*733 MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AND ORDER
I.INTRODUCTION
On October 2,1998, after a five day trial in this cause, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the Plaintiff on all three counts of her complaint. 1 The jury found for the Plaintiff and against Defendant Indiana University (“IU”), on the Plaintiffs Title VII claim, but awarded no compensatory damages against IU. The jury also found for the Plaintiff and against Defendant Cohen on both the Plaintiffs equal protection gender discrimination claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (“ § 1983”), and her state law assault and battery claim, and awarded compensatory damages in the amount of $5,157 against Defendant Cohen. In addition, the jury awarded punitive damages against Cohen in the amount of $400,000 for both the state law and § 1983 claims, for a total punitive damage award of $800,000.
Now before the Court 2 are the Plaintiffs “Motion to Alter or Amend Judgment,” filed on October 9, 1998, and Cohen’s “Motions to Alter or Amend the Judgment and For New Trial,” filed on October 16, 1998. The Plaintiffs motion contends that the verdict is inconsistent and seeks to amend the judgment to include the $ 5,157.00 compensatory damage award against Defendant IU. IU filed a response to the Plaintiffs motion on October 16, 1998, and the Plaintiff has chosen not to file a reply. Cohen’s motion contends that a new trial should be granted for a variety of reasons, or that in the alternative a substantial remittitur should be imposed on the punitive damage award. The Plaintiff filed a response to Cohen’s motion on November 12, 1998, Cohen filed a reply on November 20, 1998, and both motions are ripe for review. For the reasons hereinafter provided, the Plaintiffs Motion to Alter or Amend Judgment will be DENIED, and Defendant Cohen’s Motion to Alter or Amend the Judgment and For New Trial will be GRANTED in part and DENIED in part.
II.STANDARD OF REVIEW
A new trial may be granted under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(a) only where “the verdict is against the weight of the evidence, the damages are excessive, or if for other reasons the trial was not fair to the moving party.”
Mid-America Tablewares, Inc. v. Mogi Trading Co.,
III.PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO ALTER OR AMEND JUDGMENT
Simply stated, the jury in this case was called upon to decide what happened during a meeting between the Plaintiff and Cohen in Cohen’s office, behind closed doors, on November 11, 1994. The Plaintiff testified that Cohen grabbed and forcibly kissed her while reaching inside her blouse to fondle her breasts. Cohen, on the other hand, testified that nothing untoward happened during that meeting. The jury believed the Plaintiffs version, but despite the fact that its liability finding was necessarily linked to this single act, it did not award any compensatory *734 damages against IU, assessing the entire compensatory award against Cohen.
The Plaintiff argues that such a result is inconsistent, and contends that since the jury found liability against both Defendants for the same act of discrimination, it necessarily follows that any resulting compensatory damages must be awarded equally against both Defendants.
3
Thus, the Plaintiffs motion requests the Court to “correct” the judgment to include liability against IU in the amount of $5,157, which would in effect eviscerate the jury’s apportionment of the Plaintiffs damages between the Defendants. The Seventh Circuit has provided clear guidance for analyzing the Plaintiffs argument: “When faced with apparently inconsistent verdict, we are required to reconcile them, if possible, rather than overturn them.”
U.S. EEOC v. Century Broadcasting Corp.,
Stated somewhat differently, the Plaintiff is really requesting the Court to re-write the verdict so that damages are shared jointly and severally between the two Defendants. The Plaintiff has not pointed to any case law to support the notion that joint and several liability applies between an employer found liable under Title VII and an individual (constitutional) tortfeasor found liable under § 1983, and the Court’s own research has not disclosed any opinions even addressing the issue. In any event, it must be recognized that the jury was instructed as follows:
You may impose damages for an injury solely upon the defendant or defendants that you find are liable for that injury ... if you find that both defendants are responsible for a particular injury, you must award damages in proportion to each defendant’s responsibility for that injury.
Court’s Final Instruction No. 35 (emphasis added). Consistent with this instruction, the verdict form permitted the jury to assess compensatory damages separately against Defendant Cohen and Defendant IU. The Plaintiff acquiesced to the use of Instruction No. 35 and the verdict form, and therefore cannot be heard to complain after the fact that the compensatory damages should not
*735
have been apportioned between the Defendants.
