John Lakin and Ann Marie Lakin, (plaintiffs), brought an action at law against defendant Senco Products, Inc., (Senco) seeking economic, noneconomic, and punitive damages for personal injury and loss of consortium arising out of allegations of negligent failure to warn and strict products liability in the design and manufacture of the SN325 pneumatic nail gun. In its answer, Senco alleged, inter alia, that ORS 18.560(1) 1 limited any noneconomic damage award to $500,000. The jury returned a special verdict finding Senco liable both in strict liability and in negligence, and fixing John Lakin’s comparative fault at five percent. The jury awarded John Lakin $3,323,413 in economic damages and $2,000,000 in noneconomic damages, and awarded Ann Marie Lakin $876,000 in noneconomic damages for loss of consortium. The jury also found that Senco had acted with “wanton disregard for the health, safety and welfare of others” in causing plaintiffs’ injuries, and awarded $4,000,000 in *67 punitive damages. The trial court applied ORS 18.560(1) and entered judgment for each plaintiff for $500,000 in noneconomic damages, reduced by the jury’s finding that John Lakin had contributed five percent to his injuries. Plaintiffs and Senco both appealed.
On Senco’s appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed. On plaintiffs’ cross-appeal, the court affirmed in part and reversed in part. Adhering to its earlier holding in
Tenold v. Weyerhaeuser Co.,
We summarize the facts from the Court of Appeals’ opinion. Defendant Senco manufactures and markets pneumatic nail guns, including the SN325, which discharges 3.25 inch nails. In 1990, plaintiff John Lakin used an SN325 gun to place a single nail into a piece of wood. Standing on his toes on a makeshift sawhorse platform, Lakin raised the wood and the SN325 over his head, pressed the firing end of the SN325 against the wood, and activated the trigger. Instead of discharging only a single nail, the SN325 immediately thereafter discharged a second nail, which struck part of the first nail, causing the firing end of the SN325 to recoil into Lakin’s face. The SN325 then discharged a third nail, which penetrated Lakin’s brain. As a result of his injuries, parts of Lakin’s brain had to be surgically removed. He now suffers *68 from diminished mental and emotional capacities, his left arm and leg are paralyzed, he has undergone a radical personality change, and he cannot live independently. As noted, the jury awarded both plaintiffs noneconomic damages in excess of the limits provided by ORS 18.560(1). The trial court reduced the jury’s awards according to a formula that the trial court thought to be required by that statute.
As pertinent on appeal, Senco challenged the trial court’s evidentiary rulings, its jury instructions, and its denial of a directed verdict, all of which pertained to Senco’s compensatory liability. Senco also challenged the trial court’s rulings pertaining to punitive damages. Senco renews those arguments on review. Plaintiffs’ cross-appeal contended that ORS 18.560(1) violates several provisions of the Oregon and United States Constitutions. On Senco’s appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed; on plaintiffs’ cross-appeal, the court reversed and remanded for entry of a judgment modifying John Lakin’s recovery of noneconomic damages and Ann Marie Lakin’s recovery for loss of consortium, and otherwise affirmed. We allowed Senco’s petition for review primarily to consider the constitutionality of ORS 18.560(1), which caps noneconomic damages in this case.
I. OREGON CONSTITUTION
In addressing the constitutionality of ORS 18.560(1) under the Oregon Constitution, this court’s concern is whether the legislature had the power to enact that statute. Although, as noted, the Court of Appeals decided this issue on the basis of Article VII (Amended), section 3, of the Oregon Constitution, we believe that the answer to whether the challenged statute violates the right to jury trial expressed in Article I, section 17, of the Oregon Constitution, is dispositive.
In analyzing the meaning of a provision of the Oregon Constitution, this court looks to the specific wording of the provision, the case law surrounding it, and the historical circumstances that led to its enactment.
Priest v. Pearce,
*69 A. Text
Article I, section 17, provides:
“In all civil cases the right of Trial by Jury shall remain inviolate.”
