California Punitives by Horvitz & Levy
  • Court of Appeal conditionally affirms $500,000 punitive damages award despite vacating all compensatory damages (Jensen v. Charon Solutions)

    This unpublished opinion continues an unfortunate trend in the California Court of Appeal.

    Readers of this blog have heard me complain before that an appellate court should not affirm a punitive damages award after ordering a significant reduction in compensatory damages.  Punitive damages are supposed to bear a reasonable relationship to the plaintiff’s actual harm. Juries are instructed to make that determination in every case, and the defendant is entitled to have the jury decide that issue in the first instance.

    In this malicious prosecution case, a jury awarded $1 million in compensatory damages and $500,000 in punitive damages.  On appeal, the Court of Appeal (Second Appellate District, Division Two) concluded that the trial court erred by allowing the plaintiff’s counsel to seek over $400,000 in damages in the form of attorneys fees, based on bills which were so heavily redacted that almost no content was left.  Accordingly, the court sent the case back for a new trial on compensatory damages.

    The court should have ordered a new trial on the punitive damages as well.  That’s what some other  Courts of Appeal have done in this situation.  (See e.g., SEIU v. Colcord (2008) 160 Cal.App.4th362.)

    Instead, the Court of Appeal here affirms the punitive damages award, on the theory that, as long as the compensatory damages on remand total at least $50,000, the jury’s award of $500,000 in punitive damages will be below the “10-to-1 cap” for punitive damages.

    That’s wrong for at least two reasons.  First, as noted, the defendant has a right to have a jury decide what amount of punitive damages is appropriate based on the harm caused.  Second, our Supreme Court has explained that punitive damages are not presumptively valid whenever they are less than ten times the amount of compensatory damages.   (See Simon v. San Paolo U.S. Holding Co., Inc. (2005) 35 Cal.4th 1159, 1182 [“Multipliers less than nine or 10 to one are not, however, presumptively valid“].)  A lesser ratio may still be excessive, depending on the other circumstances of the case.

    The Supreme Court will have to sort this out someday, but this case may not be the right vehicle.  The opinion is not only unpublished, but the Court of Appeal observes that “both parties’ briefs on appeal mispresent the facts and the law.”  That isn’t going to encourage the Supreme Court to solicit further briefing in this case.

  • N.J. district court vacates $50 million punitive damages award against Lockheed

    We previously reported that a jury in federal jury in New Jersey awarded $50 million in punitive damages against Lockheed Martin in an age discrimination case. That award has been vacated, according to this story published today in the Courier Post.  The district court concluded that the plaintiff failed to present clear and convincing evidence of wrongdoing by Lockheed’s senior management.

  • “CT Supreme Court Issues Punitive Damages Ruling Favorable to Policyholders”

    This article appears today in the National Law Review, discussing a Connecticut Supreme Court opinion scheduled for official release on December 19.  The article reports that the Connecticut Supreme Court has rejected the argument that insurance coverage for punitive damages would violate that state’s public policy.  Instead, “where an insurance policy expressly provides coverage for an intentional act, common-law punitive damages are properly included in such coverage.”

    The Supreme Court of California has reached the opposite conclusion.  Because Insurance Code section 533 prohibits insurers from covering losses caused by an insured’s willful act, the Supreme Court has concluded that “our public policy prohibits indemnification of punitive damages.”  (PPG Industries v. Transamerica Ins. Co. (1999) 20 Cal.4th 310, 317.)

  • Alameda County jury awards $4.6 million in punitive damages against talc defendants

    Law 360 is reporting (subscription required) that a jury has awarded $4.6 million in punitive damages, in addition to $17.57 in compensatory damages, in a lawsuit alleging that asbestos-contaminated talc caused a man to develop mesothelioma.  The defendants are Imerys Talc America  and Vanderbilt Minerals.  Vanderbilt has already settled, according to the story.

  • “J&J Faces High-Stakes Appeal to Toss Pinnacle Hips Judgment”

    Bloomberg Technology has this story about today’s oral argument in the Fifth Circuit in the case in which a jury awarded $360 million in punitive damages against Johnson & Johnson for allegedly defective hip implants.

    Related posts:

    $360 million punitive damages award reduced under Texas cap

  • Dallas jury awards $168 million in punitive damages against Johnson & Johnson in hip implant suit

    The Dallas Morning News reports that a jury yesterday awarded Johnson & Johnson to pay $247 million, including $168 million in punitive damages, for allegedly failing to warn about defects in artificial hips.

    As the article notes, this is the third time a Dallas jury has whacked the company for punitive damages in hip implant litigation. Mark Lanier is the plaintiffs’ lawyer in all three cases.  The company says it plans to appeal.  Presumably, Lanier will again enlist Ken Starr to defend the punitive damages on appeal.

