Lead Opinion
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
I. INTRODUCTION
This case clarifies the availability of non-economic damages when an insurer has will
When an insurer has wrongfully refused to pay benefits to an insured, the insured may, under certain circumstances, seek remedies under contract law, tort law, and the Colorado Auto Accident Reparations Act (“No Fault Act” or “Act”). §§ 10-4-701 et seq., 3 C.R.S. (2002). In this case, Gioacchi-no (Jack) Giampapa filed all three types of actions against the American Family Mutual Insurance Company and a jury awarded Giampapa damages under all claims. Under the contract claim specifically, the jury awarded Giampapa $900,000 in economic and non-economic “special damages” for American Family’s willful-and-wanton breach of contract. This award did not duplicate any of Giampapa’s tort or statutory damages. On appeal today is the issue of whether Giampapa may recover complete non-economic damages under his common law contract claim.
We hold that a complete range of non-economic damages is available when an insurer has willfully and wantonly breached its contract with an insured, so long as the damages are foreseeable at the time of contracting and the damages are a natural and probable result of the breach. We begin our discussion with a summary of the underlying facts of this case and an explanation of its complex procedural history. Next, we address the threshold issue of whether a common law contract claim can coexist with a statutory claim under the No Fault Act, and conclude that the No Fault Act does not preempt a contract claim. We then address contract claims specifically, explaining (1) the background of Colorado’s existing “willful- and-wanton” rule; (2) why we retain the rule today; and (3) why the scope of the rule allows an insured to recover complete non-economic damages not limited to “mental anguish.” Finally, we apply Colorado’s willful-and-wanton rule to Giampapa and find that (1) the “law of the case doctrine” is inapplicable here; (2) his case satisfies the elements of the willful-and-wanton rule; and (3) the full $900,000 award stands because American Family has waived its section 13-21-102.5(3)(a), 5 C.R.S. (2001), statutory cap argument. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and reinstate Giampapa’s original special damages award in its entirety.
II. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In 1992, a vehicle traveling at 35-45 miles per hour rear-ended Giampapa while he was stopped at a stop sign. After the initial impact, a second vehicle crashed into the first vehicle, causing another collision. Giampapa suffered numerous serious injuries, including spinal fractures, head and neck injuries, torn knee cartilage, and severe numbness in his arms and legs.
At the time of the accident, the defendant American Family Mutual Insurance Company (“American Family”) was Giampapa’s automobile insurance carrier. Giampapa was covered under a “deluxe” insurance plan, for which he paid a higher premium and which provided additional benefits beyond the basic personal injury protection (“PIP”) coverage required by the No Fault Act. Namely, American Family agreed to pay for medical care provider bills and for reasonable and necessary durable medical equipment.
Following the accident, Giampapa began a physical therapy regimen that included hydrotherapy, treadmill walking, and strengthening exercises. Giampapa’s physicians believe that he probably will need to continue this physical therapy for the rest of his life. On his physicians’ advice, Giampapa attended these physical therapy sessions three to five times a week and had to drive approximately sixty miles, round trip, to attend each of these sessions.
Soon, the strain of this frequent and time-consuming drive began to substantially aggravate his condition and to negate the positive effects of the therapy. In light of these circumstances, Giampapa’s physicians concluded that he would be better off with a treadmill and weight machine for home use. Such home equipment would allow Giampapa to continue physical therapy without having to make the strenuous drive, thus his therapy would be more effective. His physicians also prescribed a special therapeutic chair that
American Family was advised of the medical opinion that this home medical equipment was necessary to help Giampapa recover from his injuries, but American Family repeatedly refused to pay for such items. Furthermore, in addition to refusing to pay for the medical equipment, American Family failed to pay some of Giampapa’s medical care provider bills and paid other bills months late. As a result, Giampapa received numerous collection notices from his medical providers about his failure to pay for their services.
All of these events had a devastating impact on Giampapa’s life. Because of American Family’s failure to pay the above benefits, Giampapa was required to continue his sixty-mile drives to his physical therapy sessions, three to five times a week. He consumed large amounts of pain medications to offset the diminished effectiveness of his physical therapy, and he endured substantial side effects from these medications. His personal relationships with his family degenerated as he became increasingly irritable and withdrawn, and his condition eventually forced him to shut down his business.
Giampapa ultimately filed suit against American Family for failing to make timely medical provider payments and for failing to pay for reasonable and necessary medical equipment. Giampapa argued that American Family’s actions constituted a common law breach of contract, a statutory violation of the No Fault Act, and a tortious bad faith breach of contract. A jury trial found for Giampapa on all claims.
Under the contract action, the jury found that American Family had willfully and wantonly breached its contract with Giampapa by failing to pay for $10,574.59 worth of reasonable and necessary durable medical equipment, causing him to suffer an additional $900,000 in special damages. Furthermore, the jury found that American Family had willfully and wantonly failed to pay $9,336.74 in medical care provider bills in a timely fashion.
Because the jury found that American Family’s conduct was willful and wanton, the trial court, pursuant to section 10-4-708(1.8) of the No Fault Act, 3 C.R.S. (2001), trebled “the amount of unpaid benefits recovered in the proceeding.” Specifically, the trial court awarded Giampapa three times the amount of the actual value of the medical equipment and three times the amount of the actual value of unpaid medical care provider bills.
Finally, under the tort action, the jury found that American Family had breached the insurance contract in tortious bad faith, entitling Giampapa to $100,000 in economic damages and $200,000 in non-economic damages. Neither amount duplicated the special damages under the contract claim. The jury also determined that American Family’s breach was willful and wanton beyond a reasonable doubt, thus warranting punitive damages in the amount of $300,000.
After the trial court issued its order, this case began a long and convoluted journey through an appeal, a limited retrial, and a second appeal. We now summarize this complex procedural history.