No party questions that this is a civil case or that plaintiffs had a right to a jury trial for their claims. No party argues that “inviolate” has a different meaning today than it did when Article I, section 17, was adopted in 1857 as part of the original Oregon Constitution. Thus, for purposes of this case, whatever the right to a jury trial in a civil case meant in 1857, it has the same meaning today.
In 1828, the word “inviolate” meant “unhurt; uninjured; unprofaned, unpolluted; unbroken.” Noah Webster, American Dictionary of the English Language, Vol 1, p 113 (1828). Although it post-dates adoption of Article I, section 17, in 1889 “inviolate” meant “not violated; free from violation or hint of any kind; secure against violation or impairment.” The Century Dictionary, Vol III, p 3174 (1889). The plain wording of Article I, section 17, does not answer the question whether the right to a jury trial then meant, and, therefore, now means, that the legislature may not adopt a statute imposing a cap on the amount of noneconomic damages recoverable in a civil case. We proceed to examine Oregon cases that have construed Article I, section 17.
B. Case law
In
Molodyh v. Truck Insurance Exchange,
“includes having a jury determine all issues of fact, not just those issues that remain after the legislature has narrowed the claims process.”
Id.
at 297-98.
See also State v. 1920 Studebaker Touring Car,
C. History
The guarantee of trial by jury was ensured in the Magna Carta in 1215, although the historical origins of the jury system predate the Magna Carta by hundreds of years. Thomas H. Tongue,
In Defense of Juries as Exclusive Judges of the Facts,
35 Or L Rev 143,145 (1956) (citing 3 Blackstone
Commentaries
349-50).
See also
James L. Coke,
On Jury Trial,
1 Or L Rev 177 (1922) (tracing history of jury trial to ancient Athens). From the first British expeditions to America, the common law of England, including jury trial procedures, was made a part of the law of colonial communities);
4
State v. Hansen,
In
Dimick v. Schiedt,
“The right of trial by jury is of ancient origin, characterized by Blackstone as ‘the glory of the English law’ and ‘the *71 most transcendent privilege which any subject can enjoy 5 (Bk. 3, p 379); and, as Justice Story said (2 Story, Const. § 1779), ‘* * * the Constitution would have been justly obnoxious to the most conclusive objection if it had not recognized and confirmed it in the most solemn terms.’ With, perhaps, some exceptions, trial by jury has always been, and still is, generally regarded as the normal and preferable mode of disposing of issues of fact in civil cases at law as well as in criminal cases. Maintenance of the jury as a fact-finding body is of such importance and occupies so firm a place in our history and jurisprudence that any seeming curtailment of the right to a jury trial should be scrutinized with the utmost care. * * *
“The controlling distinction between the power of the court and that of the jury is that the former is the power to determine the law and the latter to determine the facts.”
(Citations omitted.)
By 1783, the majority of state constitutions contained a catalogue of civil liberties that uniformly guaranteed the right to trial by jury in a civil case. Robert F. Williams, State Constitutional Law, 151-53 (2d ed 1993). Those provisions were carried over into the 1802 Ohio Constitution and the 1816 Indiana Constitution. 5 Article I, section 17, was taken verbatim from Article I, section 20, of the Indiana Constitution of 1851. 6 W. C. Palmer, The Sources of the Oregon Constitution, 5 Or L Rev 200, 201 (1926). Thus, Article I, section 17, has its origins in the early American colonial charters and the first state constitutions.
In 1844, an Oregon legislative act provided, in part:
“All the statute law of Iowa Territory passed at the first session of the Legislative Assembly of said Territory, and *72 not of a local character, and not incompatible with the condition and circumstances of this country, shall be the law of this government, unless otherwise modified; and the common law of England and principles of equity, not modified by the statutes of Iowa or of this government, and not incompatible with its principles, shall constitute a part of the law of this land.”
Or Laws, Art III, § 1, p 100 (1843-49). 7
In 1845, the inhabitants of the Oregon Territory adopted the organic law of the provisional government of Oregon. Article I, section 2, of that document provided, in part:
“The inhabitants of said [Oregon] territory shall always be entitled to the benefits of * * * trial by jury, * * * and of judicial proceedings according to the course of the common law.”
