Crookston v. Fire Insurance Exchange

860 P.2d 937, 223 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 1993 Utah LEXIS 131, 1993 WL 408287
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 7, 1993
Docket920172
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 860 P.2d 937 (Crookston v. Fire Insurance Exchange) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crookston v. Fire Insurance Exchange, 860 P.2d 937, 223 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 1993 Utah LEXIS 131, 1993 WL 408287 (Utah 1993).

Opinion

ZIMMERMAN, Justice:

This case is before us for the second time. In the first appeal, Crookston v. Fire Insurance Exchange, 817 P.2d 789, 806 (Utah 1991) (Crookston I), we affirmed a jury finding of fraud against defendant Fire Insurance Exchange and an award of $815,826 in compensatory damages to plaintiffs Spencer Larry Crookston and Randi Lynn Crookston. However, we also vacated the trial court’s denial of a motion by Fire Insurance for a new trial based on its claim that the $4,000,000 punitive damage award was excessive. Id. at 808. We remanded that motion so that the trial court could reconsider the award in light of the principles set forth in Crook-ston I. On remand, the trial court again denied the motion. Fire Insurance appeals, and we affirm.

The relevant facts are recited at length in Crookston I and will not be repeated here except as necessary.

We first note the standard of review. In considering a trial court’s decision to deny a new trial, we reverse only if we find an abuse of discretion, i.e., no reasonable basis for the decision. Id. at 804-05. However, if the trial court has made a determination of law that provides a premise for its denial of a new trial, such a legal decision is reviewed under a correctness standard. See State v. Ramirez, 817 P.2d 774, 781 n. 3 (Utah 1991); State v. Petersen, 810 P.2d 421, 425 (Utah 1991); see also State v. Thurman, 846 P.2d 1256, 1270 n. 11 (Utah 1993).

Fire Insurance makes several arguments attacking the denial of its motion. First, it contends that because Crookston I articulated a new standard for determining the excessiveness of a punitive damage award, we should vacate this award and remand for a redetermination of the amount by a properly instructed jury. 1 Second, Fire Insurance contends that on remand, the trial court did not properly apply the standards articulated in Crookston I in deciding the motion for a new trial.

Addressing Fire Insurance’s first argument, we find no merit to the contention that the trial court should have granted the motion for a new trial so as to allow the jury to reconsider the award after receiving new instructions. Explaining this ruling requires a brief recap of Crookston I’s treatment of the law governing the determination of the excessiveness of punitive damage awards and then a consideration of the instructions actually given in the present case.

In assessing the seven-factor balancing approach used to determine punitive damages, 2 which our case law approves and which is commonly used across the country, Crookston I found the approach lacking in guidance “for ... a jury fixing the punitive damages, a trial court reviewing a challenge to the amount of such an award, or an appellate court reviewing a trial court’s grant or denial of a new trial on *939 grounds of an inadequate or excessive award.” 817 P.2d at 808. No relative weights had been assigned to the factors, “and no standards or formulas [had] been established for properly evaluating them when making an award or when reviewing the propensity of a jury award.” Id.

Crookston I did note, however, that by looking only at the results of our prior cases, rather than trying to find some consistent underlying analytical model, some guidelines for reviewing the excessiveness of awards could be found: “[T]he results of our prior cases dealing with challenges to damages, taken as a whole, provide patterns that furnish useful guidance.... ” Id. The patterns of results in those cases demonstrate that “where the punitives are well below $100,000, punitive damage awards beyond a 3 to 1 ratio to actual damages have seldom been upheld and that where the award is in excess of $100,000, we have indicated some inclination to overturn awards having ratios of less than 3 to 1.” Id. at 810. Crookston I then used these patterns as a basis for presumptive guidelines to be used by trial courts in ruling on motions for a new trial or motions for remittitur founded on the claim that a punitive damage award is excessive. Id. at 811. Specifically, we said that an award exceeding the patterns of ratios observed in our prior cases raises a presumption that the award is excessive and that a failure by the trial court to reduce the award or order a new trial is an abuse of discretion. Id. To overcome this presumption, the trial court must explain why the case is unique, usually in terms of one of the established seven factors or “some other factor that seems compelling.” Id.

With this background in mind, we address Fire Insurance’s claim that Crook-ston I changed the law sufficiently to warrant a new punitive damage determination under new jury instructions. We recognize that the patterns described in Crookston I had not been commented on by an appellate court before the issuance of the Crookston I opinion and that the guidelines Crookston I derived from those patterns had not yet been laid down. However, at the time of trial, those patterns constituted the law in the sense that those cases allowed the prediction of how future cases might be resolved by anyone willing to undertake review of our prior decisions with an eye toward seeing the patterns. See Oliver Wendell Holmes, The Path of the Law, 10 Harv.L.Rev. 457, 460-61 (1896). Therefore, nothing in Crookston I changed the legal force of that prior ease law. The “law” that punitive to compensatory ratios of greater than 3 to 1 when the award is less than $100,000 would be viewed skeptically when challenged as excessive and that even lower ratios would be similarly viewed in awards exceeding $100,000 was settled at the time the jury in this case was instructed. See Crookston I, 817 P.2d at 810.

We acknowledge that the jury instructions given by the court below did not explain the ratios that constitute a presumptively excessive punitive damage award. The jury was instructed only on the seven factors to be considered in determining the award. However, the guidelines in Crookston I are primarily for the trial judge, who is called upon to consider the propriety of a punitive damage award on a post-verdict motion. See, e.g., id. at 811 (“In these patterns, we find that guidelines emerge for trial courts faced with challenges to punitive damage awards_”). On its face, Crookston I does not require imparting the same presumptive-ratio guidelines to the jury itself. Moreover, Fire Insurance had the responsibility of proposing any additional jury instructions, but failed to do so. In short, because we find that the jury in Crookston I

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Bluebook (online)
860 P.2d 937, 223 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 1993 Utah LEXIS 131, 1993 WL 408287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crookston-v-fire-insurance-exchange-utah-1993.