Graphnet, Inc. v. Retarus, Inc. (085529) (Hudson County & Statewide)

CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 11, 2022
DocketA-71-20
StatusPublished

This text of Graphnet, Inc. v. Retarus, Inc. (085529) (Hudson County & Statewide) (Graphnet, Inc. v. Retarus, Inc. (085529) (Hudson County & Statewide)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graphnet, Inc. v. Retarus, Inc. (085529) (Hudson County & Statewide), (N.J. 2022).

Opinion

SYLLABUS

This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Court. In the interest of brevity, portions of an opinion may not have been summarized.

Graphnet, Inc. v. Retarus, Inc. (A-71-20) (085529)

Argued November 30, 2021 -- Decided February 11, 2022

FERNANDEZ-VINA, J., writing for a unanimous Court.

In this appeal, the Court considers whether a new trial on all damages is required when the jury is improperly instructed on nominal damages and a plaintiff opposes remittitur.

Plaintiff Graphnet, Inc. and defendant Retarus, Inc. are considered industry competitors -- they each provide, among other things, cloud-based facsimile services. In 2014, Retarus published a brochure containing allegedly defamatory statements about Graphnet. The brochure described Retarus’s services, listed some of its then-clients, and contained a section titled “Competition Analysis” that described the purported advantages of Retarus’s services over named competitors, including Graphnet. The brochure listed several “[d]isadvantages” of Retarus’s competitors, including security issues, lack of customer support, and “difficulty with uptime (especially Graphnet).”

Graphnet representatives received a copy of the brochure at a May 2016 event. In August 2016, Graphnet filed a complaint against Retarus. Throughout discovery, Graphnet failed to produce requested documents and took no depositions. Based on Graphnet’s failure to present supporting evidence, the trial court dismissed all claims except for the defamation and slander claims.

The trial court and the parties agreed that the court would charge the jury pursuant to Model Civil Jury Charge 8.46, entitled “Defamation Damages (Private or Public),” which instructs a jury on the elements of defamation. The trial court’s instructions tracked the model charge closely, including Section D, which is devoted to “Nominal Damages for Slander Per Se or Libel.” In keeping with the model charge, the court instructed the jurors in part (emphases added):

For these reasons, you are permitted to award nominal damages to compensate the plaintiff for injury to reputation which you reasonably believe that may have been sustained. Nominal damages are a small amount of money damages that are not designed to compensate a plaintiff, but are awarded for 1 the infraction of a legal right where the extent of the loss is not shown or where the right is one not dependent on the loss or damage.

Neither party objected to the instructions at trial. The jury ultimately awarded Graphnet $0 in compensatory damages but $800,000 in nominal damages.

Retarus filed a motion for remittitur. Graphnet opposed the motion. The trial court granted Retarus’s motion, holding that the $800,000 award “was grossly disproportionate to the purpose of nominal damages.” The court reduced Graphnet’s award to $500, in part relying on N.J.S.A. 2A:15-5.10, which defines nominal damages as “damages that are not designed to compensate a plaintiff and are less than $500.” A final order of judgment in the amount of $500 was entered in May 2019.

Graphnet appealed, arguing that the trial court erred as a matter of law by ordering remittitur without Graphnet’s consent. The Appellate Division affirmed in part, reversed in part. The court recognized that the jury’s $800,000 nominal damages award was “shockingly excessive and cannot stand” but concluded that the trial court improperly awarded Graphnet $500 in nominal damages in violation of the well-settled doctrine of remittitur. The appellate court remanded for a new trial on nominal damages only.

The Court granted certification. 246 N.J. 440 (2021).

HELD: As the Appellate Division found, remittitur was improper without Graphnet’s consent. But this matter requires a new trial on all damages in which the jury is properly instructed on actual and nominal damages. The Court also refers Model Civil Jury Charge 8.46D to the Committee on Model Civil Jury Charges to be amended.

1. There are three main types of damages available in an action for defamation: (1) compensatory or actual; (2) punitive or exemplary; and (3) nominal. Compensatory damages depend on showings of actual harm, and may not include a damage award presumed by the jury. Unlike compensatory damages, nominal damages do not attempt to compensate the plaintiff for an actual loss. A nominal damages award may be made in a defamation case to a plaintiff who has not proved a compensable loss. Such an award is a judicial declaration that the plaintiff’s right has been violated. It serves the purpose of vindicating the plaintiff’s character by a verdict of a jury that establishes the falsity of the defamatory statement. Because nominal damages are awarded only when no showing of loss has been made, they are envisioned as more of a legal remedy than a financial one. Nominal damages, under New Jersey law, can best be defined as “a token amount of not more than $500.” (pp. 14-16)

2. A grant of remittitur allows a court to decrease a “grossly excessive damages award returned by a jury.” Cuevas v. Wentworth Grp., 226 N.J. 480, 499 (2016). In setting a 2 remittitur, the court must determine “the amount that a reasonable jury, properly instructed, would have awarded.” Orientale v. Jennings, 239 N.J. 569, 577 (2019). However, the court must obtain the plaintiff’s consent before it may grant remittitur. In other words, “[t]he plaintiff has the choice either to accept the award as remitted by the court or to proceed with a new damages trial before another jury.” Cuevas, 226 N.J. at 499. “The absence of mutual consent means that the case proceeds to a second jury for a new damages trial.” Orientale, 239 N.J. at 595. (p. 17)

3. Erroneous jury instructions typically constitute reversible error. Such error most commonly results from changes to adapt a model jury charge to the circumstances of a particular case, but it can also result from a fatal flaw within a charge itself. (pp. 17-19)

4. The grant of remittitur here -- made without consent of the plaintiff -- was error. The Court therefore considers the appropriate scope of the proceedings on remand. One can only speculate as to the jury’s intentions in awarding Graphnet $0 in compensatory damages and $800,000 in nominal damages. That is because the awards were made after improper jury instructions. Nominal damages can be awarded in a defamation case when a plaintiff has not proven a compensable loss. Here, following the model jury charge, the jury was first told it could “award nominal damages to compensate the plaintiff” and then told that “[n]ominal damages . . . are not designed to compensate a plaintiff.” The contradictory instruction given on nominal damages did not adequately convey the law. Instead, it opened the door for the jury to attempt to compensate Graphnet through nominal damages in a way that was either wholly impermissible under the law or a miscategorized but otherwise permissible form of compensatory damages. Viewing the record in the light most favorable to Graphnet, as is required under the appropriate standard of review, there is a possibility that the compensatory damages award might have been different had the jury been properly instructed on the nature and function of nominal damages. Therefore, a new trial on all damages is required. (pp. 19-21)

5. The model jury charge, as written, fails to instruct on the definition, scope, and purpose of nominal damages.

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Graphnet, Inc. v. Retarus, Inc. (085529) (Hudson County & Statewide), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graphnet-inc-v-retarus-inc-085529-hudson-county-statewide-nj-2022.