Opinion
In an action arising from plaintiff’s failed attempt to purchase an office building from defendant, the jury found that the parties had no binding and enforceable agreement but that defendant had committed promissory fraud. On his fraud cause of action, plaintiff was awarded $5,000 in economic compensatory damages and $1.7 million in punitive damages. Considering all the relevant circumstances, we conclude this award of punitive damages exceeds the federal due process limitations outlined in recent United States Supreme Court decisions. We further conclude the maximum award constitutionally permissible in the circumstances of this case is $50,000.
*1167 The central issue presented is whether, in addition to the $5,000 in compensatory damages awarded, the punitive damages award should be measured against the $400,000 in profit plaintiff claims he would have achieved had defendant sold the property to him at the agreed price. Plaintiff argues this amount represents either the uncompensated harm he suffered from defendant’s conduct or the potential harm that conduct could have caused him. On this issue, we conclude that while uncompensated or potential harm may in some circumstances be properly considered in assessing the constitutionality of a punitive damages award, here defendant’s fraud neither caused nor foreseeably threatened to cause $400,000 in harm to plaintiff. Under these circumstances, the $1.7 million punitive damages award must be measured against the $5,000 compensatory award, and so measured it is grossly excessive.
Our decision here addresses only'the federal constitutional question, not any issue of excessiveness under California law.
Factual and Procedural Background
Plaintiff Lionel Simon owns and operates a paper supply company, Liberty Paper Company, located in Los Angeles. In 1996, when the events that gave rise to this lawsuit occurred, Simon was leasing premises for his business; he had never before purchased a commercial building.
Defendant San Paolo U.S. Holding Company, Inc. (San Paolo Holding), is a wholly owned subsidiary of an Italian bank, Instituto Bancario San Paolo, S.p.A. (San Paolo Bank). In the mid-1990’s, San Paolo Holding acquired and disposed of the nonperforming loans and real property of First Los Angeles Bank, a bank San Paolo Bank sold in 1995. At the end of 1996, San Paolo Holding had net assets worth around $46 million. Pursuant to a plan of liquidation, however, most of this wealth was transferred in cash to the parent corporation, and by 1998, when punitive damages were tried in this case, San Paolo Holding held only about $4.8 million in net assets.
Duane King, who represented San Paolo Holding in the failed negotiations with Simon, was a vice-president in charge of disposing of the properties acquired from First Los Angeles Bank. William Schack, a first vice-president of San Paolo Holding, supervised King.
In 1994, Simon noticed that a small downtown office building at 816 South Figueroa Street was for sale. He considered it perfect for his business needs and remained interested in buying it after San Paolo Holding acquired it *1168 through foreclosure in late 1995. In March 1996, Simon learned that an arrangement to sell the building to an investment group headed by Robert DeVogelaere for $1.5 million had fallen through; Simon then asked William Atha, the real estate broker handling the property for San Paolo Holding, to present Simon’s offer to buy the building for $1.2 million. In ensuing negotiations, King twice raised the asking price after obtaining Simon’s oral agreement to buy, and no written agreement was reached. Additional negotiations in April and May collapsed in disputes over price (King wanted $1.35 million) and closing date (King wanted to close by the end of June for internal bookkeeping reasons, while Simon wanted a long escrow in case the foreclosed prior owner exercised its right of redemption).
The parties finally reached a tentative written agreement in June 1996. On June 12, King and Simon executed a letter of intent drafted by Atha, the broker. In exchange for San Paolo Holding’s acceptance of a $1.1 million sale price, Simon promised his cooperation in closing the transaction by June 27. Escrow was to open by 5:00 p.m. the next day, June 13, upon the approval of San Paolo Bank’s Los Angeles and New York offices. Simon was to deposit $50,000 to open escrow and was to complete all inspections and due diligence and secure financing by June 26, at which time his deposit would be released to the seller. The parties agreed “to exclusively negotiate upon execution of this letter” and “to proceed to escrow and attempt to complete a transaction based upon the above conditions,” which were said to constitute the “essential elements” of the transaction. Simon added a handwritten addendum stating, “This letter is intended as a letter of intent only and this transaction is subject to approval by legal counsel of the deposit receipt and escrow instructions.” (Simon retained counsel on June 12, paying a nonrefundable $5,000 retainer.) On the facsimile cover sheet transmitting the executed letter to Simon, Atha described it as a “signed letter of intent (nonbinding).”
