Frank Felix Associates (“Felix”) appeals from the judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Thomas C. Platt, Judge) awarding Felix damages of $10,250 for breach of a settlement agreement. Felix contends that upon breach of the settlement agreement by Austin Drugs, Inc. (“Austin”), Felix was entitled under New York General Obligations Law § 15-501(3) (McKinney 1989) to assert its рre-settlement claims. Finding no error, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
In the mid-1980s, Felix entered into an oral agreement with Interstate Cigar Company (“ICC”), the predecessor of Austin, to install computer systems on ICC’s property. Unfortunately for Felix, ICC went bankrupt. In May of 1991, several investors, some of whom were formerly associated with ICC, bought Austin in the ICC bankruptcy proceedings. Austin was a subsidiary of ICC at the time of the purchase. Subsequent to the purchase of Austin, Austin had Felix install *286 computer systems in Austin stores like those Felix previously installed in stores owned by ICC.
On May 20, 1992, one year after the bankruptcy proceedings, Felix sent Austin a memorandum claiming that Austin owed Felix $70,000 in arrearages under the ICC account incurred prior to the bankruptсy sale and $75,000 in arrearages incurred by Austin after May. of 1991. After Felix learned that Austin planned to replace the computer system, Felix sent another memorandum to Austin on June 22, 1992, claiming an outstanding balance of over $462,000. Then the parties entered into settlement discussions.
Felix and Austin thereafter executed a written settlement agreemеnt, wherein Austin agreed to pay Felix $50,000 as the amount owed for Austin’s past use of the computer system, and agreed to return a tape drive and a high-speed printer. The settlement agreement provided that Austin had to meet these obligations by October 1, 1992, or Felix would renew its prior claims. Austin made the $50,000 payment and returned the printer promptly. However, it did not return the tape drive. When Austin failed to return the tape drive, Felix sent a renewed demand letter on October 22, 1992, claiming an outstanding balance of $412,000.
Austin requested that Felix send someone to remove the tape drive on or about the time Austin received Felix’s October 22 letter. Austin indicated that it needed Felix’s techniсal assistance to remove the device. However, Felix agreed to remove the tape drive only if Austin promised to pay Felix $250. Austin refused to pay Felix, but made clear that Felix could come by and pick up the device. Felix never attempted to retrieve it. Months later, after Consumer Value Stores (“CVS”) bought out Austin, CVS scrapped the tape drive when it installed a new computer system in the former Austin stores.
Felix then brought this suit, asserting all of its pre-settlement demands. Claiming that the settlement agreement was no longer binding due to Austin’s breach, Felix sought in excess of $800,000. After a bench trial, the district court concluded that Austin breached the settlement agreement but that the breaсh was not material. The court awarded Felix $10,000 in damages for Austin’s use of the computer system one month beyond the date when it was supposed to return the tape drive under the settlement agreement, concluding that the tape drive allowed Austin to use the rest of the proprietary software provided in the pre-settlement leasing agreement between Felix and Austin. The court also awarded $250 in damages for the cost Felix would have incurred in retrieving the device. The court did not award any damages for Austin’s use of the tape drive beyond the date when Austin asked Felix to remove the system. The court also did not award damages for the destruction of the tape drive, reasoning that the tape drive would not have been destroyed had Felix removed it from Austin’s property when given the opportunity.
II. DISCUSSION
We agree "with the district court that Austin plainly breached the settlement agreement by not returning the tape drive on or before October 1. We also agree that, in light of Austin’s payment to Felix of $50,000 under the settlement agreement, Austin’s return of the high-speed printer, and Austin’s request that Felix remove the tape drive at the end of October, Austin’s failure to return the tape drive on October 1 was not a material breach. Assuming, as appears appropriate, that the settlement agreement was an executory accord, we hold that Nеw York law requires that an executory accord be materially breached before a party may sue based on its pre-settlement claims. Accordingly, Felix was not entitled to assert its pre-settlement claims.
A. Whether a Material Breach of the Accord Is Required
Assuming, as Felix argues, that the settlement agreement was an executory accord, under New York law an aggrieved party may elect to sue on the original obligation that is the subject of the accord in cases where the accord has not been performed.
See Ellenbogen & Goldstein, P.C. v. Brandes,
New York law requires, as appellant stresses, that an executory accord be performed “according to its terms” if the obligee wishes to avoid the creditor’s original claims.
Id.; see also Albee Truck Inc. v. Halpin Fire Equip. Inc.,
Because no New York' court has specifically addressed whether the breach of an еxecu-tory accord must be material before a party to the accord can elect to sue on its original claims, it falls to this Court to predict how the New York Court of Appeals would interpret New York law on this point.
See In re Joint Eastern & Southern Dist. New York Asbestos Lit.,
Although New York General Obligations Law § 15-501(3) provides that an executory accord must be “performed according to its terms,” not every breach, however insubstantial, will allow a plaintiff to disregard an executory accord and sue on its original claims. Such an interpretation could lead to absurd and inequitable results where, despite a debtor’s substantial performance in reliance on an executory accord, the most trivial breach could revive a creditor’s original claims. The creditor could obtain payment of a contested debt and, due to a minor breach of the accord, receive the windfall entitlement to reаssert its pre-settlement claims. We do not believe New York courts would adopt such a view, especially in light of the difference in the treatment of executory accords under New York’s General Obligations law and the treatment of executory accords under prior New York common law. Under modern New York law, executory accords, if in writing, are enforceable contracts. Therefore, based on ordinary contract principles, a non-material breach does not justify nonperformance by the other party.
