NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
File Name: 14a0658n.06
Nos. 13-6406/13-6472 FILED
Aug 22, 2014
DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
CLINTON BURTON, )
)
Plaintiff-Appellant/Cross-Appellee, )
)
v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE
) UNITED STATES DISTRICT
ZWICKER & ASSOCIATES, PSC aka Zwicker & ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN
Associates PC, ) DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY
)
Defendant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant. )
)
BEFORE: COLE, Chief Judge; ROGERS and ALARCÓN,* Circuit Judges.
ROGERS, Circuit Judge. In this civil rights case, Clinton Burton and his ex-employer
Zwicker & Associates PSC dispute whether there was enough evidence to support a jury’s
verdict that Zwicker fired Burton for refusing to commit perjury in violation of Kentucky public
policy. While Burton still worked at Zwicker, the company was sued by ex-employees who
alleged that Zwicker had discriminated against them. Outside counsel for Zwicker conducted
interviews to investigate these claims. Burton was identified as a potential witness and
interviewed several times. During these interviews, Burton made statements that supported the
former employees. Burton’s supervisors never specifically asked him to commit perjury and
Burton never made a statement under oath. But at trial, Burton did recount statements made by
his supervisors which the jury could have interpreted as threatening Burton with termination if he
*
The Honorable Arthur L. Alarcón, Senior Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, sitting by
designation.
Nos. 13-6406/13-6472, Burton v. Zwicker & Assocs. PSC
did not lie to Zwicker’s outside counsel, and thereby committed himself to lie on the witness
stand. This evidence was sufficient to support Burton’s public policy claim. The parties also
dispute whether the district court properly reduced the jury’s initial award of $600,000 in
punitive damages to $350,000. Because Zwicker’s conduct was not as reprehensible as other
types of conduct and because Burton received a relatively large award of compensatory damages,
the district court properly modified the award to $350,000 so that it complied with due process.
Zwicker argues that the jury awarded Burton too much back pay because the jury failed to take
into account the fact that Burton mitigated his damages by obtaining post-termination
employment. However, the burden was on Zwicker to prove how much money Burton earned.
Zwicker failed to offer that evidence, and therefore the district court did not abuse its discretion
in letting the jury’s award of back pay stand. Finally, we reject Burton’s argument that he should
have been reinstated to his position at Zwicker or awarded front pay.
Burton, a black man, worked for Zwicker, a national law firm that specializes in debt
collection, for about three years. Burton began his career at Zwicker as an entry-level collector.
His job involved convincing credit card holders to pay their delinquent bills. Burton did well as
a collector, and Zwicker quickly promoted him to a collections manager position. As a manager,
Burton supervised a team of collectors. Zwicker paid Burton a base salary of around $40,000 a
year, but Burton could earn substantial bonuses if his team hit certain collections goals.
At trial, the jury heard about a number of troubling incidents that occurred at Zwicker.
Some Zwicker employees cavalierly told racist jokes and made offensive and disparaging
comments at work. Burton intimated that his supervisors pulled him off the collections floor and
forced him to take a drug test solely to humiliate him in front of his coworkers. He also
recounted an incident in which he reported one of his co-managers for becoming involved in a
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relationship with one of the manager’s employees and showing unfair favoritism to that
employee. Zwicker ultimately fired Burton over what appears to have been a very trivial bit of
misconduct. However, the most important incident for the purposes of this appeal arose out a
sex discrimination suit that several ex-employees filed against the law firm in 2009. Zwicker’s
outside counsel began investigating the suit. As a part of that investigation, Zwicker’s lawyers
conducted interviews with potential witnesses, including Burton. The lawyers interviewed
Burton several times. In each of these interviews, Burton made statements that supported the
former employees. Apparently Burton’s support of the plaintiffs irked Zwicker’s management.
Several of Burton’s supervisors approached him and suggested that his staunch support of the
former employees was a bad idea. For example, after Burton finished speaking with the lawyers,
one supervisor told Burton he needed to make better choices, and another told him that his job
was in jeopardy. However, Burton never testified that anyone at Zwicker came right out and
directly told him to lie to the outside lawyers. Furthermore, the interviews appear to have been
preliminary fact finding efforts. There is no evidence that Zwicker ever asked Burton to make a
statement under oath.
