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Parent Company and Franchise Corporation Liability
When a child is hurt at a daycare in Chicago, most parents assume the individual worker or the local daycare owner is the only party responsible. That assumption can cost families real money. Many daycare facilities in Chicago operate under a corporate umbrella, as a franchise of a national brand, or as a subsidiary of a larger management company. When that is the case, the parent company or franchisor may share legal responsibility for what happened to your child. Understanding how corporate liability works in Illinois daycare injury cases can make the difference between a limited recovery and full compensation for your family.
Table of Contents
- How Corporate Structures Affect Daycare Liability in Illinois
- When a Franchisor Can Be Held Liable for a Daycare Injury
- Joint and Several Liability Under Illinois Law
- Piercing the Corporate Veil in Illinois Daycare Cases
- Why You Need an Attorney to Pursue Corporate Daycare Liability
- FAQs About Parent Company and Franchise Corporation Liability in Chicago Daycare Cases
How Corporate Structures Affect Daycare Liability in Illinois
Chicago is home to dozens of daycare centers that operate under national franchise brands or corporate management structures. Think about the chain daycare locations you see near the Loop, in Lincoln Park, or along the North Shore suburbs. Behind those familiar logos sits a corporate hierarchy with layers of ownership, management, and control. That structure matters enormously in a personal injury case.
Under Illinois law, a corporation is generally treated as a separate legal entity from its parent. That principle of limited liability is well established. However, Illinois courts recognize important exceptions. As a Chicago personal injury lawyer handling daycare injury cases knows, the key question is how much control the parent company or franchisor actually exercised over the daycare’s daily operations. If a corporate parent set the safety policies, dictated staff training requirements, or mandated the physical layout of the facility, it may have stepped into a role that creates direct legal exposure.
The Illinois Supreme Court addressed this issue in the context of what courts call “direct participant liability.” When a parent company directly participates in creating the conditions that lead to an injury, it can be held liable even if the harm occurred at a subsidiary’s facility. This theory applies when the parent corporation gave specific direction or authorization for a negligent activity, or when it mandated an overall course of action and authorized how specific activities within that course were carried out. For families whose children were hurt at a corporate-owned or franchise daycare, this legal theory opens the door to holding the larger organization accountable, not just the local operator.
The Illinois Child Care Act of 1969 (225 ILCS 10) defines a “day care center” broadly to include any corporation, institution, or organization that regularly provides care for children. That definition does not exempt corporate parent entities from oversight obligations simply because they sit above a licensed subsidiary. When a corporate structure is used to distance ownership from responsibility, Illinois courts look past the paperwork to examine who actually controlled the environment where your child was harmed.
When a Franchisor Can Be Held Liable for a Daycare Injury
Franchise daycares present a unique liability question. A franchisor typically licenses its brand, curriculum, and operating systems to an independently owned franchisee. On paper, the franchisee runs the business. In practice, the franchisor often dictates everything from staff-to-child ratios to the type of furniture used in classrooms. That level of control is exactly what Illinois courts examine when determining whether a franchisor shares liability for a child’s injury.
The Illinois Franchise Disclosure Act of 1987 (815 ILCS 705) governs franchise relationships in this state. While that law primarily addresses the commercial relationship between franchisors and franchisees, it reflects Illinois’s recognition that franchisors hold significant power over how franchised businesses operate. When a franchisor’s operational manuals, training requirements, or safety standards are deficient, and a child is injured because of those deficiencies, the franchisor is not automatically shielded from civil liability just because the daycare is “independently owned.”
Courts look at the degree of control the franchisor exercises. Did the franchisor require specific hiring practices? Did it set the background check procedures? Did it mandate or prohibit certain safety equipment? If the answer to any of these questions is yes, and those requirements contributed to your child’s injury, the franchisor may be a proper defendant in your lawsuit. This is especially relevant in cases involving inadequate staff training, improper supervision ratios, or defective equipment that the franchisor approved or supplied.