On the morning of June 13, Atha asked Simon if he could have his inspections done by June 21, instead of June 26 as agreed. Simon replied that he also was anxious to complete the purchase and would try to have the inspections done by June 21. Later, Atha called to tell him that San Paolo Holding was now insisting on completion by June 21. Simon said he would agree to finish by June 24, a Monday, and to use his best efforts to do so by June 21, the previous Friday. Atha drafted a deposit receipt reflecting that schedule, but King did not sign it. Despite Atha’s pointing out to both sides that they were only one business day apart in their positions, no further agreement was reached and escrow did not open as planned on June 13. Around 5:00 p.m. on June 13, King faxed a letter to Simon, giving notice that San Paolo Holding “has failed to come to terms with you” and “[ajccordingly, we are terminating negotiations with you and plan to move on in our efforts to market the building.”
*1169 Schack, King’s supervisor in Los Angeles, testified that he and King wanted to sell the building at 816 South Figueroa Street in the quarter ending June 30, 1996, in order to maximize the department’s bonus and show bank headquarters that the Los Angeles office was selling assets. According to Schack, after King signed the letter of intent specifying June 26 as the buyer’s date to complete inspections and release his deposit, King and Schack instead decided that “the 21st was what would work for us.” Although King told Schack that Simon had agreed to complete by June 24, King and Schack did not seek approval from the New York office for any date other than June 21. Because Simon would not agree to June 21, “the transaction was cancelled.”
King agreed with Schack that the “big issue” causing failure of the sale to Simon was the date for completion of inspections and release of Simon’s deposit. King also suggested that escrow could not be opened on June 13 because Simon did not submit the financial statements necessary for him to obtain financing from San Paolo Bank. Atha, however, testified that King told him San Paolo Holding would not accept Simon’s deposit or financials because of the disagreement over the release date; Atha in turn told Simon not to bother tendering the deposit and submitting the financials.
On June 14, 1996, San Paolo Holding reached a written agreement to sell the building for $1 million to a group that included DeVogelaere, the investor with whom King had negotiated earlier in the year. At trial, the parties vigorously disputed whether King began the negotiations that led to this agreement during the period between executing the letter of intent with Simon on June 12 and terminating negotiations with him at 5:00 p.m. on June 13.
While King and DeVogelaere, in declarations submitted for the purpose of expunging a lis pendens Simon had filed in connection with this lawsuit, stated they had conducted no negotiations until after the negotiations with Simon were terminated, there was considerable evidence to the contrary: phone records showed numerous calls between King and DeVogelaere during the day on June 13, in which, DeVogelaere testified, they discussed his group’s offer to buy the building; according to notes that Atha took before a call to Simon at 3:30 p.m. on June 13, and according as well to King’s own testimony, King told Atha that afternoon not to tell Simon that King was talking to another possible buyer; the sale contract originally bore dates of June 12 and June 13, later overwritten to read June 14; the offer sheet was also dated June 13; and Schack faxed the offer sheet and a credit memorandum to the New York office at 9:15 a.m. on June 14, casting doubt on King’s *1170 testimony that starting around 8:00 a.m. on the morning of June 14 he signed the contract at his Malibu home, took the executed contract to DeVogelaere’s home in Pacific Palisades, drove to his downtown Los Angeles office (a trip DeVogelaere testified ordinarily took at least 45 minutes), and prepared the offer sheet and detailed credit memorandum.
Even after opening escrow with the DeVogelaere group, King had Atha, as yet unaware of the DeVogelaere contract, engage in renewed negotiations with Simon, orally offering on June 17 to accept a June 26 deposit release date and to pay $5,000 to help with Simon’s due diligence. Simon instead filed this lawsuit on June 21, 1996. His lis pendens was later expunged, and the DeVogelaere sale closed in August 1996.
Simon’s real estate valuation expert testified the building was worth $1.5 million as of June 1996, $400,000 more than Simon was to pay under the letter of intent. San Paolo Holding’s expert, who had also previously appraised the building at $1.5 million, nevertheless testified to a value of only $1 million, based in large part on the sale for that amount to the DeVogelaere group.