Burton and four other employees sued Zwicker for violating the Kentucky Civil Rights
Act in state court in September 2010. Burton also brought a wrongful discharge claim. Burton’s
theory was that one of the reasons Zwicker fired him was because he refused to perjure himself
in the discrimination case. Such a theory is cognizable because Kentucky employers cannot fire
an employee for refusing to violate Kentucky public policy, which includes terminating the
employee for refusing to commit a crime. Zwicker removed the case to federal court.
The parties conducted extensive discovery, litigated two summary judgment motions, and
finally went to trial in April 2013. The jury found that Zwicker terminated Burton because of his
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race, in retaliation for his engaging in protected activity, and because Burton refused to perjure
himself. The jury awarded Burton $300,000 in back pay and $50,000 for mental distress due to
the wrongful termination. It further awarded $50,000 for mental distress caused by Burton’s
working in a hostile racial environment. Finally, it granted $600,000 in punitive damages
because Zwicker fired Burton for refusing to commit perjury.
The parties filed several post-trial motions that are at issue in this appeal. Zwicker filed a
motion for judgment as a matter of law and for a new trial and alternatively requested that
Burton’s damages be reduced. Burton filed a motion requesting additional relief in the form of
reinstatement and front pay.
The district court denied Zwicker’s motion for judgment as a matter of law. The court
concluded that Burton’s testimony about his refusal to change his story despite pressure from his
supervisors adequately supported the jury’s verdict on the public policy claim. The court
rejected Zwicker’s argument that an employee must actually be in a position to commit perjury
(i.e., be under oath) for the employer to be liable for a violation of public policy.
The district court agreed with Zwicker that the jury’s award of $600,000 in punitive
damages violated due process. The court walked through the Supreme Court’s BMW of N. Am.,
Inc. v. Gore, 517 U.S. 559 (1996) analysis and concluded that due process required reducing the
punitive damages award to $350,000, i.e., a 1:1 punitive to compensatory damages ratio. The
district court refused to reduce Burton’s compensatory damages, however. Zwicker argued that
the jury must have failed to consider the damages Burton mitigated by obtaining post-
termination employment when it arrived at a calculation of $300,000 in back pay. The court
refused to set aside the award on these grounds because Zwicker failed to prove how much
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Burton had earned in those positions. In other words, while the jury knew that Burton had been
working after he was fired from Zwicker, it did not know how much Burton earned.
The district court refused to grant Burton’s motion for reinstatement and front pay. It
held that reinstatement would be inappropriate because there was evidence that racism was
pervasive at Zwicker and that Burton would likely continue to experience hostility if he were to
return. The court also refused to award front pay because the only evidence Burton presented
was his salary from the last five months he worked at Zwicker. The court concluded that any
award of front pay based on this bare-bones evidence would have been too speculative.
Both parties appeal. Zwicker appeals the district court’s refusal to grant judgment as a
matter of law against Burton on his public policy claim and its refusal to reduce Burton’s
compensatory damages. Zwicker also argues that the punitive damages award should either fail
entirely along with the public policy claim or the award should be further reduced because the
modified award still violates due process. Burton on the other hand appeals the district court’s
modification of the jury’s punitive damages award and the court’s refusal to grant reinstatement
and front pay. We address Zwicker’s appeal first, and Burton’s appeal second.
Zwicker’s Appeal
1. Public Policy Claim
Although the question is close, Burton presented enough evidence for the jury to
conclude that his termination violated Kentucky public policy. In Kentucky, “an employer may
discharge his at-will employee for good cause, for no cause, or for a cause that some might view
as morally indefensible.” Firestone Textile Co. Div. v. Meadows, 666 S.W.2d 730, 731 (Ky.
1983). But the Kentucky courts have created an exception to this general rule. An employer
cannot discharge an employee for a reason “contrary to a fundamental and well-defined public
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policy as evidenced by existing law.” Grzyb v. Evans, 700 S.W.2d 399, 401 (Ky. 1985). Well-
defined public policy includes the Commonwealth’s criminal laws. This means that an employer
cannot fire an employee because the employee refuses to commit perjury, which is a crime in
Kentucky. See N.E. Health Mgmt., Inc. v. Cotton, 56 S.W.3d 440, 447 (Ky. Ct. App. 2001).