It is also worth noting that the Illinois Franchise Disclosure Act creates shared liability for individuals who directly or indirectly control a party liable under the Act. That means corporate officers and directors of a franchisor organization are not automatically insulated from personal exposure. When multiple parties at different levels of a corporate structure share responsibility, Illinois’s joint and several liability rules under 735 ILCS 5/2-1117 become critically important to how damages are allocated and collected.
Joint and Several Liability Under Illinois Law
One of the most important legal concepts in a multi-defendant daycare injury case is joint and several liability. Under 735 ILCS 5/2-1117, all defendants found liable in a negligence action are jointly and severally liable for a plaintiff’s past and future medical and medically related expenses. That means if the local daycare franchisee, the franchisor, and the corporate parent are all found negligent, each of them is on the hook for the full amount of your child’s medical bills, regardless of their individual percentage of fault.
For non-medical damages, like pain and suffering or emotional distress, the rules are slightly different. Any defendant whose share of fault is 25% or greater is jointly and severally liable for all damages. A defendant whose fault falls below 25% is only severally liable for those non-medical damages, meaning they pay only their proportional share. This distinction matters when you are dealing with a large corporate parent that may argue it played only a minor role in what happened.
Why does this matter for your family? Consider a situation where a child suffers a serious head injury at a franchise daycare near Wacker Drive because the facility was understaffed. The local franchisee may be a small LLC with limited assets. The franchisor, however, is a national corporation with substantial resources. Under Illinois’s joint and several liability framework, if both are found liable and the franchisor’s fault is 25% or more, your family can seek the full amount of medical damages from the franchisor, even if the local operator cannot pay. This is why identifying and suing all responsible corporate parties from the start is so important.
Cases involving negligent hiring, failure to conduct background checks, or inadequate staff training often implicate corporate-level decision-making. When the policies that caused your child’s injury were set at the corporate level, the corporate entity must answer for them in court.
Piercing the Corporate Veil in Illinois Daycare Cases
Sometimes a parent company tries to hide behind its corporate structure to avoid paying for a child’s injuries. Illinois law has an answer for that. Courts can “pierce the corporate veil” and hold a parent company directly liable for a subsidiary’s actions when the subsidiary is essentially an alter ego of the parent. This happens when the parent so thoroughly dominates and controls the subsidiary that the two function as a single entity, with no meaningful separation.
In the daycare context, signs of this kind of control include the parent company sharing the same management team as the daycare operator, the parent company funding all operations and absorbing all profits, the parent company making all hiring and firing decisions, and the parent company setting all safety and operational policies without giving the local operator any real independence. When these conditions exist, Illinois courts may disregard the corporate separation and hold the parent directly liable.
This theory is separate from the direct participant liability theory discussed earlier, and both can be argued in the same case. Your attorney will investigate the corporate structure thoroughly, including reviewing franchise agreements, management contracts, shared officer and director lists, and financial records. That investigation often reveals that the “local” daycare had far less independence than the corporate parent claimed.
Families whose children were injured at a daycare operating under a larger corporate structure should not accept a settlement offer from just the local franchisee without first understanding the full scope of available defendants. Settling with one party too early can limit your ability to recover from others. The Daley Center in downtown Chicago handles many of these complex civil cases, and Illinois courts are experienced in sorting through multi-party corporate liability claims.
Why You Need an Attorney to Pursue Corporate Daycare Liability
Holding a parent company or franchisor accountable for a child’s daycare injury is not a simple process. Corporate defendants have teams of lawyers whose job is to minimize liability and shift blame to the local operator. They will argue that the franchisee was an independent contractor, that the parent company had no control over day-to-day operations, and that the injury was entirely the result of one employee’s actions. Countering those arguments requires a thorough investigation, strong legal knowledge, and experience handling complex multi-party cases.
At Briskman Briskman & Greenberg, we represent families whose children have been injured at Chicago-area daycares, including those operating under corporate and franchise structures. We investigate the full corporate chain of command, identify every party that may share liability, and build a case that reflects the true scope of responsibility. Our firm handles these cases on a contingency fee basis, which means you pay no attorney’s fees unless we recover compensation for your family. You will not be responsible for our attorney’s fees if there is no recovery, though you should ask us about any potential costs or expenses during your consultation.
