The Terminix International Company, L.P., appeals from a jury verdict awarding punitive damages based on injuries suffered by Vickie Bielicki, Marta Romana, and Cindy Vigil from a Terminix employee’s spraying of a toxic pesticide in their presence. Exercising jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm.
I
On April 17, 1997, Bielicki, Romana, and Vigil were routinely finishing their duties as private food service workers at the New Mexico State Prison when Marquis Sanchez, a Terminix employee, sprayed a toxic pesticide called Conquer in the kitchen area causing them to become violently ill. All three plaintiffs suffered permanent, chronic injuries as a result of the exposure.
Before trial, Terminix stipulated that Sanchez had been negligent and that Ter-minix was vicariously liable for his negligence. Thus, the only issues tried were *1162 the amount of compensatory damages and the propriety and amount of punitive damages. The jury found in favor of plaintiffs and awarded compensatory damages of $60,700 to Bielicki, $77,800 to Romana, and $31,600 to Vigil, and punitive damages in the amount of $728,400 to Bielicki, $933,600 to Romana, and $379,200 to Vigil. Terminix’s motions for a directed verdict, judgment as a matter of law, and a new trial or remittitur were denied by the district court.
II
Denials of motions for a directed verdict and for judgment as a matter of law are reviewed de novo.
See Knight v. Snap-On Tools Corp.,
Under New Mexico law, “punitive damages may not be imposed on an employer for the misconduct of an employee absent some evidence that the employer in some way contributed to ... the employee’s misconduct.”
Campbell v. Bartlett,
World Servs., Inc.,
[David Minder, Sanchez’s supervisor,] authorized Sanchez to treat the prison facility with [Conquer] on April 17 even if people were present[;] ... that Termi-nix’s sloppy procedures and cavalier attitude toward safety and licensing requirements constituted participation in the reckless conduct^ and] ... that Minder ratified Sanchez’s misapplication based on Sanchez’s deposition testimony that Minder was more concerned with obtaining proof that the prison was treated than with the injured people.
(II Appellant’s App. at 566 (emphasis added).)
Authorization can be inferred from a supervisor’s instruction to an employee to perform a procedure, given with the knowledge that safety concerns exist.
See Brashear v. Packers,
Prison officials had told Minder not to spray Conquer with inmates or staff present, but Minder did not communicate that instruction to Sanchez. Instead, he ordered Sanchez “to go spray using the Acti-sol [machine] or we’re going to lose the contract.” 1 (II Appellant’s App. at 592.) *1163 Loss of the contract was a concern because just a few weeks prior to the incident, prison officials had threatened termination of its contract with Terminix if services did not improve promptly.
When Sanchez was trained to use Conquer by Roger Jiminez, Minder’s predecessor, Jiminez sprayed Conquer in the presence of third persons. Sanchez testified that he knew from the label it was dangerous to spray Conquer with people in the area, but it was his understanding from Terminix that even “if [he] showed up to spray Conquer and there were people present,” he nevertheless “needed to go up there and use the Conquer machine or [they] would lose this account.” (Id. at 591-92.) Terminix “never told” Sanchez that he was not “to spray Conquer in the presence of people,” or that if he “showed up for a Conquer application with the Acti-sol [machine] and there were people present, that [he] should not do the application even if they wanted [him] to do it.” (Id.)
On arrival at the prison on the day in question, Sanchez encountered inmates and staff at the application site, but sprayed Conquer nonetheless because he “didn’t have any choice because of Mr. Minder’s instructions.”
2
(Id.
at 606.) Sanchez stated he was “Oliver North that day ... just following orders.”
(Id.
at 622.) The jury could reasonably' infer from this evidence that Sanchez was authorized to perform the application at the prison even if people were present.
See Brashear,
Participation can be inferred from policies of the principal that permit the conduct of the agent,
see Templin v. Mountain Bell Tel. Co.,
The record demonstrates that Terminix condoned the disregard of safety practices during pesticide applications. In addition to his improper training and instructions, Sanchez was not properly licensed at the time of the application due, at least in part, to clerical errors at Terminix. Moreover, even though corrections officer Cayetano Trujillo was required to stay with Sanchez during the application, Terminix failed to provide him with the necessary protective clothing such as goggles or a respirator. Immediately after the incident, Trujillo requested the Material Safety Data Sheet (“MSDS”), but it was not in the truck as
*1164
required. It was the responsibility of management to ensure that the MSDS was in the truck. Based on this evidence, the jury could reasonably conclude that Termi-nix participated in the conduct of its agent.
4
See Weidler,
Regarding ratification, “[a] corporation can ratify the acts of its agents by acquiescence in or acceptance of the unauthorized acts.”
