Bernard Cote v. Philip Morris USA, Inc.
Opinion
*1099 Plaintiff Judith Berger ("Mrs. Berger") 1 sued Philip Morris USA, Inc. ("Philip Morris") for intentional and unintentional torts, seeking compensatory and punitive damages for smoking-related injuries. After a nine-day, bifurcated trial, a jury found for Mrs. Berger on all claims and awarded compensatory and punitive damages. Following the verdict, the district court ruled on multiple post-trial motions, and the parties appeal several of those rulings. Philip Morris appeals denial of its motion for a new trial, asserting improper closing argument, and denial of its renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law ("JMOL") on all claims, asserting federal preemption and due process arguments. Mrs. Berger cross appeals, arguing that the district court erred in granting Philip Morris's renewed motion for JMOL as to her intentional tort claims and vacating the related punitive-damages award.
After thorough review, and with the benefit of oral argument, we affirm the district court's denial of Philip Morris's motion for a new trial and motion for JMOL on all claims; we reverse the district court's grant of JMOL as to intentional tort claims, and conditional grant of a new trial on those claims; and we reinstate the punitive-damages award.
I. BACKGROUND
A. The Engle Litigation
This is one of thousands of "
Engle
-progeny" cases that flow from a Florida class action filed in 1994 against major domestic cigarette manufacturers, including Philip Morris.
2
The named plaintiffs in that case sought damages for smoking-related injuries under theories including negligence, strict liability, fraud, and conspiracy to commit fraud, and the case proceeded in phases. Phase I consisted of a year-long trial during which the plaintiffs presented evidence that the defendants, for decades, had engaged in advertising campaigns aimed at attracting young smokers, while intentionally deceiving consumers about the health dangers of smoking and the addictive qualities of nicotine.
3
See
*1100
Engle v. RJReynolds Tobacco
, No. 94-08273 CA-22,
Phase I produced multiple jury findings, hereinafter "Phase I findings," that favored the plaintiffs. The threshold findings resolved the question of general causation, specifically that smoking cigarettes causes multiple enumerated diseases and that nicotine in cigarettes is addictive. Additional Phase I findings focused on the defendants' conduct, including the following:
• the defendants placed cigarettes on the market that were defective and unreasonably dangerous;
• the defendants concealed or omitted material information, not otherwise known or available, knowing that the material was false or misleading, or failed to disclose a material fact concerning the health effects or addictive nature of smoking cigarettes, or both;
• the defendants agreed to conceal or omit information regarding the health effects of cigarettes or their addictive nature with the intention that smokers and the public would rely on this information to their detriment; and
• the defendants were negligent.
Philip Morris USA, Inc. v. Douglas
,
The Supreme Court of Florida eventually decertified the
Engle
class action, finding that individualized issues such as legal causation, comparative fault, and damages could not be resolved on a class-wide basis.
See
Engle,
B. This Case
Mrs. Berger, a forty-year smoker diagnosed with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), brought this suit against Philip Morris, claiming to be an Engle class member entitled to the benefit of Phase I findings. 4 Mrs. Berger sued under theories of strict liability, negligence, fraudulent concealment, and conspiracy to fraudulently conceal.
By the time of trial in September 2014, Mrs. Berger had reached the end stage of lung disease, and she depended on supplemental oxygen and a wheelchair. The first phase of the trial focused on questions of class membership, liability and compensatory damages, allocation of fault, and whether Mrs. Berger was entitled to punitive *1101 damages with respect to her intentional tort claims. 5 The evidence established that she had developed COPD on or before November 21, 1996 and that her addiction to cigarettes containing nicotine was the cause of her lung disease-facts that qualified her as a member of the Engle class, entitled to the benefit of Phase I findings.
Like the Phase I jurors in the original Engle litigation, the jurors in this case heard extensive evidence that beginning in the early 1950's and for decades that followed, Philip Morris and other tobacco companies engaged in a massive and effective disinformation campaign, aimed at instilling false doubt about scientific research linking cigarette smoking and deadly disease. In a post-trial order, the district court commented:
[T]here was ample evidence that the tobacco companies engaged in a massive, multi-faceted, protracted, and effective disinformation campaign. Mrs. Berger's counsel aptly demonstrated the effect of that campaign in his closing argument, to wit: "[W]hat we've got here and what Philip Morris and this industry is doing is worse because there's the truck driver, foot on the gas, about to go, looks out the window at the guy about to cross the street and goes, come on, come on; that's the conduct we have."
