘without fee.’ ” Estate of Heanue, 355 Ill. App. 3d at 650. The record
in the case allowed an inference that the reason no bill was sent for the emergency care was
to trigger the Act, i.e., it was done in bad faith. The court remanded so that the parties could
address whether the decision not to bill was made in good faith. Estate of Heanue, 355 Ill.
App. 3d at 651.
¶ 35 It is uncontested that Dr. Murphy in good faith provided emergency care to Anderson.
It is also uncontested that: neither Anderson nor his insurer was billed for the emergency care
provided by Dr. Murphy; neither Dr. Murphy nor ECHO was ever specifically compensated
for that emergency care; although the hospital billed for the supplies used during the code
blue, it did not bill and was not compensated for Dr. Murphy’s emergency care during the
code blue; pursuant to St. Mary’s agreement with ECHO, only ECHO could bill for the
services of its physicians; and ECHO did not bill for Dr. Murphy’s emergency care to
Anderson. Under Heanue, since no bill was sent for Dr. Murphy’s emergency care services
to Anderson, Dr. Murphy performed those services “without fee” as contemplated by section
25 of the Act. Estate of Heanue, 355 Ill. App. 3d at 649-50. We find Heanue unpersuasive.
“We are not bound by the opinions of sister appellate courts.” Valent BioSciences Corp. v.
Kim-C1, LLC, 2011 IL App (1st) 102073, ¶ 24 n.4.
¶ 36 Our main objective in interpreting a statute is to determine and give effect to the intent
of the legislature. Solon v. Midwest Medical Records Ass’n, 236 Ill. 2d 433, 440 (2010). The
most reliable indicator of the legislature’s intent is the language of the statute, which must
be given its plain and ordinary meaning. Solon, 236 Ill. 2d at 440. Clear and unambiguous
statutory language must be applied as written, without resort to extrinsic aids of statutory
construction and without reading into it exceptions, limitations or conditions that conflict
with the expressed intent or that render any part of the statute meaningless or superfluous.
Solon, 236 Ill. 2d at 440-41. We may consider the consequences that would result from
construing the statute one way or the other, always presuming that the legislature did not
intend absurd, inconvenient or unjust consequences. Solon, 236 Ill. 2d at 441. Only if a
statute is ambiguous, if it is capable of being understood by reasonably well-informed
persons in two or more different ways, will we consider extrinsic aids of construction to
discern the legislative intent. Solon, 236 Ill. 2d at 440.
¶ 37 State court decisions have found the Act clear on its face and, therefore, have not
examined the intent of the legislature in creating the Act. However, as explained persuasively
by the United States District Court in Henslee v. Provena Hospitals, 373 F. Supp. 2d 802
(N.D. Ill. 2005), the Act is ambiguous.3 Henslee, 373 F. Supp. 2d at 812. The Act does not
3
We recognize that federal district court and subsequent Seventh Circuit rulings are not
binding on us, but decisions of the lower federal courts may be persuasive authority. Cooney v.
Rossiter, 2012 IL App (1st) 102129, ¶ 30.
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define “without fee” and, as did the court in Henslee, we respectfully disagree with previous
Illinois appellate courts that have found the phrase to be clear and unambiguous. Henslee,
373 F. Supp. 2d at 812.
¶ 38 “Fee” is undefined in the statute. Therefore, we must give it its ordinary and properly
understood meaning. Johnson v. Matviuw, 176 Ill. App. 3d 907, 917 (1988). But “fee” has
more than one meaning. It does not only encompass a situation where a patient is billed for
the specific services a physician provides, as Heanue appears to hold. Henslee, 373 F. Supp.
2d at 809. If this were its sole meaning, then if a doctor or hospital neglected to send the
patient a bill itemizing the doctor’s specific emergency care, the Act would apply to the
doctor, regardless of whether the doctor intended to bill for that care in the future or whether
he received an indirect economic benefit from the patient’s care. Henslee, 373 F. Supp. 2d
at 809-10 (citing Rivera, 322 Ill. App. 3d at 648 (physician’s intentions regarding future
billing for emergency care he provided are irrelevant under the Act); Heanue, 355 Ill. App.
3d at 649-50 (only a specific fee or bill for emergency care provided triggers the Act)).
¶ 39 The word “fee” also encompasses a situation where a physician is paid.
“[T]he typical fee transaction implicitly includes two steps: first, a party is billed; second,
a professional is paid. Because the Good Samaritan Act does not restrict ‘fee’ to only one
side of the typical fee transaction, this Court determines that the meaning of ‘fee’ is
ambiguous. This Court proposes that a reasonable definition of ‘fee’ would be a situation
in which either a doctor is paid for his services or the client pays a bill for those services.
Under this interpretation of the Act, a ‘fee’ exists when a doctor is paid for the
emergency services he renders.” (Emphases in original.) Henslee, 373 F. Supp. 2d at 812.
