California Punitives by Horvitz & Levy
  • Unpublished opinion vacates $1 million punitive damages award because plaintiff failed to introduce meaingful evidence of defendant’s financial condition (Nesbitt v. Emmanuel)

    Here’s yet another unpublished opinion in which the California Court of Appeal (Second District, Division Four) reversed a punitive damages award because the plaintiff failed to introduce meaningful evidence of the defendant’s financial condition.

    The defendant in this case did not file a new trial motion in the trial court challenging the damages award.  Ordinarily, defendants must file a new trial motion in order to preserve the right to attack the amount of damages on appeal.  But the Court of Appeal permitted the defendant to challenge the punitive damages for the first time on appeal, citing footnote five of Adams v. Murakami, which held that defendants cannot waive a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence regarding their financial condition, because such arguments are rooted in public policy.

    Turning to the merits, the court described the evidence of the defendant’s financial condition as follows:

    • he had an annual income of $201,600
    • he had a tenant, but there was no evidence of the amount of his rental income
    • he was licensed as a real estate agent, but there was no evidence regarding his ability to operate a profitable real estate practice
    • he owned a condominium, but there was no evidence of his equity
    • he had recently purchased several pieces of real property, but there was no evidence of whether he still owned these properties at the time of trial and, if so, whether they were encumbered by debts
    • his liabilities were unknown

    The court concluded this evidence was not sufficient to establish that he could pay a $1 million punitive damages award without being financially destroyed.  Accordingly, the court vacated the punitive damages award.

  • Punitive damages in bad faith cases

    The Shernoff Bidart law firm, which specializes in suing insurance companies, has posted an essay on their website about punitive damages in cases of institutional bad faith.

    The essay, originally published in the Daily Journal, argues that courts should not apply the U.S. Supreme Court’s analysis in State Farm v. Campbell to cases of institutional bad faith.  In particular, the essay contends that lower courts should not follow State Farm‘s statements about ratio (“few awards exceeding a single-digit ratio between punitive and compensatory damages, to a significant degree, will satisfy due process”) in bad faith cases, and that much higher ratios should be permitted in cases where the defendant’s misconduct arises from a “bad corporate culture.”

    The essay seems to overlook the fact that State Farm itself was a bad faith case.  If anything, State Farm‘s principles should apply with more force in bad faith cases than in other types of cases.  State Farm expressly rejected the notion of punishing a defendant for a bad corporate culture:  “a defendant should be punished for the conduct that harmed the plaintiff, not for being an unsavory individual or business.”

    The Shernoff essay correctly observes that State Farm did not prohibit ratios in excess of 9 to 1 in all situations.  But State Farm recognized only a limited exception where larger ratios may be permitted: where “a particularly egregious act has resulted in only a small amount of economic damages.”  Nothing in State Farm remotely suggests that an additional exception exists for bad faith cases. To the contrary, State Farm holds that the permissible ratio in a particular case depends upon the nature of the conduct, and that conduct involving violence or physical harm should be punished more harshly than purely economic torts like bad faith.   

  • Assembly rejects proposal to eliminate tax deductions for punitive damages

    The California State Assembly has rejected AB 1276, the proposal to prohibit taxpayers from deducting punitive damages as a business expense.  (See our prior post.)  The vote tally was 50 Ayes and 26 Noes, with 4 members not voting, which means the proposal failed under Prop 26, which requires a two-thirds supermajority vote to approve a tax increase.

  • Two unpublished opinions address the relationship between compensatory damages and punitive damages, with different results (Romero v. Leon Max; Starrh and Starrh v. Aera Energy)

    The California Court of Appeal issued two unpublished opinions this week discussing the rule that punitive damages cannot be awarded without an award of compensatory damages.  Both cases involve a little twist on that rule, and both arguably should be published.

    In Romero v. Leon Max, an employment case, a jury rendered the following verdict for the plaintiff:

    • $0 in compensatory damages and $50,000 in punitive damages on her claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress
    • $6,349.10 in compensatory damages and $0 in punitive damages on her claims for wrongful discharge and retaliation

    The jury expressly found that the defendant acted with malice in connection with the intentional infliction of emotional distress claim, but did not act with malice in connection with the wrongful discharge and retaliation claims.

    The trial court tossed the punitive damages award on the ground that it was not supported by any compensatory damages award, and the Court of Appeal (Second Appellate District, Division One) affirmed.  The court held that, because the plaintiff’s only “actual damages” were awarded on claims that did not involve malice, the plaintiff could not recover any punitive damages:  “no punitive damages are appropriate based on ‘actual damages’ awarded on any cause of action in which this finding [of malice, oppression, or fraud] was not made.”

    It’s worth noting that the defendant was able to make this argument only because the special verdict form was drafted in such a way that the jury had to decide the issue of malice separately for each cause of action.  If the verdict form had contained only one catch-all question about malice at the end of the form (as is often the case), the defendant would not have been able to demonstrate that the jury awarded punitive damages only on the claim for which it did not award any actual damages.  So kudos to defense counsel at Towle Denison for some nice lawyering.