First, American Family appealed the $900,000 special damages award on the basis that the No Fault Act is the exclusive remedy for an insurer’s willful-and-wanton breach of an automobile insurance contract. The court of appeals rejected this argument, allowing Giampapa to recover special damages under common law contract principles. Giampapa v. American Family Mut. Ins. Co.,
This court denied cross-petitions for certiorari review of Giampapa I. American Family Mut Ins. Co. v. Giampapa, No. 96SC43,
At retrial, the jury awarded Giampapa $125,000 on the sole issue of mental anguish. The trial court reduced this award to $50,000 pursuant to section 13-21-102.5(3)(a), 5 C.R.S. (2001), which generally limits total non-economic damages in civil suits to $250,000.
Meanwhile, we reversed Thomas Decker I in the case of Decker v. Browning-Ferns Indus, of Colo., Inc.,
In the second appeal, Giampapa was the party seeking relief from the court of appeals. Giampapa argued for reinstatement of his original $900,000 special damages award in light of our Thomas Decker II decision. At this stage, the court of appeals declined to reconsider Giampapa I, believing the law had not changed because the court considered “inconvenience and emotional distress” to be mere subsets of “mental suffering.” Giampapa v. Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co.,
We granted certiorari to determine whether the court of appeals properly refused to reconsider Giampapa I in light of our Thomas Decker II decision regarding non-economic damages for a willful-and-wanton breach of contract. We also, sua sponte, requested briefing from the parties on the issues of whether the longstanding willful-and-wanton rule should stand and, if so, whether complete non-economic damages — not limited to “mental anguish” — are available for a willful- and-wanton breach.
We answer the above questions in the following order of analysis: First, we address the threshold issue of whether a common law contract claim can coexist with a No Fault Act claim when an insurer has wrongfully refused to pay insurance benefits. Second, we address the availability of non-economic damages in contract cases under Colorado’s willful-and-wanton rule. Third, we apply Colorado’s willful-and-wanton rule to Giam-papa and find it proper to reinstate his original special damages award in its entirety.
III. ANALYSIS
A. The No Fault Act Does Not Preempt Common Law Contract Remedies
At the outset, we affirm the Giampa-pa I holding that the No Fault Act does not abrogate a common law contract claim when an insurer wrongfully refuses to pay insurance benefits. Because the No Fault Act is
American Family argues that the “willful-and-wanton” provision of the No Fault Act signifies the legislature’s intent to statutorily abrogate common law contract remedies for an insurer’s willful-and-wanton breach of an automobile contract. American Family thus proposes that Giampapa cannot recover any special damages under common law contract principles because his damages are limited to the statutory formula trebling his general damages.
When construing a statute, our task is to give effect to the intent of the General Assembly. State v. Nieto,
Section 10-4-708(1.8) of the No Fault Act explicitly states that when an insurer’s failure to pay benefits is willful and wanton,
We find no such express or implied repeal or suspension here. First, this court has previously examined the language and the legislative history of the No Fault Act in detail, finding absolutely no evidence that the General Assembly abrogated common law remedies. Williams,
The General Assembly placed no limits on common law remedies when it first enacted the No Fault Act in 1973, and it has placed no limits on corrimon law contract remedies in the No Fault Act in the eleven years since we decided Williams. Surely, almost thirty
Second, we also find no implicit legislative intent to preempt common law contract claims; to the contrary, extinguishing such remedies would frustrate the essential purpose of the No Fault Act. The primary purpose of the Act is “to avoid inadequate compensation to victims of automobile accidents.” § 10-4-702, 3 C.R.S. (2002); see also Adams v. Farmers Ins. Group,
Furthermore, regarding section 10-4-708(1.8) specifically, we have stated that the purpose of the treble damages remedy is that it “functions as a PIP coverage enforcement mechanism ... for the benefit of those wrongfully denied the mandatory statutory coverage.” Mid-Century Ins. Co. v. Travelers Indem. Co.,
The trial court in Giampapa I aptly described the inadequacy of trebled “unpaid benefits” as a remedy by using an example where the “unpaid benefit” is a basic wheelchair. The court first observed that special damages would be “obvious and predictable” if an insurer refused to pay for an insured’s necessary wheelchair. The court then concluded that it “[did] not believe that the legislature intended to limit breach of contract recovery to three times the value of a wheelchair when an insurance company’s unreasonable failure to pay for a wheelchair renders a capable worker unable to maintain employment or to be reasonably self-sufficient.” We agree that three times the price of an “unpaid benefit” does not ensure adequate compensation for a willful-and-wanton breach resulting in lost wages, impairment of earning capacity, physical pain, mental anguish, impairment of quality of life, and other foreseeable special damages. Therefore, we conclude that the legislature did not intend to limit an insured’s remedies to the statutory remedy alone.
