United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 06-1944
JOSÉ A. MUÑIZ-OLIVARI; ANNABELLE DURÁN-LÓPEZ;
CONJUGAL PARTNERSHIP MUÑIZ-DURÁN,
Plaintiffs, Appellees,
v.
STIEFEL LABORATORIES, INC.,
Defendant, Appellant.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO
[Hon. Jaime Pieras, Jr., Senior U.S. District Judge]
Before
Lynch, Circuit Judge,
Selya, Senior Circuit Judge,
and Lipez, Circuit Judge.
Sheldon H. Nahmod, with whom Arturo Díaz-Angueira, Roberto
Feliberti, and Cancio, Nadal, Rivera & Díaz, P.S.C. were on brief,
for appellant.
Rubén T. Nigaglioni, with whom Rafael Martínez García and
Nigaglioni & Ferraiuoli Law Offices P.S.C. were on brief, for
appellees.
August 1, 2007
LYNCH, Circuit Judge. A jury found Stiefel Laboratories,
Inc. in breach of a 2001 binding verbal contract that guaranteed
José Muñiz-Olivari continued employment if Stiefel were to decide
in the future to close its Puerto Rico subsidiary, which Muñiz
headed. Stiefel terminated Muñiz's employment, along with that of
all of its other Puerto Rico employees, when it shut down its
Puerto Rico operations on January 31, 2003. Muñiz was not offered
another position.
The jury awarded Muñiz damages for back pay, front pay,
and benefits of over $600,000. Relying on the district court's
instructions that Puerto Rico law permits the award of damages for
pain and suffering in a contract action, the jury also awarded
$100,000 each to Muñiz and his wife Annabel Durán-López.
This appeal by Stiefel requires us to resolve several
issues. We hold that the evidence at trial did not compel a jury
finding in Stiefel's favor. We affirm the district court's order
denying a new trial based on claimed error in the court's jury
instructions. Thus, we affirm the judgment entered on basic
contract damages of $613,080. However, as to the remaining
damages, we hold that the issue of when, if at all, damages for
mental anguish and suffering are recoverable under Puerto Rico law
in breach of employment contract actions should be certified to the
Supreme Court of Puerto Rico. On the separate issue of whether the
pain and suffering damages are excessive (should the Supreme Court
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of Puerto Rico find that such damages are recoverable), we affirm
the district court's decision not to order a new trial or
remittitur on the pain and suffering damages.
I.
This diversity case was tried in the District of Puerto
Rico on stipulated facts, live testimony presented by plaintiffs,
and deposition excerpts offered by defendant. Because there is an
attack on the sufficiency of the verdict, we recite the facts in
the light most favorable to the verdict. Bisbal-Ramos v. City of
Mayagüez, 467 F.3d 16, 22 (1st Cir. 2006); Heinrich v. Sweet, 308
F.3d 48, 53 (1st Cir. 2002).
Stiefel is a company specializing in both prescription
and over-the-counter skin care products. Muñiz began working for
Stiefel as the marketing manager for Puerto Rico and the Caribbean
in June 1991. He headed up marketing and sales for all Stiefel
products in Puerto Rico and the Caribbean. Muñiz was recruited
into the job, from his previous high-level position at Johnson &
Johnson, by a vice president of Stiefel's international division.
Muñiz also worked as the general manager of Stiefel's operations in
Puerto Rico.
At the time Muñiz began working for Stiefel, Stiefel's
Puerto Rico operations were organized under section 936 of the
Internal Revenue Code, which provided incentives to U.S. companies
to establish operations in Puerto Rico. The section 936 tax credit
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was phased out beginning in 1996, see I.R.C. § 936(j), but
apparently the 936 program in Mayagüez, where Stiefel had its
Puerto Rico operations, ended several years earlier. As a result,
in 1992, Stiefel's Puerto Rico operations were moved into a new
subsidiary, Stiefel Laboratories, Puerto Rico Inc, which was itself
a part of Stiefel's international division. Stiefel's other
Caribbean operations remained within its international division.
Muñiz's employment continued virtually unchanged, but his employer
became Stiefel P.R. Thereafter, Muñiz was paid by Stiefel P.R.,
although half of his salary was contributed by Stiefel U.S.1
because of his work in the Caribbean market.
