On July 30, 1940 Lion Overall Co., Inc. entered into a written contract with the United States to furnish 25,000 one-piece working suits to the War Department at the Philadelphia Quartermaster Depot fоr a unit price of $2.12, less a discount of one-half of 1% for payment within twenty calendar days. The suits were to be' delivered 10% within twenty-one days after date of receipt of nоtice of award, 12% within the next seven days, and 16% each six days thereafter, until deliveries of the quantity contracted for should be completed. The total contract priсe for the garments was $53,000. The contractor defaulted in making deliveries under the contract and on January 15, 1941, the government terminated his right to proceed further. At that time, 19,009 suits had bеen delivered out of the total of 25,000, but 5,-991 had not been delivered although the last delivery date under the contract schedule was September 27, 1940. Thereafter, in accоrdance with the provisions of Article 17 of the contract, the United States procured 5,943 suits from another contractor at a unit cost price of $2.11 per garment, the delivery of which was to be made on or before February 26, 1941. The result of the purchase of the suits under the new contract was an added cost to the government of only $3.56. But the lаtter presented not only a claim for this amount and also for two other small items aggregating $18, but also a claim for liquidated damages against the estate of the contrаctor, Lion Overall Co., Inc., which was adjudicated a bankrupt in or about April 1941. It is conceded that if the terms of the contract be literally applied, liquidated damages became due for the delay in performance to the amount of $6,729.14 in addition to the item of $3.56 and the two other items which aggregated $18. The gross amount claimed by the government as liquidated damages equalled $20,886.95 but it applied to this gross sum a credit of $14,157.81, representing a balance due for suits which it had received from the contractor and had not paid for. 1
The referee in bankruptcy allowed the government only its actual damages of *77 $21.56 and rejected its claim of $6,750.70 for net liquidated damages on the ground that it was reаlly a claim for a penalty rather than for liquidated damages and was, therefore, not provable because of Section 57, sub. j 2 of the Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 93, sub. j. Upon review Judgе Bright reversed the referee and allowed the government’s entire claim.
The question before us is whether the item of $20,886.95 was a penalty within the meaning of Section 57, sub. j.
The apрellant contends that under the New York law the liquidated damage clause in the contract imposes a penalty and refers to the recent decision of Weinstein & Sons, Inc., v. City of New York,
Provisions for liquidated damages inserted in public contracts were sustained by the Supreme Court in United States v. Bethlehem Steel Co.,
It is unnecessary to deal with thе conclusion of the district judge that the ef *78 feet of the contract is to be determined from decisions founded on principles of general jurisprudence and gathered from the federal rather than from precedents found in the New York courts. As is frequently found to be the case, we see no difference between the decisions of thosе courts in controversies like the present and regard the judgment in Weinstein & Sons Inc. v. City of New York as dependent upon its particular facts, which are distinguishable from those in the case at bar.
For the foregoing reasons the claim of the United-States is allowed and the order affirmed.
Notes
The provisions of the contract relating to liquidated damagеs were as follows :
“Article 17. Delays — Liquidated damages — If the contractor refuses or fails to make delivery of the materials or supplies within the time specified in Artcle 1, or any extension thereof, the actual damage to the Government for the delay will be impossible to determine, and in lieu thereof the contractor shall pay to the Government, as fixed, agreed, and liquidated damages for each calendar day of delay in making delivery, the amount as set forth in the specifications -or accompanying papers, and the contractor and his sureties shall be liable for the amount thereof. Provided, however, That the Government reserves the right to terminate the right оf the contractor to proceed with deliveries or such part or parts thereof as to which there has been delay, and to purchase similar material or suрplies in the open market or secure .the manufacture and delivery thereof by contract or otherwise, charging against the contractor and his sureties any exсess costs occasioned the Government thereby, together with liquidated damages accruing until such time as the Government may reasonably procure similar material оr supplies elsewhere. * * *"
“Liquidated Damages: Under the terms and conditions stipulated in Article 17 of this contract, the contractor shall pay to the Government, as liquidated dаmages, for'each unit undelivered, a sum equal to *77 one-half of one percentum of 1%) of the price of each unit for each day’s delay after the date or dates specified.”
“(j) Debts owing to the United Stаtes or any State or subdivision thereof as a penalty or forfeiture shall not be allowed, except for the amount of the pecuniary loss sustained by the act, transаction, or proceeding out of which the penalty or forfeiture arose, with reasonable and actual costs occasioned thereby and such interest as may have accrued thereon according to law.”