Bosco v. Serhant,
Moreover, even assuming that IU could possibly be held jointly and severally liable for Cohen’s act, the particular evidence presented to the jury demonstrated that this was an appropriate case for the jury to properly employ their discretion in apportioning damages between the two defendants.
See Gentile v. County of Suffolk,
For example, the Plaintiff testified repeatedly, both on direct examination and in response to cross-examination, that much of the anger and distress for which she sought compensation was directed at IU’s failure (in her mind) to terminate Cohen’s employment. However, the Court ruled as a matter of law that IU exercised reasonable care to promptly correct Cohen’s sexually harassing behavior,
see Fall,
In sum, the Plaintiff has not established that the jury’s award of $5,157 in compensatory damages against Cohen and zero compensatory damages against IU resulted from a mistake of fact or law. Her theory for joint and several liability is a novel one that is not only unsupported by case law, but was raised for the first time in her Rule 59(e) motion, and most importantly the verdict comports with the instructions and evidence presented to the jury. Therefore, the Plaintiffs motion to alter or amend judgment will be denied.
IV. DEFENDANT COHEN’S MOTION FOR A NEW TRIAL
Cohen advances several reasons why a new trial should be granted as to both liability and damages. We shall address his contentions seriatim.
A. Bifurcation
Cohen’s first point restates a position and argument that the Court has twice considered and twice rejected: Cohen’s proposed bifurcation of the trial. Cohen contends that the Court erred in denying his pre-trial motion to bifurcate the trial into two phases, one limited to the state law assault and battery claim, and then, if necessary, a phase adjudicating the liability components of both the § 1983 and the Title VII claim, as well as the damages components for all three *736 claims. Cohen correctly points out that the latter two claims hinge upon the jury finding that the alleged acts of November 11, 1994, occurred, and opines that that issue should have been resolved without the jury hearing certain evidence relating to the federal law claims (i.e., the evidence pertaining to Cohen’s behavior with other women, which was relevant evidence of Cohen’s intent under the § 1983 claim, and the Boardman report, which was relevant evidence supporting both the Plaintiffs Title VII claim and the Defendant’s Title VII affirmative defense). After reviewing the record a third time, the Court is convinced that no unfairness resulted from denying Cohen’s previous motions to bifurcate the trial. 4
1. Standard
The Seventh Circuit has clearly articulated the standards guiding the bifurcation inquiry:
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 42(b) permits the separate trial of any issue when separation would be “in furtherance of convenience or to avoid prejudice, or when separate trials will be conducive to expedition and economy. Only one of these criteria need be satisfied for a court to enter a separate trial. We review a district court’s bifurcation decisions for abuse of discretion.”
Berry v. Deloney,
2. “In the Furtherance of Convenience or to Avoid Prejudice”
Cohen argues that bifurcation would have been in furtherance of convenience because, as even counsel for the Plaintiff acknowledged, if Cohen had prevailed on the battery claim the trial would have ended at that point. However, it is clear that if the battery claim had been tried first and the Plaintiff had prevailed, a great inconvenience and inefficient use of resources would have occurred for all concerned. For example, IU did not oppose the idea of bifurcation in principle, but significantly conditioned this view on the understanding that while it would remain on the sidelines during the battery phase, it would still be permitted to make an opening statement at the beginning of the § 1983/Title VII phase, and would be allowed to recall any witnesses that testified during the battery phase for either direct or cross-examination. Obviously, the necessity of recalling witnesses from the first phase to testify in the second phase would hardly be “in the furtherance of convenience” for anyone, particularly the witnesses themselves.
However, the main thrust of Cohen’s argument is that bifurcation was necessary to avoid the extreme prejudice that he purportedly suffered from the introduction of evidence about his behavior towards other women and the conclusions of the Boardman report. According to Cohen, this evidence “destroy[ed] the possibility of a fair trial by no later than the second day.” Cohen’s Reply Mem. to his Motion for a New Trial, at 3. This rather self-serving view of the trial proceedings overlooks the legal effect of the limiting instructions given by the Court to the jury each time such allegedly prejudicial evidence was introduced, admonitions which were also repeated in the Court’s final instructions.
