116 A. 335 | Conn. | 1922
The validity of the stipulation for the payment of $3,500 as liquidated damages, depends upon *301
the conditions we stated in Rabinowitz v. Apter,
Assuming that they were still stockholders in the corporation, they have no interest sufficient to entitle them to sue for and recover damages for an injury to its business, except upon allegation and proof that the directors refused to bring an action in the name of the corporation. This action, however, is brought by the plaintiffs as individuals. It is not a stockholders' action, and the question is whether the plaintiffs may still recover the penal sum of $3,500 as liquidated damages for the breach of the covenant against competition, though it is found that they ceased to own the business before the wrongful competition commenced. We think not; for it was long ago settled that the penalty of a bond is not recoverable as a debt or as a penalty but only *302 as damages for the breach of the condition of the bond, and it must follow that there can be no recovery when, in an action on such a bond, it appears that the obligees have shifted their position so that the usual inference of damage from the mere fact of a breach cannot arise; and when no proof of actual damage is offered.
There is no allegation or finding that at the time of the breach the plaintiffs were stockholders in the Bridgeport Silverware Corporation. They stand on the letter of their bond, and are met by proof that when the breach occurred they no longer owned the business which the covenant was intended to protect.
To allow the liquidated damages in this case would be to violate the intent of the parties, and to enforce a penalty. The damages were necessarily estimated as those which the plaintiffs, as owners of the business sold, might presumably sustain in case of a breach of the covenant against competition. So understood, the liquidation of the damages was reasonable. But if the contract is interpreted as obligating the defendants to pay $3,500 to the plaintiffs in case of a breach, whether they then own the business or not, it is unreasonable, and the $3,500 must be regarded merely as security for the actual damages.
We have not been referred to an authority exactly in point, and have found none, but the case falls within the well-settled principle stated in The Colombia, 197 F. 661, 664, that "no provision in a contract for the payment of a fixed sum as damages, whether stipulated for as a penalty or as liquidated damages, will be enforced in a case where the court sees that no damage has been sustained." McCann v. Albany,
There is error and the cause is remanded with direction to set aside the judgment for the plaintiffs and render judgment for the defendants.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.