OPINION and ORDER OF COURT
SYNOPSIS
Defendants have filed a Motion in Li-mine to preclude Plaintiffs from introducing evidence of expectation damages in this matter. In particular, they object to the admission of the portions of Robert Boyd Carter’s report that relate to damages. 1
Because my conclusion is fairly straightforward, I will state it from the outset: I will grant the Motion in part, in that Mr. Carter will not be permitted to testify as to the proper legal measure of damages in this matter. Instead, the Court will determine the proper measure of damages, and I will instruct the jury accordingly; the jury will then determine the appropriate amounts, if any. To the extent that the Motion seeks to prevent Plaintiffs from presenting testimony of all losses beyond premiums paid, however, it will be denied.
This simple ruling, however, belies the confusion generated by the issues addressed in the parties’ papers, which have also arisen in previous cases involving present counsel. Therefore, I take this opportunity to flesh out the reasoning behind my decisions.
DISCUSSION
The parties frame their present dispute as one about whether Plaintiff is entitled to receive “expectation,” or “benefit of the bargain,” damages. The crux of this issue is the parameters of recoverable “actual” loss under the UTPCPL and the common law. To the extent that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has not examined the precise issue before me, this Opinion reflects my predictions regarding how that court would rule. USX Corp. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 2006 U.S.App. LEXIS 8702, at *18 n. 13 (3d Cir. Mar. 7, 2006).
As an initial matter, I address the semantics upon which resolution of this question, in part, depends. Expectation damages, or benefit of the bargain damages, which are available when a contract is breached, are intended to place the injured party back in the position he would have been had the contract been performed — i.e., to give him what he expected under the contract.
ATACS Corp. v. Trans World Communs.,
In this action, Plaintiffs bring claims grounded,
inter alia,
in fraud and Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law, 73 P.S. §§ 201-1
et seq.
(“UTPCPL”). In fraud actions, compensatory damages are defined by the plaintiffs “actual loss.”
B & P Holdings I, LLC v. Grand Sasso Inc.,
It is clear, under recent Pennsylvania appellate case law, that recovery in a UTPCPL claim is not limited to out of pocket losses.
3
For example, in
Agliori v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
Similarly, in
Lesoon v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
Although the plaintiffs were essentially restored to the status quo, the court observed that, “at a minimum, [plaintiffs] should be compensated for the difference in price between the policy that was promised them and the policy that was issued.” Id. at 631-33 The court agreed that plaintiffs should receive “compensatory damages calculated in relation to the terms of the underlying transaction that gave rise to the UTPCPL violation,” and that they were entitled to the “benefit of the contract that was promised ... and therefore, the trial court should have fashioned an award designed to cover the increase in the price of a comparable insurance policy that [defendant] promised [to] them.” Id. at 630-31.
Certainly, both
Agliori
and
Lesoon
make it clear that a UTPCPL plaintiff is not limited to out-of-pocket losses.
4
Defendant’s repeated mantra of “actual loss” does not lead me to a different conclusion; the term is clearly more expansive than suggested. Likewise, however, the cases do not stand for the proposition that Plaintiffs are entitled, either under the UTPCPL or common law fraud, to receive expectation damages such as those awarded in contract. Plaintiffs in those cases were, in a sense, adjudged entitled to the value of their bargain; but they certainly were not, wholesale, deemed entitled to be placed in the position they would have been had the insurance agent’s representations been true. Instead, the losses approved were, in the courts’ view, compensatory and actual.
See also Metz v. v. Quaker Highlands,
Plaintiffs also contend, however, that the “reasonable expectations doctrine” entitles them to recover the amounts that they reasonably expected to receive under the policy. This contention, however, misapprehends the doctrine. The reasonable expectations of the insured, as discussed in
Tran v. Metropolitan Life Ins.
Co.,
Plaintiffs also rely on
Rempel v. Nationwide Life Ins. Co.,
I will not, however, rely on
Rempel
as urged. First, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has cautioned that
Rempel
is a plurality decision without precedential value.