In late 2000, Stiefel made a series of decisions the
effect of which was to move Stiefel P.R.'s operations over the next
year or so from Stiefel U.S.'s international division into its
domestic division. At that time, Pedro Miret, an assistant vice
president of Stiefel's international division and Muñiz's direct
supervisor, informed Muñiz that the Puerto Rico market would
eventually become part of Stiefel's domestic operations.
In April 2001, the oversight of the Puerto Rico
subsidiary's sales was transferred from Stiefel's international
division to its domestic division. By contrast, Caribbean sales
1
"Stiefel U.S." refers to the parent company, Stiefel
Laboratories, Inc. We use "Stiefel U.S." when necessary to
distinguish between Stiefel P.R. and the parent company.
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and marketing remained in the international division. Muñiz
retained responsibility for all sales and marketing in both Puerto
Rico and the Caribbean. As a result, he had two bosses, one for
Puerto Rico sales, and another for his Caribbean responsibilities.
The change in the oversight of Puerto Rico sales was part
of a larger effort, headed up by Brendan Murphy, to reorganize the
U.S. sales operations for Stiefel's branded products. Murphy was
the president of Glades Pharmaceutical, an "offshoot" of Stiefel
that made generic products. He had been asked by Charles Stiefel,
the CEO of Stiefel, to oversee the branded products reorganization.
As part of this reorganization effort, on September 11,
2001 Murphy held a meeting of the district managers within the U.S.
sales organization. The purpose of the meeting was to encourage
the district managers to play a more executive, rather than
supervisory, role within the sales organization. Muñiz was asked
to attend the meeting both because he was new to the domestic sales
division and because he was viewed as a good example of the new,
more independent-thinking management style that Murphy wanted to
encourage.
Following the group meeting, Murphy met separately with
Muñiz. The lawsuit turns on this later conversation. Muñiz
testified that he and Murphy privately discussed the planned
reorganization. Murphy reiterated that the Puerto Rico subsidiary
would become part of Stiefel's U.S. operations. Murphy said that
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Stiefel had not yet decided whether it would maintain the Puerto
Rico operation as a separate sales force, or would eliminate the
Puerto Rico operation and assign U.S.-based sales people to cover
that market (or parts of it).
Murphy then assured Muñiz that no matter which course
Stiefel pursued, Muñiz's employment was safe. Murphy told Muñiz
that should the Puerto Rico operations be maintained, Muñiz would
continue as general manager of the Puerto Rico operations and also
would oversee sales in Florida.2 And should Puerto Rico operations
be eliminated, Muñiz would supervise Puerto Rico and Florida sales.
Murphy also told Muñiz that even if Puerto Rico operations were
closed down, Muñiz would not have to move from Puerto Rico; rather,
Muñiz could continue to live in Puerto Rico and could travel back
and forth as needed. Murphy told Muñiz that his benefits,
including a company car allowance, health insurance, and
participation in a stock plan, also would continue unchanged.
On cross-examination, Muñiz was asked whether Murphy had
specified whether he would be an employee of Stiefel U.S., of
Stiefel P.R., or an employee by contract. Muñiz replied:
At that time it was understood[,] and he
probably mentioned it[,] that I was going to
be an employee of Stiefel[,] but he couldn't
tell me which way, because he didn't know if
the Puerto Rico organization was going to be
kept or if it was going to be folded into the
2
Muñiz testified that it was Murphy who first raised the
possibility of Muñiz's supervising Florida sales.
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. . . [domestic operation,] so he couldn't be
that specific.
But I was going to stay on at Stiefel.
Murphy asked Muñiz not to inform others of this agreement; the
company wanted to keep quiet the fact that it was going to make
major changes that would affect many employees. As a result, Muñiz
did not put the agreement in writing; had he done so, his secretary
would have learned about the changes that were afoot.
On April 5, 2002, Muñiz sent an e-mail to Tom Weider, who
headed up Stiefel's U.S. sales. Weider apparently had requested
Muñiz's thoughts on the Puerto Rico market and Stiefel's operations
there. Muñiz copied Murphy on the e-mail. At the end of the
message, Muñiz wrote:
You mentioned that I could be staying in
Puerto Rico only as General Manager (scenario
#1), or split my time between PR and a US
Region or whatever (scenario #2).
