Dewayne C. KIRK, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. The DENVER PUBLISHING COMPANY, a Colorado corporation, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 88SA405
Supreme Court of Colorado, En Banc.
Sept. 23, 1991
Appeals dismissed.
Gale A. Norton, Atty. Gen., Raymond T. Slaughter, Chief Deputy Atty. Gen., Timothy M. Tymkovich, Sol. Gen., Dianne Eret, First Asst. Atty. Gen., Denver, for amicus curiae State of Colo.
Justice QUINN delivered the Opinion of the Court.
This case involves a challenge to the constitutionality of section
I.
Although this case has a lengthy procedural history, the basic facts can be briefly stated. Kirk, who owned and operated an independent newspaper distributorship, purchased newspapers from The Rocky Mountain News and resold them to newspaper carriers, stores, and to the public through newspaper racks. In November 1979, Kirk terminated his relationship with Denver Publishing Company, but withheld payment for part of his September and all of his October billings in order to achieve leverage in his final accounting with Denver Publishing Company.
Because Kirk and the company were unable to settle a final accounting, Denver Publishing Company sued Kirk for the balance allegedly owed by him. Kirk counterclaimed for outrageous conduct and willful and wanton breach of contract. In the first trial, the court granted Kirk‘s motion for a directed verdict on Denver Publishing Company‘s claim for monies due on open account, directed a verdict against Kirk on his counterclaim for outrageous conduct, and entered a judgment of $910.26 for Kirk on the jury‘s verdict returned in his favor on his claim for willful and wanton breach of contract. The court of appeals affirmed the trial court‘s directed verdicts on Denver Publishing Company‘s open account claim and Kirk‘s counterclaim for outrageous conduct, and also affirmed the judgment of liability on Kirk‘s counterclaim against Denver Publishing Company for willful and wanton breach of contract, but remanded the case for a new trial “on the issues of actual damages, damages for emotional distress, and exemplary damages” on Kirk‘s contractual claim. Denver Publishing Co. v. Kirk, 729 P.2d 1004, 1009 (Colo. App. 1986).
Upon remand of the case for a new trial, Kirk was realigned as the plaintiff and was permitted to add a claim for malicious prosecution. The case was retried in 1988, and the jury awarded Kirk compensatory damages in the aggregate amount of $288,000 and exemplary damages in the amount of $160,500 on Kirk‘s claim for malicious prosecution. The exemplary damages award, at the request of Kirk, was subsequently reduced to $118,980 so as not to exceed the amount of actual damages on Kirk‘s claim for malicious prosecution.2 After the jury verdict, Kirk filed a post-trial motion in which he requested the district court to invalidate, as violative of several provisions of both the United States and Colorado Constitutions, the statutory requirement of section
Kirk thereafter filed this appeal and invokes several federal and state constitutional provisions in challenging the one-third payment requirement of section
II.
We begin our analysis by examining the nature of an award for exemplary damages.
A.
Tort law generally provides for two types of monetary remedies for a civil wrong. Compensatory damages are intended to “make [the plaintiff] whole,” Bullerdick v. Pritchard, 90 Colo. 272, 275, 8 P.2d 705, 706 (1932), while exemplary damages are intended to punish the wrongdoer and deter similar conduct in the future, Seaward Construction Co., Inc. v. Bradley, 817 P.2d 971, 974 (Colo. 1991), Leidholt v. District Court, 619 P.2d 768, 770 (Colo. 1980); Mince v. Butters, 200 Colo. 501, 503, 616 P.2d 127, 129 (1980). This is not to say that these two remedies are totally unrelated to and independent of each other. We implicitly recognized the interrelationship between compensatory and exemplary damages in Palmer v. A.H. Robins Co., Inc., 684 P.2d 187, 213-14 (Colo. 1984), where we observed that a claim for exemplary damages is not “a separate and distinct cause of action,” but rather “is auxiliary to an underlying claim for actual damages” and thus can be entered only in conjunction with an underlying and successful claim for actual damages assessed against a wrongdoer for a legal wrong to the injured party. So also, a claim for exemplary damages contemplates “tortious conduct,” Mortgage Finance, Inc. v. Podleski, 742 P.2d 900, 902 (Colo. 1987), and in that respect, requires, as does a claim for compensatory damages, some measure of legal fault. See Harding Glass Co., Inc. v. Jones, 640 P.2d 1123, 1126-27 (Colo. 1982). Thus, while a compensatory damages award serves the reparative function of making the injured party whole, it also performs the secondary function of discouraging “a repetition of [the defendant‘s] wrongful conduct” by serving as a “warning to others who are inclined to commit similar wrongs.” C. Morris, Punitive Damages in Tort Cases, 44 Harv. L. Rev. 1173, 1174 (1931).4 In a somewhat similar
B.
