Appellant, Town & Country Estates, Inc., appeals from a judgment entered on a jury verdict in favor of appellee, Li Ren Fong, on Fong’s claim that he was defrauded by Town & Country. The jury awarded Fong $14,400 in actual damages and $65,600 in punitive damages.
For reversal Town & Country argues that: (1) the trial court instructed the jury and received evidence on an improper measure of damages; (2) Li Ren Fong failed to adduce sufficient evidence to support an award of punitive damages; and (3) the punitive damages assessed were excessive. For the following reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court. 1
In September, 1974, Li Ren Fong entered into a lease agreement with Town & Country Estates, which managed the Windmill Square Shopping Center in Overland Park, Kansas, which was under construction and scheduled for completion in November, 1974. The five-year lease provided for a space in the shopping center at a minimum monthly rent, of $534. As provided in the agreement, the retail space Fong rented consisted merely of bare concrete walls and floor. Fong installed drywalls, petitions, ceilings, plumbing, light fixtures and other improvements which were necessary to establish a retail gift shop. On December 7, 1974, Fong opened his shop.
On November 15, 1975, Fong instituted the present suit alleging that he was falsely induced to lease the space by Lee M. Fowler, vice-president of Town & Country, who represented that at the time Fong negotiated his lease, fifty percent of the shopping center was already leased. Count I of the complaint sought rescission of the lease agreement and $150,000 damages. Count II sought $150,000 actual damages and $500,000 punitive damages. On December 1, 1975, Town & Country sold the shopping center and the new owner released Fong from his lease obligations. In April, 1976, Fong vacated the premises. Because Fong had been released from his rental contract by the new owners of the shopping center, he dropped his claim for rescission in Count 1 prior to trial.
There were two trials in this case. In both trials the juries returned verdicts for Fong finding that at the time Fong entered into the lease much less than fifty percent of the shopping center was leased and that, in fact, Fowler misrepresented the facts to Fong. Fong was awarded $19,200 actual damages and $20,000 punitive damages in the first trial. The trial court then granted Town & Country’s motion for a new trial on the ground the jury had returned inconsistent verdicts. The second trial commenced November 7, 1978; this time the jury awarded Fong $14,400 actual damages and $65,600 punitive damages. This is the verdict from which Town & Country appeals. The only issue raised concerns the amount of damages. 2
*182 Town & Country’s first contention of error is that the trial court improperly instructed the jury that
having found the issues in favor of the plaintiff you must award plaintiff such sum as you believe will fairly and justly compensate plaintiff for any actual damages you believe he sustained as a direct result of the occurrence mentioned in the evidence.
According to appellant, this instruction allows Fong to recover “out-of-pocket” expenses, i. e., “the amount . . . paid with interest . . . plus incidental losses and expenses suffered as a result of the seller’s misrepresentations,”
Salmon v. Brookshire,
In this diversity case Missouri law controls and appellant’s statement of the Missouri law on damages is correct. Both the “benefit-of-the-bargain” and “out-of-pocket” damage awards seek to award a plaintiff damages for the losses proximately caused by the defendant’s fraud.
Cf. Kendrick v. Ryus,
The damage instructions here, which the parties classify as allowing “out-of-pocket” expenses, were proper because plaintiff was no longer in possession of the premises or even obligated to lease the premises when the amount of damages was assessed. Granted, rescission is generally sought simultaneously with a request for out-of-pocket damages,
see, e. g., Miller v. Andy Burger Motors, Inc.,
Appellant also contends that the award of punitive damages was erroneous. It advances two arguments: first, there was insufficient evidence to support a finding of legal malice which must be proven to obtain punitive damages,
Ackmann v. Keeney-Toelle Real Estate Co.,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable John W. Oliver, Chief Judge, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
. Appellant also argued that Fong failed to adduce sufficient evidence to prove Town & Country made misrepresentations to him. According to appellant, Fowler’s statements that fifty percent of the shopping center was leased were merely future projections and because “fraud ‘cannot ordinarily be predicated on unfulfilled promises or statements as to future events,’”
Reed v. Cooke,
. We note that how the court characterized the measure of damages due to Fong more than likely had little effect in the outcome of this case, and, if there had been an effect it probably would have been in appellant’s disfavor. According to the parties, the “out-of-pocket” expenses awarded here are the amounts Fong expended on improvements for the leased space. If the jury had been instructed to give Fong damages according to the “benefit-of-the-bargain” test, the jury would still have the option of awarding him “special damages,” which the parties have also characterized as the amount Fong expended for improvements.
Miller v. Higgins,
. Generally, the relative position of the parties is frozen at the time the complaint is filed,
First National Bank of Kansas City v. Kavorinos,
