DECISION AND ORDER
I. BACKGROUND 1
Plaintiff Stanford Square, LLC (“Stanford”) brought this action, invoking the Court’s diversity jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332, against defendant No-mura Asset Capital Corporation (now known and appearing before the Court as Capital Company of America) (“Capital”). Stanford sued for breach of contract, breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and for refund of transaction fees paid in connection with the unconsummated loan. Capital filed a counterclaim to recover losses incurred by Capital in connection with the hedge position undertaken by Capital in order to provide the locked interest rate to Stanford (“Hedge Losses”) pursuant to the parties’ loan commitment agreement, dated September 26, 1997 (“Commitment Agreement”), and revised loan agreement, dated July 29, 1998 (“Revised Agreement”).
By Decision and Order, dated September 12, 2002, the Court issued a judgment in favor of Capital in the amount of $1,658,075.40, representing the amount of Hedge Losses under the Commitment Agreement, less the refund of transaction fees posted by Stanford.
See Stanford Square L.L.C. v. Nomura Asset Capital Corp.,
Stanford contests Capital’s motion to amend the Court’s judgment on two grounds. First, Stanford argues that Capital waived its right to prejudgment interest because it did not explicitly request prejudgment interest in its court pleadings or at trial. 2 (Stanford Mem. at 9.) Second, Stanford contends that even if Capital is entitled to prejudgment interest, Capital errs in its assertion that prejudgment interest should be calculated from the date of the breach, March 21, 1998. Rather, Stanford argues that under New York law prejudgment interest is payable only from the date in which capital made a demand for a specific amount of money, namely March 7, 2002. (Stanford Mem. at 4-8.)
For the reasons set forth below, Capital’s motion is granted.
II. DISCUSSION
A. WAIVER
Capital did not waive recovery of prejudgment interest. Rule 54(c) of the
In addition, there is no conflicting case law in the Second Circuit, as argued by Stanford, (Stanford Mem. at 9), concerning whether a party can not waive its right to prejudgment interest — the cases consistently hold that the prevailing party can not waive its right to prejudgment interest. The cases cited by Stanford,
-Sequa Corp. v. Gelmin,
No; 91 Civ. 8675,
B. COMPUTATION DATE
The second objection to Capital’s motion to amend the Court’s judgment to include prejudgment interest raised by Stanford concerns the- date from which interest is to be calculated. Capital argues that the proper date under the Commitment Agreement is the date of the breach, October 21, 1998, which was two business days after the relevant hedge period was terminated. 3 (See Capital Mem. at 3.) Stanford argues that, because a demand for payment specifying the amount of Hedge Losses was not forwarded to Stanford until March 7, 2001, and therefore prior to that date Stanford was not aware how much money it owed Capital, interest should be calculated from March 7, '2001.
It is well settled that state law applies to an award of prejudgment inter
Under CPLR § 5001(b), a prevailing party is entitled to prejudgment interest “computed from the earliest ascertainable date the cause of action existed ...” CPLR § 5001(b) (McKinney 1992). Here, the Commitment Agreement defined the duties and obligations of the parties. Pursuant to the terms and conditions of the Commitment Agreement, Stanford was required to pay Capital the difference between the Hedge Losses, costs and fees incurred by Capital and the Refund Amount “within two business days following termination of the Rate Lock Period.” (Commitment Agreement, Rana Aff. Ex. 4, at 7.) On October 16, 1998, Capital informed Stanford that the Revised Agreement was terminated and that the relevant hedge period had been broken. {See Capital Mem. at 3.) The Commitment Agreement thereby fixed the date of the breach at October 21, 1998. Therefore, Capital is entitled to interest on the Hedge Losses, determined by this Court to be $1,658,075.40, from the date the Hedge Losses became due because that is the earliest ascertainable date the cause of action existed.
