California Punitives by Horvitz & Levy
  • New Law Review Article on Philip Morris v. Williams

    Professor Benjamin Zipursky of Fordham School of Law has posted an article on SSRN entitled Punitive Damages After Philip Morris v. Williams.

    Among other things, the article discusses the Williams-based language that appears in California’s model jury instructions (CACI). Prof. Zipursky gives the CACI language a favorable review, but he thinks Ohio’s pattern instructions are a little better.

    Here’s an excerpt from the abstract:

    Philip Morris USA v. Williams has struck some commentators as hypertechnical, but it is in fact among the Court’s most significant pronouncements on the topic of punitive damages. At its center is the “Nonparty Harm Rule”: it is a violation of due process for a court to permit a jury in a tort case to use punitive damages to punish a defendant for harming persons who are not parties in the litigation. The holding is difficult to understand because the Court simultaneously stated that it is permissible to augment a punitive damages award in light of a defendant’s heightened reprehensibility and it is permissible to infer heightened reprehensibility from the numerosity of the persons injured by defendant’s conduct, including nonparties. It is surprising because it appears to sound more in process, while prior cases have focused on the magnitude of the award. For both of these reasons, it is challenging to lower courts, who must craft jury instructions implementing Williams’ mandate. This article tackles all three problems.

    Hat tip: TortsProf Blog.

  • Rex Heeseman’s Latest Daily Journal Article on Punitive Damages

    Judge Rex Heeseman of the Los Angeles Superior Court contributes regularly to the Los Angeles Daily Journal on various topics, including punitive damages. In his latest piece, Calculation of the “PD Ratio” (May 11, 2010), which you can view here if you have a subscription, Judge Heeseman discusses the decision a few months ago in Amerigraphics v. Mercury.

    Judge Heeseman’s article provides a nice overview of some of the major California appellate decisions addressing the proper ratio of punitive damages to compensatory damages. The article discusses the Amerigraphics decision in light of these precedents, and examines some of the questions raised by Amerigraphics.

    For example, Judge Heeseman notes that in Amerigraphics, an insurance bad faith case, the court excluded from the ratio calculation any amounts awarded to the policyholder as “Brandt” fees (fees that the policyholder incurred in order to obtain wrongfully withheld policy benefits). Judge Heeseman notes that other decisions (such as Major v. Western Home) included Brandt fees in the ratio analysis. He suggests that California law is now unclear as to whether Brandt fees should be considered for ratio purposes.

    Judge Heeseman also notes that the Amerigraphics court ultimately settled upon a ratio of 3.8 to 1 as the constitutional maximum on the facts of that case, and he says “[i]t appears this is the first occasion, in California at least, where an appellate court utilized a ‘fraction’ in the ratio.”

    I think it’s true that California appellate courts generally adopt whole-number ratios, but fractional ratios are fairly common in California, because appellate courts often prefer to set the punitive damages at a nice round number. (See, e.g., Diamond Woodworks v. Argonaut (2003) 109 Cal.App.4th 1020, 1056-1057 [ordering a remittitur of punitive damages to $1 million, for a ratio of 3.8 to one, exactly the same ratio adopted in Amerigraphics]; Notrica v. State Compensation Insurance Fund (1999) 70 Cal.App.4th 911, 951-954 [ordering a remititur of punitive damages to $5 million, for a ratio of 10.3 to 1]; Rosener v. Sears, Roebuck & Co. (1980) 110 Cal.App.3d 740, 746, 757 [ordering a remittitur of punitive damages to $2.5 million, resulting in a ratio of 15.8 to one].) In the most recent example, the Court of Appeal in Roby v. McKesson adopted a ratio of 1.4 to 1, only to see that number reduced to 1 to 1 by the California Supreme Court.

  • Bill To Cap Punitive Damages is Dead. Again.

    In a prior post, we reported on the death of a bill to cap punitive damages in California at three times the amount of compensatory damages. That report turned out to be premature, because the proposal wasn’t really dead. It came back to life with a different number (AB 2740). Now that bill is really dead. It was rejected by the Assembly Judiciary Committee. Don’t take our word for it; the Civil Justice Association of California (CJAC), which sponsored the bill, has the full report on its blog.

  • Las Vegas Jury Awards $500 Million in Punitive Damages

    For those of you wondering where have all the punitive damages gone, they’re baaack! With a vengeance. On the heels of a $200 million punitive damages award by a jury in Los Angeles, a jury in Las Vegas has topped that by dishing out $500 million in punitive damages.