With her own testimony, Mrs. Berger told jurors about her personal background and life as a smoker. Born in 1944, she was raised in Brooklyn, New York, and lived with her parents and two sisters. Mrs. Berger and her identical twin sister, Josephine, were especially close throughout their lives and were rarely apart. In 1958, at thirteen, "going on fourteen," Mrs. Berger tried her first cigarette. She recalled that she was in a park with friends and that "all of the kids smoked," including Josephine. Initially, Mrs. Berger feigned smoking by holding the smoke in her mouth and exhaling, but other kids noticed what she was doing and made fun, and a friend named Anita Russo taught her to inhale.
For the first few years, Mrs. Berger took only two or three cigarettes a day from friends, but by sixteen, she was purchasing and smoking a pack a day. She hid her smoking from her parents, who did not approve of the habit. When Mrs. Berger was sixteen, her father caught her smoking and told her that he disapproved because he had observed women, who he believed were prostitutes, walk the streets while smoking. Mrs. Berger never smoked in the presence of her father, who died in 1972, and when she smoked in front of her mother, who detested cigarette smoke, she did so outside.
In her high school years, Mrs. Berger was free to smoke on school grounds, at the local hangout (Cozy's Corner), and at a luncheonette where she and Josephine held part-time jobs. She observed teachers smoke, including her gym teacher, and she noticed that her own doctor and all movie stars smoked. Throughout her teen years, Mrs. Berger observed cigarette advertisements *1102 on billboards, trains, buses, and television. She testified that cigarette ads were so pervasive that people "took it for granted," and "it was like having a hamburger." She recalled an ad featuring the Marlboro Man, "a good-looking guy on a horse smoking," which in her mind, portrayed that "[smoking] wasn't that bad, ... it was okay."
At twenty, Mrs. Berger smoked a pack and a half per day. At twenty-one, she married her husband, Paul, also a smoker. After Mrs. Berger married, she stopped buying cigarettes by the carton, with the idea that she would smoke less if she purchased only two packages a day. But when she ran out of cigarettes, she would leave the house at any hour to replenish her supply, and on occasion, she resorted to smoking butts left in ashtrays.
As a teen, Mrs. Berger knew nothing about nicotine. She remembered reading the Surgeon General's warning on cigarette packages that appeared in 1966, when she was twenty-two, and recalled the exact wording: "Cigarette smoking may be hazardous to your health." She testified that at the time, she and her friends thought "they weren't sure" about the health hazards associated with cigarettes, and "they were speculating." She testified that nobody took the warning seriously because "[t]hey were working on it, but it wasn't a sure thing yet," and that she knew people in their nineties who were still smoking.
In the late 80's, Mrs. Berger realized that she had become a slave to cigarettes. She attempted to kick the habit several times and tried smoking cessation aides, but with no success. On one occasion, she and her sister Josephine were sitting in a doctor's office, waiting for flu shots, when a man using supplemental oxygen walked in. Josephine commented that unless they quit smoking, they too would "wind up like that," and each sister wagered $50 that she would be the first to stop smoking. Neither sister won the bet. In 1995, Josephine was diagnosed with emphysema, and she pleaded with her sister to stop smoking. Mrs. Berger again tried to stop smoking but had only limited success in that she decreased her consumption and refrained from smoking while caring for Josephine. In 1998, Mrs. Berger was diagnosed with COPD, and she finally stopped smoking.
Mrs. Berger testified that she could not remember an instance where a specific advertisement caused her to choose a cigarette brand, but she thought that cigarette ads nonetheless influenced her smoking habits. On direct examination, when asked why she believed that cigarette ads influenced her, she replied, "Well, I went to lights because I thought they were not as strong as the regular cigarettes." On cross-examination, however, Mrs. Berger readily acknowledged that she switched to light cigarettes because "they weren't as harsh," meaning the taste was milder than regular cigarettes, and that she did not make the switch because she thought that lights were better for her health. She testified, "No, to me they were all the same." Mrs. Berger also recognized that she switched to filtered cigarettes to avoid having tobacco in her mouth, that she preferred recessed filters because the filter was less prominent, and that she started smoking solely because of peer pressure.