Organic Law of the Provisional Government of Oregon (reprinted in General Laws of Oregon, p 59 (
In 1848, Congress extended the rights protected by the 1787 Northwest Ordinance, including the right to jury trial in a civil case, to the Oregon Territory.
An Act to Establish the Territorial Government of Oregon,
Section 14 (reprinted in General Laws of Oregon, pp 66, 75 (
The people of the Oregon Territory approved the Oregon Constitution in 1857; it went into effect February 14, 1859.
From the foregoing, we conclude that the framers of the Oregon Constitution clearly understood the meaning of the right to jury trial in a civil case and that they intended that that right would remain “inviolate,” i.e., secure against violation or impairment, in the new State of Oregon. It follows, therefore, that whatever the right to ‘Trial by Jury” meant in 1857, it means precisely the same thing today. The next question is whether the assessment of damages was a function of a common-law jury in 1857.
*73
In actions for injuries not willfully inflicted, compensation is the fundamental principle of the law of damages.
See Oliver v. North Pacific Transportation Co.,
“The amount of damages * * * from the beginning of trial by jury, was a ‘fact’ to be found by the jurors.”
Charles T. McCormick,
Handbook on the Law of Damages,
24 (1935).
See also Molodyh,
In
Nelson v. Oregon Railway Etc. Co.,
“The verdict herein may have been much larger than this court would have allowed under the evidence in the case, or in view of the facts found by the jury. Still we have no right to set it aside, or reverse or modify the judgment entered thereon. The jury are judges of the facts, and however widely our view might disagree with theirs matters nothing. We have no right to invade their province, however sanguine we may be that they have committed error.”
To the same effect,
see generally Locatelli v. Ramsey,
D. Judicial control of jury verdicts
At ancient common law, trial judges had no power to order a new trial solely on the ground that the judge thought that the verdict was “excessive.” The power of a common-law trial judge to set aside a jury verdict on account of excessive damages and to order a new trial evolved on account of misbehavior by jurors. 3 W. Blackstone,
Commentaries,
1347. It was not until
Wood v. Gunston,
82 Eng Rep 864, 867 (1655), that a judge, without any statutory authority, assumed the power to set aside a jury verdict and grant a new trial for the reason that, in the opinion of the trial judge, the amount of the verdict was “excessive.” Before that case, it appears that the only ground for a new trial was actual “misconduct of the jury.” Tongue, 35 Or L Rev at 145-46 (citing 1 Holdsworth,
A History of English Law,
225 (3d ed 1922)). In
Van Lom,
“In ancient times, as is recounted in 1 Holdsworth’s History of English Law (3d ed.) 337-347, when a jury brought in what seemed to be a false verdict the court examined by means of an attaint jury whether it was correct. If the original jury was convicted by the attaint jury they were imprisoned for a year, forfeited their goods, became infamous, *75 their wives and children were turned out, and their lands laid waste. * * * The barbarity of this practice finally led to its abandonment. But ‘It was obvious’, says Holdsworth (p. 346) ‘that some regular method of controlling the verdicts of juries was essential to the proper working of the jury system. This regular method of control was found in the growth of the practice of granting new trials if the verdict was clearly contrary to the weight of evidence.’ And, again, he says in speaking of the value of the jury system as it developed in England, ‘the jury would never have won this popularity, it would never have attained these results, if it had not been controlled by the action of the courts, the legislature and the Council.’ (p. 321).”
This court’s early cases indicate that the court took seriously the principle that juries were to be the exclusive judges of a party’s damages. Before 1910, with respect to motions for nonsuit or directed verdict, the sole question was whether there was “any” evidence in favor of the plaintiff and, if there was, the jury must receive the case.
Tippin v. Ward,
In
Serles v. Serles,
In the face of the foregoing line of authority, punctuated by the adoption of Article VII (Amended), section 3, in 1910, Senco relies on
dicta
in
Greist v. Phillips,
“When Article I, section 17, and the [Oregon] constitution were adopted, a jury’s determination of the amount of damages to be awarded in tort actions was not protected from judicial alteration.