Simon sued San Paolo Holding for breach of contract and promissory fraud. As to breach of contract, the jury by special verdict found the parties had no “binding and enforceable agreement.” As to fraud, the jury found San Paolo Holding had made “a false promise about a material matter” to Simon without the intent to perform and with the intent to defraud Simon, and that Simon had justifiably relied on the promise and was damaged in the amount of $5,000. The jury also found by clear and convincing evidence that San Paolo Holding acted with fraud, malice or oppression and awarded Simon $2.5 million in punitive damages. On San Paolo Holding’s motion for a new trial, the trial court ordered a new trial on punitive damages unless Simon agreed to their reduction to $250,000. Simon declined the remittitur. On retrial of punitive damages, a new jury awarded him $1.7 million, and the trial court rendered judgment upon that award together with the $5,000 in compensatory damages.
The Court of Appeal affirmed. The United States Supreme Court granted certiorari, vacated the decision and remanded the case to the Court of Appeal for further consideration in light of
Cooper Industries, Inc.
v.
Leatherman Tool Group, Inc.
(2001)
We granted San Paolo Holding’s petition for review, which presented the question whether the punitive damages award is unconstitutionally excessive under State Farm and its predecessors. 1
Discussion
In a series of decisions culminating in
State Farm, supra,
Eschewing both rigid numerical limits and a subjective inquiry into the jury’s motives, the high court eventually expounded in
BMW
and
State Farm
a three-factor weighing analysis looking to the nature and effects of the
*1172
defendant’s tortious conduct and the state’s treatment of comparable conduct in other contexts. As articulated in
State Farm,
the constitutional “guideposts” for reviewing courts are: “(1) the degree of reprehensibility of the defendant’s misconduct; (2) the disparity between the actual or potential harm suffered by the plaintiff and the punitive damages award; and (3) the difference between the punitive damages awarded by the jury and the civil penalties authorized or imposed in comparable cases.”
(State Farm, supra,
In deciding whether an award of punitive damages is constitutionally excessive under
State Farm
and its predecessors, we are to review the award de novo, making an independent assessment of the reprehensibility of the defendant’s conduct, the relationship between the award and the harm done to the plaintiff, and the relationship between the award and civil penalties authorized for comparable conduct.
(State Farm, supra,
On the other hand, findings of historical fact made in the trial court are still entitled to the ordinary measure of appellate deference.
(Cooper Industries, supra,
*1173 The Court of Appeal, however, erred in “presum[ing],” simply from the size of the punitive damages award, that the jury found Simon had suffered “an actual loss of at least . . . $400,000.” The jury made no such express finding, and to infer one from the size of the award would be inconsistent with de novo review, for the award’s size would thereby indirectly justify itself. (See Cooper Industries, supra, 532 U.S. at pp. 441-442 [determining independently that the potential harm from the defendant’s unfair competition (passing off the plaintiff’s product as its own) did not extend to all of the defendant’s profits from the product for five years].)
I. Uncompensated Harm/Potential Harm
Before undertaking the multifactor evaluation mandated by
BMW, supra,
United States Supreme Court precedents appear to contemplate, in some circumstances, the use of measures of harm beyond the compensatory damages. Thus in
State Farm,
discussing the second
BMW
“guidepost,” the high court spoke repeatedly of a proportionality between punitive damages and the harm or “potential harm” suffered by the plaintiff.
(State Farm, supra,
538 U.S. at pp. 418, 424.) At another point
(id.
at p. 426), the court referred to the relationship between punitive damages and both “the amount of harm” and “the general damages recovered,” impliedly recognizing that these two are not always identical. More explicitly, in
State Farm
the high court reiterated its recognition in
BMW
that in some cases compensatory damages are not the definitive quantification of harm because “ ‘the injury is hard to detect or the monetary value of noneconomic harm might have been difficult to determine.’ ”
(State Farm, supra,
at p. 425, quoting
BMW, supra,
State Farm's
reference to potential harm echoed the high court’s earlier decision in
TXO Production Corp. v. Alliance Resources Corp., supra,
In the wake of TXO, BMW and State Farm, a large number of federal and state courts have, in a variety of factual contexts, considered uncompensated or potential harm as part of the predicate for a punitive damages award. 3 In the present case, however, we conclude that the $400,000 in profit that plaintiff might have gained by purchasing the building is not a proper consideration.