Unlike the No Fault Act, which speaks only of general damages and is silent on special damages, common law contract principles have long provided both general and special damages for a breach of contract. See, e.g., Westesen v. Olathe State Bank,
B. Non-economic Damages in Contract Cases: Colorado’s Willful-and-Wanton Rule
Having concluded that a common law contract claim is viable when an insurer fails to pay benefits, we now turn to the more specific question of when and to what extent non-economic damages are available in a contract claim in the insurance context. We hold today that in Colorado, a complete range of non-economic damages is available when an insurer has willfully and wantonly breached its contract with an insured, so long as the damages are foreseeable at the time of contracting and the damages are a natural and probable result of the breach. See also Thomas Decker II,
To better understand the elements and scope of Colorado’s “willful-and-wanton” rule, we begin our analysis with a brief summary of the rule’s background. Next, we
1. Background of the Willful- and-Wanton Rule
Colorado’s willful-and-wanton rule dates back to the early twentieth century, when the court of appeals first held that mental distress damages alone, meaning mental distress damages unaccompanied by physical or pecuniary loss, are available when a promi-sor’s breach is accompanied by “willful, insulting or wanton conduct.” Hall v. Jackson,
Then, in the 1980s, we reaffirmed the rule that mental suffering damages are available if they result from a willful-and-wanton breach. Trimble,
Ten years after Trimble, in 1995, the court of appeals in Thomas Decker I interpreted the willful-and-wanton rule with a new twist. Perhaps focusing on prior cases off-handedly stating that mental damages “alone” may be recovered for a willful-and-wanton breach, the court held that a promisee could not recover other non-economic damages in addition to mental damages, such as damages for inconvenience or emotional stress. Thomas Decker I,
2. Continuing Validity of the Willful-and-Wanton Rule
In this appeal, we requested briefing from the parties on the issue of whether Colorado’s longstanding willful-and-wanton rule should stand. Stare decisis binds us to the pre-existing rule unless we are clearly convinced that (1) the rule was originally erroneous or is no longer sound due to changing conditions and (2) more good than harm will come from departing from precedent. People v. Blehm,
First, the willful-and-wanton rule was not erroneous when it was adopted. From the beginning, the rule has adhered to basic contract law principles. All contract damages, whether general or special, economic or non-economic, are recoverable only if the damages were the foreseeable result of a breach at the time the contract was made. See, e.g., Restatement (Second) of Contracts, §§ 351 & 352 (1981). A foreseeability requirement is inherent in every contract case because contractual liability is determined by whether such liability was within the contemplation of the parties at the time of contracting. See id.; Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Ex. 341, 156 Eng. Rep. 145 (1854). In Colorado, the standard jury instruction on special damages in contract cases properly reflects this emphasis on foreseeability, instructing the jury that it must find, “at the time the parties entered into the contract, the defendant reasonably could have anticipated from the facts or circumstances that the defendant knew or should have known that these damages would probably be incurred by the plaintiff if (he)(she), the defendant, breached the contract.” C.J.I. 30:35 (emphasis added).
Under the willful-and-wanton rule, the allowance of non-economic damages in contract claims does not dispose of expectation interests. To the contrary, the rule properly limits the availability of non-economic damages to extraordinary contractual circumstances where such damages are in fact foreseeable at the time of contracting. In typical commercial contracts where goods are exchanged for money, non-economic damages are not foreseeable because only pecuniary loss is at stake. See Adams,
In contrast, serious non-economic harm may be foreseeable when the contract is of a more personal nature.
Moreover, changing conditions have not rendered the willful-and-wanton rule unsound. We disagree with American Family’s argument that the expansion of tort remedies over the past few decades has completely obviated the need for contractual remedies under the willful-and-wanton rale. The separate tort and contract remedies serve entirely different purposes. See Town of Alma v. AZCO Constr., Inc.,
Second, we decline to depart from Colorado’s longstanding willful-and-wanton rale because we are not clearly convinced that such a departure would create more good than harm. The willful-and-wanton rale has existed in Colorado for ninety years, and we recently relied on the rule in Thomas Decker II,
In short, because Colorado’s longstanding willful-and-wanton rale is sound and because a departure from the rule would produce more potential harm than overriding benefits, we decline to overturn the rule today.
3. The Willful-and-Wanton Rule Allows a Full Scope of Non-Economic Damages
Turning now to the scope of non-economic damages available for a willful-and-wanton breach, we clarify our decision in Thomas Decker II and hold that non-economic damages are not limited to “mental anguish” damages only. Instead, a full range of non-economic damages is available in cases involving a willful-and-wanton breach of contract.
Colorado case law supports our conclusion that the willful-and-wanton rule has always allowed the recovery of various non-eeonomic damages in addition to “mental anguish.” First, it is clear that the Colorado courts have historically used the phrase “mental distress” as an abbreviation encompassing other types of non-economic damages. As early as Hall, the court of appeals used the
In more recent Colorado cases, the courts have used the terms “emotional distress” and “mental anguish” interchangeably, and this court has held that the “loss of ability to enjoy life” is equivalent to “mental suffering.” See Westfield Dev. Co. v. Rifle Inv. Assoc.,
In Thomas Decker II, we specifically upheld an award for inconvenience and emotional stress under the general notion that “the award of ... noneconomic damages for [the defendant’s] willful-and-wanton breach of its [contract] is proper under Colorado law.”
In affirming a broad interpretation of the willful-and-wanton rule, we note that neither American Family nor any of the amici has offered a logical reason for limiting recovery to only some categories of non-economic damage. Their arguments depend entirely on cases that use, without explanation, the statement in Hall that damages are recoverable in cases seeking “mental distress alone” or “mental distress only.” See, e.g., Mortgage Fin., Inc. v. Podleski,
Even if American Family had provided a sound reason for precluding other types of non-economic damages, we find it highly impractical to categorize different non-economic damages into arbitrary compartments where some damages are compensable and others are not. For purposes of determining a non-economic damage award, we simply find no principled method of separating “mental suffering” and “emotional distress” damages from those damages incurred by “physical pain” or “physical stress,” because “mental anguish” is commonly evidenced by physical manifestations of that same anguish. See, e.g., Smith v. Hoyer,
C. Application
In this section, before we apply Colorado’s willful-and-wanton rule to Giampapa’s case, we first determine whether the “law of the case” doctrine prevents either the court of appeals or this court from re-examining Giampapa I. Because we find that the rule is not binding here, we proceed to examine, in detail, the willful-and-wanton rule as applied to the jury findings and jury instructions in this case. Upon examination, we conclude that the findings and instructions in the trial record adequately support the non-economic portion of the jury’s $900,000 special damages verdict in favor of Giampapa on his contract claim. Finally, because American
1. Law of the Case Doctrine
When a court issues final rulings in a case, the “law of the case” doctrine generally requires the court to follow its prior relevant rulings. See People ex rel. Gallagher v. Dist Court,
The law of the case doctrine is merely discretionary when applied to a court’s power to reconsider its own prior rulings. See id.; People v. Dunlap,
In this case, we have already discussed how the court of appeals in Giampapa I erroneously interpreted the scope of Colorado’s willful-and-wanton rule by relying on Thomas Decker I. In light of our subsequent reversal of Thomas Decker I in Thomas Decker II, the court of appeals’ decision regarding special damages was no longer sound when Giampapa II reached the court of appeals. Therefore, the court of appeals should have declined to apply the law of the case doctrine to its own prior decision, and reconsidered Giampapa I in accordance with the above developments.
