State of New York OPINION
Court of Appeals This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision
before publication in the New York Reports.
No. 40
The Trustees of Columbia
University in the City of New
York,
Appellant,
v.
D'Agostino Supermarkets, Inc.,
Respondent.
Evan H. Krinick, for appellant.
Bruce H. Lederman, for respondent.
RIVERA, J.:
This appeal requires that we consider the propriety of a liquidated damages
provision in a Surrender Agreement between two New York City icons: Columbia
University, one of the City’s premier universities, and D’Agostino Supermarkets, a family-
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owned food market chain founded in 1932. As a general matter, “parties are free to agree
to a liquidated damages clause provided that the clause is neither unconscionable nor
contrary to public policy” (172 Van Duzer Realty Corp. v Globe Alumni Student Assistance
Assn., Inc., 24 NY3d 528, 536 [2014] [internal quotation marks omitted] [citation
omitted]). The damages sought here were grossly disproportionate to the amount due upon
full performance of the Surrender Agreement. Therefore, the courts below properly struck
the provision as an unenforceable penalty in contravention of public policy. We affirm.
I.
Plaintiff The Trustees of Columbia University and defendant D’Agostino
Supermarkets, Inc., entered a 15-year commercial lease for defendant’s rental of the ground
floor and basement levels of a building owned by plaintiff. Thirteen years into the tenancy,
with defendant facing financial difficulties, the parties entered a Surrender Agreement that
terminated the lease in exchange for defendant’s surrender of the premises and a staggered
payment of $261,751.73.
The Surrender Agreement provides, in relevant part,
“In consideration of Landlord entering into this Surrender
Agreement, Tenant shall pay to Landlord (i) concurrently
herewith an amount equal to Forty-Three Thousand and 00/100
Dollars ($43,000.00) (the ‘Initial Surrender Payment’), (ii) on
or before June 1, 2016, an additional amount equal to Forty-
Three Thousand and 00/100 Dollars ($43,000.00) (the
‘Second Surrender Payment’) and (iii) on the first day of each
month during the period commencing on July 1, 2016, and
ending on and including May 1, 2017, Fifteen Thousand Nine
Hundred Seventy-Seven and 43/100 Dollars ($15,977.43)
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(each such monthly payment described in this clause (iii), a
‘Monthly Surrender Payment’).”
In the event of defendant’s default or failure to timely cure upon notice, the Surrender
Agreement further provides,
“the aggregate amount of all Fixed Rent, additional rent or
other sums and charges due and payable during the term of the
Lease shall immediately thereafter come due and payable by
Tenant to Landlord and [] Tenant shall no longer be entitled to
be released and relieved from and against any Released Claims
. . . . TIME SHALL BE OF THE ESSENCE with respect to the
dates set forth in this Section.”
As agreed by the parties, defendant vacated and surrendered the premises to plaintiff
within days of signing the Surrender Agreement and timely made the two $43,000
surrender payments. Plaintiff relet the premises one month after the surrender.
Defendant failed to timely pay the first four monthly surrender payments, from July
to October 2016, despite plaintiff’s notice to cure. In November 2016, plaintiff commenced
the underlying action to enforce the damages provision in the Surrender Agreement. After
defendant answered, plaintiff moved for summary judgment on the complaint seeking
future payments under the terminated lease, i.e., $1,020,125.15, plus interest and other
taxes and costs provided for under the lease.1 Plaintiff rejected defendant’s December 2020
tender of $175,751.73, which represented overdue and early payments of the remaining
1
Plaintiff notes that the amount of prospective rent demanded in the complaint was an
inadvertent error that plaintiff corrected in its summary judgment motion.
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surrender installments.2 Defendant cross-moved for summary judgment striking the
damages provision and seeking entry of judgment against itself for $175,751.73—the
outstanding amount due under the Surrender Agreement—along with accrued interest as
of October 14, 2016, or, in the alternative, denying plaintiff’s motion and ordering
discovery on the issue of damages and mitigation based on the new lease.
Supreme Court denied plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment and granted
defendant’s cross-motion for summary judgment for the requested amount and interest.
The Appellate Division affirmed (168 AD3d 594 [1st Dept 2019]). We granted plaintiff
leave to appeal (33 NY3d 904 [2019]).
II.
A.
