STATE FARM MUT. AUTOMOBILE INS. CO.V. CAMPBELL (01-1289) 538
U.S. 408 (2003)
___ P.3d ___, reversed and remanded.
Syllabus
Opinion of the Court
NOTICE: This opinion
is subject to formal revision before publication in the preliminary print of
the United States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of
Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Washington, D. C. 20543, of any
typographical or other formal errors, in order that corrections may be made
before the preliminary print goes to press.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
No. 01—1289
STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
COMPANY, PETITIONER v. INEZ PREECE CAMPBELL and MATTHEW C.
BARNECK, special administrator and personal representative of the ESTATE OF
CURTIS B. CAMPBELL
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF UTAH
[April 7, 2003]
Justice Kennedy
delivered the opinion of the Court.
We address once
again the measure of punishment, by means of punitive damages, a State may
impose upon a defendant in a civil case. The question is whether, in the circumstances
we shall recount, an award of $145 million in punitive damages, where full
compensatory damages are $1 million, is excessive and in violation of the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United
States.
I
In 1981, Curtis
Campbell (Campbell) was driving with his wife, Inez Preece Campbell, in Cache
County, Utah. He decided to pass six vans traveling ahead of them on a two-lane
highway. Todd Ospital was driving a small car approaching from the opposite
direction. To avoid a head-on collision with Campbell, who by then was driving
on the wrong side of the highway and toward oncoming traffic, Ospital swerved
onto the shoulder, lost control of his automobile, and collided with a vehicle
driven by Robert G. Slusher. Ospital was killed, and Slusher was rendered
permanently disabled. The Campbells escaped unscathed.
In the ensuing
wrongful death and tort action, Campbell insisted he was not at fault. Early
investigations did support differing conclusions as to who caused the accident,
but “a consensus was reached early on by the investigators and witnesses that
Mr. Campbell’s unsafe pass had indeed caused the crash.” ___ P.3d ___, 2001 WL
1246676, *1 (Utah, Oct. 19, 2001). Campbell’s insurance company, petitioner
State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company (State Farm), nonetheless
decided to contest liability and declined offers by Slusher and Ospital’s
estate (Ospital) to settle the claims for the policy limit of $50,000 ($25,000
per claimant). State Farm also ignored the advice of one of its own
investigators and took the case to trial, assuring the Campbells that “their
assets were safe, that they had no liability for the accident, that [State
Farm] would represent their interests, and that they did not need to procure
separate counsel.” Id., at ___, 2001 WL 1246676, at *2. To the contrary, a jury
determined that Campbell was 100 percent at fault, and a judgment was returned
for $185,849, far more than the amount offered in settlement.
At first State
Farm refused to cover the $135,849 in excess liability. Its counsel made this
clear to the Campbells: “ ‘You may want to put for sale signs on your property
to get things moving.’ ” Ibid. Nor was State Farm willing to post a supersedeas
bond to allow Campbell to appeal the judgment against him. Campbell obtained
his own counsel to appeal the verdict. During the pendency of the appeal, in
late 1984, Slusher, Ospital, and the Campbells reached an agreement whereby
Slusher and Ospital agreed not to seek satisfaction of their claims against the
Campbells. In exchange the Campbells agreed to pursue a bad faith action
against State Farm and to be represented by Slusher’s and Ospital’s attorneys.
The Campbells also agreed that Slusher and Ospital would have a right to play a
part in all major decisions concerning the bad faith action. No settlement
could be concluded without Slusher’s and Ospital’s approval, and Slusher and
Ospital would receive 90 percent of any verdict against State Farm.
In 1989, the Utah
Supreme Court denied Campbell’s appeal in the wrongful death and tort actions.
Slusher v. Ospital, 777 P.2d 437. State Farm then paid the entire judgment,
including the amounts in excess of the policy limits. The Campbells nonetheless
filed a complaint against State Farm alleging bad faith, fraud, and intentional
infliction of emotional distress.
The trial court initially granted State Farm’s motion for summary judgment because State Farm had paid the excess verdict, but that ruling was reversed on appeal. 840 P.2d 130 (Utah App. 1992). On remand State Farm moved in limine to exclude evidence of alleged conduct that occurred in unrelated cases outside of Utah, but the trial court denied the motion. At State Farm’s request the trial court bifurcated(两分,分叉) the trial into two phases conducted before different juries. In the first phase the jury determined that State Farm’s decision not to settle was unreasonable because there was a substantial likelihood of an excess verdict.