C. The Verdict, Post-Trial Motions, and Issues on Appeal
After deliberations, the jury found that Mrs. Berger qualified as a member of the Engle class, found in her favor on all claims, and awarded her $6.25 million in compensatory damages. Jurors also found that Mrs. Berger was 40% at fault (which reduced compensatory damages to $3.75 *1103 million) and that she was entitled to punitive damages with respect to the intentional tort claims. The trial then proceeded to a second phase, where the jury determined that Mrs. Berger was entitled to $20,760,000.14 in punitive damages.
After trial, Philip Morris filed two renewed motions for JMOL, pursuant to Rule 50(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The first renewed motion sought to undo the jury's verdicts on all claims on grounds that giving Phase I findings preclusive effect violated the Due Process Clause and federal preemption principles. The second renewed motion sought JMOL only on the fraudulent concealment and conspiracy-to-conceal claims on grounds that Mrs. Berger had failed to prove detrimental reliance. In the alternative, Philip Morris sought a new trial on the intentional tort claims. Philip Morris also moved for a new trial or remittitur, setting forth several arguments, including that opposing counsel made improper closing arguments that stoked the passions of the jury and impaired dispassionate consideration of the case.
The district court rejected Philip Morris's due process and federal preemption arguments and denied its motion for a new trial or remittitur but found that Mrs. Berger's own testimony negated a finding of detrimental reliance, a required element of her intentional tort claims. Given these findings, the district court granted Philip Morris's renewed motion for JMOL as to fraudulent concealment and conspiracy to fraudulently conceal and conditionally granted Philip Morris's alternative motion for a new trial on those claims. The district court also vacated the punitive damages award and left intact the jury's negligence and strict liability verdicts and compensatory damage award.
On appeal, Philip Morris argues that the district court erred in denying its motion for a new trial, based on improper closing argument by counsel, and its renewed JMOL motion on all claims, based on due process and preemption arguments. Mrs. Berger cross appeals, arguing that the district court erred by granting JMOL in Philip Morris's favor as to fraudulent concealment and conspiracy to fraudulently conceal and by vacating the related, punitive damages award.
II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
Three standards govern our review. First, we review the district court's denial of Philip Morris's motion for a new trial based on allegedly improper closing argument under the deferential, abuse-of-discretion standard.
See
Lanham v. Whitfield
,
Second, we review the district court's grant of Philip Morris's motion for JMOL, as to intentional tort claims,
de novo
, applying the same standard as the
*1104
district court.
See
Goldsmith v. Bagby Elevator Co
.,
Third, we review the district court's grant of a new trial on intentional tort claims for abuse of discretion,
Lambert v. Fulton County, Ga.,
III. DISCUSSION
A. The District Court Properly Denied Philip Morris's Motion for a New Trial Based on Improper Closing Argument
Philip Morris argues that in closing arguments, opposing counsel made three types of inflammatory, prejudicial comments that require a new trial: (1) comments that compared it to a child predator; (2) comments that improperly disparaged its defense against Mrs. Berger's claims; and (3) comments that improperly injected counsel's opinion.
Comments Comparing Philip Morris to a "Child Predator." In closing rebuttal, plaintiff's counsel addressed defense counsel's observation that Mrs. Berger smoked despite her father's disapproval:
They bring up this thing about her dad and how clear it was to her [that he disapproved of smoking]. You know, if a child--we tell our children a lot of things not to do. ... You know, when a kid -- if a kid takes a piece of candy from a stranger and then goes and gets hurt, you know, because mommy and daddy told them don't ever accept candy from a stranger, and then it happens, and they go get hurt--
At this point, Philip Morris objected and in bench conference, argued that counsel was comparing it to pedophiles and criminals. The Court overruled the objection without comment. Mrs. Berger's attorney continued:
The kid accepts candy from a stranger and then gets hurt. Okay? We don't blame that kid because they didn't listen to mommy and daddy; we blame the party that deserves the blame.
