The full history underlying these appeals is available elsewhere.
See generally Mason v. Oklahoma Turnpike Auth.,
The prior appeals established inter alia the liability, and attendant punitive damage exposure, of defendant Terry Young 2 for the wrongful termination of plaintiff Ronald Mason. As for the asserted exces-siveness of the jury’s punitive damage award — a tоtal of $300,000 split evenly between plaintiff’s claims for violation of public policy under state law and political discrimination under 42 U.S.C. § 1983— review was left to the district court’s discretion on remand. The district court reсonsidered and approved the award. Defendant Young appealed (No. 98-6192), challenging the award in light of (1) plaintiffs failure to present evidence of defendant’s financial condition at trial, and (2) defendant’s own evidence of impecuniousness, proffered on remand. Plaintiff cross-appealed (No. 98-6201) to preserve his position that, if defendant’s post-trial financial evidence were held tо undercut the existing punitive damage award, we should remand the case to offer him an opportunity to rebut such evidence, rather than directly vacate the award or order a remittitur.
I
Before we turn to the directly dis-positive matters on this appeal, some
*1214
broad preliminary points should be clarified. The first concerns identification of the issues properly before this court, which are limited by the cоntent of our previous remand and, thus, ultimately by the scope of defendant’s prior appeal.
See Dow Chem. Corp. v. Weevil-Cide Co.,
Our second clarification has to do with the controlling authority for the common law excessiveness inquiry. Defendant indiscriminately cites state and federal decisions for the pertinent substantive standards, without explaining how these correlate with the state and federal claims on which punitive damages were awarded. While our disposition may not turn on any critical differences in this regard, it is important to note that Oklahoma law governs the excessiveness inquiry on the state tort claim, while federal law controls on the § 1983 claim. However, in both instances our standard of appellate review, dictated by the Seventh Amendment’s reexamination clause, is the same: abuse of discretion.
See Gasperini v. Center for Humanities, Inc.,
Our last clarification concerns the burden of proof. Defendant insists that in establishing the propriety and amount of punitive damages, plaintiff was obligated to present evidence of defendant’s financial condition. This is clearly not the law with respect to the federal claim.
See, e.g., Kemezy v. Peters,
*1215 II
As noted at the outset, defendant’s objection to the jury’s punitive damage award, and to the district court’s refusal to disturb it, focuses on his financial condition: specifically, the lack of evidence adduced on the matter at trial, and defendant’s own showing proffered post-trial (on remand). As we have already seen, however, it was not plaintiffs burden to establish defendant’s financial condition. Rather, this was a matter defendant could have raised in opposition to and/or mitigation of the punitive damages sought by plaintiff. His еlection not to do so cannot undermine the award the jury was persuaded to grant plaintiff on the evidence before it.
The district court discounted defendant’s own evidentiary showing on remand for two, alternative reasons:
First, the Court notes that the Defendants made a deliberate, tactical decision not to offer evidence of their respective financial conditions at trial.... Under the circumstаnces, the court finds that it would be inequitable to reduce the Defendants’ liability for punitive damages on the basis of financial information which was available to them at trial. Alternatively, the financial informatiоn provided by the Defendants in this case is not sufficient to warrant a reduction in the punitive damage awards.
Appendix at 206. We do not reach the district court’s second, substantive assessment of the evidencе, because the initial, procedural basis for rejecting it suffices to justify the court’s disposition of the matter.
As already noted, we review the district court’s resolution of the excessiveness question for an abuse of discretion.
See Gasperini
*1216 Without the financial evidence defendant sought to introduce on remand, his challenge to the punitive damage award clеarly must fail. With this conclusion, the issues raised on plaintiffs protective cross-appeal are effectively mooted as well.
Finally, the primary focus of our prior remand was whether the $150,000 in punitive damages awarded on both of plaintiffs claims were duplicative,
see Mason,
The judgment of the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined unanimously to grant thе parties’ request for a decision on the briefs without oral argument. See Fed. R.App. P. 34(0; 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G). The cases are therefore ordered submitted without oral argument.
. Defendant Sam Scott, originally an appellant in No. 98-6192 аnd appellee in No. 98-6201, has been dismissed from the proceedings through settlement. We therefore refer only to defendant Young here, even if the source for our reference originally included both dеfendants.
. We note that a substantive constitutional limitation on punitive damages was acknowledged by the United States Supreme Court long before the trial of this action.
See, e.g., TXO Prod. Corp. v. Alliance Resources Corp.,
. The current version of the punitive damаge statute does refer to the defendant's financial condition, though this is cited as but one of many factors relevant to the proper amount, *1215 distinct from the requisite misconduct of the defendant that the plaintiff must establish, by clear and convincing evidence, to obtain any award. Compare § 9.1(A), (E) with § 9.1(B)-(D). We express no opinion regarding the effect of these later provisions on the issues in this case.
. Indeed, there is a serious quеstion whether, in light of the reexamination clause of the Seventh Amendment, the district court even
could have
permitted post-trial supplementation of the evidentiary record. One circuit has considered the matter at some length and concluded that "the court cannot, consistent with the Seventh Amendment, evaluate a jury’s verdict [for excessiveness] based on evidence that the jury was not permitted to consider at trial.”
Mattison v. Dallas Carrier Corp.,
