Knepper v. Brown
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
In this common-law fraud action, plaintiffs obtained a $1.5 million jury verdict against Dex Media, Inc. (Dex), based on Dexâs involvement in creating and publishing a Yellow Pages advertisement that misrepresented a doctorâs qualifications. On appeal, Dex argued that plaintiffs presented no evidence that the misrepresentation caused the injuries that plaintiffs claimed (pain and physical deformities resulting from a botched liposuction procedure) and that it therefore was entitled to a directed verdict or to a judgment notwithstanding the juryâs verdict. The Court of Appeals disagreed and affirmed the judgment for plaintiffs. Knepper v. Brown, 213 Or App 598, 162 P3d 1026 (2007). We allowed Dexâs petition for review and, for the reasons that follow, now affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals and the judgment of the trial court.
Because Dex challenges the trial courtâs denial of a motion for a directed verdict, we consider (and describe) the evidence, and the reasonable inferences that may be drawn therefrom, in the light most favorable to plaintiffs â the parties opposing the motion. Allen v. County of Jackson County, 340 Or 146, 149, 129 P3d 694 (2006).
Dr. Timothy Brown is a licensed medical doctor who holds certifications from the American Board of Medical Specialties in dermatology and anatomic and clinical pathology. Brown started a dermatology practice in Oregon in 1985 and thereafter maintained an advertisement in Dexâs Yellow Pages directory, under the heading âPhysicians and Surgeonsâ and the subheading âDermatology (skin).â The advertisement listed various services and prominently noted that Brown was âCertified by the American Board of Dermatology.â
In 1993, Brown began to offer âtumescentâ liposuction in his office, after receiving some limited informal training in how to perform that procedure. He mentioned the new service in his 1993-94 Yellow Pages advertisement, which still appeared under the âDermatologyâ subheading and which still referred to his board certification in dermatology.
*324 In 1996, Brown placed a second advertisement in Dexâs Yellow Pages â this time under the subheading âSurgery, Plastic and Reconstructive.â The new advertisement stated that Brown performed liposuction, wrinkle treatments, and sclerotherapy. It also stated that Brown was âBoard Certifiedâ â without specifying any area of certification.
The new advertisements were added at the urging of a Dex sales representative, Mueller. Brownâs office manager, Newman, told Mueller that Brown was interested in attracting more liposuction patients. Mueller met with Newman to help her âmock upâ a new advertisement. Mueller told Newman that the âplastic and reconstruction surgeryâ subheading in the Yellow Pages would be the best place to reach that target market. Mueller also told Newman that the advertisement should identify Brown as âboard certified,â because âpatients were expecting a [board certified] plastic surgeon to do these techniques.â Newman repeatedly told Mueller that she was concerned that such an advertisement would be misleading, because Brownâs board certification was in dermatology, not plastic and reconstructive surgery. Mueller continued to push for a nonspecific âboard certifiedâ designation under the âSurgery, Plastic and Reconstructiveâ subheading, and Brown, who had the final say, acceded to Muellerâs advice.
Early in 1997, plaintiff M. M. Knepper 1 was considering cosmetic liposuction surgery. She knew that she wanted to be treated by a plastic surgeon. She consulted the âSurgery, Plastic and Reconstructiveâ subheading in the Yellow Pages and compiled a list of doctors and medical facilities that performed liposuction. Knepper saw Brownâs advertisement and included his name and telephone number on her list, believing him to be a plastic surgeon because of the location of his ad and the âboard certifiedâ designation that appeared after his name. Knepper did not call Brownâs office at the time, however.
Some months later, Knepper attended a Womenâs Show and stopped at a booth offering information about *325 Brownâs cosmetic surgery practice. Knepper recognized Brownâs name from her list of potential plastic surgeons. She picked up a brochure, which stated that Brown was board certified in, among other things, âDermatologic Surgery.â One of Brownâs employees, who was manning the booth, told Knepper that Brown was a board-certified plastic surgeon. Knepper thereafter made an appointment to discuss liposuction with Brown. At the consultation, Brown also told Knepper that he was board certified in plastic surgery.