*1175 As explained above, we must determine independently the relationship between the harm done plaintiff and the amount awarded in punitive damages. (Cooper Industries, supra, 532 U.S. at pp. 436-440.) While we defer to express jury findings supported by the evidence (see ante, at p. 9), in the absence of an express finding on the question we must independently decide whether defendant’s promissory fraud did, or foreseeably could have, hurt plaintiff in the amount of $400,000.
The first jury did not specify the “false promise about a material matter” it found San Paolo Holding had made. Based on the evidence and argument, the finding could refer to San Paolo Holding’s express promise, in the letter of intent, to “proceed to escrow and attempt to complete a transaction” on the agreed terms, to its express promise to “exclusively negotiate,” to its implied promise to seek approval from the New York office for a sale on the agreed terms, or to any combination of these. None of these possible false promises, however, was the factual cause of a $400,000 loss to Simon. Had San Paolo Holding never promised to proceed to escrow, never promised to negotiate exclusively with Simon, and never promised to seek the New York office’s approval, Simon would still not have obtained the property. Simon, the first jury found, had no contractual right to buy the property. Consequently, San Paolo Holding’s promissory fraud did not deprive him of property he would otherwise have obtained; it merely led him, as the jury indeed found, to spend $5,000 to retain an attorney in anticipation of opening escrow.
Gray v. Don Miller & Associates, Inc.
(1984)
Simon contends, and the Court of Appeal agreed, that he was precluded from recovering the $400,000 in lost profits only by operation of Civil Code section 3343, subdivision (a)(1), which in effect sets damages for
*1176
a defrauded
attempted
purchaser of property at the “[a]mounts actually and reasonably expended in reliance upon the fraud.” We disagree. Regardless of the effect of Civil Code section 3343, Simon could not recover those lost profits on his promissory fraud cause of action because
the fraud did not cause them.
Fraudulent promises to sell (as in
Kenly
v.
Ukegawa, supra,
This is not a case like
Neal
v.
Farmers Ins. Exchange, supra,
Simon also contends San Paolo Holding’s fraud was intended to cause him, or risked causing him, “potential losses . . . well in excess of $455,000.” In addition to the $400,000 anticipated profit from acquiring the building and his $5,000 out-of-pocket loss, Simon includes in this sum the $50,000 deposit that was, under the letter of intent, to become nonrefundable upon completion of inspections and due diligence on June 26, 1996. Simon argues that had he agreed to King’s demand to move the completion date up to June 21, King “would likely have strung [him] along until the 22nd, and then manufactured some other reason to back out of the sale,” resulting in the loss of his deposit. Simon further contends his potential losses include an unquantified financial impact; had he given up his leased business premises after signing the letter of intent, he would then have “found himself on the street” when San Paolo Holding pulled out of the sale. We conclude, however, that these asserted potential injuries, like the uncompensated harm Simon claims, may not be considered in assessing the ratio of punitive damages to harm.
The potential harm that is properly included in the due process analysis is “ ‘harm
that is likely to occur from, the defendant’s
conduct.’ ”
(TXO, supra,
In TXO itself, the defendant, hoping to renegotiate downward the royalties it had agreed to pay for development of the plaintiff’s oil and gas rights, had solicited a false affidavit impairing the plaintiff’s title, then brought an *1178 unsuccessful declaratory relief action in state court. (TXO, supra, 509 U.S. at pp. 448-449.) The high court plurality held it appropriate to consider the harm “the defendant’s conduct would have caused to its intended victim if the wrongful plan had succeeded.” (Id. at p. 460.) Other cases have also considered foreseeable potential injuries in the punitive damages-to-harm ratio. 5
By contrast, in
Pulla
v.
Amoco Oil Co.
(8th Cir. 1995)
The present case more closely resembles the last cited decisions, in which the asserted potential injuries were not foreseeable results of the defendant’s tortious conduct, than it does the decisions approving consideration of potential losses. The $400,000 in profit Simon claims he would have earned by acquiring the property cannot be considered potential harm from San Paolo Holding’s promissory fraud because, in the absence of any contractual obligation to sell Simon the property, San Paolo Holding’s tortious conduct could not have had the foreseeable effect of depriving Simon of an entitlement to purchase it. As in
Leatherman Tool Group, Inc. v. Cooper Industries, Inc., supra,
As the record does not reveal the goals of San Paolo Holding’s fraud, it is difficult to say what injuries beyond his $5,000 out-of-pocket loss, if any, Simon would have suffered had those goals been achieved. To the extent King, for reasons that are not apparent,
6
simply wanted to keep Simon on the hook as long as possible, he succeeded, but Simon’s only resulting loss, as far as the record shows, was the $5,000 retainer. (See
Bains LLC v. Arco Products Company
(9th Cir. 2005)
The $5,000 award of compensatory damages, therefore, must be considered the true measure of the harm (or potential harm) San Paolo Holding’s tortious act caused to Simon.