* * * *
“Until the adoption of Article VII (Amended), section 3, in 1910, trial courts were empowered to reduce jury awards of damages when the courts believed that those awards were excessive. That fact, in itself, disposes of plaintiffs argument that there existed at common law, at the time Article I, section 17, was adopted in 1857, a right to have a judge enter judgment on a jury’s award of damages — without judicial alterations — in a personal injury action.”
“From the beginning, the Oregon legislature also possessed the power to authorize courts to set aside excessive verdicts, * * * limit the amount of recoverable damages in certain actions * * *, and govern the procedure for awarding damages, * * * without compromising the right of trial by jury.”
Senco asserts that Greist “should end the inquiry for the present case.”
The quoted
dicta
requires correction. Oregon trial courts never have had the power to reduce a jury’s verdict or to enter judgment for a lesser amount of damages over the objection of the prevailing party, who always could reject a judicial
remittitur
and demand a new jury trial.
See Adcock v.
*77
Oregon Railroad Co.,
In
Greist,
this court held that there is no right to a jury trial in a wrongfiil death action, because a wrongful death claim was not one recognized at common law or under the Oregon Territorial Law when Article I, section 17, was adopted.
Greist,
E. Senco’s arguments
Senco argues that because, at common law, the trial judge had authority to ask the plaintiff to accept a remittitur of damages thought to be excessive or not supported by the evidence or to face a new trial, the legislature has the right to do the same thing by imposing a cap on noneconomic damages. We disagree. A statutory cap fundamentally is different from the doctrine of judicial remittitur. First, the legislative cap is mandatory, not discretionary. The legislature obviously has not “asked” plaintiffs to accept less than the jury’s verdict; it has mandated a reduction. Moreover, a trial judge’s power before 1857 to grant a new trial differs in several important respects from the legislature’s power to cap damages. Most important, the trial judge determined the excessiveness of the damages, if any, or the insufficiency of the evidence to support the award by reviewing the facts in a specific case. Then, if the judge decided that the jury had rendered an improper damages verdict, the prevailing party had the right to have a second jury decide damages. Under the cap, plaintiffs are denied a second jury trial.
Additionally, the statutory cap is not contingent on a factual finding that the award is excessive as a matter of law. *78 The reduction is mandated even though the jury is correctly instructed, its findings are supported by the evidence as a matter of law, and no legal error is present in the record. The statutory cap involves no review of the facts of a specific case. Moreover, the statutory cap also denies a prevailing party an opportunity to accept a remittitur of the jury’s award of non-economic damages that is less than the jury’s award, but that exceeds the statutory cap.
Senco cites no authority, and we are aware of none, for the proposition that the drafters of Article I, section 17, would have tolerated interference with a jury’s award of noneconomic damages in a case such as this as long as the interference originated in the legislature and not in the court. Senco’s focus on the legislature’s power is misdirected. The proper focus under Article I, section 17, is on the rights of the litigants and the proper role of the jury in a civil case. Here, the broad powers of the legislature must yield to a litigant’s specific right to a “Trial by Jury” guaranteed in Article I, section 17, as that right was understood in 1857. We conclude that Article I, section 17, prohibits the legislature from interfering with the full effect of a jury’s assessment of noneconomic damages, at least as to civil cases in which the right to jury trial was customary in 1857, or in cases of like nature.
Senco also argues that, because under Article XVIII, section 7, of the Oregon Constitution,
9
the legislature has the power to alter or repeal “all laws,” it must have the power to define the legal boundaries of those laws, including the extent to which a civil defendant may be liable for noneconomic damages. Again, we disagree. That provision reserves in the people of Oregon the right to alter all “laws” in force in the Oregon Territory in 1857, whether the same were of common law or legislative origin.
