DJ Manufacturing Corporation (DJ) appeals from a decision of the United States Court of Federal Claims granting summary judgment to the government. DJ argued that the liquidated damages clause in the contract between the parties was unenforceable as a penalty. The trial court rejected that argument,
DJ Mfg. Corp. v. United States,
I
In January 1991, the government solicited an offer from DJ for 283,695 combat field packs to support troops who were then participating in Operation Desert Storm. The solicitation documents set forth a delivery schedule, sought accelerated delivery if possible, and provided for liquidated damages for late delivery. The parties negotiated a contract, which became effective on February 14, 1991. Like the underlying solicitation documents, the contract provided that, for each article delivered after the date fixed in the contract, liquidated damages would be assessed at % of one percent of the contract price for each day of delay.
DJ missed several deliveiy deadlines. In accordance with the liquidated damages clause, the government withheld payment in the amount of $663,266.92, a reduction of about 8 percent of the total contract price of $8,493,828.
DJ filed suit in the Court of Federal Claims to recover the withheld amount, contending that the liquidated damages clause constituted an unenforceable penalty. The government moved for summary judgment. In support of its motion, the government submitted a declaration by an Army logistics management specialist, who stated that possession of the field packs was essential to the troops’ combat readiness. In addition, the government submitted a declaration from the contracting officer, who stated that all contracts for items to be used in Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm contained liquidated damages clauses for late delivery because of the need to get war items to the soldiers quickly.
The Court of Federal Claims granted the government’s motion. At the outset, the court held that DJ bore the burden of establishing that the liquidated damages clause was unenforceable, and that in order to avoid summary judgment DJ had to point to evidence raising a triable question of fact with respect to that issue. The court then recited the rule that a liquidated damages clause is enforceable if the harm that would be caused by a breach is difficult to estimate and the amount or rate fixed as liquidated damages is a reasonable forecast of the loss that may be caused by the breach.
As to the first element, the court characterized this ease as presenting “a paradigmatic example of a situation where accurate estimation of the damages resulting from delays in delivery is difficult, if not impossible.” As to the second element, the court rejected DJ’s argument that in order to determine the reasonableness of the liquidated damages, it was necessary to inquire into the process that the contracting officer followed in reaching the amount that was inserted into the contract. The inquiry, the court explained, is an objective one. “The proper inquiry focuses on whether the amount itself is a reasonable forecast, not whether, as [DJ] seems to suggest, the individual responsible for proposing the rate engaged in a reasonable attempt to forecast damages.” Because DJ failed to offer any evidence that the liquidated damages rate agreed upon in the contract was “greater than that which the government could reasonably suffer as a result of the delayed delivery of the field packs,” the court granted the government’s motion and ordered DJ’s complaint to be dismissed.
II
By fixing in advance the amount to be paid in the event of a breach, liquidated damages clauses save the time and expense of litigating the issue of damages. Such clauses “serve a particularly useful function when damages are uncertain in nature or amount or are unmeasurable,”
Priebe & Sons v. United States,
When damages are uncertain or difficult to measure, a liquidated damages clause will be enforced as long as “the amount stipulated for is not so extravagant, or disproportionate to the amount of property loss, as to show that compensation was not the object aimed at or as to imply fraud, mistake, circumvention or oppression.”
Wise v. United States,
A party challenging a liquidated damages clause bears the burden of proving the clause unenforceable.
See Jennie-0 Foods, Inc. v. United States,
While some state courts are hostile to liquidated damages clauses, federal law “does not look with disfavor upon ‘liquidated damages’ provisions in contracts.”
Priebe & Sons, Inc. v. United States,
Another case, equally unusual, involved a liquidated damages clause in a lease. In that case,
Kothe v. R.C. Taylor Trust,
In more conventional cases, when the amount of prospective damages are difficult to determine at the outset and the parties agree upon a fixed amount or rate to pay in the event of a breach, thereby bypassing the trouble and expense of litigating the damages issue, federal courts have regularly upheld liquidated damages clauses.
See, e.g.
(in addition to the cases previously cited),
Robinson v. United States,
Ill
In light of these principles, the trial court was correct to grant summary judgment to the government. D J argues that the government should bear the burden of proving the clause enforceable and that the evidence before the trial court did not establish the government’s right to recovery as a matter of law. That argument, however, flies in the face of settled law regarding the burden of proof and the standards for granting summary judgment.
As noted above, it was DJ’s burden to prove that the liquidated damages clause was unenforceable. When a party moves for summary judgment on an issue as to which the other party bears the burden of proof, the moving party need not offer evidence, but may obtain summary judgment merely by pointing out to the court “that there is an absence of evidence to support the nonmov-ing party’s case.”
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
The only evidence that DJ produced at the summary judgment stage was the affidavit of its president, which alleged that the liquidated damages rate was a “standard” rate, rather than a rate selected specifically for the field pack contract. In addition, DJ relies on the declaration of the contracting officer, which stated that the liquidated damages clause was put into the field pack contract, as well as other contracts for items to be used in Operations Desert Shield/Desert Storm “due to the almost overwhelming need to get war items, such as field packs, into the soldiers’ possession as soon as possible.”
Neither of those two items of evidence raises an issue of material fact requiring a trial. DJ argues that the contracting officer’s statement about the need to get war items into the soldiers’ possession quickly shows that the liquidated damages clause was designed to be a “spur to performance” and thus was an unenforceable penalty. That assertion, however, is at odds with several Supreme Court decisions, which make clear that a liquidated damages clause is not rendered unlawful simply because the promisee hopes that it will have the effect of encouraging prompt performance by the promisor. In
Robinson v. United States,
for example, the Court explained that in the case of construction contracts, “a provision giving liquidated damages for each day’s delay is
an appropriate means of inducing due performance,
or of giving compensation, in case of failure to perform.”
