Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge BROWN.
Angel Medina is a captain with the Metropolitan Police Department (“MPD” or “Department”). Medina filed a ten-count complaint in the district court charging the District of Columbia with racial and ethnic discrimination, and retaliation against him because of a series of discrimination complaints he filed against MPD. Although the jury heard five of Medina’s claims, it found for Medina on only one; it concluded MPD had unlawfully retaliated against him. The jury awarded Medina $90,000 on each of two theories of liability — one based on federal law and one based on the D.C. Human Rights Act. Because these dual awards аmount to impermissible double recovery, we reverse the magistrate judge’s order denying the District’s motion for judgment as a matter of law.
I
As the facts underlying Medina’s lawsuit are of little significance to our disposition, we give them only brief attention. Angel Medina, a Hispanic male, began serving as an MPD offiсer in 1985. After Medina applied for a promotion to lieutenant and was passed over, he filed discrimination charges with the D.C. Office of Human Rights alleging that MPD had promoted non-Hispanic officers whose performances on a promotion competency examination were inferior to his own. While the outcome of those charges has no relevance to this case, the charges are significant because they represent the first in a string of complaints filed by Medina with the Office of Human Rights and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, and — he alleges — the motive bеhind the District’s later retaliation against him.
Medina rose through the ranks, ultimately becoming a captain. But Medina claimed that on three separate occasions he was the victim of further racial and ethnic discrimination and retaliation. First, Medina alleged that in 1994, shortly after his promotion to lieutenant, he was transferred from his post at Internal Affairs to street duties although another newly promoted officer — an African-American — was not similarly transferred.
Second, Medina alleged that between late 1997 and early 1998, MPD selected two Caucasian officers to serve in the Offiсe of Internal Affairs instead of granting his request to be transferred back to that office.
Finally, in 2001, MPD suspended Medina without pay pending the resolution of unrelated criminal charges brought against him. According to Medina, MPD discriminated against him both in imposing an unnecessarily severe suspension and in failing to reinstate him to active duty within thirty days after his acquittal of criminal wrongdoing, as Department policy required.
As a result of these incidents, in 1997 Medina filed a complaint in the district court, alleging MPD violated the U.S. Constitution; Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq.; and the D.C. Human Rights Act, D.C.Code § 2-1401.01 et seq., by discriminating and retaliating against him. Medina amended his complaint in 2002 to add the later incidents of alleged discrimination and retaliation. The District then moved to dismiss all ten counts of Medina’s amended complaint.
After the entry of judgment in favor of Medina, the District moved for judgment as a matter of law, or alternatively, remittitur, claiming the jury improperly awarded Medina double recovery for the same injury. The magistrate judge denied the District’s motion, explaining in pertinent part that there was no double recovery because Medina’s federal law claims “spoke ... to [his] rights under the United States Constitution tо equal protection under the laws,” while Medina’s D.C. law claims protected his right “not [to] be subjected to retaliation for making complaints of discrimination.”
Medina v. District of Columbia,
II
We review the magistrate judge’s denial of a motion for judgment as a matter of law
de novo,
but we acknowledge “ ‘[w]e do not ... lightly disturb a jury verdict.’ ”
Novak v. Capital Mgmt. & Dev. Corp.,
The doctrine of double recovery dictates that “in the absence of punitive damages a plaintiff can recover no morе than the loss actually suffered.”
Kassman v. American Univ.,
In light of these principles, the question is whether Medina’s damages award constituted impermissible double recovery, represented compensation for two distinct injuries, or reflected a single award apportioned between two theories of liability.
We begin with Medina’s theories of recovery. In its opinion considering the District’s post-trial motions, the magistrate judge states: “[T]he jury awarded plaintiff $90,000 [because the District] ... violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act.”
Medina,
But careful examination of the jury’s verdict sheet confirms Questions 13-15 (relating to the federal claim on which Medina prevailеd) implicate § 1983, not Title VII. Question 13 asks whether the District “denied [Medina] equal protection of the laws,” which is consistent with Medina’s § 1983 claim.
Compare
Jury Verdict Form,
reprinted in Medina,
Apparently, the magistrate judge believed Medina’s injuries were synonymous with the deprivation of his rights,
see, e.g., Medina,
With these two questions answered, our task is markedly simplified. The only question remaining is whether Medina recovered twice for the same injury. We conclude he did. The magistrate judge held as a matter of law Medina could recover under both D.C. law and federal law theoriеs.
Id.
at 96,
reprinted at
J.A. 369 (“I have concluded as a matter of law that [Medina] may [succeed under both the D.C. law and federal law theories] and you [the jury] are not to concern yourself with that question at all or worry about double recovery.”). It seems the magistrate judge believed the double recovery inquiry turned not on the injuries Medina suffered but on the source of law giving rise to the cause of action.
See Medina,
Medina can prevail under these facts only if the jury intended to award him
Nor can Medina rely on
Martini v. Federal National Mortgage Association,
At first blush,
Martini
might suggest that a plaintiff may recover twice for the same injury under both state law and federal law theories. But
Martini
is distinguishable. Significantly,
Martini
involved an award of both compensatory and punitive damages, while Medina received compensatory damages only. Punitive damages, unlike compensatory damages, are not aimed at making a plaintiff whole; thus the rule against double recovery is inapplicable when the damages awarded are punitive.
Cf. Kassman,
Ill
Because the jury’s award аmounted to impermissible double recovery, we reverse the magistrate judge’s order denying the District’s motion for judgment as a matter of law. We remand with instructions that
So ordered.
Notes
. Medina’s complaint actually alleged violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1981, but prior to trial, both parties stipulated that the proper authority for Medina’s claim is § 1983.
. For purposes of this appeal only we assume without deciding that Medina could have recovered on a § 1983 claim alleging retaliation in violation of the Equal Protection Clause.
But see Teigen v. Renfrow,
