*1177 Opinion
Barbara M. Fenlon filed this action against Ronnie and Earl Brock, Jo and John Boyd and San Juan Travel for conversion of personal property, fraud, rescission and restitution and breach of contract. The dispute related to the sale, and subsequent repossession, of a travel agency by the Brocks and the Boyds to Fenlon. The Brocks and the Boyds cross-complained against Fenlon for default under a security agreement and repossession of collateral, fraud, interference with economic advantage and breach of contract. Following a jury trial the court entered judgment on a special verdict for Fenlon awarding her $95,000 in compensatory damages and $40,000 in punitive damages. The Brocks and the Boyds were awarded nothing on their cross-complaint; however, the court reduced the compensatory damage award by $39,055.86 which was the amount Fenlon owed them on a promissory note. Motions for a new trial and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict were denied. The Boyds did not appeal. In the published portion of the opinion we reject the Brocks’ contentions that punitive damages could not be awarded in the absence of evidence of their financial position, the punitive damages award is excessive, and that punitive damages violate the Eighth Amendment prohibition against excessive fines.
I
Fenlon purchased San Juan Travel from the Brocks and the Boyds in March 1980 for $95,000. She paid $27,500 cash and executed a promissory note for $67,500 payable in monthly installments. Fenlon was required to place a cash deposit in Brentwood Savings of $25,000 as security for the note. She also executed a security agreement pledging the sublease for the business premises, the furniture, fixtures and equipment, leasehold improvements, the name “San Juan Travel,” the month-to-month leases on the teleticketing machine and computer, and the Air Traffic Conference (ATC) and “LATA” appointments as collateral. To qualify with ATC to own the agency Fenlon hired Ronnie Brock to manage the business for two years after which time Fenlon hoped to be qualified to manage it herself. She also hired Jo Boyd on a part-time basis.
In late 1981 San Juan Travel began to have financial troubles and Fenlon was late with some of the note payments. In November the Brocks and the Boyds suggested to Fenlon that if she brought the note current they would reduce the payments for December and January and add the accrued interest to the principal of the note. Fenlon declined the offer. Instead she borrowed funds and liquidated some personal assets to cover the business expenses.
*1178 On December 4, 1981, ATC, which provided travel agencies with the plates for issuing airline tickets, told Fenlon they had not received the payment on her account. She went to the bank to wire funds. On December 10, ATC told Fenlon the funds had not been received and they were sending someone to pick up the payment or the plates. Ronnie Brock and Jo Boyd became aware of the problem. Fenlon believed the bank had mistakenly failed to send the funds. She did not want to liquidate her other assets to make the payment. Ronnie was convinced ATC was going to pick up the plates. According to Fenlon, on Friday December 11, 1981, the Brocks and the Boyds agreed that the $25,000 security deposit would be released. A $10,000 payment would be applied to the promissory note and the remaining $15,000 would be used to pay all delinquent accounts and for operating expenses. Six checks were drawn on the security deposit account, two payable to ATC for $2,800.44 and $5,350.91, one for $2,565.62 for bank overdrafts, one for $799 for rent, and two checks for $3,500 and $10,000 were made payable to Ronnie.
On Saturday December 12, Ronnie Brock and Jo Boyd met with bank officials regarding the financial condition of the agency. They were told the agency had several bank overdrafts. Fenlon testified she was not told about the meeting or asked to be present. When Fenlon arrived at the office on Monday December 14, Ronnie handed her a letter informing her that she and Jo were repossessing the business. Fenlon was asked to leave and her personal belongings were taken to her car by John Boyd. Ronnie testified they decided to repossess the business because Fenlon was not running it in the manner they thought it should be run and client funds were being jeopardized. Jo Boyd testified they never told Fenlon they felt she was insolvent, or demanded the balance due under the promissory note. She also testified they repossessed the agency because they felt Fenlon was not able to run it effectively, and that she had jeopardized their security.
II
Fenlon was awarded $95,000 in compensatory damages which was reduced by $39,055.86, the amount she owed the Brocks on the promissory note. She was also awarded $40,000 in punitive damages. The Brocks contend the punitive damage award must be reversed because there was insufficient evidence of malice, there was no evidence of the Brocks’ financial condition, and the award is excessive, To justify an award of punitive damages the defendant must be guilty of oppression, fraud or malice and must act with the intent to vex, injure or annoy, or with a
*1179
conscious disregard of plaintiff’s rights. (Civ. Code, § 3294.)
