Opinion
In this case appellant objects to an award of punitive damages, claiming punitive damages awarded in other cases have already fulfilled the objectives of punishment and deterrence. We hold that before such a claim may be raised on appeal, the appellant must first present evidence of the other awards to the trier of fact.
Owens-Coming Fiberglas Corporation (OCF) appeals from a judgment awarding the estate of James Duffy $25,660.17 in economic damages and $2 million in punitive damages. The jury found James Duffy’s lung cancer was caused by asbestos in insulation made by OCF. OCF contends Code of Civil Procedure section 377.34 1 prohibited the jury from awarding lost pension benefits as economic damages. Regarding punitive damages, OCF argues (1) the trial court did not adequately review the amount of the award; (2) the award is excessive as a matter of law; and (3) due process and California law preclude this and any further punitive damage awards in asbestos personal injury cases.
We affirm the judgment. Any error in the award of lost pension benefits was invited by OCF. OCF’s challenges to the punitive damage award are not supported by the law or the record.
Facts
James Duffy sued a number of defendants alleging they manufactured, distributed, or marketed asbestos products that caused his asbestosis and cancer. OCF was the only defendant at trial; all others settled with Duffy or were dismissed. OCF moved in limine to strike Duffy’s demand for punitive damages. It contended prior punitive and compensatory damages awarded against it had fulfilled the purposes of punitive damages and precluded any further awards as a matter of law. The trial court denied the motion.
During jury selection, Duffy died and his estate was substituted as plaintiff. (See § 377.31.) The jury was impaneled on December 9, 1993. OCF’s *1652 liability for economic damages was tried first. On January 3, 1994, OCF submitted proposed jury instructions, including instructions on Duffy’s probable life expectancy (BAJI No. 14.69) and the present cash value of his future economic losses (BAJI No. 14.70). On January 7, the parties stipulated to a jury instruction on damages for lost pension payments. This instruction told the jury that if it found exposure to OCF’s asbestos product caused Duffy’s lung cancer, it must assess damages for lost pension funds according to what it determined Duffy’s life expectancy would have been but for the cancer. The instruction informed the jury the parties had stipulated that the present cash value of Duffy’s future pension benefits was as shown in an exhibit placed in evidence by the estate. The jury was given the stipulated instruction as well as BAJI Nos. 14.69 (life expectancy) and 14.70 (present cash value, modified to reflect the parties’ stipulation on the present cash value of Duffy’s future pension benefits).
On January 12, the jury returned a special verdict finding OCF liable for $12,473 in medical damages and $66,612 in lost pension benefits. The jury found no comparative negligence on Duffy’s part. OCF’s liability for punitive damages was tried next. On January 26, the jury returned a special verdict finding OCF guilty of malice, fraud, or oppression in its manufacture and distribution of asbestos products. The amount of punitive damages, if any, was tried last. OCF did not present evidence of the punitive damages awarded against it in other cases, which it had cited to the trial court on its motion in limine. The jury assessed punitive damages of $2 million on January 28. The trial court reduced the compensatory damage award to $25,660.17 to account for settlements with other defendants, and entered judgment.
OCF moved for a new trial, or for a reduction in the punitive damage award. Alternatively, it moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. It contended the award of lost pension benefits was precluded by section 377.34, which restricts damages in survival actions to “the loss or damage that the decedent sustained or incurred before death.” OCF also claimed the punitive damage award was excessive, insisting it had been punished enough in asbestos litigation and further awards were unwarranted. OCF referred the trial court to the other punitive damage awards it had raised on its motion in limine. The estate argued the punitive damage award was not excessive, and the recovery of lost pension benefits was not barred by section 377.34. It maintained the statute precludes recovery for lost future earnings, which did not include Duffy’s vested and matured entitlement to pension benefits. The trial court denied the motions.
