1 This memorandum opinion was not selected for publication in the New Mexico Reports. Please
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6 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
7 ESTATE OF DANIEL RALPH GUTIERREZ,
8 by and through his personal representative,
9 JANET JARAMILLO, individually, and as
10 Next Friend of SAGE GUTIERREZ, JORDAN
11 GUTIERREZ, and NOAH GUTIERREZ, Minors,
12 Plaintiffs-Appellees,
13 v. NO. 28,799
14 METEOR MONUMENT, LLC
15 d/b/a ALAMEDA METEOR and
16 METEOR STORES, INC.,
17 Defendant-Appellant.
18 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SANTA FE COUNTY
19 Timothy L. Garcia, District Judge
20 Vigil Law Firm, P.A.
21 Jacob G. Vigil
22 Albuquerque, NM
23 for Appellees
24 Domenici Law Firm, P.C.
25 Pete V. Domenici, Jr.
26 Lorraine Hollingsworth
27 Albuquerque, NM
1 for Appellant
2 MEMORANDUM OPINION
3 WECHSLER, Judge.
4 Defendant Meteor Monument, LLC appeals the district court’s denial of its
5 motion for directed verdict, renewed motion for directed verdict, motions for
6 judgment as a matter of law, and motion for a new trial. Defendant argues, as it did
7 at every stage, that no reasonable jury could find that Dean Durand (Durand) was
8 acting within the scope of his employment with Conoco Convenience Store (Conoco),
9 owned by Defendant, at the time of the accident at issue in this case and that,
10 therefore, no reasonable jury could find against Defendant on a vicarious liability
11 claim. Defendant also claims that a negligent hiring claim was inappropriately
12 presented to the jury because of the focus of the trial on scope of employment.
13 Defendant further argues that no reasonable jury could find against Defendant on the
14 liquor license liability claim because there was no evidence that any employee of
15 Defendant knew that Durand was intoxicated when it sold or served him alcohol on
16 the day of the accident. Defendant finally argues that the punitive damages cannot
17 stand because there was no established legal theory upon which they can be imposed,
18 and, at the very least, they are excessive and violate due process concerns.
2
1 At oral argument before this Court, Plaintiffs asserted that the case was a
2 negligent hiring case from beginning to end. However, direct liability and vicarious
3 liability were confused at trial, it was not clear which claim was being tried, and at the
4 end of the trial, it was not clear which claim was actually presented to the jury.
5 Therefore, we reverse and remand to the district court for a new trial on the negligent
6 hiring claim. Additionally, we agree with Defendant that no reasonable jury could
7 have found against Defendant on the liquor license liability claim, and we therefore
8 reverse that claim. Because we reverse and remand on the employment liability claim,
9 we do not reach the questions pertaining to punitive damages.
10 BACKGROUND
11 In August 2003, Kawaljit (Nena) Brackeen, the manager of Conoco in
12 Albuquerque, New Mexico, hired Durand on a temporary basis, paying him cash from
13 the register, to help with cleaning the parking lot until Brackeen was able to find
14 someone else that she could formally employ. Durand’s duties were limited to
15 Conoco’s parking lot, including cleaning in the lot and on the exterior premises of
16 Conoco, but not including use of his personal vehicle, a Ford Bronco. Durand had a
17 history of drinking alcoholic beverages while on Conoco premises, of which Brackeen
18 was aware. On August 31, 2003, Durand was at Conoco for much of the day, cleaning
19 his personal truck and doing “prep work” in anticipation of work the next morning.
3
1 Durand drank seven 12-ounce cans of beer while on Defendant’s property and bought
2 two 24-ounce cans of “high octane” beer at the Conoco store after lunch. Later that
3 evening, around 6:00 p.m., after having consumed one of the “high octane” beers,
4 Durand exchanged the other for a cold one.
5 Around 7:00 p.m. that evening, Durand left Defendant’s property in his Bronco
6 with another individual to give that person a ride home. The individual regularly
7 spent time at Conoco and was known to regularly purchase alcohol there as well.