Heanue’s interpretation of “fee” captures only one side of a typical fee situation–the client
being billed. Henslee, 373 F. Supp. 2d at 812. The Act does not restrict “fee” to only the one
part of a fee transaction. “Fee” is capable of being understood in two different ways, the
client being billed or the physician being paid, and is, therefore, ambiguous.
¶ 40 Heanue’s interpretation of the statute reinforces our determination that the term “without
fee” is ambiguous. Heanue held “the legislature contemplated that section 25 would apply
except where a doctor charges a fee specifically for the services at issue.” Estate of Heanue,
355 Ill. App. 3d at 650. Heanue essentially adds language to the statute, limiting the statutory
“without fee” by adding “specifically for the services at issue.” If the Act were unambiguous,
this additional language would not be necessary to effectuate the Act’s statutory purpose.
¶ 41 Since “fee” as used in section 25 is ambiguous, we must follow the primary rule of
statutory construction and give effect to the intent of the legislature. Henslee, 373 F. Supp.
2d at 812. Heanue and the other Illinois cases stray far from the intent of the Act. In 1965,
in section 2a of the Medical Practice Act, the legislature originally provided immunity for
a physician “who in good faith provides emergency care without fee at the scene of a motor
vehicle accident or in case of a nuclear attack.” Ill. Rev. Stat. 1965, ch. 91, ¶ 2a. In 1969, the
legislature expanded coverage under section 2a by amending it to apply to emergency care
provided “without fee to a victim of an accident at the scene of [the] accident or in the case
of nuclear attack,” thereby eliminating the requirement that the accident be vehicular. Pub.
Act 76-1205 (eff. Sept. 11, 1969) (amending Ill. Rev. Stat. 1965, ch. 91, ¶ 2a).
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¶ 42 In 1973, section 2a was expanded again when the legislature substituted “person” for
“victim of an accident at the scene of the accident or in the case of nuclear attack.” Pub. Act
78-385 (eff. Aug. 28, 1973) (amending Ill. Rev. Stat. 1971, ch. 91, ¶ 2a). This amendment
also added “without prior notice of the illness or injury” so the section protected a physician
“who, in good faith, and without prior notice of the illness or injury, provides emergency care
without fee to a person.” Pub. Act 78-385 (eff. Aug. 28, 1973) (amending Ill. Rev. Stat.
1971, ch. 91, ¶ 2a). During legislative debate on the amendment, Senator Shaffer explained:
“This bill only gives a doctor a safeguard that [sic] if he comes upon an emergency
situation if one of us falls down the stairs and rolls to the foot of the stairs here and a
doctor treats us, and this is on the spot, not in his doctor’s office or in the hospital on the
operating table, that he has a little protection that if we have bad effects because he
wasn’t able to do the things he might do in a hospital, he would be somewhat protected.”
(Emphasis added.) 78th Ill. Gen. Assem., Senate Proceedings, May 22, 1973, at 49-50
(statements of Senator Shaffer).
¶ 43 In 1996, the legislature enacted the Good Samaritan Act (765 ILCS 49/1 et seq. (West
1996)). Pub. Act 89-607 (eff. Jan 1, 1997). The legislature also amended the Medical
Practice Act to reflect that “[e]xemption from civil liability for emergency care is as provided
in the Good Samaritan Act.” 225 ILCS 60/30 (West 1996). Thus, former section 2a of the
Medical Practice Act became section 25 of the Good Samaritan Act.
¶ 44 A final amendment in 1998 (Pub. Act 90-742, § 40 (eff. Aug. 13, 1998)) eliminated the
requirement that the physician have no prior notice of the injury or illness, setting out the
current version of the Act. 745 ILCS 49/25 (West 2010). During legislative debate on this
amendment in 1996, Representative Lang asked Representative Winters whether it was his
position “that the passage of th[e] [Act] would encourage good samaritans to do the right
thing on the streets of Illinois, I suppose, without fear of repercussions in a court of law.”
(Emphasis added.) 89th Ill. Gen. Assem., House Proceedings, Mar. 25, 1996, at 100
(statements of Representative Lang). Representative Winters responded “that is exactly the
point of the Bill.” 89th Ill. Gen. Assem., House Proceedings, Mar. 25, 1996, at 100
(statements of Representative Winters).
¶ 45 The preamble to the Act states its legislative purpose is to codify the “numerous
protections for the generous and compassionate acts of its citizens who volunteer their time
and talents to help others.” (Emphasis added.) 745 ILCS 49/2 (West 2010). It directs that
“without limitation the provisions of this Act shall be liberally construed to encourage
persons to volunteer their time and talents.” (Emphasis added.) 745 ILCS 49/2 (West 2010).
