Defendant DTG Operations, Inc. (the “Company”), a rental car company, appeals an adverse jury verdict in favor of Plaintiff Terri Wallace, a former station manager for the Company, on her retaliation claim under the Missouri Human Rights Act (the “Act”). We affirm in all respects except as to the punitive damages award. We reduce the punitive damages award to $120,000, which is four times the actual damages, and remand to the district court for entry of judgment consistent with this opinion.
I. Background
Taken in a light most favorable to the prevailing party, the evidence at trial established facts substantially as set forth in our prior opinion,
Wallace v. DTG Operations, Inc.,
The Company provided shifting explanations as to the reason for her termination. For example, the Company stated that poor performance was an issue. Initially, however, the Company had stated that the location where Wallace worked was overstaffed and that her termination was a consequence of a downturn in business coupled with a policy requiring layoffs to be based strictly on seniority.
In addition, at least one decisionmaker еxpressed anger based on Wallace’s mode of reporting the alleged sexual harassment, even though she followed a recommended reporting method. Further, Wallace’s termination was isolated among comparable employees, notwithstanding the Company’s claims that company-wide layoffs were required at the time.
The Company also claimed to have a policy precluding reassignments of persons with certain disciplinary reports in their personnel files, but the Company did not apply the policy uniformly. For example, an employee at Wallace’s location had received a transfer despite the presеnce of a purportedly disqualifying disciplinary report in his file. Wallace, whose personnel file did not include a disciplinary report of the same severity, did not receive a transfer although she asked for one and although there were open positions at the time of her termination.
Finally, the timing of Wallace’s termination served as evidence of retaliation when viewed in light of these several other factors that supported an inference of retaliatory intent. Two decisionmakers involved with Wallace’s termination made the decision to terminate Wallace fifteen days after her complaint. Aso, on the day they claim to have dеcided to terminate Wallace, one of them consulted with the supervisor whom Wallace had accused of sexual harassment.
Wallace initially pleaded federal and state claims, but she dropped her federal claims before the district court submitted the case to the jury. As such, the jury only considered Wallace’s state-law claim that the Company retaliated against her in violation of the Act. The parties hotly contested the jury instruction regarding causation. The Company argued that the federal “determinative factor” standard should apply to Wallace’s state-law retalia
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tion claim.
See, e.g., Van Horn v. Best Buy Stores, L.P.,
Based on this causation instruction, the jury found in favor of Wallace and awarded her $10,000 in lost wages and benefits. The jury also awarded her $20,000 in additional compensatory damages and $500,000 in punitive damages. Finally, the district court ordered the Company to pay approximately $220,000 in attorneys’ fees and expenses.
The Company moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, in the alternafive, a new trial or an altered or amended judgment. The district court denied the motions. In the present appeal, the Company renews its challengе to the causation instruction and argues that, regardless of the instruction, the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict or the awards of actual and punitive damages. Finally, the Company argues that the punitive damages were constitutionally excessive and that the award of attorneys’ fees and expenses was excessive. We provide additional discussion below regarding the evidence of damages and fees.
II. Discussion
At the time of trial and at the time of oral arguments, there was no Missouri authority conclusively answering the question of whether the “determinative factor” or the “contributing factor” standard should govern a Missouri Human Rights Act retaliation claim.
1
Subsequеntly, however, the Missouri Supreme Court issued its opinion in
Hill v. Ford Motor Co.,
Regarding the sufficiency of the evidence to support the finding of liability, we again reject the Company’s arguments.
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The Company presented testimony and non-frivolous arguments regarding at least two legitimate explanations for its actions: overstaffing at Wallace’s location relative to business needs and poor performance by Wallace. The Company strongly contested the allegation that retaliatory intent was a contributing factor in Wallace’s termination. Based on the trial record, it would have been reasonable for a jury to have accepted either of these explanations and to hаve found that retaliation was not a contributing factor in Wallace’s termination. The jury, however, did not accept this testimony, and we cannot now adopt the Company’s arguments without viewing the record in a light unfavorable to the verdict.
Dominic v. DeVilbiss Air Power Co.,
Regarding lost wages and benefits, the parties agreed that such damages were to be limited to a twelve-week period of time. The Company argues that, based on Wallace’s bаse salary at the time of her termination, her lost wages were, at most, approximately $5000. The Company argues further that any additional award of wages and benefits damages is unsupportable and speculative. Although there was testimony regarding potential monthly bonuses of $200 to $300, the trial testimony provided only a qualitative discussion оf Wallace’s other benefits, including things such as full health benefits and the free use of a company car. The testimony also showed that Wallace would have been eligible to participate in the Company’s retirement plan if she had been employed for a few more days.