8 Durand testified that, in taking the individual home, he was not “doing any service or
9 providing any benefit to [Conoco].” Upon dropping off the individual, the individual
10 asked Durand if he would “like to do about a 15-unit shot” of heroin. Durand agreed
11 and stated that, initially, he felt “normal” and “fine” after injecting the heroin. Durand
12 then informed the individual that he needed to return to Conoco to finish doing his
13 prep work and cleaning the islands. Also, at some point before returning to Conoco,
14 Durand smoked crack cocaine.
15 On Durand’s way back to Conoco, he passed out numerous times while driving
16 and struck five vehicles, including a motorcycle driven by Daniel Ralph Gutierrez
17 (Gutierrez). Gutierrez died as a result of the accident. A police officer on the scene
18 of the accident testified that Durand’s vehicle emitted a strong odor of alcohol and that
19 Durand smelled of alcohol, had watery, slightly bloodshot eyes, and exhibited other
4
1 signs of being intoxicated. Durand was convicted of vehicular homicide, three counts
2 of great bodily injury due to driving while intoxicated or under the influence of illegal
3 drugs, and abuse of a child and was sentenced to eighteen years of prison, with an
4 actual term of ten years.
5 Plaintiffs, the estate of Gutierrez through its personal representative, Gutierrez’
6 mother Janet Jaramillo, individually and as next friend to Gutierrez’ three children,
7 filed suit against Durand and Defendant for wrongful death and damages arising out
8 of the accident. A jury trial was held. At the close of Plaintiffs’ case, Defendant
9 moved for directed verdict, arguing that Plaintiffs failed to present sufficient evidence
10 to present the employment liability claim and the liquor license liability claim for both
11 compensatory and punitive damages to the jury. The district court denied the motion
12 as to compensatory damages for all claims and granted it as to punitive damages on
13 the liquor license claim. After the trial, but before the jury deliberated, Defendant
14 renewed its motion for directed verdict on both claims, arguing that as a matter of law,
15 no reasonable jury could find that Durand was within the scope of his employment at
16 the time of the accident and that Plaintiffs’ claim that Defendant was responsible for
17 Durand’s actions as an employee could not be raised because it had not been raised
18 before trial. The district court denied Defendant’s motion. The district court found,
19 however, that Durand’s use of crack cocaine and heroin was outside the scope of his
5
1 employment. The jury received instructions regarding liquor license liability and
2 employment liability.
3 The jury entered its verdict against Defendant on claims of employer liability
4 and liquor license liability. The jury’s award was for $4,550,000 in compensatory
5 damages, finding Durand 40% liable and Defendant 60% liable. The jury also
6 awarded punitive damages for $10,000,000 against Defendant and $10,000 against
7 Durand. Notwithstanding the jury verdict, Defendant moved post-trial for judgment
8 as a matter of law and for a new trial, arguing that the negligent hiring of Durand
9 claim was not adequately presented to the jury and that, regardless, the evidence was
10 insufficient under both claims. The district court denied the motions, finding that
11 Defendant permitted Durand to purchase the beer and then leave the property, which
12 was “within the course and scope” of Durand’s employment, thus allowing a
13 reasonable jury to find vicarious liability and negligent hiring.
14 Defendant then argued that the compensatory damages and punitive damages
15 should be remitted, that the punitive damages could not stand because there was no
16 vicarious liability, that the punitive damages were excessive, that there was no
17 evidence supporting the liquor license liability claim or the employer liability claim,
18 and that it should be granted a new trial asserting essentially the same arguments as
19 asserted in support of its motion for judgment as a matter of law. The court denied
6
1 Defendant’s requests. Defendant appeals the district court’s denial of its motion for
2 directed verdict and post-trial motions.
3 EMPLOYER LIABILITY CLAIMS
4 Defendant states that throughout the case, “the negligent hiring claim became
5 a vicarious liability claim” and that “[a]lthough the Special Verdict form . . . states that
6 [Defendant] was negligent for hiring, retention and supervision of Durand, . . . the jury
7 instructions and the jury questions made it clear that the claim was submitted to the
8 jury on the basis of vicarious liability.” Defendant therefore asserts that the district
9 court erred in denying its motion for directed verdict and motion for judgment as a
10 matter of law. We review a district court’s rulings on motions for directed verdict and
11 post-trial motions for judgment as a matter of law de novo. See Guest v. Allstate Ins.