5
Indeed, the Seventh Circuit held
*737
in
Berry
that the use of similar limiting instructions “dispelled any potential prejudice” from the introduction of potentially prejudicial evidence,
Berry,
Moreover, the fact that proper limiting instructions dispelled the prejudicial effect of the disputed evidence in Berry weighs heavily against Cohen’s claim of undue prejudice in this case. Berry involved a § 1983 action by a high school student against a school truant officer with whom she allegedly had a non-consensual sexual relationship. In addition to emotional distress damages, the plaintiff sought damages for the physical pain of being impregnated by the defendant, and for her subsequent abortion. The truant officer could not deny that he had sexual relations with the student, having pleaded guilty to “statutory rape” in state court on that score, but defended against the § 1983 action by denying that he had impregnated the student, and by arguing that her asserted damages stemmed from other abortions she had undergone. To this end, the truant officer sought to present evidence of the student’s sexual activity with others during the time of his contact with her, as well as evidence of her other abortions both before and after his contact with her.
The trial court determined, pursuant to Fed.R.Evid. 403, that this evidence was admissible only as to the issue of damages. 7 As Cohen did here, the student moved to bifurcate the trial into a liability and damages phase in an effort to keep this inflammatory evidence from tainting the jury’s liability determination. The trial court denied the motion, stating that a limiting instruction, would dissipate any threat of undue prejudice. As discussed supra, the Seventh Circuit held that this course of action did not constitute an abuse of discretion, particularly since the trial court had weighed the probative value of the evidence against its prejudicial effect, and had employed an appropriate limiting instruction.
In our view, the degree of potential prejudice associated with the evidence objected to by Cohen pales in comparison to the prejudicial effect of the evidence' relating to the Berry plaintiffs sexual history and previous abortions. Notably, however, this Court acted almost identically to the trial court in Berry, balancing the probative value of the evidence against its prejudicial effect, finding that this evidence was admissible for limited purposes, and so instructing the jury each and every time this evidence was presented. Moreover, this Court, as did the trial court in Berry, reinforced the admonitions by repeat *738 ing them in the final instructions. Given that the Seventh Circuit affirmed the trial court in Berry, a much closer case, we do not believe that the refusal to bifurcate the trial here constituted an error of law, or resulted in an unfair trial.
3. _ “Conducive to Expedition and Economy ”
As mentioned
supra;
it is evident that if the trial had been bifurcated according to Cohen’s plan, and if the Plaintiff had prevailed in the first phase, then many of the witnesses and much of the testimony presented in the first phase would have to be presented again in the second phase, a result which obviously would not have been condu: eive to expedition and economy. As the Court explained in its prior rulings, this case does not resemble a personal injury action, where liability and damages evidence can be neatly compartmentalized. In fact, it was clear prior to trial that the parties intended to present evidence relating to the Plaintiffs alleged emotional damages to either establish or refute whether Cohen’s alleged act actually took place.
See Martin v. Heideman,
This point illustrates the rather one-sided nature of Cohen’s bifurcation argument, in that the economies and expediency that bifurcation is designed to achieve would only have been realized if Cohen had prevailed in the first phase. This evinces a rather limited utility of the bifurcation procedure, and stands at odds with the Seventh Circuit’s recent emphasis that the district court must “carve at the joint” when bifurcating pursuant to Rule 42(b).
In re Rhone-Poulenc Rorer, Inc.,
B. The Jury’s Liability Determination Was Not Against the Weight of the Evidence
Cohen argues that the jury’s liability determination was not supported by the weight of the evidence. However, as explained
supra,
this case was a paradigm “he said/she said” dispute, because the Plaintiff and Cohen are the only two people who really know whether the alleged events actually occurred. Accordingly, credibility was the jury’s paramount consideration. While Cohen argues that the Plaintiffs testimony was so “problematic” that it simply could not be believed, our review of his Rule 59(a) motion is “limited to determining whether the evidence presented, combined with all reasonable inferences that may be drawn from it, is sufficient to support the verdict when viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.”
