Lead Opinion
MOORE, J., delivered the opinion of the court in which DAUGHTREY) J., joined. SUTTON, J. (pp. 809-12), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.
OPINION
Plaintiffs who successfully prove that they were fired in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (“Title VH”) are presumptively entitled to back pay for the amount they would have earned had they not been- unlawfully terminated. Such awards are intended to compensate fully plaintiffs for the wrongs that they suffered. For the same reason, an award of prejudgment interest on the back pay owed is also nearly always appropriate. We conclude from these principles that a district court must grant a motion for a new trial as to damages when a jury awards back pay to a Title VII plaintiff in an amount that, is substantially less than the damages to which he is indisputably entitled. Once damages are calibrated correctly, the district court should also make an effort to align its award of prejudgment interest (if such interest is requested and warranted) with Title VIPs remedial goals. Because the district court failed to take those steps here, we REVERSE and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with our opinion.
I. BACKGROUND
David Pittington (“Pittington”) worked for Great Smoky Mountain Lumberjack Feud, LLC, (“Lumberjack”), a theater company in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee, for five months in 2012 until he was fired in retaliation for supporting his wife (who was also a Lumberjack employee) in her sexual-harassment complaint against Lumberjack. See R. 74 (Trial Tr. at 2-3,15, 43) (Page ID #2534-135, 2547, 2575). Before being fired, Pittington allegedly suffered a number of additional hardships: he was .demoted and his duties were diminished; his hours were reduced; he was ¡segregated from his coworkers and made to work in an unheated, outdoor shack; and while in the shack, he was denied access to a padded chair that Lumberjack had previously provided, and which he needed because of a pre-existing. medical condition that caused his leg to swell, his back to knot, and his mobility to be impaired if he stood for long period^ of time. See R. 1-1 (Am. Compl. ¶¶ 11-16, 20,24,28) (Page ID #18-22); R. 74 (Trial Tr. at 11, 29-32) (Page ID #2543, 2561-64). Following his termination, Pittington sued Lumberjack in state court, alleging that Lumberjack took adverse actions against him because of his disability,, in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), and because of his involvement in his wife’s sexual harassment complaint, in violation of Title VII and the Tennessee Human Rights Act. R. 1-1 (Am. Compl. ¶¶ 17-29) (Page ID #20-22). Lumberjack removed the case to federal court, R. 1 (Notice of Removal) (Page ID #1-2), and the parties ultimately proceeded to trial before a jury.
At trial, Pittington presented the following evidence of his earnings during and after his employment at Lumberjack:
1, Pittington testified that he began working for Lumberjack in June*796 2012 as a box office clerk. R. 74 (Trial Tr. at 8, 47-48) (Page ID #2540, 2579-80). When asked to approximate his starting salary at Lumberjack, Pittington testified that he earned “[m]aybe $8 an hour” to start. Id. at 8 (Page ID #2540).
2. Pittington recalled receiving two promotions while working at Lumberjack. Soon after he joined Lumberjack, he was promoted from “box office clerk” to “a.m. lead.” Id. at 11 (Page ID #2543). He wgs then promoted again from “lead” to “assistant box office manager.” Id. at 12 (Page ID #2544).
3. On cross-examination, Lumberjack’s counsel inquired into Pittington’s pay raises while at Lumberjack. Lumberjack’s counsel asked, “[Y]our testimony is, I think, you received two promotions, but did you not go from $8 to $10.50 [per hour] once you went to a lead, and there w[ere] no other pay raises?” Id. at 48^19 (Page ID #2580-81). Pittington responded that he would “have to see the paper” because he did not “recall off the top of [his] head.” Id. at 49 (Page ID #2581). He later testified that, “[o]ff the top of [his] head,” he remembered receiving only one pay raise. Id. at 51 (Page ID #2583).
4. Pittington testified that-he typically worked eight hours per day for a total of forty hours per week while working at Lumberjack. Id. at 8, 57 (Page ID #2540, 2589). Lumberjack admitted Pittington’s time cards for his “entire time of employment” into evidence. Id. at 93 (Page ID #2625). Lumberjack’s counsel walked Pit-tington through his time cards on September 28,1 October 1, October 2, and October 8, 2012. Id. at 58-59 (Page ID #2590-91). Pittington agreed that his’ time cards for September 28, October 1, and October 2 show that he worked more than eight hours on three of those four days. Id.