Plaintiff argues that the Surrender Agreement was a practical resolution of
defendant’s breach of their commercial lease and so plaintiff’s damages should be
measured against defendant’s default on the lease. In the alternative, plaintiff requests that
we remand for a hearing to determine plaintiff’s actual damages. Defendant counters that
the liquidated damages provision is grossly excessive and effectively a late fee of over
2000% per annum for failure to timely pay the monthly installments. Defendant also
2
Defendant filed an amended answer and asserted a counterclaim for unjust enrichment
based on plaintiff’s reletting of the demised premises during the lease term.
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contends that plaintiff’s actual damages were readily calculable and accounted for when
the parties entered into the Surrender Agreement.
We conclude that the damages here are properly measured against defendant’s
breach of the Surrender Agreement and not, as plaintiff and the dissent maintain, against
the breach of the terminated lease. Viewed in that light, we further conclude that the
liquidated damages provision is an unenforceable penalty because it is plainly
disproportionate to the damages for the only contractual breach at issue in this appeal, i.e.,
overdue payment of the monthly surrender installments.
On a motion for summary judgment, the moving party 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” (Xiang Fu He v Troon Mgt., Inc.,
34 NY3d 167, 175 [2019], quoting Alvarez v Prospect Hosp., 68 NY2d 320, 324 [1986]).
If the moving party proffers the required evidence, the burden shifts to the nonmoving party
“to establish the existence of material issues of fact which require a trial of the action”
(Vega v Restani Constr. Corp., 18 NY3d 499, 503 [2012], quoting Alvarez, 68 NY2d at
324). Applying that standard here, because the damages provision is unenforceable,
Supreme Court properly denied plaintiff summary judgment and properly granted
defendant’s motion, entering judgment for the unpaid amount under the Surrender
Agreement plus interest.
B.
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In accordance with the parties’ commercial tenancy, in the event of a breach,
plaintiff had two options: (1) allow defendant to maintain possession of the property for
the full lease term and hold defendant liable for past and future rent, or (2) reenter the
premises and collect all rent due up to the time of reentry. If it chose to reenter, plaintiff
could relet the premises and defendant would be liable for any deficiency in rent and other
related expenses. Instead of suing for a breach of the lease, the parties negotiated and
entered into the Surrender Agreement, which provided that, on the date of surrender, the
lease “and the term thereof and all rights of [defendant] thereunder shall expire and
terminate.” It further relieved defendant of its obligations under the lease, including
payment of future rent and costs, in exchange for defendant’s payments of certain fixed
amounts totaling $261,751.73 and its surrender of the premises to plaintiff.
In other words, and as is commonly understood of these arrangements, the Surrender
Agreement constituted a new contract between the parties that terminated the lease and all
prospective obligations flowing from the tenancy (see Holy Props. v Cole Prods., 87 NY2d
130, 133-134 [1995]; 52 CJS Landlord & Tenant § 206; 74A NY Jur2d Landlord and
Tenant § 939; 49 Am Jur 2d Landlord and Tenant § 606). This new contract also included
a liquidated damages provision.3 Liquidated damages are “an estimate, made by the parties
at the time they enter into their agreement, of the extent of the injury that would be
3
The dissent asserts that the parties have chosen the “ill-fitting” “label” of liquidated
damages to describe the Surrender Agreement’s damages clause (dissenting op at 7). The
dissent stands alone in this view; in addition to the parties, all of the justices who have
addressed the issue have treated this provision as a liquidated damages clause. Rightly so,
because the provision sets forth the estimated compensation for a possible future breach.
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sustained as a result of breach of the agreement” (Truck Rent-A-Ctr. v Puritan Farms 2nd,
41 NY2d 420, 424 [1977]). “A liquidated damage provision has its basis in the principle
of just compensation for loss” (id., citing Restatement of Contracts § 339, and Comment
thereon). “Liquidated damages that constitute a penalty, however, violate public policy,
and are unenforceable. A provision which requires damages ‘grossly disproportionate to
the amount of actual damages provides for [a] penalty and is unenforceable’” (Van Duzer,
24 NY3d at 536 [citation omitted], quoting Truck Rent-A-Ctr., 41 NY2d at 424).
Defendant, as the party seeking to avoid payment of liquidated damages, has the
burden of establishing that the damages for breach of the Surrender Agreement were
disproportionate to the foreseeable losses and “in fact, a penalty” (see JMD Holding Corp.
v Congress Fin. Corp., 4 NY3d 373, 380 [2005]). Defendant met that burden.
