The Illinois Appellate Court will consider whether a gubernatorial executive order provides blanket immunity to a nursing home sued over five COVID-related deaths in late April-early May 2020. In an executive order issued at the beginning of April and reissued in May of that year, Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker extended the State's own immunity from suit to health-care providers who rendered assistance to the State in its battle against the coronavirus.

       In the five wrongful-death cases filed during that period, the trial court denied the nursing home's motion to dismiss based on the executive order. However, it did not rule on the dispute between the parties on whether the nursing home actually rendered any assistance. As the brief for the plaintiffs filed today argued, discovery established that the nursing home did nothing that it did not normally do in response to COVID, other than to re-use procedural masks made for one-time use by staff who dealt with residents with COVID symptoms, but not with those who died and sued in these cases. As a result, the brief argued that the nursing home did not render assistance to the State that qualified for immunity, particularly since its meager effort was unrelated to its treatment of the decedents. Moreover, the brief argued any other reading of the executive order would render it unconstitutional as exceeding the Governor's authority.

      In addition, the brief urged the court to dismiss the appeal as improvidently granted because this type of interim appeal is not available where a factual dispute continues to exist but is instead reserved for pure legal questions likely to resolve the litigation. 

      The nursing home will now have an opportunity to file a reply brief in response.