Latest News About Hedonic Damages

Updated 2026-04-20 20:05

I can’t pull new “latest news” updates right now because I don’t have access to live web retrieval in this turn. If you tell me your jurisdiction (e.g., California, federal) and whether you mean personal injury or wrongful death / survival actions, I can summarize the most relevant recent developments you care about.

That said, here are reliable, ongoing themes that news/attorneys frequently tie to hedonic damages—grounded in publicly available legal materials:

What “latest news” usually turns on

Where you may be seeing updates

Quick questions so I can get you the right “latest” items

  1. Which country/state should I focus on?
  2. Is your interest personal injury (loss of enjoyment of life) or wrongful death / “value of life”?
  3. Do you want court cases only, or also regulatory/legislative developments and commentary?

Reply with those, and I’ll produce a targeted “latest news” style brief (what happened, why it matters, and key takeaways).

Sources

Legal Decisions Involving Hedonic Damages from 2001 to 2012

review of the cases and literature cited in the cases reveals that there is anything but a professional consensus that Dr. Smith’s theory is valid. The Court also concluded that hedonic damages testimony failed a separate “relevance” test based on the fact that purchases of smoke detectors were not relevant to measure the quality of … held that the trial court was not in error for admitting the hedonic damages testimony of Robert Johnson that Banks’ hedonic loss from being in a persistent...

www.umsl.edu

Decisions Developed or Changed in 2021 - UMSL

Having 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.edu