Lompe v. Sunridge Partners, LLC

54 F. Supp. 3d 1252, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 153371, 2014 WL 5358282
CourtDistrict Court, D. Wyoming
DecidedOctober 21, 2014
DocketCase No. 12-CV-88-J
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 54 F. Supp. 3d 1252 (Lompe v. Sunridge Partners, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Wyoming primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lompe v. Sunridge Partners, LLC, 54 F. Supp. 3d 1252, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 153371, 2014 WL 5358282 (D. Wyo. 2014).

Opinion

ORDER DENYING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR JUDGMENT AS A MATTER OF LAW, OR IN THE ALTERNATIVE, MOTION FOR NEW TRIAL OR REMITTITUR

ALAN B. JOHNSON, District Judge.

The defendants’ renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law, or in the alternative, motion for new trial or remitti-tur (Doc. No. 175), and the plaintiffs response in opposition (Doc. No. 193) came before the Court for hearing on May 23, 2014. The Court, having reviewed the parties’ submissions and all materials in the record, having considered counsel’s arguments at the hearing, the applicable law, and being fully advised, hereby FINDS and ORDERS as follows:

Background and Contentions

This was a personal injury action arising out of an event in which plaintiff Amber Lompe (“Lompe”) suffered carbon monoxide poisoning in her apartment, which was owned and run by the defendants. The ease was tried to a jury over a period of several weeks. On December 19, 2014, the jury entered its verdict in favor of plaintiff Lompe. The jury found defendant Sun-ridge Partners, LLC (Sunridge) to be 25% at fault, defendant Apartment Management Consultants, LLC (AMC) to be 65% at fault, and plaintiff Lompe to be 10% at fault. It went on to find that Lompe was entitled to recover damages in the amount of $3,000,000.00. The jury’s verdict also included findings that the conduct of both Sunridge Partners, LLC and Apartment Management Consultants, LLC constituted willful and wanton misconduct, such that punitive damages should be awarded against each defendant.

The second phase of the trial addressed punitive damages. After hearing evidence and argument, and being instructed on the law, the jury found that punitive damages should be awarded. They found $3,000,000.00 punitive damages should be assessed against Sunridge and that $22,500,000.00 should be assessed against AMC.

In this motion, the defendants collectively argue this “unprecedented” verdict was the “culmination of a series of errors and omissions by the Court as to jury instructions and evidentiary rulings, the sole cure for which is the grant of a new trial pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 59.” They challenge the plaintiffs evidence and argue that punitive damages should have never been submitted to the jury. The verdict is characterized as a runaway verdict.

The following is a brief summary of the defendants’ claims. They contend that, as to liability, the jury instructions given to the jury improperly increased their duty of care under Wyoming law, and simultaneously reduced or eliminated plaintiffs duties entirely. They claim the jury should have been instructed that a landlord must have notice of a defect before liability could attach and no such notice [1256]*1256was provided to the defendants of the blocked flue vent that resulted in the carbon monoxide incident in this case. They claim the jury should have been instructed as to intervening cause and that the landowner may assign its duties under the Wyoming Residential Property Act (WRPA). They contend that the plaintiffs actions, as they characterize them, in choosing to disable the carbon monoxide detector was not just comparative fault, but an assumption of risk, which led to an insufficient allocation of fault to plaintiff. They further argue that the Court instructed as to spoliation without making the required findings. The defendants assert various evidentiary errors stacked the deck against them. The jury did not hear that plaintiff had agreed to limit defendants’ liability in the lease and that she failed to maintain the detectors in her apartment, and that had she done so, she would have prevented her own injuries.

As to punitive damages, defendants argue the evidence was insufficient, in that more than mere mistake, thoughtlessness, inadvertence, inattention or gross negligence is required. The instructions on punitive damages were not adequate in the defendants’ view, where, defendants contend, they acted reasonably in hiring an experienced property manager, serviced furnaces as needed by hiring an HVAC professional, provided tenants with carbon monoxide detectors, broke no law, and violated no industry custom. The punitive damages award was grossly excessive and arbitrary and violated the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.

It comes as no surprise that plaintiff disagrees entirely with the defendants’ assertions and arguments. Plaintiff contends the instructions accurately stated defendants’ duty of care, not increasing the duty, but defining the duty. It is an accurate statement of Wyoming law. The defendants’ efforts to rely on common law landlord duties and immunities by asking for a “knew or should have known of the danger” standard is contrary to Wyoming law. The Wyoming Supreme Court held in Merrill v. Jansma, 86 P.3d 270, 287 (Wyo.2004), that the WRPA abrogated common law and “establishe[d] a new standard of conduct in cases involving personal injuries occurring on rental property — a standard of reasonable care under the circumstances.” Id. Plaintiff argues that none of the instructions rendered defendants insurers of tenant safety. In sum, the instructions taken as a whole were correct and gave proper guidance to the jury.

Plaintiff asserts the instructions properly defined the plaintiffs duty of cáre, that no notice of defect instruction was appropriate, that no intervening cause instruction was necessary or appropriate, that Sunridge did not assign its duties under Wyoming law, and an assumption of risk instruction was unnecessary. The failure to produce evidence instruction was appropriate, fair, proper, not a sanction and applied equally to both sides. The instruction was not a spoliation sanction. The defendants cannot show prejudice as they requested an adverse inference instruction and ultimately, may have benefitted from the instruction given.

Plaintiff asserts no errors in evidence require a new trial. The Court did not err by redacting the “limited liability” clause of the lease; the redaction omitted confusing and improper portions of the lease that would have created jury confusion. Further, the plaintiff asserts that the prohibition of lease term interpretation and argument by counsel was appropriate, in that paragraph 28 of the lease relating to smoke detectors had no bearing in the case.

[1257]*1257The opinion claiming to establish a local standard of care was properly excluded. The Court properly prohibited expert opinion from Peter Meer from testifying about a locality standard of care when that matter has been addressed by statute. Post-incident evidence that the carbon monoxide alarm provided in her apartment when she moved out was broken was offered to rebut the argument that Lompe was negligent or that she was ever provided a functioning carbon monoxide alarm. Plaintiff contends evidence, including semiannual inspection reports, disclosed missing carbon monoxide alarms in many units, and that weeks after Lompe was poisoned, the majority of apartments did not have functioning alarms, nothing had changed, and the defendants did not have a practice in place to provide functioning alarms or carbon monoxide detectors to tenants. These were not remedial measures precluded from being admitted into evidence by Fed.R.Evid. 407.

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Related

T.R. v. Howard
D. New Mexico, 2024
Lompe v. Sunridge Partners, LLC
818 F.3d 1041 (Tenth Circuit, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 F. Supp. 3d 1252, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 153371, 2014 WL 5358282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lompe-v-sunridge-partners-llc-wyd-2014.