“A Trivial Sum, Not a Treasure Chest” – Georgia Supreme Court Re-defines the Ceiling on Nominal Damages in Walmart Stores East, LP v. Leverette
Introduction
On 24 June 2025, the Supreme Court of Georgia delivered a landmark opinion in Walmart Stores East, LP v. Leverette, decisively holding that
nominal damages in Georgia are limited to a trivial sum
and cannot extend into substantial monetary territory.
The ruling vacates a $1 million “nominal” damages award granted to Bettie Leverette after a low-speed collision with a 2,000-pound pallet in a Walmart store.
Beyond resolving the immediate dispute, the Court repudiates more than a century of Court of Appeals authority that treated nominal damages as having
no maximum
, steering Georgia damages jurisprudence back to its English common-law roots.
Summary of the Judgment
- The Court unanimously (8-0) held that nominal damages are, by definition, confined to an inconsequential amount—historically a shilling, six cents, or one dollar.
- It overruled a line of Court of Appeals cases (1910-2024) permitting nominal damages into six- and seven-figure ranges.
- The $1 million award below was deemed irrational because no rational juror could view that amount as
trivial.
- However, the Court remanded for the lower courts to decide two unresolved, fact-specific questions:
- Whether Walmart invited error by requesting the challenged instruction and verdict form, thereby precluding relief; and
- What the proper procedural remedy is (e.g., new trial on damages, remittitur to a token amount, or entry of a $0 verdict).
Analysis
Precedents Cited and Their Influence
- English Common-Law Authorities – Blackstone, Sutherland, Sedgwick and numerous 18th- & 19th-century English cases established that nominal damages exist solely to vindicate rights when no actual loss is proven, and must be “trifling.”
- Georgia Adoption Statute (OCGA § 1-1-10(c)(1)) – The Court underscores that the 1784 legislative act imported the whole of English common law into Georgia, meaning courts cannot alter it absent further legislative action.
- Sellers v. Mann, 113 Ga. 643 (1901) – Frequently misread as permitting limitless nominal damages, Sellers held only that a verdict stating “nominal damages” without specifying the amount is void for uncertainty. The Supreme Court re-characterises its expansive language as dictum.
- Western Union Tel. Co. v. Glenn (1910) → MTW v. Alcovy (2005) → Leverette (2024) – Court of Appeals cascade relying on Sellers’ dictum, now expressly overruled.
- U.S. Supreme Court in Uzuegbunam v. Preczewski (2021) – Cited for the historic function of nominal damages as a declaration of rights, not as compensation.
Legal Reasoning
- Common-Law Continuity Presumption
Unless the General Assembly clearly changes a common-law rule, courts must enforce it. The legislature enacted no authority suggesting that “nominal” can mean “substantial.” - Definition of “Nominal”
Historical treatment shows nominal damages are asum spoken of but having no existence in point of quantity.
One million dollars plainly fails that test. - Dicta vs. Holding
The Court distinguishes binding holdings from mere commentary. Sellers’ sliding-scale language was non-essential dicta and therefore cannot trump common-law principles. - Judicial Role Boundaries
Georgia courts maysay what the law is, not what it should be.
Only the legislature may enlarge nominal damages.
Potential Impact
- Immediate – Trials henceforth must ensure jury charges clarify that nominal damages are token amounts (likely a dollar or less). Verdict forms should avoid inviting large “nominal” sums.
- Cost-Shifting Statutes – Awards under $10 or $50 in some contexts entitle a plaintiff to limited or no costs; plaintiffs who rely on nominal damages to recover costs must now temper expectations.
- Strategic Litigation – Plaintiffs may pursue declaratory or injunctive relief rather than banking on sizeable nominal damages if compensatory proof is weak.
- Legislative Response – The General Assembly could, if policy demands, create statutory minimums for certain rights violations (e.g., civil rights) akin to federal statutory-damage schemes.
- Precedent Clean-Up – Trial and appellate courts must disregard the overruled “no maximum” line and revisit any pending appeals relying on it.
Complex Concepts Simplified
- Nominal Damages – A symbolic, usually tiny sum (think $1) awarded when a right is violated but actual damages cannot be proved.
- Dicta – Judicial musings not essential to the decision; persuasive at best, never binding.
- Invited Error – A party cannot complain on appeal about an error it induced or agreed to below.
- Common-Law Adoption Statute – A statute by which Georgia adopted English judge-made law as of 1776; this “frozen” common law carries statutory force until modified by the legislature.
- Remittitur vs. New Trial – Remittitur reduces an excessive verdict; a new trial re-opens the fact-finding process. Which path is chosen often depends on trial-level error and procedural posture.
Conclusion
Walmart v. Leverette restores a centuries-old understanding that nominal damages are about principle, not profit. By capping such awards at an amount any rational person would deem negligible, the Georgia Supreme Court:
- Re-anchors Georgia tort and contract damages to their English roots;
- Eliminates judicially-created latitude for “windfall” nominal awards;
- Provides clear guidance for trial courts, litigants, and juries; and
- Signals that any expansion of nominal damages must emanate from the legislature, not the bench.
The decision is thus both a doctrinal correction and an instruction in judicial restraint, reaffirming that rights-vindication must not masquerade as compensatory relief. Future litigants seeking meaningful monetary recovery must supply meaningful proof, or settle for the token recognition that the term “nominal damages” truly implies.
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