Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byShannon Sisley Modified over 10 years ago
2
Compensatory damages are meant to return the victim to the pre-injury state Punitive damages are meant to deter the tortfeasor from injuring others
3
Under what conditions should punitive damages to be awarded? How should the amount of punitive damages determined?
4
Punitive damages are awarded when the defendants behavior is malicious, oppressive, gross, willful and wonton, or fraudulent. Punitive damages should Bear a reasonable relationship to compensatory damages Depend on the defendants ability to pay There are no precise legal rule for calculating punitive damages
5
HELSINKI, Finland -- Jaako Rytsola, a 27-year-old Finnish Internet entrepreneur and newspaper columnist, was cruising in his BMW one recent evening. "The road was wide and I was feeling good," he later wrote. "It's nice to be driving when there's no one in sight." But this road wasn't empty; a radar-equipped police car was clocking his speed. The officer pulled over Mr. Rytsola's car and issued him a speeding ticket for driving 43 miles an hour in a 25-mile-an-hour zone. The fine: $71,400. Link If we assume the marginal utility of a dollar declines, should the fine be positively related to income?
6
The equations start with a motorist's net monthly income. The figure comes into play whenever a driver is caught going at least 12 miles an hour over the posted limit (below that, the fine is a fixed amount, ranging from $63 to $110). To begin, the driver's monthly net income is reduced by 1,500 Finnish marks ($235) and that total is divided by 60. This figure is supposed to represent a person's daily disposable income. Then, for every dependent, such as a child or nonworking spouse, 15 marks is subtracted. But as many as 20 marks may be added depending on the value of the driver's other assets, including real estate. The final figure, called a day fine, is then multiplied by a number ranging between one and 120, representing the severity of the violation as determined by the traffic officer. For example, a person driving 20 miles an hour over the limit on a highway in good weather might be assessed 12 day fines.
7
There is no need for punitive damages if the tort system is perfect Compensatory damages will internalize all external social costs. All victims receive perfect compensation
8
Not every victim brings suit Not every victim can prove damages Perfect damages are not always awarded or possible. Result Compensatory damages are less than the total social cost of injury
9
Profit maximizing manufacturer may choose less than optimal precaution Under strict liability this will lead to less than optimal precaution Less of a concern under negligence Enforcement error can be corrected by offsetting compensatory damages with punitive damages Compensatory damages are not enough to deter inefficient risky behavior
10
A manufacturer of a fuel additive for automobile engines is keeping a careful eye on costs. He can set quality control at a high or a low level. High-level quality control costs $9,000 per year and guarantees that the fuel additive is pure and never causes damage to automobile engines. Low-level quality control is costless (thus saving $9,000) but results in some batches of the fuel additives being flawed. A few of the cars using the flawed batch will be harmed; specifically, the expected damage to cars is $10,000 per year ($1000 in expected damages to each of 10 cars). Strict liability with perfect compensation would produce efficient care. (High level quality control)
11
Suppose only half the consumers sue for damages Expected liability is only $5,000 The company will opt for low level quality care
12
x = precaution p = probability of harm A = harm caused by the accident L = injurers liability m = punitive multiple e = enforcement error
13
Social optimum Defendants optimum With enforcement error Liability is only a fraction of the actual harm
14
Therefore Result is too little care This can be adjusted by using a multiple m To correct the error set If e =.1 then m = 10 L should be equal to Am
15
Correctly estimating error, e What percent of injured parties did not collect damages? What jurisdictions are to be considered? Correctly estimating optimal level of precaution under negligence rules Possibility of multiple punitive damage awards Social policy determined by a small group of individuals who do not have the ability to engage in independent fact finding Judge serves as gatekeeper Punitive damages have an impact on the incentive to bring suit The damages do not need to go to the plaintiff for optimal deterrence Represents a windfall gain for the plaintiff
16
Nationwide policy that if the repair costs did not exceed 3 percent of the suggested retail price the car was sold as new The customer drove the car for approximately 9 months without noticing any flaws When he took the car in for detailing the shop detected evidence that the car had been repainted and informed Gore Gores car had been partially repainted by BMW at a cost of $ 601.37, which was about 1.5 percent of the car's suggested retail price
17
At trial before a jury, the customer claimed that His actual damages were $ 4,000, in that the value of one of the manufacturer's repainted cars was approximately 10 percent less than the value of a new car that had not been damaged and repaired; and A punitive damages award of $ 4 million would provide an appropriate penalty, using the $4,000 actual damages estimate, in that since 1983, the manufacturer had sold as new 983 cars which had been repainted at a cost of more than $ 300 per vehicle, including 14 in Alabama. $4,000 x 1,000 cars = $4 million
18
The jury--based on its determination that the nationwide policy of nondisclosure constituted gross, oppressive, or malicious fraud for purposes of Alabama statutes which authorized punitive damages The jury returned a verdict which awarded the customer $ 4,000 in compensatory damages and $4 million in punitive damages.