Based on Burton’s testimony, a jury could have concluded that Burton’s supervisors
asked him to commit perjury in violation of Kentucky public policy. At trial, the jury heard the
following testimony:
Q. Did you support the company’s position in [the sex discrimination lawsuit], or
did you give [Zwicker’s lawyers] some information that supported the
Employees?
A. Oh, I gave them information that supported the employees.
...
Q. And how did the company react to your information you were providing to the
company’s lawyers?
A. They were not happy about it and they began to make comments, explain their
displeasure for me taking the support of these employees.
Q. All right. Now, you say “they.” How about Jamie Walker; did she say
anything to you about it?
A. Absolutely.
Q. What did she say?
A. In one exchange, Jamie Walker was actually in there with the attorneys, and
she was finishing or they were talking. And so it was my turn, and they were
calling me in, and Jamie Walker stated to me, she said, “Clinton, you can tell the
truth. You won’t lose your job.”
Q. Were you telling the truth in the first place?
A. Absolutely.
Q. Was another individual you spoke to about this or who spoke to you was John
Twite?
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A. Correct.
...
A. . . . And he stated to me, “Hey Clinton, you need to make better choices. You
need to make better decisions.”
Q. Make better choices. And this was after you had met with lawyers?
A. Three to five times, being badgered, berated.
...
Q. And did [Mike Koziol] speak with you about your—the information you were
giving to the lawyers?
A. He did.
Q. What did he say?
A. He said that I made poor judgment and that my job was in jeopardy.
Based on this testimony, the jury could have concluded that Burton’s supervisors asked him to
perjure himself even though the supervisors did not actually use the term “perjury” or tell Burton
to “lie under oath.” In the right context, the words “tell the truth” and “you won’t lose your job”
could easily be understood to mean “lie if you don’t want to get fired.” Similarly, being told to
“make better choices” could mean “change your tune or else . . . .” The jury could also have
concluded that Mike Koziol delivered a thinly veiled threat when he told Burton his job was “in
jeopardy.” The jury could have reasonably concluded that both Zwicker and Burton understood
the meaning of these statements: either Burton could toe the Zwicker line or start looking for a
new job.
Zwicker disagrees with this reasoning and argues that an employer must make an
affirmative request that the employee commit a crime. However, a request is still affirmative if
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both the employer and employee understand that the employer is asking the employee to commit
a crime even if the employer asks in a roundabout way. It should not be surprising that an
employer would not come right out and command an employee to “commit perjury,” but rather
would choose to make the request in a more subtle way.
Zwicker also argues that there was insufficient evidence because Burton was never under
oath. It is of course true that Burton could not commit perjury unless he was eventually placed
in a position where he could make a statement under oath. But Kentucky law does not require
that the actual criminal act occur for an employee to have a public policy claim. Rather, an
employer must only request that the employee break the law. In Cotton, the plaintiffs’
supervisor faced shoplifting charges, and the plaintiffs were asked to testify falsely to help
bolster the supervisor’s defense. 56 S.W.3d at 443. The employees refused, the case proceeded
to trial, and the supervisor was eventually convicted. Id. at 444. Because the employees never
testified, they were never under oath. Nevertheless, the Court of Appeals held that the plaintiffs
had a viable public policy claim because their employer requested that the employees commit
perjury.
This case is not on all fours with Cotton because it was arguably more likely that the
plaintiffs in that case would have been placed under oath. There, the supervisor actually asked
the employees to testify. Here, Burton’s interview with Zwicker’s lawyers was more
preliminary: the lawyers never requested that Burton sign an affidavit, testify, or otherwise make
a statement under oath. But, the district court could only grant judgment as a matter of law in
Zwicker’s favor “if in viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party,
there is no genuine issue of material fact for the jury, and reasonable minds could come to but
one conclusion, in favor of the moving party.” Noble v. Brinker Int’l, Inc., 391 F.3d 715, 720
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(6th Cir. 2004) (internal quotation marks omitted). Burton testified that he was “identified by the
company as a potential witness in [the sex discrimination] case.” Based on that testimony, the
jury could reasonably conclude that the purpose of the interviews was to evaluate what Burton
would say if he testified. The jury could further infer that Burton would know that he would be
expected to tell the same story under oath as he did in the preliminary interview. Thus by
encouraging Burton to lie in the first interview, Zwicker was in effect asking Burton to agree to
lie when he was eventually called as a witness. The employees in Cotton were in the same basic
position. If the employees had caved to pressure from their supervisor and agreed to testify
falsely, they would not have committed perjury either. Rather they would have simply conveyed
their willingness to tell a certain story when they were eventually called as witnesses. In both
cases, the employee’s ability to actually commit perjury was contingent on the employee’s being
placed under oath. The fact that the contingency was arguably less likely to occur in this case
than in Cotton does not justify disregarding the jury’s finding.
