Lead Opinion
Lee D. Harper brought suit under the Jones Act and general maritime law for injuries suffered while working on Zapata Off-Shore Company’s drilling barge and for inadequate maintenance. By this appeal, Zapata challenges the award of punitive damages and the amount of compensatory damages and maintenance found by the jury. We reverse and remand.
I. Background
Harper was attempting to carry a 90-pound rotary coupling part from the heliport on Zapata’s drilling barge to a storage room below. While Harper was going down a steep flight of stairs, the barge shifted and he stumbled, injuring his back. The accident required Harper to have back surgery on two occasions to remove extrusions of ruptured discs. Following the incident Zapata paid for Harper’s medical expenses and gave him a check for $638 every two weeks. The check specified that $112 was for maintenance and that $526 was an "advance.” When Zapata learned that Harper was suing, it terminated the advances, but continued to pay maintenance of $8 a day ($112 every two weeks).
In a jury trial Harper sued for compensatory damages, increased maintenance, and attorney’s fees and punitive damages for Zapata’s failure to pay a proper amount of maintenance. The jury found that Zapata was negligent and that the vessel was un-seaworthy and awarded Harper $40 a day in maintenance, $1,000,000 in compensatory damages, $500,000 in punitive damages, and $5,000 in attorney’s fees. In response to Zapata’s motion for new trial, the district court reduced the punitive damages award to $250,000 on remittitur, which Harper accepted.
II. Punitive Damages and Attorney’s Fees
Zapata’s position in the briefs and at oral argument was that lump-sum punitive damage awards could not be grounded on a failure to pay maintenance. The seminal case of Vaughan v. Atkinson,
It does not follow, however, that punitive damages may be based on a shipowner’s failure to pay adequate maintenance. Zapata argues that the district court erred by allowing the jury to impose punitive damages merely because Zapata paid a maintenance rate that the jury later found to be inadequate. We agree. On this record, the district court should not have submitted the questions of punitive damages or attorney’s fees to the jury. See Boeing Co. v. Shipman,
During the examination of Zapata’s claims representatives, the district court instructed the jury that Zapata’s advances were not to be credited toward maintenance — “the advances [have] nothing to do with the proper amount of maintenance.”
We cannot escape the conclusion that the jury penalized Zapata for terminating its advances. During closing argument, Harper’s counsel repeatedly emphasized the millions of dollars Zapata saved with settlement efforts.
For purposes of the punitive damages issue, the district court appeared to have considered the settlement advances as maintenance payments. The court stated that it “share[d] the jury’s apparent outrage produced by defendant’s intentional evil practice of attempting to prevent litigation by cutting the maintenance rate to a starvation level.” Harper v. Zapata OffShore Co.,
The cases in which punitive damages or attorney’s fees have been granted share
Courts have refused to allow awards of attorney’s fees or punitive damages in cases in which the shipowner’s conduct was not sufficiently egregious or wanton. See e.g., Ober v. Penrod Drilling Co.,
No bright line separates the type of conduct that properly grounds an award of punitive damages — a shipowner’s willful and callous default in its duty of investigating claims and providing maintenance and cure — from the type of conduct that does not support a punitive damages award. We do not attempt to draw the line between an absolute failure to provide maintenance and cure and the payment of a nominal amount of maintenance. Clearly, a shipowner who attempts to comply with its duty of providing maintenance by paying a seaman $1 a day would be subject to punitive damages. We think that shipowners who pay a grossly inadequate amount of maintenance in callous disregard of the seaman’s rights should not be shielded from punitive damages. Therefore, we must distinguish between payment of a grossly inadequate maintenance sum and good faith payment of a maintenance rate that at trial may turn out to have been inadequate to cover the costs of food and lodging.
We hold that Zapata’s conduct in dealing with Harper’s claim was not of a type, within the meaning of Vaughan v. Atkinson, that would support punitive damages and attorney’s fees. Zapata’s actions in paying $8 a day for maintenance were undoubtedly undertaken willfully in the sense that it intended to pay what it paid in fact. We think, however, that the willful, wanton and callous conduct required to ground an award of punitive damages requires an element of bad faith. The record shows that Zapata did not act in
Although $8 daily is unquestionably a low maintenance payment, that sum had become entrenched over the years as the standard figure. See Caulfield v. AC & D Marine, Inc.,
III. Maintenance
Zapata contests the jury’s determination that $40 was the proper amount that it should have paid Harper. It claims that no evidence supports fixing maintenance at $40.
“Maintenance is intended to cover the reasonable costs the seaman incurs in acquiring food and lodging ashore during the period of his illness or disability.” Caul-field v. AC & D Marine, Inc.,
Although Harper provided no lay or expert testimony concerning his actual expenses for food ashore, he did testify that Zapata provided its seamen with a $20 daily allowance for food when Zapata sent them ashore for school or during stormy weather. This testimony constituted probative evidence to support a maintenance award covering food expenses.
During Harper’s period of cure, he resided at his home with his wife and children. The record, however, is devoid of any evidence that Harper incurred lodging expenses. Because a seaman is not entitled to maintenance unless he incurs costs, see Johnson v. United States,
IV. Excessive Compensatory Damages
Zapata claims that the jury’s award of $1,000,000 in compensatory damages resulted from passion and prejudice. We need not speculate on the motivation of the jury, because we agree with Zapata’s alternative argument: the award of compensatory damages exceeded the maximum that any reasonable jury could have awarded. See Caldarera v. Eastern Airlines, Inc.,
Harper underwent two laminectomies and still experiences back pain and some leg pain. He compared his pain to a toothache. Harper’s wife testified that he experiences pain and has trouble sleeping at night and that some of his days are worse than others. Harper testified that his back hurts as bad as it ever did and that walking at least a mile a day has not helped his condition.