See Perozzi v. Ganiere,
Senco next argues that, because ORS 18.560(1) is a law that is applied only
after
the jury has performed its fact-finding function, it does not violate Article I, section 17. Senco argues that the jury’s fact-finding function “ends with its ascertainment of the facts, assessment of the damages, and return of the verdict.” At that point, Senco asserts, a judicial function arises,
i.e.,
the duty to apply the law to the facts. “Remedies are matters of law, not matters of fact,” Senco insists. Senco concludes that ORS 18.560(1) “does nothing to impair that trial or that verdict.” That argument was persuasive in
Etheridge v. Medical Centers Hospitals,
Although it is true that ORS 18.560(1) does not prohibit a jury from assessing noneconomic damages, to the extent that the jury’s award exceeds the statutory cap, the statute prevents the jury’s award from having its full and intended effect. We conclude that to permit the legislature to override the effect of the jury’s determination of noneconomic damages would “violate” plaintiffs’ right to “Trial by Jury,” guaranteed in Article I, section 17. Limiting the effect of a jury’s noneconomic damages verdict eviscerates “Trial by Jury” as it was understood in 1857 and, therefore, does not allow the common-law right of jury trial to remain “inviolate.” We agree with the reasoning of the Washington Supreme Court in Sofie that an argument like that advanced by Senco here
“ignores the constitutional magnitude of the jury’s fact-finding province, including its role to determine damages. *80 [To argue contra is to assert] that the right to trial by jury is not invaded if the jury is allowed to determine facts which go unheeded when the court issues its judgment. Such an argument pays lip service to the form of the jury but robs the institution of its function. This court will not construe constitutional rights in such a manner. As we once stated: “ ‘The constitution deals with substance, not shadows. Its inhibition was leveled at the thing, not the name.... If the inhibition can be evaded by the form of the enactment, its insertion in the fundamental law was a vain and futile proceeding.’ ”
Senco also argues that ORS 18.560(1) is valid because, even after the cap is applied, plaintiffs “received a large verdict,” including “substantial” noneconomic damages. In
Hale v. Port of Portland,
“[T]he remedy need not be precisely of the same type or extent; it is enough that the remedy is a substantial one.”
The issue in Hale was whether the damage limitations in the Oregon Tort Claims Act, ORS 30.260 et seq., were constitutional as applied to cities and port districts. This court held that those limitations did not deny the plaintiff a right of action against the City of Portland guaranteed by Article I, section 10, of the Oregon Constitution, and that the damage limitations were permissible under Article I, section 20. 12 Id. at 517-26. The court further held that the *81 damage limitations did not violate the Due Process or Equal Protection Clauses to the United States Constitution. Id. at 526-27. We do not find Holds Article I, sections 10 and 20, analyses relevant to our analysis of Article I, section 17. This court’s Article I, section 17, jurisprudence never has established a “substantial” remedy test in defining the scope and meaning of the right of jury trial. Moreover, we do not assess the constitutionality of ORS 18.560(1) under Article I, section 17, based on the amount of the statutory cap; rather, we assess its constitutionality because it is a cap on the jury’s determination of noneconomic damages.
From the foregoing, we conclude that ORS 18.560(1) interferes with the resolution of a factual issue,
i.e.,
noneconomic damages, that Article I, section 17, commits to the jury. Thus, the statute’s requirement that “the amount awarded * * * shall not exceed $500,000” violates the injured party’s right to receive an award that reflects the jury’s factual determination of the amount of the damages “as will fully compensate [plaintiffs] for all loss and injury to [them].”
Oliver,
We acknowledge that other courts have upheld statutory caps on noneconomic damages on various theories under their own state constitutions.
13
We have reviewed the extensive decisional law from other jurisdictions on this subject and we are satisfied that the conclusion that we reach today is supported by the better-reasoned authorities. In addition to the decision of the Washington Supreme Court in
So fie,
quoted above,
see Moore v. Mobile Infirmary Ass’n,
592
*82
So 2d 156, 163 (Ala 1991) (damages assessments of Alabama juries are protected by constitutional guarantee of right to trial by jury);
Condemarin v. University Hosp.,
In summary, Article I, section 17, guarantees a jury trial in civil actions for which the common law provided a jury trial when the Oregon Constitution was adopted in 1857 and in cases of like nature.
Molodyh.
