California Punitives by Horvitz & Levy
  • Cal. Supreme Court dismisses review in Nelson v. Exxon Mobil (assignability of punitive damages)

    The Supreme Court has granted Exxon Mobil’s motion to dismiss review in Nelson v. Exxon Mobil, which raised the question whether punitive damages claims could be assignable in certain circumstances.  The text of the order (which you can view on the court’s on-line docket) confirms that the motion was part of a settlement between the parties.  The docket does not indicate that either party has asked the Supreme Court to reinstate the published status of the Court of Appeal’s opinion, so the opinion remains depublished and nonprecedential.

    Interestingly, the Supreme Court had to appoint a temporary justice (Presiding Justice Barbara Jones of the First Appellate District) to rule on the motion to dismiss.  As noted in our prior post, the court is short-handed due to the retirement of Justice Moreno, and three of the remaining six justices on the court were recused from participating in this case.  So a temporary justice was needed to provide the fourth vote necessary to dismiss review.

    Today’s Daily Journal (subscription required) has a story about the dismissal, as an illustration of the complications created by the open seat on the court.

    Related posts:

    Exxon Mobil asks California Supreme Court to dismiss case on assignability of punitive damages

    California Supreme Court grants review in case involving assignability of punitive damages

    Nelson v. Exxon Mobil: punitive damages claims can be assigned

  • Petition for review asks Cal. Supreme Court to resolve split in authority regarding the proper treatment of a punitive damages award after reduction of compensatories

    The defendant in Behr v. Redmond has filed a petition for review with the California Supreme Court, asking the court to decide the following three issues:

    1. When an appellate court substantially reduces a compensatory damages award, must it remand for a new trial on the corresponding punitive damages award—which the jury calibrated in part on the basis of the excessive compensatory award—or may it simply affirm the punitive award?

    2. Does article I, section 16 of the California Constitution create a constitutional right to a jury trial on punitive damages?

    3. Does a 1.75-to-i ratio of punitive to compensatory damages violate the Fourteenth Amendment’s due process clause, where non-economic damages overwhelmingly predominate in the compensatory award?

    As mentioned in prior posts, there is a split of Court of Appeal authority on the first question.  As the petition explains, the lower courts have taken five different approaches on this issue: (1) send the case back to the trial court to conduct a new trial on punitive damages, (2) reduce the punitive damages award to maintain the jury’s original punitive-to-compensatory ratio, (3) remand to the trial court so that the trial court, not a jury, can decide whether to retry, reduce, or let stand the punitive damages award, (4) affirm the trial court’s decision to leave the punitive damages award undisturbed where the trial court had itself ordered a reduction of compensatory damages and determined that no reduction of the punitive damages was necessary, and (5) affirm the punitive damages award so long as the Court of Appeal finds the award is not excessive.

    There is no question in my mind that this is a recurring issue of statewide importance that merits Supreme Court review.  I’m going out on a limb to predict the Supreme Court will grant review.  (So far I’m two for two on such predictions; see here and here).

    Related posts:

    Behr v. Redmond: Court of Appeal publishes previously unpublished opinion, creates split of authority
     
    Behr v. Redmond: $2.8M punitive award affirmed, despite reduction of compensatory damages from $4M to $1.6M

  • Exxon Mobil asks California Supreme Court to dismiss case on assignability of punitive damages

    Exxon Mobil has asked the California Supreme Court to dismiss review in Nelson v. Exxon Mobil, the case in which the Court of Appeal held that plaintiffs in certain cases can assign their claims for punitive damages.  Exxon Mobil persuaded the Supreme Court to grant review in the first place, so Exxon Mobil’s motion to dismiss suggests that the parties have reached a settlement.  (We’re just speculating here; we have no first-hand information about the reason for the motion).

    The short-handed Supreme Court (which has only six justices following the retirement of Carlos Moreno) will probably be more than happy to grant the motion to dismiss.  To reach a decision in this case, the Supreme Court would have needed to appoint four temporary justices: one to replace Justice Moreno, two to replace Justices Chin and Baxter who recused themselves from participation in this case when review was granted, and one to replace Chief Justice Cantil-Sakauye, who is disqualified from participation in this case because she wrote the Court of Appeal’s opinion when she was still a member of that court.