In 1986, as part of tort-reform legislation, the General Assembly modified the preexisting statutory scheme for exemplary damages. Chap. 106, sec. 1,
In all civil actions in which damages are assessed by a jury for a wrong done to the person or to personal or real property, and the injury complained of is attended by circumstances of fraud, malice, or willful and wanton conduct, the jury, in addition to the actual damages sustained by such party, may award him reasonable exemplary damages.
The term “willful and wanton conduct” is defined as conduct “purposefully committed which the actor must have realized as dangerous, done heedlessly and recklessly, without regard to consequences, or of the rights and safety of others, particularly the plaintiff.”
The focal point of this case is section
One-third of all reasonable damages collected pursuant to this section shall be paid into the state general fund. The remaining two-thirds of such damages collected shall be paid to the injured party. Nothing in this subsection (4) shall be construed to give the general fund any interest in the claim for exemplary damages or in the litigation itself at any time prior to payment becoming due.
By its plain terms, section
C.
Property interests emanate from state law, and there is no question that under Colorado law a judgment for exemplary damages qualifies as a property interest.
The term “property” includes a multiplicity of interests and is commonly used to denote everything that is the subject of ownership, whether tangible or intangible, as well as those rights and interests which have value to the owner. See Black‘s Law Dictionary 1095 (5th ed. 1979). The concept of property, therefore, encompasses those enforceable contractual rights that traditionally have been recognized as choses in action. Baker v. Young, 798 P.2d 889, 893 (Colo. 1990).
Because the term “property” includes a “legal right to damage for an injury,” Rosane v. Senger, 112 Colo. 363, 370, 149 P.2d 372, 375 (1944), it necessarily follows that the term “property” also includes the judgment itself, which creates an independent legal right to full satisfaction from the “goods and chattels, lands, tenements, and real estate of every person against whom any judgment is obtained.”
III.
We next consider the concept of “taking” as it relates to the federal and state constitutional proscriptions against the governmental taking of private property without just compensation. The
A.
The Taking Clause of both the federal and state constitutions is “designed to bar Government from forcing some people alone to bear public burdens which, in all fairness and justice, should be borne by the public as a whole.” Penn Central Transp. Co., 438 U.S. at 123; see also Board of County Comm‘rs of Saguache County v. Flickinger, 687 P.2d 975, 983 (Colo. 1984). Resolving the question of “what constitutes a taking” is a problem of considerable difficulty, and courts have been unable “to develop any ‘set formula’ for determining when ‘justice and fairness’ require that economic injuries caused by public action be compensated by the government, rather than remain disproportionately concentrated on a few persons.” Flickinger, 687 P.2d at 983 (quoting Penn Central Transp. Co., 438 U.S. at 124); see Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon, 260 U.S. 393, 415 (1922) (when
The determination of whether a “taking” has occurred by reason of a governmental regulation interfering with or impairing the interest of a private property owner involves essentially an “ad hoc, factual” analysis. Kaiser Aetna v. United States, 444 U.S. 164, 175 (1979). In resolving a “taking” issue, the United States Supreme Court has considered the totality of circumstances underlying the taking, including such factors as the character of the governmental action, its economic impact, and its interference with reasonable economic expectations of the property owner. See Ruckelshaus v. Monsanto Co., 467 U.S. 986, 1005 (1984); Pruneyard Shopping Center v. Robins, 447 U.S. 74, 83 (1980); Kaiser Aetna, 444 U.S. at 175. An additional factor, and one entitled to considerable weight, is whether the property right has ripened into a judgment. Where a private property interest emanates directly from a final judgment, the longstanding rule, announced by the Supreme Court in McCullough v. Virginia, 172 U.S. 102, 123-24 (1898), and consistently followed by other courts, is that such a property interest cannot be diminished by legislative fiat:
It is not within the power of a legislature to take away rights which have been once vested by a judgment. Legislation may act on subsequent proceedings, may abate actions pending, but when those actions have passed into judgment the power of the legislature to disturb the rights created thereby ceases.7
B.
