Gordon v. Rice ( 2021 )


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    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
    Nos. 17-CV-1422 & 18-CV-167
    ALISHA GORDON, APPELLANT,
    V.
    NADINE RICE, APPELLEE.
    Appeal from the Superior Court
    of the District of Columbia
    (CAB-5579-15)
    (Hon. Michael Rankin, Trial Judge)
    (Submitted June 20, 2019                               Decided October 14, 2021)
    Alisha Gordon, pro se.
    Nadine Rice, pro se.
    Before BECKWITH, Associate Judge, and NEBEKER and FISHER, Senior
    Judges. ∗
    ∗
    Judge Fisher was an Associate Judge at the time of submission. His status
    changed to Senior Judge on August 23, 2020.
    2
    BECKWITH, Associate Judge: A jury found that appellant Alisha Gordon
    committed an assault and battery on appellee Nadine Rice and awarded Ms. Rice
    compensatory damages of $337 and punitive damages of $150,000, which the trial
    court remitted to $33,363. On appeal, Ms. Gordon argues that the remitted award is
    unconstitutionally excessive in light of the Supreme Court’s admonition that “few
    awards exceeding a single-digit ratio between punitive and compensatory damages
    . . . will satisfy due process.” State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Campbell, 
    538 U.S. 408
    , 425 (2003). Because we cannot meaningfully review the trial court’s remitted
    award to ensure that it comports with due process, we remand this case to the trial
    court to reconsider the award in light of this opinion.
    I.
    Appellee Nadine Rice filed a complaint against appellant Alisha Gordon and
    a codefendant, William Byrd, for assault, battery, and intentional infliction of
    emotional distress (IIED) after a physical altercation among the three of them in the
    hallway of their shared apartment complex. In her amended complaint, Ms. Rice
    alleged the following. As Ms. Rice was walking up the stairs to her apartment, Ms.
    Gordon and Mr. Byrd started to yell at her and prevented her from going into the
    apartment. Ms. Gordon pepper sprayed Ms. Rice while Mr. Byrd watched, then Mr.
    3
    Byrd wrestled Ms. Rice to the ground. Ms. Gordon stomped on Ms. Rice and used
    the apartment door to strike Ms. Rice while she was on the ground. Finally, Ms.
    Rice’s complaint alleged that Mr. Byrd and Ms. Gordon gave false statements to
    police officers that resulted in her arrest and prosecution for unlawful entry and
    assault. Ms. Rice was ultimately acquitted of those charges.
    The case proceeded to trial on the assault and battery claims after the trial
    court dismissed Ms. Rice’s IIED claim for lack of evidence that Ms. Gordon and Mr.
    Byrd’s conduct was outrageous. A set of videos of the incident introduced at trial
    showed Ms. Rice charging through the door into Mr. Byrd and Ms. Gordon’s
    apartment after the three argued, Mr. Byrd attempting to restrain her and push her
    out, Ms. Gordon kicking Ms. Rice while Mr. Byrd restrained her on the ground, and
    finally Ms. Gordon shutting the door and leaning on it while Ms. Rice was lying in
    the threshold. 1
    The jury concluded that Ms. Gordon committed assault and battery without
    justification 2 and awarded Ms. Rice $337 in compensatory damages and $150,000
    1
    Ms. Gordon has not provided the court with transcripts of the bulk of the
    trial testimony.
    2
    The jury found that Mr. Byrd also committed battery but determined that
    his actions were justified as self-defense.
    4
    in punitive damages, a 445:1 ratio. Ms. Gordon moved for remittitur, requesting a
    punitive damages award of $3,370 or less. The trial court granted Ms. Gordon’s
    motion in part and remitted Ms. Gordon’s damages to $33,363, or a 99:1 ratio. Ms.
    Gordon appealed both the jury’s verdict and the remitted award, and we consolidated
    the appeals. 3
    II.
    Ms. Gordon argues that the evidence in this case did not support the
    assessment of punitive damages against her and that, even if it did, the trial court’s
    remitted award of $33,363 is still unconstitutionally excessive on its face under State
    Farm, 
    538 U.S. at 425
    . 4 We address these arguments in turn.