The other cases Zwicker cites do not support its position because they do not involve
illegal conduct. For example, Chavez v. Dakkota Integrated Sys., LLC, 832 F. Supp. 2d 786, 803
(W.D. Ky. 2011) involved an employee who objected to installing airbags that had fallen from a
forklift into instrument panels that were to be installed in Ford trucks. Id. at 790–91. The
employee argued that installing these airbags would violate two of Kentucky’s consumer
protection laws. Id. at 802. But the Chavez court concluded that there was no evidence that
using the airbags would violate the relevant statutes. Thus the plaintiff in Chavez lost because he
failed to show that installing the airbags would violate the Commonwealth’s consumer protection
laws. Id. By contrast, perjury is without a doubt illegal. Our decision in Merkel v. Scovill, Inc.,
787 F.2d 174 (6th Cir. 1986), which applied Ohio law, is also distinguishable. That case
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involved an employer that requested that its employee sign an affidavit. Id. at 180. The
employee argued that the affidavit contained false statements. But the evidence presented at trial
indicated that the employee’s supervisor believed that the affidavit was accurate. Id. Thus the
evidence in Merkel did not support a public policy claim because there was no indication that the
employer requested that the employee lie. By contrast, the jury in this case heard testimony
which indicated that Burton spoke truthfully to the lawyers, but that Zwicker management still
pressured him to change his story, i.e., lie. While we might come to a different conclusion on the
cold record, the jury actually heard the testimony of the witnesses in this case where nuance may
make all the difference. Zwicker does not challenge, moreover, the content of the jury
instructions.
The jury thus believed that Burton’s refusal to agree to commit perjury caused Zwicker to
fire Burton, and the company points to nothing that justifies disregarding that conclusion.
Zwicker also argues that Burton failed to show causation between his termination and his refusal
to commit perjury. Zwicker notes that the interviews with outside counsel happened well before
Burton was fired and thus argues that Burton failed to establish causation. In support of this
argument, Zwicker cites several of this court’s decisions that have held that mere temporal
proximity without additional evidence is usually insufficient to establish causation in a federal
retaliation claim. See, e.g., Vereecke v. Huron Valley Sch. Dist., 609 F.3d 392, 403 (6th Cir.
2010); Williams v. Zurz, 503 F. App’x 367, 372 (6th Cir. 2012). However, Kentucky courts
appear to use a more generous causation standard. To make a public policy claim under
Kentucky law, “a plaintiff must show at a minimum that he engaged in a statutorily protected
activity, that he was discharged, and that there was a connection between the protected activity
and the discharge.” Mitchell v. Coldstream Labs., Inc., 337 S.W.3d 642, 645 (Ky. Ct. App.
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2010) (internal quotation marks omitted). Kentucky courts have found that a connection exists
between a protected activity and a subsequent discharge even when a substantial amount of time
has passed. For example, in Follett v. Gateway Reg’l Health Sys. Inc., 229 S.W.3d 925 (Ky. Ct.
App. 2007), Gateway claimed that it fired Follett, who was the Director of Nursing at a hospital,
because she decided to give nurses a raise in February 2003. Id. at 927. However, Follett had
reported a doctor for drinking on the job in February 2002 and billing irregularities in January
2003. Id. at 930–32. The Court of Appeals found that a jury could conclude that the real reason
the hospital terminated Follett was her reports and not her decision to give the nurses a raise. Id.
at 932. Similarly, the Cotton court affirmed a jury verdict for a public policy claim even though
the supervisor asked her employees to perjure themselves in April 1995 and forge a document in
May 1996, but the employees were not forced to resign until October 1996. 56 S.W.3d at 444.