The question here distills to whether the liquidated damages provision in the
Surrender Agreement is so disproportionate to the anticipated harm to plaintiff from
defendant’s failure to timely pay the monthly installments that the provision constitutes a
penalty. The damages provision effectively reinstated defendant’s future rent liabilities
under the terminated lease, to the tune of $1,020,125.15, plus interest and other prospective
taxes and costs due under the lease, even though those damages did not flow from a breach
of the Surrender Agreement. Those damages were 7½ times what plaintiff would have
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received, if defendant had fully complied with the Surrender Agreement. Plaintiff cannot
enforce a non-existent lease under the guise of damages for a breach of a separate contract.4
To be clear, when the lease was in effect, plaintiff could have exercised its rights as
the landowner and proceeded against defendant for violating the leasehold terms (see Van
Duzer, 24 NY3d at 534-535). Instead, plaintiff negotiated with defendant to terminate the
lease in exchange for a set amount of money and surrender of the premises. That contract
freed plaintiff from its lessor obligations. Critically, contrary to the dissent’s assertion that
plaintiff “received nothing in exchange” (dissenting op at 5), it allowed plaintiff to
immediately reenter and relet the premises without the need for litigation, which is exactly
what it did.
When defendant breached the Surrender Agreement, plaintiff was entitled to
proceed under that contract and demand damages for the breach, including the amount past
due and acceleration of the remaining installment payments. However, plaintiff could not
seek a payment grossly disproportionate to the amount past due plus interest (see Bi-Econ.
Mkt., Inc. v Harleysville Ins. Co. of N.Y., 10 NY3d 187, 193 [2008] [recognizing that for
4
The dissent attempts to create discord where none exists by stating that we reach our
decision by casting aside principles of contract law (dissenting op at 4). But no one disputes
that “[f]reedom of contract prevails in an arm’s length transaction between sophisticated
parties . . . , and in the absence of countervailing public policy concerns there is no reason
to relieve them of the consequences of their bargain’” (159 MP Corp. v Redbridge Bedford,
LLC, 33 NY3d 353, 359 [2019], quoting Oppenheimer & Co. v Oppenheim, Appel, Dixon
& Co., 86 NY2d 685, 695 [1995]). The dissent simply ignores that “[w]e have deemed a
contractual provision to be unenforceable where the public policy in favor of freedom of
contract is overridden by another weighty and countervailing public policy” (id. at 360),
including a liquidated damages provision grossly disproportionate to the amount of actual
damages (see Van Duzer, 24 NY3d at 536).
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“agreements to pay”—i.e., “contracts for money only”—the only recoverable damage for
breach is interest”]; Scavenger, Inc. v GT Interactive Software Corp., 289 AD2d 58, 58-
59, 734 N.Y.S.2d 141, 142 [1st Dept 2001] [“(W)here the breach of contract was a failure
to pay money, plaintiff should be limited to a recovery of the contract amounts plus
appropriate interest] [citation omitted]; Cotheal v Talmage, 9 NY [5 Seld] 551, 554 [1854]
[“Where there is a contract to pay money, the damages for its breach are fixed and
liquidated by law, and require no liquidation by the parties”]; 36 NY Jur 2d, Damages §
173 [stating that liquidated damages clauses in contracts for the payment of money are
typically inappropriate because “for the nonpayment of money, the law awards interest as
damages”]). By any measure the more than one million dollars plus interest demanded here
is disproportionate to the $175,751.73 unpaid under the Surrender Agreement (see e.g. TY
Bldrs. II, Inc. v 55 Day Spa, Inc., 167 AD3d 679, 681 [2d Dept 2018] [holding that a late
fee that would accrue on 27 days for a total of $1,350 was equal to, in effect, a 79% penalty
for that month and thus unenforceable as against the public policy expressed by Penal Law
§ 190.40]; Clean Air Options, LLC v Humanscale Corp., 142 AD3d 923, 924 [1st Dept
2016] [“The late fee, which according to the parties’ calculations results in an annual
interest rate of 78%, is unreasonable and confiscatory in nature, and thus unenforceable”
(internal quotation marks omitted)] [citation omitted]; Sandra’s Jewel Box v 401 Hotel,
273 AD2d 1, 3 [1st Dept 2000] [holding that a set-off of $15,000 exceeded the base amount
due ($1,800 per month for five months), amounted to a 365% per annum penalty, and was
unenforceable]; Pyramid Ctrs. & Co. v Kinney Shoe Corp., 244 AD2d 625, 627 [3d Dept
1997] [holding that a liquidated damages clause providing for double the fixed minimum
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rent upon surrender of the property was “not to provide just compensation but, rather to
secure performance by the compulsion of the very disproportion”(internal quotation marks
omitted)] [citation omitted]; 943 Lexington Ave. v Niarchos, 83 Misc2d 803, 804 [App
Term, 1st Dept, 1975] [holding that a rent surcharge of 60% per annum, was “unreasonable
and confiscatory in nature and therefore unenforceable”] [citation omitted]).