II. Evaluation of the Award Under State Farm and BMW
We now consider in sequence the three guideposts prescribed by the high court: “(1) the degree of reprehensibility of the defendant’s misconduct; (2) the disparity between the actual or potential harm suffered by the plaintiff and the punitive damages award; and (3) the difference between the punitive damages awarded by the jury and the civil penalties authorized or imposed in
*1180
comparable cases.”
(State Farm, supra,
A. Degree of Reprehensibility
The high court in both
BMW
and
State Farm
recognized that “the most important indicium of the reasonableness of a punitive damages award is the degree of reprehensibility of the defendant’s conduct.”
(State Farm, supra,
Here, defendant’s tortious acts caused only economic harm and did not show disregard of others’ health or safety. The first two subfactors are clearly inapplicable.
The parties dispute whether Simon was financially vulnerable, but we assess this factor as essentially neutral. While San Paolo Holding had financial resources vastly superior to Simon’s, the transaction was an arm’s-length one upon which neither party depended for economic survival or security; Simon wanted to buy the office building and San Paolo Holding wanted to sell it (albeit seemingly not to Simon), but neither needed for the transaction to go through. This limited the leverage San Paolo Holding’s superior financial position might otherwise have given it over Simon.
Similarly, although San Paolo Holding’s conduct could be characterized as more than a single isolated incident, as the evidence showed deceptive conduct by King spanning several weeks, the tortious act on which liability was based was a single false promise (or set of promises) made in the letter of intent, and no evidence indicated King had acted similarly toward other potential buyers. Unlike, for example, the defendant in our companion case of Johnson v. Ford Motor Co. (2005) 35 Cal.4th 1191, San Paolo Holding cannot be characterized as a repeat offender. This subfactor, too, fails to support a high assessment of reprehensibility.
*1181
Finally, San Paolo Holding concedes King’s making of one or more intentionally false promises, as the jury found he did, constitutes “intentional . . . deceit”
(State Farm, supra,
In sum, of the five subfactors relevant to reprehensibility, only one applies. In the universe of cases warranting punitive damages under California law, the fraudulent promise or promises that led to San Paolo Holding’s liability have to be regarded as of relatively low culpability.
B. Ratio of Punitive Damages to Actual or Potential Harm
While the high court had in
BMW
and earlier decisions already demanded that punitive damages bear a “ ‘reasonable relationship’ ” to compensatory damages
(BMW, supra,
In
BMW,
the court not only abjured drawing “ ‘a mathematical bright line,’ ” but also observed that “[i]n most cases, the ratio will be within a constitutionally acceptable range,” disapproving only the “breathtaking 500 to
*1182
1” ratio in the case before it.
(BMW, supra,
We understand the court’s statement in
State Farm
that “few awards” significantly exceeding a single-digit ratio will satisfy due process to establish a type of presumption: ratios between the punitive damages award and the plaintiff’s actual or potential compensatory damages significantly greater than 9 or 10 to 1 are suspect and, absent special justification (by, for example, extreme reprehensibility or unusually small, hard-to-detect or hard-to-measure compensatory damages), cannot survive appellate scrutiny under the due process clause.
7
As stated in
Williams
v.
ConAgra Poultry Company
(8th Cir. 2004)
Multipliers
less
than nine or 10 are not, however, presumptively
valid
under
State Farm.
Especially when the compensatory damages are substantial or already contain a punitive element, lesser ratios “can reach the outermost limit of the due process guarantee.”
(State Farm, supra,
Measurement of damages is, of course, far from exact, a fact reflected in the high court’s qualification of its single-digit presumption: only awards exceeding that level “to a significant degree” are constitutionally suspect.
(State Farm, supra,
The disputed $1.7 million punitive damages award to Simon was 340 times his $5,000 award of compensatory damages. This qualifies as a “breathtaking” multiplier
(BMW, supra,
Measured against the second BMW/State Farm guidepost, therefore, the punitive damages award is grossly excessive.