5. After being fired from Lumberjack on October 8, 2012, Pittington testified that he did not gain new employment until April 2013. Id. at 2-3, 59 (Page ID #2534-35, 2591). He testified that he “look[ed] for work during that time.” Id. at 3 (Page ID #2535).
6. Pittington testified that he was hired ' in April 2013 by Perry Smith Development. Id. Pittington worked in- the corporate office for Perry Smith Development handling guest relations. Id. His pay at Perry Smith Development started at $7.25 per hour. Id. He was laid off by Perry Smith Development after a corporate reorganization. Id. at 4 (Page ID #2536). He was laid off “maybe [in] the end of August, beginning of September.” Id. at 3 (Page ID #2535).
7. Pittington testified that his next job was with the Cyrus Family Theater. Id. at 4 (Page ID #2536). That position began in “either May or June” of 2014. Id. He was supposed to receive $500 a week while working there, but his employer “wrote bad checks or just didn’t write a check at all during that time.” Id. at 4-5 (Page ID #2536-37); He worked there until October 2014 and re*797 ceived “[m]aybe one or two checks” during that time. Id. at 5 (Page ID #2537).
8. Pittington testified that he was next employed by Sablé Equestrian Theater in January 2015. Id. at 5 (Page ID #2537). He received $500 or $600 per week while there. Id. at 6 (Page ID #2538). He 'worked at Sablé Equestrian Theater until it went of business in September 2015. Id.
9. Pittington testified that he was next employed by the Clarion Inn, a hotel. Id. at 6 (Page ID #2538). In its jury instructions, the district court informed the jury that “[t]he parties stipulate that Mr. Pittington fully mitigated his damages as of October 12, 2015,” when he secured employment at the Clarion Inn, and therefore “any damages awarded in the form of back pay should not go beyond October 12, 2015,.... as this is the date that Mr. Pittington obtained a new job of like kind, status, and pay.” Pittington,2017 WL 1393718 , at *2.
10. Pittington’s counsel asked Pitting-ton whether it is “hard to keep a good job at a theater in Pigeon Forge.” R. 74 (Trial Tr. at 6) (Page ID #2538). Pittington responded: “I wouldn’t say it’s hard to keep a good job. There’s a lot of theaters in town. I’m not sure if it’s exactly hard to keep a job. There’s a lot of theaters that have—some theaters have employees that have been there quite some time.” Id. at 6-7 (Page ID #2538-39), He then clarified that it was “common in Pigeon Forge” for theaters to “fold[ ].” Id. at 7 (Page ID #2539).
During his closing remarks, Pittington’s attorney urged the jury to award Pitting-ton $40,632.50 in back pay. R. 91 (Trial Tr. at 15) (Page ID #2984). Counsel reached this number by assuming that Pittington would have received $10.60 per hour and worked an average of forty hours per week had he remained employed by Lumberjack. Id. at 14 (Page ID #2983). He stated that Pittington remained unemployed following his termination from Lumberjack for twenty-eight weeks, and thus was owed $11,760 for that time. Id. Pittington then worked for twenty-one weeks beginning in April 2013, but he did not earn as much at Perry Smith Development as he had at Lumberjack, and thus was, according to his counsel, entitled to $4,252.50 in deficiency wages. Id. He was then unemployed again for thirty-five weeks, which counsel calculated as $14,700 in lost wages. Id. at 14-15 (Page ID #2983-84). Pittington then worked at Cyrus Family Theater from June 2014 to October 2014, but received only two paychecks of $500 each during that time, and therefore counsel argued that Pittington was owed $8,240 in in back pay for those twenty-two weeks. Id. at 15 (Page ID #2984). Pittington was unemployed again for three weeks, and then worked at Sablé Equestrian Theater from January 2015 through September 2015. Id. Because Pittington was “making more [money] at a similar job,” Pittington’s attorney conceded that Pittington was not owed any damages for that period. Id. Finally, Pittington was unemployed for another four weeks (after Sablé closed down and before beginning his work at Clarion Inn), and was thereby owed $1,680 in back pay for that period, according to his attorney. Id. All told, the above figures added up to $40,632.50. See id. at 14-15 (Page ID #2983-84).