The Cotton court explicitly addressed the passage of time between the perjury request and the
termination:
The hospital seems to argue that because Cotton and Howell worked for more
than a year after Dennis requested them to perjure themselves that their claims of
retaliation are unlikely and unbelievable. Unfortunately for the hospital, the jury
sided with Cotton and Howell and the hospital has not cited any support for its
contention that this lapse in time has any legal significance.
Id. at 447. As in Cotton, there is not enough reason to disregard the jury’s finding here. The
district court accordingly did not err in refusing to grant Zwicker’s motion for judgment as a
matter of law.1
2. Back Pay
Zwicker’s challenge to the jury’s award of back pay is without merit. “We review back
pay awards for an abuse of discretion.” Suggs v. ServiceMaster Educ. Food Mgmt., 72 F.3d
1
Zwicker also argued that the award of punitive damages should fail entirely along with Burton’s public policy
claim. That argument fails because Burton presented enough evidence to support his public policy claim.
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1228, 1233 (6th Cir. 1996). The law firm argues that the district court erred in allowing the
jury’s award of $300,000 in back pay to stand because there was evidence in the record that
Burton found other employment after he was fired and that the jury’s award did not account for
the money Burton earned in those positions. Burton testified that he made approximately
$46,000 in the first five months of 2010. Zwicker terminated Burton in May 2010, and the
parties went to trial in April 2013. Assuming that these earnings were representative of Burton’s
typical monthly salary, Burton was entitled to a maximum of approximately $322,000 in back
pay ($46,000 / 5 = $9,200 x 35 = $322,000). The jury’s award of $300,000 was thus supported
by evidence presented at trial and was therefore a permissible award. See Jackson v. City of
Cookeville, 31 F.3d 1354, 1359 (6th Cir. 1994).
Zwicker argues that a reasonable jury could not have arrived at this figure because Burton
admitted that he held several jobs between May 2010 and the trial. Burton testified that he
worked at ACB, Citibank, Green & Cooper, and Alliance Data after he was fired from Zwicker.
According to Zwicker, Burton was employed for thirty months total. Zwicker argues that Burton
was only entitled to back pay of approximately $46,000, i.e., his salary from Zwicker for the five
months he was unemployed. But this ignores the possibility that Burton made less in his
subsequent positions then he did at Zwicker. Simply proving that a plaintiff was employed is not
the same thing as showing how much the plaintiff earned. Generally, an award of back pay
should be offset by the plaintiff’s earnings from other jobs. See Hance v. Norfolk S. Ry. Co.,
571 F.3d 511, 521 (6th Cir. 2009). However, “the burden . . . falls on the wrongdoer to show
that the damages were lessened or might have been lessened by the plaintiff.” Jones v. Consol.
Rail Corp., 800 F.2d 590, 593 (6th Cir. 1986). “Once a claimant establishes a prima facie case
and presents evidence on the issue of damages, the burden of producing sufficient evidence to
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establish the amount of interim earnings . . . shifts to the defendant.” Rasimas v. Mich. Dep’t of
Mental Health, 714 F.2d 614, 623 (6th Cir. 1983). Zwicker did not present any evidence about
Burton’s interim earnings. Zwicker only established that Burton was employed. In fact, the
district court and the parties discussed the absence of salary evidence during the jury charge
conference. In an attempt to correct the problem, the district court offered to reopen the case to
allow the parties to offer evidence about Burton’s post-termination earnings. However, Zwicker
declined to take that opportunity. Without evidence of Burton’s earnings in these positions, it is
impossible to say that the jury’s award was not supported by evidence presented at trial or that
the district court abused its discretion in refusing to modify the award. Zwicker may well be
correct that the jury’s award of $300,000 did not accurately reflect Burton’s mitigation efforts.
But the law firm has only itself to blame for the jury not taking Burton’s post-termination
earnings into account.
3. Punitive Damages
The district court’s modified award of $350,000 in punitive damages complied with due
process, and the district court did not err by failing to further reduce Burton’s punitive damages.
Originally, the jury awarded Burton $600,000 in punitive damages. After trial, Zwicker argued
this award violated due process. The district court agreed and reduced the punitive damages to
$350,000. The district court arrived at this figure because it concluded that a 1:1 ratio of
punitive to compensatory damages was appropriate given the facts of the case. Courts look to
three “guideposts” when evaluating 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
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between the punitive damages awarded by the jury and the civil penalties authorized or imposed
in comparable cases.” State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Campbell, 538 U.S. 408, 418 (2003).