Hutchison v. Amateur Electronic Supply, Inc.,
C. Punitive Damages
Cohen’s motion also raises several arguments for a new trial that are limited to the issue of punitive damages. 8
1. The Punitive Award Does Not ■ Invalidate the Liability Determination
Cohen’s first argument is that the excessiveness of the punitive damages award ($800,000.00), when compared to the jury’s compensatory damages award of $5,157.00, demonstrates that the jury was infected with such an irrational “inflamed passion” that its liability determination must be questioned.
See Ustrak v. Fairman,
Cohen’s argument that the jury’s liability determination should be set aside on the basis of the unreasonable punitive damage award is undermined by the jury’s relatively modest compensatory damages award of $5,157 (an amount which, as noted
supra,
Cohen does not suggest is excessive or unreasonable). In our view, the apparent reasonableness of the compensatory award supports a belief that the jury arrived at its liability determination in a calculated and proportionate manner. This conclusion is bolstered by the fact that the jury was properly instructed that compensatory and punitive damages are awarded for very separate and distinct purposes.
Compare
Court’s Final Instruction No. 28 (explaining purpose of compensatory damages),
with
Court’s Final Instruction Nos. 30
&
31 (explaining purpose of punitive damages).
9
Thus, the fact that the jury’s punitive damages award may represent an unreasonable attempt at “over deterrence,” or a disproportionate punishment, does not indicate that their liability determination was similarly flawed, particularly in light of the apparently reasonable compensatory award. Indeed, Cohen has pointed to “nothing in the record, other than the size of the [punitive] award, to impeach the objectivity of the jury or the fairness of the proceedings.”
Dorin v. The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States,
2. The Punitive Awards Are Not Duplicative
Cohen also challenges the jury’s punitive damages award as duplicative, in that it awards the Plaintiff twice for one injury.
See, e.g., Indiana Harbor Belt R.R. Co. v. American Cyanamid Co.,
The jury in this case was instructed, without objection, to consider punitive awards that would both punish past acts and deter similar future acts of two separate and distinct types of conduct; a state common law prohibition against rude, insolent touching on the one hand, and a federal constitutional prohibition of intentional gender discrimination on the other.
12
The jury was further instructed that it was not to compensate the Plaintiff twice for the same injury.
See
Court’s Final Instruction No. 35. Therefore, the jury’s award of compensatory damages on both the state law and § 1983 claims could reasonably represent an intent to punish and deter Cohen’s disregard for each of the unique types of improper conduct which it was called upon to consider, namely Indiana’s state policy against violence and the federal constitution’s prohibition against gender discrimination.
See Mason,
The jury’s intent to award punitive damages separately for each type of improper conduct presented to them is clearly evidenced by their answers to the two special interrogatories posed to them. The special interrogatory that was originally incorporated into their verdict form required the jury to specifically identify the standard of proof upon which they based their award of punitive damages on the § 1983 claim. The jury’s answer indicated that their § 1983 punitive award was based upon a preponderance of the evidence, which of course differs
*741
from the clear and convincing standard upon which they were required to base their state law punitive award.
See
Court’s Instruction No. 30;
Travelers Indem. Co. v. Armstrong,
Moreover, the jury was provided with an opportunity to explicitly explain their intentions with regard to their punitive damages award when they first returned their verdict. While initially reviewing the verdict form prior to its publication, the Court observed that the jury had awarded the exact same amount of punitive damages ($400,000) on both the state law and § 1983 claims, which raised a question of whether the jury had intended their total punitive damages award for both claims to be $400,000 or $800,000 in total. The Court discussed this concern with all counsel at a sidebar conference, then prepared a second special interrogatory to allow the jury to correct this potential ambiguity by specifying the total amount of punitive damages it intended to award.
See
Partial Transcript of Proceedings Pertaining to the Jury’s Verdict held on October 2,1998, at 24-29. The jury answered the special interrogatory by indicating that its total assessment of punitive damages was $800,000, which unequivocally indicated its intention to punish Cohen on both- available theories.
Mason,
The Court’s employment of the second special interrogatory also raises another point, because the Court’s discussions with counsel about this aspect of the jury’s verdict obviously alerted all counsel to the possibility that the jury might return a punitive damage award on both the state law claim and the § 1983 claim.
