Someone reading the Illinois Supreme Court’s Sept. 24 dispositions of petitions for leave to appeal might have felt a sense of deja vu. On that date, the court allowed leave to appeal in Price v. Philip Morris Inc., despite having considered that same case in 2005. In the words of the appellate court, Price presents “an unusual set of procedural circumstances.” The case began in 2000 when the plaintiffs filed a class action against Philip Morris, alleging that the tobacco company had violated the …