We find that counsel's rebuttal argument was a fair response to the argument that Mrs. Berger smoked even after her father caught her smoking and expressed his disapproval. Contrary to Philip Morris's portrayal, counsel's use of the don't-take-candy-from-a-stranger adage did not of necessity suggest child predation or pedophilia. Furthermore, to constitute reversable error, statements made in oral argument must be "plainly unwarranted and clearly injurious."
Peterson v. Willie
,
Comments Critical of Philip Morris's Defense . Philip Morris contends that opposing counsel's remarks improperly disparaged its defense of the case by (1) arguing that Philip Morris was trying to "rewrite history," (2) referring to Philip Morris's evidence as "distraction science," and (3) stating that Philip Morris would "do anything to create doubt."
We find that the district court properly overruled Philip Morris's objection to counsel's "rewrite history" comment, which was no more than a general remark about defense strategy. As for the passing reference to "distraction science," Philip Morris contends that counsel was suggesting that Philip Morris was perpetuating in the courtroom the same disinformation campaign that gave rise to Mrs. Berger's claims. During a lengthy bench conference, the district court overruled the objection but instructed counsel to "make clear that you were talking about past history and conduct that the defendant engaged in the past." Thereafter, Mrs. Berger's counsel suspended all mention of "distraction science." In sum, it is far from clear that counsel's brief reference to "distraction science" injured the defense to any degree. Finally, the district court sustained Philip Morris's objection to counsel's comment that Philip Morris would "do anything to create doubt," and instructed the jury to ignore counsel's comment. We find that the district court's curative instruction mitigated any possible prejudicial interpretation by the jury.
Comments Injecting Personal Opinion.
Philip Morris argues that counsel improperly voiced personal opinions, including, "I don't think that's a lot to ask in this country: to make products as safe as possible," and a comment that it was "sick" and "disgusting" that Philip Morris introduced Nicorette gum only after smokers had become ill. Although counsel has a duty to refrain from providing personal commentary, potentially prejudicial remarks "may be rendered harmless by a curative instruction."
United States v. Iglesias
,
B. This Court's Precedent Requires Rejection of Philip Morris's Due Process and Preemption Arguments.
In its opening brief, Philip Morris sought to preserve its position on two additional issues: (1) whether the use of Phase I findings to prove elements of
Engle
-progeny claims violates due process and (2) whether the use of Phase I findings to prove elements of
Engle
-progeny nonintentional tort claims is preempted by federal law. Philip Morris acknowledged that these questions had been decided against it by this Court's decision in
Graham v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.
,
After the close of briefing, this Court held in
Burkhart v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co
.,
C. The District Court Erred in Granting Philip Morris's Renewed Motion for JMOL and Alternative Motion for a New Trial as to Intentional Tort Claims and Vacating the Related Punitive Damages Award
Phase I findings, which the jury was required to accept, established that Philip Morris engaged in conduct that subjected the company to liability for fraudulent concealment and conspiracy to fraudulently conceal. 6 Given the conclusive findings about fraudulent conduct, the only questions remaining were whether Mrs. Berger had relied to her detriment on the material information that Philip Morris and other defendants had concealed about the health effects and/or addictive nature of smoking and, if so, whether her reliance was a legal cause of her COPD. The district court instructed the jury accordingly, and in answer to interrogatories, the jury found that Mrs. Berger had so relied and that her reliance was a legal cause of her COPD.
The district court granted judgment to Philip Morris on the concealment claims because it found that Mrs. Berger's own testimony that she started smoking due to peer pressure and that she chose her cigarette *1107 brand and type based on personal preferences, not health considerations, overcame any evidence that would fairly support an inference of detrimental reliance. The district court stated its conclusion as follows:
Here, there is but little evidence that Mrs. Berger was aware of the false disinformation and even less evidence that she acted or refrained from action due to it. To be sure, Mrs. Berger thought that the question of smoking's addictive effects and risks to health was uncertain and the basis for the Surgeon General's warnings, which she admitted ignoring, was speculative. This testimony fairly gives rise to an inference that the disinformation affected her smoking-related decisions .