C. Comparable Civil Penalties
The third guidepost is less useful in a case like this one, where plaintiff prevailed only on a cause of action involving “common law tort duties that
*1184
do not lend themselves to a comparison with statutory penalties”
(Continental Trend Resources v. OXY USA, Inc., supra,
While comparison to these statutory penalties cannot tell us precisely how large an award would be constitutional, it clearly does not tend to support the present award of $1.7 million in punitive damages, a sum 340 times the financial harm defendant’s fraud caused plaintiff.
D. The Role Played by the Defendant's Financial Condition
Plaintiff contends a substantial reduction will make the punitive damages so small as to be written off as a cost of doing business, negating the state’s interest in deterring repetition or imitation of defendant’s conduct. Defendant counters that after BMW and State Farm, the small size of an award in comparison to the defendant’s financial condition is no longer a factor to consider in assessing excessiveness. We briefly address the question of a defendant’s wealth or financial condition in relation to the state’s interests in punishing and deterring a defendant’s wrongful conduct.
Where the defendant’s oppression, fraud or malice has been proven by clear and convincing evidence, California law permits the recovery of punitive damages “for the sake of example and by way of punishing the defendant.” (Civ. Code, § 3294, subd. (a).) As we explained in
Neal v.
*1185
Farmers Ins. Exchange, supra,
Due process does not preclude a state from using punitive damages for the purposes of deterrence. As the high court stated in
State Farm, supra,
Because a court reviewing the jury’s award for due process compliance may consider what level of punishment is necessary to vindicate the state’s legitimate interests in deterring conduct harmful to state residents, the defendant’s financial condition remains a legitimate consideration in setting punitive damages. (See
State Farm, supra,
Reading the high court’s decisions as a whole, we agree with the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals that while wealth cannot substitute for the high court’s guideposts in limiting awards, and cannot alone justify a high award, the guideposts were not intended “to prevent juries from levying awards that serve important state interests and provide a meaningful deterrent against corporate misconduct.”
(Kemp v. American Telephone & Telegraph Co.
(11th Cir. 2004)
We need not in this case attempt to delineate the relationship between wealth and the
BMW/State Farm
guideposts under all circumstances. In some cases, the defendant’s financial condition may combine with high reprehensibility and a low compensatory award to justify an extraordinary ratio between compensatory and punitive damages. (See, e.g.,
Kemp
v.
American Telephone & Telegraph Co., supra,
393 F.3d at pp. 1357, 1365 [where the defendant played a “critical role” in conduct of illegal gambling scheme, punitive damages of $250,000 on only $115 in compensatory damages were justified in part by need for “meaningful deterrent” to illegal conduct by large corporation].) In other cases, especially those involving substantial compensatory awards, the level of deterrence may be limited, after
*1187
State Farm,
to that provided “as a natural result of imposing damages over and above traditional compensatory damages, not from the imposition of sanctions in an individual case that are actually disabling to the defendant”
(Romo v. Ford Motor Co., supra,
III. The Maximum Constitutional Award
A. Appellate Determination v. Remittitur
Our review of the BMW/State Farm guideposts, even in light of California’s interest in punishing and deterring fraudulent conduct, leads to the conclusion that the jury’s award of $1.7 million in punitive damages is grossly excessive. The Court of Appeal erred in holding to the contrary. We could end our discussion here and remand to the Court of Appeal for that court to reduce the award to the constitutionally allowed maximum. But because this litigation has already lasted more than eight years, a process so far including two trips to the United States Supreme Court and three decisions by the Court of Appeal, we believe the better course is for this court itself to determine the maximum punitive damages award that satisfies the constraints of due process and to order the judgment reduced accordingly.
Moreover, we agree with San Paolo Holding that the appropriate order is for an absolute reduction, rather than a conditional reduction with the alternative of a new trial, i.e., a remittitur. As constitutional excessiveness is a legal issue appellate courts determine independently
(State Farm, supra,
Once a maximum constitutional award has been determined, moreover, a new trial on punitive damages would be futile. “Giving a plaintiff the option of a new trial rather than accepting the constitutional maximum for this case would be of no value. If, on a new trial, the plaintiff was awarded punitive damages
less
than the constitutional maximum, he would have lost. If the plaintiff obtained
more
than the constitutional maximum, the award could not be sustained. Thus, a new trial provides only a ‘heads the defendant wins; tails the plaintiff loses’ option.”
