*162 In this action by a contractor against the State of South Dakota and its Highway Commission the single question is whether a provision in a state highway construction contract is one for liquidated damages, as the trial court found, or is a penalty.
On October 5, 1963 plaintiff, Dave Gustafson & Company, entered into a contract with the State Highway Commission for the construction of the subbase, base and bituminous surfacing of a new public highway between Wessington Springs and Woonsocket. Plaintiff performed a total dollar amount of work in the amount of $530,724.14. Upon completion the new highway replaced the pre-existing portion of State Trunk Highway No. 34 between the two towns. During construction the old portion of Highway 34 remained open for travel by the public in substantially the same manner as it had been for the past five years. After the new highway was completed the old portion of the road was also left open for use as a public highway.
Plaintiff failed to complete the new highway on the date fixed. There was a delay of 67 working days for which there was no extension of time requested or granted. Therefore the state withheld $14,070.00 as liquidated damages from the amount due plaintiff computed according to the contract scale of daily damage for delay in construction. As this project totaled $530,-742.14, the per diem daily damage was $210. This daily damage multiplied by the 67 day delay equals the sum withheld. According to an interrogatory answered by the state any damage, loss, or expense incurred by reason of the delay was "unknown". This did not necessarily mean there were no damages.
The pertinent contract provision reads:
"8.9 FAILURE TO COMPLETE THE WORK ON TIME:— Time is an essential element of the contract and it is important that the work be pressed vigorously to completion. [1] The cost to the Department of the administration of the contract including engineering, inspection, and supervision, will be increased as the time occupied in the work is lengthened. [2] The public is subject to detriment and inconvenience when full use cannot be made of an incomplete project.
*163 "Should the Contractor fail to complete the work within the time agreed upon in the contract or within such extra time as may have been allowed by increases in the contract or by formally approved extensions granted by the Department there shall be deducted from any monies or amount due or that may become due the Contractor, the sum set forth in the schedule shown in Section 8.10 herein, for each and every weather working day, that the work shall remain uncompleted. [3] This sum shall be considered and treated not as penalty but as fixed, agreed liquidated damage due the State from the Contractor by reason of inconvenience to the public, added cost of Engineering and supervision, and other items which have caused an expenditure of public funds resulting from his failure to complete the work within the time specified in the contract."
Section 8.10 provides the following graduated scale of per diem liquadated damages:
From more than To and including
0 25.000 42
25.000 50.000 70
50.000 100,000 105
100,000 500,000 140
500,000 1,000,000 210
1,000,000 2,000,000 280
2,000,000 420"
An unexcused delay in performing a contract after the time fixed for performance constitutes a breach of contract for which damages are recoverable. The measure of damages, except as otherwise provided by statute, is the amount which *164 would "compensate the party aggrieved for all the detriment proximately caused thereby, or which, in the ordinary course of things, would be likely to result therefrom." SDC 1960 Supp. 37.1801. Such actual damages would have to be alleged and proved.
Stipulated sums in the nature of "Penalties imposed by contract * * ’v are void", and unenforceable. SDC 10.0703. However, parties to a contract may agree "upon an amount presumed to be the damage for breach in cases where it would be impracticable or extremely difficult to fix actual damage." SDC 10.0704. "The effect of a clause for 'stipulated damages in a contract is to substitute the amount agreed upon as liquidated damages for the actual damages resulting from breach of the contract, and thereby prevents a controversy between the parties as to the amount of damages. If a provision is construed to be one for liquidated damages, the sum stipulated forms, in general, the measure of damages in case of a breach, and the recovery must be for that amount. No larger or smaller sum can be awarded even though the actual loss may be greater or less." 22 Am.Jur.2d, Damages, § 235, page 321. In such case, evidence of the actual loss or harm suffered is immaterial and irrelevant. Willgohs v. Buerman,
Our statutes reflect the common law on the subject. Restatement, Contracts, § 339 comparatively reads:
"An agreement, made in advance of breach, fixing the damages therefor, is not enforceable as a contract and does not affect the damages recoverable for the breach, unless
(a) the amount so fixed is a reasonable forecast of just compensation for the harm that is caused by the breach, and
(b) the harm that is caused by the breach is one that is incapable or very difficult of accurate estimation."
*165
The difficult problem, in each case, is to determine whether or not the stipulated sum is an unenforceable penalty or an enforceable provision for liquidated damages. This is a question of law for the court to determine. Anderson v. Cactus Heights Country Club,
One of the primary concerns is whether or not damages imposed by contract involve a breach where it would be impracticable or extremely difficult to fix actual damages. Most of our cases turn on this point. Because actual damages were found to be ascertainable and accurately measurable the court refused to enforce stipulated damages provisions in the following earlier cases: Barnes v. Clement,
Perhaps the furthest extension of this rule of construction appears in Fitzgerald v. City of Huron,
In the recent case of Anderson v. Cactus Heights Country Club,
This case reflects the modern tendency not to "look with disfavor upon 'liquidated damages' provisions in contracts. When they are fair and reasonable attempts to fix just compensation for anticipated loss caused by breach of contract, they are enforced
* * *
They serve a particularly useful function when damages are uncertain in nature or amount or are unmeasurable, as is the case in many government contracts.” Priebe
&
Sons v. United States,
Judged in this light and by the standards established in Anderson v. Cactus Heights Country Club,
Affirmed.