12 Co., 2009-NMCA-037, ¶ 10, 145 N.M. 797, 205 P.3d 844 (directed verdict), certs.
13 granted, 2009-NMCERT-004, 146 N.M. 642, 213 P.3d 792; Niederstadt v. Town of
14 Carrizozo, 2008-NMCA-053, ¶ 9, 143 N.M. 786, 182 P.3d 769 (judgment as a matter
15 of law), cert. denied, 2008-NMCERT-003, 143 N.M. 681, 180 P.3d 1180.
16 At oral argument before this Court, Plaintiffs asserted that there was never a
17 vicarious liability claim and that, instead, it was a claim for negligent hiring from the
18 beginning of the case through the end. Plaintiffs also argue in their brief that the jury
19 found Defendant liable under a negligent hiring claim and also on a vicarious liability
7
1 claim. However, at the post-trial hearing and at oral argument before this Court,
2 Plaintiffs clearly and repeatedly stated that there was no employer vicarious liability
3 claim, and the special verdict form does not ask the jury to consider whether
4 Defendant was liable under an employer vicarious liability theory. Plaintiffs also
5 stated at oral argument that they were aware that they could not win on a vicarious
6 liability claim because, as they conceded, there was no evidence to support a finding
7 that Durand was acting in the scope of his employment with Defendant at the time of
8 the accident. We agree with Plaintiffs that employer vicarious liability was not
9 argued. We also agree with Defendant that a claim for the negligent hiring,
10 supervision, and retention of Durand was not included in the complaint or clearly
11 argued at trial. However, because of the pervasive confusion throughout the trial by
12 the parties and the district court, we remand for a new trial on the negligent hiring
13 claim.
14 An employer may be vicariously liable for the tortious conduct of employees
15 who are acting within the scope of employment at the time the tortious conduct was
16 committed. See Ovecka v. Burlington N. Santa Fe Ry. Co., 2008-NMCA-140, ¶ 9, 145
17 N.M. 113, 194 P.3d 728, cert. quashed, 2009-NMCERT-005, 146 N.M. 728, 214 P.3d
18 793. Therefore, to impose employer vicarious liability on Defendant, Plaintiffs would
19 have needed to establish that Durand was acting within the scope of his employment
8
1 with Defendant at the time of Durand’s tortious conduct—in other words, at the time
2 Durand caused the accident.
3 As we have stated, Plaintiffs assert that there was no employer vicarious
4 liability claim in this case. Moreover, the district court specifically stated that the
5 scope of employment “doesn’t mean when [Durand] is driving.” The district court
6 was clear that the evidence did not support that Durand was providing Defendant any
7 benefit when he left the premises, stating that “[t]he facts, clearly, don’t support that
8 [Durand] was out on the public roads, that he was supposedly going somewhere and
9 bringing somebody back”—in other words, the facts did not support that Durand was
10 acting in the course and scope of his employment at the time of the accident. We
11 agree and, because a finding that Durand was acting in the scope of his employment
12 at the time of the accident was required for employer vicarious liability, see id., we
13 hold that there was no employer vicarious liability claim.
14 As to the negligent hiring, retention, and supervision of Durand claim, an
15 employer may be directly liable for an employee “based on the employer’s negligent
16 acts or omissions in hiring or retaining an employee when the employer knows or
17 should know, through the exercise of reasonable care, that the employee is
18 incompetent or unfit.” Lessard v. Coronado Paint & Decorating Ctr., Inc., 2007-
19 NMCA-122, ¶ 28, 142 N.M. 583, 168 P.3d 155, cert. quashed, 2008-NMCERT-002,
9
1 143 N.M. 667, 180 P.3d 674. Even if the employer is not vicariously liable, the
2 employer may still be held liable for negligent hiring or retention. Id. To succeed on
3 a negligent hiring claim, a plaintiff must show that there was “a breach of a recognized
4 duty to a foreseeable plaintiff.” Ovecka, 2008-NMCA-140, ¶ 26. A duty to third
5 parties for negligent hiring derives from foreseeability of a particular plaintiff and a
6 particular harm and, if that foreseeability exists, a determination of public policy to
7 ascertain whether imposing the duty would be supported by law. Id. In this case,
8 therefore, Plaintiffs needed to prove that Plaintiffs’ injury, arising from the accident
9 that Durand caused, was a foreseeable result of Defendant hiring, retaining, or
10 supervising Durand.
