The primary issue in this case is whether the petitioner waived his right to complain that the exemplary damages awarded by the trial court were unconstitutionally excessive. Even though the petitioner did not complain about the exemplary damages until the court of appeals issued its judgment, we conclude that he did not waive that claim. In this case, the court of appeals’ judgment reduced the trial court’s award of compensatory damages but left the exemplary damages intact. After the reduction of compensatory damages, the court of appeals had an obligation to review whether the exemplary damages were “reasonable and proportionate to the amount of harm to the plaintiff and to the general damages recovered.”
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Campbell,
This is the second time that this Court has considered this defamation case. The case arose in the 1990s, when Joe Ed Bunton, a public-access television host in Palestine, Texas, repeatedly accused Bas-com Bentley III, a local district judge, of being “corrupt” and a “criminal” who “oughta be in jail.” Bunton also accused Bentley of engaging in judicial misconduct, making improper campaign contributions, and various other misdeeds. Bentley requested that Bunton cease making .such allegations, but Bunton refused, stating on his program that he welcomed a defamation suit from Bentley because “the facts are with us and this is the truth, and therefore it is not slander.” Bentley subsequently sued Bunton and his television co-host for defamation.
At trial, the court directed a verdict that Bunton’s allegations of corruption and criminality were defamatory per se, and the jury then found that Bunton had made those statements with actual malice. The trial court’s judgment ordered Bunton to pay Bentley $150,000 for past and future loss of character and reputation, $7 million for past mental anguish, and $1 million in exemplary damages. After the court of appeals initially affirmed the judgment against Bunton, this Court remanded the case back to the court of appeals “to reconsider the excessiveness of the jury’s award of mental anguish damages against Bun-ton.”
We first conclude that there is legally sufficient evidence to support the court of appeals’ judgment with regard to the compensatory damages. When this case was before this Court for the first time, a four-judge plurality of the Court held that there was “no evidence that Bentley suffered mental anguish damages in the amount of $7 million,” and remanded the case to the court of appeals to reconsider the mental anguish damages.
Consequently, the only compensatory-damages question before this Court is whether legally sufficient evidence supports a mental anguish award of $150,000. We conclude that it does. As we noted in our prior opinion, there was evidence that “the ordeal had cost [Bentley] time, deprived him of sleep, caused him embarrassment in the community in which he had spent almost all of his life, disrupted his family, and distressed his children at school,” and that “[fjriends testified that he had been depressed, that his honor and integrity had been impugned, that his family had suffered, too, adding to his own distress, and that he would never be the same.”
Although the court of appeals suggested a significant remittitur of compensatory damages, it did not reevaluate the exemplary damages; instead, the court held that Bunton had waived any claim as to exemplary damages when he failed to “complain on appeal of the award of exemplary damages.” — S.W.3d - n. 1. We agree that, ordinarily, an appellant waives any complaint about the trial court’s judgment that is not raised in the court of appeals.
See Johnson v. Lynaugh,
We have held that exemplary damages must be reasonably proportionate to compensatory damages, and that adjustment of compensatory damages therefore requires reevaluation of the factors supporting an award of exemplary damages.
See Tatum v. Preston Carter Co.,
The United States Constitution similarly requires an analysis of the relationship between the actual harm suffered and the exemplary damages awarded.
Campbell,
All three factors work together to ensure that exemplary damages are “reasonable and proportionate to the amount of harm to the plaintiff and to the general damages recovered.”
See Campbell,
Because the exemplary damages must bear a reasonable relation to the defendant’s conduct and to the actual harm suffered, a claim that the exemplary damages are grossly disproportionate may therefore arise any time the compensatory damages are significantly adjusted. Ideally, the court of appeals should automatically reevaluate exemplary damages whenever compensatory damages are reduced.
See Preston Carter Co.,
