Petoseed Company, Inc., appeals the trial judge’s ruling finding it liable for civil compensatory contempt. Petoseed argues the trial judge should have dismissed Danny Jarrell and Jimmy Wooten’s complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), SCRCP. 1 We agree and reverse.
*209 FACTS
Jarrell and Wooten, Respondents, initiated this lawsuit in 1994 against Petoseed for fraud and civil compensatory contempt. They allege they have suffered no less than $50,000 in damages based on Petoseed’s failure to produce a set of test results requested in a prior action. They learned about the results after Petoseed disclosed them to another litigant in a similar Florida lawsuit. In their prior action, Jarrell and Wooten sought damages for a failed watermelon crop. They allege Petoseed sold them watermelon seeds contaminated with Watermelon Fruit Blotch Disease, making their crop unmarketable. Had they known about the test results, Respondents assert, they would not have settled their case for $70,000. Based on Respondents’ testimony, actual damages ranged from approximately $40,000 to $100,000.
Petoseed moved to dismiss Respondents’ present lawsuit for failure to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The trial judge denied this motion. Following a bench trial, the trial judge found Petoseed liable for civil compensatory contempt. The trial judge did not issue a ruling on Respondents’ cause of action for fraud, which is still pending.
DISCUSSION
A
Rule 12(b)(6), SCRCP, motion must be based solely upon the allegations set forth on the face of the complaint.
Brown v. Leverette,
Civil contempt sanctions serve two functions: to coerce future compliance and to remedy past noncompliance.
United States v. United Mine Workers of Amer.,
Four South Carolina cases have addressed the subject of compensatory contempt. In the most recent one,
Curlee v. Howle,
the supreme court limited a compensatory contempt award to litigation costs incurred by a mother arising out of her former spouse’s failure to abide by a previous court order, including air fare, lodging, attorney fees, and detective fees.
Stated another way, compensatory contempt is “money awarded to a party who is injured by the contemnor’s action to restore the party to his original position and is limited to the party’s actual loss.”
Whetstone v. Whetstone,
In
Ex Parte Thurmond,
the supreme court held that when an individual right is directly involved in a contempt proceeding, the court has the power to order the contemnor to place the injured party in as good a situation as he would have been in if the contempt had not been committed.
Other jurisdictions have interpreted more broadly the types of damages recoverable under a civil compensatory contempt proceeding.
See generally
Annotation,
Right of Injured Party to Award of Compensatory Damages or Fine in Contempt Proceedings,
Unlike the cases cited above, the damages alleged by Respondents are speculative. While we do not sanction Petoseed’s conduct in failing to abide by the trial court’s prior discovery order, Respondents have not alleged any actual damages they incurred as a result of Petoseed’s actions. Notwithstanding Respondents’ contrary arguments, their case may or may not have settled for a higher amount or gone to trial, in which case the cost of harm is even more remote. 3
In addition, the relief Respondents seek does not place them in the position they would have occupied prior to the alleged contemptuous conduct. By attempting to recover the difference between the amount of settlement made without knowledge of the non-disclosed information and the amount of settlement had the information been disclosed, Respondents seek an improved post-contempt position based on expectation instead of harm. This approach would allow Respondents to keep the benefit of their settlement bargain while conferring on them extra damages in contravention of their promise not to sue.
The touchstone of civil compensatory contempt decisions is the return of the aggrieved party to the status quo. In our view, if Petoseed had disclosed the requested information, then Respondents would have had the test results and perhaps a higher expected value of their case. Possible loss of lever *213 age at the bargaining table, however, does not translate to actual damages. Thus, civil compensatory contempt cannot provide the relief Respondents seek.
Judicial and public policy considerations favor this conclusion. Allowing Respondents to recover damages for civil compensatory contempt would greatly expand prior South Carolina precedent. Where, as here, no expenses or out-of-pocket costs have been alleged, the indemnification policies promoted by civil compensatory contempt would be jeopardized. Binding settlements would be subject to attack in circumvention of the accepted principles for setting them aside.
E.g., Taylor v. Palmetto State Life Ins. Co.,
We therefore hold the trial judge erred in refusing to grant Petoseed’s 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss. In light of our disposition of this issue, we need not address Petoseed’s remaining arguments.
REVERSED.
Notes
. Respondents filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground the trial judge's order is interlocutory and not immediately appealable. They contend the order is not final because damages are undetermined and the merits of the cause of action for fraud have not been decided. We conclude, however, that the order involves the merits and determines a substantial matter forming the underlying cause of action. Petoseed’s issues, therefore, are appealable.
See
S.C.Code Ann. § 14-3-330(1) (1976);
Peterkin v. Brigman,
. Respondents cite
Slotkin v. Citizens Cas. Co. of New York
in support of their argument that the damages they allege are recoverable in a civil compensatory contempt proceeding.
. Although Respondents requested sanctions in their complaint in addition to civil compensatory damages, they have abandoned this claim. In his final order, the trial judge stated, "No mention has been made of punishment either by confinement or civil fine.” Furthermore, Respondents neither requested a ruling on this issue pursuant to Rule 59(e), SCRCP, nor allege any error related to sanctions on appeal.