    3
    Ms. Rice also filed an appeal, but she later dismissed it voluntarily.
    4
    Ms. Gordon also makes two arguments regarding evidentiary and
    instructional rulings at her trial: that it was improper to admit Ms. Rice’s testimony
    regarding her arrest, incarceration, and prosecution for unlawful entry and that the
    court should not have instructed the jury that it could award Ms. Rice damages for
    emotional distress because the emotional distress claim had already been dismissed.
    But as Ms. Gordon admits, she has not provided the transcripts that would show
    what Ms. Rice testified to at trial. Under D.C. App. R. 28(a)(10)(A), the appellant’s
    brief must contain the appellant’s “contentions and the reasons for them, with
    citations to the authorities and parts of the record on which the appellant relies.”
    And under D.C. App. R. 10(b)(1), the appellant has the duty to order transcripts of
    “such parts of the proceedings not already on file as the appellant considers
    5
    “[I]n order to sustain an award of punitive damages, the plaintiff must prove,
    by a preponderance of the evidence, that the defendant committed a tortious act, and
    by clear and convincing evidence that the act was accompanied by conduct and a
    state of mind evincing malice or its equivalent.” Jonathan Woodner Co. v. Breeden,
    
    665 A.2d 929
    , 938 (D.C. 1995). We review the trial court’s determination that there
    was a triable claim for punitive damages for abuse of discretion. See Tolson v.
    District of Columbia, 
    860 A.2d 336
    , 345 (D.C. 2004).
    We perceive no flaws in the court’s conclusion that Ms. Gordon’s conduct
    was sufficiently intentional and reprehensible to warrant sending the question of
    punitive damages to the jury. In its order on Ms. Gordon’s remittitur motion, the
    court noted several facts that supported this finding, including that Ms. Gordon
    removed herself from the initial scuffle to retrieve the pepper spray from her
    apartment, sprayed Ms. Rice multiple times in the face, stomped and kicked Ms.
    Rice while Mr. Byrd was holding her down, and slammed the apartment door on Ms.
    necessary.” It is impossible to assess if and how Ms. Rice’s testimony was
    inflammatory without seeing her testimony. Because it would also be next to
    impossible to determine the prejudicial effect of the emotional distress instruction
    without having a full view of whether and how Ms. Rice’s emotional distress was
    presented to the jury, we need not determine whether that instruction was given in
    error. Ms. Gordon has failed to demonstrate that either of these claims warrants
    reversal.
    6
    Rice’s body, all while Ms. Rice was restrained on the ground by Mr. Byrd and
    otherwise defenseless. The trial court was “considerably better positioned than are
    we to assess the gravity of [Ms. Gordon’s] wrongdoing” in determining whether the
    evidence was “sufficient to sustain an award of punitive damages.” Daka, Inc. v.
    McCrae, 
    839 A.2d 682
    , 696 (D.C. 2003). It did not abuse its discretion in submitting
    the issue of punitive damages to the jury.
    Even when punitive damages are in order, however, a punitive damages award
    must comport with due process, which “prohibits the imposition of grossly excessive
    or arbitrary punishments on a tortfeasor.” State Farm, 
    538 U.S. at 427
    . The
    Supreme Court has identified three “guideposts”—which we will refer to as the Gore
    factors—for reviewing courts to assess the constitutionality of a punitive damages
    award:
    (1) the degree of reprehensibility of the defendant’s
    misconduct; (2) the disparity between the actual or
    potential harm suffered by the plaintiff and the punitive
    damages award; and (3) the difference between the
    punitive damages awarded by the jury and the civil
    penalties authorized or imposed in comparable cases.
