The U.S. Supreme Court is once again taking up the question
of constitutional limits on punitive damage awards in Cooper
Industries v. Leatherman Tool Group, No. 99-2035.
Leatherman
makes a multipurpose tool popular with outdoor enthusiasts.
Cooper moved to capture part of this market with a knock-off
that was almost indistinguishable from the Leatherman product
and used a photo of Leatherman's tool -- minus the identifying
marks -- to promote its own product in brochures. Leatherman
sued under Oregon law. A federal court jury awarded $50,000
in compensatory and $4.5 million in punitive damages. The
district court upheld the amount, and the 9th Circuit court
of appeals affirmed, finding no abuse of discretion.
In
the Supreme Court, Cooper argues that the court of appeals
should have reviewed the verdicts de novo, giving no deference
to the trial court. Cooper contends that jury awards of punitive
damages are wildly unpredictable, imposing different penalties
on similarly situated defendants. Appeals courts reviewing
such verdicts de novo and applying the guideposts set forth
in BMW v. Gore, could develop
more consistency in awards. The Seventh Amendment does not
preclude appellate courts from substituting their own view
of a reasonable amount in place of the jury's because punitive
damages are not a "fact" found by the jury.
AAJ
filed a brief as amicus curiae in support of Leatherman. AAJ
argued that there is no constitutional right to predictable
(as distinguished from non-excessive) punitive damages. Moreover,
the Court has never distinguished punitive damages from compensatory
for Seventh Amendment purposes. Indeed, a major factor in
the adoption of the Seventh Amendment was to protect the jury's
power to award punitive damages.