A simple hypothetical further illustrates the penalizing nature of the liquidated
damages provision here. According to plaintiff’s interpretation of the Surrender
Agreement, if defendant timely made all but the final monthly surrender payment of
$15,977.43, defendant’s breach would render it liable for $1,029,969.54 plus interest and
additional costs. Defendant would be liable for the total amount remaining due under the
terminated lease, and defendant would be forced to pay that amount, rather than the final
installment, without having had the benefit of the premises which it had surrendered to
plaintiff. There is but one way to refer to this outcome: an unenforceable penalty.
Our decision in Van Duzer is instructive. In that appeal, the defendants maintained
that the landowner’s acceleration of prospective rent was disproportionate to the
landowner’s actual damages where the landowner terminated the lease and relet the
premises after the tenant vacated. Without deciding whether the amount sought was a
penalty, we held that the defendants were entitled to a hearing to present evidence that the
undiscounted accelerated rent was disproportionate to the landowner’s actual losses, and
thus constituted unenforceable liquidated damages. As we explained,
“arguably the ability to obtain all future rent due in one lump
sum, undiscounted to present-day value, and also enjoy
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uninterrupted possession of the property provides the
landowner with more than the compensation attendant to the
losses from the breach—even though such compensation is the
recognized purpose of a liquidated damages provision” (Van
Duzer, 24 NY3d at 536-537).
The facts in this appeal present an even more obvious case of an unenforceable
penalty. In Van Duzer, the landowner proceeded under the lease for damages flowing
directly from the tenant’s abandonment of the premises and noncompliance with the lease
terms. Again, the payment plan in the Surrender Agreement here reflects the parties’
negotiated damages for the breach of the lease, not the Surrender Agreement. The
subsequent failure to pay installments on time is a breach of the Surrender Agreement, and
a breach that is properly compensated by an award of the outstanding settlement payments
plus interest.
The dissent maintains that the Surrender Agreement is best understood as a
“settlement agreement” (dissenting op at 3). Why this would matter is unclear considering
that a settlement agreement, like any other agreement, cannot be enforced if it violates
public policy, including our state’s rejection of penalties as damages (see 1420 Concourse
Corp. v Cruz, 135 AD2d 371, 372 [1st Dept 1987] [“(W)here the parties, both represented
by counsel, have freely entered into a stipulation of settlement in open court, such
stipulation will generally be enforced unless public policy is affronted”]; see e.g. SMD
Capital Group LLC v EPR Capital LLC, 45 AD3d 314, 314 [1st Dept 2007] [applying the
test to determine the enforceability of a liquidated damages clause in a settlement
agreement related to defendant’s failure to produce the required books and records at the
closing of a real estate transaction as required under a settlement agreement]; Quaker Oats
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Co v Reilly, 274 AD2d 565, 566 [2d Dept 2000] [holding liquidated damages provision in
settlement agreement regarding a mortgage foreclosure was unenforceable as grossly
disproportionate and noting that “it is irrelevant that the plaintiff might have recovered
much more had it continued with (the settled action)]).
Plaintiff unpersuasively argues and the dissent agrees that affirmance here would
disincentivize landowners from entering surrender agreements and deprive tenants of the
benefit afforded by such arrangements. Plaintiff chose to terminate the lease in exchange
for a fixed amount paid in installments and reentry on the premises for purposes of entering
a new lease with another tenant. The award of outstanding payments therefore allowed
plaintiff to realize the benefit of its bargain under the Surrender Agreement and put the
property to its highest and best use. This approach encourages surrender agreements as
providing a benefit to all parties—the tenant is released from future liability and the
landowner regains the premises and the opportunity to relet on its own account. In contrast,
the dissent’s approach would disincentivize tenants from negotiating a mutually agreeable
surrender because the tenant would remain on the hook for back rent, future rent and other
contractual damages without the benefit of enjoyment of the premises.