    As reported by the Associated Press, a jury awarded awarded $5 million in compensatory damages and $500 million in punitive damages to a husband and wife who alleged that the husband was infected with Hepatitis C during a colonoscopy. The jury awarded punitive damages not against the medical facility that infected the plaintiff, but against two drug companies that made and distributed propofol, the anesthetic drug used during the procedure. The plaintiffs alleged that the companies, Teva Parenteral Medicines and Baxter Healthcare Corp., supplied the drugs in vials that were larger than necessary, tempting the healthcare providers to re-use the vials on multiple patients, even though the vials were labeled for individual use. During the trial, the plaintiffs’ attorney referred to the vials as “weapons of mass infection.” (See this report in the Sun Times.)

    This award is destined to be reversed or reduced. The basis for imposing punitive damages seems shaky and the amount of the award is simply absurd. An affirmance of this award would literally be unprecedented. Not surprisingly, the defendants have announced their plans to appeal. But even if the defendants get this award tossed, they won’t be out of the woods. Apparently there are series of similar cases in the pipe-line. This was just the first to make it to trial.

  • $200 Million Punitive Damages Verdict in Los Angeles Asbestos Case

    Yesterday, a Los Angeles jury awarded $8.8 million in compensatory damages and $200 million in punitive damages in an asbestos case against Certainteed Corporation and the Los Angeles Department of Water & Power (DWP). (The case is Evans v. AW Chesterton Co et al., case no. BC418867.)

    It’s not clear to me whether the punitive damages were assessed against both defendants, or just one of them. Either way, the ratio of punitive damages to compensatory damages is 22.7 to 1. If that award remains intact through posttrial motions and appeal (not likely), it would dwarf the largest punitive damages award ever to to survive appeal in California ($55 million in Buell-Wilson v. Ford).

    Hat tip: CVN Blog.

    UPDATE: The Recorder (via Law.com) has a story on this verdict.

  • Gulf Oil Spill: Punitive Damages Bonanza?

    That didn’t take long. Reuters reports that the first class actions have been filed against BP and others, seeking punitive damages for the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

    This is only the beginning. Various media outlets are reporting that this spill could exceed the size of the Exxon Valdez spill. The Valdez spill generated a punitive damages award of $5 billion (ultimately reduced to $500 million), so you can expect a long line of lawyers hoping to get a piece of an even bigger payday this time around.

  • Ninth Circuit’s Dukes v. Wal-Mart Decision Addresses Class Certification of Punitive Damages Claims

    Today, the Ninth Circuit issued its long awaited en banc decision in Dukes v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., the case in which plaintiffs filed a class action alleging that Wal-Mart discriminates against women in violation of Title VII.

    As we noted in prior posts, one of the (many) legal questions at issue in Dukes is the propriety of a classwide determination of punitive damages for Title VII claims. The federal district court held that a class estimated to include more than 1.5 million women—including their requests for back pay and punitive damages—could be certified. A divided panel of the Ninth Circuit subsequently affirmed the certification of the requests for back pay and punitive damages but the court later granted rehearing en banc.

    Today, in a 6 to 5 decision, a divided en banc panel affirmed the certification of the requests for back pay under Rule 23(b)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure but reversed the certification of the requests for punitive damages under that rule.

    In doing so, the majority opinion exacerbated an existing split amongst the federal appellate courts over the proper standard for determining when class certification is appropriate under Rule 23(b)(2). The en banc Dukes majority held that, “[t]o be certified under Rule 23(b)(2), . . . a class must seek only monetary damages that are not ‘superior [in] strength, influence, or authority’ to injunctive and declaratory relief.” In contrast, the Second Circuit’s Rule 23(b)(2) test assesses a plaintiff’s subjective intent in bringing a lawsuit to determine whether monetary relief predominates over declaratory and injunctive relief. And several other federal appellate courts hold that a class action seeking monetary relief may be certified under Rule 23(b)(2) only if the monetary relief is “incidental” to the other forms of requested relief.

    The majority opinion held that, under its new test, a district court must “consider, on a case-by-case basis, the objective ‘effect of the relief sought’ on the litigation.” The majority explained that the following factors would be relevant to this legal analysis: (1) “whether the monetary relief sought determines the key procedures that will be used”; (2) “whether it introduces new and significant legal and factual issues”; (3) “whether it requires individualized hearings”; and (4) “whether its size and nature—as measured by recovery per class member—raise particular due process and manageability concerns.”

