54 Me. 468 | Me. | 1867
Lead Opinion
In the event of his failure to "do and perform each and every condition, and stipulation” in a certain license, and agreement for carrying on a lumbering operation upon the plaintiff’s land, the defendant bound himself to the plaintiff, " in the full and liquidated sum of one thousand dollars, over and above the actual damage” which the plaintiff might sustain in consequence of such non-performance ; and the plaintiff brings this action to recover said sum, as liquidated damages, for the breach of the contract by the defendant.
The question presented for our determination, is whether the sum named in the contract to be paid by the defendant on his failure to fulfil its conditions, is a penalty or liquidated damages.
It is competent for the parties, in making a contract, to leave the damages, arising from a breach of its provisions, to be determined in a court of law, or to specify the amount of such damages in the contract itself. If the contract is silent in respect to damages, the law will allow only the actual, proximate damages. In order, however, to provide for consequential damages, or secure the profits which are expected to arise from business, or contracts that depend upon the performance of the principal contract, or to save expense, or to render certain what would otherwise be difficult, if not impossible to ascertain, it is sometimes desirable that the contract should fix the amount of the damages. If, for instance, a party has a contract for building a ship at a large profit, conditioned upon his having her completed at a specified time, it would be competent for him, in contracting for the materials, to make the damages, in case of breach, sufficient to cover his prospective profits in building the ship. While, to persons unacquainted with the circumstances of the case, the damages stipulated in such a contract might seem greatly disproportionate to the loss sus
The controversy in the courts as to whether the particu
While entire uniformity of judicial opinion is unattainable upon this controverted question, owing to the liability of the particular tribunal to be influenced, iu a greater or less degree, by a desire on the one hand to prevent a supposed hardship, and on the other to give a strict construction to the language of the contract, courts, nevertheless, substantially agree upon the following general principles of interpretation.
1. The words "penalty,” "forfeiture,” or "liquidated damages” are not conclusive, and the Court will examine the other provisions of the contract, its subject matter, the situation of the parties and the course and usages of trade, as well as this particular language, and gather the intention of the
2. Generally, if the actual damages can be readily ascertained, or if the intention of the parties is doubtful, the sum named will be deemed a penalty, but if it is clearly the intention of the parties to fix the amount of the damages, the sum specified will be regarded as liquidated damages, though it should seem disproportionate and inequitable. Chrisdee v. Bolton, 14 Eng. C. L., 547; Brewster v. Edgerly, 13 N. H., 275; Clement v. Cash, 21 N. Y., 253.
3. If the instrument provides for the payment of a larger sum, in future to pay a less one, the larger sum will be regarded as a penalty in respect to the excess over the legal interest, whatever be the language used; and if the contract consist of several stipulations, the damages for the breach of which, independently of the sum named- in the instrument, are uncertain and cannot well be ascertained, the sum agreed upon is to be treated as liquidated damages. Orr v. Churchill, 1 H. Bl., 227; Astley v. Weldon, ante; Mead v. Wheeler, 13 N. H., 351; Atkyns v. Kinnier, 4 Exch., 776.
In the case last cited, Parke, B., thus lays down the rule of law where there are several stipulations in the contract, and only one sum named as the measure of damages. " If a party,” he observes, "agrees to pay' £1000, on several events, all of which are capable of accurate valuation, the sum must be construed as a penalty and not as liquidated damages. But if there be a contract consisting of one or
In the case at bar, the defendant bound himself to the plaintiff "in the full and liquidated sum of one thousand dollars, over and above the actual damage,” in the event of his failure "to do and perform each and every condition and stipulation” in his contract. Language can scarcely make the intention of the parties to fix the amount of the damages more clear and emphatic. The sum named is not only " liquidated,” but, as if to exclude all possibility of its being a penalty, it is declared to be " over and above the actual* damages.” Whether it was to afford an additional stimulus to secure the fulfilment of the contract, or to provide against other losses, or compensate for other advantages, contingent upon this contract, or from the difficulty of ascertaining the actual damages or for some other reason, it is manifest that other damages than the legal damages were taken into the account by the parties when they incorporated this provision in their agreement. Besides, the contract contains several distinct conditions and requirements for the non-fulfilment of which, respectively, no sum is specified; and it is impossible to ascertain such damages from the very nature of these stipulations. What actual damages would result to the plaintiff, solely from the defendant’s omission to land the logs at a suitable place, or to notify the scaler seasonably, or to mark the logs, or drive them as early as practicable, or to cut clear without waste, or to perform the dozen other stipulations of the contract, is practically beyond the power of a judicial tribunal to as
According to the agreement of the parties, the defendant is to be defaulted for the sum of one thousand dollars, with interest from the date of the writ.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. — The plaintiff, on 10th Oct., 1860, gave the defendant a permit to cut timber on land owned by him, on certain conditions and stipulations therein expressed. The concluding clause of the permit is in these words: — "And the said grantee hereby agrees with the said grantor to go upon premises with the said three or more teams well manned and furnished, in due and proper season, and cut and remove timber as aforesaid, and truly and faithfully do and perform each and every condition and stipulation expressed in this license and agreement, hereby binding himself in the full and liquidated sum of one thousand dollars, well and truly to be paid to the grantor on 'demand, over and above the actual damage which said grant- <or may sustain by the non-performance of any agreement (hereinbefore contained.”
The plaintiff claims one thousand dollars as liquidated 'damages. What are liquidated damages ?
In case of a contract, damages are. the pecuniary satisfaction to which the injured party is entitled by way of compensation for its breach. Liquidated damages are damages agreed upon by the parties, as and for a compensation for ■and in lieu of the actual damages arising from such breach.
In the case at bar, the sum of one thousand dollars was not liquidated damages. It was not for damages at all. The contract so expressly and unqualifiedly states it. It was a sum " over and above the actual damages.” The plaintiff, by its terms, was further entitled to recover "the actual damage” which he might sustain by " the non-performance of any agreement hereinafter contained.” Suppose the actual damages were five thousand dollars, would not the plaintiff be entitled to recover that sum ? Most assuredly. The actual damages are therefore excluded from the sum of one thousand dollars, and yet remain to be assessed.
It is difficult to conceive of a clearer case of a penalty, than that where a party is required to pay one thousand dollars over and above what he owes. If that is not a penalty, what is or what can be ?
The intent of the parties is to be ascertained from the agreement. The mere use of the words "penalty,” "forfeiture,” or " liquidated damages,” is not at all decisive of the question. In Kemble v. Farrar, 6 Bing., 141, the sum of £1000 was " declared by the parties to be liquidated and ascertained damages, and not a penalty, or penal sum, or in the nature thereof,” yet, notwithstanding these sweeping words, the Court, upon an examination of the contract, decided that the sum must be taken to be á penalty, and that it was for the jury to assess the real damages sustained by reason of the breach of the agreement in suit.
Liquidated damages are fixed, settled and agreed upon in advance, to avoid all litigation as to those actually sustained. They are a compensation for and in lieu of actual damages, never in addition thereto. The language of the agreement leaves no room for any other conclusion than that the sum fixed is a penalty. It is not for damages, by the terms of the contract. It is not, therefore, a sum agreed upon in