In any such case, the trial of all issues of fact must be by juiy. The determination of damages in a personal injury case is a question of fact.
Chase v. Alexander,
II. PUNITIVE DAMAGES
We proceed to consider Senco’s arguments relating to punitive damages. Senco challenges plaintiffs’ entitlement to punitive damages as well as the alleged “excessiveness” of the jury’s punitive damages award. Senco argues that the jury’s $4,000,000 million punitive damages award violates the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which provides:
“[N]or shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law[.]”
Senco argues that “[njeither this Court on independent review, nor any rational juror, could find, by clear and convincing evidence or otherwise, that Senco acted with wanton
*83
disregard on the plain record in this case.” Therefore, Senco asserts, the trial court erred in submitting the issue of punitive damages to the jury, and the Court of Appeals erred in affirming the trial court’s ruling on that issue. Senco asserts that the Court of Appeals “neglected its duty” meaningfully to review the punitive damages award, as it was required to do by
Honda Motor Co., Ltd. v. Oberg,
In
Oberg,
“[T]he standard for post-verdict judicial review of an award of punitive damages is as follows: A jury’s award of punitive damages shall not be disturbed when it is within the range that a rational juror would be entitled to award in the light of the record as a whole; the range that a rational juror would be entitled to award depends, in turn, on the statutory and common law factors that allow an award of punitive damages for the specific kind of claim at issue.” 14
(Footnote omitted.)
Following our independent review of the record and for the reasons cogently explained in the Court of Appeals’ opinion,
Lakin,
We also have considered Senco’s challenge to the alleged excessiveness of the jury’s punitive damages award.
15
The Court of Appeals concluded that the punitive damages award was “within the range that a rational juror would be entitled to award.”
Id.
at 76 (quoting
Oberg,
We also have considered Senco’s challenges to the trial court’s admission of the testimony of Senco’s general counsel, who testified that he was aware that claims were made “four to eight times per year” involving the unintended actuation of Senco’s nail guns, and to the admission of the testimony of plaintiffs’ expert witness, who testified that he had knowledge of prior accidents occurring as a result of the use of Senco’s nail guns. Both witnesses’ testimony was offered to show that Senco had notice of the dangerousness of the SN325. For the reasons explained by the Court of Appeals, id. at 61-63, we find no error and, therefore, affirm the trial court’s rulings on those issues.
Finally, we have considered each of Senco’s other assignments of error and every argument made thereunder. As to any assignment or argument not discussed above, we find no error.
The decision of the Court of Appeals is affirmed. The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed in part and reversed *85 in part, and the case is remanded to the circuit court for further proceedings.
Notes
ORS 18.560 provides:
“(1) Except for claims subject to ORS 30.260 to 30.300 [the Oregon Tort Claims Act! and ORS chapter 656 [the Oregon Workers’ Compensation Actl, in any civil action seeking damages arising out of bodily injury, including emotional injury or distress, death or property damage of any one person including claims for loss of care, comfort, companionship and society and loss of consortium, the amount awarded for noneconomic damages shall not exceed $500,000.
“(2) As used in this section:
“(a) ‘Economic damages’ means objectively verifiable monetary losses including but not limited to reasonable charges necessarily incurred for medical, hospital, nursing and rehabilitative services and other health care services, burial and memorial expenses, loss of income and past and future impairment of earning capacity, reasonable and necessary expenses incurred for substitute domestic services, recurring loss to an estate, damage to reputation that is economically verifiable, reasonable and necessarily incurred costs due to loss of use of property and reasonable costs incurred for repair or replacement of damaged property, whichever is less.
“(b) ‘Noneconomic damages’ means subjective, nonmonetary losses, including but not limited to pain, mental suffering, emotional distress, humiliation, injury to reputation, loss of care, comfort, companionship and society, loss of consortium, inconvenience and interference with normal and usual activities apart from gainful employment.
“(3) This section does not apply to punitive damages.
“(4) The jury shall not be advised of the limitation set forth in this section.”
Article VII (Amended), section 3, provides, in part:
“In actions at law, * * * the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury shall be otherwise re-examined in any court of this state, unless the court can affirmatively say that there is no evidence to support the verdict.”
