Schwigel v. Kohlmann
Schwigel v. Kohlmann
Opinion of the Court
¶ 1. David J. Kohlmann, his wife Jane, and their corporation, Kohlmann Tool & Design, Inc. (Kohlmann), appeal from a judgment confirming a jury verdict awarding Jeffrey Schwigel and his corporation, Classic Tool & Machine, Co. (Schwigel), a total of $562,000 in compensatory and punitive damages. Kohlmann argues that the form of the verdict was improper because it asked a single damage question relating to Schwigel's multiple claims based on breach of contract, negligent misrepresentation, and unjust enrichment. Kohlmann makes no challenge to that portion of the judgment confirming the jury's further award of $12,000 compensatory damages on Schwigel's conversion claim.
¶ 2. We agree with Kohlmann that the verdict improperly asked a single damage question on Schwigel's breach of contract, negligent misrepresentation and unjust enrichment claims. We reverse this portion of the judgment and remand for a new trial on Schwigel's compensatory claims relating to these three causes of action and on his punitive damage claim. We
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶ 3. Our recitation of the facts is presented in a light most favorable to Schwigel since the jury has found Kohlmann liable on all of the claims at issue, and we do not disturb those findings on appeal. Kohlmann and Schwigel were both tool and die makers. In 1998, Kohlmann was operating his business out of a shop he owned in Cedarburg, Wisconsin. After Kohlmann and Schwigel became acquainted, Kohlmann asked Schwi-gel to move his business to Kohlmann's shop. Schwigel declined. During October 1999, Kohlmann told Schwi-gel that he had located a prospective and lucrative motor shaft production job. Since Schwigel had the expertise and machinery to handle the job, Kohlmann again asked Schwigel to relocate to his shop and to take over the prospective job. Schwigel again declined, but the parties continued to talk. In the meantime, Schwi-gel investigated the prospective job and determined that it provided an opportunity to make a good profit.
. ¶ 4. The talks eventually produced a verbal agreement whereby Schwigel would share production space in Kohlmann's shop at the cost of $700 per month. The motor shaft production job was a substantial factor in Schwigel's decision to relocate. Schwigel moved into Kohlmann's shop on or about November 3, 1999. Because of limited space, Schwigel stored some of his equipment in another building owned by Jack Dunfee, a business associate of Kohlmann. Dunfee did not
¶ 5. On November 19,1999, Kohlmann received a purchase order from the manufacturer for the immediate production of the shafts. After receiving the purchase order, Schwigel and Kohlmann went to Illinois to look into purchasing a machine to mass produce the shaft job. On December 2, 1999, Schwigel received approval from his bank to purchase the mass-production machine. That same day, Kohlmann offered to buy the machine for Schwigel and allow Schwigel to make payments to him. However, two days later, Kohl-mann told Schwigel that he was going to buy the machine for himself in order to produce the shafts and keep the shaft job for himself.
¶ 6. Thereafter, the relationship between Schwi-gel and Kohlmann deteriorated, and on December 28, 1999, Kohlmann told Schwigel to get out. Without notice to Schwigel, Kohlmann changed the locks on the shop, prohibiting Schwigel from gaining access to his equipment and performing work for his customers. After numerous attempts to get access to the shop, Schwigel contacted the Cedarburg police to help him get his equipment back. On January 18 and 19, 2000, the police supervised as Schwigel moved his equipment out of Kohlmann's shop. At that time, Schwigel also asked to remove his other equipment that had been stored in the building owned by Dunfee. Neither Dun-fee nor Kohlmann would allow Schwigel access to the storage building, and the police told Schwigel that if he attempted to access the building he would be charged ■with trespassing.
¶ 7. By July 2000, Schwigel had lost all of his customers and he was out of business. Four months later, in November 2000, Schwigel received a phone call
¶ 8. This lawsuit ensued. By amended complaint, Schwigel alleged claims of breach of contract, negligent misrepresentation, unjust enrichment, promissory es-toppel and conversion against Kohlmann. Schwigel sought compensatory and punitive damages. The jury trial lasted four days. When discussing the form of the verdict at the close of the evidence, the trial court proposed separate damage questions for each of Schwigel's claims. Kohlmann supported this approach. Schwigel objected and instead asked for a single question as to the breach of contract, negligent misrepresentation, unjust enrichment and promissory estoppel claims. After much discussion, Schwigel persuaded the court to change its mind. As a result, the special verdict asked a single compensatory damage question as to Schwigel's breach of contract, negligent misrepresentation, unjust enrichment and promissory estoppel claims.
¶ 9. The jury found in favor of Schwigel on all his claims, save promissory estoppel.
