The Referee’s findings of fact are undisputed. The material facts are that the debtor and Highway Display, Inc., entered into a contract providing for the erection and maintenance of specially built display signs along highways near Minneapolis, Minnesota, for the purpose of advertising debtor’s clothing business. The contract provided for payments by debtor of $190 per month for thirty-six months, and contained a clause-permitting claimant to declare immediately due and payable any balance owing for the unexpired term, should any default occur in the payments. The debtor apparently complied with the contract until January 4, 1953, but has made no payment since that time. Claimant seeks to recover in full the balance unpaid under the contract, while debtor contends it is liable only for the amount due but unpaid at the initiation of its arrangement proceeding ; that the remainder of the claim of Highway Display represents an unenforcible penalty. The Referee found that no overreaching or hardship was involved in the formation of the contract, that the claimant incurred substantially all of the costs necessary to the performance of the contract before the commencement of the arrangement, that the signs could probably not be resold by the claimant and that their salvage value was nil. Therefore, he concluded that the acceleration clause was not a penalty.
Provisions in a contract providing for liquidated damages in event of default are prima facie valid, Blunt v. Egeland, 1908,
The debtor here does not quarrel with the rule that a provision in a contract will be construed as a penalty if it bears no reasonable relationship to the amount of actual damages. It contends that by application of this rule we must necessarily come to the conclusion that the provision now under consideration is a penalty. It has not, however, offered any cogent reasons why it should be regarded as unreasonable. The undisputed findings are that prior to the commencement of the arrangement proceedings, the claimant had already incurred in performance of the contract an amount in excess of the amount it would have received had the contract been performed according to its terms. It would seem that even in the absence of this acceleration clause, claimant’s damages would have been precisely the sum it seeks here — the amount owing under the contract. It is apparent that a liquidated damages clause which provides for the same damages as would be owing without it cannot be construed as an unreasonable penalty. Paramount Pictures Dist. Corp. v. Gehring, 1936,
It follows that the Referee’s findings, conclusions, and order must be affirmed. It is so ordered.
An exception is allowed.