    In Starrh and Starrh Cotton Growers v. Aera Energy, the Court of Appeal (Fifth Appellate District) held that the plaintiff was entitled to pursue a punitive damages claim even though the jury did not make a finding that the plaintiff suffered any actual harm.  The plaintiff, who claimed that the defendant’s oil extraction operations contaminated the plaintiff’s groundwater, obtained an $8.5 million damages award on a disgorgement theory.  In other words, the jury awarded damages based on the benefits the defendant obtained through its misconduct, not based on any actual losses suffered by the plaintiff.

    After the jury returned the $8.5 million award, the trial court concluded, based on certain findings that the jury made about the timing of the defendant’s conduct, that the jury could not possibly find that the defendant acted with malice.  Accordingly, the trial court did not submit the issue of malice to the jury.

    The Court of Appeal reversed, holding that the trial court should have submitted the question of punitive damages to the jury, and should have allowed both parties to present evidence and argument on the issue, because the evidence would have supported a finding that the defendant acted with malice.  The defendant argued on appeal that imposing punitive damages in the case would violate the Due Process Clause because the jury did not find any “actual harm.”  The court rejected that argument, stating that punitive damages are not limited “to cases in which the underlying damages verdict is measured by reference to the plaintiff’s loss rather than the defendant’s gain.”  The court noted that California law has permitted punitive damages where the compensatory award is only nominal, and therefore doesn’t represent any actual harm to the plaintiff.

    The end result is that, in Romero the plaintiff proved actual harm but was not entitled to punitive damages, and in Starrh the plaintiff did not prove any actual harm but was entitled to punitive damages.  Both cases may be consistent with existing law, but the results aren’t exactly intuitive.

  • Assemblyman revives proposal to eliminate tax deduction for punitive damages

    Last year we blogged about Assemblyman Mike Feuer‘s proposal to prevent California taxpayers from taking a tax deduction for payments of punitive damages.  The bill, Assembly Bill 1276, got through the appropriations committee by a vote of 12-5, but failed in a floor vote and was moved to the “inactive” file last June.  The issue appeared to be dead, but it has recently come back to life.

    At Feuer’s request, the bill was removed from the inactive file and will come up for another vote on the floor.  Feuer is trying to drum up support for the bill on Twitter

    When courts punish corporations for egregious misconduct, we expect they’ll pay. But a tax loophole lets them to [sic] deduct punitive damages! 

    My AB 1276 prevents corporations from writing off punitive damages as “business expenses.” Contact your member and urge support today.

    The bill needs a 2/3 vote to pass.  Our sources in Sacramento tell us there’s no chance of that happening.

  • “Economic Analysis of Punitive Damages”

    Prof. Catherine M. Sharkey at NYU Law has posted a chapter entitled Economic Analysis of Punitive Damages: Theory, Empirics, and Doctrine, from the forthcoming Research Handbook on the Economics of Torts.  Here’s the abstract:

    This chapter — to be included in Research Handbook on the Economics of Torts (Arlen ed., Kluwer, forthcoming 2012) — assesses economic rationales for punitive damages in light of contemporary empirics and doctrine. The primary economic rationale for supra-compensatory damages is optimal deterrence (or loss internalization): when compensatory damages alone will not induce an actor to take cost-justified safety precautions, then supra-compensatory damages are necessary to force the actor to internalize the full scope of the harms caused by his actions. Alternative economic rationales — disgorgement of ill-gotten gains and enforcement of property rights — have been proposed to align the theory with the historical and conventional focus of punitive damages on intentionally wrongful behavior.

    Notwithstanding its academic prominence, the economic deterrence rationale has not dominated doctrine. In fact, the U.S. Supreme Court has all but rejected economic deterrence, by instead placing increasing emphasis on a competing retributive punishment rationale. But, since punitive damages lie squarely within the purview of state law, state legislatures and courts possess a degree of freedom to articulate state-based goals of punitive damages — such as economic deterrence — even in the face of heavy-handed federal constitutional review imposed by the U.S. Supreme Court.

    Hat tip: TortsProf Blog.

  • Garth Brooks wins $500,000 punitive damages award

    According to this report, a jury in Oklahoma has awarded Garth Brooks $500,000 in compensatory damages and $500,000 in punitive damages, in a lawsuit against a hospital that accepted a donation from Brooks and then reneged on its promise to name a women’s clinic after his late mother.

  • Unpublished opinion affirms $750,000 punitive damages award against two doctors (Taheri v. Khadavi)

    This unpublished opinion from the California Court of Appeal (Second Appellate District, Division Seven) affirms a judgment awarding $8 million in compensatory damages and $750,000 in punitive damages in a case involving claims of fraud and breach of fiduciary duty by two doctors.

