The plaintiff is a citizen and a resident of the State of Iowa. The defendant is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Delaware. It is engaged in the operation of a public ballroom at Clear Lake, Cerro Gordo County, Iowa, known as the Surf. The plaintiff, a Negro, alleges in her complaint that on December 8, 1951, the defendant refused to admit her to its ballroom and that such refusal constituted a violation of the Iowa Civil Rights Statute, Section 735.1, Code of Iowa 1950, I.C.A. The plaintiff asks $3,000 compensatory damages and $7,000 exemplary damages because of such refusal. The plaintiff’s claim is based upon the Iowa statute referred to and not on any federal statute or the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. The defendant has moved to dismiss the action on the ground that under the Iowa law it would be legally impossible for the plaintiff to recover damages in an amount exceeding $3,000, the jurisdictional amount required by Section 1332 of Title 28 of the United States Code, 28 U.S.C.A. § 1332. The motion requires consideration of the Iowa Civil Rights Statute and the Iowa rules of law relating to compensatory and exemplary damages.
The Iowa Civil Rights Statute referred to provides: “All persons within this state shall be entitled to the full and equal enjoyment of the accommodations, advantages, facilities, and privileges of inns, restaurants, chophouses, eating houses, lunch counters, and all other places where refreshments are served, public conveyances, barber shops, bathhouses, theaters, and all other places of amusement.” The judicial history of this statute is discussed by Goostree, The Iowa Civil Rights Statute: A Problem of Enforcement, 37 Iowa Law Review 242 (1952). The statute was originally enacted in 1884. It has been before the Iowa Supreme Court in only four cases. The Iowa Court first considered the statute in the ease of State v. Hall, 1887,
The defendant’s motion to dismiss is based upon the claim that under the rules of Iowa law relating to compensatory and exemplary damages it would be legally impossible for the plaintiff to recover damages in excess of $3,-
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000. In the case of Thompson v. Mutual Benefit, Health and Accident Ass’n of Omaha, Nebraska, D.C.1949,
Plaintiff claims compensatory damages in the amount of $3,000, which is insufficient by itself to confer jurisdiction on this Court, for Sec. 1332 of Title 28 of the United States Code requires an amount
in excess
of $3,000. Rule 15(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A., permits plaintiff to amend her complaint before the service of a responsive pleading, and a motion to dismiss is not a “responsive pleading” within the meaning of the rule. Ohio Casualty Ins. Co. v. Farmers Bank of Clay, Ky., 6 Cir., 1949,
Plaintiff’s allegations must, of course, be taken as true when ruling on a motion to dismiss solely on the ground of lack of jurisdictional amount. Gibbs v. Buck, 1938,
In Iowa exemplary damages ordinarily cannot be awarded unless there is a basis for compensatory damages, and the amount of the exemplary damages must be reasonably proportionate to the compensatory damages awarded. Crum v. Walker, 1950,
An award of only nominal damages will not support an award of exemplary damages. Roggensack v. Winona Monument Co., supra; Morrow v. Scoville, supra; Stricklen v. Pearson Const. Co., supra; Connelly v. White, supra; Schwartz v. Davis, supra. But it has been said that an award of exemplary damages could be sustained by itself where compensatory damages were too difficult to compute, Lane v. Mitchell, supra, and where there are grounds for compensatory and exemplary damages a lump sum verdict has been permitted. Bishop v. Baird & Baird, 1947,
It is necessary, therefore, that plaintiff’s allegations state facts permitting an award of compensatory damages sufficient to provide a basis for the exemplary damages required to make up the jurisdictional amount. Damages for emotional distress or mental suffering or humiliation are compensatory, not exemplary. McVay v. Carpe, 1947,
In Iowa where there is no physical injury or trauma, there can be no recovery for emotional distress caused by a negligent act. See Blakeley v. Shortal’s Estate, 1945,
Where the act is intentional or willful, however, compensatory damages may be recovered for emotional distress unaccompanied by any physical injury. Curnett v. Wolf, Iowa 1953,
In this connection several factors should be noted. First, legal protection for emotional tranquillity or “peace of mind” is a relatively new concept to the law rendering questionable many earlier decisions both as to legal principles and to the value placed upon this protected interest. Sec. 46, 1948 Supp. to Restatements. Second, the courts may judicially notice the decline in the value of the dollar. Elings v. Ted McGrevey, Inc., 1952,
The most recent Iowa case allowing compensatory damages for emotional distress unaccompanied by physical injury is Curnett v. Wolf, supra. In that case the defendant, in a telephone conversation, made certain remarks to plaintiff, including an implied threat to influence plaintiff’s employer, to discharge plaintiff. This conversation caused plaintiff to be erflotionally upset for several weeks. The jury awarded $7,500, which was reduced to $4,000 by the Iowa Supreme Court. The recovery of $4,000 compensatory damages was justified, the Court felt, because the “jury could find, under the record, that such mental suffering was acute”.
