What are the facts?
On March 24, 1989, the oil tanker Exxon Valdez, owned by Exxon Shipping and operated by Exxon Corporation, ran aground on Bligh Reef in Prince William Sound, Alaska, discharging roughly 11 million gallons of crude oil. The vessel's captain, Joseph Hazelwood, had a known history of alcohol abuse; there was evidence he had consumed alcohol before departure and he left the bridge shortly before the grounding. Plaintiffs—a class of commercial fishermen, Alaska Natives, landowners, and others economically harmed by the spill—sued in federal court. A jury awarded approximately $507.5 million in compensatory damages and $5 billion in punitive damages against Exxon. After extensive post-trial proceedings and appeals, the district court reduced the punitive award; the Ninth Circuit ultimately remitted it to $2.5 billion. Exxon petitioned for certiorari, arguing that the Clean Water Act (CWA) preempted punitive damages and that the punitive award was excessive. The Supreme Court granted certiorari on multiple questions, including the excessiveness of punitive damages under maritime law and whether the CWA displaced punitive damages; the Court split evenly on corporate vicarious liability for punitive damages, leaving the Ninth Circuit's allowance of such liability undisturbed without opinion.
What is the legal issue?
Under federal maritime common law, are punitive damages available for reckless conduct causing mass environmental harm, and if so, what limits apply to the size of punitive awards; and does the Clean Water Act preempt private punitive damages in this context?
What rule applies?
As a matter of federal maritime common law, punitive damages are available in appropriate cases but are limited to a 1:1 ratio to compensatory damages as a fair upper bound to ensure predictability and proportionality. The Clean Water Act does not preempt private claims for punitive damages in maritime tort litigation. The Court did not reach any constitutional due process limit, deciding instead on maritime common-law grounds; and due to an even division on the corporate vicarious liability question, the Ninth Circuit's ruling allowing punitive damages against Exxon based on managerial misconduct remained in place without a precedential Supreme Court resolution.
What did the court hold?
The punitive damages award of $2.5 billion was excessive under federal maritime common law. The Court imposed a 1:1 punitive-to-compensatory damages cap in maritime cases and reduced punitive damages to $507.5 million (equal to the compensatory award). The Court further held that the Clean Water Act does not preempt private punitive damages in maritime tort cases. The Court was equally divided on whether Exxon's liability for punitive damages could be based on the acts of its managerial employees, leaving the Ninth Circuit's allowance of such vicarious punitive liability undisturbed.
What is the reasoning?
Writing for the Court, Justice Souter grounded the decision in the traditional objectives of punitive damages—retribution and deterrence—balanced against concerns with fairness, predictability, and administrability in maritime law. The Court emphasized the uniquely federal and uniform character of maritime law, which authorizes the judiciary to fashion common-law rules consonant with maritime needs. Surveying the history of punitive damages and empirical studies on award variability, the Court found that punitive awards are often unpredictable and disproportionate, imposing substantial and inconsistent penalties for similar conduct. Seeking a principled and administrable standard, the Court adopted a 1:1 punitive-to-compensatory ratio as a fair upper limit in maritime cases. This benchmark, the Court reasoned, is above the median ratio of punitive to compensatory awards found in empirical data, sufficiently punitive to deter reckless corporate conduct, and provides a predictable ceiling that curbs arbitrary outcomes while respecting the jury's compensatory assessments. Crucially, the Court declined to ground its decision in constitutional due process (as in BMW v. Gore and State Farm v. Campbell), instead resting entirely on federal maritime common law to avoid unnecessary constitutional adjudication. On preemption, the Court rejected Exxon's argument that the Clean Water Act displaced private punitive damages. The CWA's text, structure, and savings clauses did not reveal congressional intent to preempt traditional maritime remedies available to private parties; rather, the statute primarily governs public enforcement and civil penalties payable to the government. The Court therefore preserved the coexistence of public regulatory penalties and private punitive sanctions in maritime torts. As to corporate vicarious liability for punitive damages based on managerial employees' misconduct, the Court evenly divided, resulting in an affirmance without opinion that left the Ninth Circuit's determination intact but without creating Supreme Court precedent on that question.
Why is this case significant?
Exxon Shipping Co. v. Baker is essential for understanding punitive damages and the interplay between statutory regimes and judge-made maritime law. It establishes a clear, administrable maritime rule capping punitive damages at a 1:1 ratio to compensatory damages—distinct from, and not replacing, the constitutional guideposts in non-maritime cases. The case preserves private punitive remedies alongside governmental enforcement under the Clean Water Act, clarifies that constitutional due process need not be reached where maritime common law supplies an adequate rule, and highlights the Court's institutional concerns with variability and fairness in punitive awards. For law students, it is a leading case at the intersection of Torts, Remedies, and Admiralty, frequently tested to probe understanding of punitive damages frameworks, preemption, and the judiciary's role in crafting federal common law.
Does the 1:1 punitive-to-compensatory cap apply outside maritime cases?
No. The 1:1 cap in Exxon Shipping Co. v. Baker is a rule of federal maritime common law. Outside the maritime context, punitive damages are governed primarily by state law subject to constitutional due process constraints articulated in BMW v. Gore and State Farm v. Campbell. Those constitutional cases do not impose a categorical 1:1 cap; rather, they provide guideposts (reprehensibility, ratio, and comparable civil penalties), and in some circumstances permit higher ratios.
How does Exxon relate to BMW v. Gore and State Farm v. Campbell?
Exxon is complementary but distinct. The Court deliberately avoided the constitutional due process analysis central to BMW and State Farm and instead fashioned a non-constitutional, judge-made rule for maritime cases. Whereas BMW and State Farm set constitutional limits (e.g., general skepticism of double-digit ratios), Exxon sets a bright-line 1:1 cap in maritime cases to enhance predictability and uniformity.
Did the Clean Water Act preempt private punitive damages for the Exxon Valdez spill?
No. The Supreme Court held that the Clean Water Act does not preempt private punitive damages in maritime tort actions. The statute's text and savings clauses did not show congressional intent to displace traditional maritime remedies for private parties, even though the CWA provides for governmental civil penalties and criminal sanctions.
What happened to the question of corporate vicarious liability for punitive damages?
The Court was evenly divided on whether Exxon could be held vicariously liable for punitive damages based on the reckless acts of its managerial employees (e.g., the captain's conduct and corporate oversight). As a result, the Ninth Circuit's decision allowing punitive liability on that basis was affirmed without opinion. This outcome resolved the case but created no binding Supreme Court precedent on the vicarious liability issue.
What were the final damages after the Supreme Court's decision?
Compensatory damages stood at approximately $507.5 million. The Supreme Court reduced punitive damages from $2.5 billion (post–Ninth Circuit) to match the compensatory award, yielding $507.5 million in punitive damages—a 1:1 ratio.
Does Exxon bar punitive damages for maritime environmental disasters going forward?
No. Exxon preserves the availability of punitive damages in maritime torts but limits their size. Plaintiffs may still pursue punitive damages for egregious maritime misconduct; however, absent circumstances justifying a different maritime rule, the punitive award may not exceed compensatory damages.