1 No. 40
JMD Holding Corp.,
Respondent, v. Congress Financial Corporation,
Appellant,
First Union National Bank,
Defendant.
2005 NY Int. 46
March 31, 2005
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before
publication in the New York Reports.
Richard G. Haddad, for appellant. David B. Eizenman, for respondent. Commercial Finance Association, amicus curiæ.
READ, J.:
In this action, JMD Holding Corporation seeks to
recover $600,000 charged to its loan account by Congress
Financial Corporation for early termination of the parties' $40
million commercial revolving loan agreement. After JMD paid off
its outstanding loans, Congress also retained leftover funds in
JMD's account as a cash collateral reserve to cover losses,
including attorneys' fees, allegedly related to JMD's contingent
obligations under the loan agreement. JMD also seeks to recover
these funds. For the reasons discussed below, we conclude that
JMD has not satisfied its prima facie burden to show that the
$600,000 early termination fee is an unenforceable penalty. We
also conclude that Congress was not entitled to keep the cash
collateral reserve. I. On August 22, 1997, JMD's predecessor entered into a
Loan and Security Agreement with Congress. Under the agreement,
Congress agreed to make loans "from time to time in amounts
requested by [JMD's predecessor]" in accordance with an asset-
based lending formula and up to a maximum credit of $5 million.
On January 20, 1998, JMD and Congress executed an Amended,
Restated and Consolidated Loan and Security Agreement (Agreement)
to increase JMD's maximum credit to $40 million. JMD committed
to borrow from Congress to finance its working capital needs
through the end of the Agreement's term on August 21, 2000,
subject to renewal from year to year thereafter on at least 60
days' written notice.
To secure payment and performance of its obligations[1]
under the Agreement, JMD granted Congress "a continuing security
interest in, a lien upon, and a right of set off against" its
assets, most pertinently including accounts receivable and
inventory and their proceeds. The Agreement required JMD and its
"account debtors" to direct all payments on accounts or payments
constituting proceeds of other collateral into blocked bank
accounts or "lockboxes." JMD agreed that all payments made into
the lockbox were Congress's property. These funds were
transferred or "swept" on a daily basis from the lockbox into
Congress's bank account, and were applied by Congress to pay down
the outstanding obligations in JMD's loan account, thus creating
availability for new revolving advances. Interest on the outstanding principal amount of non-
contingent obligations was set at 1.5% above the prime rate per
annum. At Congress's option and without notice, interest was set
at 3.5% above the prime rate per annum on non-contingent
obligations for the period from and after the Agreement's
termination or non-renewal or JMD's default until payment; and on
any outstanding loans in excess of amounts JMD was eligible to
borrow (e.g., advances in excess of amounts available to JMD
under the Agreement's asset-based lending formula). The Agreement afforded Congress seven non-exclusive
remedies for JMD's breach, including the right to terminate.[2]
Further, if the Agreement was terminated prior to the end of any
term, JMD was required to pay Congress an early termination fee
of between 1% and 2% of the $40 million maximum credit. The
percentage decreased as the end of the Agreement's term drew
closer; that is, the closer the termination to the end of a term,
the lower the fee. The Agreement recited that the early termination fee
was required "in view of the impracticality and extreme
difficulty of ascertaining actual damages and by mutual agreement
of the parties as to a reasonable calculation of [Congress's]
lost profits as a result [of early termination]." Further, the
fee was "presumed to be the amount of damages sustained by
[Congress] as a result of such early termination," and JMD
"agree[d] that it [the early termination fee] [was] reasonable
under the circumstances currently existing."
