Bill
LC 387
Generally revise civil liability laws
LC 387 would broadly overhaul civil liability rules—negligence standards, damages, defenses—shaping tort risk, but the bill died in process and has no enacted impact.
Bill
LC 387
LC 387 would broadly overhaul civil liability rules—negligence standards, damages, defenses—shaping tort risk, but the bill died in process and has no enacted impact.
LC 387 is a draft bill titled “Generally revise civil liability laws,” introduced on September 27, 2024. The bill’s classification indicates it would reform broad civil liability frameworks, potentially affecting standards, damages, and remedies in tort and related areas. The legislative actions show a process that stalled and ultimately resulted in the draft dying in process.
A “died in process” status generally means the measure did not advance to committee action or floor consideration and is unlikely to become law in its current form unless reintroduced in a future session.
Because the full text is not provided, the following are common subjects in general civil liability reform and may or may not be included:
- Standards of care and negligence definitions
- Statutes of limitations and tolling provisions
- Comparative fault or joint-and-several liability rules
- Caps or limitations on damages (including punitive damages)
- Rules governing damages calculation and evidentiary standards
- Immunities or exemptions for certain entities (e.g., government, healthcare providers)
- Administrative or procedural changes (discovery rules, burden of proof, attorney’s fees)
- Remedies and enforcement mechanisms
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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