As for the effect of the law of the case doctrine on this court, the doctrine does not bind us to the substantive decisions made by the court of appeals in Giampapa I. A decision of an intermediate appellate court in a prior appeal remains subject to review by a higher court even after retrial and a second round of appellate proceedings in the same case. See Mercer v. Theriot,
2. Giampapa Satisfies the Willful- and-Wanton Rule
We now determine whether the original jury properly awarded Giampapa non-economic damages under his common law contract claim. In order for the jury’s verdict awarding Giampapa non-economic damages to stand, the jury’s findings must substantively satisfy the three elements of Colorado’s willful-and-wanton rule, namely: (1) Giampapa’s non-economic damages must have been the foreseeable result of a breach at the time the contract with American Family was made; (2) Giampapa’s non-economic damages must be proven with reasonable certainty; and (3) the non-economic portion of Giampapa’s special damages must be the natural and probable result of a willful-and-wanton breach. We will defer to the jury’s verdict if the trial court properly instructed the jury on the above issues and if the record contains evidence to support its findings.
First, the foreseeability element is sufficiently addressed in the trial court’s “special damages” instruction because it states that these damages are available only if, “at the time the parties entered into the contract, the defendant reasonably could have anticipated from the facts or circumstances that the defendant knew or should have known that these damages would probably be incurred by the plaintiff if the defendant breached the contract.” (emphasis added). Therefore, the jury was explicitly instructed to determine whether American Family had either foreseen or should have foreseen, at the time of contracting, the non-economic damages that would result from a breach. American Family is in the business of providing personal automobile insurance coverage. The jury reasonably concluded that when American Family first sold Giam-papa a “deluxe” insurance plan, American Family knew or should have known that if it failed to pay for medical equipment necessary to help Giampapa recover from an automobile accident, Giampapa would suffer mental anguish, physical pain, and impairment of quality of life.
Second, Giampapa’s non-economic damages have been proven -with reasonable certainty. We note as a preliminary matter that the rule precluding the recovery of uncertain damages “applies only to situations where the fact of damages is uncertain, not where the amount is uncertain.” Peterson v. Colo. Potato Flake & Mfg. Co.,
Third, in order for the non-eeonomic portion of Giampapa’s special damages to stand, American Family’s breach must have been willful and wanton and Giampapa’s non-economic damages must have been the natural and probable result of that breach. We first address the latter and more straightforward “natural and probable result” element. In the trial court’s instruction explaining “special damages,” the court required the jury to “find by a preponderance of the evidence that [such damages] were a natural and probable consequence of the claimed breach of the contract by the defendant.”
What is less apparent is whether the jury made a necessary finding of willful-and-wanton conduct under Giampapa’s common law contract claim. A review of the instructions as a whole reveals that the court did not specifically tell the jury that it had to find willful-and-wanton conduct before it could award special damages under the contract claim. As discussed earlier, the common law defines a “willful-and-wanton” breach of contract as one that is “intentional, and without legal justification or excuse.” McCreery, 99 Colo, at 503,
Although the trial court failed to give a separate instruction regarding willful- and-wanton conduct under the common law contract claim, we find that this oversight is not fatal. At trial, the American Family claims adjuster admitted that Giampapa’s insurance policy provided medical equipment and that such equipment was reasonably defined as equipment used for a medical purpose. Giampapa’s physician also testified that he notified American Family of his medical opinion that the home medical equipment in question was necessary to help Giampapa recover from his injuries. There was no conflicting evidence suggesting that the medical equipment was inappropriate or unnecessary. Nevertheless, American Family refused to pay for the home medical equipment. The above evidence clearly supports the jury’s conclusion that American Family’s failure to pay Giampapa’s benefits was willful-and-wanton under the No Fault Act. Because the definition of willful-and-wanton conduct is narrower under the Act than under the common law, the jury’s findings also satisfy the broader definition of willful-and-wanton conduct under Giampa-pa’s common law contract claim.
The above jury instructions and jury findings sufficiently address and satisfy all elements of Colorado’s willful-and-wanton rule; therefore, the jury acted properly by awarding Giampapa non-eeonomic damages.
3. Statutory Cap Argument Waived
American Family now argues that even if the jury properly awarded non-economic damages, Colorado’s statutory cap on non-economic damages applies to the special damages award in this ease. Section 13-21-102.5(3)(a) generally limits total non-economic awards in civil suits to $250,000 with an option to raise the cap in certain circumstances to $500,000. Giampapa has already received $200,000 in non-economic damages under his tort claim.
The original jury awarded Giampapa a $900,000 lump sum for special damages, and this sum covered both his economic and non-economic special damages under his contract claim. The jury did not specify how much of the $900,000 award compensated his economic injuries of lost earnings and impairment of earning capacity, and how much of the $900,000 award compensated his non-eeo-nomic injuries of mental anguish, physical pain, and impairment of quality of life. This uncertainty regarding the actual amount of non-economic damages awarded and whether the damages cap applies are matters that should have been properly raised before the original trial court.