    Applying this newly announced test to the Dukes case, the majority opinion concluded that the requests for back pay could be certified for class treatment under Rule 23(b)(2). But the majority determined that the district court abused its discretion by certifying the requests for punitive damages because the court did not undertake an analysis of whether certification of these requests rendered the final relief sought by the class “predominantly ‘related to money damages.’”

    The majority, however, did not hold that claims seeking punitive damages can never be certified or could not be certified in the Dukes case. Instead, the majority opinion remanded the case for the district court to determine whether certification of the requests for punitive damages would be appropriate under Rule 23(b)(2) and, even if such certification were inappropriate, whether “hybrid certification”—certification of a portion of the case pursuant to Rule 23(b)(2) and the requests for punitive damage under the separate class certification standard set by Rule 23(b)(3)—would nonetheless be proper.

    In remanding the punitive damages portion of the case, the majority opinion noted that several factors from its new test counseled against certification of the requests for punitive damages under Rule 23(b)(2). However, the majority also noted that one factor—whether individualized hearings were necessary—weighed against a finding that punitive damages predominate over declaratory and injunctive relief. According to the majority, the Dukes case “does not require individualized punitive damages determinations” because the plaintiffs’ “theory of the liability is a class-wide theory that is based on a company policy that allegedly affects all class members in a similar way.”

    Five judges on the en banc panel dissented for a wide variety of reasons. The dissenting judges explained that the majority’s new test for class certification under Rule 23(b)(2) was “essentially unusable” and “aggravate[d] the already-existing inconsistency between the circuits.” The dissent also faulted the majority for concluding, in an “unprecedented holding,” that “punitive damages do not require individualized determinations because the plaintiffs allege[d] that Wal-Mart’s policy ‘affects all class members in a similar way.’” The dissent explained that this remarkable determination, “made with virtually no analysis, is wrong both as a matter of law and fact.”

    Absent an unprecedented “super” rehearing en banc by the full Ninth Circuit, the Dukes saga in the Ninth Circuit is now over. Next up: whether Wal-Mart files a petition for a writ of certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court and, if so, whether the high court agrees to step into the fray over what some have reported to be the largest class action in history.

  • Devlin v. Foot & Ankle Doctors: $142,500 in Punitive Damages Affirmed

    Nothing earth-shattering here. The California Court of Appeal (Second District, Division Four) concludes in an unpublished opinion that a $142,500 punitive damages is not excessive in relation to a $57,000 compensatory damages award (ratio of 2.5 to one).

  • Another Punitive Damages Award in Florida Tobacco Litigation

    BusinessWeek reports that a Florida jury has awarded $10 million in compensatory damages and $80 million in punitive damages to a smoker’s widow in a lawsuit against R.J. Reynolds, as part of the ongoing series of post-Engle trials in that state.

    The jury allocated 49% of the fault to the smoker. As a result, the Florida trial judge reduced the total award against R.J. Reynolds, including the punitive damages, by 49 percent. The net result was a judgment of $46.3 million.

    I have never seen a California defendant ask a judge to reduce a punitive damages by the percentage of fault allocated to the plaintiff. I have seen many cases in which a defendant argues that the issue of excessiveness should be evaluated in light of the compensatory damages as reduced by the allocation of fault. But aside from arguments on excessiveness, I haven’t seen anyone argue that the allocation of fault should result in a direct, corresponding reduction in the punitive damages. Although I haven’t researched this extensively, I’m not aware of any California law directly on point. When the California Supreme Court adopted the doctrine of comparative negligence in Yi v. Yellow Cab, the court expressly declined to address the effect of that rule on punitive damages, saying only that “[t]he law of punitive damages remains a separate consideration.”

    Related posts:

    Florida Jury Awards $20 Million in Punitive Damages to Smoker’s Widow

    Smoker’s Widow Wins $12.5 Million in Punitive Damages

    Florida Trial Judge Cuts $244 Million Punitive Damages Award

    Florida Jury Awards $25 Million in Punitive Damages to Smoker’s Widow

    “Smokers, tobacco, both winners in early Engle cases”

    Jury Rules For Plaintiff in First Phase of Retrial After Reversal of $145 Billion Punitive Damages Award

    After Reversal of $145 Billion Class Action Punitive Damages Award, Florida Smokers Seek Punitive Damages in Individual Suits

    Plaintiffs’ Attorneys Win $218 Million Fee Award for Helping Obtain a Punitive Damages Verdict that Was Reversed on Appeal