    The defendants did not challenge the amount of the punitive damages award as excessive, but they argued that the Court of Appeal should vacate the award because the plaintiff failed to prove that the defendants acted with malice, oppression, or fraud within the meaning of Civil Code section 3294.  The court rejected that argument, reasoning that the defendants are subject to punitive damages because the jury found them guilty of fraud:

    The jury found the defendants committed fraud.  As discussed above, that finding was supported by substantial evidence . . . Accordingly the punitive damages must be upheld.

    The court’s analysis seems to assume that, if a plaintiff proves a cause of action for fraud, then punitive damages are automatically available under the fraud prong of section 3294.  But California law defines the tort of fraud differently from the sort of fraud needed to obtain punitive damages.  The difference is the sort of “intent” required.  To prove the tort of fraud, the plaintiff must prove that the defendant acted with an intent to induce reliance.  But to obtain punitive damages for fraud, the plaintiff must prove that the defendant actually intended to cause harm.  Thus, a defendant who commits fraud with intent to induce reliance, but no intent to cause harm, is not liable for punitive damages.  It’s not possible to tell from this opinion whether it would have made any difference if the Court of Appeal had considered this distinction.

  • New law review article on enforcement of U.S. punitive damages awards in France

    Professor François-Xavier Licari, of the University of Metz law school, has written another interesting article on the enforcement of American punitive damages awards in France.  The article, co-authored by Benjamin West Janke, is entitled Enforcing Punitive Damages Awards in France after Fountaine PajotHere’s the abstract:

    In a landmark ruling, the Cour de cassation held that “an award of punitive damages is not, per se, contrary to public policy,” but that “it is otherwise when the amount awarded is disproportionate with regard to the damage sustained and the debtor’s breach of his contractual obligation.” Schlenzka & Langhorne v. Fountaine Pajot, S.A. involved the failed attempt by American judgment creditors to enforce their California judgment against a French defendant in France. At the same time that the judgment creditors were taking their case through the French legal system, the Cour de cassation, in a different line of cases, liberalized the conditions under which a foreign judgment could be enforced in France. But when the Court opened one door for the American plaintiffs, it closed another by refusing to enforce the judgment because it included disproportionate punitive damages. The Court’s reasons were inconsistent with prior interpretations of proportionality and disingenuous to the court’s modern approach to the enforcement of foreign judgments. In just a few words, the Court echoed prevailing French and European sentiments about American punitive damage awards. Unfortunately, the prevailing attitudes are dominated more by prejudice than by fact and reason.

    The article will appear in the American Journal of Comparative Law.

  • A big year for big verdicts: the top punitive damages awards of 2011

    A majority of states have adopted statutory caps on punitive damages, but the verdicts of 2011 showed us that colossal punitive damages awards are still alive and well in the rest of the U.S., especially in California.

    Top 10 California punitive damages verdicts of 2011

    By my count, these were the top 10 punitive damages awards of the year in California:

    1.  $85 million against Mattel.
    2.  $65 million against Encino-Tarzana Regional Medical Center.
    3.  $50 million against Ford.
    4.  $30 million against Actelion.  
    5.  $20 million against Kaiser-Gypsum (reduced to $4 million after post-trial motions).
    6.  $19 million against Stonebridge Life Insurance (reduced to $350k after post-trial motions).
    7.  $15.6 million against Johnson & Johnson.
    8.  $15.4 million against Pentel.
    9.  $13.5 million against ArvinMeritor and Pneumo Abex.
    10. $2.5 million against Jon Peters.

    That’s a total of $306 million in punitive damages just for these 10 cases.

    Top 5 U.S. punitive damages verdicts of 2011

    The California numbers are impressive, but our top verdict of the year, the $85 million verdict against Mattell, doesn’t even make the top five on the list of the biggest punitive damages awards in the U.S. in 2011:

    1.  $150 billion (Texas)
    2.  $1 billion (Maryland)
    3.  $300 million (vacated on post-trial motions) (Mississippi)
    4.  $200 million (Virginia)
    5.  $162.5 million  (Nevada)

    As the notations above indicate, some of these mega-awards have already been tossed out.  Most of the others will probably meet the same fate.  But 2011 showed that the reversal of such awards on appeal is no sure thing, even in California.  In the few years prior to 2011, our courts were regularly chopping these awards down to size, following the U.S. Supreme Court’s statement in State Farm that the ratio of punitive damages to compensatory damages should not exeed one to one, in cases where the compensatory damages themselves are “substantial.”  But in 2011 we saw some backsliding on that issue, with several courts upholding some very large awards, with ratios in excess of 1 to 1, despite the presence of substantial compensatory damages:

    $13.8 million (ratio of 16 to 1)
    $7 million (ratio of 2.75 to 1)
    $4.7 million (ratio of 2.35 to 1)
    $2.8 million (ratio of 1.75 to 1)
    $1 million (ratio of 2 to 1)

    The California Supreme Court declined review in all of these cases, so this list, unlike the others above, represents final payable judgments.

    All the numbers in this post are based on a review of our blog posts from 2011.  Perhaps there are some other verdicts and decisions that should be listed, but somehow escaped our attention during the year.  If anyone sees something we missed that should have made these lists, let us know, and we will update the lists accordingly.