Muñiz then detailed the implications of each scenario for the
Puerto Rico market and operations.
As Stiefel mulled the fate of its Puerto Rico operations,
Muñiz argued that the company should keep the Puerto Rico
operations open and preserve the jobs of the workers there. He
eventually lost the battle when Stiefel decided to eliminate its
Puerto Rico operations. Matt Pattullo, who was vice president of
human resources and risk management for Stiefel U.S., went to
Puerto Rico on January 26 or 27, 2003, and informed Muñiz that
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Stiefel had decided to close the Puerto Rico operations effective
that Friday, January 31, 2003. Pattullo told Muñiz that the
employment of all of the Puerto Rico employees would be terminated.
After several days, Muñiz secured a meeting with Pattullo
to discuss his own employment. At that meeting, Muñiz learned that
his employment was also being terminated. Muñiz told Pattullo that
he had an offer to stay with the company, and that if the position
he had been offered was not yet available, he would take any job
until the Florida/Puerto Rico supervisor job was established.
Pattullo did not respond and seemed uninterested. Muñiz testified:
"I don't think I got anywhere when I talked to [Pattullo] about
[the job offer]."
After the meeting, Muñiz sent Pattullo a memo, dated
January 30, 2003, summarizing their conversation and asking if
there was a position with Stiefel available for him. The memo did
not mention Muñiz's 2001 conversations with Murphy. On cross-
examination, Muñiz stated that he had made a mistake in not
mentioning the offer again. In a February 18, 2003 follow-up memo
to Pattullo, Muñiz wrote:
I expressed a willingness to relocate to the
States to work in whatever capacity Stiefel
thinks I can do. The reason is the
unemployment problem[,] especially at my
age[,] in Puerto Rico. I was told that I
would be supervising Florida, Puerto Rico and
pos[s]ibly other States -- is that still the
case? Aren't they filling new supervisor
positions at the present time?
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On February 24, 2003, Muñiz sent Pattullo another memo,
which referenced his February 18 memo:
I don't know if you've read it[,] but the
several point[s] I mention in that letter are
of outmost [sic] importance to me.
[Es]pecially important is the matter of my
continued employment at Stiefel Laboratories.
The last I heard from Tom Weider was that
there would be a recruitment of 30 new sales
territories and five new district supervisors,
including a bi-lingual supervisor for Puerto
Rico and Florida, w[h]ich had been offered me.
Please get back to me as soon as
possible.
Pattullo did not testify at trial. Testimony from his
deposition was placed into the record, however. Pattullo was asked
whether he had attempted to find out from anyone at Stiefel whether
Muñiz had in fact received an offer of continued employment from
Murphy. He answered, "No." Pattullo stated that he had not
investigated Muñiz's claim "because [Stiefel] didn't have the
intention to rehire him because of some previous practices,
practices which we discussed."
After reviewing the deposition transcript, Pattullo made
the following "correction": "I later recall that I did in fact ask
Tom Weider if Jose Muñiz was offered a district sales manager
position[,] and Tom said no." Both versions of Pattullo's
testimony were read to the jury.
Like Pattullo, Weider did not testify, but portions of
his deposition testimony were read to the jury. Weider's
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deposition established that Brendan Murphy was ultimately
responsible for the Puerto Rico operations. Weider initially
denied that Murphy would have had the authority to offer a position
to Muñiz without first clearing it through him (Weider). He later
stated, however, that Murphy did in fact have the authority to hire
someone without consulting him.
Weider also said that he had never been consulted about
Muñiz's claim that Murphy had offered him a position in the
reconfigured U.S. sales organization. He stated: "I wasn't
consulted because there never was a position in the United States
for . . . Muñiz. So, I wouldn't be consulted on something that
couldn't happen." Weider then reiterated that he had never had a
discussion about Muñiz's claim "because [Stiefel] never had a
position for Muñiz in the United States." Weider later "corrected"
the deposition, stating that Pattullo had shown him Muñiz's
February 2003 letter and had inquired whether any agreement or
contract existed, and that he (Weider) had answered, "[A]bsolutely
not." Weider then again stated: "We don't have an opportunity
. . . for him. So, there never would be a discussion."