Article I, section 17, provides:
“In all civil cases the right of Trial by Jury shall remain inviolate.”
In 1774, the First Continental Congress declared that the people of America were “entitled to the common law of England,” especially the right to trial by jury, the denial of which explicitly was incorporated in the Declaration of Independence as one of the King’s acts of tyranny. In 1787, Congress passed a law protecting the right of jury trial in the North-West Territory:
“The inhabitants of said territory shall always be entitled to the benefits of * * * trial by jury; * * * and of judicial proceedings according to the course of the common law.”
Article of Compact contained in the Ordinance of 1787 for the Government of the North-West Territory (reprinted in General Laws of Oregon, p 81 (
The early constitutions of Kentucky, Ohio, and Tennessee all provided that the right to jury trial in a civil case shall remain “inviolate.” The Pennsylvania Constitution of 1776 provided that the right to trial by jury “ought to be held sacred.” The drafters of Indiana’s Bill of Rights borrowed freely from the wording of other states’ constitutions, most notably the constitutions of Kentucky, Ohio, Tennessee, and Pennsylvania. Robert Twomley, The Indiana Bill of Rights, 20 Ind LJ 211, 212-13 (1945).
Article I, section 20, of the 1851 Indiana Constitution, provides:
“In all civil cases, the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate.”
Article I, section 9, of the 1846 Iowa Constitution, provides, in part:
“The right of trial by jury shall remain inviolateM”
Although the Seventh Amendment to the United States Constitution does not apply through the Fourteenth Amendment to the states,
Minneapolis & St. Louis R.R. v. Bombolis,
Article XVIII, section 7, provides:
“All laws in force in the Territory of Oregon when this Constitution takes effect, and consistent therewith, shall continue in force until altered or repealed.”
We note that the relevant provisions of the present Virginia Constitution, like the Virginia Declaration of Rights (1776), is written in terms of admonition, not legal command. Article I, section 11, of the Virginia Constitution, provides, in part:
“That in * * * suits between man and man, trial by jury is preferable to any other, and ought to be held sacred.”
Article I, section 10, provides:
“No court shall be secret, but justice shall be administered, openly and without purchase, completely and without delay, and every man shall have remedy by due course of law for injury done him in his person, property, or reputation.”
Article I, section 20, provides:
“No law shall be passed granting to any citizen or class of citizens privileges, or immunities, which, upon the same terms, shall not equally belong to all citizens.”
The constitutionality of state statutory damage caps has been attacked in state and federal courts on several grounds. It has been asserted, inter alia, that such caps violate constitutional guarantees of trial by jury, equal privileges and immunities, separation of powers, substantive and procedural due process, equal protection, remedy by due course of law, access to courts, and against special legislation. The courts that have considered the constitutionality of state caps are divided on theory, analysis, and outcome. It does not appear that the United States Supreme Court has addressed the issue of the validity of state statutory caps on noneconomic damages under the Seventh Amendment. See Jennifer Friesen, State Constitutional Law, § 6-3, 354-71 (2d ed (1992 w/supp 1997) (citing and discussing cases).
ORS 30.925(2) defines the statutory factors to be considered in assessing punitive damages in a product liability case:
“(2) Punitive damages, if any, shall be determined and awarded based upon the following criteria:
“(a) The likelihood at the time that serious harm would arise from the defendant’s misconduct;
“(b) The degree of the defendant’s awareness of that likelihood;
“(c) The profitability of the defendant’s misconduct;
“(d) The duration of the defendant’s misconduct and any concealment of it;
“(e) The attitude and conduct of the defendant upon discovery of the misconduct;
“(f) The financial condition of the defendant; and
“(g) The total deterrent effect of other punishment imposed upon the defendant as a result of the misconduct, including, but not limited to, punitive damage awards to persons in situations similar to the claimant’s and the severity of criminal penalties to which the defendant has been or may be subjected.”
Senco does not challenge the constitutional sufficiency of Oregon’s procedures for assessing and reviewing punitive damage awards.