*1653 Discussion
1. OCF Invited Any Error in the Award of Lost Pension Benefits
OCF argues section 377.34 prohibits recovery of Duffy’s lost pension benefits. However, OCF submitted jury instructions on Duffy’s life expectancy and the present cash value of his future economic loss, and stipulated to an instruction requiring the jury to assess damages for lost pension benefits if it found OCF liable for causing Duffy’s lung cancer. Therefore, it is in no position to complain that such damages are precluded by section 377.34.
The doctrine of invited error bars an appellant from attacking a verdict that resulted from a jury instruction given at the appellant’s request.
(Nevis
v.
Pacific Gas & Electric Co.
(1954)
The invited error doctrine applies “with particular force in the area of jury instructions. Whereas in criminal cases a court has strong sua sponte duties to instruct the jury on a wide variety of subjects, a court in a civil case has no parallel responsibilities. A civil litigant must propose complete instructions in accordance with his or her theory of the litigation and a trial court is not ‘obligated to seek out theories [a party] might have advanced, or to articulate for him that which he has left unspoken.’ [Citations.]” Mesecher v. County of San Diego, supra, 9 Cal.App.4th at p. 1686.)
OCF contends it has not waived the right to challenge the award because it raised the issue in its motions for a new trial or judgment
*1654
notwithstanding the verdict. It claims legal challenges may be presented for the first time by way of posttrial motion and will be treated as if raised before the verdict, citing
Hoffman-Haag
v.
Transamerica Ins. Co.
(1991)
OCF suggests we may consider the effect of section 377.34 as a purely legal issue involving no disputed facts. We have broad discretion to decide whether to consider a tardily raised legal issue. We are more inclined to do so when matters of important public interest or public policy are involved.
(Resolution Trust Corp.
v.
Winslow
(1992)
We decline to exercise our discretion to consider whether section 377.34 bars the estate’s recovery of lost pension benefits. Although OCF’s argument is consistent with the plain language of section 377.34, the statute’s impact on recovery of future pension benefits appears to be an issue of first impression.
2
However, we perceive no pressing public interest or policy in favor of reaching the issue, as existed in. the
Resolution Trust Corp.
and
Moschetta
cases. Judicial policy disfavors reaching the issue; the invited
*1655
error doctrine prevents OCF from challenging the verdict the jury reached by following instructions OCF submitted. This would be so even if OCF’s position had been adopted by a definitive, retroactive appellate decision rendered after the verdict.
(Henderson
v.
Harnischfeger Corp.
(1974)
OCF notes the estate responded to OCF’s posttrial motions on the merits, without arguing that OCF had consented to the jury’s consideration of lost pension benefits. Therefore, OCF contends, the estate cannot assert on appeal that OCF waived the section 377.34 issue. However, it “is an elementary principle of appellate law” that courts will not review invited instructional error.
(Fortman
v.
Hemco, Inc., supra,
2. Trial Court Review of the Punitive Damage Award Satisfied Due Process
OCF claims its right to procedural due process was violated. It asserts the trial court did not meaningfully review the punitive damage award on OCF’s motions for a new trial, a reduction in punitive damages, or judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The only basis OCF specifies for this claim is the trial court’s failure to state reasons for upholding the award.
3
OCF claims a statement of reasons is required under
Las Palmas Associates
v.
Las Palmas Center Associates
(1991)
In
Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co.
v.
Haslip
(1990)
Las Palmas
concluded California standards of posttrial and appellate review of punitive damages provide due process.
(Las Palmas, supra,
In
TXO Production Corp.
v.
Alliance Resources Corp.
(1993)
We agree with
Las Palmas
and
TXO
that due process does not demand a statement of reasons when the trial court allows an award of punitive damages to stand. We are not persuaded otherwise by
Morgan
v.
Woessner, supra,
OCF does not contend the trial court failed to adequately consider its arguments at the hearing on its posttrial motions. Indeed it cannot, for it did not make a transcript of the hearing a part of the appellate record. We presume the trial court’s denial of the motions was correct; as appellant, OCF bears the burden of overcoming this presumption by showing error on an adequate record.
(Maria P.
v.