The trial court initially granted State Farm’s motion for summary judgment because State Farm had paid the excess verdict, but that ruling was reversed on appeal. 840 P.2d 130 (Utah App. 1992). On remand State Farm moved in limine to exclude evidence of alleged conduct that occurred in unrelated cases outside of Utah, but the trial court denied the motion. At State Farm’s request the trial court bifurcated(两分,分叉) the trial into two phases conducted before different juries. In the first phase the jury determined that State Farm’s decision not to settle was unreasonable because there was a substantial likelihood of an excess verdict.
Before the second
phase of the action against State Farm we decided BMW of North America, Inc. v.
Gore, 517 U.S. 559 (1996), and refused to sustain a $2 million punitive damages
award which accompanied a verdict of only $4,000 in compensatory damages. Based
on that decision, State Farm again moved for the exclusion of evidence of
dissimilar out-of-state conduct. App. to Pet. for Cert. 168a—172a. The trial
court denied State Farm’s motion. Id., at 189a.
The second phase
addressed State Farm’s liability for fraud and intentional infliction of
emotional distress, as well as compensatory and punitive damages. The Utah
Supreme Court aptly characterized this phase of the trial:
“State Farm argued during phase II that its decision to take
the case to trial was an ‘honest mistake’ that did not warrant punitive
damages. In contrast, the Campbells introduced evidence that State Farm’s
decision to take the case to trial was a result of a national scheme to meet
corporate fiscal goals by capping payouts on claims company wide. This scheme
was referred to as State Farm’s ‘Performance, Planning and Review,’ or PP &
R, policy. To prove the existence of this scheme, the trial court allowed the
Campbells to introduce extensive expert testimony regarding fraudulent
practices by State Farm in its nation-wide operations. Although State Farm
moved prior to phase II of the trial for the exclusion of such evidence and continued
to object to it at trial, the trial court ruled that such evidence was
admissible to determine whether State Farm’s conduct in the Campbell case was
indeed intentional and sufficiently egregious(过分的) to warrant punitive damages.” ___
P.3d, at ___, 2001 WL 1246676, at *3.
Evidence pertaining to the PP&R policy concerned State
Farm’s business practices for over 20 years in numerous States. Most of these
practices bore no relation to third-party automobile insurance claims, the type
of claim underlying the Campbells’ complaint against the company. The jury
awarded the Campbells $2.6 million in compensatory damages and $145 million in
punitive damages, which the trial court reduced to $1 million and $25 million
respectively. Both parties appealed.
The Utah Supreme
Court sought to apply the three guideposts we identified in Gore, supra, at
574—575, and it reinstated the $145 million punitive damages award. Relying in
large part on the extensive evidence concerning the PP&R policy, the court
concluded State Farm’s conduct was reprehensible. The court also relied upon
State Farm’s “massive wealth” and on testimony indicating that “State Farm’s
actions, because of their clandestine nature, will be punished at most in one
out of every 50,000 cases as a matter of statistical probability,” ___ P.3d, at
___, 2001 WL 1246676, at *15, and concluded that the ratio between punitive and
compensatory damages was not unwarranted. Finally, the court noted that the
punitive damages award was not excessive when compared to various civil and
criminal penalties State Farm could have faced, including $10,000 for each act
of fraud, the suspension of its license to conduct business in Utah, the
disgorgement of profits, and imprisonment. Id., at ___, 2001 WL 1246676, at
*17. We granted certiorari. 535 U.S. 1111 (2002).
II
We recognized in
Cooper Industries, Inc. v. Leatherman Tool Group, Inc., 532 U.S. 424 (2001),
that in our judicial system compensatory and punitive damages, although usually
awarded at the same time by the same decision maker, serve different purposes.
Id., at 432. Compensatory damages “are intended to redress the concrete loss
that the plaintiff has suffered by reason of the defendant’s wrongful conduct.”
Ibid. (citing Restatement (Second) of Torts §903, pp. 453—454 (1979)). By
contrast, punitive damages serve a broader function; they are aimed at
deterrence and retribution. Cooper Industries, supra, at 432; see also Gore,
supra, at 568 (“Punitive damages may properly be imposed to further a State’s
legitimate interests in punishing unlawful conduct and deterring its
repetition”); Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Haslip, 499 U.S. 1, 19 (1991)
(“[P]unitive damages are imposed for purposes of retribution and deterrence”).