For his part, Lumberjack’s attorney in closing urged the jury to find that Pitting-ton had failed to mitigate adequately his damages and therefore was not entitled to the full amount of back pay that he requested. In particular, Lumberjack’s counsel stated:
*798 They talked about the money damages. I hope we don’t get to this part of the case; -but if we do, the plaintiff has a duty to mitigate. And one thing that stuck out as the plaintiff was talking about damages, did you hear the time period of 35-weeks unemployed? Pigeon Forge? That’s a long time to not get a job in Pigeon Forge. Fifty-two weeks in a year. That means only 17 weeks employed that year. There’s a duty to mitigate. There’s a duty to get a job.' So do you have to award all the back pay they’re seeking? No.
R. 95 (Trial Tr. at 15) (Page ID #3062).
After deliberations, the jury returned a verdict in Pittington’s favor on his Title VII and Tennessee Human Rights Act retaliation claims.
The district court declined to award front pay, increase Pittington’s back pay award, or hold a new trial as to damages, but it agreed that prejudgment interest on the back pay award was warranted. See Pittington v. Great Smoky Mountain Lumberjack Feud, LLC, No. 3:14-CV-00397,
On appeal, Pittington challenges the district court’s refusal to increase the jury’s damage award or otherwise hold a new trial as to damages, along with the district court’s decision to award prejudgment interest in accordance with the rate set by
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
We review for abuse of discretion a district court’s denial of a motion for a
B. Denial of Motion to Order a New Trial as to Damáges Under Rule 59(a)
In reviewing the district court’s denial of Pittington’s motion for a new trial as to damages, three key principles guide our analysis. First, successful Title VII plaintiffs are presumptively entitled to back pay, and they ought to receive enough back pay to make them whole— “that is, to place [them] in the position [they] would, have been in but for discrimination.” Rasimas v. Michigan Dep’t of Mental Health, 714 F.2d-614, 626 (6th Cir. 1983). It is thus an abuse of discretion to set a back pay award that falls-far short of this restorative goal, see United States v. City of Warren,
Second, the Title VII plaintiff bears the burden of proving damages with “reasonable certainty,” see Blackwell v. Sun Elec. Corp.,
Finally, Tifie VII requires plaintiffs to mitigate damages. Rasimas, 714 F.2d at 623 (citing 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(g)). This rule is designed “to prevent
In light -of the above principles, the district court abused its discretion in this case when it refused to hold a new trial.on the issue of damages. The district court interpreted the jury’s damages award of $10,000 as approximating the compensation Pittington “would have earned from the time he was terminated in October 2012, until he obtained employment in April 2013.” Pittington,
As noted above, plaintiffs in Title VII cases have a duty to mitigate damages, but “‘the burden of producing sufficient evidence to establish the amount of interim earnings or lack of diligence’ in mitigating damages” rests with the defendant. Wooldridge,
Lumberjack contends that the district court did not improperly shift the burden onto Pittington to prove mitigation, but instead properly upheld the damages verdict because the jury had “infer[red] a lack of mitigation.” Appellee Br. at 23. Once again, such an argument is legally tenable only if a reasonable jury could find that Lumberjack proved by a preponderance of the evidence that “substantially equivalent positions” were available to Pit-tington and that Pittington had “failed to use reasonable care and diligence in seeking such positions.” Rasimas, 714 F.2d at 624. But Lumberjack provided no evidence regarding the availability of comparable employment in or around Pigeon Forge and made no effort to demonstrate that Pittington’s job-search process was unreasonable. Compare R. 74 (Trial Tr. at 44-101) (Page ID #2576-2633) (cross-examination of Pittington, in which no mention is made of the Pigeon Forge job market or Pittington’s mitigation efforts), with Ford v. Nicks,
Lumberjack alternatively argues that the district court affirmed the jury’s $10,000 back pay award based on Pitting-ton’s failure to prove damages, for which he bore the burden. In particular, Lumberjack contends that Pittington failed to establish with reasonable certainty either the gross amount of back pay he was owed (i.e., the amount he would have earned between October 2012 and October 2015 had he continued to be employed by Lumberjack) or the amount of wages he earned from the positions he held after being terminated by Lumberjack (i.e., the amount by which his gross damages should be offset): This argument fails on both fronts. First, Pittington testified that his starting salary at Lumberjack was approximately $8 per hour, and he did not disagree with opposing counsel’s statement that his salary was subsequently raised to $10.50 per hour.