¶ 46 One cannot be a volunteer if one is paid for the services provided, whether one is paid
by the hour, the day, the month, the year or the patient visit. Dr. Murphy was not voluntarily
present at the hospital. He was paid by the hour to be there. He received that pay in exchange
for his services as emergency room physician and would be paid regardless of which or how
many patients he saw or whether he saw those patients in the emergency room or on another
floor. Dr. Murphy was compensated for the time he spent responding to the code blue called
for Anderson. He did not provide that emergency care “without fee.” We find that to hold
otherwise would lead to an absurd result.
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¶ 47 Further, Heanue’s one-sided definition of “fee” could result in a disparity of legal
remedies between the affluent and the less-privileged. See Ben Bridges, Comments, Curb
Your Immunity: The Improper Expansion of Good Samaritan Protection in Illinois, 34 S. Ill.
U. L.J. 373, 391 (2010). If a hospital physician paid by the hour negligently provided
emergency care to an affluent patient and the patient or the patient’s insurer was billed for
that care, the doctor would not be immune under the Act. Bridges, supra, at 391. If the same
doctor provided negligent emergency care to an indigent uninsured patient and the hospital
did not bill the patient because it would not be able to collect payment, the doctor would be
immune under the Act. Bridges, supra, at 391. The affluent patient would be able to file a
negligence action against the physician and the indigent patient would not. Bridges, supra,
at 391. The physician could arguably provide substandard care to all poor, uninsured patients
because those patients would have no legal recourse against him. Bridges, supra, at 391. The
legislature cannot have intended such a result.
¶ 48 We agree with Henslee that a reasonable definition of “fee” in section 25 encompasses
a situation “in which either a doctor is paid for his services or the client pays a bill for those
services.” (Emphases in original.) Henslee, 373 F. Supp. 2d at 812. “Under this interpretation
of the Act, a ‘fee’ exists when a doctor is paid for the emergency services he renders.”
Henslee, 373 F. Supp. 2d at 812. “By using the term[ ] ‘volunteer’, the legislature seems to
also contemplate the second part of a fee transaction–the doctor being paid. It follows that
a doctor who is being paid to work at an emergency facility is neither a volunteer nor is he
rendering ‘emergency care without fee.’ ” Henslee, 373 F. Supp. 2d at 813.
¶ 49 As Henslee points out, billing for medical services is no longer a simple transaction
between two parties. Henslee, 373 F. Supp. 2d at 813. It typically involves contracts between
hospitals, doctors, practice groups and insurers. Doctors rarely bill patients directly and are
seldom compensated directly by their patients, making it difficult to link a charge for services
to a payment received from a patient. Henslee, 373 F. Supp. 2d at 814. Therefore, a definition
of “fee” that includes both the doctor’s compensation and the patient’s eventual payment
circumvents the possibility that doctors or their employers will attempt to “engineer
immunity,” such as by avoiding itemized billing or waiting to bill until threat of litigation has
passed. Henslee, 373 F. Supp. 2d at 814.
¶ 50 “The Good Samaritan Act was meant to protect volunteers; it was never meant to be a
shelter for practicing physicians who, acting in the scope of their employment, receive
payment for their emergency services.” Henslee, 373 F. Supp. 2d at 814. As the legislative
history and preamble make clear, the Act is intended to protect physicians who step into the
breach when coming upon an emergency, without aid of the usual equipment and services
at their disposal and without thought of contractual duty or pay. The Act should not apply
to physicians who provide emergency services in a hospital where they have been hired and
paid to work, such as a staff member, an employee, an independent contractor or an on-call
physician. These doctors are not providing their services “without fee.”
¶ 51 Defendants’ interpretation of the statute, taken together with modern billing practices and
the facts that a majority of emergency room physicians are independent contractors or in a
physicians’ group, are compensated for their time and must respond to code blue calls as part
of their job, leads to a situation where most code blue responses by physicians would be
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immunized under the Act. This was not the intent of the Act. Nowhere in the legislative
history of the Act is it ever stated that the intent of the Act was to immunize emergency room
physicians who are paid for their time.
¶ 52 We do not find that the Act can never apply in a hospital setting. The determination of
whether emergency care was provided “without fee” is not dependent on the geography of
where that care was provided. We merely state that, on these facts, as a matter of law, Dr.
Murphy received “a fee” for his emergency care of Anderson and thus did not provide
emergency care “without fee” as contemplated by the Act. Dr. Murphy is not immune from
liability under the Good Samaritan Act. Summary judgment on this basis is reversed.
¶ 53 2. Deviation From the Standard of Care
¶ 54 Plaintiffs lastly argue that there is no merit to Dr. Murphy’s alternate basis for summary
judgment, in which he asserted that, as a matter of law, he had not deviated from the standard
of care. The trial court did not address this theory because it found Dr. Murphy immune from
liability under the Act. We leave it to the trial court to address this alternate basis for
summary judgment on remand.
¶ 55 CONCLUSION
¶ 56 For the reasons stated above, we reverse and remand the decision of the trial court.
¶ 57 Reversed and remanded.
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