Plaintiff Louise Bennett brought this wrongful death action against defendant Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corporation (OCF). She sought damages for the asbestos related death of her husband, including damages based on aggravating circumstances. § 537.090. 1 Pursuant to the court’s instructions, the jury returned a verdict assessing actual damages of $1,114,000 and damages based on aggravating circumstances at $1,005,000. Because OCF challenges the constitutionality of the statute allowing damages based on aggravating circumstances, this Court has jurisdiction of the appeal. Mo. Const, art. V, § 3. Affirmed in part and reversed and remanded in part.
I.
“A decision to punish a tortfeasor by means of an exaction of exemplary damages is an exercise of state power that must comply with the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.”
Honda Motor Co., Ltd. v. Oberg,
— U.S.-,-,
II.
In relevant part, § 537.090 provides that the jury may consider the following in a wrongful death action:
The mitigating or aggravating circumstances attending the death may be considered by the trier of the facts, but damages for grief and bereavement by reason of the death shall not be recoverable.
From its origins, our wrongful death statute has allowed for a jury to award “damages as they may deem fair and just, ... and, also, having regard to the mitigating or aggravating circumstances attending such wrongful act, neglect or default.” Ch, 51, § 4, RSMo 1855 (emphasis added).
Early cases interpreted the authorization for damages based on aggravating circumstances to allow exemplary or punitive damages.
See Parsons v. Missouri Pac. Ry. Co.,
At one time it was arguable that the legislature intended aggravating circumstances to authorize an award of not only punitive damages but actual damages for exceptional anguish or pain experienced by the decedent that preceded or accompanied death. However, a 1979 amendment to § 537.090 allows the jury to award “such damages as the deceased may have suffered between the time of injury and the time of death and for the recovery of which the deceased might have maintained an action had death not ensued.” The quoted language fully covers any pain, suffering and other compensatory damages the deceased may have experienced prior to death. At least since 1979, the damages attributed to “aggravating circumstances” necessarily refers only to punitive damages.
Nevertheless, it is argued that aggravating circumstance damages cannot be fully equated with punitive damages. The cases supporting this argument include
Glick v. Ballentine Produce, Inc.,
III.
Section 537.090 provides no standards to guide a jury in determining how
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much will be awarded for damages based on aggravating circumstances. However, the lack of standards in the statute does not mean that the statute is unconstitutional. Where possible, courts are to interpret statutes so that they are in harmony with the constitution.
In re Link,
IV.
A question arises as to whether an objection to the instructions was preserved. Before the instructions were given to the jury, counsel for OCF objected because the jury was “provided no guidance whatsoever with respect to the notion that the purpose of such damages [is] to deter wrongdoing and to punish conduct.” A similar complaint was included in the motion for new trial that the instructions failed to apprise the jury of the purpose, nature and character of aggravating circumstances damages as required by due process. This was sufficient to inform the plaintiff and trial court of the basic flaws in the instructions and to preserve the issue on appeal.
Rule 70.03.
There is no requirement that one objecting to instructions submit correct instructions to preserve the issue on appeal.
Southern Missouri Bank v. Fogle,
Perhaps in reliance on Glick, Contes-tible, and other pre-MAI cases, the Supreme Court Committee on Approved Jury Instructions has promulgated an instruction relating to aggravating circumstances in wrongful death cases, MAI 5.01. Because the method for submitting aggravating circumstances in MAI 5.01 fails to give adequate guidance to the jury as to the nature and purpose of aggravating circumstance damages, the trial court properly declined to give the aggravating circumstance paragraph of MAI 5.01. However, rather than instructing as in an ordinary case of punitive damages, the trial court gave a modified instruction based on MAI 10.04.
The instructions given to the jury were as follows:
Instruction No. 8
If you find in favor of the plaintiff, then you must award the plaintiff such sum as you believe will fairly and justly compensate plaintiff for any damages you believe plaintiff and decedent sustained and plaintiff is reasonably certain to sustain in the future as a direct result of the fatal injury to Fred Bennett.
You must not consider grief or bereavement suffered by reason of the death.
In determining the amount of plaintiffs damages, you are not to consider any evidence of prior payment to plaintiff. The judge will consider any such payment and make an adjustment if required by law.
Instruction No. 9
If you find in favor of plaintiff under Instruction Number 6, and if you believe that:
First, at the time defendant sold the KAYLO, defendant knew of the defective condition and danger submitted in Instruction Number 6, and
Second, defendant thereby showed complete indifference to or conscious disregard for the safety of others, then in addition to any damages to which you may find plaintiff entitled under Instruction Number 8, you may award plaintiff an additional amount for aggravating circumstances.
Correctly recognizing that aggravating circumstance damages are punitive in nature, the verdict form used by the trial court required that aggravating circumstance damages be set out separately from actual dam
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ages. However, the modified MAI 10.04 used by the trial court omitted the words found in all approved exemplary damages instructions which guide the jury to award “such sum as you believe will serve to punish defendant and to deter defendant and others from like conduct.” It is this critical language found in the approved instructions on exemplary damages, MAI 10.01,
et seq.,
that gives a jury appropriate guidance and defeats a claim that a jury award of punitive damages is unconstitutionally vague.
See Carpenter v. Chrysler Corp.,
V.
OCF also argues that it was denied the right to present evidence of its financial status to the jury on the issue of aggravating circumstances. It was long ago stated that evidence of the defendant’s financial condition is relevant in a wrongful death action involving damages for aggravating circumstances.
Morgan v. Durfee,
VI.
As a separate matter, OCF complains that the verdict form was in error in failing to set out a separate line for mitigating circumstances when separate lines were used to award aggravating circumstance damages and actual damages. OCF argues “common sense” dictates that the verdict form include a separate line for mitigating circumstances in order to avoid unduly emphasizing consideration of aggravating circumstance damages. When supported by the evidence, a defendant in a wrongful death action is entitled to a mitigating circumstances instruction. MAI 6.01. However, under the MAI instructional scheme, verdict forms include amounts of actual or punitive damages awarded and not amounts which were considered but not awarded. Reductions for mitigating circumstances should not be set out on a separate line of the verdict form.
CONCLUSION
Until such time as new approved instructions are promulgated, the statutory procedure and form instructions relating to punitive damages should be followed whenever a plaintiff desires to submit a claim for aggravating circumstance damages in a wrongful death case. See MAI 10.01, et seq., and § 510.263. The aggravating circumstances paragraph of MAI 5.01 should not be given.
Instructional error as to a punitive damages claim warrants a new trial only on that portion of the case but not on other issues relating to actual damages.
Menaugh v. Resler Optometry, Inc.,
Notes
. All references to statutes are to RSMo 1994 unless specified otherwise.
. Whether Missouri’s post-trial safeguards are adequate to meet a due process challenge is not at issue here. However, Alabama’s post-trial safeguards are similar to Missouri law permitting mitigating circumstances to be considered and are similar to the statutorily resurrected doc *466 trines of remittitur and additur relating to punitive damages. See § 510.263.6.
