106 F. 385 | 7th Cir. | 1901
Upon the foregoing statement of facts,
delivered the opinion of the court.
We think it was error to direct a verdict for the full amount of $20,000, the amount named in the bond, without requiring evidence of actual damages sustained. Such a claim would seem to savor more of the pound of flesh and "due and forfeit of my bond” rule than of the spirit of modern equity. Unless it be clear that the case is one where it would be difficult or impossible to assess the actual damages from testimony given, the court should construe the amount named in the bond or contract as a penalty, although the parties have chosen to call it “stipulated damages." It is a general rule that, where the contract provides for the payment of a large; sum of money upon the failure of the party to pay a smaller sum, the amount named as damages will be construed as a penalty, although called “stipulated damages.” This is not because the contract to pay money is essentially different from a contract to perform work or labor or to do any other thing, but because the actual damages are capable of assessment; and the rule is just the same in all cases where the actual damages can be assessed from testimony. The parties cannot, by calling the sum mentioned “stipulated damages,” change what is essentially a penalty intended to secure the performance of the contract into damages, to take the place of the damages actually sustained. The Revised Statutes of the United States (section 961) provide:
“Tn all suits brought to recover the forfeiture annexed to any articles of agreement, covenant. Pond, or other specialty, where the forfeiture, breach or nou-peri'ornmneo appears by the default or confession of the defendant or upon demurrer, the court shall render judgment for the plaintiff to recover so much as is due according to equity. And when the sum for which judgment should be rendered is uncertain, it shall, if either of the parties request it, be assessed by a jury.-’
This rule congress has provided for the guidance of the federal courts in all cases where it is applicable. It is just, benign, and equitable, while the rule which the court has applied in the case at bar seems harsh, inequitable, and quite unnecessary. Aside from the above statute, which defines the attitude of the government towards these cases, and prescribes the rule it is willing to abide by, we think, under the more recent adjudications of the courts, both in this country and in England, the $20,000 mentioned in the bond in this case should be construed as a penalty, rather than as stipulated damages to be recovered upon any slight breach of the contract, when nominal damages or small actual damages to be assessed by the jury would satisfy the conditions more justly and equitably. If the parties could at will change what is essentially a penalty, and properly intended to enforce the obligations of the contract, into stipulated damages, it could be done in any case, although the dam
*391 “It is hereby mutually agreed by and between the parties hereto that the measure of damages for the default of either party to carry out its agreement shall be $50,000. less such sums as may have been paid by either party to the other.”
. The plaintiff sought to recover the $59,000 as stipulated damages, and the defendant made the same claim against the plaintiff, by way of counterclaim. No proof of damages was offered by either party, and «he court held that neither party could recover the §50,000, which, the court construed as a penalty. The opinion in that case will obviate the necessity of any very extended review of the authorities in the case at bar. fcftill, a brief reference to some of the leading adjudications contained in the brief for plaintiff in error may not be inappropriate.
In Manufacturing Co. v. Camp, 13 C. C. A. 137, 65 Fed. 794, 25 U. S. App. 134, it was provided in the contract that:
“The sum of $5,000 is now hereby estimated, assessed, and accepted between-the parties hereto as liquidated damages to be paid by the parties of the second part unto the party of the first part, which tiie parties of the second part hereby declare to be due, and promise and bind themselves to pay unto said party"of the first part, or to its assigns, immediately upon the termination or annulment, or declaration of the termination or annulment, of this contract by the party of the first part for any of the causes or reasons herein set out.”