At trial, American Family did not claim that the damages cap limited the $900,000 award. American Family did not object to the special damages instruction either before the instruction was delivered to the jury or after the jury read its verdict. Nor did American Family ever request separate instructions or ask the jury to allocate economic and non-eeonomic damages more specifically. Furthermore, although the damages cap issue was mentioned briefly in American Family’s notice of appeal, American Family did not make any arguments regarding the issue before the court of appeals in Giampa-pa I. In fact, American Family specifically conceded in both that appeal and in Giampa-pa II that it had not previously raised the non-economic damages cap issue in relation to the original $900,000 special damages award.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals in Giampa-pa II, disapprove of Giampapa I, and remand this case to the court of appeals to return the case to the trial court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Giampapa did not pursue lost earnings during the retrial. Also, the court of appeals in Giampa-pa I erroneously categorized "impairment of earning capacity” as a type of non-economic injury. As we indicated in Decker v. Browning-Ferns Indus, of Colo., Inc.,
. The jury at the original trial had already awarded Giampapa $200,000 in non-economic damages under his tort claim.
. "General damages" are those that flow naturally from the breach of contract, whereas "special” or "consequential damages” are other foreseeable damages within the reasonable contemplation of the parties at the time the contract was made. See, e.g., 3 Dan B. Dobbs, Law of Remedies § 12.2(3), 39-43 (2d ed.1993). In this case, general damages are the actual value of unpaid medical provider bills and medical equipment, and special damages include economic and non-economic losses such as lost earnings, mental anguish, impairment of quality of life, etc.
. The Act itself does not define "willful-and-wanton,” but we have previously stated that in the insurance context, a willful-and-wanton breach under the Act is established when "an insurer acts without justification or in disregard of a plaintiff's rights." Dale v. Guaranty Nat'l Ins. Co.,
. We take note that Giampapa contracted and paid for a "deluxe” PIP plan that provided benefits for medical care provider bills and medical equipment not required by the basic mandatory PIP coverage set forth by section 10-4-706, 3 C.R.S. (2002). For purposes of this case, we do not distinguish between mandatory and supplemental benefits because we believe a common law contract remedy is available for a willful- and-wanton breach in either case.
. We have never considered whether the definition of "willful-and-wanton" under the No Fault Act covers the same "willful-and-wanton” behavior defined under common law contract principles. We need not reach the issue here because the trial court instructions did not use either definition.
. Trimble also suggested that an exception to the willful-and-wanton rule exists where the contract is "of such a personal and special nature that the parties knew, or should have known, that a breach would result in severe mental or emotional distress.” Trimble,
. See also Restatement of Contracts § 341 (1932) (allowing mental suffering compensation only where a wanton or reckless breach is of "such a character that the defendant had reason to know when the contract was made that the breach would cause mental suffering for reasons other than mere pecuniary loss”).
. Some states directly rely on this distinction between contracts of a "personal” nature and contracts of a "commercial” nature when determining the availability of mental anguish damages. See, e.g., Kewin v. Mass. Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
.Professor Whaley agrees that where "peace of mind and freedom from worry are part of the bargain, as the defendant very well knew, and if the defendant breaches these sorts of contracts, the defendant should pay for the agony suffered as an obvious consequence.” Douglas J. Whaley, Paying for the Agony: The Recoveiy of Emotional Distress Damages in Contract Actions, 26 Suffolk U.L.Rev. 935, 953 (1992).
. At re-trial, the court further defined the "natural and probable consequence” requirement as a "but-for” inquiry into whether the defendant’s breach was "an act or failure to act which in natural and probable sequence produced the claimed injury. It is a cause without which the claimed injury would not have been incurred.”
. At the time of the original trial, we had not yet decided the Dale case, which defines "willful- and-wanton” under the No Fault Act as being "without justification or in disregard of a plaintiff’s rights.”
Concurrence Opinion
specially concurring.
Because the majority approves the recovery of noneconomic damages for the willful and wanton breach of a contract, I write separately. The majority’s rule undermines the goals and purposes of contract law and conflates the important distinction between tort and contract law. I would disapprove of its future use and substitute a new rale for the recovery of noneconomic damages for a breach of contract claim. I would hold that noneconomic damages resulting from a breach of contract should be determined by a strict foreseeability test. Noneconomic damages should be available in a breach of contract suit only if the parties specifically provided for them in the contract or if the nature of the contract clearly indicated that such damages were within the contemplation or expectation of the parties. Because the rejection of the willful and wanton rule departs from our somewhat murky precedent, I would apply it prospectively only. Martin Marietta Corp. v. Lorenz,
To understand my reasoning, I trace the history of the willful and wanton rule and explain why the rule blurs the distinction between contract and tort. Because I ultimately reject the willful and wanton rule, I also outline a strict foreseeability test — consistent with the fundamental principles of contract law — that should replace the majority’s rule in the future.
I. The History Of Colorado’s Willful and Wanton Rule Demonstrates That It Has Not Adhered To Fundamental Principles Of Contract Law
Under Colorado’s willful and wanton rule, noneconomic damages arising from a breach of contract are available if the breach is willful and wanton. The majority argues that “[f]rom the beginning, the rule has adhered to basic contract law principles.” See maj. op. at 240. Specifically, the majority claims and now holds that foreseeability has always been inherent in the rule. Id. at 240.
My review of our caselaw reveals opposing conclusions. Colorado’s willful and wanton rule has never adhered to basic contract law principles. From its inception, this “contract rule” has relied upon tort principles.
In addition, there is only one case in which we adopted a “foreseeability approach” that would entitle injured parties to noneconomic damages following a breach of contract. Trimble v. City & County of Denver, 697 P.2d 716, 731 (Colo.1985). Yet even in Trim-ble, we distinguished the case because it involved a contract of a “personal nature.” Id. at 731-32. Considering this history, the majority relies only on the Colorado Jury Instructions in support of its “inherent foreseeability requirement” and does not cite to a single Colorado case. See maj. op. at 240.
The uniqueness of Colorado’s willful and wanton rule cannot be over-emphasized. I
To appreciate why the willful and wanton rule is more consistent with the principles of tort law, I briefly describe the cases which explain, or attempt to explain, the origins of the rule.
