Here’s a concise update on the latest developments regarding hedonic damages.
What hedonic damages are
- Hedonic damages refer to compensation for the loss of enjoyment or quality of life due to injury or death, quantified as a monetary amount. They are controversial and not uniformly recognized across jurisdictions.
Recent trends and status
- Admissibility of hedonic damages testimony by experts remains uncertain and varies by jurisdiction. In many jurisdictions, courts have been reluctant to allow distinct hedonic-damages awards or have required careful scrutiny of expert methodologies. This pattern has persisted in recent decades, with some appellate decisions cautioning against over-reliance on speculative valuations while others discuss limited admissibility under narrow circumstances. [Sources discussing long-running skepticism and selective admissibility across states].
- Several state-level discussions have explored whether hedonic damages should be recognized or vetoed legislatively. In places where statutes or court decisions explicitly recognize hedonic damages (or treat them as a separate category), awards have occurred in particular contexts, often involving catastrophic injuries or wrongful death scenarios. In contrast, other states either reject hedonic damages outright or subsume them within general non-economic damages like pain and suffering. [State-level debates and varied legislative actions].
Notable resources and overviews
- Comprehensive surveys track decisions from 1985 onward, noting recurring themes: (1) many decisions address hedonic damages in terms of admissibility of expert testimony rather than the size of an award, and (2) where hedonic damages are barred, courts still sometimes allow limited testimony on related non-economic impacts. This literature is updated periodically to reflect new appellate outcomes. [Academic and legal reviews updating hedonic-damages jurisprudence].
- A few law reviews and practitioner-oriented analyses summarize which jurisdictions have explicit or strong opposition to hedonic damages, as well as where hedonic damages have been treated as an allowable component of recovery under specific circumstances. These pieces are useful for practitioners evaluating whether hedonic damages might be argued in a given case. [Law reviews and practitioner summaries].
If you’d like, I can:
- Narrow this to your jurisdiction (New Jersey or nearby states) and summarize recent appellate opinions specifically addressing hedonic damages.
- Compile a brief table of states with explicit recognition, strong opposition, and ambiguous stance, with representative cases.
- Provide a short, plain-language explainer for how courts typically approach expert testimony on hedonic damages and what factors influence admissibility.
Would you like me to focus on New Jersey and neighboring states, or provide a broad nationwide synthesis with representative cases? Please specify your preference.
Sources
'o See infra note 39 and accompanying text. State legislators have also demonstrated a recent interest in hedonic damages. Rhode Island Governor Lincoln Almond recently vetoed legislation that would have permitted recovery of hedonic damages in wrongful death actions. See, e.g., Press Release, Office of the Governor,
brooklynworks.brooklaw.eduMeasurements now show that, while life may be sacred, it is neither “priceless” nor “invaluable.” Life can be valued. Obtaining a reliable estimate as to the value of life is the main goal of economists to ensure consistent, accurate awards are regularly achieved in personal injury and wrongful death litigation.
www.smitheconomics.comThis list includes cases in which hedonic damages was mentioned as an issue from 1985 to September 1, 2022. The list is not complete and is a work in progress that will be added to and improved over…
aaefe.orgHaving held that hedonic damages are not recoverable as a separate form of damages, the court nevertheless declines to limit the testimony of [Stan V.] Smith, Moore's proposed expert on such damages, until the substance of his testimony can be more fully explored at trial. In the past, the undersigned has rejected speculative figures that attempt to quantify an injured person's emotions when a jury of lay persons is equally equipped to make the determination. . . .
www.umsl.eduCurious about how hedonic damages affect personal injury claims? Discover why these damages spark debate, which states recognize them, and what it means for victims seeking fair compensation.
www.brandonjbroderick.comAbstract This paper examines the trends in court decisions involving hedonic damages as a follow up to an earlier survey of cases described by Ireland, Johnson and Taylor in a 1997 article. The trend continues to be against the admissibility of expert economic testimony on hedonic damages or other methods for placing dollar values on intangible losses. However, there have been a few … Truck-a-way Corporation (1998). Recent decisions of the Mississippi and Kentucky Supreme Courts are discussed...
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