California Punitives by Horvitz & Levy
  • Miami Judge Awards $393 Million in Punitive Damages Against Cuba

    The Associated Press is reporting that a trial judge in Miami has awarded $1 billion, including $393 million in punitive damages, against Cuba, Fidel Castro, Raul Castro, and Che Guevara. (Presumably Guevara’s estate is the actual defendant, not Guevara himself, who was executed in Bolivia in 1967.) The plaintiff claims that Guevara and the Castros imprisoned his father after the 1959 Cuban revolution and caused him to commit suicide.

    As the AP story notes, the plaintiff is not likely to collect any portion of this punitive award. So in that sense, the amount of the award is irrelevant. The judge said he awarded the eye-popping amount because he wanted to “send a message.” In my view, however, absurdly high awards like this send an unfortunate message to the American public that no amount of punitive damages is too high. Awards like this receive major publicity, even though the appellate reversals of such awards often go largely unnoticed (except on this blog, of course). As a result, many jurors have become conditioned to believe that our legal system freely allows them to award hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars in punitive damages. While such awards may provide lots of business for appellate lawyers, ultimately they are a burden on the American economy.

  • Rehearing Denied in Leeper-Johnson

    The California Court of Appeal (Fourth District, Division One) has issued an order denying the defendant’s petition for rehearing in Leeper-Johnson v. Prudential, a case we previously blogged about.

    Although the court denied rehearing, it modified its opinion. The modification makes clear that, when calculating the ratio of punitive damages to compensatory damages in an insurance bad faith case, the court should consider only the tort damages (not contract damages, such as unpaid policy benefits). This modification follows the approach of other California opinions such as Textron Financial v. National Union and Major v. Western Home.

  • Daimler-Chrysler v. Flax: SCOTUS Declines to Review $13.3 Million Punitive Damages Award

    Yesterday, the U.S. Supreme Court yesterday denied Daimler-Chrysler’s cert. petition in a case involving a $13.3 million punitive damages award to the parents of an 8-year-old who died in the crash of a Dodge Caravan. (See the court’s online docket and yesterday’s Order List.)

    The jury originally awarded the plaintiffs compensatory damages of $5 million for wrongful death and another $2.5 million for negligent infliction of emotional distress (NIED). The jury then added nearly $98 million in punitive damages – – $65 million for wrongful death and $32.5 million for NIED. The trial court reduced the punitive damages to $13.3 million for wrongful death and $6.6 million for NIED.

    The Tennessee Court of Appeals reversed the punitive damages award in its entirety, concluding that no punitive damages could be imposed based on the evidence.

    The Tennessee Supreme Court, however, reinstated the wrongful death punitive damages award. Daimler-Chrysler argued under Philip Morris v. Williams that the trial court violated its due process rights by failing to instruct the jury not to punish the defendant for harm to non-parties, but the Tennessee Supreme Court rejected that argument because Daimler-Chrysler had not raised it in the Court of Appeals.

    Overlawyered and Products Liability Prof Blog had posts about the Tennessee Supreme Court’s opinion back in July 2008, describing the underlying facts.

  • Judge Sotomayor: A Moderate on Business Issues?

    According to Business Week, a Justice Sotomayor would be a centrist on business cases, including those involving punitive damages. Business Week quotes Evan Tager of Mayer Brown for the proposition that “on the bench Sotomayor has ‘expressed unease’ about large punitive awards, yet has upheld large awards ‘when the ratio of punitive to compensatory damages is modest.’”

  • The Effect of Justice Souter’s Retirement on Punitive Damages

    One of the names on President Obama’s shortlist to replace Justice Souter is California Associate Justice Carlos Moreno. Today’s Recorder profiles Justice Moreno, and includes my observation that Justice Moreno “would represent a ‘left turn’ from Souter on civil issues, particularly in regard to businesses. ‘Justice Souter, for all the complaints he got from the right, is very protective of business interests and is worried about the effect of regulation, [a]nd Justice Moreno much less so.’ Souter has been in the majority in setting ‘significant limits’ on punitive damages, . . . but [Rosen] doesn’t believe Moreno would follow suit.” My co-blogger Curt Cutting discussed Justice Souter’s voting record on punitive damages here.

  • California Supreme Court Denies Review in Blanks v. Seyfarth Shaw

    According to the California Supreme Court’s conference results list, the court has declined to review Blanks v. Seyfarth Shaw, a case we discussed in a prior post.