Contrary to the Company’s arguments, we do not believe that the quantitative testimony regarding salary and bonuses, coupled with the qualitative testimony regarding benefits, was insufficient to support the finding of $10,000 in lost wages and benefits. In this case, the jury was entitled to place a value on those elements of actual damages that the testimony identified in qualitative terms without precise testimony as tо dollar amounts. The benefits at issue — free use of the Company’s cars, including gas and insurance, and health benefits — were, by their nature, easily understandable and quantifiable by lay persons. The jury was not required to check common sense at the door, and the amount the jury found is not such that we may conclude it was the result of unguided speculаtion.
See Comcast of Illinois X v. Multi-Vision Electronics, Inc.,
Similarly, the evidence supports the jury’s award of $20,000 for “other damages sustained by the plaintiff, such as future pecuniary losses, emotional pain, suffering, inconvenience, mental anguish, loss of enjoyment of life, and other nonpeсuniary losses,” as set forth in the relevant jury instruction. We note first that the Company attempts to characterize these damages as relating only to emotional distress. This category of damages, however, *362 was broader in scope than emotional distress and included damages of the types listed in the relevant jury instruction.
Second, thе evidence included testimony from Wallace regarding her reaction to losing her job, the value she placed on the job, and her actions and opportunities following her termination. In addition, Wallace’s aunt testified regarding Wallace’s emotional state after her termination and what the job had meant to Wallace. In light of this evidence, the jury’s award of other compensatory damages was not so great a figure as to fall outside the range of permissible awards.
See Mathieu v. Gopher News Co.,
Regarding punitive damages, the evidence, taken in a light most favorable to Wallace, was sufficient under Missouri law to justify submitting this issue to the jury. The аward, however, was excessive when viewed in light of prevailing due process limitations. The punitive damages in this case were fifty times greater than Wallace’s lost wages and benefits, twenty-five times greater than her other compensatory damages, and approximately sixteen times greater than all of the actual damagеs combined.
Given the nature of Wallace’s claims and the evidence at trial, the most important factors to consider in a due process analysis include “the degree of reprehensibility of the defendant’s conduct” and the “ratio [of punitive damages] to the actual harm inflicted on the plaintiff.”
BMW of N. Am., Inc. v. Gore,
A high ratio may be appropriate based on particularly reprehensible conduct or where actual damages are nominal.
See JCB, Inc. v. Union Planters Bank, NA,
In
State Farm,
the Court pointed to traditional remedies of “double, treble, or quadruple damages” and stated that “they demonstrate what should be obvious: [s]ingle-digit multipliers are more likely to comport with due process, while still achieving the State’s goals of deterrence and retribution, than awards with ratios in range of 500 to 1 or ... 145 to 1.”
Id.
(internal citation omitted). While suggesting that ratios alone cannot control the analysis, the Supreme Court has repeatedly intimated that a four-to-one ratio is likely to survive any due process challenges given the historic use of double, treble, and quadruple damages as a punitive remedy.
See Pac. Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Haslip,
Regarding attorneys’ fees, expenses, and costs, the Company argues the total award оf approximately $220,000 was excessive. The Company characterizes Wallace’s success as limited and points to actions by Wallace that led to an initial mistrial and increased attorney hours.
See Hensley v. Eckerhart,
To the extent the Company’s arguments regarding limited success are premised on Wallace’s voluntary dismissal of her federal retaliation claim, we find the argument to be without merit. The parties continued to dispute the applicable standard for causation until the district court established the jury instructions, and success on the jury instruction issue appears to have driven Wallace’s decision to drop her federal claims. The Company does not suggest how preparation or trial of the case would have differed had the federal claim been submitted to the jury, and, apart from the causation standard, the state and federal claims involved the same issues.
We also reject the argument that we should reduce the fee award based on a lack of success regarding an initially pleaded sex discrimination claim. Most of the expense in this case was incurred after termination of the discrimination claim, and facts surrounding the alleged discrimination were relevant to the retaliation claim because the act that induced the retaliation was Wallace’s report of harassment. We find no abuse of discretion in the district court’s award.
See Fish v. St. Cloud State Univ.,
Finally, we have considered the Company’s several arguments regаrding the district court’s evidentiary rulings and find no abuse of discretion.
See United States v. Raplinger,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed in part, and we remand for entry *364 of an amended judgment reflecting a remittitur of punitive damages to $120,000.
Notes
. There was authority suggesting the "contributing factor” standard should apply, but these cases were not so clear as to eliminate uncertainty regarding this issue.
See Korando v. Mallinckrodt, Inc.,