The first case where a Colorado court considered the willful and wanton rule was Hall v. Jackson,
The Hall court began its analysis by noting that, at common law, mental distress damages were unavailable unless they accompanied physical injury. Id. at 229,
Turning to contract cases, the court discussed a Colorado ease involving a willful breach of a contract of carriage. Hall,
Lacking guidance from this court and the legislature as to when mental distress damages should be available in contract cases, the court of appeals in Hall relied on these and similar cases to support the rule it created. Id. at 237-38,
The first Colorado Supreme Court ease to consider the issue of mental suffering damages in a contract case was Westesen v. Olathe State Bank,
In a case involving facts similar to Hall, the Colorado Supreme Court approved use of the willful and wanton rule. Fitzsimmons v. Olinger Mortuary Ass’n,
A few years later, this court again discussed the availability of mental distress damages in contract cases, at last providing some minimal definition of “willful and wanton.” McCreery v. Miller’s Groceteria Co.,
Following McCreery, Colorado courts did not discuss the availability of noneconomic damages in contract cases until the 1980s. See, e.g., Trimble,
In sum, Colorado’s caselaw demonstrates that permitting the recovery for noneconomic damages resulting from a willful and wanton breach of a contract has always been rooted in the law of tort and not the law of contract. In connection with the development of this rule, the concept of foreseeable noneconomic damages has played no significant role.
II. The Willful And Wanton Rule Blurs The Distinction Between Contract And Tort
In an attempt to cure the basic contract law deficiencies of the willful and wanton rule, the majority explicitly includes a “foreseeability element.” See maj. op at 243. For plaintiffs to recover under the majority’s rule, noneconomic damages must have been the foreseeable result of a breach at the time the contract with defendant was made. Id. However, by retaining the “willful and wanton” element, the majority fails to cure the rule’s deficiencies. The rule still focuses on the conduct of the defendant at the time of the breach, thereby blurring the distinction between contract and tort. As background to support a full discussion of how I reach these conclusions, I review first some general principles of contract and tort law damages.
The purpose of contract damages is neither to compel performance nor to punish the breaching party. Rather, contract damages compensate the promisee for any loss resulting from breach. See, e.g., Mortgage Fin., Inc.,
Such expectancy damages have some limits. One such limitation has its roots in the mutual assent reached by the parties when they agree to a contract. The aggrieved party can recover only those damages that were the foreseeable result of a breach at the time the contract was made, and those damages that can be proven with reasonable certainty. See, e.g., Restatement (Second) of Contracts §§ 351 & 352 (1981). The foreseeability limitation exists because parties to a contract voluntarily assume liability. By definition, a contract means that parties mutually reached and agreed to specified terms and obligations. Courts are reluctant, therefore, to impose greater liability than contemplated by the parties at the time the contract was made. See, e.g., John A. Sebert, Jr., Punitive and Nonpecuniary Damages in Actions Based Upon Contract: Toward Achieving the Objective of Full Compensation, 33 UCLA L.Rev. 1565, 1567 (1986) (stating that “damage rules recognize the consensual basis of contract liability by limiting a contracting party’s potential liability to those risks that
Another such limit to expectancy damages is the common law principle that victims of a breach of contract typically were not entitled to noneconomic damages, such as emotional distress and mental suffering. Farnsworth, Farnsworth on Contracts § 12.17. Different rationales have been advanced to explain this limitation. Some courts and commentators suggest that such nonpecuniary damages are not generally foreseeable.
Contrary to contract purposes, tort law addresses different purposes. See, e.g., Town of Alma,
Because the law of torts and the law of contracts reflect different policies, each body of law recognizes different remedies. Thomas Decker II,
The differences between the goals of tort and contract explain the differences between the damages recoverable under each.
There are even occasions where a breach of contract is thought to be economically and socially beneficial. The theory of “efficient breach” posits that the purpose of contract law is not to discourage all breaches. To the contrary, certain breaches, such as those where the breaching party’s gains exceed the injured party’s losses, are thought to be desirable. When such a situation arises, the measure of damages under contract law — the expectancy interest — provides an incentive to encourage the breach. See, e.g., Richard A. Posner, Economic Analysis of the Law (4th ed.1992); Farnsworth, Famsivorth cm Contracts § 12.3.
Our recent caselaw reflects these differing purposes of contract and tort and recognizes the need to separate the boundaries of these two bodies of law. Town of Alma,
As noted, traditional contract damages are based upon the expectations of the party at the time the contract is formed. The majority’s rule, permitting recovery of noneconomic damages for willful and wanton breaches, punishes a person who intentionally breaches more severely than it does one who only negligently breaches a contract. By focusing upon the type of breach, the majority’s rule risks under-compensating an injured promis-ee under a contract. Even if noneconomic damages are clearly foreseeable and can be proven with reasonable certainty, the majority would deny these damages from an injured party if the breach is unintentional or merely negligent. Such an approach fails to provide injured parties with the “benefit of their bargain.” See maj. op. at 241. Instead of adhering to traditional contract principles, the willful and wanton rule depends upon particular conduct deemed wrongful by law. Usually, wrongful conduct forms the basis of liability only in tort law.
Using a standard of culpability such as willfulness to determine liability in a contract case undermines the doctrine of efficient
The majority holds that noneconomic damages are available provided that the damages are a natural and probable result of a willful and wanton breach. See maj. op. at 234, 238. By so holding, the majority perpetuates a rule that creates a particular type of tort liability in the context of traditional contract liability. Noneconomic damages are available only if particular conduct occurs that is deemed wrongful. Thus, Colorado law imposes a tort duty to discourage contracting parties from intentionally breaching their contract. This rule in turn effectively elevates a breach of contract claim into an actionable tort claim. Such an approach undermines the goals and basic principles of contract law and unacceptably blurs the distinction between contract and tort.