Dr. Eyster, the neurosurgeon who performed the first laminectomy, thought Harper was doing well after the operation. He stated that Harper had some back pain and no leg pain and estimated his permanent impairment at 15 percent. Dr. Hackman, the neurosurgeon who performed Harper’s second laminectomy, saw him several times after surgery. Dr. Hackman put Harper on medication and stated that his aches and pains were helped tremendously. Dr. Hackman ran an electromyography (EMG) test, which was normal, and discharged Harper because his examination was unremarkable and his leg pain was gone. The doctor estimated Harper’s permanent impairment at ten percent.
Dr. Manale, an orthopedic surgeon, saw Harper twice. He agreed that the EMG showed that Harper was normal neurologically because his reflexes were fine. Dr. Manale estimated Harper’s minimum physical impairment at 30 percent and thought that he should not work unless he could do some part-time work where he would not have to drive or leave his home. The doctor indicated that if Harper wore a corset it would help by reducing motion in his spine.
Based on the evidence in the record, the jury could have concluded that Harper would never be able to work again. The highest amount in evidence that would compensate Harper for total wage loss, assuming total disability, was approximately $448,000.
While Harper has suffered a painful injury, has undergone two back operations, and continues to live with some pain, his lot is far from excruciating agony. He can enjoy life by taking care in his activities and, perhaps, by the use of a corset and by taking some medication. We conclude that an award approximating $485,000 for pain is excessive.
“Our power to grant a remittitur is the same as that of the district court.” Cal-darera, 705 F.2d at 784. We determine that the maximum award of compensatory damages supported by the evidence is $800,000. We order a new trial of Harper’s claims against Zapata unless Harper will accept a remittitur of the verdict — compensatory damages in the amount of $800,000 and maintenance in the amount of $20 daily-
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. Harper testified that, because of rising expenses, he asked Zapata for “an advance or some kind of a loan or something to help out.” He stated that he intended to repay the advances out of any recovery he obtained.
. While discussing the punitive damages charge with counsel, the district court referred to the advances as loans. In the Order and Reasons, however, the district court referred three times to the termination of advances as a reduction in maintenance. Harper v. Zapata Off-Shore Co.,
. [Zapata goes] out and they get these injured workers and they make them advances, yeah. They don’t tell you it’s a gift, it’s an advance and the poor man worries if he doesn’t take what they want to do then he is in trouble and then they tell him if you go get a lawyer, exercise the rights ... we are going to cut you back to $56 a week and we are going to give you a little reminder of that with every check. We write down their maintenance, you see, the $112 every two weeks, $56 a week. That’s what they do to scare these people____ Let me tell you, they've been doing this for years. How many millions of dollars do you think Zapata has saved by doing that over these years, how many millions do you think they've saved themselves by giving some poor fellow, go to his house, and have somebody sit down and tell him if you, we get an adversary position if you get a lawyer, we’re going to cut you to $56 when the right time comes, we’re going to settle it but it better be in our favor then when he comes by he makes some small settlement because the man is scared to get a lawyer. He can’t live, Zapata has saved millions, taken millions out of people's pockets by denying them their legal rights by doing that and that’s just not right.
. Before he was injured, Harper worked seven days on, at twelve hours a day, and seven days off, at an hourly wage of $9.05. Dr. Boudreaux, Zapata’s economic expert, calculated Harper's annual pay at approximately $24,940. Adding six percent to account for variations such as increased productivity and inflation, Dr. Bou-dreaux testified that if Harper could not return to work, $308,462 invested conservatively would produce an income stream representing the after-tax pay that Harper would have lost over the 19.5 years of his remaining work life. Dr. Bou-dreaux calculated Harper’s lost wages from the time of the accident to the trial date at $41,565. Assuming that Harper could not work, the loss of his past and future wages equalled $350,027, based on an annual salary of $24,940. Zapata stopped paying Harper on April 1, 1981, approximately three weeks after the accident. Harper introduced into evidence his W-2 statement for 1981, which reflected compensation from Zapata in the amount of $8,225. Harper's counsel asked Dr. Boudreaux to take that figure, which represented payment for a three-month period, and to assume that Harper would have continued at that level during the remainder of 1981. He then estimated an annual wage of $32,900. Taking the tax effect into account, the economist calculated that Harper’s annual wage, based on the W-2 statement, was 28 percent higher than the annual wage estimate of $24,940. Increasing the figure of $350,027 by 28 percent yielded $448,035.
Dissenting Opinion
Circuit Judge, dissenting in part:
I dissent in the name of common sense, to part IV of the opinion.
The majority allows $515,000 for lost wages in this case. A conservative investment of these funds would yield to the plaintiff an annual income of $60,000. When the plaintiff was able bodied and fully employed by the defendant in this case, he earned approximately $30,000
It is clear to me that in this case the jury became outraged over a matter which we now hold that it had no basis to be outraged about. The verdict, in all of its parts, is a product of that unfounded outrage. The case should be sent back for a retrial on damages. That is what I would do and what ought to be done in this case for the sake of a fair and sober result.
. The plaintiff earned $9.05 per hour. With overtime, the plaintiffs pay at the time of the accident, if the proposed work-week schedule was actually worked, would have been $32,900 a year.