11 As stated above, Defendant argues that a claim for Defendant’s negligent hiring
12 of Durand was not included in the complaint, was not tried, and should not have been
13 presented to the jury. Defendant first made this argument to the district court during
14 the jury instruction phase of the trial. Defendant argued that the complaint alleged
15 that Defendant negligently hired employees who sold alcohol to Durand, but that it did
16 not allege that Defendant negligently hired Durand himself. Defendant stated that, as
17 a result, Defendant had no notice that there was a negligent hiring of Durand claim
18 against it and that Plaintiffs’ including an instruction regarding Defendant’s negligent
19 hiring of Durand was the first time Defendant was aware that such a claim was being
10
1 brought. Defendant thus argued that a negligent hiring of Durand claim should not
2 have been permitted and that the district court erred in concluding that Durand could
3 be included as an “other employee[]” as argued in the complaint. Although Defendant
4 did not object that the elements instruction for the negligent hiring claim was wrong,
5 we are satisfied that Defendant’s objection to the direct negligence theory at the
6 beginning of the instruction phase was sufficient to inform the district court and the
7 other parties that Defendant believed that the elements of negligent hiring had not
8 been presented throughout the trial. See Rule 12-216(A) NMRA (“To preserve a
9 question for review it must appear that a ruling or decision by the district court was
10 fairly invoked.”); Reule Sun Corp. v. Valles, 2010-NMSC-004, ¶ 9, 147 N.M. 512,
11 226 P.3d 611 (filed 2009).
12 We agree with Defendant that a claim for the negligent hiring of Durand was
13 not included in the complaint. Indeed, the complaint asserts that Defendant
14 “negligently hired, trained, supervised, and retained . . . Brackeen, John Brackeen and
15 other employees and agents who sold or otherwise provided alcoholic beverages to
16 . . . Durand.” (Emphasis added.) Durand could not have been included as one of the
17 “other employees” mentioned because he was not hired to sell alcohol, he did not sell
18 alcohol, and no claim has been made that he sold or served alcohol to himself.
19 Nevertheless, although it was not clear throughout the trial that Plaintiffs were
11
1 seeking recovery for Defendant’s negligent hiring of Durand, it was also not clear that
2 Plaintiffs were not. Several times throughout the trial, Plaintiffs and the district court
3 discussed evidence and objections within the context of the negligent hiring and
4 supervision of Durand. For example, the court referenced negligent supervision of
5 Durand in response to Plaintiffs’ argument regarding utter indifference; it mentioned
6 negligent supervision again in response to Defendant’s request to dismiss punitive
7 damages under “some type of . . . employee [theory]”; and it discussed Defendant
8 “letting an employee get drunk and work and drive” in the context of punitive
9 damages for employment liability, implying negligent supervision. Although no
10 evidence was presented that Durand was hired to drive or that he was acting for the
11 benefit of Defendant when he drove the individual home, see Ovecka, 2008-NMCA-
12 140, ¶¶ 27-29, a claim for the negligent hiring of Durand was clearly contemplated by
13 Plaintiffs and the court throughout the course of the trial. Additionally, the special
14 verdict form, which was not objected to by Defendant, asked the jury to consider
15 whether Defendant was “negligent for the hiring, retention, or supervision of . . .
16 Durand” and whether “any negligence” of Defendant was a cause of Plaintiffs’
17 injuries. As Defendant asserts in its brief, “[j]ury instructions not objected to become
18 the law of the case.” McMinn v. MBF Operating Acquisition Corp., 2007-NMSC-040,
19 ¶ 53, 142 N.M. 160, 164 P.3d 41 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
12
1 In addition to any confusion regarding who Defendant negligently hired, both
2 parties focused their arguments throughout the trial on “scope of employment.” As
3 stated above, although scope of employment is required for a finding of vicarious
4 liability, see Ovecka, 2008-NMCA-140, ¶ 9, it is merely a factor that the factfinder
5 could consider when determining foreseeability in a direct liability action. See
6 Lessard, 2007-NMCA-122, ¶ 40. Evidence that an employer has negligently hired an
7 unsafe driver combined with that employer benefitting from the employee’s
8 driving—the driving being within the scope of employment—could allow a factfinder
9 to conclude that the employer’s negligence in hiring caused the injury to the third
10 party. Id. ¶ 39. However, the district court specifically found that the “occurrence”
11 relevant to the scope of employment inquiry was Defendant’s allowing Durand to
12 drink and then leave the premises, not Durand’s driving at the time of the accident.