Lumberjack’s second argument— that Pittington failed to prove sufficiently his interim earnings—is legally untenable. Lumberjack, not Pittington, bore the burden of proving the amount of Pittington’s interim earnings between discharge and judgment. See Rasimas, 714 F.2d at 623; see also Burton,
Finally, Lumberjack insists that even if Pittington satisfied his burden of production as to his damages, he may 'have failed to meet his burden of persuasion, regardless of whether his testimony “stands un-rebutted.” See Appellee Br. at 12. Once again, this argument inverts the proper burden of proof. The jury could not simply disbelieve Pittington’s testimony as to his earnings between April 2013 and October 2015 and, on that basis, decide that Pit-tington was not entitled to any back pay for those thirty months, particularly' since the jury apparently found that Pittington had established with “reasonable certainty” the amount he would have earned during that time had he remained employed at Lumberjack.
This is not to suggest that a jury is precluded from making credibility determinations when assessing damages in a-discrimination case. A jury may, for instance, decline to award the plaintiffs full claim for back pay, notwithstanding the plaintiffs “testimony that she had been out of work for one year and one month,” where the defendant, “[t]hrough cross-examination, ... proved that [the plaintiff] failed to use reasonable diligence in seeking employment” during that time. Voyles v. Louisville Transp. Co.,
In short, the district court applied an erroneous legal standard to the extent that it held thaj; the jury could find that Pittington had failed reasonably to mitigate his damages without requiring Lumberjack to prove such unreasonableness by a preponderance of the evidence. If the district court instead affirmed the jury’s damages award on the ground that Pit-tington had failed to prove his damages from April 2013 through October 2015, such a decision would still amount to an abuse of discretion because no reasonable jury could find that Pittington had failed to make out a prima facie case as to the issue of damages. Because the $10,000 award Pittington received was “substantially less than [even the lowest estimate of damages that had been] unquestionably proved by the plaintiffs uncontradicted and undisputed evidence,” see Anchor, 94 F.3d at 1021, the district court erred in declining to order a new trial as to the issue of damages.
Although the district court should have ordered a new trial as to damages, it did not abuse its discretion in denying Pittington’s motion to alter or amend the jury’s damage award under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e). The Seventh Amendment provides certain civil litigants in federal court the right to have a jury resolve factual issues. See Dimick v. Schiedt,
As we have previously acknowledged, other circuits have developed two‘narrow exceptions to the prohibition against additur. First, additur may be appropriate when the parties would prefer to consent to an increased damages figure rather than proceed to a new trial as to damages. See Clay v. Gordon,
Pittington contends that the district court abused its discretion by awarding prejudgment interest- on his back pay award at the rate established by the federal postjudgment statute,
Lumberjack, in turn, argues that Pit-tington urged the district court to apply the 10% prejudgment interest rate available to plaintiffs in discrimination cases under Tennessee law, and therefore forfeited the opportunity to argue for a different rate before this court. See Appellee Br. at 26-30. In addition, Lumberjack argues that the federal rate set forth in
We hold that the. district court abused its discretion in applying a prejudgment interest rate of 0.66%. Pittington did not, as Lumberjack and the dissent insist, forfeit its opportunity to argue for a rate other than the 10% maximum authorized by Tennessee law. In response to Lumberjack’s argument that the district court should "adopt the federal post-judgment interest rate in its briefing before that court, Pittington acknowledged that the district court had discretion over “the applicable interest-rate and method of calculation,” and urged the court to “compensate him as completely as possible in light of the circumstances of this case[,] ... [r]egardless of the rate and method the Court chooses to utilize.” R. 83 (PI. Reply in Support of Mot, to Alter/Amend Judgment at 6) (Page ID #2900). In so doing, Pittington adequately argued in favor of a fair rate—.even though we agree that he would have been better served if he had provided the district court with some guidance as to what that rate should be.