Riles
(1987)
*1658 3. The Punitive Damage Award Was Not Excessive
OCF contends the punitive damage award was excessive. Whether to award punitive damages and how much to award were issues for the jury and for the trial court on the new trial motion. All presumptions favor the correctness of the verdict and judgment. The trial court’s approval of the punitive damage award by denying OCF a new trial is not binding on appeal, but we must give it significant weight. We may reverse the award as excessive only if the entire record, viewed most favorably to the judgment, indicates the award was the result of passion and prejudice. We are also guided, however, by the recognition that punitive damages are not favored in the law because they create the anomaly of excessive compensation.
(Las Palmas, supra,
The purpose of punitive damages is a public one—to punish wrongdoing and deter future misconduct by either the defendant or other potential wrongdoers. The essential question for the jury, the trial court, and the appellate courts is whether the amount of the award substantially serves the public interest in punishment and deterrence. The California Supreme Court has established three criteria for making that determination: (1) the reprehensibility of the defendant’s misdeeds; (2) the amount of compensatory damages, though there is no fixed ratio for determining whether punitive damages are reasonable in relation to actual damages; and (3) the defendant’s financial condition.
(Adams
v.
Murakami, supra,
OCF’s attack on the punitive damage award is narrowly based, but broadly aimed. It does not contend its conduct was insufficiently reprehensible to justify punitive damages, or that the compensatory damages awarded the estate were disproportional to the punitive damage award, or that its overall financial condition is such that the award is excessive. Rather, OCF claims it has been punished enough in asbestos litigation by compensatory and punitive damages and litigation expenses. It asks us to rule that additional punitive damages are unnecessary and therefore unlawful in this or *1659 any other action for personal injuries caused by asbestos exposure. OCF also contends the award in this case is improper because it exceeds the profits OCF realized on the sale of Kaylo, the asbestos insulation product to which Duffy was exposed. 5
Because it may be dealt with briefly, we first consider the argument based on Kaylo profits. We then address the “overkill” argument. We will not consider evidence of awards in other asbestos cases that was not presented to the jury. We conclude the evidence OCF did present was insufficient to establish that the point of “overkill” has been reached. Partly because of that insufficiency, in part 4 of our opinion we reject OCF’s policy arguments against imposition of punitive damages in any asbestos litigation.
A. The Amount of Punitive Damages Is Not Limited by Kaylo Profits
OCF presented evidence that from 1954 to 1972, the calendar years in which OCF sold or manufactured Kaylo, total sales of the product were approximately $140 million. About 1 percent of that, or $1.5 million, was realized as net profit after taxes, which was a lower margin than OCF enjoyed on its other products. Kaylo sales were about 2 percent of OCF’s total sales. OCF contends the $2 million punitive damage award is excessive as a matter of law because it exceeds the. profits attributable to Kaylo. OCF cites no authority to support this claim. In
Adams
v.
Murakami, supra,
In
Cummings Medical Corp.
v.
Occupational Medical Corp.
(1992)
We need not take sides in the conflict between
Cummings
and
Kenly
to dispose of OCF’s profits argument. The amount of a defendant’s profits does not limit a punitive damage award, as
Cummings
noted. And profits may not accurately reflect a defendant’s financial condition, as
Kenly
pointed out. If it had made very high profits on Kaylo, but suffered losses on its other products, OCF would not suggest that punitive damages be based on Kaylo profits alone.
Adams
v.
Murakami, supra,
B. OCF Cannot Rely on Evidence It Failed to Present to the Jury
Awarding punitive damages is first a function of the trier of fact.
(Egan
v.
Mutual of Omaha Ins. Co.
(1979)
When a motion for new trial is based on the ground of excessive damages, the trial court is restricted to the evidence presented at trial. “A new trial shall not be granted . . . upon the ground of excessive or inadequate damages, unless after weighing the evidence the court is convinced from the entire record, including reasonable inferences therefrom, that the court or
*1661
jury clearly should have reached a different verdict or decision.” (§ 657; see also
Frost
v.