    
    Id.
     at 418 (citing BMW of N. Am. v. Gore, 
    517 U.S. 559
    , 575 (1996)); see also
    McCrae, 
    839 A.2d at 697
    . We conduct de novo review of a trial court’s application
    of these guideposts to a challenged award. McCrae, 
    839 A.2d at 697
    . Because
    7
    “[p]unitive damages pose an acute danger of arbitrary deprivation of property,” State
    Farm, 
    538 U.S. at 417
     (internal quotation marks omitted), we have considered it
    “critical” that “courts conduct meaningful and adequate review of punitive damages
    awards,” Modern Mgmt. Co. v. Wilson, 
    997 A.2d 37
    , 46 (D.C. 2010).
    The trial court applied these principles to determine that the jury’s punitive
    damages award of $150,000 was excessive. With regard to the first Gore factor, the
    court concluded that Ms. Gordon’s conduct was “on the low end of the
    reprehensibility scale.” In assessing the second factor, the court found that a ratio
    of punitive to compensatory damages of 445:1 was high enough to “raise[ ] th[e]
    court’s judicial eyebrow.” Because it recognized that higher ratios can nevertheless
    be justified where low compensatory damages fail to reflect the harm caused or the
    jurisdiction’s interest in deterrence, the court assessed the actual harm and the harm
    likely to result from the conduct at issue in the case, finding both on the “low end of
    the scale.” It also concluded that a higher ratio of punitive to compensatory damages
    could not be justified based on deterrence needs stemming from Ms. Gordon’s
    wealth, given that evidence of net worth was not sufficiently provided at trial. 5
    5
    Ms. Gordon argues that the punitive damages verdict cannot stand because
    Ms. Rice failed to establish net worth. It is true that “where a plaintiff seeks to
    recover punitive damages based on the wealth of the defendant, proof of the
    defendant’s current net worth is required.” Jonathan Woodner Co., 
    665 A.2d at 932
    .
    8
    When it came to the third Gore factor, the trial court “reviewed punitive damages
    awards in similar civil actions in the District of Columbia” going back to the year
    2000. From this search, it concluded that the most analogous case was one in which
    the jury awarded $2,250 in punitive damages and $150 in compensatory damages—
    a 15:1 ratio—to a plaintiff it found had been [battered] by a defendant who backed
    his car into the plaintiff twice. 6 It also noted that the maximum criminal fine for the
    conduct at issue—assuming Ms. Rice suffered “significant bodily injury”—would
    be $12,500. The trial court thus found that all three Gore factors weighed against
    the jury’s punitive damages award of $150,000.
    Given that the trial court expressly disclaimed reliance on Ms. Gordon’s net worth
    in setting the remitted award, however, we see no error here. See 
    id.
     at 941 n.19
    (“[N]et worth is only one of several considerations relevant to a punitive damages
    determination.”). Although Ms. Gordon has argued that there was insufficient
    evidence of her net worth to permit an award based in part on her wealth, she has
    not challenged the award based on inability to pay.
    6
    In finding this case most similar, the trial court also considered a case in
    which the jury awarded $137,000 in punitive damages against a defendant who had
    choked a coworker, slammed her head into a filing cabinet, and struck her multiple
    times, causing a broken eye socket, a broken nose, and closed head trauma, and a
    case in which punitive damage awards of $15,000 to $30,000 were assessed against
    “police officers who threw objects across a restaurant, acted after ‘essentially no
    provocation,’ made derogatory comments about the plaintiffs while assaulting them,
    and consumed alcohol to the point of intoxication, while armed, then brawled in a
    crowded restaurant”—conduct the trial court found “more egregious” than Ms.
    Gordon’s.
    9
    The trial court then proceeded to determine the “maximum tolerable award.”
    See Carter v. District of Columbia, 
    795 F.2d 116
    , 135 n.13 (D.C. Cir. 1986)
    (“Because the seventh amendment right to jury trial pervades the atmosphere, it is
    appropriate to set a remittitur so as to permit recovery of the highest amount the jury
    tolerably could have awarded.”). It determined that the maximum punitive damages
    award that would comport with due process was one having a double-digit ratio to
    the compensatory damages award, and so set the award ninety-nine times higher
    than the compensatory damages.