On June 22, 1999, Congress sent JMD notice of default
in light of JMD's failure to comply with multiple provisions of
the Agreement, including those governing collateral reporting and
covenants as to accounts receivable and inventory; requirements
to maintain minimum working capital and adjusted net worth; and
delivery of required documentation, including audited financial
statements and reports. JMD does not contest that it was in
default. Congress accelerated the payment of all JMD's
obligations and demanded their immediate repayment, one of its
remedies under the Agreement. As of the date of the notice of default, the early
termination fee was $600,000 (1.5% of $40 million). On July 1,
1999, the parties executed a letter agreement, by which Congress
agreed to forgive or discount the early termination fee if JMD
paid off its indebtedness before September 3, 1999.[3]
As it
turned out, JMD did not pay all its outstanding obligations to
Congress before the end of this grace period. On November 10, 1999, Congress charged JMD's loan
account in the amount of $600,000 for the early termination fee.
JMD paid Congress all loan balances, both principal and interest,
no later than November 23, 1999. Nonetheless, Congress continued
to retain the remaining funds in JMD's loan account as a cash
collateral reserve to cover losses, including attorneys' fees,
purportedly related to JMD's contingent obligations. On December 28, 2000, JMD commenced this action, which
included causes of action asserting that Congress had converted
approximately $800,000 of JMD's property and for money had and
received in the same amount.[4]
JMD moved for summary judgment on
these claims, arguing that the early termination fee was an
unenforceable penalty, not legitimate liquidated damages, and
that Congress had no right to retain cash collateral. In support
of its motion, JMD offered the affidavit of its president, who
attested in conclusory fashion that, based on the memorandum of
law prepared by JMD's attorney, the early termination fee was an
"unenforceable penalty." He also alleged that Congress had
offered "no legitimate basis whatsoever for its refusal to turn
over" JMD's funds. Relying on Truck Rent-A-Center, Inc. v Puritan Farms
2nd (41 2 420 [1977]), Supreme Court concluded in July 2002
that "the liquidated damages clauses executed by the parties
[were] so disproportionate from any potential damages suffered by
Congress as to constitute an unenforceable penalty"; and that
"Congress ha[d] not demonstrated that any issues of fact
exist[ed] as to whether it [was] entitled to maintain a cash
reserve" and "ha[d] not identified any additional obligations on
JMD's part."[5]
Supreme Court referred the issue of the amount of
money to be returned by Congress to JMD to a special referee, who
in August 2003 awarded JMD $820,256.41 plus interest at the
statutory rate of 9% per annum from December 1, 1999 though entry
of judgment. In September 2003, Supreme Court entered an order
and judgment accepting the special referee's determination and
awarding JMD $1,098,090.41. In October 2003, the Appellate Division affirmed
Supreme Court's award of partial summary judgment to JMD (309
2 645 [1st Dept 2003]). In March 2004, the Appellate Division
affirmed Supreme Court's order accepting the special referee's
determination (5 AD3d 334 [1st Dept 2004]). We subsequently
granted Congress leave to appeal. II. This appeal principally involves a liquidated damages
clause -- the Agreement's provision for an early termination fee
-- considered by the courts below to be a penalty and therefore
unenforceable. Whether the early termination fee represents an
enforceable liquidation of damages or an unenforceable penalty is
a question of law, giving due consideration to the nature of the
contract and the circumstances ( Mosler Safe Co. v Maiden Lane
Safe Deposit Co., 199 NY 479, 485 [1910]; Leasing Serv. Corp. v
Justice, 673 F2d 70, 74 [2d Cir 1982]). The burden is on the
party seeking to avoid liquidated damages -- here, JMD -- to show
that the stated liquidated damages are, in fact, a penalty ( P.J.