Southern Pacific Co.
(1960)
An appellate court also depends on the record developed at trial when it reviews an award of punitive damages for excessiveness. “A reviewing court cannot make a fully informed determination of whether an award of punitive damages is excessive unless the record contains evidence of the defendant’s financial condition.”
(Adams
v.
Murakami, supra,
Punitive damages previously imposed for the same conduct are relevant in determining the amount of punitive damages required to sufficiently punish and deter.
(Gagnon
v.
Continental Casualty Co., supra,
We conclude that evidence of punitive damages imposed in other cases must be presented to the jury in the first instance. No California court has so held because the issue has not been squarely presented. “We recognize the fact that multiplicity of awards may present a problem, but the mere possibility of a future award in a different case is not a ground for setting aside the award in this case .... If Ford should be confronted with the possibility of an award in another case for the same conduct,
it may raise the issue in that case.” (Grimshaw
v.
Ford Motor Co., supra,
Courts in other jurisdictions, when presented with the “overkill” argument made by OCF here, have held that evidence of other punitive damage awards must be presented to the jury before the argument is raised in a reviewing court. (W.R.
Grace & Co.-Conn.
v.
Waters
(Fla. 1994)
OCF argues it should not be required to give the jury “highly inflammatory evidence" of other punitive damage awards. However, the prejudice inherent in such evidence relates more to liability for punitive damages than to the amount of the award. Under Civil Code section 3295, subdivision (d), the defendant may require these issues to be tried separately, as they were in this case. Thus, the jury can determine liability for punitive damages without considering other juries’ views on the reprehensibility of the defendant’s conduct. If the jury finds that punitive damages are warranted, evidence of other awards that is presented at the amount phase of trial should tend to reduce the amount assessed, particularly where, as here, the defendant no *1663 longer engages in the conduct at issue. 6 BAJI No. 14.72.2 requires the jury to consider “[t]he amount of punitive damages which will have a deterrent effect on the defendant in the light of [the] defendant’s financial condition.” We believe juries are capable of properly evaluating the impact of other awards against the defendant when weighing the deterrent effect of a punitive damage award. An appropriate instruction can be given to ensure that the evidence of other awards is not used to increase punitive damages, but only to decrease them if the jury concludes the level of deterrence and punishment already imposed justifies a lesser award, or no award at all. 7
OCF contends we may take judicial notice of cases not considered in the trial court, citing
Devlin
v.
Kearny Mesa AMC/Jeep/Renault, Inc., supra,
155 Cal.App.3d at pages 393-396. In
Devlin,
however, the court did not examine other cases involving the same defendant to determine whether the ends of punishment and deterrence had been sufficiently achieved. Rather, the court conducted a general survey “in an effort to determine whether we could discern from the cases a single formula for calculating punitive damages.”
(Id.
at p. 388.) After reviewing the compensatory and punitive damages awarded, the relationship between the punitive damages and the defendants’ wealth, the rulings on motion for new trial and appeal, and the final ratios between punitive damages and wealth, and between punitive and compensatory damages
(id.
at pp. 393-396), the
Devlin
court “discovered what everyone probably already knows: the formula does not exist. And, we have concluded, that is properly so.”
(Id.
at p. 388.) The court proceeded to “examine the usual factors recited by appellate courts when reviewing punitive damages awards”
(ibid.),
reiterating that “. . . the calculation of punitive damages does not involve strict adherence to a rigid formula. It involves, instead, ‘a fluid process of adding or subtracting depending on the nature of the acts and
the effect on the parties and the worth of the defendants. Juries within this framework have a wide discretion in determining what is
*1664
proper.
[Citation.]’ ”
(Id.
at p. 390, quoting
Walker
v.
Signal Companies, Inc.
(1978)
Even if we took judicial notice of the cases cited to us by OCF, we would not have enough information to gauge the actual impact of the awards in those cases because we have no evidence that OCF has paid the awards. The notations OCF adds to its string of cites indicate that many of the awards are the subject of pending appeals, and others have been resolved by settlement. We have no way of knowing the extent to which insurance has indemnified OCF for its liabilities in other cases.