14
Significantly, the Court also allowed all counsel the opportunity to make any objections to the second special interrogatory prior to presenting it to the jury, but no objections were made. See Partial Transcript of Proceedings Pertaining to the Jury’s Verdict held on October 2,1998, at 28-29. Cohen’s failure to object to the use of the verdict form prior to trial, and particularly his failure to object to the special interrogatory that sought clarification from the jury on this very point, would appear to preclude him from now arguing that the jury’s award was duplicative. See
Bogan,
8. The Punitive Awards Were Supported By Sufficient Evidence
Cohen asserts that the jury’s award of punitive damages as to both the state law and § 1983 claims were not supported by sufficient evidence, and therefore must be vacated. As to the assault and .battery claim,
[p]unitive damages must be supported by clear and convincing evidence. The evidence must overcome the presumption the defendant’s conduct was merely negligent or the result of some honest error. Punitive damages are only recoverable upon evidence the defendant acted with malice, fraud, gross negligence, or oppression which did not result from mistake of law or fact, honest error of judgment, over-zealousness, mere negligence or other human failing. The defendant is cloaked with the rebuttable presumption his actions, though perhaps tortious, were nevertheless nonini-quitous human failings.
*742
Watson, 559
N.E.2d at 1210 (internal citations omitted). Punitive damages are appropriate in § 1983 cases when the defendant’s conduct is “motivated by evil intent or callous indifference to the federally-protected rights” of the plaintiff.
Graham v. Satkoski, 51
F.3d 710, 714 (7th Cir.1995) (citations omitted);
see also Smith v. Wade,
As we have discussed, this case came down to a credibility contest, and we will not question the jury’s acceptance of the Plaintiffs testimony that Cohen grabbed her, forcibly kissed her, forced his hand down her blouse, and fondled her breast. This forceful and deliberate act is clearly sufficient to support an award of punitive damages on both claims.
Merriweather v. Family Dollar Stores of Indiana, Inc.,
4. Ind.Code § 34-51-3-4 Does Not Apply
Cohen also points to a “tort reform” measure enacted by the Indiana legislature on July 1, 1998, 15 to argue that the Plaintiffs state law punitive damage award must be reduced as a matter of law. The statute at issue provides that:
A punitive damage award may not be more than the greater of:
(1) three (3) times compensatory damages awarded in the action; or
(2) fifty thousand dollars ($50,000).
Ind.Code § 34-51-3-4 (1998) (emphasis added). Cohen contends that although this statute was enacted after this case was filed, it nevertheless applies retroactively and mandates that the Plaintiffs damages be limited to three times her compensatory damage award, or $15,471. 16 We disagree.
The analysis employed by the Indiana courts to determine whether a statute should be given prospective or retroactive effect is well established:
Whether a statute or amendment is to be applied retroactively to pending cases or only prospectively depends on the legislature’s intent. Absent an express indication otherwise, we presume that the legislature intends statutes and amendments to apply prospectively. Strong and compelling rear sons must exist for retroactive application.
Chesnut v. Roof,
Even if we were to assume
arguendo
that the statute is indeed procedural in nature,
17
that would not end our inquiry, be
*743
cause the Indiana Supreme Court has long held that a statute is not to be applied retroactively merely because it is procedural in nature.
See State ex rel. Uzelac v. Lake Criminal Court,
Cohen also argues that it is obvious that the legislature intended Ind.Code § 34-51-3-4 to be retroactive, because it applies to
“all
cases in which a party requests the recovery of punitive damages,”
id.
(emphasis added), while Ind.Code § 34-51-2-1 (1998), (which deals with comparative fault and was also enacted as part of Ind.P.L. 1-1998), is expressly limited to actions accruing after January 1, 1985.
See
Ind.Code § 34-51-2-1(b)(2) (1998). According to Cohen, the fact that Ind.Code § 34r-51-3-4 contains no date restriction .implicitly indicates that the legislature intended the punitive damages “cap” to apply retroactively. However, this exact “comparison” argument was squarely rejected by the Indiana Court of Appeals in
Ches-nut,
which held that retroactivity cannot be implied from the legislature’s silence within a particular statutory section, even when another section of the same statute contains an express effective date limitation.