Carlin Constr. Co. v City of New York, 59 AD2d 847 [1st Dept
1977]; Wechsler v Hunt Health Sys., 330 F Supp 2d 383, 413 [SD NY
[2004]). Further, "[w]here the court has sustained a liquidated
damages clause the measure of damages for a breach will be the
sum in the clause, no more, no less. If the clause is rejected
as being a penalty, the recovery is limited to actual damages
proven" ( Brecher v Laikin, 430 F Supp 103, 106 [SD NY 1977]; see
also III Farnsworth, Contracts § 12.18 at 304 [where a liquidated
damages provision is an unenforceable penalty, "the rest of the
agreement stands, and the injured party is remitted to the
conventional damage remedy for breach of that agreement, just as
if the provision had not been included"]). In Truck Rent-A-Center, we characterized liquidated
damages as "[i]n effect, . . . an estimate, made by the parties
at the time they enter into their agreement, of the extent of the
injury that would be sustained as a result of breach of the
agreement" (41 2 at 424). We called the distinction between
liquidated damages and a penalty "well established":
"A contractual provision fixing damages in the event of
breach will be sustained if the amount liquidated bears
a reasonable proportion to the probable loss and the
amount of actual loss is incapable or difficult of
precise estimation. If, however, the amount fixed is
plainly or grossly disproportionate to the probable
loss, the provision calls for a penalty and will not be
enforced" ( id. at 425).
Thus, JMD must demonstrate either that damages flowing from a
prospective early termination were readily ascertainable at the
time Congress and JMD entered into their revolving loan
agreement, or that the early termination fee is conspicuously
disproportionate to these foreseeable losses. Relatedly, we have
cautioned generally against interfering with parties' agreements
( see Fifty States Mgt. Corp. v Pioneer Auto Parks, , 46 NY2d 573,
577 [1979] ["Absent some element of fraud, exploitive
overreaching or unconscionable conduct . . . to exploit a
technical breach, there is no warrant, either in law or equity,
for a court to refuse enforcement of the agreement of the
parties"]; cf. III Farnsworth, Contracts §12.18 at 303-304 ["(I)t
has become increasingly difficult to justify the peculiar
historical distinction between liquidated damages and penalties.
Today the trend favors freedom of contract through the
enforcement of stipulated damage provisions as long as they do
not clearly disregard the principle of compensation"]; see also XCO Intl., Inc. v Pacific Scientific Co., 369 F3d 998, 1002 [7th
Cir 2004] ["The rule (against penalty clauses) hangs on, but is
chastened by an emerging presumption against interpreting
liquidated damages clauses as penalty clauses"]). Here, Congress committed to advance such sums as JMD
might periodically request throughout the Agreement's entire
term, based on an asset-based lending formula and up to a maximum
credit of $40 million. The outstanding loan balance would
fluctuate based on JMD's needs for working capital and the value
of its collateral (e.g., accounts receivable), which secured the
sums advanced and was applied to repay Congress so as to create
availability for additional loans. Under this asset-based financing arrangement, JMD only
needed to borrow when and to the extent required for adequate
cash flow to operate its business. As a result, JMD did not have
to take out fixed loans in amounts sufficient to safeguard itself
against short-term cash shortfalls or unanticipated
contingencies, and thereby avoided unnecessary interest costs.
In return for its commitment to make up to $40 million available
to JMD for the Agreement's full term, Congress bargained for
interest income over this entire time period. JMD reasons that because it had the right but not the
obligation to borrow -- a signature feature of any commercial
revolving loan agreement -- Congress has no entitlement to
liquidated damages in lieu of interest lost in the thirteen
months between the Agreement's early termination and the end of
its contractual term. This is so, JMD argues, because Congress
was never assured that JMD would ask it to advance any funds
whatsoever, much less any particular amounts at any particular
time or up to the $40 million maximum credit over this thirteen-
month time period. Under this construct, Congress would
necessarily never suffer damages on account of early termination.
Having thus hypothetically reduced Congress's prospective damages
to zero, JMD argues that the early termination fee obviously does
not bear a reasonable proportion to the readily estimated
probable loss from the Agreement's breach and its consequent
early termination. Of course, this argument begs the question of why JMD
would ever have entered into a contract requiring it to pledge
virtually all its assets in order to obtain loans that it did not
intend to request. JMD never offers any reason, much less proof,
to suppose that at the outset of the parties' agreement it would
have been reasonable to predict that JMD planned to borrow
considerably less than the maximum credit or, put another way,
that it was more likely that JMD intended to borrow amounts
closer to nothing than to $40 million.[6]
After all, the Agreement
increased the maximum credit available to JMD eight-fold over the
$5 million line of credit negotiated just five months earlier by
its predecessor. Further, JMD disregards Congress's costs to make $40
million available to loan. Congress had to have adequate funding
in place to fulfill its obligation to lend up to $40 million to
JMD upon request throughout the Agreement's term. This
commitment created costs for Congress as well as diminished its
capacity to make profitable loans to other entities. The Second
Circuit in Walter E. Heller & Co. v American Flyers Airline Corp.