The district court properly concluded that Zwicker acted with intentional malice. The
Supreme Court has called reprehensibility “[p]erhaps the most important indicium of the
reasonableness of a punitive damages award.” Gore, 517 U.S. at 575. Courts evaluate
reprehensibility based on whether:
the harm caused was physical as opposed to economic; the tortious conduct
evinced an indifference to or a reckless disregard of the health or safety of others;
the target of the conduct had financial vulnerability; the conduct involved
repeated actions or was an isolated incident; the harm was the result of intentional
malice, trickery, or deceit, or mere accident.
State Farm, 538 U.S. at 419.
In this case, the jury finding itself indicates that Zwicker acted with intentional malice.
The jury found that Zwicker fired Burton in retaliation for his refusing to commit perjury, which
certainly implies that Zwicker acted with some intentional malice. In Bridgeport Music, Inc. v.
Justin Combs Publ’g, 507 F.3d 470, 486 (6th Cir. 2007), we reasoned that the intentional malice
factor was supported by the fact that “[t]he jury concluded that the defendants acted ‘willfully.’”
In that case, which involved copyright infringement, the inference of malice from the jury
finding of willfulness was not a strong one, but it nonetheless led us to conclude that the
“defendants’ conduct was still somewhat reprehensible.” Id. The same is true here; indeed,
firing a particular employee for refusing to commit perjury is if anything more malicious than
copyright infringement. This is not to say that any jury verdict for an intentional tort necessarily
supports punitive damages, but instead only that an intentional injury in a context such as this
supports the reprehensibility guidepost for assessing punitive damages.
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The district court also did not err in setting punitive damages at $350,000 based on a 1:1
ratio of punitive to compensatory damages. While no bright-line rule exists, the Supreme Court
has explained that awards of punitive damages that significantly exceed a plaintiff’s
compensatory damages will rarely be upheld. See State Farm, 538 U.S. at 425. Zwicker does
not object to the district court’s decision to use a 1:1 ratio. Rather, it disagrees with the district
court’s use of $350,000 as the compensatory damages figure in that 1:1 ratio. It bases this
argument on the fact that Burton could only receive punitive damages for his public policy claim.
See Simpson Cnty. Steeplechase Ass’n, Inc. v. Roberts, 898 S.W.2d 523, 526 (Ky. Ct. App.
1995). Zwicker contends that the calculation of punitive damages should be pegged to the
compensatory damages that correspond to the public policy claim and that inflating the
compensatory damages figure with damages that stem from other causes of action would be
improper. The problem with this argument is that Burton’s damages were the same for all of the
causes of action involving wrongful termination. The jury concluded that Zwicker wrongfully
terminated Burton on several different theories. It concluded that Zwicker fired Burton because
of his race, because Burton engaged in a protected activity, and because Burton refused to
commit perjury. Each of these theories required the jury to conclude that a different kind of
wrongful conduct had occurred. But the result of the wrongful conduct was the same under each
theory: Burton was fired for an improper reason. The harm Burton suffered under each of these
theories is the same. Burton’s wrongful termination caused him to incur damages because he
was no longer receiving a salary from Zwicker and caused him to suffer mental distress.
Zwicker’s argument is thus incorrect as a factual matter: the jury in effect concluded that Burton
suffered $350,000 in compensatory damages because he was terminated in violation of Kentucky
public policy because Burton’s damages were the same for all three theories of the case.2 The
2
It is notable that the jury also awarded Burton $50,000 for “emotional and mental distress resulting from [a] hostile
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district court did not err by modifying Burton’s punitive damages award to $350,000 based on a
1:1 ratio of punitive to compensatory damages.
Burton’s Appeal
1. Punitive Damages
Given the attenuated egregiousness of Zwicker’s conduct and the jury’s large award of
compensatory damages, the district court properly reduced the jury’s award of punitive damages.