2
Our review begins and ends with a determination of whether there is any substantial evidence, contradicted or uncontradicted, which supports the jury’s conclusion.
(Beck
v.
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.
(1976)
We reject the Brocks’ contention that the punitive damages award cannot stand in the absence of evidence of the Brocks’ net worth.
3
In
Neal
v.
Farmers Ins. Exchange
(1978)
In
Hanley
v.
Lund
(1963)
Since
Hanley,
numerous cases have upheld punitive damage awards absent evidence of the defendant’s wealth. The long-standing rule in California is that the plaintiff may, but is not required to, introduce evidence of the defendant’s financial condition when seeking punitive damages. On the other hand, the defendant may present evidence of his or her inability to pay.
(Greenfield
v.
Spectrum Investment Corp.
(1985)
Other divisions of this court have recently rejected the
Hanley/Vossler
line of cases, holding that a punitive damage award cannot stand absent evidence of the defendant’s financial condition.
(Dumas
v.
Stocker
(1989)
Dumas
relied heavily on
Alhino
v.
Starr
(1980)
Dumas
next relied on
Barragan
v.
Banco BCH
(1986)
*1182 Both Dumas and Grocers Wholesale suggest policy reasons for rejecting the Hanley/Vossler rule. Specifically, they concluded the absence of evidence of the defendant’s net worth could deprive the appellate court of a meaningful review of punitive damages awards and could shift the traditional burden of proof from plaintiff to defendant. We reject both proffered policies. The defendant always has the ability to introduce evidence of his financial condition to preserve a challenge to a punitive damages award on the ground that it is excessive as a percentage of his net worth, and the defendant also has the best access to such information. It is not the duty of a litigant to create a record for an opponent’s potential appeal. Certainly under most circumstances the plaintiff will want to introduce evidence of the defendant’s financial condition, but we find no authority apart from Dumas and Grocers Wholesale that compels the introduction of such evidence.
Requiring plaintiff to prove defendant’s net worth is also unfair to a wealthy defendant and, under current law, potentially unnecessarily time-consuming as well as unfair to all defendants. A wealthy defendant who has been found liable for punitive damages will ordinarily be delighted to have plaintiff omit proof of its net worth and permit the jury to determine the amount without information on the subject. 4 Presumably the award will be low and the defendant will retain the option to contend it is excessive based on the compensatory damages awarded and the conduct involved.
Since plaintiff ordinarily cannot discover information on defendant’s net worth until “a prima facie case of liability for [punitive] damages” has been presented (Civ. Code, § 3295, subd. (a)), a plaintiff who believes the subpoenaed information is inaccurate, incomplete or misleading will be forced to request a continuance during trial to obtain accurate information which he was barred from obtaining earlier. On the other hand, if plaintiff can continue to elect not to present net worth information, the problem may be avoided.
*1183 A defendant of modest means will, under current law, not hesitate in the punitive damages phase of the trial to present his financial situation to the jury. He knows punitive damages will be awarded and has an incentive to minimize the amount. 5 He is not in the position of appearing to concede that his conduct merits punitive damages since that issue is now determined, at his option, in the first phase of a bifurcated trial before his net worth is considered by the jury. (Civ. Code, § 3295, subd. (d).)
Nothing in the record supports the Brocks’ contention that the award itself was excessive. The amount of punitive damages is within the discretion of the jury.
(Nelson
v.
Gaunt, supra,
Finally, we reject the Brocks’ argument that the punitive damages award is an excessive fine under the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section 17 of the California Constitution. There are no grounds on which to find the award excessive. Furthermore, as this is a purely civil penalty between private parties, the Eighth Amendment does not apply.
(Browning-Ferris Industries of Vermont, Inc.
v.
Kelco Disposal, Inc.
(1989)
III-VI *
*1184 The judgment is affirmed.
Crosby, Acting P. J., and Parslow, J., * concurred.
Notes
The degree of proof required under current law is clear and convincing evidence (Civ. Code, § 3294, subd. (a)); however, at the time of trial of this action it was proof by a preponderance of the evidence.
This contention was not presented in the trial court.
Dumas
v.
Stocker, supra,
We note this case was tried under the rules existing prior to January 1, 1988, and the punitive damages were determined in the main action. As we shall discuss, however, the amount awarded was not excessive under the circumstances.
See footnote, ante, page 1174.
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