In support of its assertion that an intention to “spur performance” converts a liquidated damages clause into an unenforceable penalty, DJ cites
Priebe & Sons, Inc. v. United States.
That case, however, does not stand for such a broad proposition. As noted above, the liquidated damages clause at issue in
Priebe & Sons
served no compensatory function at all, since there was no possibility that the breach at issue would result in any compensable loss. Thus, the liquidated damages clause was struck down because it served
“only
as an added spur to performance,” and because it constituted “an exaction of punishment for a breach
which could produce no possible
damage.”
There is no inconsistency in a promisee’s seeking assurance of performance through a guarantee of fair compensation for breach. As Williston noted "with respect to standard (and legitimate) liquidated damages provisions, “there can be no doubt that these provisions are intended not merely as a provision for an unfortunate and unexpected contingency but also to secure the promisee in the performance of the main obligation and to make the promisor more reluctant to break it.” 5 Samuel Williston, supra, § 778, at 692. In this respect, at least, Corbin was in agreement. See 5 Arthur J. Corbin, Cor-bin on Contracts § 1058, at 339-40 (1964 ed.) (“The purpose of providing for a money payment in case of breach, whether it be called a penalty, a forfeiture, liquidated damages, or merely a sum of money, is primarily to secure the performance promised____ Penalties are said to be in terrorem to induce performance as promised; in large measure the same is true of liquidated damages.”). What the policy against penalties is designed to prevent is a penal sanction that is so disproportionate to any damage that could be anticipated that it seeks “to enforce performance of the main purpose of the contract by the compulsion of this very disproportion.” 5 Samuel Williston, supra, § 776, at 668 (emphasis added). Nothing that DJ offered or pointed to in the evidence before the trial court remotely suggested that the liquidated damages clause in this case is of that character.
DJ’s second argument is that the evidence before the trial court raised a triable issue of fact as to whether the contracting officer set the liquidated damages rate based on a particularized assessment of the facts of this contract. In making that argument, DJ relies on 48 C.F.R. § 12.202(b), which directs that the “rate of liquidated damages used must be reasonable and considered on a ease-by-case basis since liquidated damages fixed without any reference to probable actual damages may be held to be a penalty, and therefore unenforceable.”
Contrary to DJ’s assertion, section 12.202(b) does not create a rule of substantive law requiring a liquidated damages clause to be struck down unless the liquidated damages rate is specially tailored to the particular contract in advance. Section 12.202(b) merely recognizes that a court may refuse to enforce a liquidated damages clause if the liquidated damages amount or rate is shown not to be reasonably related to the actual damages that the promisee could suffer as a result of a breach, and it advises that care should be taken to ensure that the rate or amount is not unreasonable in light of the possible actual damages that could flow from breach. The regulation thus appears to be designed for internal guidance rather than to create rights in contracting parties. In any event, our predecessor court has held that the language on which DJ relies does not require that liquidated damages clauses be “tailor-made for each individual contract.”
Young
Assocs.,
Inc. v. United States,
Finally, DJ argues that there was a triable issue as to whether the liquidated damages rate that the parties agreed upon in the field pack contract was unreasonable. Once again, DJ bore the burden of pointing to evidence establishing a material factual dispute on that issue, and the trial court correctly held that DJ failed to carry that burden.
The damages that are likely to flow from delays in the delivery of goods is often difficult to assess, particularly when the goods are to be produced in the uncertain setting of wartime.
See Priebe & Sons, Inc. v. United States,
But how much damage could accrue to the Spanish government because a shipyard failed to deliver, at the time agreed upon, four torpedo-boat destroyers? This question was involved in testing the validity of a provision for liquidated damages for delay in the House of Lords decision in Clydebank Engineering and Shipbuilding Co., Ltd. v. Castaneda. How could the damages be accurately determined? As Lord Halsbury said in an opinion upholding the provision ... “in order to do that properly and to have any real effect upon any tribunal determining that question, one ought to have, before one’s mind the whole administration of the Spanish Navy.”
See also 5 Arthur L. Corbin, supra, § 1072, at 402 (“Since the injury caused by [delay in performance] is nearly always difficult to determine, the courts strongly incline to accept the estimate [in a liquidated damages clause] as reasonable and to enforce it”).
In this case, not only did DJ fail to raise a triable question with respect to the difficulty of forecasting damages at the outset, but it also failed to raise any factual issue casting doubt on the reasonableness of the stipulated damages rate. Nor is there anything inherently unreasonable about that rate — a reduction in the contract price of
%
of one percent per day, or two percent per month, on a contract that was supposed to be completed within a period of only a few months. In fact, the decision of our predecessor court in
Pacific Hardware & Steel Co. v. United States,
This basis of ascertaining the damages, if we are to treat it as such, does not appear to be unreasonable or oppressive. It indicates, we think, that the parties had in mind the inherent difficulty of proving actual damages and the differences that might arise between the parties in making settlements if there were delays in delivery. The representatives of the Government on the one hand could reason that it was desirable to have a provision in the contract which would render unnecessary any differences in settlement; while the contractor on the other hand could reason that such a course was preferable, because if for no other reason it would eliminate the delays incident to lawsuits brought to secure settlements.
In addition to being of roughly the same dimension as the liquidated damages rate in this case, the rate in
Pacific Hardware
also appears to have been a “standard” rate, as there were at least two other contemporaneous Court of Claims decisions upholding liquidated damages clauses containing the same liquidated damages rate of
%
of one percent per day.
See Morris v. United States,
AFFIRMED.