Upon this clause in the contract the court say:
“Is this sum of $5,000 inserted as a. penalty or as liquidated damages? ‘Upoii this subject,’ sajs Judge Deady in Harris v. Miller, 6 Sawy. 319, 11 Fed. 118, ‘the law is peculiar, and, instead of giving effect to the contract of, the parties according to their intentions, it assumes to control them according to its standard of justice.’ In a note to Spencer v. Tilden, 5 Cow. 144, it fe said: ‘This doctrine which converts damages apparently stipulated or fixed by the parties into a penalty came from the civil law through tin» court of c-ixancery, and has at length obtained a firm hold in the courts of common law. It is obvious that, in order to enforce it, courts must disregard the particular expressions of the parties; for the moment we agree that a party may, by calling a real penalty “liquidated damages,” or throwing it into the form of aw alternative in a contract, or substituting its payment for some specified default, secure the whole to himself, without regard to the real damages, we bring back the oppressive rule of the common law. The griping creditor will always use the particular form or phraseology of contract which will secure him his pound of flesh unless the courts interfere in all cases, and tell him that, from the very nature and essence of his bond, whatever he claims, and in whatever shape, or upon whatever footing, if it be in truth plainly beyond the legal amount of damages, so far it shall he no more than nominal.’ The rule laid down in. Barton v. Glover, Holt, N. P. 43, 45, is: ‘Where a sum of money, whether in, the name of a penalty or otherwise, is introduced in a covenant or agreement merely to secure the enjoyment of a collateral object, the enjoyment of the object is considered as the principal intent of the deed or contract, and the penalty only as accessory, and therefore only to secure the damage really incurred'.’ The fact that the parties speak of it as ‘liquidated damages’ is not conclusive [citing Lampman v. Cochran, 16 N. Y. 275]. ⅞ ⅜ * ‘The subject-mat'or of the contract and the intention of the parties are the controlling guides. If, from the nature of the agreement, it is clear that any attempt to get at the actual damages would lie difficult, if not vain, then the courts wiiS incline to give the relief which the parties have agreed on. But if, on the other hand, the contract is such that the strict construction of the phraseology would work absurdity or oppression, the use of ihe term “liquidated damages’” will not prevent the courts from inquiring into the actual injury sustained, and doing justice between the parties.’ Sedg. Meas. Dam. (7th Ed.) 399; Pom. Eq. Jur. § 433.”
“By the rules now established, at law as well as in equity, the sum of $10,-000, named in this bond, is a penalty only, and not liquidated damages. As observed by Lord Tenterden in a similar case, ‘Whoever framed this agreement does not appear to have had any very clear idea of the distinction between a penalty and liquidated damages, for the sum in question is described in the same sentence as a penal sum and as liquidated damages.’ Davies v. Penton, 6. Barn. & C. 216, 222, 9 Dow. & Ry. 369, 376.”
The subject of liquidated damages is fully and exhaustively considered, and what we consider the true rule laid down, in 19 Cent. Law J. 284, as follows:
“But if the court, after a thorough inspection of the contract in all its provisions, and consideration of its subject-matter, and all its surrounding circumstances, the ease or difficulty of measuring the breach in damages, the situation of the parties, and the usages to which they may be understood to refer, from the whole, decide that equity and good conscience require that such sum be treated, not as liquidated damages, but as a penalty provided to secure the due performance of the act, and therefore subject to the chancery powers of equity courts, or the statutory powers of common-law courts, they will betray no hesitation in doing so,”—citing Peine v. Weber, 47 Ill. 43; Low v. Nolte, 16 Ill. 475, 477; Hahn v. Hortman, 12 Bush, 249; Foley v. McKeegan, 4 Iowa, 1; Williams v. Green, 14 Ark. 315, 321; Dwinel v. Brown, 54 Me. 468, 471; Bearden v. Smith, 11 Rich. Law, 554, 556; Grasselli v. Lowden, 11 Ohio St. 349, 361; Reynolds v. Bridge, 6 El. & Bl. 545; McPhee v. Wilson, 25 U. C. Q. B. 169, 172; Magee v. Lavell, L. R. 9 C. P. 107, 115; Beale v. Hayes, 5 Sandf. 640; Hoag v. McGinnis, 22 Wend. 163, 165; Gillis v. Hall, 7 Phila. 422, 2 Brewst. 342; Perkins v. Lyman, 11 Mass. 76, 81; Hodges v. King, 7 Metc. (Mass.) 583; Dakin v. Williams, 22 Wend. 201; Chamberlain v. Bagley, 11 N. H. 234; Hosmer v. True, 19 Barb. 106; Streeper v. Williams, 48 Pa. St. 450; Curry v. Larer, 7 Pa. St. 470; Cushing v. Drew, 97 Mass. 445; Lindsay v. Anesley, 6 Ired. Law, 186; Foley v. McKeegan, 4 Iowa, 1; Hamaker v. Shroers, 49 Mo. 406; Dwinel v. Brown, 54 Me. 468, 471; Hise v. Foster, 17 Iowa, 23; Bigony v. Tyson, 75 Pa. St. 157: Grasselli v. Lowden, 11 Ohio St. 349, 351; Colwell v. Foulks, 36 How. Prac. 306, 320; Fisk v. Gray, 11 Allen, 132; Wallis v. Carpenter, 13 Allen, 19; Lord v. Gaddis, 9 Iowa, 265.