While States
possess discretion over the imposition of punitive damages, it is well
established that there are procedural and substantive constitutional
limitations on these awards. Cooper Industries, supra; Gore, 517 U.S., at 559;
Honda Motor Co. v. Oberg, 512 U.S. 415 (1994); TXO Production Corp. v. Alliance
Resources Corp., 509 U.S. 443 (1993); Haslip, supra. The Due Process Clause of
the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits the imposition of grossly excessive or
arbitrary punishments on a tortfeasor. Cooper Industries, supra, at 433; Gore,
517 U.S., at 562; see also id., at 587 (Breyer, J., concurring) (“This
constitutional concern, itself harkening back to the Magna Carta, arises out of
the basic unfairness of depriving citizens of life, liberty, or property,
through the application, not of law and legal processes, but of arbitrary
coercion”). The reason is that “[e]lementary notions of fairness enshrined in
our constitutional jurisprudence dictate that a person receive fair notice not
only of the conduct that will subject him to punishment, but also of the
severity of the penalty that a State may impose.” Id., at 574; Cooper
Industries, supra, at 433 (“Despite the broad discretion that States possess
with respect to the imposition of criminal penalties and punitive damages, the
Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution
imposes substantive limits on that discretion”). To the extent an award is
grossly excessive, it furthers no legitimate purpose and constitutes an
arbitrary deprivation of property. Haslip, supra, at 42 (O’Connor, J.,
dissenting) (“Punitive damages are a powerful weapon. Imposed wisely and with
restraint, they have the potential to advance legitimate state interests.
Imposed indiscriminately, however, they have a devastating potential for harm.
Regrettably, common-law procedures for awarding punitive damages fall into the
latter category”).
Although these
awards serve the same purposes as criminal penalties, defendants subjected to
punitive damages in civil cases have not been accorded the protections
applicable in a criminal proceeding. This increases our concerns over the
imprecise manner in which punitive damages systems are administered. We have
admonished that “[p]unitive damages pose an acute danger of arbitrary
deprivation of property. Jury instructions typically leave the jury with wide
discretion in choosing amounts, and the presentation of evidence of a
defendant’s net worth creates the potential that juries will use their verdicts
to express biases against big businesses, particularly those without strong
local presences.” Honda Motor, supra, at 432; see also Haslip, supra, at 59
(O’Connor, J., dissenting) (“[T]he Due Process Clause does not permit a State
to classify arbitrariness as a virtue. Indeed, the point of due process–of the
law in general–is to allow citizens to order their behavior. A State can have
no legitimate interest in deliberately making the law so arbitrary that
citizens will be unable to avoid punishment based solely upon bias or whim”).
Our concerns are heightened when the decisionmaker is presented, as we shall
discuss, with evidence that has little bearing as to the amount of punitive
damages that should be awarded. Vague instructions, or those that merely inform
the jury to avoid “passion or prejudice,” App. to Pet. for Cert. 108a—109a, do
little to aid the decisionmaker in its task of assigning appropriate weight to
evidence that is relevant and evidence that is tangential or only inflammatory.
In light of these
concerns, in Gore, supra, we instructed courts reviewing punitive damages to
consider three guideposts: (1) the degree of reprehensibility of the
defendant’s misconduct; (2) the disparity between the actual or potential harm
suffered by the plaintiff and the punitive damages award; and (3) the
difference between the punitive damages awarded by the jury and the civil
penalties authorized or imposed in comparable cases. Id., at 575. We reiterated
the importance of these three guideposts in Cooper Industries and mandated
appellate courts to conduct de novo review of a trial court’s application of
them to the jury’s award. 532 U.S., at 424. Exacting appellate review ensures
that an award of punitive damages is based upon an “ ‘application of law,
rather than a decisionmaker’s caprice.’ ” Id., at 436 (quoting Gore, supra, at
587 (Breyer, J., concurring)).
III
Under the
principles outlined in BMW of North America, Inc. v. Gore, this case is neither
close nor difficult. It was error to reinstate the jury’s $145 million punitive
damages award. We address each guidepost of Gore in some detail.