Albuquerque Concrete Coring,
Sanchez was at a different job site the next day, and no one at Terminix contacted him to inquire about the incident or asked him to prepare a report documenting the same. At a staff meeting several days later, the matter was not discussed. After that meeting Sanchez went to his supervisor’s office in an attempt to discuss the issue. Instead of asking for details, Minder said he would “handle it” and again told Sanchez “[n]ot to worry about it.” (Id. at 611.) Minder admitted that he never did an investigative report on the incident. Yet another supervisor, Rick Boss, failed to take appropriate action, instead choosing to regularly joke about the incident by stating that Sanchez was “savfing] the taxpayers money” by “getting rid of the inmates.” (Id. at 616.)
Relying on
Romero v. J.W. Jones Construction Co.,
We recognize that much of this evidence was disputed by Terminix at trial, but it is within the province of the jury to give testimony whatever weight it deems appropriate after evaluating the credibility of the witnesses.
See United Phosphorus, Ltd. v. Midland Fumigant, Inc.,
Ill
We review for abuse of discretion the district court’s denial of a motion for a new trial or remittitur,
see Fitzgerald v. Mountain States Tel. & Tel. Co.,
The Supreme Court decision in
BMW of North America, Inc. v. Gore,
To determine reprehensibility, we examine whether (1) the defendant’s conduct “evinced ... indifference to or reckless disregard for the health and safety of others,” (2) the defendant “has repeatedly engaged in prohibited conduct while knowing or suspecting that it was unlawful,” or (3) the evidence “discloses ... deliberate false statements, acts of affirmative misconduct, or concealment of evidence of improper motive.”
BMW of N. Am.,
The ratio between the punitive damages and compensatory damages awarded by the jury is 12 to 1. In reviewing this ratio, we are not guided- by a “mathematical bright line between the constitutionally acceptable and the constitutionally unacceptable,” but rather by a “general concern of reasonableness.”
BMW of N. Am.,
The district court concluded that the ratio between the punitive and compensatory portions of the award was permissible because “[e]ach plaintiff presented evidence of injuries that might be permanent and difficult to detect[, fjuture medical costs could be greater that the jury’s compensatory award, and it is difficult to assign a cash value to [plaintiffs’ injuries.” (II Appellant’s App. at 567.) We likewise conclude that a high ratio is justified because the evidence establishes that “the injury is hard to detect [and] the monetary value of noneconomic harm ... [is] difficult to determine.”
BMW of N. Am.,
With regard to the last
BMW
factor, the reviewing court should give “substantial deference to the legislative judgments concerning appropriate sanctions for the conduct at issue” when “[c]omparing the punitive damages award and the civil or criminal penalties that could be imposed for comparable misconduct.”
BMW of N. Am.,
Although the punitive damages award is exceptional when compared only to the applicable fines, the authorization of imprisonment in the criminal context can justify a higher award.
See Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Haslip,
Beyond the constitutional minimum, the Supreme Court of New Mexico has held that “punitive damages do not have to be in reasonable proportion to actual damages, but they must not be so unrelated to the injury as to plainly manifest passion and prejudice rather than reason and justice.”
Allsup’s Convenience Stores,
IV
We AFFIRM the judgment of the district court and GRANT Terminix’s Motion to Supplement the Record on Appeal.
Notes
. Terminix contends that only one inference can be drawn from Minder’s concern over the *1163 loss of the contract — that the job must be done properly or not at all. While this is one inference that could be drawn, evidence supports the conclusion that Sanchez was not so instructed.
. There is a material distinction, according to Terminix, between authorizing Sanchez to apply the pesticide on that day and authorizing a tortious application of the pesticide. Termi-nix claims that Sanchez's tortious conduct was spraying with people present, not merely the possibility of an airborne cloud of which Minder was aware. The evidence belies this distinction. The jury could infer from the evidence presented that Sanchez reasonably believed he was instructed to complete the job that day, despite his hesitations upon arriving at the prison and finding people in the area he was about to spray.
. Terminix contends that a cavalier attitude toward safety at best establishes negligence, but does not support an award of punitive damages. This assertion misconstrues the applicable law. In support of its proposition, Terminix relies on cases addressing whether particular conduct was negligent.
See Gonzales v. Surgidev Corp.,
. Terminix's argument that absent any prior warning that an employee is prone to misconduct, a corporation’s failure to exercise closer control over its employees does not warrant an award of punitive damages, is without merit. The cases relied on by Terminix for this contention are distinguishable. In
Eckhardt v. Charter Hospital of Albuquerque, Inc.,
. An employee's conduct is deemed to be that of the employer in "every case.” 7 U.S.C. § 1361(b)(4).
