30 App. D.C. 270 | D.C. Cir. | 1908
delivered the opinion of the Court:
Counsel for plaintiff contends that the contract provides for the imposition of a penalty, and not liquidated damages, and therefore the District of Columbia was only entitled to deduct from the contract price the amount of damages actually sustained in consequence of plaintiff’s delay in delivering the boat. In England, before the passage of the statute of forfeitures and penalties (8 & 9 Wm. III.), in actions at law on a contract, where the performance of the conditions was secured by a penalty, the recovery was for the full amount of the penalty. Courts of equity, however, could relieve against fraud or mistake. The effect of this statute was to furnish the same relief in a court of law as could be obtained in a court of equity. In Sun Printing & Pub. Asso. v. Moore, 183 U. S.
There is nothing to prevent the parties from stipulating in advance that a certain sum shall be the damages which one shall forfeit to the other for failure to perform the conditions of a valid contract. Especially is this true where the damages
Whether the sum agreed to be paid as damages for the failure to perform the conditions of a contract shall be treated as liquidated damages or as a penalty is to be drawn from the subject-matter of the agreement, the meaning and intent of
It is contended by counsel for plaintiff that the defendant, by the receipt of the engineer of the fire department of June 5th, and the order of the commissioners of July 3d, waived all right to retain liquidated damages. The receipt given by the engineer of the fire department upon the arrival of the boat in Washington cannot be construed into either a release
The order of the commissioners of July 3d, however, presents a more difficult question. Usually the acceptance of work contracted for by one of the parties relieves the other party of liability for delay in the performance of his part of the contract, but such acceptance must be uziconditional, and with full knowledge, on the part of the accepting party, of any default on the part of the other party. Here the acceptance was upon
Reversed.