Under New York common law, an executo-ry accord was not an enforceable contract. Only full performance constituted satisfaction of the accord and extinguished the pre-exist-ing debt.
Denbwrg,
In our interpretation of New York law, we are aided by decisions in other jurisdictions. State high courts and federal appellate courts interpreting state laws have uniformly determined that before a party to an execu-tory accord can elect to sue on its original claims, the executory accord must be materially breached.
See, e.g., Zenith Drilling Corp. v. Internorth, Inc.,
Our conclusion is also consistent with the view taken in the Restatement (Second) of Contracts, which states that “[wjhether a breach by the obligor discharges the obli-gee’s duty under the accord is governed by the rules [relating to performance and nonperformance of contracts].” Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 281 cmt. b (1981). These rules include the requirement that for an obligor’s duties to be discharged on account of faded performance, thе obligee’s failure to perform must be material. Id. § 241; see also 6 A. Corbin, Corbin on Contracts § 1275, pp. 111-13 (1962) (To “make[ ] the creditor’s prior claim again enforceable ____the debtor’s breach must be a material breach, going to the essence, and discharging the creditor from his contractual duty.”); E. Allan Farnsworth, Contracts §§ 4.24 n.9, 8.18 *289 (1990) (applying rules relating to the material breach of contracts to accords).
We believe, based on this authority, that New York courts would require that any breach of an executory accord be material before a party may sue upon the original obligation. We therefore turn to the question of whether Austin materially breached the executory accord.
B. Whether Austin Materially Breached the Executory Accord
Whether Austin materially breаched the executory accord is a question of law. Therefore, while we defer to the district court’s findings regarding the relevant facts, we review its conclusion that Austin did not commit a material breach de novo.
See Petereit v. S.B. Thomas,
Under New York law, for a breach of a contract to be material, it must “go to the root of the agreement betwеen the parties.”
See Septembertide Pub., B.V. v. Stein and Day, Inc.,
In determining if Austin’s breach defeated the object of the executory accord, we must consider the special purpose of the contract. As we previously noted, an executory accord grants an obligor a limited window of opportunity within which to satisfy a creditor’s demands before the creditor may again assert its original claims. Accordingly, close adherence to the terms of the accord is important, especially to the time-frame within which substitute performance must be rendered to the creditor. See Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 241(a) (materiality depends, in part, on “the extent to which the injured party will be deprived of the benefit which he reasonably expected”); id. § 242(c) (in determining whether material breach relieves non-breaсhing party’s obligation to perform, “the extent to which the agreement provides for performance without delay” should be considered).
Austin clearly did not meet its obligation to comply with the executory accord’s deadline for full performance. Not until twenty days after it was supposed to have returned Felix’s tape drive did Austin invitе Felix to remove the device. In fact, Austin never returned it and the device was eventually scrapped. We do not believe these facts establish that Austin’s breach was material, however. Austin’s breach must be viewed in light of its substantial compliance with its other obligations under the accord. See id. § 241 (materiality depends on all of the facts аnd circumstances, including, inter alia, the extent to which the injured party will be deprived of the benefits reasonably expected, the extent to which the injured party can be adequately compensated for its loss, and the good faith of the breaching party). Austin substantially complied with the terms of the executory accord by promptly paying Felix the agreed-upon $50,000 and returning Felix’s high-speed printer.
Moreover, any harm to Felix caused by Austin failing to return the tape drive promptly could be fully compensated in monetary damages without undermining the basis of the executory accord, given Austin’s substantial performance of its other obligations under the accord. Accordingly, the mere fact that the district court found damages for Austin’s delay in the amount of $10,000 does not render the breach material. See id. § 241(b) and cmt. c (materiality of breach depends in part on the extent to which the injured party can be compensated for its loss).
The fact that Austin never returned the tape-drive and that it was eventually sсrapped when CVS took over Austin’s stores does not warrant a different conclusion. On October 20 Austin invited Felix to remove it. This was a reasonable invitation, given the fact that removal required the technical expertise that Felix had. Felix never did so, essentially abandoning the tape drive. Given *290 these circumstances, we believe the district court justifiably attributed little weight to Felix’s claim that the tape drive was very valuable. We also believe the district court correctly concluded, based on its view of the evidence, that Felix easily could have retrieved the device if it had wanted to. Accordingly, we conclude that the twenty-day delay between the time Austin was supposed to return the tape drive and the time it invited Felix to remove the device from Austin’s stores was not a material breach of the executory accord. Felix was not entitled to sue on its original claims.
III. CONCLUSION
We affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. We assume that the agreement was an executo-ry accord as opposed to a substitute agreement. Whereаs an executory accord extinguishes a claimant's prior claims upon performance of the accord, a substitute agreement extinguishes a claimant's prior claims upon execution of the agreement.
See Denburg,
.
See, e.g., Kapco Mfg. Co. v. C & O Enterp., Inc.,