If your child was hurt at a corporate or franchise daycare anywhere in the Chicago area, from the South Side to the suburbs along I-290, do not wait to get legal guidance. The statute of limitations for personal injury claims in Illinois generally requires action within two years, though special rules apply for minor children. Protecting your child’s rights starts with a phone call. Contact Briskman Briskman & Greenberg at (312) 222-0010 for a free consultation. We are here to help your family understand your options and pursue the accountability your child deserves.
FAQs About Parent Company and Franchise Corporation Liability in Chicago Daycare Cases
Can I sue a national daycare franchise brand if my child was hurt at a local franchise location in Chicago?
It depends on how much control the franchisor exercised over the local location’s operations. If the franchisor set safety policies, training requirements, hiring practices, or operational standards that contributed to your child’s injury, the franchisor may be a proper defendant alongside the local franchisee. Illinois courts look at the actual relationship between the parties, not just what the franchise agreement says on paper. An attorney can review the franchise agreement and operational documents to determine whether the franchisor shares liability in your specific case.
What is “direct participant liability” and how does it apply to daycare injury cases?
Direct participant liability is a legal theory recognized by the Illinois Supreme Court that allows a parent company to be held liable when it directly participated in creating the conditions that caused an injury. In a daycare case, this could mean the parent company mandated a specific staffing policy, approved a dangerous piece of equipment, or required a training program that was inadequate. The parent company does not need to have been physically present at the daycare. If its specific direction or authorization contributed to your child’s harm, it can be held accountable under this theory.
What does Illinois’s joint and several liability law mean for my child’s case against multiple corporate defendants?
Under 735 ILCS 5/2-1117, all defendants found liable in a negligence case are jointly and severally liable for your child’s past and future medical expenses. This means you can collect the full amount of those medical costs from any one defendant, regardless of that defendant’s individual percentage of fault. For non-medical damages, any defendant found to be 25% or more at fault is also jointly and severally liable. This is especially important when the local daycare operator has limited assets but the parent company or franchisor has significant financial resources.
What is “piercing the corporate veil” and when does it apply to a daycare injury claim?
Piercing the corporate veil is a legal remedy that allows a court to hold a parent company directly liable for a subsidiary’s actions when the two entities operate as one. Illinois courts will consider this when the parent company completely dominates the subsidiary’s finances, management, and operations, to the point where the subsidiary has no real independence. In a daycare case, this might apply when the parent company controls all hiring, sets all safety policies, and shares the same officers and directors as the daycare operator. If the corporate separation is more cosmetic than real, Illinois courts can look past it.
How long do I have to file a lawsuit against a parent company or franchisor for my child’s daycare injury in Illinois?
Illinois generally requires personal injury lawsuits to be filed within two years of the date of the injury. However, special rules apply to minor children. If a parent or guardian does not file a timely claim on the child’s behalf, the child typically has two years from their 18th birthday to file their own lawsuit. Even so, waiting significantly reduces your ability to gather evidence, preserve surveillance footage, and build a strong case. Corporate defendants also have resources to destroy or lose records over time. Contact Briskman Briskman & Greenberg at (312) 222-0010 as soon as possible after your child’s injury to protect your family’s legal rights.
This page is an advertisement on behalf of Briskman Briskman & Greenberg, 351 W. Hubbard St., Suite 810, Chicago, IL 60654. Past results do not guarantee similar outcomes in future cases. Each case is different and must be evaluated on its own facts.
More Resources About Who Can Be Held Legally Responsible for Daycare Injuries
- Suing a Daycare Center After a Child Is Injured in Illinois
- Chicago Daycare Owner Liability for Child Injuries
- Daycare Worker and Individual Staff Liability in Illinois
- Property Owner and Landlord Liability for Daycare Injuries
- Third-Party Liability in Chicago Daycare Injury Cases
- Product Manufacturer Liability for Defective Daycare Equipment
- Negligent Hiring and Retention Claims Against Chicago Daycares
- Negligent Supervision Claims Against Chicago Daycares
- Vicarious Liability in Illinois Daycare Cases
- Suing an Unlicensed Daycare in Chicago
- When Multiple Parties Share Liability for a Daycare Injury
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