(459 F2d 896, 899 [2d Cir 1972]) identified several similar
elements of damages that were real but difficult to estimate ex
ante and accordingly enforced $250,000 in liquidated damages for
breach of an agreement to borrow $8.9 million to purchase a jet
airplane. These damages included the lender's loss of interest
over the term of the contract or, alternatively, until the
borrower prepaid principal; that the lender "was, as of the
signing of the contract, contractually limiting its lending
activities so that the funds to be advanced to [borrower] might
be available when needed by [borrower]"; and that if the
transaction was not consummated, "the lender was faced with the
cost and expense of procuring substitute . . . borrowers and the
attendant delay in lending sums to be lent to [borrower]" ( id. at
899 [internal quotations omitted]). Further, "when these factors
are considered together with the fact that the sum arrived at was
the product of an arms-length transaction between sophisticated
businessmen, ably represented by counsel, the sum stated for
liquidated damages does not seem to be a sum plainly
disproportionate to the possible loss" ( id.). The lender's other
conceivable but difficult to calculate losses included "rate of
return, duration of the loan, risk, extent and realizability of
collateral, and the other obvious uncertainties inherent in this
particular contract," which made it "reasonable that a sum for
liquidated damages should be agreed to after arms-length
negotiations" ( id. at 899-900; accord United Merchants & Mftrs.,
Inc. v Equitable Life Assur. Soc., 674 F2d 134 [2d Cir 1982]). When Congress and JMD entered into the Agreement, they
could not readily forecast the credit facilities for which JMD
would qualify under the Agreement's asset-based formula, which
would fluctuate over its term; how much JMD would actually
borrow; whether the Agreement would be terminated early; and how
much JMD would have borrowed if the Agreement had not been
terminated early. Congress also, as already noted, was required
to limit its lending activities to insure that adequate funds
were available to fulfill its $40 million obligation to JMD, and
would incur costs to procure substitute borrowers in the event
that JMD breached the Agreement, causing Congress to terminate
it. The Agreement therefore included an early termination fee of
between 1% and 2% of the $40 million maximum credit, with the
percentage decreasing as the Agreement's term approached.
According to amicus Commercial Finance Association, an early
termination fee structured as "liquidated damages . . . based on
a sliding scale" and "linked to the amount of the commitment as
opposed to the outstanding loan balance at any given time" is a
common feature in asset-based lending facilities negotiated by
sophisticated commercial parties. To support its position, JMD also relies heavily on
Seidlitz v Auerbach (230 NY 167 [1920]), a case in which we
considered whether a $7,500 security deposit on a lease was
enforceable as liquidated damages. When the lessee failed to pay
one month's rent and was evicted, the landlord argued that it was
entitled to the entire deposit. We disagreed:
"[W]here a contract contains a number of covenants of
different degrees of importance and the loss resulting
from the breach of some of them will be clearly
disproportionate to the sum sought to be fixed as
liquidated damages, especially where the loss in some
cases is readily ascertainable, the sum so fixed will
be treated as a penalty. The strength of a chain is
that of its weakest link" ( id. at 173). In Hackenheimer v Kurtzmann (235 NY 57 [1923]),
however, we held that liquidated damages were enforceable for a
material breach of a contract that, read literally, suggested
their availability for trivial breaches as well. Otherwise,
Seidlitz "may be pressed to so extreme a conclusion as to make it
impossible to draw any contract providing for such [liquidated]
damages" ( id. at 67; see also United Air Lines, Inc. v Austin
Travel Corp., 867 F2d 737, 741 [2d Cir 1989] ["[T]he presumed
