In a contract for the construction of two government laboratory
buildings, it was provided that, in case the completion of the work
should be delayed beyond a period allowed, the United States, in
view of the difficulty of estimating the resulting damages with
exactness, and for the cost of extra inspection and rents,
salaries, and other expenses that would be entailed, might deduct
$200 for each day of delay, until the work should be completed, not
as a penalty, but as liquidated damages, computed, estimated and
agreed upon. There was such delay, as to both buildings, that the
amount thus computed exceeded $20,000.
Held that the fact
that the amount specified was to be the same whether both buildings
were delayed or only one was not a sufficient reason for
considering it a penalty, nor was there other ground for not giving
effect to the agreement as a genuine pre-estimate of loss. P.
249 U. S. 364.
Sun Printing & Publishing Association v. Moore,
183 U. S. 642.
Whether a party should be relieved from a plain stipulation for
liquidated damages upon the ground that a penalty was really
intended will depend upon the facts of the case, and not upon a
conjectural situation that might have arisen under the contract.
Id.
52 Ct.Clms. 400 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 249 U. S. 363
MR. JUSTICE CLARKE delivered the opinion of the Court.
In December, 1904, Stannard, represented in this case by his
trustee in bankruptcy, contracted with the United States to erect
two laboratory buildings for the Department of Agriculture, in the
City of Washington, D.C., for $1,171,000. The buildings were both
to be completed in thirty months, and, for a delay of 101 days
beyond the contract period, the government deducted from the
contract price $200 a day, the amount stipulated in the contract as
liquidated damages, a total of $20,200, and the claim made in this
Court is for the recovery of that amount.
The Court of Claims dismissed the petition, and the case is here
on appeal.
The contract was in writing, and the specifications, which the
contractor had before him when bidding, were made a part of it.
These specifications contain the following:
"11. Each bidder must submit his proposal with the distinct
understanding that, in case of its acceptance, time for the
completion of the work shall be considered as
Page 249 U. S. 364
of the essence of the contract, and that, for the cost of all
extra inspection and for all amounts paid for rents, salaries, and
other expenses entailed upon the United States by delay in
completing the contract, the United States shall be entitled to the
fixed sum of $200, as liquidated damages, computed, estimated, and
agreed upon, for each and every day's delay not caused by the
United States."
The provision of the contract upon the subject is:
"3. To complete the said work in all its parts within thirty
months from the date of the receipt of the notice referred to in
subdivision 2 hereof. Time is to be considered as of the essence of
the contract, and in case the completion of said work shall be
delayed beyond said period, the party of the second part may, in
view of the difficulty of estimating with exactness the damages
which will result, deduct as liquidated damages, and not as a
penalty, the sum of two hundred dollars ($200.00) for each and
every day during the continuance of such delay and until such work
shall be completed, and such deductions may be made from time to
time from any payments due hereunder."
There is no dispute as to the extent of the delay, and the sole
contention of the appellant is that, because a single sum in
damages is stipulated for, without regard to whether the completion
of one or both buildings should be delayed, and because the damage
to the government would probably be less in amount if one were
completed on time and the other not, than if the completion of both
were delayed, the provision of the contract with respect to
liquidated damages cannot be considered the result of a genuine
pre-estimate of the loss which would be caused by the delay, but
must be regarded as a penalty which requires proof of damage in any
amount to be deducted.
If it were not for the earnestness with which this claim
Page 249 U. S. 365
is presented, we should content ourselves with the observation
that, as there was delay in the completion of both buildings, the
case falls literally within the terms of the contract of the
parties, and that a court will refuse to imagine a different state
of facts than that before it for the purpose of obtaining a basis
for modifying a written agreement, which evidently was entered into
with great deliberation.
The subject of the interpretation of provisions for liquidated
damages in contracts, as contradistinguished from such as provide
for penalties, was elaborately and comprehensively considered by
this Court in
Sun Printing & Publishing Association v.
Moore, 183 U. S. 642,
applied in
United States v. Bethlehem Steel Co.,
205 U. S. 105, and
the result of the modern decisions was determined to be that, in
such cases, courts will endeavor, by a construction of the
agreement which the parties have made, to ascertain what their
intention was when they inserted such a stipulation for payment, of
a designated sum or upon a designated basis, for a breach of a
covenant of their contract precisely as they seek for the intention
of the parties in other respects. When that intention is clearly
ascertainable from the writing, effect will be given to the
provision as freely as to any other where the damages are uncertain
in nature or amount or are difficult of ascertainment or where the
amount stipulated for is not so extravagant or disproportionate to
the amount of property loss as to show that compensation was not
the object aimed at or as to imply fraud, mistake, circumvention,
or oppression. There is no sound reason why persons competent and
free to contract may not agree upon this subject as fully as upon
any other, or why their agreement, when fairly and understandingly
entered into with a view to just compensation for the anticipated
loss, should not be enforced.
There are, no doubt, decided cases which tend to support
Page 249 U. S. 366
the contention advanced by appellant, but these decisions were,
for the most part, rendered at a time when courts were disposed to
look upon such provisions in contracts with disfavor and to
construe them strictly, if not astutely, in order that damages,
even though termed liquidated, might be treated as penalties, so
that only such loss as could be definitely proved could be
recovered. The later rule, however, is to look with candor, if not
with favor, upon such provisions in contracts when deliberately
entered into between parties who have equality of opportunity for
understanding and insisting upon their rights, as promoting prompt
performance of contracts and because adjusting in advance, and
amicably, matters the settlement of which through courts would
often involve difficulty, uncertainty, delay, and expense.
The result of the application of the doctrine thus stated to the
case before us cannot be doubtful. The character of the contract
and the amount involved assures experience and large capacity in
the contractor and the parties specifically state that the amount
agreed upon as liquidated damages had been "computed, estimated,
and agreed upon" between them. It is obvious that the extent of the
loss which would result to the government from delay in performance
must be uncertain and difficult to determine, and it is clear that
the amount stipulated for is not excessive, having regard to the
amount of money which the government would have invested in the
buildings at the time when such delay would occur, to the expense
of securing or continuing in other buildings during such delay, and
to the confusion which must necessarily result in the important and
extensive laboratory operations of the Department of
Agriculture.
The parties to the contract, with full understanding of the
results of delay and before differences or interested views had
arisen between them, were much more competent
Page 249 U. S. 367
to justly determine what the amount of damage would be, an
amount necessarily largely conjectural and resting in estimate,
than a court or jury would be, directed to a conclusion, as either
must be, after the event, by views and testimony derived from
witnesses who would be unusual to a degree if their conclusions
were not, in a measure, colored and partisan.
There is nothing in the contract or in the record to indicate
that the parties did not take into consideration, when estimating
the amount of damage which would be caused by delay, the prospect
of one building's being delayed and the other not, and the amount
of the damages stipulated, having regard to the circumstances of
the case, may well have been adopted with reference to the
probability of such a result.
The judgment of the Court of Claims must be
Affirmed.