Weider testified that he had never discussed with Murphy
whether Murphy had in fact offered Muñiz a position. Weider said
that it was not worthwhile to call Murphy to ask if there was any
truth to Muñiz's allegation because "a position . . . [was] not
available."
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Upon Muñiz's termination, Stiefel repurchased his stock
options and paid him an amount equal to fourteen weeks of salary.
II.
A. Sufficiency of the Evidence
Stiefel argues that it was entitled to judgment on the
evidence because no reasonable jury could conclude that there was
a binding verbal contract.
We review the district court's denial of Stiefel's post-
judgment motion for judgment as a matter of law de novo. Diaz-
Fonseca v. Puerto Rico, 451 F.3d 13, 26 (1st Cir. 2006); Valentín-
Almeyda v. Mun. of Aguadilla, 447 F.3d 85, 95 (1st Cir. 2006). We
review the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, and
we will reverse "only if a reasonable person could not have reached
the conclusion of the jury." Valentín-Almeyda, 447 F.3d at 95-96
(quoting White v. N.H. Dep't of Corr., 221 F.3d 254, 259 (1st Cir.
2000)) (internal quotation marks omitted). The standard is a
stringent one, though the party bearing the ultimate burden of
proof must have presented more than a "mere scintilla of evidence"
in his favor and cannot prevail if the jury's verdict rests on
overly speculative or conjectural evidence. Webber v. Int'l Paper
Co., 417 F.3d 229, 233 (1st Cir. 2005) (quoting Vázquez-Valentín v.
Santiago-Díaz, 385 F.3d 23, 30 (1st Cir. 2004), vacated on other
grounds, 126 S. Ct. 1329 (2006)) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
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A verbal contract is enforceable under Puerto Rico law as
long as it provides the essential conditions required for its
validity. P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 31, § 3451. These essential
conditions include "(1) [t]he consent of the contracting parties[,]
(2) [a] definite object which may be the subject of the contract[,
and] (3) [t]he cause for the obligation which may be established."
Id. § 3391.
Stiefel offers several reasons why the evidence was
insufficient as a matter of law to establish the formation of a
contract under Puerto Rico law. First, Stiefel argues that there
was no agreement on two essential elements of cause, or
consideration: compensation and duration of the contract.3 Second,
Stiefel argues that there was insufficient evidence that Stiefel
U.S., as opposed to Stiefel P.R., was a party to the contract.
Finally, Stiefel argues that there was insufficient evidence that
Murphy had the authority to bind Stiefel U.S. to the alleged
contract.4
3
Stiefel asserts that compensation and duration are
elements of cause when an employer contracts for the services of an
employee but does not cite any case law to that effect. Our
resolution of the case does not require us to decide whether this
is a correct statement of Puerto Rico law.
4
Stiefel also briefly asserts that even if a valid offer
were made, the evidence does not establish that Muñiz accepted the
offer. The argument is waived, see United States v. Zannino, 895
F.3d 1, 17 (1st Cir. 1990), and would fail in any event.
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A reasonable jury could easily have concluded that there
was a valid contract to continue Muñiz's employment should Stiefel
close its Puerto Rico operations. A jury also could have
concluded, particularly based on Weider's testimony, that the
company could not even be bothered to ask Murphy whether he had
made Muñiz an offer because even if such an offer had been made and
accepted, the company had no intention of honoring the agreement
because no position for Muñiz existed in 2003.
Stiefel's argument mistakes the nature of the agreement
in dispute. Stiefel tries to characterize the claim as one of an
oral contract for employment for the rest of Muñiz's working life.
In fact, Muñiz's claim is much narrower. He did not claim that
Stiefel was obligated to employ him until age 65, no matter what.
Nor did he claim that he could not be terminated for performance-
related reasons. Stiefel admits that Muñiz's employment
performance was good; the only reason for his job termination was
the closing of the Puerto Rico operations he had headed.