A
“[T]he most
important indicium of the reasonableness of a punitive damages award is the
degree of reprehensibility of the defendant’s conduct.” Gore, supra, at 575. We
have instructed courts to determine the reprehensibility of a defendant by
considering whether: the harm caused was physical as opposed to economic; the
tortious conduct evinced an indifference to or a reckless disregard of the
health or safety of others; the target of the conduct had financial
vulnerability; the conduct involved repeated actions or was an isolated
incident; and the harm was the result of intentional malice, trickery, or
deceit, or mere accident. 517 U.S., at 576—577. The existence of any one of
these factors weighing in favor of a plaintiff may not be sufficient to sustain
a punitive damages award; and the absence of all of them renders any award
suspect. It should be presumed a plaintiff has been made whole for his injuries
by compensatory damages, so punitive damages should only be awarded if the
defendant’s culpability, after having paid compensatory damages, is so
reprehensible as to warrant the imposition of further sanctions to achieve
punishment or deterrence. Id., at 575.
Applying these
factors in the instant case, we must acknowledge that State Farm’s handling of
the claims against the Campbells merits no praise. The trial court found that
State Farm’s employees altered the company’s records to make Campbell appear
less culpable. State Farm disregarded the overwhelming likelihood of liability
and the near-certain probability that, by taking the case to trial, a judgment
in excess of the policy limits would be awarded. State Farm amplified the harm
by at first assuring the Campbells their assets would be safe from any verdict
and by later telling them, postjudgment, to put a for-sale sign on their house.
While we do not suggest there was error in awarding punitive damages based upon
State Farm’s conduct toward the Campbells, a more modest punishment for this
reprehensible conduct could have satisfied the State’s legitimate objectives,
and the Utah courts should have gone no further.
This case,
instead, was used as a platform to expose, and punish, the perceived
deficiencies of State Farm’s operations throughout the country. The Utah
Supreme Court’s opinion makes explicit that State Farm was being condemned for
its nationwide policies rather than for the conduct direct toward the
Campbells. ___ P.3d, at ___, 2001 WL 1246676, at *3 (“[T]he Campbells
introduced evidence that State Farm’s decision to take the case to trial was a
result of a national scheme to meet corporate fiscal goals by capping payouts
on claims company wide”). This was, as well, an explicit rationale of the trial
court’s decision in approving the award, though reduced from $145 million to
$25 million. App. to Pet. for Cert. 120a (“[T]he Campbells demonstrated,
through the testimony of State Farm employees who had worked outside of Utah,
and through expert testimony, that this pattern of claims adjustment under the
PP&R program was not a local anomaly, but was a consistent, nationwide
feature of State Farm’s business operations, orchestrated from the highest
levels of corporate management”).
The Campbells
contend that State Farm has only itself to blame for the reliance upon
dissimilar and out-of-state conduct evidence. The record does not support this
contention. From their opening statements onward the Campbells framed this case
as a chance to rebuke State Farm for its nationwide activities. App. 208
(“You’re going to hear evidence that even the insurance commission in Utah and
around the country are unwilling or inept at protecting people against
abuses”); id., at 242 (“[T]his is a very important case. . . . [I]t transcends
the Campbell file. It involves a nationwide practice. And you, here, are going
to be evaluating and assessing, and hopefully requiring State Farm to stand
accountable for what it’s doing across the country, which is the purpose of
punitive damages”). This was a position maintained throughout the litigation.
In opposing State Farm’s motion to exclude such evidence under Gore, the
Campbells’ counsel convinced the trial court that there was no limitation on
the scope of evidence that could be considered under our precedents. App. to
Pet. for Cert. 172a (“As I read the case [Gore], I was struck with the fact
that a clear message in the case … seems to be that courts in punitive damages
cases should receive more evidence, not less. And that the court seems to be
inviting an even broader area of evidence than the current rulings of the court
would indicate”); id., at 189a (trial court ruling).
A State cannot
punish a defendant for conduct that may have been lawful where it occurred.
Gore, supra, at 572; Bigelow v. Virginia, 421 U.S. 809, 824 (1975) (“A State
does not acquire power or supervision over the internal affairs of another
State merely because the welfare and health of its own citizens may be affected
when they travel to that State”); New York Life Ins. Co. v. Head, 234 U.S. 149,
161 (1914) (“[I]t would be impossible to permit the statutes of Missouri to
operate beyond the jurisdiction of that State . . . without throwing down the
constitutional barriers by which all the States are restricted within the
orbits of their lawful authority and upon the preservation of which the Government
under the Constitution depends. This is so obviously the necessary result of
the Constitution that it has rarely been called in question and hence
authorities directly dealing with it do not abound”); Huntington v. Attrill,
146 U.S. 657, 669 (1892) (“Laws have no force of themselves beyond the
jurisdiction of the State which enacts them, and can have extra-territorial
effect only by the comity of other States”). Nor, as a general rule, does a
State have a legitimate concern in imposing punitive damages to punish a
defendant for unlawful acts committed outside of the State’s jurisdiction. Any
proper adjudication of conduct that occurred outside Utah to other persons
would require their inclusion, and, to those parties, the Utah courts, in the
usual case, would need to apply the laws of their relevant jurisdiction.
Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Shutts, 472 U.S. 797, 821—822 (1985).
Here, the
Campbells do not dispute that much of the out-of-state conduct was lawful where
it occurred. They argue, however, that such evidence was not the primary basis
for the punitive damages award and was relevant to the extent it demonstrated,
in a general sense, State Farm’s motive against its insured. Brief for
Respondents 46—47 (“[E]ven if the practices described by State Farm were not
malum in se or malum prohibitum, they became relevant to punitive damages to
the extent they were used as tools to implement State Farm’s wrongful PP&R
policy”). This argument misses the mark. Lawful out-of-state conduct may be
probative when it demonstrates the deliberateness and culpability of the
defendant’s action in the State where it is tortious, but that conduct must
have a nexus to the specific harm suffered by the plaintiff. A jury must be
instructed, furthermore, that it may not use evidence of out-of-state conduct
to punish a defendant for action that was lawful in the jurisdiction where it
occurred. Gore, 517 U.S., at 572—573 (noting that a State “does not have the
power … to punish [a defendant] for conduct that was lawful where it occurred
and that had no impact on [the State] or its residents”). A basic principle of
federalism is that each State may make its own reasoned judgment about what
conduct is permitted or proscribed within its borders, and each State alone can
determine what measure of punishment, if any, to impose on a defendant who acts
within its jurisdiction. Id., at 569 (“[T]he States need not, and in fact do
not, provide such protection in a uniform manner”).
For a more
fundamental reason, however, the Utah courts erred in relying upon this and
other evidence: The courts awarded punitive damages to punish and deter conduct
that bore no relation to the Campbells’ harm. A defendant’s dissimilar acts,
independent from the acts upon which liability was premised, may not serve as
the basis for punitive damages. A defendant should be punished for the conduct
that harmed the plaintiff, not for being an unsavory individual or business.
Due process does not permit courts, in the calculation of punitive damages, to
adjudicate the merits of other parties’ hypothetical claims against a defendant
under the guise of the reprehensibility analysis, but we have no doubt the Utah
Supreme Court did that here. __ P.3d, at __, 2001 WL 1246676, at *11 (“Even if
the harm to the Campbells can be appropriately characterized as minimal, the
trial court’s assessment of the situation is on target: ‘The harm is minor to
the individual but massive in the aggregate’ ”). Punishment on these bases
creates the possibility of multiple punitive damages awards for the same
conduct; for in the usual case nonparties are not bound by the judgment some
other plaintiff obtains. Gore, supra, at 593 (Breyer, J., concurring) (“Larger
damages might also ‘double count’ by including in the punitive damages award some
of the compensatory, or punitive, damages that subsequent plaintiffs would also
recover”).
The same reasons
lead us to conclude the Utah Supreme Court’s decision cannot be justified on
the grounds that State Farm was a recidivist. Although “[o]ur holdings that a
recidivist may be punished more severely than a first offender recognize that
repeated misconduct is more reprehensible than an individual instance of
malfeasance,” Gore, supra, at 577, in the context of civil actions courts must
ensure the conduct in question replicates the prior transgressions. TXO, 509
U.S., at 462, n. 28 (noting that courts should look to “ ‘the existence and
frequency of similar past conduct’ ”) (quoting Haslip, 499 U.S., at 21—
2).
The Campbells have
identified scant evidence of repeated misconduct of the sort that injured them.
Nor does our review of the Utah courts’ decisions convince us that State Farm
was only punished for its actions toward the Campbells. Although evidence of
other acts need not be identical to have relevance in the calculation of
punitive damages, the Utah court erred here because evidence pertaining to
claims that had nothing to do with a third-party lawsuit was introduced at
length. Other evidence concerning reprehensibility was even more tangential.
