A jury awarded punitive but not compensatory damages in this sex-discrimination suit. Progressive Steel Treating, the employer, contends that punitive damages cannot be awarded when the jury determines that the plaintiff did not suffer injury.
Charmaine Timm, the plaintiff, testified that co-worker Craig Tunnell frequently snuck up from behind her and grabbed or pinched her buttocks. Less frequently Tun-nell would run his hand up her thighs. Sexual comments and propositions from Tunnell were everyday fare, according to Timm, despite her protests. A reasonable jury could conclude that the combination of unwelcome remarks and battery were sex discrimination under
Meritor Savings Bank, fsb v. Vinson, 477
U.S. 57,
Timm quit about six months after starting work, and the jury may have thought that she left to take a better job, rather than because of Tunnell’s boorish conduct. That could explain the decision not to award back pay. The lack of compensatory damages is harder to reconcile with the award of punitive damages—though the fact that Timm, a former prison guard, is no stranger to rough treatment, coupled with the lack of an instruction about nominal damages, may play a role. At all events, Progressive did not ask the district judge to order the jury to continue deliberating until it came up with consistent verdicts. Instead it used the lack of compensatory damages as the fulcrum of an argument that punitive damages are legally impossible. One answer could be that there is no priority among inconsistent verdicts; if the verdicts cannot be reconciled, the whole case must be retried.
American Casualty Co. v. B. Ciandolo, Inc.,
Hennessy v. Penril Datacomm Networks, Inc.,
The question remains whether punitive damages can be awarded when the jury has awarded no compensatory or at least nominal damages to a particular plaintiff. Punitive damages (as awarded here) are applicable even in the absence of actual damages, Sahagian v. Dickey,827 F.2d 90 , 100 (7th Cir.1987); McKinley v. Trattles,732 F.2d 1320 , 1326 (7th Cir.1984), despite local law to the contrary. Wilson v. Taylor,658 F.2d 1021 , 1033 (5th Cir.1981). Although state law may not allow punitive damages without a compensatory award, under federal law, when a jury finds a constitutional violation under a § 1983 claim, it may award punitive damages even when it does not award compensatory damages. The scope of punitive damages in § 1983 actions is governed by the “federal common law of damages” which imposes uniformity when enforcing the Civil Rights Acts. Lenard, v. Argento,699 F.2d 874 , 897 (7th Cir.1983); Basista v. Weir,340 F.2d 74 , 87 (3d Cir.1965).
Erwin v. Manitowoc County,
Of course, a plaintiff must suffer
some
injury to have standing. Timm testified to circumstances that demonstrate injury. “Testers” in housing-discrimination cases are allowed to recover exemplary damages even though they do not want to occupy the apartments for which they apply, and the experience of discrimination is brief (indeed, testers usually do not know that discrimina
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tion was at work until learning that persons with other characteristics were able to lease or buy property). See
Havens Realty Corp. v. Coleman,
Affirmed.