  • Court of Appeal vacates $5 million punitive damages award, with an invisible dissent (Leggins v. Rite Aid)

    In this unpublished opinion issued today, the California Court of Appeal reversed a $5 million punitive damages award in an employment discrimination case.  Or at least two of the justices did.  A third justice indicated that she plans to dissent.  More about that later.  First, the facts of the case.

    The plaintiff, a former a Rite Aid store manager, sued Rite Aid for harassment and discrimination based on race and disability.  A jury awarded him $3.7 million in compensatory damages and $5 million in punitive damages.

    Rite Aid appealed, challenging both the compensatory and punitive damages.  The Court of Appeal (Second Appellate District, Division One) affirmed the compensatory damages award but vacated the punitive damages award in its entirety, on the ground that the plaintiff failed to satisfy the “managing agent” requirement of Civil Code section 3294.

    Section 3294 provides that punitive damages cannot be awarded against a corporation based on the misconduct of a low-level employee.  The plaintiff must show that an officer, director, or managing agent of the corporation was involved.  Here, the plaintiff claimed he was harassed and discriminated against by two district managers, whom he argued were managing agents within the meaning of section 3294 because they oversaw 10 to 15 stores.  But merely managing a large number of stores does not make someone a managing agent.  The Supreme Court has explained that corporate employees do not qualify as managing agents unless they exercise substantial discretionary authority over vital aspects of the company’s business, and therefore have the power to create company policies that will govern the business in the future.

    In this case, the plaintiff presented no evidence that the Rite Aid district managers had that sort of discretionary authority to set company policy.  To the contrary, the record showed that the managers had no discretion to deviate from Rite Aid policies and were obligated to follow them strictly.

    A couple of low-level Rite Aid employees testified that they thought the managers had authority to set policies, but the Court of Appeal concluded that testimony did not satisfy plaintiff’s burden of proof.  The court observed that their testimony lacked any indication that they knew anything about how Rite Aid formed its corporate policies.

    The end of the opinion indicates that Justice Chaney wrote the opinion, Justice Johnson concurred, and Justice Rothschild dissented.  But no actual dissenting opinion appears.  Instead, there is a statement by Justice Rothschild that “I will be filing a dissent.”  I’ve read a lot of California Court of Appeal opinions and I’ve never seen that before.

    Even more odd, the opinion contains footnotes that refer to the content of the non-existent dissent.  See for example footnote 3 on page 39 (“The dissent suggests . . . “).  I’m not sure exactly what happened here, but there are sure to be further developments.  Stay tuned.

    UPDATE (11/15):  The Court of Appeal reposted the opinion, this time with Justice Rothschild’s concurring and dissenting opinion attached.  Justice Rothschild agreed with the majority’s analysis on punitive damages, but in her view Rite Aid is entitled to a complete new trial on all issues because the trial court wrongly excluded evidence that supported the reasonableness of Rite Aid’s employment decisions.

  • Ninth Circuit reduces $2.5 million punitive damages award to $1 million (King v. GEICO)

    This unpublished memorandum disposition from the Ninth Circuit does not have much factual detail, so we can’t tell exactly what GEICO did to warrant punitive damages.  But whatever it was, the Ninth Circuit found GEICO’s conduct to be “of low to moderate reprehensibility.”

    As a result, the court concluded that the jury’s $2.5 million punitive damages award was unconstitutionally excessive when compared to the $266,000 in compensatory damages (a nine to one ratio).  The court observed: “This is significantly higher than the four-to-one proxy that we apply in similar contexts.”  The court then reduced the award to a little over $1 million, right at the four-to-one benchmark.

    The panel consisted of Judges McKeown, Gould, and Rothstein (a district court judge for the Western District of Washington, sitting by designation).

  • Court of Appeal affirms $371,250 punitive damages award against San Diego Zoo (Diamond One Construction v. Zoological Society of San Diego)

    There isn’t much to say about this unpublished decision, but we try to report all California appellate decisions involving significant amounts of punitive damages.

    A construction contractor sued the San Diego Zoo for fraud and recovered $222,741 in compensatory damages and $371,250 in punitive damages.  The zoo appealed, arguing that the punitive damages should be reversed because it was based on the conduct of a zoo employee who was not a managing agent within the meaning of Civil Code section 3294.

    The Court of Appeal (Fourth Appellate District, Division One) disagreed, finding that the employee originated the idea for the construction project and made a number of discretionary decisions that influenced the scope and tenor of the project: “There can be no serious dispute he ‘exercise[d] substantial discretionary authority over decisions that ultimately determine[d] corporate policy.’ ”

    The court also rejected the zoo’s argument that the ratio of 1.667-to-1 between the punitive damages and compensatory damages was constitutionally excessive.