For example, the Utah Supreme Court criticized State Farm’s investigation into
the personal life of one of its employees and, in a broader approach, the
manner in which State Farm’s policies corrupted its employees. ___ P.3d, at
___, 2001 WL 1246676, at *10; id., at ___, 2001 WL 1246676, at *12. The
Campbells attempt to justify the courts’ reliance upon this unrelated testimony
on the theory that each dollar of profit made by underpaying a third-party
claimant is the same as a dollar made by underpaying a first-party one. Brief
for Respondents 45; see also ___ P.3d, at ___, 2001 WL 1246676, at *12 (“State
Farm’s continuing illicit practice created market disadvantages for other
honest insurance companies because these practices increased profits. As plaintiffs’
expert witnesses established, such wrongfully obtained competitive advantages
have the potential to pressure other companies to adopt similar fraudulent
tactics, or to force them out of business. Thus, such actions cause distortions
throughout the insurance market and ultimately hurt all consumers”). For the
reasons already stated, this argument is unconvincing. The reprehensibility
guidepost does not permit courts to expand the scope of the case so that a
defendant may be punished for any malfeasance, which in this case extended for
a 20-year period. In this case, because the Campbells have shown no conduct by
State Farm similar to that which harmed them, the conduct that harmed them is
the only conduct relevant to the reprehensibility analysis.
B
Turning to the
second Gore guidepost, we have been reluctant to identify concrete
constitutional limits on the ratio between harm, or potential harm, to the
plaintiff and the punitive damages award. Gore, supra, at 582 (“[W]e have
consistently rejected the notion that the constitutional line is marked by a
simple mathematical formula, even one that compares actual and potential
damages to the punitive award”); TXO, supra, at 458. We decline again to impose
a bright-line ratio which a punitive damages award cannot exceed. Our
jurisprudence and the principles it has now established demonstrate, however,
that, in practice, few awards exceeding a single-digit ratio between punitive
and compensatory damages, to a significant degree, will satisfy due process. In
Haslip, in upholding a punitive damages award, we concluded that an award of
more than four times the amount of compensatory damages might be close to the
line of constitutional impropriety. 499 U.S., at 23—24. We cited that 4-to-1
ratio again in Gore. 517 U.S., at 581. The Court further referenced a long
legislative history, dating back over 700 years and going forward to today,
providing for sanctions of double, treble, or quadruple damages to deter and
punish. Id., at 581, and n. 33. While these ratios are not binding, they are
instructive. They demonstrate what should be obvious: Single-digit multipliers
are more likely to comport with due process, while still achieving the State’s
goals of deterrence and retribution, than awards with ratios in range of 500 to
1, id., at 582, or, in this case, of 145 to 1.
Nonetheless,
because there are no rigid benchmarks that a punitive damages award may not
surpass, ratios greater than those we have previously upheld may comport with
due process where “a particularly egregious act has resulted in only a small
amount of economic damages.” Ibid.; see also ibid. (positing that a higher
ratio might be necessary where “the injury is hard to detect or the monetary
value of noneconomic harm might have been difficult to determine”). The
converse is also true, however. When compensatory damages are substantial, then
a lesser ratio, perhaps only equal to compensatory damages, can reach the
outermost limit of the due process guarantee. The precise award in any case, of
course, must be based upon the facts and circumstances of the defendant’s
conduct and the harm to the plaintiff.
In sum, courts
must ensure that the measure of punishment is both reasonable and proportionate
to the amount of harm to the plaintiff and to the general damages recovered. In
the context of this case, we have no doubt that there is a presumption against
an award that has a 145-to-1 ratio. The compensatory award in this case was
substantial; the Campbells were awarded $1 million for a year and a half of
emotional distress. This was complete compensation. The harm arose from a
transaction in the economic realm, not from some physical assault or trauma;
there were no physical injuries; and State Farm paid the excess verdict before
the complaint was filed, so the Campbells suffered only minor economic injuries
for the 18-month period in which State Farm refused to resolve the claim
against them. The compensatory damages for the injury suffered here, moreover,
likely were based on a component which was duplicated in the punitive award.
Much of the distress was caused by the outrage and humiliation the Campbells
suffered at the actions of their insurer; and it is a major role of punitive
damages to condemn such conduct. Compensatory damages, however, already contain
this punitive element. See Restatement (Second) of Torts §908, Comment c, p.
466 (1977) (“In many cases in which compensatory damages include an amount for
emotional distress, such as humiliation or indignation aroused by the
defendant’s act, there is no clear line of demarcation between punishment and
compensation and a verdict for a specified amount frequently includes elements
of both”).