  • Ittella v. Pacific American Fish Co.: Court of Appeal Reverses $1.15 Million Punitive Damages Award

    The California Court of Appeal (Second District, Division Seven) issued this unpublished opinion today, reversing a $1.15 million punitive damages award and a $230,000 compensatory damages award.

    In the interests of full disclosure, our firm represented the defendant. We raised a few interesting punitive damages questions (e.g., whether a $230,000 compensatory damages award is “substantial” within the meaning of State Farm v. Campbell, such that the ratio of ratio of punitive to compensatory damages should not exceed 1-to-1). The court did not reach those issues; it reversed the entire judgment because the plaintiff failed to prove causation.

  • L.A. Jury Awards $50 Million In Punitive Damages Against CEO of iPayment

    The Los Angeles and San Francisco Daily Journal (subscription required) reports today that a jury in Los Angeles County Superior Court has awarded $50 million in punitive damages against Greg Daily, chairman and CEO of Nashville-based credit card processing company iPayment.

    According to the Daily Journal story, the trial judge granted the parties’ joint request to temporarily seal the amount of the punitive damages award. But the Daily Journal cites anonymous sources for the $50 million figure.

    Ordinarily, a punitive damages award of this size against an individual would be excessive under California’s “rule of thumb” that punitive damages cannot exceed more than 10 percent of a defendant’s net worth. In this case, however, the defendant is worth $1 billion, according to the plaintiff’s expert witness.

    The plaintiff is L.A.-based venture capitalist Douglas Shooker. Shooker claimed at trial that he spent months conducting research to develop a business plan for iPayment, and in exchange he received an option to purchase a 57 percent share of iPayment for $26 million. According to Shooker, Daily stole his business plan, installed himself as CEO, and blocked Shooker from exercising his option. Last week the jury awarded $300 million in compensatory damages. Daily promptly declared bankruptcy, so it remains to be seen whether any of the damages are collectible (assuming they survive post-trial motions and appeal).

  • Leeper-Johnson v. Prudential: Court of Appeal Affirms $4 Million Punitive Damages Award

    The California Court of Appeal (Fourth District, Division One) issued this unpublished opinion last week, affirming a trial court’s grant of a new trial on punitive damages.

    The jury awarded compensatory damages of nearly $2 million, plus $14 million in punitive damages. The trial court ruled that the punitive damages award was excessive, and granted a new trial on punitive damages unless the plaintiff agreed to accept a remittitur of the punitive award to $4 million. The plaintiff refused the remittitur so the trial court ordered a new trial on punitive damages. The defendant appealed.

    The Court of Appeal eliminated some elements of the compensatory damages award, reducing the total compensatory award to $1.7 million.

    The court then addressed the defendant’s argument that, on the facts of this case, 1-to-1 is the constitutional maximum ratio of punitive damages to compensatory damages. Presumably, the defendant cited the U.S. Supreme Court’s statement in Campbell that 1-to-1 may be the maximum ratio in cases involving “substantial” compensatory damages. The Court of Appeal opinion doesn’t discuss that aspect of Campbell, but it does indicate that the defendant relied on Gober v. Ralph’s Grocery, which held that trial and appellate courts both have the power to reduce a punitive damages award to the constitutional maximum without affording the plaintiff a new trial.

    Gober reasoned that it would be pointless to award a plaintiff a new trial when the defendant is willing to pay the constitutional maximum. The plaintiff could not possibly do any better on retrial.

    Curiously, the court in this case rejected the defendant’s reliance on Gober because the defendant had not agreed to forgo its right to a new trial. I don’t quite understand how the defendant could cite Gober and ask the Court of Appeal to reduce the punitive damages award to the constitutional maximum without forgoing its right to a new trial. Was the defendant asking the court to affirm the new trial order, while at the same time rendering an advisory opinion about the maximum amount of punitive damages that could be permitted upon retrial? If so, I can understand why the court would be unwilling to do that. But if the defendant didn’t expressly insist on its right to a new trial, and was urging the Court of Appeal to simply reduce the award to a 1-to-1 ratio, I think some courts might have interpreted the defendant’s reliance on Gober as an implied agreement to waive a new trial (assuming the punitive damages were capped at a 1-to-1 ratio).