ON PETITION TO TRANSFER
Following a bench trial, the trial court in this personal injury case awarded approximately $1.4 million in compensatory and $500,000 in punitive damages against the defendant. The defendant appealed the $500,000 punitive damages award, claiming the amount was excessive, and the Court of Appeals affirmed, finding that the award was not an abuse of the trial court’s discretion. We grant transfer in this case and hold that the amount of punitive damages awarded by a trial court is subject to appellate review de novo. Applying that standard, and given the circumstances in this case, the trial court’s $500,000 punitive damages award is clearly excessive. We vacate the judgment, and remand this case to the trial court for entry of a new award.
Factual and Procedural Background
Seventeen-year-old Matthew Stroud was driving a vehicle at excessive speed while intoxicated, ran a stop sign, and collided with another vehicle. Stroud’s passenger, Trevor Lints, was severely and permanently injured, and the occupants of the other vehicle were killed. Stroud pleaded
*442
guilty to criminal charges and in 1997 was sentenced to eight years imprisonment. Lints and his parents sued Stroud and, after a bench trial, Lints was awarded $1,381,500 in compensatory damages
1
and $500,000 in punitive damages. Stroud appealed the punitive damages award, contending it was excessive because, given his financial situation and prospects, there was no possibility he could ever pay it. The Court of Appeals, applying an abuse of discretion standard, affirmed the trial court.
Stroud v. Lints,
I. Standard of Review of Punitive Damages
It is clear that a state is required, as a matter of federal constitutional law, to provide appellate review of the amount of a punitive damages award.
Honda Motor Co. v. Oberg,
After the Court of Appeals decision in this case, the United States Supreme Court handed down its decision in
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Campbell,
— U.S.-,
' Under these federal authorities, there is no federal constitutional requirement that a state law challenge to the *443 amount of an award be reviewed de novo. Stroud raises no federal constitutional claim. Rather, he contends only that the trial court incorrectly failed to consider his ability to pay a $500,000 punitive damages award. Thus, we must resolve the standard Indiana courts are to apply in reviewing a claim of an excessive punitive damages award under state law. We conclude as a matter of state law that review of the amount of a punitive damage award should be de novo.
The punitive damages award in this case was assessed by the trial court after a bench trial. Trial Rule 52(A) states, in relevant part, “On appeal of claims tried by the court without a jury or with an advisory jury, at law or in equity, the court on appeal shall not set aside the findings or judgment unless clearly erroneous.” The decision to award punitive damages must be based on facts that are supported by clear and convincing evidence. Ind. Code § 34-51-3-2 (1998). In this case, the trial court did not enter any specific findings of fact, but merely found that punitive damages were appropriate.
The trial court’s findings of historical fact—for example what the defendant did and what its motive was—and its conclusion that the evidence warrants imposition of punitive damages are reviewed on appeal just as other sufficiency issues. Both of these are subject to review on appeal under the standard established in
Bud Wolf Chevrolet, Inc. v. Robertson,
Due process limitations on punitive damages awards are grounded in concerns for excessive punishments, unevenly administered justice, and arbitrary results.
State Farm,
Practical considerations also dictate de novo review of a punitive damage award. Under State Farm, appellate courts are to review de novo constitutional challenges to punitive damages. Plainly in the future all competently represented parties who challenge a punitive damage award will present constitutional claims as well as state *444 law issues. The factors identified by the Supreme Court in evaluating a federal constitutional challenge to a punitive award are for all practical purposes the same as those relevant to a state law review. For reasons of consistency and judicial economy, Indiana state courts should apply the same standard of review to state law issues.
De novo review of the amount of a punitive award is consistent with Indiana precedent as well as federal law under
State Farm. Bud Wolf
addressed the propriety of awarding punitive damages, not whether the amount was excessive.
Bud Wolf
went on to agree explicitly with the Court of Appeals in distinguishing the issue of whether the jury could have awarded punitive damages from whether the amount of damages awarded was excessive.
Bud Wolf,
519 N.E.2d at
138
(“With respect to Bud Wolfs argument that punitive damages were excessive, we agree with the Court of Appeals’ analysis and resulting conclusion....”). The Court of Appeals’ ruling on this point was: “Because we have concluded that the jury’s award was supported by evidence, we must now consider whether the damages were excessive.”
Bud Wolf,
Similarly, in the order of this Court denying transfer in
Budget Car Sales v. Stott,
By contrast, in
Hibschman Pontiac, Inc. v. Batchelor,
De novo review of punitive damages is also consistent with our state constitutional right to jury trial in civil cases. In
Cooper Industries,
the Supreme Court pointed out that “[u]nlike the measure of actual damages suffered, which presents a question of historical or predictive fact, the level of punitive damages is not really a ‘fact’ ‘tried’ by the jury.”
