In this diversity case arising under Illinois law, the defendants-appellants, together, “American Eagle”, reneged on two contracts for the purchase and development of land. On summary judgment, the District Court found American Eagle liable for breach of the contracts and awarded damages totalling $560,385.85. American Eagle now contests various aspects of this damage award. Its appeal is a nonstarter, however, because it failed to present to the District Court the main arguments that it raises on appeal. We affirm.
Background
Under a “Purchase Agreement” dated April 30, 1987, American Eagle agreed to buy certain land, personal property, and contract rights from the plaintiff-appellee Kensington Rock Island Limited Partnership (“Kensington”) for a total price of $600,000. As part of this contract, American Eagle gave Kensington a promissory note in the principal amount of $50,000 as “earnest money”, payable on the closing date. Also under this contract, American Eagle agreed to pay $165,000 to the plaintiff-appellee, Rappaport Companies, Inc. (“Rappaport”), apparently for its work in setting up the deal. By a separate “Development Agreement” of the same date, American Eagle hired Rappaport to oversee the commercial and residential development of the property. Rappaport’s fee depended in part on the success of the project, but it was entitled to at least $168,-125 under the Development Agreement in addition to its closing fee under the Purchase Agreement.
The closing date under the Purchase Agreement came, was extended, and passed with American Eagle unable to come up with the purchase price. This suit followed. On Kensington and Rappaport’s motion, the District Court entered summary judgment in their favor, awarding damages of $227,260.85 to Kensington and $333,125.00 to Rappaport. On appeal, American Eagle disputes various portions of these damages. This Court has jurisdiction to review the District Court's final
The Award to Kensington
The District Court’s award of damages to Kensington was as follows:
Consequential damages (real estate taxes, utilities, insurance, and interest expense that Kensington incurred after the closing date) $ 90,274.47
Principal amount of the promissory note that American Eagle gave to Kensington as “earnest money” 50,000.00
Interest and late fees on the promissory note 11,138.98
Attorneys’ fees, as provided in the promissory note 40,847.40
Closing fee provided in the Purchase Agreement’s allocation of the total $600,000 purchase price 35,000.00
Total $227,260.85
American Eagle’s waiver of its arguments starts with the first item of damages in the above table. American Eagle states in its main brief that it does not contest the “consequential damages that were awarded. Specifically, these include the award to Kensington of real estate taxes, insurance premiums, utilities costs, and interest.” Brief of Defendants-Appellants, p. 13 n. 3.
The next three items of damage in the table arise from the promissory note that American Eagle gave as “earnest money” —$50,000.00 in principal, $11,138.98 in interest and late fees, and $40,847.40 in legal fees, all payable under the note. The Illinois rule is clear that Kensington is entitled to this earnest money. Upon “default by the buyer, ... [any] earnest money or down payment may be retained in full by the seller without reference to the amount of actual damages which may have resulted ... from the buyer’s default.” Bamberg v. Griffin,
The only question here is the amount of the legal fees. We review the amount of the District Court’s award of legal fees for abuse of discretion. See, e.g., Illinois Bell Telephone Co. v. Haines and Co.,
The last item of damage is the “closing fee”. The Purchase Agreement authorizes Kensington to allocate $35,000 of the total purchase price to this fee. American Eagle contends that this contractual allocation was only for tax purposes, and so is not “conclusive proof” of damage. Brief of Defendants-Appellants, p. 15. American Eagle is correct that the contractual allocation would not be conclusive for summary judgment purposes if opposed by evidence that would allow the trier of fact to decide in American Eagle’s favor on the point. See La Preferida, Inc. v. Cerveceria Modelo, S.A.,
American Eagle’s other argument is that the District Court should not have awarded the $35,000 closing fee as damages because the $50,000 “earnest money” promissory note acted as liquidated damages and so caps the total recovery. This argument fails because American Eagle presented it to the District Court unintelligibly, if at all.
The Award to Rappaport
The District Court awarded $333,-125 to Rappaport as damages under the Purchase Agreement and Development Agreement. American Eagle presents two arguments concerning this award. First it claims that Rappaport failed to mitigate. But failure to mitigate damages is an affirmative defense under Illinois law. See, e.g., Toushin v. Gonsky,
Conclusion
A party who prevails in court should receive relief—not further litigation in which the opposing side presents new arguments that were available from the start. Further, courts lack the resources to allow a party to raise new issues when it has already had a full, fair opportunity to present its case. We would do an injustice to Kensington and Rappaport (who have waited more than three years for this case to reach its current position) and litigants in other cases if we were to allow American Eagle to start this case over again by presenting new arguments on appeal.
Notes
. American Eagle’s argument to the District Court on this issue consisted of a single, poorly
. We note a tension in this Circuit's decisions as to whether the doctrine of "plain error” applies in civil cases under any circumstances. See Kendra Oil & Gas, Inc. v. Homco, Ltd.,