This conflation of principles can be demonstrated by the majority’s articulation of its own rule, particularly with respect to foreseeability. The majority holds that a plaintiff can recover for noneconomic damages under the willful and wanton rule if such damages are a “foreseeable result of a breach at the time the contract was made.” See maj. op. at 240 citing to the Restatement (Second) of Contracts, §§ 351 & 352). As mentioned earlier, the majority also holds that such damages are recoverable so long as the damages are a “natural and probable result of the breach.” See maj. op. at 234, 238. I find this articulation indistinguishable from a “natural and proximate result of the breach,” which is the wording used and found in one of our original willful and wanton cases. See Westesen, 78 Colo, at 219,
While I adhere fully to the principles of stare decisis and the policies that this important doctrine serves, I am convinced that our current rule of noneconomic damages in contract cases should be set aside. See People v. Blehm,
III. A New Contract Rule of Strict Foreseeability for the Recovery of Noneconomic Damages
Having concluded that the Colorado willful and wanton rule should be abandoned, I consider what rule should be implemented in its place. As discussed, the expectations of the parties at the time of contracting usually
The majority argues that “some new rule” would cause more harm than good because it undoubtedly would spur increased litigation and raise a number of uncertainties. See maj. op. at 241. Other courts and commentators are suspicious that using a foreseeability standard to determine the availability of non-economic damages will “risk runaway jury verdicts, inhibit commercial transactions, and increase uncertainty for contracting parties.” See, e.g., Michael Dorff, Attaching Tort Claims to Contract Actions: An Economic Analysis of Contort, 28 Seton Hall L.Rev. 390, 403 (1997). These authorities fear that literal application of the foreseeability rule would mean that emotional distress damages would be recoverable in almost every breach of contract suit. Gaglidari,
Recognizing these concerns, I would adopt a rule of strict foreseeability, following the approach of the Hawaii Supreme Court. Francis v. Lee Enter. Inc.,
Though the Francis court recognized the importance of stare decisis, it ultimately concluded that the Dold rule on willful or reckless breaches of contract “unnecessarily blurs the distinction between — and undermines the discrete theories of recovery relevant to— tort and contract law.” Francis,
[I]n deciding whether such [emotional distress] damages are recoverable, we shift the focus of the inquiry away from the manner of the breach and to the nature of the contract. Thus, damages for emotional distress may be recoverable, but only where the parties specifically provide for them in the contract or where the nature of the contract clearly indicates that such damages are within the contemplation or expectation of the parties.
Id. (emphasis removed).
I agree with the analysis of the Hawaii Supreme Court. I would hold that noneco-nomic damages are available in breach of contract suits only where the parties specifically provide for them in the contract or where the nature of the contract clearly indicates that such damages are within the contemplation or expectation of the parties.
Replacing the willful and wanton rule with a rule of strict foreseeability does not risk under-compensating plaintiffs in employment cases. See maj. op. at 241. Neither rule changes our holding in Thomas Decker II that employees terminated in a willful and wanton manner cannot bring a tort claim for bad faith breach.
I note that a strict foreseeability test is consistent with the growing trend towards permitting the recovery of noneconomic damages when such damages are contemplated by the parties at the time of contracting. Recently, several jurisdictions besides Hawaii have chosen to apply foreseeability prin
While the rejection of the willful and wanton rule might not have been foreshadowed, there is some support in our precedent for the strict foreseeability rule that I propose today. In Trimble, we held that mental distress damages are available if they were foreseeable at the time of contracting and they were caused by the breach of a “personal” contract, which is a similar, though not identical, approach to that which I would adopt today.
In following the lead of the Francis court, I would not undermine the ability of parties to allocate with confidence contractual risk or the predictability of contract damages generally.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, I specially concur with the judgment of the majority.
. I concur with the majority’s discussion that (1) the "law of the case doctrine" is inapplicable here; (2) the Colorado Auto Accident Reparations Act (the "No Fault Act”) §§ 10-4-701 to 10-4 — 726, 3 C.R.S. (2002) does not preempt common law contract claims; (3) the full $900,000 award stands because American Family waived its section 13-21-102.5(3)(a), 5 C.R.S. (2002) statutory cap argument; and (4) under existing precedent, recovery from a willful and wanton breach of contract is not limited to mental distress damages, and includes a full range of noneconomic damages.
. A few states may require that the breach be willful and wanton, but this is usually coupled with other requirements, such as that the plaintiff suffer a bodily injury. See, e.g., Restatement (First) of Contracts § 341 (1932).
Other states have taken a variety of other approaches to the question of when noneconomic damages are available in contract suits. See generally John A. Sebert, Jr., Punitive and Nonpecu-niary Damages in Actions Based Upon Contract: Toward Achieving the Objective of Full Compensation, 33 UCLA L.Rev. 1565, 1584-1600 (1986); David Tartaglio, The Expectation of Peace of Mind: A Basis for Recovery of Damages for Mental Suffering Resulting from the Breach of First Party Insurance Contracts, 56 S. Cal. L.Rev. 1345, 1353-59 (1983); Joseph P. Tomain, Contract Compensation in Nonmarket Transactions, 46 U. Pitt. L.Rev. 867, 888-912 (1985). Several states maintain the rule that generally no damages may be recovered for mental or emotional distress resulting from a breach of contract. See, e.g., Brown v. Matthews Mortuary, Inc.,
A related approach adopted by several jurisdictions is to permit mental distress damages when the contract breached is of a "personal” nature, but not if it is of a "commercial” nature. See, e.g., Kewin v. Mass. Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
. The portion of the Westesen holding that permitted noneconomic damages whenever economic damages were present, subject to traditional foreseeability and causation requirements, was specifically rejected by the court of appeals. Adams v. Frontier Airlines Fed. Credit Union,
. See, e.g., Westfield Dev. Co. v. Rifle Inv. Assoc.,
. See, e.g., John D. Calamari & Joseph M. Perillo, The Law of Contracts § 14-5(b) (3rd ed.1987) (and cases cited therein); Linda Curtis, Damage Measurements for Bad Faith Breach of Contract: An Economic Analysis, 39 Stan. L.Rev. 161, 165 (1986) ("The argument rests on a model of a contract as an arm’s length commercial transaction, in which emotional distress is generally not within the contemplation of the parties.”).