13 The fact that Defendant arguably knew of Durand’s history with alcohol abuse
14 and driving while under the influence when selling him alcohol and allowing him to
15 drive might be a factor that contributed to a finding of liquor license
16 liability—although, as discussed fully below, all three elements required for such a
17 finding were not met. Unfortunately, however, that fact is not relevant to the
18 employment liability question in this case. If Durand had been hired in some capacity
19 to drive or had been found to be acting in the scope of his employment while he was
13
1 driving the individual home or at the time of the accident, Defendant’s knowledge of
2 Durand’s history with alcohol abuse and driving while under the influence might have
3 played a role with a negligent hiring claim. See Ovecka, 2008-NMCA-140, ¶ 25.
4 However, in this case, as stated above, the district court specifically stated that the
5 scope of employment “doesn’t mean when [Durand] is driving.”
6 The district court indicated at the post-trial hearing that if Defendant was
7 correct that scope of employment was not necessary for a negligent hiring claim, then
8 the instructions were faulty. However, the court ultimately found that the faulty
9 instruction was not fundamental error. We disagree.
10 The parties’ and the district court’s focus on “scope of employment”; Plaintiffs’
11 failure to clearly argue the foreseeability of the accident as a result of Defendant’s
12 hiring of Durand, as required for a finding of direct negligence; the faulty instructions;
13 and the jury’s question and court’s answer, stating that scope of employment was
14 required to find Defendant liable under the employment liability claim, created an
15 environment in which the jury would have been unable to fairly determine the actual
16 issues before it. Cf. State v. Stefani, 2006-NMCA-073, ¶ 22, 139 N.M. 719, 137 P.3d
17 659 (stating that we review jury instructions to determine whether they would have
18 been confusing or whether they may have misdirected a reasonable jury). Given the
19 parties’ and the district court’s focus on “scope of employment,” as well as the jury’s
14
1 clear finding that Durand was acting in the scope of his employment, we cannot know
2 if the jury might have found against Defendant on the negligent hiring of Durand
3 claim had it been accurately presented.
4 Defendant requests that this Court overturn the damages awards against
5 Defendant or, in the alternative, remand to the district court for a new trial. Because
6 there is too much uncertainty as to whether the jury would have reasonably found
7 against Defendant on a negligent hiring of Durand claim, we remand for a new trial.
8 Cf. State v. Stampley, 1999-NMSC-027, ¶ 48, 127 N.M. 426, 982 P.2d 477 (reversing
9 and remanding for a new trial in a case where the jury instructions were so vague that
10 they could have confused or misdirected a reasonable jury to such an extent that our
11 Supreme Court could not know if the defendant was convicted of a nonexistent
12 crime).
13 LIQUOR LICENSE LIABILITY
14 Defendant additionally argues that the district court erred in denying its motion
15 for directed verdict, thereby submitting the liquor license liability claim to the jury,
16 because the evidence was insufficient to support the claim. We review the district
17 court’s denial of a motion for a directed verdict de novo. Guest, 2009-NMCA-037,
18 ¶ 10. To find Defendant liable under the liquor license liability claim, Plaintiffs
19 needed to show that (1) Defendant or its agents or employees sold or served alcohol
15
1 to Durand while he was intoxicated and that (2) Defendant or its agents or employees
2 knew from circumstances and from what was reasonably apparent that Durand was
3 intoxicated. See NMSA 1978, § 41-11-1(A) (1986) (stating that a licensee can be held
4 civilly liable, predicated on a breach of NMSA 1978, Section 60-7A-16 (1993), if it
5 (1) sold or served alcohol to an intoxicated person, (2) it was reasonably apparent to
6 the licensee that the person was intoxicated, and (3) the licensee knew from
7 circumstances that the person was intoxicated).