19
It would warn consumers of any pre-sale repairs Buyers might expect some price reduction, but probably less than $4,000 Cost of price reduction would be passed on to all buyers
20
The Supreme Court of Alabama expressed the view that A jury could not use the number of similar acts that a defendant had committed in other jurisdictions as a multiplier when determining the dollar amount of a punitive damages award, A constitutionally reasonable punitive damages award in the case at hand was $2 million No statement on how they arrived at the $2 million. There were only 14 cars similar cars in Alabama.
21
The United States Supreme Court reversed and remanded. The $ 2 million punitive damages award was grossly excessive and hence exceeded the limit under the due process clause of the Federal Constitution's Fourteenth Amendment, in that There were none of the aggravating factors associated with particularly reprehensible conduct was present. Harm was purely economic in nature. BMW was not a recidivist who knew that what it was doing was wrong. There were no false statements made by BMW. BMW did not violate any state law requiring disclosure. The jury cannot punish BMW for actions that did not harm Alabama residents. May not impose sanctions to deter conduct that is legal in other jurisdictions. The award was 500 times the amount of the customer's actual harm as determined by the jury, and there was no suggestion that the customer or any other purchaser was threatened with any additional potential harm by the distributor's nondisclosure policy. There was a lack of proportionality between the actual harm and the punitive damages. The sanction imposed on the distributor was substantially greater than the statutory fines available in Alabama and elsewhere for similar malfeasance. Upon return to Alabama the award was reduced to $50,000.
22
Possible implications Damages must be local Statutes determining fines and penalties may provide guidelines When harm is purely economic punitive damages may be limited to single digit multipliers
23
SC - Does the maritime law allow for vicarious punitive liability? $287 million in compensatory damages and $5 billion in punitives. In 2008 SC ruled that punitives must be reduced to 1 to 1 ratio under maritime law.
24
Do juries have adequate information? Do juries apply a proper methodology? Should juries determine public policy?
25
Large awards are unpredictable and are weakly correlated with compensatory damages Juries are more likely to assign liability and larger awards than judges Huge unpredictable awards may deter innovation or lead to withdrawal of products from the market out of concern for potential punitive damages awards.
26
Juries are able to target unpopular defendants, penalize unorthodox or controversial views, and redistribute wealth Uncertain damages have no deterrent effect
27
The victim need not receive the damages The objective is deterrence, not compensation
28
Ester Dardinger died of brain cancer Anthem blamed for mishandling her treatment $30 million punitive damage award upheld Proportionate to profits from right to sell insurance in Ohio $10 million to Dardinger After attorney fees remainder to research at Ohio State
29
Punitive damages must be reasonably related to the harm to the plaintiff Jury awarded $79.5 million in punitive damages to lung cancer victim. Oregon Supreme Court upheld damages US Supreme Court Oregon jury could not punish the tobacco company for injuring people, whom the Court called "strangers to the litigation."
30
How does this relate to the damage multiple in Cooter and Ulen? The plaintiff may use damage to others to show how reprehensible the conduct was. How can a jury consider harm to nonparties and then withhold that consideration from the punishment calculus?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.