New York law does-not hold, as Stanford contends, that prejudgment interest is due from the demand date or when damages become ascertainable. The myriad of cases cited by Stanford for the proposition that the demand date is the correct date on which calculation- of prejudgment interest begins, (Stanford- Mem. at 4-5), concern factual situations in which the date of the demand was the" earliest ascertainable date the cause of action existed.' In those cases, as Capital correctly points out, a debt existed with no precise date for payment specifically fixed in the parties’ contracts; therefore, a cause of action would only accrue when payment is demanded. In fact, Stanford’s cite to New York Jurisprudence 2d, (Stanford Mem. at 4), specifically refers to the necessity of a demand “.. .when a debt exists with no date specified for its payment...” 72 N.Y. Jur.2d Interest and Usury § 39 n. 59 (citing
Moody v. Continental Casualty Co.,
Essentially, Stanford claims that because the amount of payment due Capi
Stanford’s contention that awarding prejudgment interest is fundamentally unfair when the amount due is unknown to the liable party is misplaced. (Stanford Mem. at 5.) Awarding prejudgment interest is based upon the premise that the party to whom the money is owed has been deprived of the use of the funds and can be made whole only by the award of interest. Conversely, the party owing the money has had the use of the funds he was obligated to have paid, and should be required to pay compensation by way of interest.
See De Long Corp. v. Morrison-Knudsen Co.,
In virtually all breach of contract cases, unless liquidated damages are specifically provided for, the quantum of damages is disputed. The fact that damages are disputed by the parties does not defeat a party’s right to prejudgment interest. The Second Circuit has applied New York law to award prejudgment interest on awards of lost profits, which are often disputed and unlikely to be readily ascertainable.
See U.S. Naval Institute v. Charter Communications Inc.,
Accordingly, certainty as to the amount of money due is not a necessary factor in awarding prejudgment interest. Rather, New York law mandates that prejudgment
III. ORDER
For the foregoing reasons, it is hereby
ORDERED that Capital’s 59(e) motion to amend this Court’s judgment of September 12, 2002 to include prejudgment interest is granted; and it is
ORDERED that Stanford is to pay Capital prejudgment interest on $1,658,075.40 from October 21, 1998 to September 20, 2002 at the statutorily mandated prejudgment interest in the amount of 9% per annum; and it is finally
ORDERED that the Clerk of Court close this ease.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. A more complete summary of the factual findings in this case can be found in this Court's earlier decisions in this matter.
See Stanford Square, L.L.C.
v.
Nomura Asset Capital Corp.,
. The memoranda of law cited herein will be referred to as follows; Memorandum of Defendant The Capital Company of America in Support of its Motion to Alter or Amend Judgment to Include Prejudgment Interest, dated October 2, 2002 ("Capital Mem."); Memorandum of Plaintiff Stanford Square, LLC in Opposition to Defendant’s Motion to Alter or Amend Judgment to Include Prejudgment Interest, dated October 16, 2002 ("Stanford Mem."); and Reply Memorandum of Defendant The Capital Company of America in Further Support of its Motion to Alter or Amend Judgment to Include Prejudgment Interest, dated October 22, 2002 ("Capital Reply Mem.”).
. The relevant terms - of the Commitment Agreement provide that: "In the event that the Rate Lock Period has expired and [Capital] shall have the right at any time to close out the Hedge Position” (as defined in the Request Form). If [Capital] chooses to close out the Hedge Position, (i) the interest rate will no longer be fixed at the Locked Interest Rate, and (ii) [Capital’s] only obligation to Borrower shall be to return the refundable portion of the Early Rate Lock Deposit after setting off (A) losses incurred in the Hedge Position, if any, and (B) fees and expenses (including attorneys' fees) incurred by [Capital] in connection with the proposed Loan ((A) and (B) collectively, "[Capital’s] Expenses”). If [Capital] Expenses exceed the combined Early-Rate Lock Deposit and the Commitment Fee (after deduction of the non-refundable portion), the Borrower shall pay [Capital] the difference within two business days following termination of the Rate Lock Period. See Commitment Letter and Term Sheet, dated September 26, 2997 ("Commitment Agreement”), attached as Exhibit 4 to the Rana Affidavit, dated October 2, 2002 ("Rana Aff.”), at 7.-
. Stanford's argument that by failing to specify the amount of Hedge Losses, Capital somehow frustrated Stanford's compliance with the terms of the Commitment Agreement, and the cites in support, (Stanford Mem. at 7-8), go to the issue of whether Stanford should have been required to perform at all, and not to the appropriate date from which to compute prejudgment interest. This Court has already determined that the Hedge Losses were payable by Stanford, and the amount payable was determined at trial.