While the district court’s reduction of the original award of punitive damages from $600,000 to
$350,000 was discussed above, Burton also appeals that decision. Unsurprisingly, Burton’s
arguments are much different than Zwicker’s. Burton’s position is that the jury’s original award
of $600,000 complied with due process and the district court’s modification of the award was
improper. Burton argues that the district court should have found that he was financially
vulnerable and that Zwicker engaged in repeated conduct. Because these additional factors were
present, Burton contends that Zwicker’s conduct was reprehensible enough to justify the original
award. While Burton is correct that he exhibited some financial vulnerability, Zwicker’s conduct
still was not reprehensible enough to justify more than $350,000 of punitive damages.
Despite his salary, Burton did exhibit some financial vulnerability. The district held that
Burton was not financially vulnerable because Burton earned over $100,000 a year at Zwicker.
It is true that this was a relatively large salary. However, financial vulnerability exists on a
spectrum. By way of illustration, in Morgan v. N.Y. Life Ins. Co., 559 F.3d 425, 441 (6th Cir.
2009), this court held that the managing partner at an insurance company who made a base salary
of $500,000 to $1,000,000 per year was not financially vulnerable. The Morgan court also
racial environment.” This claim had to with the racist jokes and statements Burton endured while working at
Zwicker. The harm Burton suffered due to the hostile work environment was distinct from the termination.
Apparently in recognition of this fact, the district court did not include the $50,000 in compensatory damages that
the jury granted for the hostile work environment in the $350,000 figure for purposes of calculation of the ratio of
punitive damages.
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factored in the jury’s award of $6,000,000 in compensatory damages in considering Morgan’s
financial vulnerability. Burton made much less than Morgan and was awarded much less in the
way compensatory damages. Thus, Burton was clearly more financially vulnerable than
Morgan. By contrast, in Bach v. First Union Nat’l Bank, 149 F. App’x 354 (6th Cir. 2005), a
“seventy-seven year old retired widow” who “possesse[d] assets totaling approximately
$224,000.00 and ha[d] a monthly income of approximately $1,800.00” was conceded by the
defendant to be financially vulnerable. Id. at 356, 365. Burton is much younger than the
plaintiff in Bach, had a higher monthly income, and has the potential to earn for many more
years. Burton is less financially vulnerable than the plaintiff in Bach. Burton falls somewhere in
between these two cases, and thus the financial vulnerability factor does not weigh strongly
either way.
Zwicker’s conduct was not repeated. “The repeated conduct factor requires that the
similar reprehensible conduct be committed against various different parties rather than repeated
reprehensible acts within the single transaction with the plaintiff.” Bridgeport, 507 F.3d at 487
(internal quotation marks and alterations omitted). While Zwicker’s lawyers interviewed Burton
several times, all of those interviews related to the same case. There is no other evidence that
Zwicker tried to convince its other employees to commit perjury and fired them for failing to do
so. Burton does not meet (nor does he argue that he meets) any of the other factors. He suffered
no physical harm, and Zwicker’s conduct did not pose a risk to the health of safety of others.
The attenuated level of reprehensibility of Zwicker’s conduct means that Burton’s award
of punitive damages must be relatively modest to comply with due process. In Bridgeport, this
court held that “where only one of the reprehensibility factors [was] present,” “a ratio [of
compensatory to punitive damages] of 1:1 to 2:1 is all that due process will allow.” Id. at 487.
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While two factors are present in this case, neither factor is particularly strong. Thus Zwicker’s
conduct was only somewhat reprehensible.
Given the jury’s large award of compensatory damages, an award of punitive damages at
a 1:1 ratio of punitive to compensatory damages was appropriate. Originally, the jury granted
Burton punitive damages at a ratio of approximately 1.7:1. Burton argues that this ratio was
appropriate because the Supreme Court has held that higher ratios were consistent with due
process and because this court’s Bridgeport decision suggested that a 2:1 ratio would be
appropriate in a case where the defendant’s conduct was only mildly reprehensible. However,
this case involves a large award of compensatory damages. While the Supreme Court has been
hesitant “to impose a bright-line ratio which a punitive damages award cannot exceed,” it has
said that “few awards exceeding a single-digit ratio to a significant degree will satisfy due
process.” State Farm, 538 U.S. at 424–25. The Court has furthered explained that a higher ratio
may be appropriate in cases where a defendant’s conduct is egregious and the plaintiff’s
economic damages are relatively low. Id. at 425. But the converse is also true: “When
compensatory damages are substantial, then a lesser ratio, perhaps only equal to compensatory
damages, can reach the outermost limit of the due process guarantee.” Id. at 425. In State Farm,
the Supreme Court reasoned that an “award at or near the amount of compensatory damages”
was required “in light of the substantial compensatory damages awarded.” Id. at 429. This court
applied that reasoning in Bach v. First Union Nat’l Bank, 486 F.3d 150, 153 (6th Cir. 2007).