The essence of Muñiz's testimony was that he and Murphy
had agreed that Muñiz's employment would not be terminated as a
result of the then-ongoing reorganization of Stiefel's domestic
sales division (of which Stiefel P.R. had become a part). Muñiz
understood that whether or not Stiefel P.R. were shut down, an
option Stiefel was already considering, he had been promised that
he would occupy essentially the same position, comparable to the
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one he then occupied, overseeing sales in Puerto Rico and Florida,
and that he would receive the normal salary and benefits for
someone in his position.
At the time of his conversation with Murphy, Muñiz was
already employed, with significant responsibility, at a given
salary and benefits level. Murphy was in charge of reorganizing
Stiefel's domestic sales division. A reasonable jury could
conclude that Murphy told Muñiz that regardless of whether
Stiefel's Puerto Rico operations were shut down, Muñiz's job would
be secure. Murphy was not offering to hire Muñiz, but rather was
guaranteeing that Muñiz's employment would continue regardless of
the reorganization. Thus, the purpose of the relevant discussions
-- and resulting agreement -- was not Muñiz's compensation or
benefits, but his continued employment in the event the Puerto Rico
operations were eventually closed.
Stiefel argues that at most there was evidence of Muñiz's
unilateral understanding, not of a mutual agreement. The premise
of the argument is wrong. There was evidence beyond Muñiz's
testimony that after the reorganization he was going to oversee
sales in Puerto Rico and Florida. Other Stiefel employees, relying
not on statements by Muñiz but on statements by Stiefel officials,
confirmed the basic structure of the arrangement Muñiz had been
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offered.5 There also was testimony that Muñiz participated in the
hiring of Florida sales representatives because the understanding
was that he would soon be overseeing Florida sales.
While the jury needed not have accepted this testimony,6
it was not unreasonable for it to do so. Nor was it unreasonable
for the jury to conclude that an agreement to continue Muñiz's
employment should the Puerto Rico operations be terminated did not
need to repeat the basic terms of his then-ongoing employment.
Muñiz stayed at his job and helped with the reorganization, despite
the risk to him. A jury could have found that this was adequate
acceptance and consideration, to the extent such was needed.
Stiefel also argues that there was insufficient evidence
that Stiefel U.S. was a party to any existing contract or that
Murphy had the requisite authority to bind Stiefel U.S. In light
of Weider's deposition testimony that Murphy, an officer of Stiefel
U.S., could hire someone without consulting Weider, it is difficult
to understand why Stiefel is making these arguments on appeal.
5
Stiefel's brief allusion that the testimony of these
other Stiefel employees should not have been admitted is waived.
See Zannino, 895 F.3d at 17.
6
Plaintiffs seem to argue that the jury was required to
accept their lay testimony because defendants did not produce
Murphy. Not so. See Quintanta-Ruiz v. Hyundai Motor Corp., 303
F.3d 62, 75-76 (1st Cir. 2002) (discussing jurors' prerogative to
reject uncontradicted and unimpeached testimony that they find
incredible). By the same token, defendants seem to argue that a
contract may never be established by the testimony of one party.
Again, not so.
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Moreover, the evidence was that Murphy's portfolio was broader than
Puerto Rico, that Stiefel's Puerto Rico operations were being
merged into Stiefel U.S.'s domestic division, and that the
agreement involved responsibilities in Florida. A reasonable jury
could easily have concluded, apart from Weider's admissions, that
it was Stiefel U.S. that was a party to the agreement.
B. The Jury Instructions
Stiefel argues that it is entitled to a new trial because
the district court's instructions to the jury improperly placed a
burden of proof on the defendant. Over the defendant's objections,
the district court gave the following instruction to the jury:
Defendant's Burden of Production. Defendant
is not compelled to introduce any evidence or
produce any witnesses. If you believe that
Plaintiff has discharged a persuasion by a
preponderance of the evidence, then Defendant
has to discharge his own in order to be
successful.
