No. B121917, Supreme Court of California (filed
October 8, 2004)
In this case plaintiff made an offer to buy a
building worth $1.5 million for $1.1 million. While
working out the details, the seller secretly contracted
with another buyer, depriving the plaintiff of a
$400,000 gain. The buyer sued the seller for fraud.
The jury award for compensatory damages was limited
by statute to out-of-pocket expenses, $5,000, however,
the jury also awarded $1.7 million in punitive damages.
The court of appeal affirmed this award and rejected
the defense's argument that the ratio to compensatory
damages under State Farm was an excessively
high 340 to 1. Rather, the court looked to the
nature and degree of the actual harm suffered by
the plaintiff. The appropriate ratio was therefore
about 4 to 1.
This case raises the question: Under State Farm,
should the ratio between compensatory and
punitive damages be based solely on the actual compensatory
damages awarded or on the plaintiffs uncompensated
loss due to statutory limitations?
AAJs brief argues that courts historically
required that punitives bear some relation to actual
harm, not just the compensatory award. Because compensatories
often do not reflect actual harm (because of damage
caps, limits on wrongful death damages, etc.) the
policy served by punitives requires courts to focus
on actual harm.