On the merits, then, the district court failed to consider adequately case-specific factors before applying the federal statutory rate set forth in
First, the district court observed that Pittington’s requested rate of 10% per year “would be a windfall,” but failed to examine whether 0.66% would afford Lumberjack a windfall in the opposite direction, see Pittington,
Admittedly, Pittington’s failure to provide any information regarding the lost interest value of the money he was owed made it harder for the district court to determine what prejudgment interest rate would fully compensate Pittington “for the true cost of damages [he] incurred.” See City of Warren,
For the foregoing reasons, we ‘ REVERSE the district court’s denial of Pit-tington’s motion for a new trial on the issue of damages, as the district court abused its discretion by applying an erroneous legal standard in its consideration of Pittington’s motion or else made a clear error of judgment in determining that the jury’s award was reasonable in light of Pittington’s uncontroverted evidence as to damages. We also REVERSE the district court’s decision to award prejudgment interest at the rate specified by
. Lumberjack’s attorney referred to the time cards for “October 28, October 1, October 2, and October 8,” but since Pittington’s employment was terminated on October 8, we assume that Lumberjack's attorney was actually referring to Pittington’s time card for September 28 rather than October 28. In any event, the correct date of this time card is not critical to the resolution of this case.
, At the close of Lumberjack’s case, the district court entered a directed verdict in favor of Lumberjack on Pittington’s ADA claim. See Appellee Br. at 3 n.l; R. 66 (Minute Entry for Jury Trial, Day 3) (Page ID #1531). Pittington did not appeal this order.
. Rule 59(e) of the Federal Rules of. Civil Procedure permits parties to file "[a] motion to alter or amend a judgment ... no later than 28 days after the entry of the judgment.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 59(e).
. With respect to jury trials, Rule 59(a) authorizes district courts, cm motion, to grant a new trial as to some or all issues "after a jury trial, for any reason for which a new trial has heretofore been granted in an action at law in federal court.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 59(a)(1)(A).
. Q: Now, when you started at Lumberjack Feud, you began at $8' an hour. Isn't that correct?
A: I believe so.
Q: I think—your testimony is, I think, you received two promotions, but did you not go from $8 to $10.50 once you went to a lead, and there was no other pay raises?
A: I’d have to see the paper. I don’t recall off the top of my head..
Q: [I]s it your testimony that you had—were promoted from clerk to lead? Is that • correct?
A: Yes.
Q: And then from lead to. assistant box office—assistant box office manager?
A: Yes.
Q: And that there was two distinct pay raises?
A: I don’t remember if there was two distinct'pay raises. I know that there was a pay raise with the promotion.
,Q: And so the pay raise that you would remember would be the one pay raise. Do you remember two pay raises?
A: Off the top^ofmy head, I remember one.
R. 74 (Trial Tr. at 48-51) (Page ID #2580-83).
. Indeed, we have previously held that where a defendant indicates that the plaintiff worked at a higher hourly rate than the plaintiff asserts, the jury ought to calculate the back pay award using the higher rate proffered by the defendant. See Tramill v. United Parcel Serv.,
. Pittington’s gross damages equal $65,940 (10.5 hourly rate x 40 hdurs per week x 157 weeks between October 8, 2012 and October 12, 2015). From that number, the jury should have subtracted the $1,000 Pittington earned at Cyrus Family Theater and the $21,000 that Pittington earned during the roughly 35 weeks that he worked at Sablé Equestrian Theater. Finally, assuming the jury was entitled- to presume that Pittington earned as much as he would have earned but for his unlawful termination during his time at Perry Smith Development, it could have deducted an additional $9,240 from the gross award. All told, the final damages figure would amotint to slightly less than $35,000.
