Enеrgy Plus Consulting, LLC (“EPC”) sued defendants Illinois Fuel Company, LLC and Appalachian Fuels, LLC, alleging breach of contract and seeking $720,000 in damages. The contract pro *908 vided that if the defеndants failed to release an option in a separate contract with a third party by a specified date, they would pay EPC $720,000. The district court, in granting defendants’ motiоn for summary judgment, found that the $720,000 provision was an unenforceable penalty clause. We agree with the district court, and therefore affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
The contract at issue arоse from Washington County, Illinois’ (the “County”) efforts to lease a coal reserve given to it by Exxon Corporation. In April 2001, the County entered into a contract with EPC (the “Standstill Agreement”) granting EPC the exclusive right, for eighteen months, to contract with third parties to develop the reserve. The County, however, reserved its right to reject third-party proposals submitted by EPC.
Consistent with the Standstill Agreement, EPC solicited several companies potentially interested in exploring the reserve, including the defendants, Illinois Fuel Company, LLC and Appalachian Fuels, LLC (referenced jointly as “Fuels”). On August 13, 2001, Fuels and EPC signed an agreement (the “Agreement”) which provided that EPC would present Fuels to the County as a potential candidate interested in exploring the reserve. In turn, upon entering into an option contract with the County providing Fuels an exclusive right to explore the reserve, Fuels would pay EPC $100,000. The Agreement also included the following clause:
Fuels shall pay to Energy Plus Seven-Hundred Twenty-Thousand Dollars ($720,000) upon which-ever shall occur first:
(A.) the expiration of ninety days from the date of execution of the Option, unless Fuels has released the Option, or
(B.) the execution of a Mining Lease.
The Agreement further specified that if Fuels executed a mining lease with the County, Fuels would also pay EPC $720,000 on- the date of execution for the next four years.
On August 13, 2001, following the execution of the Agreement between Fuels and EPC, Fuels and the County executed an option contract granting Fuels the exclusive right to explore and lease the reserve. The option expired the sooner of February 13, 2002 or the date upоn which Fuels Completed its due diligence. After executing the option contract, Fuels paid EPC $100,000, as required under the Agreement.
On November 15, 2001, four days after the expiration of the ninety-day deadline in the Agreement, EPC and Fuels amended the Agreement (the “Amendment”), extending the ninety-day deadline for Fuels to either pay $720,000 or release the option until December 31, 2001. 1 Fuels paid $50,000 for the extension. The Amendment also stipulated that Fuels could extend the deadline to February 13, 2002 if Fuels paid EPC another $50,000 by no later than December 31, 2001.
On January 4, 2002, four days after the deadline to release the option agreement expired, Fuels notified the County by letter that it would not exercise the option аnd also informed EPC of its decision by telephone. On January 10, 2002, EPC received a copy of the letter advising it of Fuels’ decision. In response, EPC demanded that Fuels pay it $720,000 pursuаnt to the Amendment’s provision which required the payment if Fuels did not re *909 lease the option on or before December 31, 2001. When Fuels refused to pay, EPC filed this lawsuit in the Circuit Court оf Washington County, Illinois, alleging breach of contract. The case was removed to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Illinois and both parties filed motions for summаry judgment. The district court denied EPC’s motion but granted summary judgment in favor of Fuels, finding that the clause calling for the $720,000 payment was an unenforceable penalty. EPC appeals.
II. ANALYSIS
We review a district court’s decision to grant summary judgment de novo, viewing all facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, and determine whether there is a genuine issue for triаl.
Hilt-Dyson v. City of Chicago,
Whether a contractual provision is a valid liquidated damages clause or an unenforceable penalty clause is a question of state law that we reviеw de novo.
Checkers Eight LP v. Hawkins,
The provision of the contract requiring Fuels to pay the $720,000 that EPC demands is a penalty under Illinois law because the clause mandating thе payment was not reasonable at the time of contracting.
See Checkers,
The November 15 Amendment is additional evidence of this single sum’s unreasonableness. It gave Fuels the option of purchasing a forty-five day еxtension beyond December 31 for $50,000. This suggests that, at least as of November 15, the cost of keeping the reserves off the market beyond December 31 was closer to $50,000. Thus, EPC’s requirement of a $720,000 payment, even for notifying EPC one day after the specified deadline that Fuels would not exercise the option, is an unenforceable penalty under Illinois law.
To avoid this characterization, EPC contends that this Court’s holding in
Scavenger Sale Investors v. Bryant,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we Affirm the district court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of thе defendants.
Notes
. Although the Amendment was executed on November 15, 2001, it was dated November 11, 2001.
. Some Illinois courts also include a third prong: "[whether] the parties intended to agree in advance to the settlement of damages that might arise from the breach
...See, e.g., Med+Plus Neck and Back Pain Center v. Noffsinger,
. EPC apparently attempts to avoid the characterization of the $720,000 as a penalty by arguing that it was either one, or a combination, of the following: (1) an estimate of the damages it would incur by taking the coal reserve off the market beyond the December 31 deadline; (2) a fee for taking the coal reserve off the market; or (3) the first installment of five payments under the mining lease.
