Seko Air Freight, a freight forwarder, signed a contract with Transworld Systems, a debt collector, under which Seko prepaid $50,234 for the right to send 10,000 accounts for collection during the next two years. The transaction is slightly more complex, because some of these accounts rolled over from earlier years, but the details do not matter. Eight months after signing this contract Seko had not transmitted a single account for collection. It terminated the deal and asked Transworld for the money back. Transworld replied that there is no money-back feature, and this suit under the diversity jurisdiction ensued. It barely meets the jurisdictional minimum, a narrow scrape that affects the merits — for it has led Seko to argue that it is entitled to every penny back. Any effort to calculate the amount to which Transworld would be entitled for holding its services at the ready for a third of the contract’s projected duration would do little more than show that the controversy does not belong in federal court. So Seko has tried an all-or-nothing strategy. The district court concluded that “nothing” is closer to the mark,
Here is the termination clause in the contract:
It is understood and agreed that this Assignment Agreement may be terminated within five (5) working days following receipt of a written notice by either party. Said notice shall be sent by certified or registered mail.
According to Seko, the presence of a termination clause implies an entitlement to a refund, although the contract lacks any provision for a refund. It cites two fines of Illinois cases. (The parties agree that Illinois law governs.) One concerns the obligations of lawyers whose clients discharge them; the other arises out of contracts between nursing homes and patients, who may die or move. In both circumstances, a right to terminate implies some entitlement to a refund (although not necessarily of the complete sum; a client who fires his lawyer does not receive the whole retainer back). See
Maksym v. Loesch,
Seko prepaid roughly $50,000 for the right to have Transworld dun 10,000 customers. Transworld installed a computer system and software at Seko’s headquarters to facilitate this process. (Seko paid separately for the hardware, but not for the software and Transworld’s efforts to customize the system to Seko’s circumstances.) On receiving each account, Transworld was to send out a series of letters. Transworld guaranteed that the net collections would be high enough that if it received all 10,000 accounts Seko would obtain at least twice the $50,000 prepayment. Accounts that did not pay after the first five letters were to be sent to one of Transworld’s affiliates for additional efforts, including litigation; the parties were to share these collections 50-50. This more complete descrip
Seko calls Transworld’s retention of the prepayment a “forfeiture” and invokes the rule against penalty clauses, see
Lake River Corp. v. Carborundum Co.,
Affirmed.