    We must consider whether, as Ms. Gordon contends, the remitted award of
    $33,363 is itself constitutionally excessive. The trial court did not justify its remitted
    award using the Gore factors. And while we do not suggest that doing so is required
    of a court remitting an award, we ultimately do not find it possible to conduct
    “meaningful and adequate review” on this record given that—as we will next
    explain—much of the trial court’s Gore analysis would seem to support an even
    lower award. Cf. Louison v. Crockett, 
    546 A.2d 400
    , 405–07 (D.C. 1998) (reviewing
    trial court’s decision denying remittitur of compensatory damages award in
    negligence action under abuse of discretion standard and remanding because “the
    record on its face provides questionable support for the verdict, and elucidation by
    the trial court might clarify the matter”).
    10
    The Supreme Court has called the degree of reprehensibility of the
    defendant’s conduct the “most import indicium of the reasonableness of a punitive
    damages award.” Gore, 
    517 U.S. at 575
    . By the trial court’s own assessment, this
    was a case “on the low end of the reprehensibility scale” when accounting only for
    that harm that was established at trial and could properly be accounted for in the
    punitive damages determination. It noted that the attack was a one-off incident, was
    not “prolonged or sustained,” was the result of an “eruption of tensions” as opposed
    to a “planned attack,” and did not “create a substantial danger to innocent
    bystanders.” This does not indicate that the trial court saw Ms. Gordon’s conduct as
    the sort of “particularly egregious act” that can support a punitive damages award
    that greatly exceeds the compensatory damages. See 
    id. at 582
     (“[L]ow awards of
    compensatory damages may properly support a higher ratio than high compensatory
    awards, if, for example, a particularly egregious act has resulted in only a small
    amount of economic damages.”).
    Although there is no bright-line rule governing the ratio between punitive and
    compensatory damages, “[s]ingle-digit multipliers are more likely to comport with
    due process,” and “few awards exceeding [that] ratio . . . [by] a significant degree”
    will be constitutionally permissible. State Farm, 
    538 U.S. at 425
    . We have
    recognized, however, that some circumstances may justify higher—and perhaps
    11
    even significantly higher—ratios. For example, higher ratios may “comport with
    due process where ‘a particularly egregious act has resulted in only a small amount
    of economic damages.’” McCrae, 
    839 A.2d at
    698 n.18 (quoting State Farm, 
    538 U.S. at 410
    ). Compare Daka, Inc. v. Breiner, 
    711 A.2d 86
     (D.C. 1998) (upholding
    punitive damages award thirty-nine times greater than the compensatory damages
    award in a workplace discrimination case), with McCrae, 
    839 A.2d at 699
     (reversing
    punitive damages award twenty-six times greater than the compensatory damages
    award in subsequent workplace discrimination case against the same company as in
    Breiner and distinguishing the even higher ratio found constitutionally permissible
    there in part because “the plaintiff was awarded ‘substantial’ compensatory
    damages . . . , almost nineteen times greater than the compensatory damages
    awarded for similar emotional injury in [Breiner]”).
    The trial court gave three reasons for not remitting the award to a single-digit
    multiplier. First, it concluded that “reducing [Ms. Rice’s] punitive damages to
    achieve a single-digit ratio [was] not warranted” in light of the “substantially low”
    compensatory damages award. This may be the case, but the trial court did not then
    provide a rationale for arriving at the highest possible double-digit-multiplier award.