intent of the parties is that a liquidated damages provision will
apply only to material breaches"]; III Farnsworth, Contracts §
12.18 at 311, n31). JMD does not dispute that it breached multiple
provisions of the Agreement, including those governing collateral
reporting and covenants as to accounts receivable and inventory;
requirements to maintain minimum working capital and adjusted net
worth; and delivery of required documentation, including audited
financial statements and reports. Nor does JMD dispute that, as
a result of these breaches, it was in default and therefore
Congress was entitled to terminate the Agreement. Angling for
the protection of Seidlitz, however, JMD persistently
characterizes its breaches, both individually and collectively,
as minor recordkeeping deficiencies. But these breaches were
material, given the nature of a commercial revolving loan
agreement. For one thing, JMD neglected to provide Congress with
the kind of information that any asset-based lender requires in
order to track the movement and quality of its borrower's
collateral and to determine loan availability accurately ( see
generally Levie, "Asset-Based Lending," SB74 ALI-ABA 95 [May 15,
1997]). The proponent of a motion for summary judgment "must
make a prima facie showing of entitlement to judgment as a matter
of law, tendering sufficient evidence to demonstrate the absence
of any material issues of fact. Failure to make such prima facie
showing requires a denial of the motion, regardless of the
sufficiency of the opposing papers" ( Alvarez v Prospect Hosp., , 68 NY2d 320, 324 [1986] [citations omitted]; see also Friends of
Animals v Associated Fur Mfrs., , 46 NY2d 1065 [1979]). In this
regard, CPLR 3212 [b] provides that a summary judgment motion
"shall be supported by affidavit" of a person "having knowledge
of the facts" as well as other admissible evidence ( see GTF Mktg.
v Colonial Aluminum Sales, , 66 NY2d 965, 967 [1985]). A
conclusory affidavit or an affidavit by an individual without
personal knowledge of the facts does not establish the
proponent's prima facie burden ( see e.g. Vermette v Kenworth
Truck Co., , 68 NY2d 714 [1986]). The conclusory affidavit of JMD's president, which
relied entirely on the memorandum of law prepared by JMD's
attorney, provides no factual basis to support any conclusion
that the early termination fee was an unenforceable penalty ( see
e.g. Bush v St. Clare's Hosp., , 82 NY2d 738 [1993]). JMD
presented no proof to show that Congress's prospective damages
upon early termination were capable of precise estimation at the
time the parties executed the Agreement, or that the early
termination fee was grossly disproportionate to this probable
loss. Congress, which did not cross-move for summary
judgment, has asked us nonetheless to grant it this relief or, in
the alternative, to determine that material triable issues of
fact remain. While Supreme Court and the Appellate Division may
search the record and grant summary judgment to a non-moving
party ( seeCPLR 3212 [b]), we may not ( Merritt Hill Vineyards v
Windy Hgts. Vineyard (61 2 106, 110-111 [1984]). Upon
remittal of this matter to Supreme Court, however, Congress may
seek summary judgment if it is so advised. III. Finally, we conclude that Congress was not entitled to
engage in self-help by retaining funds remaining in JMD's loan
account after JMD had paid Congress all outstanding loans. Upon
termination or non-renewal of the Agreement and other related
financing agreements -- notably including security agreements --
JMD was required to pay Congress all "outstanding and unpaid"
obligations "in full." In addition, the Agreement required JMD
to "furnish cash collateral" to Congress "in such amounts as
[Congress] determine[d] [were] reasonably necessary" to secure
itself against losses in connection with any of JMD's contingent
obligations. In short, the Agreement provided for JMD to make
cash collateral available to ensure its payment of any potential
or not indefeasibly paid indebtedness still known to exist at the
time Congress terminated its security interest in JMD's assets.