Because a judgment for exemplary damages entitles the judgment creditor to a satisfaction out of the real and personal property of the judgment debtor, the taking of a money judgment from the judgment creditor is substantially equivalent to the taking of money itself. In Webb‘s Fabulous Pharmacies, Inc. v. Beckwith, 449 U.S. 155 (1980), the Supreme Court considered the constitutionality of a state statute authorizing a county to take the interest accruing on an interpleader fund deposited into the registry of the county court under circumstances where another statute imposed a fee for the clerk‘s services in receiving the fund into the registry. The Court rejected the notion that the statute created a valid fee for services and held that the county‘s retention of the interest fund violated the Taking Clause of the
To put it another way: a State, by ipse dixit, may not transform private property into public property without compensation, even for the limited duration of the deposit in court. This is the very kind of thing that the Taking Clause of the
Fifth Amendment was meant to prevent. That Clause stands as a shield against the arbitrary use of governmental power.
Webb‘s Fabulous Pharmacies, 449 U.S. at 164.
In contrast to Webb‘s Fabulous Pharmacies, the Court in United States v. Sperry Corp., 493 U.S. 52 (1989), found no unconstitutional taking of money under a federal statute that required the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to deduct 1½% from the first $5 million dollars of an arbitration award entered by the Iran-United States Claims Tribunal. The purpose of the statutory deduction was to reimburse the United States government for the expenses incurred in the administration of the arbitration program. Acknowledging that the amount of a user fee need not “be precisely calibrated to the use that a party makes of government services,” the Court concluded that the statutory deductions were not “so clearly excessive as to belie their purported character as user fees,” stating:
This is not a situation where the Government has appropriated all, or most, of the award to itself and labeled the booty as a user fee.... We need not state what percentage of the award would be too great a take to qualify as a user fee, for we are convinced that on the facts of this case, 1½% does not qualify as a “taking” by any standard of excessiveness.
493 U.S. at 62-63 (citations and footnote omitted).
The rule to be gleaned from Webb‘s Fabulous Pharmacies and Sperry is that, in order to withstand a constitutional challenge to a governmental appropriation of a significant part of a money judgment under the Taking Clause of the United States Constitution, the governmental appropriation must bear a reasonable relationship to the governmental services provided to civil litigants in making use of the judicial process for the purpose of resolving the civil claim resulting in the judgment. We adopt that rule as the controlling norm for resolving the taking issue in this case.
IV.
We turn to Kirk‘s claim that the requirement of section
Section
Section
Section
The only conceivable justification for section
Section
The fact that a legislative body might choose to eliminate exemplary damages in civil cases without offending due process of law is not to say that any restriction whatever on an exemplary damages award will pass constitutional muster. See Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Haslip, 499 U.S. 1 (1991) (Scalia, J., concurring). In our view, forcing a judgment creditor to pay to the state general fund one-third of a judgment for exemplary damages in order to fund services which have already been funded by other revenue-raising measures, and without conferring on the judgment creditor any benefit or service not furnished to other civil litigants not required to make the same contribution, amounts to an unconstitutional taking of the judgment creditor‘s property in violation of the Taking Clause of the United States and Colorado Constitutions. Cf. Ochs v. Town of Hot Sulphur Springs, 158 Colo. 456, 461-62, 407 P.2d 677, 680 (1965) (enforcement of municipal “frontage tax” on real property without any corresponding benefit to property results in “taking private property without compensation, and without due process of law“).8
V.
In urging us to uphold the constitutionality of section
The legislature may well abate or diminish a pending civil action, but when that claim ripens into judgment “the power of the legislature to disturb the rights created thereby ceases.” McCullough, 172 U.S. at 123-24. Section
To be sure, section
We need not turn this case, however, on a judgment creditor‘s reasonable economic expectation of a property interest in the
We accordingly reverse that part of the district court‘s judgment upholding the constitutionality of section
ROVIRA, C.J., dissents.