Bilt-Rite Contractors, Inc. v. The Architectural Studio,
None of the cited cases or other sources depart clearly from the concept of “actual” loss, as defined by Pennsylvania appellate courts, and none of them lead me to believe that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court would permit recovery for fraud based on a theory heretofore reserved exclusively for contract damages. This is true despite the semantic disorder caused by the use of the terms “expectation” and “benefit of the bargain,” which are of special significance in contract, in a tort setting. In other words, I see no clear indication that Pennsylvania law would permit Plaintiffs to receive the promised full face amounts of the policies, merely because that’s what they expected to receive. Tort victims are compensated for loss and injury suffered, not for falsely promised but unrealized gain. In the face of a fraudulent misrepresentation, the tortious conduct did not cause the failure to materialize; it is intrinsic to the cause of action that the failure was preordained. 6 A party cannot lose what she does not or will not have, and cannot be compensated for a loss not suffered. To rule otherwise would be an unwarranted and, I think, nonsensical extension of state law.
To punctuate my attempt at distinguishing the varieties of damages at issue, I will indulge in a brief hypothetical exercise of the law school variety. Assume that A tells B that if B invests $10.00 in a particular item, A promises to return one million dollars to B on a specified date. B never receives the promised return. In order to have achieved the promised gain, B would have had to invest $100.00. In a contract action based on these facts, an award based on the one million dollars would place B in the position in which he would have been, had the contract been performed, and may well be an appropriate damage award. B has not, however, “lost” one million dollars; such an award simply would not be compensatory in nature. He may, however, under Pennsylvania law, have lost $90.00, which may fairly be said to represent the value of his bargain; his loss may also include other injuries proven to have been proximately caused by the misrepresentation. 7
CONCLUSION
In sum, the jury may consider the actual and promised face amounts of the subject *517 policies, as well as additional unexpected outlays that Plaintiffs are obligated to pay. Mr. Carter will not, however, be permitted to testify that these numbers represent the benefit of Plaintiffs’ bargain, or otherwise testify regarding the appropriate measure of damages, either under the UTPCPL or the common law. Instead, the Court will instruct the jury as to the proper measure of damages, and the jury will determine the proper amount. An appropriate Order follows.
ORDER OF COURT
AND NOW, this 12th day of May, 2006, it is ORDERED that Defendant’s Motion in Limine to Preclude Evidence Regarding the Recovery of Purported Expectation Damages (Docket No. 54) is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part, as stated in the foregoing Opinion.
Notes
. Mr. Boyd’s testimony is the subject of a pending Daubert Motion. Today's Opinion is applicable, of course, only if he is permitted to testify, and should not be taken to indicate the Court’s position on the Daubert Motion. Moreover, to the extent that Defendant's Motion challenges the basis for Mr. Boyd's opinion, that issue may be reserved for the Dau-bert hearing. Despite the pending Motion, however, it seems appropriate to resolve the issues presented by Defendant’s Motion at this time, as they bear on jury instructions as well.
. According to the Oxford University Press Dictionary installed on Wordperfect, “Com *514 pensate” is to "give (someone) something to reduce or balance the bad effect of loss, suffering, or injury.”
. Moreover, the state trial court cases that Defendant attaches are not particularly persuasive. Out of pocket losses, or damages consistent with such losses, might well be the only "actual” injury suffered in a particular matter; that does not, however, mean that all fraud or UTPCPL plaintiffs are limited to recovering those amounts. Without relevant analysis or discussion by the courts, the decisions in those cases are not particularly helpful.
. In their effort to obtain "expectation” damages, Plaintiffs also point to Restatement authority and to Pennsylvania's Suggested Standard Jury Instructions. Of course, neither are binding on this Court. Nevertheless, without setting forth the entire Section here, I note that the Restatement of Torts (Second) § 549(2) is consistent with Lesoon, but does not support Plaintiff's argument. The Comment to this Section refers, as an example, to the lost opportunity of acquiring a substitute. Assuming without deciding that the Section is applicable here, it simply does not provide that the recipient is entitled merely to fulfill his expectations. It does, however, permit the conclusion that actual loss may include those damages identified in Lesoon. Similarly, the Standard Pennsylvania Jury Instructions on damages for fraud, with their emphasis on value, comport with the case law, but do not suggest that a party may recover non-compensatory amounts based solely on his expectations.
.
Metz
was discussed rather thoroughly in the
Lesoon
decision. Similar to the latter, the
Metz
court approved recovery of increased costs required to fulfill the false promise.
Metz,
. For that reason, falsely promised but unrealized gain differs materially from other expected but unrealized gain, such as lost profits. The latter would have belonged to the recipient, absent the misrepresentation.
. A s with all law school hypotheticals for those inclined to contemplate them long after class has ended, this one is likely underinclu-sive or otherwise imperfect. It will suffice, however, for its intended basic illustrative purposes; therefore, the reader is asked to assume the absence of complicating variables.