(Johansen, supra,
B. Determination of Maximum Award
To state a particular level beyond which punitive damages in a given case would be grossly excessive, and hence unconstitutionally arbitrary, “ ‘is not an enviable task. ... In the last analysis, an appellate panel, convinced it must reduce an award of punitive damages, must rely on its combined experience and judgment.’ ”
(Leatherman Tool Group, Inc.
v.
Cooper Industries, Inc., supra,
Referring to our earlier reprehensibility analysis and using the comparisons to compensatory damages and civil penalties for calibration, we conclude the maximum here lies at $50,000, or 10 times the compensatory award. This
*1189
amount, we believe, will “further [California’s] legitimate interests in punishing unlawful conduct and deterring its repetition”
(BMW, supra,
We have already explained the reasons for our evaluation of San Paolo Holding’s reprehensibility as low, and the presumption against awards significantly exceeding a single-digit multiplier of the actual or potential harm inflicted. (See pts. IIA. & II.B.,
ante.)
In
State Farm,
the high court made clear that due process permits a higher ratio between punitive damages and a small compensatory award for purely economic damages containing no punitive element than between punitive damages and a substantial compensatory award for emotional distress; the latter may be based in part on indignation at the defendant’s act and may be so large as to serve, itself, as a deterrent.
(State Farm, supra,
538 U.S. at pp. 425-426.) Here the $5,000 award was for purely economic damages containing no punitive element and is quite small. Yet the compensatory award here, as earlier discussed, did accurately measure the injury proven to have been inflicted. (See pt. I.,
ante.)
This was not a case where the harm could not be quantified and only nominal damages were awarded. (See, e.g.,
DiSorbo v. Hoy, supra,
A penalty of $50,000, though just exceeding the largest single-digit ratio amount, is in absolute size not extraordinary for fraudulent conduct. (See, e.g.,
Mathias
v.
Accor Economy Lodging, Inc., supra,
347 F.3d at pp. 677-678 [upholding $186,000 in punitives on a $5,000 compensatory award against wealthy corporate defendant for outrageous but not very harmful behavior];
McClain v. Metabolife International, Inc., supra,
We therefore conclude $50,000 is, considering all the circumstances of this case, the maximum award of punitive damages consistent with due process.
*1190 Disposition
The judgment of the Court of Appeal is reversed. The matter is remanded to the Court of Appeal with directions that it modify the superior court judgment to reduce the award of punitive damages to $50,000 and affirm the judgment as modified.
George, C. J., Kennard, J., Baxter, J., Chin, J., Brown, J., and Moreno, J., concurred.
Notes
Because the present petition goes only to federal issues, we do not address whether the award is excessive under state law standards. (See
Adams
v.
Murakami
(1991)
The requirement of independent review applies to state as well as federal appellate courts when assessing excessiveness under the federal due process clause. (See
State Farm, supra,
See, e.g.,
Romo v. Ford Motor Co.
(2003)
Simon cites our decision in
Lazar v. Superior Court
(1996)
See
Southern Union Company v. Southwest Gas Corporation, supra,
Simon has suggested that King had a personal financial motive for ultimately selling to the DeVogelaere group rather than to Simon. Even if true, this would not explain why King first executed a letter of intent with Simon.
Though one court has referred to a 9-to-l ratio as the constitutional trigger point
(McClain v. Metabolife International, Inc.
(N.D.Ala. 2003)
In
State Farm,
the high court explained the limited value of comparing punitive damages to criminal penalties: “The existence of a criminal penalty does have bearing on the seriousness with which a State views the wrongful action. When used to determine the dollar amount of the award, however, the criminal penalty has less utility. Great care must be taken to avoid use of the civil process to assess criminal penalties that can be imposed only after the heightened protections of a criminal trial have been observed, including, of course, its higher standards of proof.”
(State Farm, supra,
Accord,
Bardis v. Oates, supra,
This is trae whether we use the $46 million San Paolo Holding had in 1996 or the $4.8 million it had in 1998, after transferring cash to its corporate parent. We consider the higher number more appropriate, however, because it more closely reflects San Paolo Holding’s condition at the time of the tortious acts whose repetition or imitation the law seeks to deter.