LOHR, J., joins in the dissent.
Chief Justice ROVIRA dissenting:
The majority holds that section
I
Based on plaintiff‘s claim for malicious prosecution against the Denver Publishing Company, a jury awarded him exemplary damages in the amount of $160,500. At the time plaintiff brought his claim, section
On appeal plaintiff contends that the legislative requirement that a portion of an exemplary damages judgment actually collected be paid into the state‘s general fund is an unconstitutional taking of property. Although plaintiff has raised other constitutional issues, the majority relies only on the “taking” issue in arriving at the conclusion that the statute is unconstitutional.
II
The majority reasons that the entire judgment for exemplary damages is a property interest of the plaintiff and that if the state takes a portion such taking is unconstitutional.
To arrive at this conclusion, the majority examines the nature of an award for exemplary damages, and finds that compensatory damages and exemplary damages are related and dependent on one another, both having similar reparative functions. Compensatory damages serve a primary repara-
Because the term property includes a “legal right to damage for an injury,” it follows that the term property includes the judgment itself. Maj. op. at 267 (quoting Rosane v. Senger, 112 Colo. 363, 370, 149 P.2d 372, 375 (1944)). According to the majority, because section
I do not dispute that a judgment is a property right. I also agree that a “taking” of a judgment without compensation would be unconstitutional. I disagree however, based upon facts and law applicable to this case, that the plaintiff has a right to the entire exemplary damages judgment. My disagreement is premised on the ground that a claim for exemplary damages is a statutory right which may be conditioned by the legislature and thus the entire judgment never vested in the plaintiff.
Exemplary damages were authorized by statute to punish and deter conduct attended by circumstances of fraud, malice or willful and wanton conduct. 1889 Colo. Sess. Laws 64-65. Although exemplary damages may have a negligible reparative function, it is well-established in Colorado that punishment and deterrence is the essential purpose of exemplary damages. Seaward Constr. Co., Inc. v. Bradley, 817 P.2d 971, 974 (Colo. 1991); Mince v. Butters, 200 Colo. 501, 503, 616 P.2d 127 (1980); French v. Deane, 19 Colo. 504, 511, 36 P. 609 (1894). The effort by the majority to establish a link between actual and exemplary damages due to their reparative functions is tenuous at best.
The uniqueness of exemplary damages is also demonstrated in the statute authorizing such damages. First, the wrong giving rise to exemplary damages must be attended by circumstances of fraud, malice, or willful and wanton conduct. Second, the amount of an exemplary damages award may not exceed the actual damages awarded without circumstances justifying an increase. Third, the court may reduce an exemplary damages award if the deterrent effect has been accomplished or if the purpose has been served.
The two remedies may be interrelated, as the majority opinion suggests, but a claim for exemplary damages is unique and should not be viewed as a legal right which is any greater than that provided by statute.
Since a claim for exemplary damages arises from statute, such a claim may also be limited by statute. Kaitz v. District Court, 650 P.2d 553, 556 (Colo. 1982). If the legislature may completely eliminate exemplary damages in civil cases, as the majority concedes, the legislature may also place conditions on a statutory grant of authority to recover such damages. The plaintiff recognized that the right to exemplary damages is a statutory right, and that right is subject to legislative conditions. Plaintiff accepted the condition pursuant to section
The legislature cannot modify a judgment which is a property right, but the legislature is free to condition a claim for exemplary damages which is allowed only
Any property right plaintiff may have in the award is limited as provided by the statute. When the statute became effective, plaintiff had a “mere expectancy” in a possible future exemplary damage award. This expectancy was conditioned by one-third going to the state, and plaintiff was aware of this at the time he filed his complaint.2
Section
The majority is concerned that the “forced contribution of one-third of the exemplary damages judgment is imposed not on the defendant wrongdoer ... but upon the plaintiff who suffered the wrong.” Maj. op. at 270. I disagree. There is minimal burden placed on the plaintiff where, as here, the plaintiff had a mere expectancy in exemplary damages, and where only a portion of that received is contributed to the state. Furthermore, the state‘s receipt of one-third of an exemplary damages judgment does not negate the punishment of the wrongdoer. The wrongdoer must pay the entire exemplary damages judgment regardless of who receives it.