Our review of whether the instruction contained an error
of law is de novo. Goodman v. Bowdoin Coll., 380 F.3d 33, 47 (1st
Cir. 2004); Tatro v. Kervin, 41 F.3d 9, 14 (1st Cir. 1994). We
review the charge as a whole, Goodman, 380 F.3d at 47, and our
focus is on whether the court's instructions adequately illuminated
the pertinent law without unduly confusing matters or misleading
the jury, Gifford v. Am. Can. Caribbean Line, Inc., 276 F.3d 80, 84
(1st Cir. 2002); Levinsky's, Inc. v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., 127
F.3d 122, 135 (1st Cir. 1997). A new trial will be ordered only if
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after reviewing the entire record we cannot fairly say that a
preserved error was harmless. Goodman, 380 F.3d at 47; Beatty v.
Michael Bus. Machs. Corp., 172 F.3d 117, 121 (1st Cir. 1999).
It is black letter law that in a civil action, at the
close of plaintiff's case, "the defendant may introduce evidence
. . . . The defendant is not required to introduce any evidence or
to call any witnesses." 3 K.F. O'Malley et al., Federal Jury
Practice and Instructions § 101.02, at 24 (5th ed. 2000) (emphasis
added).7 Matters of defense may be established either by the
cross-examination of the plaintiff's witnesses or by testimony of
the defendant's own witnesses. N.Y. Cent. R.R. Co. v. Johnson, 279
U.S. 310, 316 (1929). This is not a case in which the defendant
presented an affirmative defense on which it bore the burden of
either production or persuasion.
Stiefel's argument that the district court's instruction
left the jury with the impression that the defendant bore a burden
of proof cannot be based on the first sentence of the instruction,
7
It is basic law that in a contract case, the plaintiff
has the burden of proof to show that there was a contract and a
breach. Nonetheless, plaintiffs have argued to this court that the
instruction given is a standard jury instruction used in the
circuit courts. None of the provided citations support the
argument, which is flatly wrong. Federal Jury Practice and
Instructions, on which plaintiffs rely, merely notes that an
instruction that the defendant has a burden is appropriate where
there is a counterclaim or affirmative defense by the defendant.
See 3 Federal Jury Practice and Instructions, supra, § 104.01, at
135. The other pattern instructions that the plaintiffs cite are
inapposite, having to do with definitions of preponderance of the
evidence.
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which plainly (and correctly) says that the defendant bears no
burden of production. To our eyes, however, the next sentence is
confused. It would have been better for the court not to have used
the language it did. The language did literally say that if
plaintiffs "discharged a persuasion," then Stiefel bore a burden of
persuasion.
Even so, we think that the jury most likely understood
that it was being instructed to consider defendant's efforts to
discredit plaintiffs' evidence before it completely decided the
case, even if it found plaintiffs' case persuasive. This is not
contrary to the legal proposition that Stiefel never bore a burden
of production or persuasion. At the beginning of its charge, the
district court correctly instructed the jury in very clear terms
that the plaintiffs bore the burden of proving all of the elements
of their case. In the context of the overall charge, a single
maladroit statement did not lead the jury astray. See Gifford, 276
F.3d at 84.
Moreover, we agree with the district court that any
potential confusion caused by the instruction did not influence the
jury's verdict. The instruction was awkward and unfortunate, but
it still cannot be said to have prejudiced Stiefel. See
Levinsky's, 127 F.3d at 135. Muñiz's testimony, which Stiefel did
little to undercut and nothing to rebut, strongly supported the
findings that there was an agreement and that it had been breached.
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Stiefel called no live witnesses; it did use deposition excerpts.
Weider's deposition was devastating to its case. Stiefel chose a
parsimonious trial strategy; it lost the case at trial and cannot
win it on appeal.
The result of our rejection of these challenges to the
merits is to affirm the jury finding of breach of contract and the
award of basic contract damages.8 We analyze the pain and
suffering damages, to which defendant objects, separately.
C. Availability of Contract Damages for Pain and Suffering
Under Puerto Rico Law
The district court resolved an unsettled issue of Puerto
Rico law when it instructed the jury, without any qualification,
that it could award damages for pain and suffering for breach of an
employment contract in an ordinary civil case that involved no
8
The jury awarded Muñiz damages for past earnings of
$169,520, for future earnings/front pay of $423,800, and for
benefits of $19,740. The sum of these is $613,060. The district
court's judgment, however, awarded front pay of $423,820 and total
basic contract damages, excluding pain and suffering, of $613,080.