8 As discussed above, the record establishes that Durand was permitted to
9 regularly purchase and drink alcohol at the store; that he was often intoxicated in the
10 afternoons and was told by employees of Defendant to drive his vehicle off the
11 premises; that on August 31, Durand drank seven 12-ounce cans of beer and at least
12 one 24-ounce can of “high octane” beer during the day; and that around 6:00 p.m. on
13 August 31, Durand exchanged his remaining can of “high octane” beer for a cold one.
14 The record further shows that approximately five hours after the accident, Durand had
15 a blood alcohol level of .09. Initially, therefore, it would appear that a reasonable jury
16 could conclude that (1) Defendant’s employees sold alcohol to Durand and allowed
17 him to exchange a beer while he was intoxicated and (2) Defendant’s employees knew
18 from the circumstances and Durand’s history, as well as from what was reasonably
19 apparent, that Durand was intoxicated when Defendant’s employees sold him the beer
16
1 and allowed him to exchange cans. See id.; see also Carter Farms Co. v. Hoffman-
2 Laroche, Inc., 83 N.M. 383, 385, 492 P.2d 1000, 1002 (Ct. App. 1971) (stating that
3 a fact may be proved by circumstantial evidence). Indeed, Plaintiffs argue that the
4 evidence could allow a reasonable jury to infer, even if from circumstantial evidence,
5 that Durand was drunk when Defendant allowed Durand to exchange—in other words,
6 when Defendant “sold” Durand—the “high octane” beer.
7 However, although we agree that the evidence could allow a reasonable jury to
8 infer that Durand was drunk at the time he purchased the alcohol and perhaps even
9 that Defendant knew that Durand was drunk based on the circumstances and Durand’s
10 history, there is no evidence in the record regarding who sold the alcohol to Durand
11 and, therefore, no evidence to support a finding that Defendant knew that Durand was
12 drunk based on what was reasonably apparent. See § 41-11-1(A). Durand could not
13 remember who sold him the alcohol and the manager could not remember who was
14 employed at the store that day. The store also has a high turnover, and the employees
15 who were probably working that afternoon worked at Conoco for likely no more than
16 a month and may not have had knowledge of Durand’s reputation for drinking.
17 Additionally, Durand only worked for the store for two weekends before the incident,
18 and, although the manager of the store knew his reputation for drinking, there is no
19 evidence that short-term employees would have had the requisite knowledge of the
17
1 drinking habits of another short-term employee. As a result, despite the evidence
2 that Durand had been drinking that day and often did drink while on Conoco premises,
3 there is no evidence that it would have been reasonably apparent to anyone selling
4 Durand the alcohol, or allowing him to exchange his “high octane” beer, in the
5 evening on August 31 that Durand was intoxicated. Indeed, Durand was the only
6 person testifying at trial who could address whether or not he was intoxicated at the
7 time the liquor was purchased or exchanged, and he testified that he “wasn’t drunk”;
8 that, in general, he “was not intoxicated . . . any time while [he] worked”; that he was
9 not intoxicated during the time that he was at Conoco on August 31 before the
10 accident; and that the reason he had trouble operating his vehicle was not because of
11 the beer, but because of the heroin that he had injected. In addition, Durand testified
12 that the amount of beer he had consumed that day was not a lot for him and that,
13 although he had been drinking, the Conoco employees did not know he was drunk.
14 Generally, it is for the jury to weigh testimony, determine credibility, reconcile
15 inconsistencies or contradictions, and determine where the truth lies. Mascarenas v.
16 Gonzales, 83 N.M. 749, 751, 497 P.2d 751, 753 (Ct. App. 1972). However, in this
17 case, no reasonable jury could find that an unknown employee who had likely been
18 working at the store for a short amount of time knew of Durand’s history, knew
19 whether or how much Durand had been drinking that day, or could see that he was
18
1 impaired due to alcohol given his contention that he was not. In other words, no
2 reasonable jury could find that Defendant or its agents or employees knew from what
3 was reasonably apparent that Durand was intoxicated. See § 41-11-1(A)(2).
4 Therefore, we reverse the district court’s denial of Defendant’s motion for directed
5 verdict on the liquor license liability claim.
6 CONCLUSION
7 For the reasons stated in this opinion, we reverse and remand the direct
8 negligence claim to the district court for a new trial. Additionally, we reverse the
9 district court’s denial of Defendant’s motion for a directed verdict on the liquor
10 license liability claim. Because the employer liability claim is being remanded for a
11 new trial, we do not reach Defendant’s arguments regarding punitive damages.
12 IT IS SO ORDERED.
13 _______________________________
14 JAMES J. WECHSLER, Judge
15 WE CONCUR:
16 _________________________________
17 MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge
18 _________________________________
19 CELIA FOY CASTILLO, Judge
19