SPECIAL VERDICT DAMAGE QUESTION
¶ 10. We accord substantial deference to the manner in which a trial court frames a special verdict. Runjo v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins., Co., 197 Wis. 2d 594, 602, 541 N.W.2d 173 (Ct. App. 1995). However, we must reverse when a special verdict question does not fairly represent the material issue of fact to the jury. See id. In performing our review, we do not view the special verdict in a vacuum. Instead, we also look to the accompanying instructions given to the jury. "This court has frequently stated that the form of the special verdict rests in the discretion of the trial court, and the court's chosen form will not be rejected unless the inquiry, taken with the applicable instruction, does not fairly present the material issues of fact to the jury for determination." Topp v. Cont'l Ins. Co., 83 Wis. 2d 780, 785, 266 N.W.2d 397 (1978) (emphasis added). A practice treatise also captures this thought:
A special verdict must also be formulated to complement the court's instructions to the jury. In framing the verdict, the court must ensure that the verdict, when taken in conjunction with the applicable instructions, fairly presents all material issues of fact to the jury for determination. The instructions and special verdict are adequate as long as together they cover the law applicable to the facts of the case.
R. George Burnett et al., Wisconsin Trial Practice § 12.10, at 9 (1999) (citations omitted).
¶ 12. In this case, the trial court instructed the jury under the measure of damages for breach of contract, and then additionally told the jury, "The same measure of damages applies to the other claims made by the plaintiff." While it may be debatable whether the measure of damages for a breach of contract (reasonable compensation for the losses caused by the breach) and for negligent misrepresentation (out-of-pocket loss) is the same, this certainly cannot be said as to the measure of damages for unjust enrichment (reasonable value of the benefit conferred). Thus, at a minimum, the special verdict and the accompanying instructions misstated the law of damages as to unjust enrichment. And that misstatement presented the prospect of dupli-cative damage awards or a windfall to Schwigel.
¶ 14. In an effort to salvage the verdict, we have examined whether the jury instructions cautioned the jury to not duplicate or overlap the damages awarded in the single question based on the three separate claims. The trial court came close on this question, but not close enough. The court instructed the jury:
You may be required to answer a number of questions on damages that relate to the various claims. In answering, make sure that the amount of money you fill in for damages, if any, is not influenced or affected by your answers to previous questions in the verdict.4
If this instruction had cautioned the jury to make sure that it was not awarding duplicate damages on the
¶ 15. Schwigel also argues that a special verdict with separate damage questions would have posed the same prospect of duplicate damages.
¶ 16. In summary, we reverse those portions of the judgment awarding $250,000 for compensatory damages on the breach of contract, negligent misrepresentation and unjust enrichment claims. We remand for a new trial on those claims. We affirm the portion of the judgment awarding $12,000 compensatory damages on Schwigel's conversion claim.
PUNITIVE DAMAGES
¶ 17. Having overturned the jury's $250,000 compensatory damage award, we also conclude that the jury's $300,000 punitive damage award cannot stand. One of the factors that a jury may take into consideration when awarding punitive damages is the "actual damage" incurred by the victim. Wis JI — Civil 1707.1. Again, we presume that the jury follows the trial court's instructions. Deer, 125 Wis. 2d at 364. So it is fair to conclude that the jury's punitive damage award was premised, at least in part, on the substantial compensatory damage award of $250,000. Having struck down that award, it follows that the jury's punitive damage award cannot stand.
¶ 18. In an attempt to salvage the punitive damage award, Schwigel points to the trial court's postver-dict ruling that the punitive damage award was sup
¶ 19. If the issue before us were limited to the trial court's approval of a punitive damage award premised solely upon the jury's compensatory damage award of $12,000, we perhaps could uphold the trial court's ruling. But those are not the facts. Per the jury instructions, the jury's punitive damage award was premised, at least in part, upon Schwigel's "actual damage," which the jury determined to be $262,000. To surmise that the jury would have made the same punitive damage award based upon a $12,000 compensatory damage award is rank speculation. We decline to perpetuate that speculation.
¶ 20. We reverse the punitive damage award and remand for a new trial on that claim as well. We stress that we are not disturbing the jury's determination that Kohlmann acted maliciously or in intentional disregard of Schwigel's rights. The evidence abundantly supports that determination and that question shall not be submitted to the new jury. The trial on remand is limited only to the question of damages. However, this does not mean that evidence of Kohlmann's offending conduct is not relevant on the question of the amount of punitive damages in the further trial. Since the purpose
MISCELLANEOUS ISSUES
1. Issues as to Jane Kohlmann
¶ 21. Jane Kohlmann argues that the verdict was defective because it did not discriminate between her conduct and that of David, her husband. Instead, the verdict consistently referred to "the defendants." However, Jane has waived this issue. She did not propose her own special verdict and she never asked that the special verdict make this distinction. Moreover, this is not a matter of waiver by stealth or silence. To the contrary, during the jury instruction conference, Schwi-gel expressly proposed that the verdict consistently refer to the defendants in the plural. Jane offered no objection and the trial court adopted Schwigel's proposal.