Again, the author says:
“The leading case upon the second branch of the rule just stated is Kemble v. Farren, 6 Bing. 141. Though it has been questioned and repudiated by some courts as an attempt to make a contract for the parties in derogation of their own, as an unjustifiable interference with the freedom of action of competent persons, it has withstood all hostile criticism, and the array of eases which have cited it with approval and followed it is a standing voucher for the logic of its decision. An actor made a contract not to play for five seasons with any one but the obligee, and the latter promised to pay the former £3. 10s. each night, and some small expenses in addition. The bond provided that, if either party should violate any of such promises, he should forfeit to the other the sum of £1,000, not by way of penalty, but as and by way of liquidated damages. As a strict adherence to this language would have made the employer liable in the sum of £1,000 for a neglect to pay one single night’s stipend, viz. £3. 10s., the damages for the nonpayment of which would be too slight for notice, and as there was nothing to indicate that this result was to be excluded, but, on the other hand, the clause covered violations of any and all stipulations, the court came to the conclusion that the intention of the parties, which is the ‘pole star* in the construction of all compacts, was not to effect so absurd a result, but merely to provide a penalty as security for the due per*393 formance of the various stipulations, and that the words employed were either inserted by mistake, or for purposes of deception and to evade the well-known policy of the law.”
In Wilhelm v. Eaves (Or.) 27 Pac. 1053, 14 L. R. A. 297, there was up for construction a stipulation for the payment of $200 “as liquidated damages on ihe breach of any of several promises or agreements which were of varying degrees of importance.” The court, in an exhaustive opinion holding this to be penalty, and not for liquidated damages, says:
“The decision of the question as to whether a given sum, provided in the contract to be paid on a breach thereof, shall be considered as liquidated damages or a penalty, is often inherently difficult, and there is much apparent conflict in the adjudged cases. The words ‘liquidated damages’ are not at all conclusive as to the character of the stipulation. Compensation for a breach of a contract is always desirable, and the courts are not hound by the language used by the parties; and, if the construction is at all doubtful, the tendency of the courts is in favor of the interpretation which makes the sum a penalty. Cushing v. Drew, 97 Mass. 445. While it is usually said that the intention of the parties, as gathered from the subject-matter of the contract, the language used, and surrounding circumstances, is to govern in eases of this kind, ‘such intention,’ says Mr. Sutherland, ‘under Uto artificial rules that have been adopted, is determined by very latitudinary construction. To be potential and controlling that a stated sum is liquidated damages, that sum must be fixed as tiie basis of compensation, and substantially limited to it, for just compensation is recognized as the universal measure of damages not punitory. Parties may liquidate the amount by previous agreement, but, where a stipulated sum is evidently not based on that principle, the Intention to liquidate damages will either be found not to exist, or will be disregarded, and the stated sum treated as a penalty.’ 1 Suth. Meas. Dam. 480. In Jaquith v. Hudson, 5 Mich. 133, the court says: ‘The law, following ihe dictates of equity and natural justice in cases of this kind, adopts the principle of just compensation for the loss or injury actually sustained, considering it no greater violation of this principle to confine the injured party to the recovery of less than to enable him, by the aid of a court, to- extort more. * * * This principle of natural justice, the courts of law, following courts of equity, have, in this class of cases, adopted as the law of Ihe contract; and they will not permit the parties, by express stipulation, or any form of language, however clear the intent, to set it aside.’ From the confused array of individual cases upon this question there may be deduced certain general rules that are recognized and enforced by the courts, and the apparent conflict in the cases arises rather from the application of these rules to the facts of the individual case than in the principles themselves. One of these rules is that when a contract: specifying one certain sum as liquidated damages contains various stipulations of different degrees of importance, and the damages from a breach of some of which would be easily ascertainable, though the remainder might belong to that class winch justifies such arrangement as to damages, and by the terms of the contract such sum would be payable equally on the failure to perform the least as to that to perform the most important, or equally on the failure to perform that one the damage from the violation of which would be easily ascertainable as to that from the breach of which the loss would be difficult of ascertainment, the stipulated sum will be regarded as a penalty, and not liquidated damages, though the language of the parties be the strongest which could be employed to evince a contrary intent,”- — citing Kemble v. Farren. 6 Bing. 141; Carter v. Strom, 41 Minn. 522, 43 N. W. 394; Lampman v. Cochran, 16 N. Y. 275; Daily v. Litchfield, 10 Mich. 29; Cheddick’s Ex’r v. Marsh, 21 N. J. Law, 463; Trower v. Elder, 77 Ill. 452; Lyman v. Babcock, 40 Wis. 503; Niver v. Rossman, 18 Barb. 50; 3 Pars. Cont. 361; 2 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 443; 1 Suth. Meas. Dam. 521; 19 Cent. Law J. 282, where the authorities are fully collated.