    The trial court’s own order does not suggest that it saw this as a case in which the
    compensatory damages were on the low end of what the jury could have awarded
    12
    given the harm established at trial. 7 Cf. Howard Univ. v. Wilkins, 
    22 A.3d 774
    , 784
    (D.C. 2011) (finding, in upholding punitive damages award of $42,677.50 that, “had
    the jury awarded $42,677.50 in compensatory damages, it would have seemed
    entirely reasonable—perhaps modest—in light of the evidence”). Nor is this a case
    in which only nominal damages were awarded. Cf. id.; cf. also Arizona v. ASARCO
    LLC, 
    773 F.3d 1050
    , 1058 (9th Cir. 2014) (collecting cases from various
    jurisdictions finding ratio assessment under Gore’s second guidepost inapposite in
    nominal damages cases). Although it is true that deterrence interests may justify
    higher punitive damages awards where compensatory damages alone would fail to
    serve that function, nothing in the trial court’s order suggests that a punitive damages
    award less than ninety-nine times the compensatory damages would not provide
    adequate deterrence. 8
    Second, the trial court noted that Ms. Rice’s “harm—specifically, her
    humiliation and indignation, is difficult for a jury [to] quantify.” See Modern Mgmt.,
    7
    The trial court found that the only compensable harm consisted of “physical
    injuries and garden variety emotional distress flowing from the assault and battery.”
    The only physical injuries Ms. Rice alleged in her complaint were bruises and
    lacerations, but her complaint does state that she “was taken to Providence Hospital
    to be treated for her injuries.”
    8
    This is especially so in light of what the District has deemed adequate
    deterrence in criminal cases involving analogous conduct. See infra.
    13
    
    997 A.2d at
    57–58 (“A higher ratio may also be justified in cases in which the injury
    is hard to detect or the monetary value of noneconomic harm might have been
    difficult to determine.”). The trial court had determined that the only emotional harm
    that could be accounted for in the damages assessment was “garden variety
    emotional distress.” We fail to see, at least on the record before us, how this sort of
    harm—difficult to quantify as it may be—can take this case out of the presumptive
    single-digit-ratio range.
    Third, the trial court found it “likely that the jury’s assessment of [Ms.
    Gordon’s] malice toward [Ms. Rice] was influenced by comments [Ms. Gordon]
    made, during her opening statement, that [Ms. Rice] consumes illegal drugs, as well
    as [Ms. Gordon’s] reference to a particularly sensitive trauma [Ms. Rice] endured
    years ago, which bore no relationship to the issues at bar.” The Supreme Court has
    made clear that “[a] defendant’s dissimilar acts, independent from the acts upon
    which liability was premised, may not serve as the basis for punitive damages.”
    State Farm, 
    538 U.S. at 422
    . To the extent the award punishes Ms. Gordon for the
    cruelty of a comment made during trial—and thus conduct unrelated to the conduct
    for which she was found liable—it is not permissible under State Farm. If, on the
    other hand, Ms. Gordon’s conduct at trial created a credibility issue as to her malice
    toward Ms. Rice during the incident, we would defer to the trial court’s assessment
    14
    that a jury could reasonably have found the conduct at issue more reprehensible than
    it might otherwise have.       Howard Univ., 
    22 A.3d at 782
     (“Because [the
    reprehensibility analysis] may ‘turn[ ] on witness credibility and demeanor,’ trial
    courts ‘have a somewhat superior vantage over courts of appeals.’” (quoting Cooper
    Indus., Inc. v. Leatherman Tool Grp., Inc., 
    532 U.S. 424
    , 440 (2001))). Because we
    cannot determine how Ms. Gordon’s conduct at trial factored into the award, we are
    left with a concern that she may have been improperly punished for that conduct.
    Finally, with regard to the third Gore factor, other civil and criminal penalties
    suggest the remitted award may still pose constitutional concerns. The trial court
    found Ms. Gordon’s conduct most analogous to assault under 
    D.C. Code § 22-404
    .