Stiefel cites the lower figure in its brief, but it does not appear
to have moved to amend the judgment. We thus affirm the basic
contract damages of $613,080.
Stiefel asserts in its brief that the jury award is
inconsistent with the evidence because it is based on 7 years of
lost employment whereas the evidence was that Muñiz would have
worked for 9.5 years before retiring. We ascribe no significance
to the fact that the jury awarded Muñiz less in damages than he
sought.
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claim of violation of anti-discrimination laws or civil rights
laws.9
The parties have framed the issue as follows.
Ordinarily, under Puerto Rico law, damages for pain and suffering
are not recoverable in an action for contract. See, e.g., Mattei
Nazario v. Vélez & Asoc., 145 D.P.R. 508, Offic. Trans. at 8 (1998)
("With regard to mental anguish and sufferings, we have repeatedly
held that, ordinarily, they do not lie in actions for breach of
contract . . . ."); González Mena v. Dannermiller Coffee Co., 48
P.R.R. 590, 598 (1935) ("Any damages for mental suffering suffered
by the plaintiff are certainly not recoverable in this action,
which is based on a breach of contract."). In some cases, when the
defendant in breach of contract has on the same facts also
committed a tort and foreseeably and necessarily caused pain and
suffering damages, such damages are allowable. Camacho v. Iglesia
Catolica, 72 P.R.R. 332, 341 (1951).
Stiefel stresses that there is no claim that it engaged
in tortious activity and so argues that no emotional distress
damages may be awarded. Stiefel separately argues that Muñiz's
wife was not a party to the contract, and so she is not entitled to
such damages in any event.
9
Before trial, the district court dismissed state-law
claims of age discrimination and for damages resulting therefrom.
Muñiz does not appeal that ruling.
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The plaintiffs stress that it was foreseeable that the
loss of expected employment would indeed cause pain and suffering,
particularly given the difficulty of finding a job in Puerto Rico
at Muñiz's age. The plaintiffs point out that Muñiz indicated in
his letters to Pattullo that he was very concerned about his
ability to find other employment in Puerto Rico.
The district court essentially adopted the view that it
is foreseeable in most employment termination cases, and in this
one, that the employee and his or her spouse will experience
emotional distress, and that they will therefore be able to seek
damages for pain and suffering. Because the court believed that
Stiefel's breach of the contract was tortious and the plaintiffs'
resulting emotional distress damages foreseeable, it permitted
recovery.
Stiefel's two arguments -- that emotional distress
damages are not available at all and that even if they are
available to Muñiz, they are not available to his wife -- are
questions of local policy, which are best addressed by the Supreme
Court of Puerto Rico in the first instance. See VanHaaren v. State
Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 989 F.2d 1, 3 (1st Cir. 1993) ("Absent
controlling state court precedent, a federal court sitting in
diversity may certify a state law issue to the state's highest
court . . . ."). The rules of that court permit certification.
See P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 32, app. III, Rule 53.1(f). We will remand
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with instructions to the district court to certify the questions of
whether emotional suffering damages are available to Muñiz and his
wife, unless the parties resolve the matter in the interim.
D. Excessiveness of Pain and Suffering Damages
Stiefel argues that, even if pain and suffering damages
are available, the damages awards for pain and suffering of
$100,000 each to Muñiz and his wife are "so high, grossly
excessive, inordinate and shocking to the conscience" that the
district court was required to give a remittitur.
Our review of the denial of remittitur is for abuse of
discretion. Gasperino v. Ctr. for Humanities, Inc., 518 U.S. 415,
433 (1996); McDonough v. City of Quincy, 452 F.3d 8, 22 (1st Cir.
2006). A defendant arguing that an award is excessive faces a
demanding standard. An award will not be overturned unless it is
grossly excessive or shocking to the conscience. Valentín-Almeyda,
447 F.3d at 103; see also McDonough, 452 F.3d at 22. We give
special deference to a district court's view that a particular
award is not excessive because that court has greater familiarity
with local community standards and observed the witnesses on the
stand. Valentín-Almeyda, 447 F.3d at 103. The federal standard
for excessiveness applies in diversity cases from Puerto Rico.