    Related posts:

    California Supreme Court grants review in case involving assignability of punitive damages

    Nelson v. Exxon Mobil: punitive damages claims can be assigned

  • Will the new Chief Justice change the California Supreme Court’s approach to punitive damages?

    Last week we linked to a National Law Journal article exploring whether the new members of the U.S. Supreme Court might change that court’s approach to punitive damages law.  That story prompted us to consider whether Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye, whose selection as the next Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court was approved yesterday by the voters, might reshape punitive damages law in California.

    The short answer is no, we see no indications that Justice Cantil-Sakauye’s addition to the court will result in a sea change in punitive damages law.  For starters, none of the California Supreme Court’s recent opinions on punitive damages have been closely divided.  In the most recent decision, Roby v. McKesson, was decided by a vote of 5-2.  The two previous cases, Simon v. San Paolo U.S. Holdings and Johnson v. Ford Motor Co., were decided 7-0 and 5-2, respectively.  So there’s no reason to think that the presence of one new justice on the court would have changed the outcomes in those cases.

    Moreover, we see nothing in Justice Cantil-Sakauye’s Court of Appeal opinions to suggest that she has any particular agenda when it comes to punitive damages.  Her most notable punitive damages decision is Nelson v. Exxon Mobil, which is currently pending before the California Supreme Court.  (Click here to view the docket.)  In that case, she held that punitive damages claims are assignable when they arise from a cause of action that is assignable.  We noted at the time that Justice Cantil-Sakauye’s opinion seemed to conflict with other cases suggesting that punitive damages claims are never assignable.  But her opinion on this issue does not suggest to us any grand plan to reshape punitive damages law.  And Chief Justice Cantil-Sakauye won’t even be able to participate in the Supreme Court’s decision.  (See Canon 3E(5)(f) of the California Code of Judicial Ethics [appellate justice is disqualified if “[t]he justice (i) served as the judge before whom the proceeding was tried or heard in the lower court”].) So at this time, we have no reason to expect any change in the California Supreme Court’s approach to punitive damages.

  • California Supreme Court Denies Rehearing in Roby v. McKesson

    The California Supreme Court has denied rehearing in Roby v. McKesson and issued an order modifying its opinion. Both parties sought rehearing, and an additional rehearing petition was filed by the Consumer Attorneys of California as amicus curiae.

    The Consumer Attorneys’ petition raised an interesting issue. It asked the court to delete language from the opinion stating that the need for deterrence in the form of punitive damages is lower in cases involving emotional distress damages, because emotional distress damages already include a punitive component. The California Supreme Court borrowed that statement from the U.S. Supreme Court’s opinion in State Farm v. Campbell. But the Consumer Attorneys argued that the principle should not be extended to California law because in California, emotional distress damages are strictly limited to compensation and cannot include any punitive component. The Supreme Court rejected that argument without comment.

    The order modifying the opinion addresses a different issue. The modification is apparently intended to clarify that punitive damages will not necessarily be available in every FEHA case involving the sort of attendance policy used by the defendant in this case.

  • California Supreme Court Grants Review in Case Involving Assignability of Punitive Damages

    Last November we discussed the Court of Appeal’s decision in Nelson v. Exxon Mobil, holding that claims for punitive damages are assingable, at least when those claims arise from harm to real property. We observed that the case “could be headed to the California Supreme Court,” because the Court of Appeal’s opinion seems to conflict with other opinions indicating that punitive damages claims are categorically unassignable. Sure enough, the California Supreme Court has granted review. (See the court’s online docket.)

    Justices Chin and Baxter recused themselves, presumably because they own Exxon stock. That means the outcome in this case may be depend in large part on the identify of the two Court of Appeal justices who get assigned to replace them.