Knepper decided to retain Brown, and he performed a liposuction procedure on her in December 1997. After the procedure, Knepper contacted Brownâs office to report continuing pain and âmisshapenness,â and Brown performed two more liposuction procedures in an unsuccessful attempt to repair the damage. Plaintiffs eventually filed the present action against Brown and Dex, alleging claims of medical malpractice, fraud, conspiracy to commit fraud, and loss of consortium. Brown later settled with plaintiffs, leaving plaintiffsâ fraud claim (and the derivative conspiracy and loss of consortium claims) against Dex to be decided at trial. Plaintiffsâ fraud claim alleged that (1) Dex knew that Brown was not board certified in plastic and reconstructive surgery; (2) Dex and Brown together designed and developed an advertisement that falsely implied that Brown was a board-certified plastic surgeon; (3) Knepper wanted a board-certified plastic surgeon to perform liposuction surgery on her; (4) Knepper relied in part on the misleading Dex advertisement and retained Brown to perform liposuction surgery; (5) if Knepper had known the truth about Brownâs credentials, she would not have consented to surgery by him; and (6) Brown performed the liposuction negligently, causing injury to plaintiffs.
Prior to trial, Dex moved for summary judgment, arguing, among other things, that plaintiffs could not demonstrate a sufficient causal link between the alleged misrepresentation regarding Brownâs credentials and Knepperâs injury at the hands of Brown. The trial court granted the summary judgment motion, but the Court of Appeals reversed and remanded. Knepper v. Brown, 182 Or App 597, 623, 50 P3d 1209 (2002). On remand, the case proceeded to trial. At the close of evidence, Dex submitted a motion for a *326 directed verdict citing a lack of evidence with respect to various elements of plaintiffsâ claims. The trial court denied the motion and the case went to the jury. However, the jury deadlocked and the first trial ended in a mistrial.
In a second trial, plaintiffs presented Knepperâs testimony regarding her injuries and her decision to retain Brown to perform liposuction; Newmanâs testimony regarding Dexâs involvement in developing the misleading advertisement and Dexâs knowledge that the advertisement was misleading; and the testimony of Brown himself, regarding his negligent treatment of Knepper. Plaintiffs also presented the testimony of Dr. Lloyd Hale, a plastic surgeon, regarding the nature and extent of Knepperâs injuries and whether Knepperâs three liposuction procedures were performed in a manner that met the applicable standard of care. Hale also testified about the qualifications of dermatologists, as opposed to those of plastic surgeons, to perform surgical procedures. He observed that dermatologists usually do not receive formalized surgical training, while plastic surgeons receive extensive surgical training over a period of many years. Hale further observed that surgical knowledge, training, and experience are important for obtaining good results from liposuction. Hale acknowledged that plastic surgeons do not always meet the standard of care for liposuction or other surgical procedures, but he stated that he had never seen an injury like Knepperâs â which he described as an âuncorrectable disasterâ â at the hands of a doctor who had gone through formalized surgical training.
After the close of evidence, Dex again moved â on roughly the same grounds as it had in the first trial â for a directed verdict. The trial court again denied the motion. This time, however, the jury did not deadlock, but returned a $1.58 million verdict for plaintiffs, which the trial court reduced by the amount of plaintiffsâ settlement with Brown. Dex thereafter moved for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, but the trial court denied that motion.
Dex appealed, arguing that plaintiffs had failed to prove various elements of their claims and that the trial court should have granted a directed verdict, a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, or a new trial. As noted, the Court of *327 Appeals rejected those arguments and affirmed, Knepper, 213 Or App 598, and we allowed Dexâs petition for review.
Before this court, Dex argues, first, that a common-law fraud claim requires evidence that the damage at issue is a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the defendantâs conduct and that plaintiffs in this case failed to present such evidence. Dex acknowledges that the jury was instructed that plaintiffs must prove âthat a company in Dexâs position could reasonably foresee when it published the ad that Dr. Brown would be negligent in performing liposuction on [ ] Knepper and cause her injury.â Dex contends, however, that, regardless of how the jury was instructed or what the jury found, plaintiffs failed to present specific evidence respecting that issue.