¶ 22. Based on the same reasoning, we need not address Jane's further arguments that David's conduct was improperly imputed to her and that the evidence was insufficient as to all of Schwigel's claims. To preserve this argument, Jane was duty bound to assure that the verdict made separate inquiries as to her. She did not. Instead, in an apparent strategic decision, she joined in with David's theory of defense, and the two presented a united force against Schwigel's claims.
¶ 23. Kohlmann argues that the trial court erred by denying his motion to dismiss Schwigel's negligent misrepresentation claim at the close of the evidence. We summarily reject this argument. "A motion challenging the sufficiency of the evidence as a matter of law should not be granted 'unless the court is satisfied that, considering all credible evidence and reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the party against whom the motion is made, there is no credible evidence to sustain a finding in favor of such party.'" Beacon Bowl, Inc. v. Wis. Elec. Power Co., 176 Wis. 2d 740, 788, 501 N.W.2d 788 (1993) (citation omitted); see also Wis. Stat. § 805.14(1).
¶ 24. As we have noted, Kohlmann does not challenge the jury's liability findings as to the breach of contract and unjust enrichment claims. We have previously set out the facts supporting those claims. Those facts, viewed in a light most favorable to Schwigel, also abundantly supported Schwigel's negligent misrepresentation claim. The trial court properly denied Kohlmann's motion to dismiss at the close of the evidence.
3. Moot Issues
¶ 25. Kohlmann claims that the punitive damage award cannot stand in light of the $12,000 compensatory damage award on Schwigel's conversion claim. However, we have already reversed the punitive damage award on other grounds. This issue is moot. Kohl-mann also argues that a document pertaining to damages, and not produced during discovery, was
CONCLUSION
¶ 26. We reverse and remand for a new damage trial on Schwigel's claims for breach of contract, negligent misrepresentation and unjust enrichment. We also remand for a new trial on Schwigel's claim for punitive damages. In all other respects we affirm the judgment.
¶ 27. Costs are not awarded to either party.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed in part; reversed in part and cause remanded with directions.
The damage question asked, "What sum of money will compensate the plaintiffs for any losses caused by the defendant?"
As to the negligent misrepresentation claim, the jury found that Kohlmann was eighty percent negligent and Schwi-gel was twenty percent contributorily negligent.
Schwigel then undertakes to explain how the evidence supports the $250,000 award under his breach of contract or negligence claims.
This instruction was the functional equivalent of Wis JI — Civil 1700 cautioning that "[i]n answering the damage
From our reading of the record, it appears that this argument is what prompted the trial court to change its mind and to restructure the verdict with a single damage question as requested by Schwigel.
All statutory references are to the 1999-2000 version.
The election of remedies doctrine can also assist in avoiding double recovery. See Tuchalski v. Moczynski, 152 Wis. 2d 517, 520, 449 N.W.2d 292 (Ct. App. 1989). The parties do not address this doctrine and we make no judgment whether this is an appropriate case for application of the doctrine. The parties or the trial court may take this question up on remand if they see fit.
The dissent is similarly flawed.
Kohlmann does not offer any argument as to how the "wish list" tainted the jury's damage award on Schwigel's conversion claim. As noted, we do not read Kohlmann's appeal to challenge the conversion award.
Concurring in Part
¶ 28. (concurring in part; dissenting in part). I differ with the majority's conclusion that the trial court engaged in "rank speculation," Majority at ¶ 19, when it determined that the jury's award of punitive damages was supported by the compensatory damages awarded for conversion. As I understand the majority's position, the punitive damages award must be reversed because it may be based, in part, on the jury being instructed that it may take into consideration the "actual damage" incurred by Schwi-gel.
¶ 29. Trial courts in Wisconsin have significant authority to decide whether a jury verdict of punitive damages is proper in a particular case. Fahrenberg v. Tengel, 96 Wis. 2d 211, 229, 291 N.W.2d 516 (1980). The trial court may either approve the amount awarded or reduce what the court believes are excessive punitive damages to a reasonable amount. Id. at 232 n.12. This authority is necessary because it is within the jury's discretion to determine the proper amount of punitive damages to award, Reyes v. Greatway Insurance Company, 220 Wis. 2d 285, 302, 582 N.W.2d 480 (Ct. App. 1998), aff'd, 227 Wis. 2d 357, 597 N.W.2d 687 (1999), and because punitive damages rest upon a "vague and immeasurable basis." Malco, Inc. v. Midwest Aluminum Sales, Inc., 14 Wis. 2d 57, 64, 109 N.W.2d 516 (1961). In
¶ 30. In determining whether the punitive damages are excessive, the court begins with the premise that the purpose of punitive damages is to punish and deter, not to compensate the plaintiff for any loss. Reyes, 220 Wis. 2d at 303. The court must
consider the reasonableness of the award in light of the case facts. Other factors [that the court] should consider are: the grievousness of the acts, the degree of malicious intent, whether the award bears a reasonable relationship to the award of compensatory damages, the potential damage that might have been caused by the acts, the ratio of the award to civil or criminal penalties that could be imposed for comparable misconduct, and the wealth of the wrongdoer. [The court] also consider[s] the defendant's ability to satisfy a punitive award. Further, one mitigating factor the jury may consider is the severity of any criminal penalty already imposed.
