Of Passion, Prejudice And Punitive Damages

Addressing an issue of damages, the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit vacated the district court’s grant of punitive damages in favor of the plaintiff, finding “passion and prejudice” mitigated finding of “malice”Waverly Scott Kaffaga, as Executrix of the Estate of Elaine Anderson Steinbeck v. The Estate of Thomas Steinbeck et al., Case No. 18-55336 (9th Cir. Sept. 9, 2019) (Tallman, J).

The lawsuit related to decades of litigation among the heirs to John Steinbeck’s registered copyrights to his works, including The Grapes of WrathOf Mice and MenEast of Eden and The Pearl. When Steinbeck died in 1968, he left interest in his works to his third wife, Elaine. Steinbeck’s two sons by a previous marriage each received $50,000. In the 1970s, the sons obtained rights in their father’s works when interests in works were renewed pursuant to US Copyright law.

In 1983, changes in the law prompted Elaine and the sons to enter into an agreement that provided each of them with an equal share of the royalties and gave Elaine “complete power and authority to negotiate, authorize and take action with respect to the exploitation and/or termination of rights” in the works. In 2003, Elaine passed away, and her daughter, Waverly Kaffaga, assumed the role of successor under the 1983 agreement. The sons challenged the validity of the 1983 agreement, and the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit determined that the agreement was valid and enforceable. Despite losing in court, one of the sons, Thomas Steinbeck, along with his wife Gail and Gail’s media company, filed a lawsuit in California asserting rights to the works that the courts had already told them they did not have. The district court held, and the Ninth Circuit affirmed, that the Steinbecks’ claims were barred by collateral estoppel.

Kaffaga countersued Thomas and Gail for their attempts to assert various rights in the works despite having no rights. Those attempts led to multiple Hollywood producers abandoning negotiations with Kaffaga to develop screenplays for the works. The district court granted Kaffaga summary judgment on her breach of contract and slander of title claims, citing many detailed facts it believed supported those claims. The district court let the jury decide on her claim of tortious interference. The jury unanimously found for Kaffaga and awarded $5.25 million in compensatory damages and $7.9 million in punitive damages, including $6 million against Gail individually.

On appeal, the Ninth Circuit found clear support in the record for the lower court’s decisions, save for one—punitive damages. There, the appellate court noted that although Kaffaga had the better argument, and although there was ample evidence of defendants’ malice in the record to support the jury’s verdict, triggering punitive damages, Kaffaga missed one key piece of evidence.

Under California law, there is a “passion and prejudice” standard that measures the amount of punitive damages against the ratio between damages and the defendant’s net worth. It is the plaintiff’s burden to place into the record “meaningful evidence of the defendant’s financial condition” to support a defendant’s ability to pay.” Thus, for the punitive damage award to stand, the record needed to contain sufficient evidence of Gail’s assets, income, liabilities and expenses. Here, Kaffaga failed. Although Gail testified that she received approximately $120,000 to $200,000 per year from domestic book royalties, Kaffaga introduced no estimate of Gail’s potential income from the four television series and six feature films in development, nor did she introduce an estimate of the total value of Gail’s other intellectual property assets. The Ninth Circuit found that Kaffaga failed to meet her burden of placing into the record “meaningful evidence” of Gail’s financial condition showing that she had the ability to pay any punitive damages award as required by California law. The Ninth Circuit therefore vacated the almost $6 million punitive damages award.

Practice Note: When seeking punitive damages in California, the moving party must place “meaningful evidence” of the non-moving party’s financial condition and ability to pay any punitive damages awarded, including their assets, income, liabilities and expenses. If there are problems obtaining such evidence during discovery, procedures such as a motion to compel or proposing an appropriate adverse inference instruction at trial are in order.


© 2019 McDermott Will & Emery

For more copyright inheritance, see the National Law Review Estates & Trusts or Intellectual Property law pages.

The ABA Presents: International Humanitarian Law Sourcebook (Law of Armed Conflict)

Now available from the ABA’s Center for Human Rights: International Humanitarian Law Sourcebook (Law of Armed Conflict)

This book is a comprehensive compilation of the major source documents of International Humanitarian Law.  This ready-reference will be invaluable to lawyers, policymakers, military leaders, nongovernmental organizations and academics around the world.

Available for purchase here.

Check out the ABA’s Business, Human Rights, and Sustainability Sourcebook

Now available from the ABA: Business, Human Rights, and Sustainability Sourcebook

The Business, Human Rights and Sustainability Sourcebook addresses the intersection of human rights law with the conduct of business, in light of sustainability mandates and the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights.

This sourcebook can be used as a standalone reference, or combined into a set as a companion volume with the Center on Human Right’s International Human Rights Law Sourcebook and The International Humanitarian Law Sourcebook.

Available for purchase here.

The ABA Center for Human Rights Presents: International Due Process and Fair Trial Manual

Now available from the ABA: International Due Process and Fair Trial Manual.

ABA Due Process

Available as a book and an e-book, the Justice Defenders Manual is a relevant resource to provide a concise and clear handbook about human rights and how to defend them.

Available here.

The ABA presents: User Guide to HUD’s Previous Participation Review Process (aka “2530 approval”)

Available as an e-book and a hard copy from the ABA available here.

ABA HUD Review Process

 

The Previous Participation Review is only one component of HUD’s review of an application. Previous Participation Review is generally applicable to multifamily projects and healthcare facilities. This guide explains the key features of the revised process.

Available for purchase here.

The Healthcare Executive’s Simple Guide to FMV For Attorneys, C-Suite, Compliance, and Physicians

Health ABA adsThe ABA has developed a guide for healthcare executives: The Healthcare Executive’s Simple Guide to FMV For Attorneys, C-Suite, Compliance, and Physicians.  This guide has been developed to provide basic information on nearly every type of transaction or compensation arrangement that must adhere to the FMV standard.

Click here to order.

This guide will help healthcare executives navigate nearly every type of FMV opinion for transactions and compensation agreements. Readers will be able to quickly access pertinent material to help better understand and ensure a sound FMV analysis.

The Guide covers:
• Current regulatory environment and guidance behind FMV
• What to ask when engaging an appraiser to help ensure you will get a defensible opinion
• Value drivers behind over 20 of the most common facility transactions and agreement types
• Checklist when reviewing a FMV opinion and the Commercially Reasonable standard