  • Cal. Supreme Court Denies Review in Fariba v. Dealer Services

    The California Supreme Court has denied review in a case we blogged about last October, Fariba v. Dealer Services. In that published opinion, the Court of Appeal affirmed an order granting directed verdict for the defendant on the issue of punitive damages. The court concluded that a directed verdict was appropriate because no reasonable jury could have found by clear and convincing evidence that the defendant acted in conscious disregard of the plaintiff’s rights, given that the plaintiff’s theory of liability turned on a legal issue of first impression.

    Click here to view the California Supreme Court’s online docket for this case.

  • Roby v. McKesson: Cal. Supreme Court Embraces 1:1 Ratio

    Now that I’ve had a chance to review this morning’s opinion from the California Supreme Court, here’s a more detailed summary of the court’s ruling. The primary significance of the case, for purposes of this blog, is that the California Supreme Court has embraced the principle that the maximum permissible ratio of punitive damages to compensatory damages is one-to-one in cases where the compensatory damages award is substantial.

    The Lower Court Proceedings
    The plaintiff in this case, Charlene Roby, claimed she was fired because of a medical condition and a related disability. A jury found in her favor and awarded $3.5 million in compensatory damages and $15 million in compensatory punitive damages. (That was the award against her employer. She received a separate, smaller award against her supervisor.)

    The Court of Appeal reduced the compensatory damages award to $1.4 million, based on ambiguities in the jury’s verdict and a lack of evidence to support some of Roby’s claims. The court further concluded that the $15 million punitive damages award was excessive under the federal Due Process Clause. The court determined that the maximum permissible punitive damages award, based on the facts of the case and the size of the compensatory damages award, was $2 million (1.4 times the amount of compensatory damages).

    Roby’s Petition for Review and Briefing on the Merits

    Roby petitioned for California Supreme Court for review. She asked the court to decide two issues relating to the Court of Appeal’s reduction of the compensatory damages, and she asked the court to decide several punitive damages issues, including whether the Court of Appeal erred in reducing the punitive damages award.

    In the briefing on the merits, Roby and her amicus, the Consumer Attorneys of California (CAOC), argued that the Court of Appeal went too far in adhering to the U.S. Supreme Court’s statement in State Farm v. Campbell that “[w]hen compensatory damages are substantial, then a lesser ratio, perhaps only equal to compensatory damages, can reach the outermost limit of the due process clause.” According to Roby and CAOC, that statement in Campbell was dicta but some lower courts have taken it as a license to substitute their view of the appropriate amount of punitive damages in place of the jury’s decision.

    The Supreme Court’s Opinion

    The Supreme Court ruled in Roby’s favor on one of her arguments regarding compensatory damages, and increased the amount of compensatory damages by $500,000 (for reasons that are outside the topic of this blog).

    Having decided to affirm $1.9 million in compensatory damages, the Supreme Court then addressed the amount of the punitive damages. It agreed with the Court of Appeal that the jury’s $15 million award was excessive, but it disagreed with the Court of Appeal’s adoption of a maximum ratio of 1.4 to one. The Supreme Court held that the ratio could not exceed one to one on the facts of this case.

    The Supreme Court first analyzed the reprehensibility of the defendant’s conduct in light of the five “reprehensibility factors” discussed in State Farm: (1) whether the harm was physical as opposed to economic, (2) whether the defendant’s conduct evinced an indifference to or reckless disregard of the health or safety of others, (3) whether the plaintiff was financially vulnerable, (4) whether the conduct involved repeated actions or was an isolated incident, and (5) whether the harm was the result of intentional malice. The Supreme Court concluded that the first three factors were all present in the case, but the latter two factors were not. Accordingly, the court concluded that the defendant’s conduct “was at the low end of the range of wrongdoing that can support an award of punitive damages under California law.”

    As part of its discussion of reprehensibility, the court considered which employees of the defendant could be considered “managing agents” within the meaning of Civil Code section 3294, such that their conduct could subject their employer to punitive damages. The court concluded that certain corporate managers had participated in some of the misconduct at issue, and therefore punitive damages could be awarded. But the court also held that Roby’s immediate supervisor, who had authority over four employees at a local distribution center, did not constitute a managing agent. The court emphasized that a managing agent must have authority to set company-wide policy, i.e., “formal policies that affect a substantial portion of the company and that are the type likely to come to the attention of corporate leadership. It is this sort of broad authority that justifies punishing an entire company for an otherwise isolated act of oppression, fraud, or malice.” This statement is inconsistent with some recent Court of Appeal decisions that have held that employees could qualify as managing agents even if they lacked such broad authority. (See our post on Major v. Western Home.)