Grajales-Romero v. Am. Airlines, Inc., 194 F.3d 288, 300 (1st Cir.
1999).
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Plaintiffs' case with respect to damages rested on their
own testimony.10 Muñiz testified about his inability to find
another job, and about the shock he and his wife had experienced as
a result of his termination and the eventual realization that they
were going to "lose everything." He was visibly emotional on the
stand.
Muñiz's wife gave more expansive testimony. She
testified that she had become depressed and preoccupied, and that
she had trouble sleeping. Her husband also had become depressed.
Muñiz and his wife survived on his pension from Johnson & Johnson
(which was only $450 per month), the money Muñiz had received for
his stock options, and their savings. They had four children, and
at one time all four were in college at the same time. Given their
economic straits, Muñiz and his wife were at the point where they
believed they needed to sell their family home, which was very
distressing.
The defense relies heavily on the fact that the plaintiff
did not seek medical help for emotional distress, and had no out-
of-pocket expenses. Evidence of having sought medical treatment is
not required. See Rodriguez-Torres v. Carribean Forms Mfr., Inc.,
10
Stiefel asserts that Muñiz's wife's testimony about his
depression must be disregarded because no medical expert testified
at trial. This is not so. See Sanchez v. P.R. Oil Co., 37 F.3d
712, 724 (1st Cir. 1994).
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399 F.3d 52, 64 (1st Cir. 2005). The jury could easily have
rejected Stiefel's argument given Muñiz's cash flow worries.
Often we look to comparable cases to determine if a
damages award is totally out of line. There may not be any cases
that are strict comparators for the pain and suffering damages
awarded here, in an ordinary contract action. After all, in most
jurisdictions in this country, emotional distress damages are not
available as an ordinary contract remedy. See, e.g., B & M Homes,
Inc. v. Hogan, 376 So. 2d 667, 671 (Ala. 1979); Sawyer v. Bank of
Am., 145 Cal. Rptr. 623, 625 (1978); McClean v. Univ. Club, 327
N.E.2d 174, 180 (Mass. 1951); Boyce v. Greeley Square Hotel Co.,
126 N.E 647, 649 (N.Y. 1920).
We look to an imperfectly analogous area: employment
discrimination law. The analogy is imperfect because Congress and
various state legislatures have, for policy reasons, allowed pain
and suffering damages in cases brought under Title VII, the Age
Discrimination in Employment Act, and comparable state laws.
Still, the distinction between ordinary employment contract cases
and employment cases enforcing important federal or state policies
goes more to whether emotional distress damages should be allowable
at all, rather than to whether a particular award is excessive.
Under this analogous case law, the pain and suffering
damages awarded to Muñiz and his wife are not excessive. More
generous awards have been upheld based on testimony similar to that
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here. See McDonough, 452 F.3d at 22 (affirming jury award of
$300,000, the majority of which was for emotional distress, in
Title VII unlawful retaliation case); Koster v. Trans World
Airlines, Inc., 181 F.3d 24, 36 (1st Cir. 1999) (reducing emotional
distress award in state law age discrimination case from $716,000
to $250,000); see also Rodriguez-Torres, 399 F.3d at 64 (affirming,
on plain error review, $250,000 award in employment discrimination
case).
III.
That part of the judgment for the plaintiffs for basic
contract damages in the sum of $613,080 is affirmed, and the
judgment should be amended and entered to reflect that amount, with
interest.
On remand, the district court is instructed to formulate,
with the prompt assistance of the parties, the appropriate
questions regarding the availability of pain and suffering damages
in a contract case involving no separate tort allegations and the
availability of such damages to a non-party to the contract, and
certify them to the Puerto Rico Supreme Court. See P.R. Laws Ann.
tit. 32, app. III, Rule 53.1(f). If the Supreme Court of Puerto
Rico concludes that pain and suffering damages are available to
Muñiz or to Muñiz and his wife, then an additional judgment in the
sum of $100,000 or $200,000, respectively, will be entered, with
whatever interest is appropriate. Our intention is that the
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plaintiffs be able to collect the judgment we have affirmed on
basic contract damages, even while there is certification.
Costs are awarded to plaintiffs. So ordered.
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