8
Another crucial consideration is whether the awards in the other cases arose from the same conduct for which OCF was punished in this case.
(Simpson
v.
Pittsburgh Corning Corp.
(2d Cir. 1990)
In W.R.
Grace & Co.-Conn.
v.
Waters, supra,
*1665
OCF points out that in
Las Palmas, supra,
We are not the first appellate court to make this point to OCF. Before trial began in this case, an Illinois appellate court held that evidence of other awards could not be considered on appeal when OCF had not presented it to the jury.
(Kochan
v.
Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp., supra,
610 N.E.2d at pp. 694-695.) OCF also knew that in
Dunn
v.
HOVIC, supra,
Our decision does not give the plaintiff the right to introduce evidence of other punitive damage awards. While the plaintiff bears the burden of producing evidence of the defendant’s financial condition
(Adams
v.
Murakami, supra,
C. Evidence Before the Jury Did Not Establish “Overkill”
OCF contends the evidence it did present to the jury demonstrated such a heavy financial burden on OCF in asbestos litigation that any additional punitive damage award was unwarranted. We disagree.
OCF’s Third Quarter 1993 Form 10-Q, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), was the most current evidence of its financial condition presented to the jury. 9 It showed that as of September 30, 1993, approximately 94,000 asbestos personal injury claims were pending against OCF. Approximately 116,400 such claims had been resolved by settlement or otherwise; another 15,600 cases had been settled in principle. During 1990, 1991, and 1992, OCF had resolved approximately 54,800 claims at an average cost of less than $10,000. OCF expected the average payment for the cases currently settled in principle to be somewhat higher. It noted its indemnity payments had varied considerably over time and from case to case due to a number of factors including claimants’ different illnesses and exposures, the number and resources of codefendants, the jurisdiction of suits and availability of defenses, and the type of settlement. OCF estimated incurring $50 to $60 million in defense costs during 1993.
OCF concedes most of its pre-1993 liability was covered by insurance. 10 Its 10-Q form stated that as of September 30, 1993, OCF had approximately $431 million in unexhausted products hazard coverage. $144 million of this coverage would not be available until 1996, and another $71 million was subject to coverage litigation or alternative dispute resolution. Additionally, OCF estimated it would be able to recover approximately $300 million in nonproducts coverage under its liability insurance policies, although this coverage was subject to ongoing arbitration.
*1667 OCF’s 10-Q form disclosed a $940 million reserve, the product of a charge against earnings which the company intended to use for uninsured indemnity and defense costs associated with asbestos personal injury claims through the year 1999. (OCF was unable to estimate the cost of claims received after 1999.) OCF noted a recent increase in claim filing rates, and substantial uncertainty over the actionability of claims by unimpaired persons who had been exposed to asbestos. Depending especially on the future treatment of such “unimpaired claims,” OCF recognized the reserve might have to be increased, but it was confident the reserve was sufficient to provide for the uninsured costs of claims by significantly impaired persons. Nevertheless, it cautioned there was considerable uncertainty in its estimates, and actual costs could be higher or lower than expected. Management’s conclusion was that “additional uninsured and unreserved costs which may arise out of pending personal injury and property damage asbestos claims and additional similar asbestos claims filed in the future will not have a materially adverse effect on the Company’s financial position.”