Those inferences are, however, insufficient to support the verdict in light of Mrs. Berger's own explicit testimony. Though she was aware of the Surgeon General's warnings and was under the impression that the science relating to health risks appeared in dispute and uncertain, her testimony failed to connect, and even served to disconnect, her ensuing decisions with the companies' false pronouncements about those issues.
Berger v. Philip Morris USA, Inc.
,
We apply the federal standard to assess whether the evidence presented at trial was sufficient to raise a question of fact for the jury, but state law supplies the substantive law that we apply in this diversity case.
7
See generally
Erie R.R. Co. v.Tompkins,
*1108 Engle -progeny concealment claims arise from a long-lived, sustained effort to hide the truth about the health hazards of smoking. In recounting the evidence presented in this case, the district court noted that at thirteen going on fourteen, Mrs. Berger was "entirely typical of those whom tobacco companies deliberately targeted as prospective customers." The district court explained:
Tobacco companies knew they needed to gain new customers when they were young, as those who were non-smokers by their twenties would, in all likelihood, never become their customers. Tobacco companies consequently deliberately targeted persons of school and college age to begin smoking, knowing that, as a result of the addictive powers of their product, and the oft irresistible influence of peer pressure on pupils and students, they would acquire new, life-long consumers of their products.
Most of those new customers could not and did not know, of course, that they would be reducing their life expectancy, on average, by ten years, and, in any event, exposing themselves to a host of incapacitating and deadly cigarette-caused diseases. By the 1950s and 1960s the tobacco companies joined and often collusively acted to conceal those consequences, despite their own knowledge of the addictive and deadly effects of their products.
Berger
,
Recognizing the unique circumstances underlying
Engle
-progeny fraudulent concealment claims, Florida courts have consistently held that
Engle
-progeny plaintiffs are not required to show reliance on a specific statement.
See
Philip Morris USA Inc. v. McCall
,
Our federal standard of review and Florida substantive law prescribing the type of evidence sufficient to raise an inference of detrimental reliance are compatible and together provide the proper analytical framework for the question before us: Whether, considering all evidence and drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of Mrs. Berger, any reasonable juror could have inferred that she was exposed to Philip Morris's decades-long, pervasive disinformation campaign and was accordingly confused regarding the health effects or addictive nature of smoking cigarettes such that she may have behaved differently had she known the true facts.
*1109 In this case, jurors heard evidence about the tobacco industry's sustained and pervasive disinformation campaign, Mrs. Berger's exposure to ads that imparted the notion that smoking "wasn't that bad," Mrs. Berger's unawareness early on about the addictive power of nicotine, and her impression that the Surgeon General's warning was based on speculation. Additionally, Mrs. Berger testified that she made multiple unsuccessful attempts to stop smoking before her 1998 diagnosis, even resorting to nicotine gum and "waiting for some miracle" that never happened. With this evidence, any reasonable juror could have inferred that Mrs. Berger might have never started smoking or would have quit smoking earlier if she had known the true facts about the health effects and/or addictive nature of smoking. Contrary to the district court's view, we find that Mrs. Berger's testimony that peer pressure influenced her decision to start smoking and that she chose her cigarette brand and type based on personal preferences did little to rebut the reasonable inference that Philip Morris's disinformation campaign confused her understanding about the health hazards of smoking to her detriment. 8 Even if Mrs. Berger started smoking solely as a result of peer pressure, and then subsequently chose her cigarettes based solely on personal preferences, a reasonable juror could have concluded that if she had known the whole truth about the risks of smoking, she would have quit. We therefore find that the district court erred in granting Philip Morris's renewed motion for JMOL.
In accordance with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50(c)(1), the district court ruled on Philip Morris's alternative motion for a new trial, and it conditionally granted a new trial on the intentional tort claims. In granting the motion, the district court referred to the erroneous conclusion that Mrs. Berger's testimony provided "direct evidence that she did not rely to her detriment on incomplete representations regarding the health effects and/or addictive nature of smoking cigarettes."