    Had Ms. Gordon been criminally charged with felony assault under that provision,
    she would have faced a maximum fine of $12,500. See 
    D.C. Code §§ 22-404
    (a)(2),
    22-3571.01 (2021 Supp.). That fine would only apply if Ms. Gordon “intentionally,
    knowingly, or recklessly cause[d] significant bodily injury,” meaning “an injury that
    requires hospitalization or immediate medical attention.” See 
    D.C. Code §§ 22
    -
    404(a)(2), 22-3571.01 (2021 Supp.). Otherwise, the maximum fine would be
    $1,000. 9 See 
    D.C. Code §§ 22-404
    (a)(1), 22-3571.01 (2021 Supp.). Although these
    9
    The trial court’s order mistakenly concludes that the maximum fine for
    simple assault not resulting in significant bodily injury would be $2,500. The trial
    15
    fines could also be accompanied by a term of imprisonment, an additional measure
    of punishment and deterrence and one that increases the difficulty of comparing this
    case to others, the fines that would apply in the criminal context indicate “the
    seriousness with which [the legislature] views the wrongful action.” Modern Mgmt.,
    
    997 A.2d at
    59–60 (alteration in original) (quoting State Farm, 
    538 U.S. at 428
    ). 10
    Thus, we “accord substantial deference to legislative judgments concerning
    appropriate sanctions for the conduct at issue,” which helps ensure that punitive
    damages awards are not arbitrary. 
    Id.
     (quoting Gore, 
    517 U.S. at 583
    ). We do not
    suggest that a punitive damages award exceeding the maximum possible criminal
    fine by this amount is always constitutionally suspect. But in light of the other
    indicators here that the award is excessive, the fact that the District has found a
    substantially lower fine sufficient to fulfill its interests in deterrence and punishment
    court did not determine whether Ms. Gordon’s conduct was most analogous to
    simple assault (carrying a $1,000 maximum fine) or felony assault (carrying a
    $12,500 maximum fine).
    10
    For felony assault under 
    D.C. Code § 22-404
    (a)(2), one can be “fined not
    more than [$12,500] or be imprisoned not more than 3 years, or both.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis
    added); see also 
    D.C. Code § 22-3571.01
    . For simple assault under 
    D.C. Code § 22
    -
    404(a)(1), one can be “fined not more than [$1,000] or be imprisoned not more than
    180 days, or both.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added); see also 
    D.C. Code § 22-3571.01
    .
    16
    makes us hesitant to affirm on this record. 11
    The trial court reasonably applied the Gore factors to justify remitting the jury
    award and took care to articulate its reasoning. The record does not, however,
    indicate the court’s justification for setting such a high award—one that the
    guideposts suggest may be excessive. In the absence of such a justification and
    because much of the trial court’s reasoning supporting its conclusion to remit the
    award at least ostensibly supports remitting it even further, we are unable to
    meaningfully review the excessiveness of the remitted award.
    11
    This is especially so given that the trial court itself found a civil case
    resulting in a $2,250 punitive damages award—fifteen times higher than the
    compensatory damages of $150—most similar to this case in terms of conduct and
    reprehensibility. The fact-specific nature of the inquiry into the excessiveness of
    punitive damages—and the fact that the punitive damages award there was not
    necessarily the highest award that would comport with due process—means that we
    afford limited weight to that figure as a comparative matter. See Modern Mgmt.,
    
    997 A.2d at 25
    . Nevertheless, the trial court’s analysis of other civil jury verdicts is
    further indication of its view of the reprehensibility of Ms. Gordon’s conduct, a view
    seemingly in tension with the 99:1 remitted award.
    We also note that the jury did not find Ms. Gordon’s codefendant liable for
    assault and battery because the jury concluded that Mr. Byrd acted in self-defense
    after Ms. Rice tried to charge into the apartment. Though the jury could reasonably
    conclude that Ms. Gordon’s conduct did not likewise constitute self-defense, this
    particular circumstance by no means bolsters the argument for a high punitive
    damages award.
    17
    For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the trial court’s remitted punitive
    damages award and remand this case to allow the trial court to reconsider the award
    in light of this opinion or issue findings explaining the reasoning supporting the 99:1
    award. 12
    So ordered.
    12
    Ms. Gordon also argues that the trial court erred by failing to offer her the
    alternative of a new trial when it remitted the award. Ms. Gordon’s argument is
    misplaced, as the right to a new trial instead of accepting a remitted damages award
    is a right that can only be exercised by the prevailing party, namely the plaintiff,
    “[t]o avoid violating the Seventh Amendment.” See Phillips v. District of Columbia,
    
    458 A.2d 722
    , 724 (D.C. 1983).