In closing argument, OCF referred to the information in its 10-Q form and contended it showed the goals of punishment and deterrence had already been met, so that punitive damages were unnecessary. The jury was not convinced. Viewing the record most favorably in support of the verdict, as we must, we cannot say the jury’s conclusion was the result of passion or prejudice. OCF’s argument was primarily based not on its actual out-of-pocket losses, which were relatively small according to the 10-Q form, but on its anticipated expenses. OCF admitted that very few claims went to trial, so the jury could reasonably conclude that punitive damages would be imposed in a small number of cases. To the extent OCF was indemnified by insurance for damages assessed against it, it cannot be said that the punitive and deterrent functions of punitive damages have been served. (See Stonewall Surplus Lines Ins. Co. v. Johnson Controls, Inc., supra, 14 Cal.App.4th at pp. 642-643.) The evidence showed OCF had substantial remaining insurance coverage and a large reserve set aside for claims like the one before the jury. OCF did not anticipate such claims having an adverse effect on its financial condition in the foreseeable future. Without any showing of punitive damages actually assessed and paid, the evidence fell far short of demonstrating “overkill.”
D. A Reduction in the Punitive Damage Award Is Not Warranted
As an alternative to reversing the punitive damage award, OCF asks us to order a substantial remittitur. The only argument or authority OCF advances in support of this request is that we should follow the approach of
*1668
the Third Circuit in
Dunn
v.
HOVIC, supra,
We have declared our unwillingness to consider evidence of other punitive damage awards that was not presented to the jury. The approach taken by the
Dunn
court encourages defendants to withhold such evidence from the jury, then use it on appeal to attack the punitive damage award. Without any disrespect to the Third Circuit, we do not condone this strategy and will not reward it by ordering a remittitur. OCF does not argue a remittitur is justified under the established California criteria for determining whether punitive damages are excessive—the reprehensibility of OCF’s conduct, the amount of compensatory damages,
11
and the defendant’s overall financial condition.
(Adams
v.
Murakami, supra,
4. OCF’s Arguments Against Punitive Damages as a Matter of Law Are Unconvincing
OCF raises a number of arguments to the effect that punitive damages are precluded as a matter of law in asbestos litigation. While we agree there is a danger of “overkill” by repeated awards of punitive damages in asbestos cases, we believe that danger must be established by an adequate record before an appellate court can do something about it. OCF’s legal arguments are not supported by such a record, and do not persuade us to ban punitive damages in asbestos litigation as a matter of law. OCF contends such a ban is supported by two California cases, which bar punitive damages in other contexts. We conclude the rules established in those cases do not apply to asbestos litigation.
*1669 A. The Market Share Rule
The market share rule permits a consumer harmed by fungible goods that cannot be traced to a specific manufacturer to recover from various manufacturers in proportion to the share each had of the appropriate market, unless any defendant can prove it could not have made the product causing the plaintiff’s injuries.
(Sindell
v.
Abbott Laboratories
(1980)
Because of the diversity of asbestos products, the market share rule does not apply in asbestos personal injury litigation
(Mullen
v.
Armstrong World Industries, Inc.
(1988)
We do not discuss these considerations individually, for two reasons. First, their significance is questionable, since we have concluded this record does not establish “overkill.” Second, the primary rationale of
Magallanes
simply does not apply in this case. The
Magallanes
court precluded punitive damages in market share liability cases because such liability is imposed without regard to fault. Punitive damages are predicated on fault; i.e., causation and malice or oppression. (Civ. Code, § 3294;
Magallanes
v.
Superior Court, supra,
167 Cal.App.3d at pp. 887-888.) The
Magallanes
court concluded “in the context of the case at bench, in order to impose
*1670
punitive damages the plaintiff must first identify the defendant who supplied the DES which was ingested by the plaintiff’s mother and caused the damage complained of and also prove that that defendant acted with malice or oppression. Consequently, punitive damages cannot be alleged in a case in which liability is based solely upon the participation of the defendant in the market.”
(Magallanes
v.
Superior Court, supra,
B. The Fraud-on-the-market Doctrine
The fraud-on-the-market doctrine provides a presumption of reliance to plaintiffs alleging misrepresentations in the sale of securities. In
Mirkin
v.
Wasserman
(1993)
The unavailability of punitive damages under both state and federal securities regulations can be traced to “a longstanding consensus” in federal case law that the burden on the securities business from punitive damages outweighs their contribution to the enforcement of securities laws.
(Mirkin
v.