The Utah Supreme
Court sought to justify the massive award by pointing to State Farm’s purported
failure to report a prior $100 million punitive damages award in Texas to its
corporate headquarters; the fact that State Farm’s policies have affected
numerous Utah consumers; the fact that State Farm will only be punished in one
out of every 50,000 cases as a matter of statistical probability; and State
Farm’s enormous wealth. ___ P.3d, at ___, 2001 WL 1246676, at *15. Since the
Supreme Court of Utah discussed the Texas award when applying the ratio
guidepost, we discuss it here. The Texas award, however, should have been
analyzed in the context of the reprehensibility guidepost only. The failure of
the company to report the Texas award is out-of-state conduct that, if the
conduct were similar, might have had some bearing on the degree of
reprehensibility, subject to the limitations we have described. Here, it was
dissimilar, and of such marginal relevance that it should have been accorded
little or no weight. The award was rendered in a first-party lawsuit; no
judgment was entered in the case; and it was later settled for a fraction of
the verdict. With respect to the Utah Supreme Court’s second justification, the
Campbells’ inability to direct us to testimony demonstrating harm to the people
of Utah (other than those directly involved in this case) indicates that the
adverse effect on the State’s general population was in fact minor.
The remaining
premises for the Utah Supreme Court’s decision bear no relation to the award’s
reasonableness or proportionality to the harm. They are, rather, arguments that
seek to defend a departure from well-established constraints on punitive
damages. While States enjoy considerable discretion in deducing when punitive
damages are warranted, each award must comport with the principles set forth in
Gore. Here the argument that State Farm will be punished in only the rare case,
coupled with reference to its assets (which, of course, are what other insured
parties in Utah and other States must rely upon for payment of claims) had
little to do with the actual harm sustained by the Campbells. The wealth of a
defendant cannot justify an otherwise unconstitutional punitive damages award.
Gore, 517 U.S., at 585 (“The fact that BMW is a large corporation rather than
an impecunious individual does not diminish its entitlement to fair notice of
the demands that the several States impose on the conduct of its business”);
see also id., at 591 (Breyer, J., concurring) (“[Wealth] provides an open-ended
basis for inflating awards when the defendant is wealthy … . That does not make
its use unlawful or inappropriate; it simply means that this factor cannot make
up for the failure of other factors, such as ‘reprehensibility,’ to constrain
significantly an award that purports to punish a defendant’s conduct”). The
principles set forth in Gore must be implemented with care, to ensure both
reasonableness and proportionality.
C
The third
guidepost in Gore is the disparity between the punitive damages award and the
“civil penalties authorized or imposed in comparable cases.” Id., at 575. We
note that, in the past, we have also looked to criminal penalties that could be
imposed. Id., at 583; Haslip, 499 U.S., at 23. The existence of a criminal
penalty does have bearing on the seriousness with which a State views the
wrongful action. When used to determine the dollar amount of the award,
however, the criminal penalty has less utility. Great care must be taken to
avoid use of the civil process to assess criminal penalties that can be imposed
only after the heightened protections of a criminal trial have been observed,
including, of course, its higher standards of proof. Punitive damages are not a
substitute for the criminal process, and the remote possibility of a criminal
sanction does not automatically sustain a punitive damages award.
Here, we need not
dwell long on this guidepost. The most relevant civil sanction under Utah state
law for the wrong done to the Campbells appears to be a $10,000 fine for an act
of fraud, ___ P.3d, at ___, 2001 WL 1246676, at *17, an amount dwarfed by the
$145 million punitive damages award. The Supreme Court of Utah speculated about
the loss of State Farm’s business license, the disgorgement of profits, and
possible imprisonment, but here again its references were to the broad
fraudulent scheme drawn from evidence of out-of-state and dissimilar conduct.
This analysis was insufficient to justify the award.
IV
An application of
the Gore guideposts to the facts of this case, especially in light of the
substantial compensatory damages awarded (a portion of which contained a
punitive element), likely would justify a punitive damages award at or near the
amount of compensatory damages. The punitive award of $145 million, therefore,
was neither reasonable nor proportionate to the wrong committed, and it was an
irrational and arbitrary deprivation of the property of the defendant. The
proper calculation of punitive damages under the principles we have discussed
should be resolved, in the first instance, by the Utah courts.
The judgment of
the Utah Supreme Court is reversed, and the case is remanded for proceedings
not inconsistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
No comments:
Post a Comment