“It is not always, however, that damages are to be construed as liquidated because the parties have construed them to be so. The language of the parties to the agreement in question is clear and emphatic that the sum of $3,000 shall be recoverable from the party making default, as and for liquidated damages; yet no court of justice, without an entire disregard of prior decisions, can give effect to the apparent intentions of the parties by adopting that construction of their agreement which the terms they have used so forcibly suggest. * * * When consequences so unreasonable would follow, the law presumes that they must have been overlooked by the parties, and therefore mercifully gives to their language an interpretation which excludes them. When it would be plainly unconseientious to exact a large sum for a trivial breach, even a court of law, acting upon a principle of equity, will release the parties from the literal obligation Which their language imports.”
■ In Suth. Meas. Dam. p. 601, the author, in speaking of these building contracts, says:
“In a building contract containing the usual clauses fixing the days for completing the various parts of the work, a stipulation to the effect that any neglect to comply with the conditions of the contract and finish the work as provided should entitle the employer to claim damages at the rate of ■ $10 per day for every day’s detention so caused was held a covenant for stipulated damages. The more recent authorities, however, are to the effect that the damages ordinarily resulting from the failure to fulfill a building contract which contains only the usual conditions are not so uncertain as to be the subjects for such stipulations.”
"One of the leading English cases upon this subject is that of In re '.Newman, Ex parte Capper, 4 Ch. Div. 724. The case grew out of a ■contract for the erection of certain buildings, which provided that they should be completed by the 25th day of December, 1875; the language of the contract on this point being:
“The said works to be finished, completed, and delivered up, cleared of ■■all scaffolding, rubbish, and other impediments, on or before the 25th of December, 1875, and in default thereof the said contractor shall forfeit and •pay to the said governors the sum of £10 per week for every week after that date during'which the said work shall remain unfinished and not delivered up.”
The works were commenced by the contractors, and were carried '■•on by them, until the 5th of November, 1875, when they failed. On .the 3d of February following, the governors entered into a contract with the sureties of the contractors for the completion of the buildings on their own account, which contract contained a stipulation that nothing therein contained should prejudice the remedy of the ■governors under the prior agreement and bond. The works were ultimately completed by the sureties, but not until September, 1876. In February, 1876, the governors tendered proof against the estate of 'the contractors for the sum of £1000, as liquidated damages for the breach of the contract. The affidavit of proof made did not allege any particular damage, and the trustees rejected the claim against ■the estate on the ground that it was not shown.that any damage had "been sustained by the nonperformance of the contract. Application being made by the governors of the county court, the judge affirmed the decision of the trustees on the ground that the final- clause was
“The provisions of this contract are so plain that, however it may have-hoen in other cases which have been mentioned, it would be very difficult 1o give any other meaning to them than that which they bear on their face. * * * Here it was of the substance-the very essence — of the contract that the buildings should be completed by the 25th of December. Ik November the trustees had the option of saying that they would or would not complete the contract, and they went on with it up to a certain time,, when they repudiated it. The meaning of the clause, if it means anything; at all, is that the penalty of £1,000 has been incurred. X cannot alter the contract. I cannot find any circumstances to Induce me to say, or to justify me in saying, that in the events which have happened a less sum than £!,-• OCO should be paid. If I were to say that, I should be obliged to asli myself how much less than £1,000 ought to be paid. What means have I of ascertaining that? It has not been suggested that there are any particulars' of the amount of damage which has been incurred, and t do not know that anybody is in a position to- furnish them. But I say that, if the contention of the trustees were right, I should be puzzled greatly in either finding, or directing any other tribunal to find, the amount of the specific damage', which lias been sustained. The order is wrong, and the appeal must succeed. The appellants must have their costs of the hearing in the Court below and of the appeal.”