Chesnut,
5. Remittitur
In the alternative, Cohen seeks a remittitur of the jury’s total punitive damage award of $800,000 on that ground that it is grossly excessive and inconsistent with applicable law. The jury’s damage calculations are entitled to great deference, and the Court may only vacate the jury’s verdict if the award is either “monstrously excessive,” “shocks the judicial conscience,” has “no rational connection to the evidence,” or clearly appears “to be the result of passion and prejudice.”
E.g., McNabola v. Chicago Transit Auth.,
Cohen, apparently mindful of the difficulties inherent in determining the point at which a damage award ceases to become “reasonable” and enters the realm of the “monstrously excessive,” suggests that the Court apply the guideposts articulated by the Supreme Court in
BMW of North America, Inc. v. Gore,
Degree of Reprehensibility
The first and most important indici-um of the reasonableness of a damages award is the reprehensibility of the defendant’s conduct.
BMW,
On the other hand, it must be recognized that this was in reality not a particularly vicious or prolonged attack (the incident by the Plaintiffs own account lasted approximately 30 seconds), as evidenced by the fact that the Plaintiff did not suffer any physical injuries from the encounter. “That conduct is sufficiently reprehensible to give rise to tort liability, and even a modest award of exemplary damages, does not establish the high degree of culpability that warrants a substantial punitive damages award.”
BMW,
—$500,000 to each of two plaintiffs, aged seven and ten, who were repeatedly raped, sodomized, and otherwise sexually abused;
—$200,000 awarded to a plaintiff who was raped at knife point by an acquaintance who slashed her face and clothes; and
—$100,000, reduced from $275,000, awarded to a plaintiff who was sexually touched as a child by her stepfather.
Mathie,
The conduct punished in these eases was far more violent and reprehensible than Cohen’s, yet the jury here awarded punitive damages several times greater than these amounts. This observation is not meant to belittle the Plaintiffs claim or her injuries, for “unchecked sexual harassment” such as the Plaintiff described here can clearly inflict substantial harm. Nevertheless, we must conclude that the punitive award here grossly exceeds the relative enormity or reprehensibility of Cohen’s conduct.
BMW,
Ratio
Cohen is quick to point out that the punitive damages awarded are approximately 155 times greater than the compensatory award, a ratio that he contends would cause a windfall of damages for the Plaintiff. In response, the Plaintiff recites
BMW’s
admonition against applying a simple mathematical formula to the excessiveness inquiry, as well as
*746
the majority’s recognition that in some circumstances a low award of compensatory damages may properly support a high punitive award.
BMW,
Sanctions for Comparable Misconduct The third indicium of excessiveness articulated in
BMW
is a comparison between the award and “the civil or criminal penalties that could be imposed for comparable misconduct,” because “a reviewing court should accord ‘substantial deference’ to legislative judgments concerning the appropriate sanctions for the conduct at issue.”
BMW,
A canvassing of the case law and relevant treatises has uncovered few reported decisions challenging punitive damage awards in sex discrimination or sexual harassment cases under § 1983. In
Gutzwiller v. Fenik,
Some scale has also been supplied by the Seventh Circuit in some recent Title VII sexual harassment decisions. In
Timm v. Progressive Steel Treating, Inc.,
Cohen is Personally Liable for the Judgment
The enormity of the total punitive award in this case also warrants consideration of a factor that was not before the Supreme Court in
BMW:
Cohen is an individual with a salary of approximately $90,000 a year, according to his trial testimony, and not a multi-national corporation. That is to say, “although [Cohen] did have some notice as to the gravity of his conduct, nothing could conceivably have prepared him for a punitive damage award amounting to the sacrifice of the better part of a [professor’s pre-tax] pay for a decade.”
Lee,
Indeed, the Seventh Circuit recognized in
Kemezy,
*748
This entire discussion leads to the inescapable conclusion that the jury’s punitive damage award is impermissibly excessive and must be reduced by the Court. However, we will not undertake this task in a vacuum, because the jury “plainly intended to award a significant amount in punitive damages and this intention must be given due regard.”
Florez,
This conclusion finds support in the Seventh Circuit’s long standing approach of analyzing challenged damage awards to determine whether they are out of line with analogous cases.
E.g., Cooper,
Of course, the Court may not arbitrarily reduce the Plaintiffs punitive damage award, because doing so would infringe upon her Seventh Amendment right to a jury trial.