Pittington's counsel offered a higher estimate in his closing argument at trial by argu.ing that Pittington should not receive damages for his time working at Sablé Equestrian Theater because his salary there exceeded his
. Notably, the dissent agrees that the jury could have reasonably reached a back pay award of approximately $21,000. The dissent, however, believes that the jury could then deduct $11,200 from the back pay award because Pittington purportedly conceded "that it is not hard to get a job in Pigeon Forge” arid he "could not explain how, or if, any job search efforts came-up short,” and therefore the jury could conclude that Pittington had failed to mitigate damages during his thirty-five. weeks of unemployment. See Dissent Op. at 810-11. As explained above, Lumberjack— not Pittington—bore the burden of proving failure to mitigate. Pittington had no obligation to offer evidence of his job-search efforts unless and until Lumbeijack placéd mitigation in issue. See Jackson,
The dissent correctly observes that Lumberjack could have, in theory, relied on Pitting-ton's testimony to meet its burden. But recall what “failure to mitigate” means: Lumberjack had to show that "substantially equivalent positions ... were available” and that Pitting-ton "failed to use reasonable care and diligence in seeking such positions,” Rasimas, 714 F.2d at 624. A jury could not reasonably glean, from the sole statement that it was riot so hard for long-time theater employees in Pigeon Forge to keep their jobs, that it would have been easy for Pittington to get a comparable job in Pigeon Forge and that he had been lackadaisical in his efforts to do so.
. As the district court noted, the jury’s $10,000 award appears to correspond to the amount Pittington would have received between October 2012 and April 2013 (i.e., his .initial bout of unemployment after being unlawfully terminated). If the jury credited Pit-tington’s testimony regarding his weekly hours and hourly rate, then it had all the information it needed to. calculate the pay Pittington would have received from Lumberjack between April 2013 and October 2015, as well.
. The dissent fears that our decision "run[s] the risk of rewarding a strategic choice gone awry” because Pittington could have offered “W-2s, pay subs, [or] tax returns” to corroborate his statements at trial. Dissent Op. at 811-12. But a litigant is not required to introduce documentary evidence where testimony would suffice. See R & R Assocs., Inc. v. Visual Scene, Inc.,
. As the Supreme Court explained in Dim-ick, remittitur (conditioning the denial of a defendant’s motion for a new trial on the plaintiff's willingness to remit excess damages) is permissible because the amount actually owed was, in a sense, already found by a jury, , and remittitur simply ”lop[s] off an ,excrescence.”
. In Clay, we suggested that additur would be appropriate with the plaintiff’s consent (rather than the parties’ consent), presumably based on the assumption that additur as a remedy presumes that the defendant is willing to pay an increased award in lieu of another trial. For the sake of clarity, we note- that under the additur-by-consent exception to Dimick, both parties must agree to an increased damages award to avoid implicating Seventh Amendment concerns. See Dimick,
. The dissent believes that Pittington’s petition for a fair-rate was too vague and too late to preserve the issue for appeal. See Dissent Op. at 812. But Pittington requested prejudgment interest in his opening brief; he did not then forfeit that request by acknowledging in his reply brief that the district court could decide to award him a lower rate than he believed appropriate. Once a plaintiff asks for prejudgment interest, the trial court must
Dissenting Opinion
DISSENT
dissenting.
It is tempting to join the court’s decision to reverse this $10,000 verdict and to go along with its conclusion that Pittington is entitled to more damages (apparently somewhere between $10,000 and $35,000) and is entitled to more prejudgment interest (apparently something more than $228). The financial stakes are not high. But I cannot “rebuke[ ]” the district court, supra at 800-01, for taking this case as it came to her. Perhaps because of the relatively small amount of money sought by Pittington, his counsel introduced some evidence of damages and neglected many other sources of evidence, making it exceedingly nebulous for anyone—jury, district court judge, appellate judges—-to be sure about what he fairly deserved. And perhaps because of those modest stakes, his counsel made only one argument about prejudgment interest—that he-was'entitled to a 10% per year interest award on the judgment, a princely rate of return if you could get it during the time at hand. Under these circumstances, the district court judge did not exceed her considerable discretion in rejecting Pittington’s request for a new trial on damages and in rejecting his request for a 10% prejudgment interest award on the judgment.