. See, e.g., Sebert, 33 UCLA L.Rev. at 1587-88 (and cases cited therein).
. See, e.g., Farnsworth, Farnsworth on Contracts § 12.17 ("A limitation more firmly rooted in tradition is that generally denying recovery for emotional disturbance, or 'mental distress,’ resulting from breach of contract, even if the limitations of unforeseeability and uncertainty can be overcome, It could be argued that the real basis of this rule is that such recovery is likely to result in disproportionate compensation.”); Calamari & Perillo, Law of Contracts § 14-5(b).
.Even the use of the phrases "general damages” and "special damages” differs somewhat confusingly under tort and contract. Like in contract, general damages in tort are those that flow naturally from the defendant’s conduct and special damages in tort are those damages that are particular to a specific plaintiff. 1 Marilyn Minzer et aL, Damages in Tort Actions § 3.03[1] (1992). However, under tort law, many types of noneco-nomic injuries are considered to flow naturally from a tort. Id.; see also Lira v. Shelter Ins. Co.,
One notes some irony here: special damages in torts are more certainly calculated, in contracts they are less certain (consequentials are contract special damages); general damages in torts are less certain, in contracts they are more certain (formulas are contract general damages). Thus, special damages in torts are like general damages in contracts and general damages in torts are analogous to special damages in contracts.
Thomas C. Galligan, Jr., Contortions Along the Boundary Between Contracts and Torts, 69 Tul. L.Rev. 457, 470 (1994).
. Farnsworth also states:
No matter how reprehensible the breach, damages are generally limited to those required to compensate the injured party for lost expectation, for it is a fundamental tenet of the law of contract remedies that an injured party should not be put in a better position than had the contract been performed. As Holmes said, "If a contract is broken the measure of damages generally is the same, whatever the cause of the breach.” ... [C]ontract law is, in its essential design, a law of strict liability, and the accompanying system of remedies operates without regard to fault.
Farnsworth, Farnsworth on Contracts § 12.8 (footnotes omitted).
. The Francis court did not alter the rule that a breach of contract that results in physical injury’ may be actionable in tort, an issue that I do not address. Francis,
. The majority relies on Guerin, Bourgeons and Francis to argue that Colorado, like these states, recognizes that the availability of noneconomic damages is consistent with basic contract law principles. See maj. op. at 240-241. The majority's reliance on these cases is misplaced on two grounds. First, none of these states requires a plaintiff to prove the breach was willful and wanton to recover for noneconomic damages in a contract case. As mentioned above, the Hawaii Supreme Court in Francis specifically rejected a rule similar to Colorado’s willful and wanton rule because it was not consistent with basic contract law.
. Professor Whaley, who argues in favor of applying ordinary foreseeability principles to the recovery of noneconomic damages, summarizes this idea well:
Using a simple Hadley [v. Baxendale, 9 Ex. 341, 156 Eng. Rep. 145 (1854)] test for the recovery of emotional distress damages is not likely to lead to a large expansion of liability. Most contract breaches do not cause legally significant amounts of mental anguish. But for the sort of contracts where human emotions are very much at issue[, where] peace of mind and freedom from worry are part of the bargain, as the defendant very well knew, and if the defendant breaches these sorts of contracts, the defendant should pay for the agony suffered as an obvious consequence. There is no surprise here; the issue of foreseeability takes care of that. Nor is this rule unfair to the defendant. If the defendant is going to traffic in the kind of contract that risks emotional distress when breached, let the defendant bear that risk.
Whaley, 26 Suffolk U.L.Rev. at 953.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
While I agree that our prior pronouncements sanctioning recovery for mental anguish caused by a willful and wanton breach of contract literally cry out for explanation and reconciliation, I do not agree that the issue is before us in this case. It seems clear, at least to me, that the legislature has already specified the precise recovery for a willful and wanton failure to pay no-fault auto insurance benefits when they are due. Because I disagree with the majority’s proliferation of recoveries for the same injuries and conduct generally, and with its allowance of more than a treble-damage recovery for willful and wanton breach of a no-fault insurance contract specifically, I respectfully dissent.
By the slimmest of margins, this court previously held that section 10-4-708 does not abrogate the common law remedy for tortious bad faith breach of an insurance contract. Farmers Group, Inc. v. Williams,
Neither, in my view, does this plain reading “frustrate the essential purpose of the No Fault Act.” See maj. op. at 238. The plaintiff in this case sought recovery on multiple theories and won jury verdicts including $900,000 for willful and wanton breach of the insurance contract; $300,000 for the tort of breaching the contract in bad faith and an additional $300,000 in punitive damages for doing so; and treble damages for breach under the No-Fault Act. In what can only be described as a tour de force, the majority (in sharp contrast to the special concurrence) not only finds a meaningful distinction between recovery in contract for willful and wanton breach and recovery in tort for bad faith breach, allowing separate recoveries for both, but also “clarifies” our prior holdings recognizing a willful and wanton breach of contract claim for mental anguish by expanding that cause of action to permit recovery for a “complete range of non-economic damages.” See maj. op. at 234. On top of all this, the majority attributes to the legislature an intent to accomplish its purpose of “ ‘avoiding] inadequate compensation to victims of automobile accidents’,” maj. op. at 238 (quoting from section 10-4-702, 3 C.R.S. (2002)), by providing an additional treble damages award for willful and wanton breach. It seems to me more likely that this statement of legislative purpose refers to its treatment of fault as a consideration in auto accident eases, and that by providing a treble-damage award for a willful and wanton failure to pay no-fault insurance benefits when due, the legislature considered itself to be dictating the proper remedy for this behavior.
While everyone surely must feel sympathy for the plight of accident victims like the plaintiff, I can find no legal justification for affirming a $900,000, willful and wanton breach of contract award by expanding an already questionable theory of recovery and