Hetzel v. Prince William County, Virginia,
V. CONCLUSION
For all the foregoing reasons, the Plaintiffs motion to alter or amend the judgment is DENIED. Defendant Cohen’s motion for a new trial is GRANTED as to his request for a remittitur of the punitive damage award, but is DENIED in all other respects. Within twenty (20) days of this Order the Plaintiff will either accept or reject the re-mittitur of $375,000 on the state law punitive award and $375,000 on the § 1983 punitive award. If accepted, a punitive damage award of $25,000 will entered on both the state law and the § 1983 claims. If rejected, the jury’s punitive damages award will be vacated and a new trial will be granted solely as to the amount of punitive damages to be awarded.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. This Opinion will assume familiarity with the relevant facts, which can be gleaned from the Court’s denial of the Defendant’s motion for summary judgment found in Fall v. Indiana University Bd. of Trustees, 12 F.Supp.2d 870 (N.D.Ind.1998).
. Jurisdiction of the undersigned Magistrate Judge is based on 28 U.S.C. § 636(c), all parties consenting.
. The Court notes that counsel for the Plaintiff failed to raise this argument after the verdict was returned, but before the jury was discharged, despite the fact that the issue was raised by the Court at a bench conference prior to the discharge of the jury.
See
Partial Transcript of Proceedings Pertaining to the Jury’s Verdict Held on October 2, 1998 (filed December 14, 1998), at 24-29. In some circuits, the failure to object to an allegedly inconsistent verdict before the jury is discharged waives the argument.
See Coleman v. Lane,
No. 92 C 2726,
However, it is clear that waiver would apply here if the verdict could properly be considered a "Special Verdict" or a "General Verdict Accompanied by Interrogatories” under Fed.R.Civ.P. 49(a) or (b), rather than a general verdict.
See Strauss v. Stratojac Corp.,
Nevertheless, as discussed
infra
the Plaintiff has waived any argument that can be construed as an indirect attack on the jury instructions or the verdict form itself.
Bogan v. Stroud,
. The possibility of bifurcation was raised for the first time in the first final pretrial conference held in this case on July 31, 1998. At that time the Court believed the concept deserved serious consideration, and called for the parties to brief the subject. All parties filed both initial briefs and responses to support their positions on bifurcation, which provided much of the basis for the Court's initial denial of the motion to bifurcate in its Memorandum of Decision and Order dated September 4, 1998. On September 14, 1998, Defendant Cohen filed what the Court construed to be a motion to reconsider, inter alia, the Court’s decision on the bifurcation issue, which the Court denied on September 17, 1998.
. The Court repeatedly admonished the jury that they were to consider such evidence only for the purposes of establishing Cohen's intent to discriminate based upon gender, or to show that IU may have had prior notice of alleged acts of Cohen before November 11, 1994. Each limiting instruction further admonished the jury that this evidence was not to be considered for any other purpose, and emphasized that liability attached, if at all, only as to Defendant Cohen’s conduct on November 11, 1994.
The final jury instructions re-emphasized the point:
During the course of the trial you were instructed that certain evidence could only be *737 considered by you for limited purposes. Some evidence was only allowed for the limited purpose of determining the Plaintiff’s damages, if any, and some evidence was for the limited purpose of showing that Defendant Indiana University may have had prior notice of information pertaining to alleged acts of Defendant Cohen before November 11, 1994, and some evidence was for the limited purpose of showing Defendant Cohen's intent to discriminate based upon gender. Where so limited, this evidence may not be considered for any other purpose, because liability attaches, if at all, only as to Defendant Cohen's conduct on or after November 11, 1994.
Court's Final Instruction No. 14.
. Cohen's argument necessarily suggests that the jury failed to follow the Court's limiting and final instructions. However, we must presume that the jury followed its instructions.
Berry,
. As alluded to supra, .this Court, found, and Cohen appears to concede, that the evidence to which he objects was relevant to the Plaintiff's federal claims. Thus, Cohen’s argument on the motion to bifurcate, as well as the Rule 403 and Rule 404 objections he raised in his motion in limine, is limited to the fact that the prejudicial effect of this evidence substantially outweighed its probative value.