Berger,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated, we AFFIRM the district court's denial of Philip Morris's motion for a new trial based on improper closing argument, we AFFIRM the district court's denial of Philip Morris's renewed motion for JMOL on all claims based on due process and preemption principles, and we REVERSE the district court's grant of Philip Morris's renewed motion for JMOL on intentional tort claims. We also REVERSE the district court's decision *1110 to conditionally grant Philip Morris's alternative motion for a new trial on intentional tort claims. We REMAND the case to the district court for the entry of judgment in Plaintiff's favor on claims for fraudulent concealment and conspiracy to fraudulently conceal and for reinstatement of the jury's corresponding punitive damages award.
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, REMANDED IN PART.
On March 30, 2017, while this appeal was pending, Mrs. Berger died. Pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 43(a), this Court approved the substitution of Bernard Cote, the personal representative of Mrs. Berger's estate, in Mrs. Berger's place. For the sake of clarity, however, we continue to refer to Mrs. Berger as the Appellee/Cross-Appellant.
For a thorough history of the
Engle
litigation, see
Graham v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co
.,
The Engle trial court recounted a portion of the Phase I evidence as follows:
From the early years of advertising up until July of 1969, defendants engaged in concerted advertising campaigns extolling the virtues of smoking and making references to the lack of health risks and stressing the alleged benefits of smoking. References were made to Doctors smoking with no ill effects, to Radio and Television stars like Arthur Godfrey, and to sports figures, all of whom smoked and hawked the health benefits of tobacco or lack of health risks. All the while the defendants knew by their own research and the work of others, that cigarettes were carcinogenic and caused cancer and other deadly diseases. Defendants reneged on their promises contained in the Frank Statement of 1954, and never revealed to the public the addictive nature of tobacco-a fact they all recognized but never admitted. Even after 1969, defendants continued campaigns of misinformation about the dangers of smoking and fostered the myth that there was a continuing controversy about causation in face of the overwhelming contrary body of evidence worldwide. Not only was there misinformation supplied by defendants, there was concealment of known information which affected the health of the public at large.
Engle v. RJ Reynolds Tobacco
, No. 94-08273 CA-22,
The case began as a multi-plaintiff action in Florida state court, which the defendants removed to the Middle District of Florida, where individual cases proceeded to trial.
The district court instructed the jury that it could consider punitive damages only with respect to Mrs. Berger's claims for fraudulent concealment and conspiracy to fraudulently conceal. At the time, the district court's instruction was consistent with Florida law,
see
Soffer v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co
.,
Florida law prescribes the following elements for a fraudulent concealment claim: (1) the defendant concealed or failed to disclose a material fact; (2) the defendant knew or should have known the material fact should be disclosed; (3) the defendant knew that its concealment of or failure to disclose the material fact would induce the plaintiff to act; (4) the defendant had a duty to disclose the material fact; and (5) the plaintiff detrimentally relied on the misinformation.
See
Hess v. Philip Morris USA, Inc.
,
The Phase I findings conclusively established that Philip Morris and other tobacco companies "concealed or omitted material information not otherwise known or available knowing that the material was false or misleading or failed to disclose a material fact concerning the health effects or addictive nature of smoking cigarettes or both" and "agreed to conceal or omit information regarding the health effects of cigarettes or their addictive nature with the intention that smokers and the public would rely on this information to their detriment."
Engle v. Liggett Grp., Inc
.,
In interpreting Florida law, we look first to precedent from the Florida Supreme Court. If there is no such precedent, we adhere to decisions of Florida's intermediate appellate courts absent some persuasive indication that the Florida Supreme Court "would decide the issue otherwise."
Winn-Dixie Stores, Inc. v. Dolgencorp, LLC,
In a footnote set forth in its reply brief and answer on cross-appeal, Philip Morris suggests that even if Mrs. Berger had adduced evidence establishing reliance, she failed to adduce evidence that such reliance was detrimental. This cursory statement is not sufficient to "plainly and prominently" raise the issue on appeal.
Access Now, Inc. v. Sw. Airlines Co.
,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Bernard COTE, the Personal Representative of the Estate of Judith Berger, Plaintiff-Appellee Cross Appellant, v. R.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, Et Al., Defendants, Philip Morris USA, Inc., Defendant-Appellant Cross Appellee.
- Cited By
- 15 cases
- Status
- Published