28 Mo. 156 | Mo. | 1859
delivered the opinion of the court.
The parties to this action entered into a written contract by which the plaintiff agreed to lease to the defendant for the term of one year a dwelling-house in the city of St. Louis, and the defendant agreed to pay therefor, in monthly instalments, seven hundred and thirty-five dollars. By the same instrument, which was under seal, the plaintiff stipulated that he would at any time during the year sell and convey the premises to the defendant at the price and on the terms therein particularly set forth, and the defendant covenanted that he would during the term demand a conveyance and comply with the conditions of the sale. It was further agreed “ that upon the completion of said sale and purchase as and in the manner aforesaid, said lease and rent shall cease ; and, to secure the faithful payment of said rent and making of said purchase as and in the manner aforesaid, the said Temple has assigned unto said Stillwell his right and title to three hundred shares of the capital stock of the St.
The defendant contends that the parties to the contract mutually agreed that in the event of a breach of its provisions, the stock assigned and delivered to the plaintiff should cover the damages, which might be incurred, as liquidated or settled damages, without reference to the actual injury sustained. The plaintiff, on the other hand, insists that the stock or its value should be considered only as penalty, which was intended as a security for the actual damages that might accrue by the failure of the defendant to perform his contract.
The courts have indicated a strong inclination towards that construction which excludes the idea of liquidated damages and which limits a recovery to compensation for the real injury ; but the rule is almost invariably invoked in favor of the party who is bound for the penalty, and it is seldom that
The plaintiff insists that the clause of the contract under consideration relates only to the damages that might be incurred by the failure of the defendant to purchase the property. As any arrears of-rent could easily be computed, there was little reason for securing it by a penalty, or liquidating -the damages that might result from the nonpayment of it; but the parties chose to contract otherwise, and on turning to' the clause, it will be seen that the obligation to pay rent is indissolubly connected with the agreement to purchase ; and the plaintiff’s construction can not be maintained without doing violence to his language and wresting words from their context.