. Cohen’s motion for a new trial does not take . issue with the jury’s compensatory damages award. Therefore, this Order, and the remittitur that will be applied, will not affect the compensatory award.
.
See Memphis Community Sch. Dist. v. Stachura,
.In
Ustrak,
the jury had awarded $15,000 in punitive damages for what the Seventh Circuit described as "at worst a trivial deprivation” of the plaintiff prisoner’s First Amendment rights, stating that "[a]ny award of punitive damages in excess of $1,000 would be unconscionable.”
Ustrak,
*740 In contrast, the Plaintiff in this case clearly suffered more than a trivial deprivation of her constitutional rights, and, as explained supra, the juty's relatively reasonable compensatory damages award does not support an inference that its liability decision was tainted by passion or prejudice.
. The Court notes that the Supreme Court’s thorough decision in
BMW of North America v. Gore,
. Compare Court's Final Instruction No. 19 (outlining the elements of the assault and battery claim), and Court’s Final Instruction No. 30 ("Punitive damages may be awarded [on the assault and battery claim] in such sum as you believe will ... deter the defendant and others like him from like conduct in the future.”) (emphasis added), with Court's Final Instruction No. 25 (outlining the elements of the § 1983 gender discrimination claim), and Court’s Final Instruction No. 31 ("you should consider whether punitive damages are likely to deter or prevent other persons from performing wrongful acts similar to those Defendant Cohen may have performed [in violation of § 1983]”) (emphasis added).
.The Ninth Circuit relied upon the
Mason
decision in a subsequent unreported decision upholding a jury’s award of punitive damages on both a § 1983 sexual harassment claim and a state law intentional infliction of emotional distress claim.
See Mockler v. Multnomah County,
. Of course, the verdict form itself allowed for the jury to return two punitive damage awards, and no one objected to its use.
. Ind.P.L. 1-1998, § 47, July 1, 1998.
. Cohen contends that the Indiana Legislature intended to cap punitive damages at three times compensatories in cases such as this one, where the trebled compensatory amount does not exceed $50,000, because, as he astutely points out, "[o]therwise ... courts would be enmeshed in figuring [whether] to award greater than three times compensatory damages in the smallest of punitive damage cases.” This may well have been the legislature’s intent, but the plain wording of the statute does not speak to the lesser of three times compensatories or $50,000. Indeed, the statute clearly employs the permissive command “may,” and therefore plainly permits courts to "cap” punitive damages at the greater of either three times compensatories or $50,000. Whether the legislature actually intended this seemingly curious result, or whether the statute should be interpreted differently from its plain meaning will presumably soon be the matter of substantial attention in Indiana courts. However, given our holding that the statute should not be applied retroactively, we shall not be the first court to make this determination.
.Cohen argues that Ind.Code § 34-51-3-4 is purely procedural in nature even though it affects the Plaintiff’s right to punitive damages.
See Landgraf v. USI Film Products,
The Court does not share Cohen’s conviction that the statute does not affect substantive rights.
See Eddy v. McGinnis,
.
Accord Metro Holding Co. v. Mitchell,
. Moreover, it would be inappropriate to infer that the legislature implicitly intended for Ind. Code § 34-51-3-4 to apply retroactively if any other statutory amendment enacted as part of the rather far reaching Ind.P.L. 1-1998 affects substantive rights.
See Chesnut,
. Although the Court will not give retroactive effect to Ind.Code § 34-51-3-4 (1998), we do acknowledge that the statute indicates the legislature’s clear intent to limit punitive damage awards in state tort actions.
BMW,
. We recognize that Title VII cases do not present a perfect analogy to the instant case, because Title VII damage awards are recovered from employers, while § 1983 awards may, as in this case, be recovered from an individual defendant who is not indemnified by his employer. As discussed more fully infra, this distinction weighs in favor of Cohen.
. The Court is aware that in
Keenan v. Philadelphia,
.We also observe that Congress has imposed a maximum combined punitive and compensatory limit in sexual harassment cases under Title VII of $300,000 for those employers with more than 500 employees, and a combined punitive and compensatory limit of $50,000 for those employ *748 ers with between 14 and 101 employees. 42 U.S.C. § 1981a(b)(3)(A), (D).
