The Columbus Dispatch

JPMorgan $8 billion jury loss to widow faces massive reduction

- By Tom Korosec and Margaret Cronin Fisk

JPMorgan Chase will probably face a judgment of no more than $90 million in a lawsuit claiming mismanagem­ent of an estate that initially brought a jury verdict of $8 billion in punitive damages.

A Dallas jury in September awarded excessive punitives and duplicate actual damages, the widow and children of Max Hopper, a former American Airlines executive, said in court filings.

Lawyers for Stephen Hopper and Laura Wassmer asked a Dallas probate court to limit punitive damages to them and their father’s estate to about $70 million, down from a total of $6 billion awarded by the jury. Hopper and Wassmer also asked for $3.9 million for losses and attorneys’ fees.

The widow, Jo Hopper, asked the court to lower her award to $14.4 million, according to a filing from her lawyers disclosed Friday.

The final award could go even lower. JPMorgan is seeking to reverse the entire judgment.

The dispute over the estate began with the death of Max Hopper in 2010. Hopper, who pioneered a reservatio­n system for the airline, died unexpected­ly with assets of more than $19 million but without a will, family lawyers said.

JPMorgan was hired to administer the estate and the bank should have divided the assets and released them to Jo Hopper and her stepchildr­en, according to the lawsuit. Instead, her lawyers said in a statement, “the bank took years to release basic interests in art, home furnishing­s, jewelry, and notably, Mr. Hopper’s collection of 6,700 golf putters and 900 bottles of wine. Some of the interests in the assets were not released for more than five years.’’

The plaintiffs alleged that bank representa­tives failed to meet financial deadlines for assets under their control, stock options were allowed to expire, and Mrs. Hopper’s wishes to sell stock were ignored. Stephen Hopper and Laura Wassmer also claimed that the bank cut them out of decisions and kept them uninformed in order to curry favor with their stepmother. Jo Hopper initially sued the bank, alleging breach of fiduciary duty. JPMorgan paid legal fees to defend this out of the estate account, depleting it by more than $3 million, the plaintiffs’ said in court filings.

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