Wasserman, supra,
The Mirkin court observed that an assessment of punitive damages in a ffaud-on-the-market case presumably accounts for the total effect of the defendant’s misrepresentations on the market. Because the fraud is committed on the market as a whole, rather than on individual plaintiffs, awards in separate cases would punish the defendant repeatedly for the same transaction. (Mirkin v. Wasserman, supra, 5 Cal.4th at pp. 1106-1107.) This reasoning does not apply with the same force to asbestos personal injury cases in which each plaintiff must prove individual injury and causation. Furthermore, other policy reasons cited by the Mirkin court do not appear pertinent in asbestos litigation. No criminal sanctions serve the purpose of retribution, as in the securities context, nor does OCF contend the availability of punitive damages has exacerbated a problem with inflated settlement values in asbestos cases. (See ibid.) OCF’s reliance on Mirkin is misplaced.
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed. The estate shall recover its costs on appeal.
Phelan, P. J., and Corrigan, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied January 15, 1997.
Notes
Further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure, unless otherwise specified.
In
Williamson
v.
Plant Insulation Co.
(1994)
The estate contends OCF is collaterally estopped from asserting its various challenges to multiple punitive damage awards because those claims were rejected by the Second District last year in an unpublished opinion.
(Rekdahl
v.
Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp.
(May 25, 1995) B068259; see California Rules of Court, rule 977(b)(1) [reliance on unpublished opinion permitted when opinion is relevant for collateral estoppel purposes].) We take judicial notice of the
Rekdahl
opinion, which discloses that the only issue decided by the Second District which is identical to an issue raised in this appeal is whether due process requires a statement of reasons by the trial court when a new trial on punitive damages is denied. (On identity of issues as a prerequisite to collateral estoppel, see
Lucido
v.
Superior Court
(1990)
While we agree with the Second District’s conclusion that a statement of reasons is not constitutionally required, we nevertheless consider the merits of the issue and publish our decision, for the benefit of other litigants. (See
Verdugo Hills Hospital, Inc.
v.
Department of Health
(1979)
The statement from
TXO
quoted above is taken from the plurality opinion signed by Justices Stevens, Rehnquist, and Blackmun. Justice Kennedy expressly concurred with this part of the plurality opinion.
(TXO, supra,
At oral argument, OCF suggested for the first time that under the United States Supreme Court’s recent opinion in
BMW of North America, Inc.
v.
Gore
(1996)_U.S. _ [
Other jurisdictions have recognized the protection that bifurcated proceedings afford defendants in this situation.
(W.R. Grace & Co.-Conn.
v.
Waters, supra,
A proper instruction might read: “If you determine that a defendant has already been assessed with punitive damages based on the same conduct for which punitive damages are requested in this case, you may consider whether punitive damages awarded in other cases have sufficiently punished and made an example of the defendant. You must not use the amount of punitive damages awarded in other cases to determine the amount of the punitive damage award in this case, except to the extent you determine that a lesser award, or no award at all, is justified in light of the penalties already imposed.”
Insurance will not indemnify a defendant for punitive damages in California, but the same is not true in all jurisdictions.
(Stonewall Surplus Lines Ins. Co.
v.
Johnson Controls, Inc.
(1993)
OCF also introduced the deposition of Peter Frank, an accounting expert, which was taken on May 1, 1993, in connection with another asbestos case. Mr. Frank’s testimony was based, in part, on earlier SEC filings.
In his deposition, Mr. Frank stated he had no precise information on how much of OCF’s payments to asbestos plaintiffs had been covered by insurance, but “the indications are that the vast majority of the more than one billion dollars has to date been covered by insurance.”
OCF does not argue on appeal, as it did on its motion for a new trial, that the punitive damage award should be reduced by the same proportion in which the trial court reduced the compensatory damage award to account for settlements with other defendants. Since OCF does not raise this argument, we will not consider it further except to note there is no rule requiring preservation of the original ratio between punitive damages and compensatory damages.
(Betts
v.
Allstate Ins. Co.
(1984)