    After discussing the reprehensibility issue, the court then turned to the question of ratio. The court noted that under State Farm, and under the California Supreme Court’s own opinion in Simon v. San Paolo, the maximum permissible ratio of punitive damages is low, perhaps only one to one, when the amount of compensatory damages is substantial. And the court noted that a low ratio is especially appropriate when the compensatory damages award includes a punitive component in the form of emotional distress damages.

    Finally, the court considered the difference between the jury’s punitive damages award and the applicable civil penalties authorized by the Legislature for similar misconduct. The court noted that if Roby had pursued a claim administratively before the California Fair Employment and Housing Commission, the commission could have assessed a maximum fine of $150,000. “Obviously, this guidepost weighs in favor of a lower constitutional limit in this case.”

    After considering all these factors, the court concluded that a one-to-one ratio is the federal constitutional limit in this case. The court then ordered a reduction of the punitive damages to a $1.9 million maximum, without affording the plaintiff the option of a new trial. Thus, the Supreme Court implicitly rejected Roby’s argument that a new trial was the only appropriate remedy. Curiously, while embracing the one-to-one ratio as the limit in this case, the Supreme Court did not mention the U.S. Supreme Court’s opinion in Exxon Shipping, which adopted a one-to-one ratio limit as a matter of federal common law.

    In a concurring and dissenting opinion, Justice Werdegar (joined by Justice Moreno), agreed with most of the majority’s analysis, but argued that a ratio of two to one should be the limit. Justice Werdegar reasoned that a higher award was warranted for two reasons: (1) she viewed the defendant’s conduct as being more reprehensible than described in the majority opinion, and (2) the defendant is a large corporation, ranked in the top 50 of the Fortune 500.

    The significance of this opinion lies partly in the fact that the California Supreme Court has issued so few opinions on punitive damages in recent years. The opinion is fairly lengthy, and various tidbits from this opinion will likely be relevant to a variety of sub-issues that arise in punitive damages litigation. But the primary significance seems to be that the court has put the final nail in the coffin of the argument that the portion of State Farm calling for a one-to-one ratio limit is mere dicta that should does not apply in California.

    UPDATE (12/01/2009): The Daily Journal has a story on Roby here (subscription required).
  • Roby v. McKesson: Cal. Supreme Court Reduces Punitive Damages to 1-to-1 Ratio

    The California Supreme Court has issued its opinion in Roby v. McKesson. I haven’t had a chance to read it in detail yet, but from a quick skim I see that the Supreme Court agreed with the Court of Appeal that the jury’s $15 million punitive damages award was constitutionally excessive, and further held that any amount of punitive damages in excess of the amount of compensatory damages ($1.9 million) would violate due process. I’ll post more on this later.

  • Roby v. McKesson Opinion Will Be Issued Monday, Nov. 30

    The California Supreme Court has announced that it will issue its opinion in Roby v. McKesson on Monday, November 3o. One of the issues presented in Roby is:

    May an appellate court determine the maximum constitutionally permissible
    award of punitive damages when it has reduced the accompanying award of
    compensatory damages, or should the court remand for a new determination of
    punitive damages in light of the reduced award of compensatory damages?

    The Supreme Court issued a pre-argument briefing order suggesting that the court was thinking about remanding the case for a redetermination of the compensatory damages, in which case the court would not reach the punitive damages issues.

    Related posts:

    Briefs in Roby v. McKesson Now Available on Cal. Supreme Court Website

    California Supreme Court Will Hear Oral Arguments in Roby v. McKesson on Sept. 2

    Cal. Supreme Court Requests Supplemental Briefing in Roby v. McKesson

    CAOC Amicus Brief in California Supreme Court Covers Punitive Damages Issues in Roby v. McKesson