This cash collateral was to be "remitted by wire transfer" by JMD
to a bank account designated in writing by Congress for this
purpose. That is not what happened here. After paying off its
indebtedness, JMD asked Congress to turn over surplus proceeds
from deposits in the lockbox and provide a UCC-3 financing
statement amendment to terminate Congress's security interest in
JMD's assets ( see UCC 9-513[c][1]). Congress, for its part,
offered to remit these monies and terminate its security interest
upon JMD's execution of a release of claims. JMD refused to
execute a release, and Congress retained the remaining funds in
JMD's loan account as a so-called "cash collateral reserve" for
payment of any contingent obligations that JMD might have owed
it. Congress subsequently substantially drew down the
reserve, principally to pay for attorneys' fees related to either
competing claims for the funds in JMD's account or this lawsuit.
As justification for these charges to the reserve, Congress
points to JMD's broad promise to indemnify it for losses,
including attorneys' fees, incurred in connection with disputes
related to the Agreement's "negotiation, preparation, execution,
delivery, enforcement, performance or administration." While we
conclude that the Agreement did not authorize Congress to retain
and charge a reserve for these attorneys' fees, we view as a
separate matter and express no opinion whether Congress may
recoup any of its attorneys' fees by way of counterclaim or in a
separate action for indemnification ( see Hooper Assoc. v AGS
Computers, , 74 NY2d 487 [1989] [promise by one party to a contract
to indemnify the other for attorneys' fees incurred in litigation
between them must be unmistakably clear in order to be
enforceable, such as where some of indemnified subjects are
exclusively or unequivocally referable to claims between parties
on the contract rather than claims of third parties]). This
issue was beyond the scope of Supreme Court's reference to the
special referee, who was limited to determining "the amount to be
returned by Congress to JMD" from the cash collateral reserve
retained by Congress. Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should
be modified, without costs, and the case remitted to Supreme
Court for further proceedings in accordance with this Opinion
and, as so modified, affirmed.
Footnotes
1 The Agreement defined obligations to encompass loans, letter of
credit accommodations and generally any other indebtedness owing by
JMD to Congress, specifically including contingent obligations.
2 The other six remedies were the right to accelerate and demand
immediate payment of all obligations; to enter upon any premises where
collateral was located and take possession of it or complete
processing, manufacturing and repair of all or any portion of it; to
require JMD at its expense to make any part or all of the collateral
available at a time and place of Congress's choosing; to foreclose
upon any or all the collateral; to remove any or all of the collateral
from the premises where it was located for purposes of sale,
foreclosure or other disposition; and to sell, lease, transfer, assign
deliver or otherwise dispose of any and all collateral at such prices
or terms as Congress deemed reasonable.
3 Under the letter agreement, Congress agreed to forgive the early
termination fee entirely if JMD paid all its outstanding obligations
by July 23, 1999. Congress further agreed to discount the fee to
$150,000 if JMD paid after July 23, 1999 but on or before August 6,
1999; to $300,000 if JMD paid after August 6, 1999 but on or before
August 20, 1999; and to $450,000 if JMD paid after August 20, 1999 but
on or before September 3, 1999. Congress expressed its intention to
look to JMD for the entire $600,000 early termination fee, however, if
JMD did not pay all its outstanding obligations until after September
3, 1999.
4 The $800,000 comprises the $600,000 early termination fee and
the funds retained by Congress as a cash collateral reserve, which the
parties stipulated amounted to $131,443.40 as of the date JMD brought
this lawsuit.
5 Congress sought reargument, contending that Supreme Court had
overlooked the fact that the maximum credit was raised from $5 million
to $40 million, and that the court had erred in not considering this
when evaluating the reasonableness of the liquidated damages
provision. In April 2003, Supreme Court granted reargument, and
adhered to its original decision.
6 For example, JMD did not even present any suggestive proof on
the issue, such as evidence of the sums it actually borrowed from
Congress before the Agreement was terminated and, more relevantly,
whether or how much money it may have borrowed elsewhere for working
capital in the thirteen months between the Agreement's early
termination and the end of the contractual term. A wide disparity
between the early termination fee and the interest that Congress
earned or would have earned on these sums might support an inference
that the estimate of harm underlying the liquidation of damages was
not reasonable.