Before we turn to the merits of that issue, we briefly consider plaintiffsâ objection that the issue is unpreservedâ that is, that Dex never raised lack of evidence of foreseeability as a basis for its request for a directed verdict. 2 The Court of Appeals held that defendant had preserved the issue because, in moving for a directed verdict at the second trial, defense counsel expressly incorporated, by reference, arguments raised in the defendantâs motion for a directed verdict in the first trial, including an argument that âit was not and could not have been reasonably foreseeable to Dex that publishing Brownâs Yellow Pages ad would result in his committing medical malpractice against a reader of that ad.â Knepper, 213 Or App at 603 (quoting defense motion).
Plaintiffs acknowledge that that statement was made in the first directed verdict motion, but they argue that it was presented there as a part of an entirely different argument, viz., an argument that plaintiffs had failed to present evidence showing that Knepperâs injuries had resulted from *328 any reliance on Brownâs advertisement. Plaintiffs contend that, in light of the context in which it appeared, the sentence that the Court of Appeals quoted was not sufficient to preserve Dexâs present argument.
In our view, plaintiffs are attempting to hold Dex to an unreasonably stringent standard. In tort law, the correct formulation for deciding issues of causation is not always clear, and defendantâs causation argument in the cross-referenced directed verdict motion reflected a desire to cover all of the bases. While the argument may have begun with one causation theory â that plaintiffs must prove that Knepperâs injuries were a âdirect and necessaryâ result of the alleged misrepresentation â it ended with a related âbackstopâ causation theory â that plaintiffs must prove that Brownâs malpractice (the direct cause of Knepperâs injuries) at least was a reasonably foreseeable result of the publication of Brownâs advertisement. We conclude that, although defense counsel did not specifically mention lack of evidence of foreseeability in the second trial in his oral motion for a directed verdict, his reference to the argument made in the first trial was sufficient to preserve the claim of error. We turn to the merits of that issue.
As noted, Dexâs initial argument is that, to hold Dex liable for fraud, plaintiffs were required, but failed, to present evidence establishing that Brownâs negligent treatment of Knepper was a reasonably foreseeable consequence of Dexâs publication of Brownâs advertisement. Defendant observes that this court historically has regarded âproximate causeâ as an element of fraud and that several legal authorities, discussed below, generally equate the concept of proximate cause with reasonable foreseeability when applied to claims of fraud. Defendant then draws on general discussions of reasonable foreseeability in this courtâs negligence cases to support its contention that, in the fraud context, a defendant is liable for a plaintiffs injuries only to the extent that the particular kind of harm that the plaintiff suffered was a reasonably foreseeable result of the defendantâs fraudulent conduct. 3 Finally, defendant relies on another of this courtâs *329 negligence cases, Buchler v. Oregon Corrections Div., 316 Or 499, 853 P2d 798 (1993), 4 to support its view that a defendant may be held liable for injuries caused by a third partyâs âharm-producing actâ only if those injuries are of a kind that are within the reasonably foreseeable scope of the risk created by the defendantâs conduct. Applying that proposed rule to the present case, Dex argues that plaintiffs were required to prove that the particular type of injury that Knepper suffered â a botched medical procedure at the hands of a third party (Brown) â was a reasonably foreseeable consequence of Dexâs publication of Brownâs misleading advertisement. Dex further contends that plaintiffs failed to present evidence that addressed that element of the case.
We begin our analysis by noting that this is a fraud case, i.e., a case involving an intentional tort. Our past cases have referred to proximate cause (or âproximate injuryâ) as one of nine elements of a claim for tortious fraud. 5 Although our more recent cases have employed a more abbreviated list of the elements of fraud, see, e.g., Riley Hill General Contractor v. Tandy Corp., 303 Or 390, 405, 737 P2d 595 (1987) (listing five elements), we agree that some notion of proximate cause is subsumed under the last element in that abbreviated list: âDamage to the plaintiff, resulting from [the plaintiffs] reliance [on defendantâs representation].â Id. (emphasis added).