That case involved a jury award of $400,000 in compensatory damages and $2.2 million in
punitive damages. The Bach court held that the jury’s award “closely mirrors the hypothetical
scenario described in State Farm,” and thus a 1:1 ratio was appropriate. Id. at 156. Considering
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the similarity of the compensatory damages awards in this case and Bach, limiting the ratio to
1:1 was proper.
2. Reinstatement
The district court did not err in refusing to reinstate Burton. On cross examination,
Burton testified that “almost all members of [Zwicker] management showed some type of racial
animus or harbored ill feelings toward me.” Burton also had job at Alliance Data at the time of
trial. “[W]hile reinstatement should be granted in the ordinary case . . . , it is an equitable
remedy which is not appropriate in every case, such as where the plaintiff has found other
work, . . . or where hostility would result. Roush v. KFC Nat’l Mgmt. Co., 10 F.3d 392, 398 (6th
Cir. 1993). Burton had another job, and the district court reasonably concluded that hostility
would result if Burton returned to the Zwicker work environment. The district court acted within
its discretion in refusing to grant reinstatement.
3. Front Pay
The district court also did not err in refusing to award Burton front pay because Burton
failed to introduce evidence that the district court could use to craft a reasonably certain award.
Under federal law,3 “[a] plaintiff who seeks an award of front pay must provide the district court
with the essential data necessary to calculate a reasonably certain front pay award.” Arban v. W.
Publ’g Corp., 345 F.3d 390, 407 (6th Cir. 2003). At trial, the only evidence that Burton offered
was that he made approximately $46,000 in the first five months of 2010. Simply proving one’s
salary is not enough. This court has explained that
awards of front pay must be guided by consideration of certain factors, including
an employee’s duty to mitigate, the availability of employment opportunities, the
period within which one by reasonable efforts may be re-employed, the
employee’s work and life expectancy, the discount tables to determine the present
3
The Kentucky courts appear to generally follow federal law in this area. See, e.g., Dollar Gen. Partners v.
Upchurch, 214 S.W.3d 910, 920–21 (Ky. Ct. App. 2006).
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value of future damages and other factors that are pertinent on prospective
damage awards.
Roush, 10 F.3d at 399 (internal quotation marks omitted). Burton failed to offer evidence of any
of these factors.
In particular, Burton needed to offer at least some evidence that could be used to impose
a temporal limit on an award of front pay. “The cut-off date for the [front pay] award is within
the discretion of the district court . . . yet evidence must be submitted from which a reasonable
projection can be made. Such an estimation must involve more than mere guesswork.” Shore v.
Fed. Express Corp., 777 F.2d 1155, 1160 (6th Cir. 1985); see also Peyton v. DiMario, 287 F.3d
1121, 1129 (D.C. Cir. 2002). Burton has not pointed to any evidence that the district court could
have used to determine a cut-off date. Burton responds that awards of front pay are inherently
speculative. But while Burton need not have paraded a team of economists in front of the judge
to meet his burden of proof, he had to provide at least some evidence that the district court could
have used to establish a reasonable limit on the duration on the award. Without some basis for
imposing a limit on the award, any award of front pay by the district court would have been a
stab in the dark.
While courts generally award front pay when reinstatement is inappropriate, Suggs,
72 F.3d at 1234, refusing to do so is permissible. A plaintiff “is not automatically entitled to
front pay.” Upchurch, 214 S.W.3d at 920. In Upchurch, a Kentucky court denied reinstatement
because the plaintiff failed to request it as a remedy, and denied front pay because the plaintiff
stopped actively seeking employment after being terminated. Id. at 920–21. Upchurch makes it
clear that awards of front pay are not always required under Kentucky law. Burton failed to
carry his burden of proof on this issue, and the district court did not err in denying front pay.
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
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