Backpay award. Pittington bases his argument on a black-letter principle: that Lumberjack, the defendant, had the burden to show that he, the plaintiff, failed to mitigate damages. Rasimas v. Mich. Dep’t of Mental Health,
If I understand the court’s contrary conclusion, it turns on a question asked by
Pittington next misapprehends Lumberjack’s burden. As he sees it, Lumberjack must offer its own evidence—from its own witnesses—to meet its lack-of-mitigation burden. But the rule describes a destina-' tion, not the path to take. Lumberjack was free to rely on Pittington’s sworn testimony to carry its burden. His statements are record evidence upon which Lumberjack, the jury, and the district court could rely. Pittington testified on direct examination about three different jobs he held after being fired from Lumberjack. A jury could infer from the existence of those jobs that “substantially equivalent positions” existed in Pigeon Forge. Rasimas,
Pittington also fails to come to grips with the deferential standard of review for challenging the amount of a jury award under Civil Rule 59. The district court may overturn a jury award only if the number is “substantially less than unquestionably proved by the plaintiffs uncontradicted and undisputed evidence.” Anchor v. O’Toole,
The jury’s award also makes sense for what it is worth. The district court mentioned one possible path to $10,000, noting that this figure corresponded to what he would have earned between his firing and his first post-Lumberjack job. But there are many others. Try this one. The jury could have looked at the sparse record (Pittington did not submit the paperwork he received during discovery about his job and salary, presumably because it would have limited his request for damages) and Pittington’s own testimony to use the $8 hourly wage when calculating pre-mitigation backpay. Then it could have multiplied
The exact path to $10,000 of course does not matter. What matters is that the path, indeed paths, exist. See Anchor,
Any other approach runs the risk of disrespecting the jury’s and district court’s ring-side view of the case. We review transcripts for a living. They review witnesses and their credibility for a living. We have a comparative advantage on law. They have comparative advantages on facts. Pitting-ton does not -challenge a single jury instruction. He challenges only how the jury and district court saw the evidence. No appellate court can recreate what the jury saw and the trial judge witnessed, which is why the standard of review is so deferential and why it is so. unconventional to reverse jury trial awards.
It’s not just disrespect of juries and trial judges that should concern us. We also run the risk of rewarding a strategic choice gone awry. Pittington chose not to' add W~ 2s, pay stubs, tax returns, or other typical evidence to the record. Perhaps he feared what those documents might reveal about his pay, working hours, or relationship with Lumberjack—including matters that might go to whether the undérlying merits of his claim' were even valid. Just the same, he chose not to propose alternative methods by which the jury might have calculated an award. He just asked for $40,000, which the majority agrees would have been too much. Perhaps he feared that the jury'would seize on any alternative that might result in a lower number. All we know for sure, and all that matters, is that he chose to rely on spotty testimony and his lawyer’s skill to make the case that $40,000 was the correct amount. By making that strategic choice, he forfeited the opportunity to present additional evidence or argue in the alternative for different amounts. See Estate of Quirk v. Comm’r of Internal Revenue,
The jury .was free to review the evidence and decide what amount of damages he had shown, including perhaps by compromising among competing ways of looking at the evidence, from the perspective of the individual jurors. If reasonable judges can see the same case differently, it shouldn’t surprise anyone that reasonable jurors sometimes see the. same evidence differently. And we should respect efforts to
Pre-judgment interest. Our review of a district court’s decision about pre-judgment interest also is deferential—and also rarely reversed. The court may award prejudgment interest “at its discretion in accordance with general equitable principles,” and we again review the decision for an abuse of discretion. Rybarczyk v. TRW, Inc.,
Making the case easier, Pittington forfeited any contrary argument. In what looks like another strategic decision, Pit-tington argued only for the 10% rate when he moved to alter the judgment. Nowhere in his briefs did he argue below that the district court should have used any other method to calculate pre-judgment interest if the state rate seemed too high. He instead limited’ his claim to the highest amount for which he could realistically hope: the state rate. Generally speaking, district courts do not make reversible errors when they ignore arguments never made.
In reaching a contrary conclusion, the court seizes on this language in Pitting-ton’s lower court briefs: “Regardless of the rate and method the Court chooses to utilize, Mr. Pittington simply requests that the Court compensate him as completely as possible in light of the circumstances of this case.” R. 83 at 6; supra at 807. That does not suffice to preserve this argument or any other for appeal. A litigant does not preserve an argument by making a general request for relief. Even that general idea, worse yet, made its first appearance in a reply brief, which does not preserve an issue for appeal anyway. See Scottsdale Ins. Co. v. Flowers,
The court seeing it differently, I respectfully dissent.