It is not unreasonable for the legislature to condition an exemplary damage award where the purpose behind exemplary damages is to punish the wrongdoer and deter dangerous or malicious conduct. The legislature has recognized that exemplary damages are allowed for the benefit of the public. In exercising its legislative powers, the legislature appropriately decided that the goal of benefitting society through exemplary damages awards required a portion of exemplary damages awards be paid to the state.
As I do not believe that the statute violates the taking clause of either the Colorado or the United States Constitutions, I am confronted with the other constitutional claims not addressed in the majority opinion.3 Because the majority reverses on the
I am authorized to state that JUSTICE LOHR joins in this dissent.
Notes
The large portion of our tort law in which liability is dependent on fault can only be used to compensate plaintiffs when there are defendants deserving of punishment. As long as the liability with fault rules are retained, the law of torts will have an admonitory function even though the doctrine of punitive damages is abandoned. So punishment in tort actions is not anomalous (if anomalous only means unusual); and punitive damage practice is only one of many means of varying the size of money judgments in view of the admonitory function. The function itself is inherent in the liability with fault rules, and is not dependent on the allowance of punitive damages. Punitive damages are ordinarily merely a means of increasing the severity of the admonition of “compensatory” damages, and can only be criticized on that basis. C. Morris, Punitive Damages in Tort Cases, 44 Harv. L. Rev. 1173, 1177 (1931) (footnotes omitted).
- The deterrent effect of the damages has been accomplished; or
- The conduct which resulted in the award has ceased; or
- The purpose of such damages has otherwise been served.
In 1882, the Virginia Assembly again passed a statute which, in effect, provided that a taxpayer seeking to use coupons in payment of his taxes should pay the taxes in money at the time of tendering the coupons and thereafter bring a suit to establish the genuineness of the coupons and that, if the suit be decided in the taxpayer‘s favor, the taxpayer would obtain from the treasurer a return of the money paid. The Virginia Assembly also passed in that year an act declaring that tax collectors should receive in payment of taxes and other dues “gold, silver, United States Treasury notes, national bank currency and nothing else.” Id. at 104. This statute also contained a provision permitting a lawsuit by one claiming that such exaction was illegal and also provided that there shall be no other remedy and no writ of mandamus or prohibition or any other writ or process shall issue to hinder or delay the collection of revenue.
In 1892 McCullough filed an action in the Circuit Court of the City of Norfolk to establish the genuineness of certain coupons that he had tendered in payment of taxes. The action was commenced pursuant to the terms of the 1882 statute, which authorized the filing of such an action as the exclusive remedy for one challenging the requirement that taxes be paid in gold, silver, or United States currency. McCullough sought to establish the genuineness of certain coupon bonds for the payment of his taxes. The Circuit Court of the City of Norfolk rendered judgment in McCullough‘s favor, but in 1894, after the judgment was rendered, the Virginia Assembly repealed the 1882 statute authorizing the litigation commenced by McCullough. The Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia reversed the judgment in McCullough‘s favor, dismissed his petition, and awarded costs to the state. It was under this sequence of events that the United States Supreme Court held that the judgment rendered in the Circuit Court of the City of Norfolk pursuant to the 1882 act was rightfully entered and that the rights acquired by that judgment under the 1882 act could not be disturbed by the subsequent repeal of the statute in 1894.
The rule adopted in McCullough applies to private property rights acquired under a judgment and does not apply to an action to enforce a public right. An action to enforce a public right, “even after it has been established by the judgment of the court, may be annulled by subsequent legislation and should not be thereafter enforced; although, in so far as a private right has been incidentally established by such judgment, as for special damages to the plaintiff or for his costs, it may not be thus taken away.” Hodges v. Snyder, 261 U.S. 600, 603-04 (1923); see Atlantic City Casino Assoc. v. City of Atlantic City, 217 N.J. Super. 277, 525 A.2d 1109, 1113 (1985); City of Norfolk v. Stephenson, 185 Va. 305, 38 S.E.2d 570, 575 (1946).