If defendant’s description of the cause of plaintiff’s emotional distress, deprivation of an evening’s dancing, were accepted, this contention might have merit. However, that question need not be decided, for the plaintiff complains not merely of the deprivation of an evening’s pleasure on the dance floor but of the emotional distress caused by defendant’s public and illegal act of discrimination against her on account of her race. See To Secure These Rights, Report of the President’s Committee on Civil Rights, (1947) pp. 76, 77, 82 et seq.
It is not necessary for this Court at this time to determine whether or not an award to the plaintiff of compensatory damages in excess of $3,000 would be permitted to stand under the Iowa law, for, as heretofore noted, the plaintiff is also claiming exemplary damages.
Under Iowa law exemplary damages are not a matter of right but rest in the discretion of the jury. Boyle v. Bornholtz, 1937,
Exemplary damages may be awarded where it appears that the defendant is guilty of
fraud,
see Williamson v. Western Stage Co., 1867,
Such exemplary damages are permitted on the theory that they serve as a deterrent to wrongdoers and as punishment for wrongdoing. Kuiken v. Garrett, 1952,
The malice or wanton conduct of an agent acting within the scope of his employment is imputable to the corporation and will sustain an award of exemplary damages against the corporation. White v. International Text Book Co., 1915,
In case of plaintiff’s death the right to exemplary damages does not survive unless the action is commenced before death. Boyle v. Bornholtz, supra; Union Mill Co. v. Prenzler, supra. And where the defendant dies and the action is continued against his personal representative, no exemplary damages may be awarded because they are not a “right” of the injured party, but a punishment, and so may be exacted only from the wrongdoer. Sheik v. Hobson, Adm’r, supra. The assignee of a cause of action, however, may recover both compensatory and exemplary damages. Dunshee v. Standard Oil Co., supra. The next of kin cannot recover exemplary damages for wrongful death of decedent. DeMoss v. Walker, 1951,
Awards of exemplary damages in Iowa have been upheld in malicious prosecution cases, see e. g. Kness v. Kommes, 1928,
It is frequently stated that no exemplary damages are recoverable for breach of contract, citing Lacey v. Straughan, 1860,
Defendant’s contention is that there is no sufficient allegation of malice in plaintiff’s complaint to permit any award of exemplary damages to stand, or, alternatively, that if some exemplary damages could be awarded still any aggregate verdict in excess of $3,000 on these facts in state court would be set aside as excessive by the Iowa Supreme Court. This alternative contention rests upon the assumption that plaintiff could in no event recover more than $500 compensatory damages and that since exemplary damages must be reasonably proportionate to compensatory damages the total recovery could not exceed $3,000. This Court is unable to hold that it appears to a legal certainty under Iowa law that any award for compensatory damages to the plaintiff in excess of $500 would not be permitted to stand.