The question, then, is whether that notion of proximate cause or proximate injury is equivalent to the concept of *330 âreasonable foreseeability,â as we have used that phrase in cases like Fazzolari and Buckler. We are persuaded that it is.
Courts have noted that, when an intentional tort is involved, the range of legal causation can be quite broad: â âFor an intended injury, the law is astute to discover even very remote causation.â â W. Page Keeton, Prosser and Keeton on Torts § 43, 293 n 6 (5th ed 1984) (quoting Derosier v. New England Telephone & Telegraph Co., 81 NH 451, 130 A 145 (1925)); see also American Fed. Teachers v. Oregon Taxpayers United, 345 Or 1, 17, 189 P3d 9 (2008) (in action under Oregon Racketeer and Corrupt Organizations Act, person who was intended target of illegal acts was injured âby reason ofâ those acts). Still, the historical references to âproximate injuryâ as an element of fraud indicates that courts also recognize that there is some limitation on the consequences for which a perpetrator of an intentional fraud may be held liable. A requirement that any claimed damages be foreseeable appropriately recognizes that the scope of liability for an intentional, fraudulent misrepresentation depends on the nature of the misrepresentation, the audience to whom the misrepresentation was directed, and the nature of the action or forbearance, intended or negligent, that the misrepresentation justifiably induced. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 548A (1977) incorporates that requirement:
âA fraudulent misrepresentation is a legal cause of a pecuniary loss resulting from action or inaction in reliance upon it if, but only if, the loss might reasonably be expected to result from the reliance.â
(Emphasis added.) Comments to that Restatement section make the same point even more clearly:
âa. * * * In general, the misrepresentation is a legal cause only of those pecuniary losses that are within the foreseeable risk of harm that it creates. There is an analogy here to the rules as to legal causation of physical harm resulting from negligent conduct, stated in §§ 435 to 461.
âb. Pecuniary losses that could not reasonably be expected to result from the misrepresentation are, in general, not legally caused by it and are beyond the scope of the makerâs liability. This means that the matter misrepresented must *331 be considered in light of its tendency to cause those losses and the likelihood that they will follow. * * *
âIn determining what is foreseeable as a result of the misrepresentation, the possibility of intervening events is not to be excluded altogether.â
Id., comments a, b. Similarly, in Prosser and Keeton on Torts § 110 at 767, the author states:
âFurthermore, the consequential or special damages must have been proximately caused by the fraudulent conduct. In general and with only a few exceptions, the courts have restricted recovery to those losses which might be expected to follow from the fraud and from events that are reasonably foreseeable.â
(Footnotes omitted.)
When we apply that foreseeability principle in the present case, it is clear that plaintiffsâ damages reasonably might be expected to result from their reliance on Dexâs misrepresentation. An advertisement that misrepresents a medical providerâs qualifications self-evidently creates a risk that a consumer who seeks treatment from the provider in reliance on that misrepresentation will suffer an adverse result that would not have occurred if the providerâs qualifications had been as represented. The testimony at trial showed that Knepperâs injuries fell precisely within the foreseeable risk of harm that the misrepresentation created: Knepper testified that she wanted to have a board-certified plastic surgeon perform the liposuction, and a juror could infer from that testimony that Knepper believed that she was more likely to suffer an adverse result from being treated by a medical provider who was not board certified in plastic surgery. Further, plaintiffsâ medical expert testified that he had never seen adverse results like the ones that Knepper experienced from a medical provider who was certified in plastic surgery. A juror could infer from that testimony that plaintiffsâ injuries probably would not have occurred if Knepper had received treatment from a board-certified plastic surgeon (as she believed Brown to be). Stated in terms of the applicable legal standard, Dex had reason to expect that Knepper would act in justifiable reliance on Dexâs misrepresentation by retaining Brown for the surgery, and that an adverse result *332 was more likely if Brown, rather than a board-certified plastic surgeon, performed liposuction surgery. There is no additional requirement that plaintiffs also prove that Dex in fact did foresee that Knepper would suffer the particular adverse results of the medical services that Brown performed. It follows that plaintiffsâ injuries were foreseeable as a result of Dexâs intentional misrepresentation, and that is all that plaintiffs had to show. Dex must respond in damages accordingly.