Id. (citations omitted). Given that the court is asked to exercise its discretion, it is free.to pick and choose what factors it will consider and the weight it will assign to those factors. The trial court's approval of the amount of punitive damages is independent of the jury's award of punitive damages.
¶ 31. In this case, Kohlmann invoked the trial court's authority to review the punitive damages and either approve them or reduce them to what the court believed would be a fair and reasonable amount. In denying the motion, the trial court explained:
*848 As far as the amount of the punitive damages, which relates to the jury's finding with respect to conversion, they found $12,000 in compensatory damages. I believe that would support the punitive damage judgment alone. While it is a substantial multiple the conversion was testified to — to be one substantial reason, a cause, if you will, that the plaintiff went out of the business he had been in previously because he didn't have the availability of his machine tools. Now there were other reasons, financial losses and problems incurred by the other aspects of the case, but I don't find those disproportionate in light of an understanding while withholding the machine tools in terms of compensatory damage on one level would be the rental value of the machine tools supposedly where a business is put in a situation without their machine tools or readily availability to replace them, and from the testimony it seemed obvious you couldn't just walk into some other shop and say, do you have these 55 machine tools or ten machine tools so I can go right back into business tomorrow, that you would have a business interruption.
The trial court found the punitive damages reasonable because Kohlmann's conversion of Schwigel's machine tools was the primary cause of Schwigel going out of business.
¶ 32. When the trial court approves or reduces the punitive damages and provides an analysis of the evidence supporting the award, its action will only be set aside where there is an evident abuse of discretion.
The test to determine abuse is whether, if the trial court had been sitting as the sole finder of fact and had fixed the plaintiffs damages in the disputed amount, this court would still disturb the finding. If there is a reasonable basis for the trial court's determination as to the proper amount, it will be sustained.
Lutz v. Shelby Mut. Ins. Co., 70 Wis. 2d 743, 759, 235 N.W.2d 426 (1975) (footnotes omitted). Under these tests, the trial court's finding that the punitive damages are reasonable solely because of conversion would pass muster. It does not matter if the jury awarded the punitive damages on any of the other claims Schwigel pursued because the trial court found that Kohlmann's conduct in the conversion claim was so egregious and outrageous that it was deserving of punishment.
¶ 33. I would affirm the trial court's approval of the punitive damages because it is based upon conduct that is separate from that encompassed by the omnibus damages question — breach of contract, negligent misrepresentation, unjust enrichment and promissory es-toppel. In finding that the amount of punitive damages was reasonable because of the conversion of Schwigel's tools, the trial court was not engaging in "rank speculation" that the jury would have awarded the same amount of punitive damages if it had found only conversion damages of $12,000. Rather, the trial court was exercising the discretionary authority it has to review the punitive damages award. It was reasonable for the trial court to conclude that Kohlmann's refusal to return the tools to Schwigel, after he demanded their return, was responsible for Schwigel going out of busi
The jury was instructed that in considering whether to award punitive damages it may take into account the actual
There is no procedural requirement that mandates a new trial on all damages awarded when a new trial is ordered only on compensatory damages. Punitive damages and compensatory damages are "entirely separable" and the interests of justice are best served by limiting a new trial on damages to those that are suspect because of error. See Badger Bearing, Inc. v. Drives & Bearings, Inc., 111 Wis. 2d 659, 673-74, 331 N.W.2d 847 (Ct. App. 1983).
We defer to the trial court's discretion because it had the opportunity to hear the testimony, view the demeanor and body language of the witnesses. The trial court heard the emphasis, volume alterations and intonations of each witness. As a result, the trial court is in a better position to judge the credibility of each witness and the persuasiveness of each side's presentations.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Jeffrey Schwigel and Classic Tool & MacHine Co., Plaintiffs-Respondents, v. David J. Kohlmann, Jane Kohlmann and Kohlmann Tool & Design, Inc., Defendants-Appellants
- Cited By
- 9 cases
- Status
- Published