This is an appeal from the final judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts, issued on remand following a prior appeal to this Court, declaring that the “Deficit Loan” made by BCA 1 to Fort Hill Square Associates accrued compound interest. FHS
Properties Limited Partnership contests the award of compound, rather than simple, interest. For the reasons discussed below, we agree with the appellant that the district court’s award of compound interest was in error.
BACKGROUND
The facts of this case were thoroughly laid out by this Court in
FHS Properties Ltd. Partnership v. BC Associates,
FHS brought this action to clarify whether BCA’s settlement payment was a partnership expense. The district court concluded that BCA was entitled to indemnification payments from the partnership in the amount of $2.1 million, accruing interest at 6% per annum. However, in FHS Properties, we held that BCA’s payment met the conditions of a “deficit loan” under the partnership agreement, which among other things entitled BCA to interest at a rate of 18% per annum. See id. at 86-87. Accordingly, we reversed the district court’s judgment and remanded for proceedings consistent with our opinion.
*50 FHS then moved for the district court to enter final judgment specifying whether the interest on the deficit loan would be simple or compound. The deficit loan provision provides only that such loans “shall bear interest at an annual rate which is two percentage points above the so-called ‘Prime rate’ ... or at 18% per year, whichever is greater.”
After a brief discussion of Massachusetts law 2 relating to the availability of compound interest, and without any discussion of the facts of the case, the district court concluded that the interest should be compounded, “because compounding is the equitable means of fully compensating a creditor-partner under the Deficit Loan provision.” FHS Props. Ltd. Partnership v. BC Assocs., No. 94-CV-11346-MEL, slip. op. at 2 (D.Mass. Aug. 26, 1999).
DISCUSSION
The appellant challenges the district court’s award of compound interest, arguing that under Massachusetts law, a court does not have discretion to award compound interest in the absence of an express provision in the contract. The ap-pellee acknowledges this general rule but contends, however, that there is an equitable exception that was rightfully invoked in this case where FHS behaved inequitably.
Whether Massachusetts law permits a court to fashion an equitable remedy of compound interest on a contractual debt is a question of law, which is, therefore, subject to de novo review.
See Negron v. Caleb Brett U.S.A., Inc.,
In Massachusetts, compound interest is generally disfavored.
See Ellis v. Sullivan,
It is undisputed that the deficit loan provision in the partnership agreement does not expressly provide for the compounding of interest. Indeed, it provides only that a deficit loan “shall bear interest at an annual rate ... [of no more than] 18% per year.” Furthermore, the overwhelming majority of Massachusetts cases equate an interest rate “per annum,” whether in a contract or a statute, with simple interest.
See, e.g., Coupounas,
We are not moved by the appellee’s contention that such a reading of the provision unfairly penalizes BCA because the loan repayment will come, in part, from its own partnership profits. Such is necessarily, and thus foreseeably, the circumstance with every deficit loan by its terms, and the provision could have been drafted accordingly to provide for compound interest. We enforce the contract as written, and “ ‘are not free to revise or change’ ” it.
Hakim,
Nevertheless, the appellee argues that compound interest was appropriate in this case because the jury found FHS’s conduct to be inequitable. To that end, the . appel-lee argues that equitable principles governed this case from the beginning, and that this Court should look to equity and not contract for just compensation. For support, the appellee directs the Court to its Answer, its submissions of special verdict questions for the jury, and the language of the district court’s Memorandum and Decision to award compound interest.
After a thorough review of the record and briefs, we cannot agree. BCA’s position throughout the trial was that the $5.6 million settlement payment qualified as a deficit loan under the terms of the partnership agreement. Only as an afterthought, once the case had been submitted to the jury, did BCA raise the issue of compound interest as a matter of equity.
. Furthermore, we are not convinced that the district court reached the decision that interest should be compounded as a matter of equity. To be sure, the district court used the word “equitable” in its conclusion. However, there is no subsequent analysis of the equities of the case to support the appellee’s contention that the award of compound interest was based on FHS’s misconduct. Absent a discussion of the equities, the more plausible reading of the opinion is that the court was interpreting and applying the terms of the deficit loan provision.
In any event, accounting for “equitable considerations” does not convert a contract action to one in equity. We have not been presented with any authority establishing that the district court had the discretion to depart from the terms of the contract based on equitable considerations. The majority of cases on which the appellee relies for the proposition that a court has discretion to award compound interest involve proceedings in equity.
See Chokel v. First Nat’l Supermarkets, Inc.,
*52
Buckley
involved an exclusive, franchise agreement, but the action itself was deemed an action in equity to recover damages.
See Buckley,
In
Howes,
a contractor sued to recover for labor and materials expended in the alteration and repair of the defendant’s house.
See Howes,
In summary, whether the district court was accounting for equitable considerations or was interpreting the terms of the deficit loan provision, it erred as a matter of law in awarding compound interest.
CONCLUSION
Because there is no authority to depart from the general rule that compound interest shall not be allowed unless expressly stated in the agreement, and because it is undisputed that the partnership agreement does not provide for compound interest, we conclude that the award of compound- interest in this case was improper. The district court’s judgment is reversed and remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion. Costs against the appellee.
Notes
. The appellees are BC Associates (“BCA-l"), BC Phase 2 Associates Limited Partnership ("BCA-2”), and Donald Chiofaro and Theodore Oatis, the general partners of BCA-l and BCA-2. We will refer to them collectively as BCA.
. Section 21 of the Partnership Agreement expressly provided that the interpretation of its terms is governed by Massachusetts law.