From this decision the trustees appealed. Upon this final appeal the opinion of Chief Justice Bacon was reversed by the concurring opinions of all the justices, from which we quote as follows:
“James, L. J. I am of opinion that this case is clearly within those which' have been referred to by Mr. Bagshawe. The authority of Kemble v. Farren cannot be considered as having been in any degree nibbled away by those-cases before Lord Wensleydale which have been referred to, and which' it is said show that the principle of Kemble v. Farren is to be confined to a; case in which, amongst other stipulations, there was one stipulation for the payment of a sum of money. That was not the ratio decidendi of KemWe v. Barren, in which it was laid down in broad terms that, ‘wherever" there is a sum mentioned at the end of a contract as damages for the nonper--formalice of any of a great number of stipulations, there it must be treated as a penalty.’ The law is, I think, stated in a very satisfactory way in a case which was referred to in the argument of Kemble v. Farren. I mean Astley v. Weldon, 2 Bos. & P. 346, in which Air. Justice Ileath said: ‘Where-artieles contain covenants for the performance of several things, and then, one large sum is stated at the end to be paid upon breach of performance, that must be considered as a penalty. But where it is agreed that, if a party do. such a particular tiling, such a sum shall be paid by him, there the sum stated' may bo treated as liquidated damages.’ ”
‘•Baggalíay, ,T. A. I am of the same opinion. I will only add that the principle upon which Kemble v. Farren was decided was commented ttpoi* by Lord Westlmry in the case of Thompson v. Hudson, L. R. 4 H. L. I, in-these terms: ‘If the sum described as liquidated damages be a large sum. and the title to that sum is to a,rise upon some very trifling consideration, then it follows plainly that the large sum named never could have been meant to be the real measure of damages. It was an oppressive agreement. The sum named never could have been the proper amount of damages arising, upon the nonobservanco of some of the stipulations of that, agreement, which probably would have been measured by a few shillings; and therefore the very large sum stated to be damages was properly regarded as in the nature of a penalty.’ If further authority is wanted for the decision at which we have arrived in this caso, I think it is founts in the words used by Lord Coleridge in Magee v. Lavell, L. R. 9 C. P. 107. which appear exactly applicable to the present case.”
“I„ am entirely of the same opinion. I do not wish to quote anything I have said as an authority, and I do not wish to repeat it. Therefore, instead of repeating, it, I will simply say that I abide by everything I said in Betts v. Burch, 4 Hurl. & N. 506. It has been argued that in Galsworthy v. Strutt, 1 Exch. 659, and the other eases referred to by Mr. De Gex. we have the authority of Lord Wensleydale that this £1,000 can be proved against the debtor’s estate. If it were a question of bare authority, independently of principle, I should say that we have the rule laid down by Lord Coleridge in Magee v. Lavell, L. R. 9 C. P. 107, expressly to the. contrary, where he says: ‘If we look to the nature of the contract in the present case, it will be seen that it involves several events of various degrees of importance; and therefore, according to the general principle governing such cases, the sum mentioned must be considered as a penalty, and not liquidated damages.’ I am of the opinion that this appeal must be allowed. I may add that I cannot think there can be any difficulty in assessing the damages.”
, We are of opinion that the case at bar comes fairly within the spirit and meaning of these adjudications. The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to grant a new trial.