Sometimes in litigation, neither side wins. This is one of those times. The parties dispute the enforceability, in a commercial lease, of a provision granting an $81,648
I.
Raffel was the landlord and Medallion was the tenant under the disputed commercial lease. The lease term began on January 1, 1990, and was to end on “the last day of the month that is Sixty (60) months after the commencement date.” R. 1-1, Lease para. 1. Raffel argued below that, under this provision, the lease ended on January 31, 1995. Medallion contended that the lease ended on December 31, 1994, and refused to pay rent for January 1995. The district court determined that the lease ended on January 31, 1995, and awarded Raffel one month’s rent of $9,584.86 plus a ten percent late charge allowed by the lease. Raffel v. Medallion Kitchens of Minnesota, Inc.,
What they do vigorously contest is whether Medallion owes an additional $81,648 under a lease provision described by Raffel as a conditional rent abatement clause and by Medallion as a penalty clause. Apparently, as an inducement to enter into the sixty-one month lease, the lessee was not required to pay rent for the first seven months of the lease. This amounted to approximately $81,-648 in rental savings for Medallion. The lease also provided that if the lessee was late in paying rent more than thirty days after notice, “the amount in the arrears of the free rent provided herein is due and payable to Landlord.” R. 27, Ex. C.
Having found that this was the intention of the parties, the district court also ruled that the provision was void under Illinois law as a penalty. “For what is this provision that imposes a death penalty for a misdemeanor?” the district court asked. Raffel,
The district court also found that neither party was entitled to attorneys fees under the prevailing party clause of the lease. That clause provided that “[i]f either party hereto institute[s] any action or proceeding to enforce any provision hereof by reason of any alleged breach of any provision of this Lease, the prevailing party shall be entitled to receive from the losing party all reasonable attorneys’ fees and all court costs in connection with such proceeding.” R. 1-1, Lease para. 19.D. Both parties claimed entitlement to attorneys’ fees under this provision. Raffel claimed that prevailing on his claim for an additional month of rent and the additional late fees, for a judgment totaling $13,384.86, entitled him to attorneys’ fees. Medallion claimed victory because it successfully defended against the penalty of $81,648. The court noted that under Illinois law, a party is considered the prevailing party for the purpose of awarding fees when that party is successful on any significant issue in the action and achieves some benefit in bringing suit, receives a judgment in his favor or obtains an affirmative recovery. Jackson v. Hammer,
II.
On appeal, Raffel contends that the district court erred in finding that the $81,648 payment constituted a forfeiture that was void under Illinois law. Medallion argues that the district court’s ruling is supported both by Illinois law relating to forfeitures or penalties and by the “mend the hold” doctrine. Raffel and Medallion have filed cross-appeals on the issue of entitlement to attorneys’ fees under the prevailing party clause of the lease.
A.
We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Medallion on the issue of the penalty clause. Green v. Shalala,
Whether a provision for damages is a penalty clause or a liquidated damages clause is a question of law. Lake River
As a material inducement for your company to enter into the above-referenced lease agreement, [the landlord] hereby waives the base-rental payments as set forth in Paragraph 2A of the lease agreement for the first seven (7) months of the lease term. However, in the event Medallion Kitchens is in default in the payment of rent for a period of more than 30 days from notice, the amount in the arrears of the free rent provided herein is due and payable to Landlord.
R. 26, Exhibit C. According to Raffel, a late fee equivalent to seven months’ rent merely compensates him for those first seven months. We cannot agree. The plain terms of the provision contradict this reading. Raf-fel is already compensated for the seven months’ rent by Medallion’s concession of entering into an extended lease term of sixty-one months. Therefore, the $81,648 payment would compensate Raffel for something other than the first seven months. We need look no further than the second sentence of the provision to determine its true purpose: the amount becomes due and owing if Medallion is ever more than thirty days late (after notice) in payment of rent. Thus, the provision is meant to ensure Medallion’s performance of its obligation to pay rent timely under the lease.
The Illinois Supreme Court directs us to “look to see the nature and purpose of fixing the amount of damages to be paid, and if it appears to have been inserted to secure the prompt performance of the agreement it will be treated as a penalty and no more than actual damages proved can be recovered.” Advance Amusement Co. v. Franke,
We agree with the district court that the contract provision calling for a ten percent late fee if the rent is paid even one day late fully compensates Raffel for payments that are more than thirty days late. Thus, the $81,648 fine ensures the lessor more than his actual damages. Second, the amount of the damages is invariant to the gravity of the breach. Whether the rent is thirty days late or a year late, the late fee is the same unreasonably large amount: seven times the monthly rent. In combination with our conclusion that the purpose of the clause is to ensure performance rather than compensate the landlord for actual damages, we thus conclude that under the standards articulated above, the additional $81,648 can only be categorized as a penalty. As such, it is unenforceable under Illinois law.
B.
This brings us to the prevailing party issue in the same posture in which the district court faced the issue. That is, Raffel has prevailed on his claim for one month’s additional rent, and for three months’ worth of the ten percent late fee. Raffel has also prevailed on Medallion’s counterclaim. But Raffel has failed in the most significant claim
The district court called it a draw, and we are inclined to agree. Under Illinois law, whether to award attorneys’ fees is a decision within the sound discretion of the trial court, and that decision will not be disturbed on appeal absent an abuse of discretion. Michigan Ave. Nat’l Bank of Chicago v. Evans, Inc.,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. This provision was contained in a separate letter agreement supplementing the lease. The letter is incorporated by reference into the lease agreement.
. Medallion vacated the property before the end of the lease term, but continued to pay rent, albeit late. Medallion later determined that Raf-fel had permitted a corporation solely owned by Raffel to occupy the leased space rent free. Medallion filed a counterclaim based on Raffel’s acceptance of the early surrender of the leased premises. The district court denied Medallion any relief on this counterclaim.
. Because we resolve this issue using principles of Illinois law regarding penalties, we need not address the district court’s alternative holding under the "mend the hold” doctrine.