We turn to Dexâs next argument â that the trial court erred in declining to direct a verdict on plaintiffsâ fraud and conspiracy claims on the ground that plaintiffs failed to submit any evidence that Dex had âacted maliciously, with the intention to harm another, or in reckless disregard of the consequences.â Dex contends that, to prevent an unconstitutional chilling effect on the free flow of information, Oregon courts must recognize that publishers require some additional protection from claims arising out of false or misleading advertisements, and cannot be held liable for the publication of such advertisements unless the publication is done maliciously or with intent to harm another or in reckless disregard of that possibility.
We think that Dexâs argument demands too much. This is not a case of the unwitting publication of an advertisement that turns out to be false. It is, instead, a case in which the publisher took a knowing and active part in the perpetration of the fraud. Punishing fraud has no impermissible âchillingâ effect on the right to express views on âany subject whatever.â See Article I, section 8, of the Oregon Constitution (protecting such a right of expression). In fact, fraud is excepted from that constitutional protection. See State v. Robertson, 293 Or 402, 412, 649 P2d 569 (1982) (explaining principle). What Dex argues would extend constitutional protection to fraud, and we reject that argument.
As we have explained, plaintiffsâ evidence permitted the jury to infer that the fraudulent misrepresentation by Dex and Brown was designed to mislead potential patients into believing that Brown was a board-certified plastic surgeon, thereby luring them into accepting surgery by Brown *333 that he was not specially trained to perform. The misrepresentation created the risk that those who relied on it would be harmed as a particular result of Brownâs lack of expertise as a plastic surgeon, and that is what happened to plaintiffs. The trial judge did not err in refusing to grant Dexâs motions for directed verdict and judgment notwithstanding the juryâs verdict.
The decision of the Court of Appeals and the judgment of the circuit court are affirmed.
Plaintiffs are Knepper and her husband.
Plaintiffs acknowledge that Dex raised lack of evidence of foreseeability in its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict at the end of the second trial, but argues, correctly, that Dex cannot question the sufficiency of the evidence of foreseeability on appeal unless it moved to withdraw the issue from the jury before the jury returned its verdict. See ORCP 63 A (âWhen a motion for a directed verdict, made at the close of all the evidence, which should have been granted has been refused and a verdict is rendered against the applicant, the court may, on motion, render a judgment notwithstanding the verdict * * *.â)⢠Accordingly, the proper focus is on whether defendant raised the issue when it moved for a directed verdict.
For example, in Fazzolari v. Portland School Dist. No. 1J, 303 Or 1, 17, 734 P2d 1326 (1987), this court stated that the issue of liability for a harm resulting *329 from a defendantâs conduct âdepends on whether that conduct unreasonably created a foreseeable risk * * * of the kind of harm that befell the plaintiff.â (Emphasis added.)
In Buckler, this court held that the state Corrections Division was not liable in negligence for bodily injuries intentionally inflicted on members of the public by a prisoner who had escaped from the Corrections Divisionâs supervision. The court acknowledged that the Corrections Division in some sense may have facilitated the prisonerâs escape, but held that âmere âfacilitationâ of an unintended adverse result, where intervening intentional criminality of another person is the harm-producing force, does not cause the harm so as to support liability for it.â 316 Or at 511-12.
See, e.g., U. S. National Bank v. Fought, 291 Or 201, 220-21, 630 P2d 337 (1981) (quoting list of nine elements of fraud, including âconsequent and proximate injury,â from Conzelmann v. N.W.P & D. Prod. Co., 190 Or 332, 350, 225 P2d 757 (1950)); Webb v. Clark, 274 Or 387, 391, 546 P2d 1078 (1976) (same); Rice v. McAlister, 268 Or 125, 128, 519 P2d 1263 (1974) (same).