Cooper Indus., Inc.,
Applying an abuse of discretion standard, the Court of Appeals held that the $500,000 award in this case was permissible. For the reasons given above, we review that amount under a de novo standard. The decision of the trial court comes to an appeal cloaked with the presumption that it is correct. Otherwise stated, even under de novo review, a tie at the appellate level goes to the winner in the trial court, even if that party had the burden of proof or persuasion in the trial court. Under de novo review, no deference is owed to the result reached by the trial court, and if the record shows error in the judgment of the trial court, modification of the trial court’s award is proper. Although this case, following State Farm, applies a de novo standard, for the reasons given below we would find the award excessive under any standard of review.
II. Considering the Defendant’s Wealth
Given Stroud’s financial circumstances, we conclude that the $500,000 award is far beyond the appropriate amount. We base that conclusion largely on what the law is trying to do in allowing punitive damages awards. First, and most importantly, it is not to compensate the victim or the victim’s attorney. Neither the plaintiff nor the plaintiffs counsel has a right to an award of punitive damages in addition to compensatory damages.
Cheatham v. Pohle,
Only in recent times have requests for punitive damages become commonplace. Indeed, until 1988 Indiana common law precluded punitive damages under a theory, now rejected by statute, that the threat of criminal prosecution for the same acts barred punitive action by the State.
Eddy v. McGinnis,
Ten thousand dollars is a significant sum to some and a trivial amount to others. Because one legislative goal is deterring *446 others as well as the defendant, an assessment of the group of likely similar offenders is appropriate. This in turn depends on the nature of the conduct to be deterred. Thus, the perpetrator of a financial crime or a mass tort will usually be a person of substantial resources, and a size-able award may be the only meaningful penalty. This wrong, however, required only an automobile. Stroud, and others whom we might seek to deter, frequently have no meaningful economic resources. Under these circumstances, ignoring the defendant’s financial condition is error.
Stroud is a 17-year-old sentenced to eight years in prison for the criminal charges stemming from this case. His sole source of income at the time of trial was as a participant in the Elkhart County work release program. He plainly has no ability to pay now or in the short to intermediate future. Interest compounded at eight percent per annum on one-half million dollars will dig him into an increasingly deeper hole. Most significantly, he will be unable to discharge this liability through bankruptcy. 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(9) (2000);
In re Reese,
The defendant’s wealth is ordinarily cited as a reason to escalate a punitive award, and that is consistent with the goal of deterrence. But that door swings both ways. An award that not only hurts but permanently cripples the defendant goes too far. 2 A life of financial hopelessness may be an invitation to a life of crime. Perpetual inability to get the financial burden of a judgment off his back leaves a defendant with few alternatives. The wisdom of rendering an award of punitive damages undischargeable is for the Congress. But given that that decision has been made, courts of our state should consider punitive awards with that legal fact in mind. Stroud has no significant assets today and will have none for some time. Although some portion of Stroud’s future wages may be exempt from execution, this award is of dubious benefit to the plaintiff and its present value in dollars is close to zero. But a staggering punitive damages award is not merely a useless act. It also traps the plaintiff and defendant forever in a creditor-debtor relationship that offers little if any financial reward to the plaintiff and seems far more likely to lead to nothing but travail for both.
The trial court provided no findings of fact to indicate, first, why a punitive damages award was appropriate, and second, why that award should be set at $500,000. In reviewing the award, the Court of Appeals considered helpful the factors first articulated in
BMW,
and recently reaffirmed in
State Farm,
In any case, the Court of Appeals also acknowledged that Indiana common law has historically regarded the defendant’s wealth as an important factor in determining whether a punitive damages award is excessive.
Stroud,
We do not doubt the severity of the injuries caused by Stroud. But the judge awarded Lints compensation for his injuries in the amount of $1,381,500.00 after allowing for comparative fault. We agree that punitive damages are intended both to deter others and to punish the wrongdoer. However, the common law has long held that the ability of a defendant to pay a punitive damages award is an important consideration. This doctrine is grounded in sound policy. It not only justifies upholding high awards when the defendant’s resources render a lesser amount inconsequential, it also means that in cases such as this, where the defendant is a teenager with no assets and no apparent ability to pay in the future, an award this substantial must be modified. As the Court of Appeals put it in
Ramada Hotel Operating Co. v. Shaffer,
Inasmuch as this Court should review the defendant’s economic wealth in the situation where punishment and deterrence are the stated purposes, the economic wealth of the defendant is material to the issue of punitive damages so that these objectives will be fulfilled. The economic wealth of a defendant tends to show ... the point at which an award of punitive damages becomes an amount which will deter and punish the defendant.
In Stroud’s case, the punitive damages award passed the point of deterrence and punishment long before it reached the $500,000 mark.
Conclusion
We affirm the judgment insofar as it awards compensatory damages. We grant transfer and vacate the trial court’s award of punitive damages. We remand so that the trial court may enter an award of punitive damages in an amount reflecting proper consideration of the defendant’s financial status.
Notes
. Lints' award of $1,842,000 was reduced twenty-five percent for comparative fault.
. Courts in other states have reached the same conclusion.
See, e.g., Hollins
v.
Powell,
