Norcon, Inc. v. Kotowski

971 P.2d 158, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 25, 1998 WL 909909
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1999
DocketS-6390, S-6420
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 971 P.2d 158 (Norcon, Inc. v. Kotowski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norcon, Inc. v. Kotowski, 971 P.2d 158, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 25, 1998 WL 909909 (Ala. 1999).

Opinions

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

A jury found Norcon, Inc., liable to Mary Kotowski for sexual harassment, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and negligent infliction of emotional distress. It awarded her $8,494.40 for lost earnings and $1,850 for emotional distress. The jury also found Nor-con liable for punitive damages and awarded $3,770,260.63. Foremost among the many issues presented are whether an award of punitive damages is justified, whether the award is excessive, and, if so, what an appropriate remittitur amount would be. We hold that the evidence warranted a punitive damages award, but that the existing award is excessive. We conclude that the maximum allowable punitive damage award is $500,000 and order a remittitur to that amount.

II. FACTS

Most of the issues in this case require that we view the evidence in a light most favorable to Kotowski. Unless otherwise indicated, the facts set forth are presented from this perspective.

Mary Kotowski was one of thousands of workers employed to clean up the Exxon Valdez oil spill in Prince William Sound. Exxon employed Veco, Inc., to act as general contractor on the spill cleanup. Norcon, a sister corporation of Veco, was one of Veco’s subcontractors. Exxon, Veco, and Norcon had a strict policy prohibiting the consumption of alcohol by anyone working on the spill or living in contractor housing.

Kotowski was dispatched by her labor union in Fairbanks to work for Norcon on June 15, 1989. After a day of orientation she was assigned to work aboard a shower barge attached to the vessel Pacific Northwest Explorer. She worked there for approximately two weeks without days off, working at least twelve hours each day. She slept on the Pacific Northwest Explorer.

Kotowski’s immediate supervisor was Kathleen Brennan, who reported to Mike Posehn, a general foreman for Norcon. Both Brennan and Posehn were union members.

No incidents of importance occurred until June 28, 1989. On that date Posehn told Kotowski she should pack her gear and move to another barge, the Foss 280. Transportation to take her to the Foss 280 did not arrive until the next day. She thus went to the Foss 280 on June 29, checked in with security, and asked for her room assignment. She was told that she had not yet been assigned a room, but was taken to a work station where she busied herself.

Kotowski was working alone when Mike Posehn appeared with another individual. She testified that “he came up to me, he kissed me, he kind of squeezed my bottom, asked me how’s it going, babe?” The kiss was on her lips. This was only the third or fourth time she had seen Posehn. Kotowski was distressed but she did not complain to Posehn. Subsequently she asked Posehn if there was specific work that she should be doing. He replied that she should ask “one of the girls running around out here ... if they need help with anything.” Posehn and his companion then left. After spending the day working on the Foss 280, Kotowski returned to her room on the Pacific Northwest Explorer.

[162]*162On the 30th, Kotowski returned to the Foss 280, sought out and found Posehn. Ko-towski testified that she “needed some kind of direction to go and something to do other than just standing around or pretending I was busy.” She told Posehn that if she wasn’t needed on the Foss 280 there was work for her to do on the Pacific Northwest Explorer and requested that she be allowed to continue to work there. Posehn responded by inviting her to his room for further discussion. She complied. In his room, Po-sehn poured them both a drink of whiskey. While she took a sip, he consumed his drink. Posehn told her to calm down, take the afternoon off, and return to the Pacific Northwest Explorer for a nap. He invited her to return to his room in the evening for a party, and they could further discuss her employment then.

Kotowski returned to the Pacific Northwest Explorer. She discussed the events on the Foss 280 with Elmo Saveli, the Exxon executive in charge of the cleanup task force. She told Saveli that she was being harassed, that Posehn had a reputation for granting employment preferences in exchange for sex, that she had been invited to a party in Po-sehn’s room that evening, and that she expected alcohol consumption to occur there. Saveli furnished Kotowski with a tape recorder to enable her to record conversations at the party. Kotowski requested protection from being fired. Saveli typed and signed the following note: “To whom it may concern. Ms. Mary [Kotowski], ... a Norcon employee, has agreed to assist in gathering information concerning alcohol/drug abuse aboard the Foss 280 barge. She is to be granted amnesty from prosecution and from being fired from her job.”

Kotowski proceeded to the Foss 280 to attend the party. Upon boarding she was met by a woman who told her that Kotowski was transferred to the “beach,” a less desirable assignment. The party was held in Posehn’s room, which was adjacent to the room where Norcon’s managers resided. The party was attended by numerous people including some Norcon managers. There was sexual banter at the party and alcohol was consumed. Posehn told Kotowski that although she had been assigned to the beach, he had changed the assignment.

Toward the end of the party the following colloquy took place between Kotowski and Posehn:

Kotowski: Oh, okay. So I’ll be here at noon.
Posehn: Huh uh.
Kotowski: Huh uh?
Posehn: I haven’t decided yet. Go ahead and have another drink. We’ll decide by the time you finish that.
Kotowski: You want me to have another drink and then we’ll decide by the time I leave, what time I get here?
Posehn: Right.
Kotowski: What might be that time (laughs) by the time I leave?

At approximately 11:00 p.m. Kotowski left the party to use the bathroom. When she returned to Posehn’s room no guests were present and the lights were out. She opened the door and found Posehn standing in his underwear. She told him that she was leaving. Posehn invited her to spend the night. He was pushing the door closed when she yanked it open and left, leaving her hard hat, coat, and life vest in the room. She returned to the Pacific Northwest Explorer and delivered the tapes and the tape recorder to Saveli’s secretary.

The next day, Kotowski worked aboard the Pacific Northwest Explorer, assisting Saveli’s secretary. She talked to Saveli briefly. He acknowledged that he had received the tapes and listened to parts of them.

On July 1, Ron Nelson, a Norcon executive who had attended Posehn’s party, asked Dallas Wilmarth, a union steward, to ask Kotow-ski to sign a statement that she had been insubordinate to Norcon. Nelson promised that it would not affect Kotowski’s job. Wil-marth complied, telling Kotowski that “I was guaranteed that your job wouldn’t be terminated.” After deliberating, Kotowski signed the statement. Wilmarth delivered the statement to Nelson, who was then lunching with other Norcon managers. He observed that “[pjretty quick they started passing that paper around, laughing about it, and I thought, oh boy, I think we’re in trouble.”

[163]

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Bluebook (online)
971 P.2d 158, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 25, 1998 WL 909909, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norcon-inc-v-kotowski-alaska-1999.