The question to be determined, therefore, is whether or not the allegations of plaintiff’s complaint, taken as true, would permit an award of exemplary damages under Iowa law. Since neither fraud nor gross negligence is alleged, the issue turns upon the requirement of malice, supra. There has been some confusion in the discussion of this term in the Iowa cases, but basically Iowa law has recognized three terms for malice. First there is malice in the popular sense of ill will or hatred, sometimes termed “express malice.” Second there is “malice in fact.” Third there is “malice in law.” The confusion arises primarily because the latter two terms are both characterized as “legal malice” as distinguished from “express” or “lay” malice. The distinction has been stated by the Iowa Supreme Court, speaking through Justice McClain, as “Malice in law is where malice is established by legal presumption from proof of certain facts, as in actions for libel * * *. Malice in fact is to be found by the jury from the evidence in the case. They may infer it from want of probable cause. But it is well established that the plaintiff is not required to prove express malice, in the popular signification of the term, as that defendant was prompted by malevolence, or acted from motives of ill will, resentment, or hatred toward the plaintiff. It is sufficient if he prove it in its enlarged legal sense.” Connelly v. White, supra [
The Iowa Supreme Court recently referred to the categories of malice in the case of Robinson v. Home Fire & Marine Ins. Co., Iowa 1953,
While it is not entirely clear whether the Iowa decisions regard “malice in fact” as a descriptive term for “legal malice” or as a synonym for “express malice,” it is apparent that the “malice” required to permit an award of exemplary damages is something less than actual ill-will or express malice and may be termed “legal malice” for want of ,a better expression.
The requirement of legal malice rather than actual malice may be regarded either as an evidentiary matter or as a substantive difference in the law. If it is regarded as evidentiary, the difference may be described as a substitution of circumstantial proof of malice for direct proof of an evil or improper state of mind. Exemplary damages, being punitive in nature, seek to prevent injury occasioned by wickedly motivated acts. Objective proof of a wicked motive, as an admission by the defendant of his evil purpose, therefore, permits an award of such damages. Such a standard of proof, however, is in the nature of things rather difficult to meet. The law therefore developed a different standard of proof so that the essential ingredient of wicked or improper motive could be shown by circumstantial rather than direct evidence. Thus in malicious prosecution cases the plaintiff need not show directly the defendant’s state of mind but only that defendant had no just or probable cause for his actions, and the trier of fact is then permitted to infer the improper state of mind from the absence of probable cause. See Nordhaus v. Peterson, 1880,
So in the case of exemplary damages, which are discretionary and not a matter of right, it is first said that they may be awarded where the defendant acts from ill-will or actual malice. Then it is said that this wicked state of mind may be presumed or inferred from other facts, such as want of justification in malicious prosecution cases. To this point the law is differentiating only in an evidentiary sense, for it is reasonable to presume that one instituting legal process against a particular person without justification was motivated by malice or evil intent directed toward that person. But the law goes further. It is finally said that the intentional doing of a “wrongful act” without justification will permit an inference of the wicked state of mind. Yet it is apparent that many wrongful or illegal acts may be intentionally committed from motives wholly apart from any malice or evil intent directed toward the person who happens to suffer by the action, as where defendant is motivated by a desire for gain and has no feeling at all for those injured by him.
Therefore, when the law reaches this last stage, as it has in Iowa, it is no longer “malice” which is required but the “something else” from which malice is said to be presumed. See Schnathorst v. Williams, 1949,
The award of exemplary damages on substantive grounds wholly divorced from any inquiry into the wrongdoer’s subjective state of mind is not a novel principle in Iowa law. In Williamson v. Western Stage Co., supra, the Iowa Court upheld an award of exemplary damages where defendant had been grossly negligent in employing a drunken stage driver, and in Cameron v. Bryan, supra, such an award was sustained where defendant had heedlessly permitted a dog known to be vicious to run loose. Significantly, in neither of these cases was there any intimation that the defendant was being punished for any active intent directed toward those injured. They may be said to stand for the principle that intentional wrongful action in disregard for the rights of others amounts to conduct to which the law will attach a penalty and deterrent by way of exemplary damages.
In any event, Iowa law permits the award of exemplary damages where the defendant has intentionally committed an illegal or improper act without justification which proximately results in injury to the plaintiff. This would be true whether the requirement of legal malice rather than actual malice is regarded as a substantive principle or as an evidentiary matter.
Plaintiff in this case alleges that defendant’s agents acted “wilfully, maliciously, and. with a wilful disregard of the rights of the plaintiff.” Elsewhere in the complaint it is alleged that the action was illegal, based solely on her race, with no other justification.
Taking these allegations as true, it appears that defendant through its agents without justification intentionally committed an illegal act to plaintiff’s injury. From these facts it would be permissible for a jury to award exemplary damages, either by drawing the inference of legal malice or on a separate substantive ground.
As it does not appear to a legal certainty that a recovery by plaintiff in excess of $3,000 would be impossible under Iowa law, the motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction is overruled.