Plaintiff’s real argument is that it did not receive six payments on time, but that was
the risk that it accepted by entering the Surrender Agreement. A party’s default is a risk
common to all contracts, without unique effect in the context of a surrender of premises.
And the existence of that risk does not and cannot justify exaction of a penalty.
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Finally, plaintiff is not entitled to an evidentiary hearing to determine plaintiff’s actual
damages and the extent to which those damages were ascertainable at the time that the
parties signed the Surrender Agreement.5 Plaintiff’s reliance on Van Duzer is misplaced.
We remitted in Van Duzer to afford the breaching tenant an opportunity to present evidence
in support of their contention that the undiscounted acceleration of all future rents
constituted an unlawful penalty (24 NY3d at 532). In contrast, and notwithstanding the
dissent’s suggestion, Supreme Court here already completed the task that compelled
remittal in Van Duzer, i.e., the determination that the liquidated damages provision was a
penalty because plaintiff’s damages were ascertainable and the liquidated damages were
grossly disproportionate to the cost of breaching the Surrender Agreement.
III.
Under our well-established rules of contract, the Surrender Agreement’s liquidated
damages provision does not fairly compensate plaintiff for defendant’s delayed installment
payments. The provision calls for a sum more than sevenfold the amount due if defendant
had complied fully with the Surrender Agreement. We cannot enforce such an obviously
and grossly disproportionate award without offending our State’s public policy against “the
imposition of penalties or forfeitures for which there is no statutory authority” (Truck Rent-
A-Ctr., 41 NY2d at 424, citing City of Rye v Public Serv. Mut. Ins. Co., 34 NY2d 470, 472-
5
While negotiating the Surrender Agreement, plaintiff was actively courting new tenants
and has conceded that it did not suffer a differential in rent as a consequence of reletting
shortly after defendant’s surrender.
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473 [1974]). Accordingly, there was no error in rejecting plaintiff’s liquidated damages
provision.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.
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DiFIORE, Chief Judge (dissenting):
After D’Agostino Supermarkets, Inc., the lessee of property owned by Columbia
University, breached the lease by failing to pay rent for more than seven months, the parties
settled their dispute by entering into a Surrender Agreement which contained certain
conditions. If D’Agostino made timely installment payments totaling about $262,000,
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representing the rent it already owed but had failed to pay, it would be relieved of certain
other obligations stemming from its breach of the lease. However, if it failed to timely
make the payments, D’Agostino would not “be released and relieved from” the claims
Columbia possessed as a result of the breach of the lease, particularly the right (as described
in the Surrender Agreement) to collect “the aggregate amount of all Fixed Rent, additional
rent or other sums and charges due” during the remainder of the lease term (about two
years). It is undisputed that, after entering the Surrender Agreement, D’Agostino again
failed to uphold its end of the bargain, breaching the condition to timely make the back-
rent installment payments. Yet the majority concludes, as a matter of law, that
D’Agostino—a well-counseled, sophisticated party who freely negotiated the terms of the
settlement—should be relieved of its obligation to accept the consequences of that second
breach. This result is incompatible with our freedom of contract precedent and the strong
public policy favoring enforcement of settlement agreements. Worse yet, I fear it will chill
future efforts to resolve lease disputes without litigation—to the detriment of distressed
tenants. Therefore, I respectfully dissent.
As this Court recently reaffirmed in 159 MP Corp. v Redbridge Bedford, LLC,
“‘[f]reedom of contract prevails in an arm’s length transaction between sophisticated
parties . . . , and in the absence of countervailing public policy concerns there is no reason
to relieve them of the consequences of their bargain’” (33 NY3d 353, 359 [2019], quoting
Oppenheimer & Co. v Oppenheim, Appel, Dixon & Co., 86 NY2d 685, 695 [1995]). The
public policy underlying freedom of contract is twofold: “[b]y disfavoring judicial
upending of the balance struck at the conclusion of the parties’ negotiations” it “both
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promotes certainty and predictability and respects the autonomy of commercial parties in
ordering their own business arrangements” (159 MP Corp., 33 NY3d at 359-360).
Accordingly, “‘when parties set down their agreement in a clear, complete document, their
writing should . . . be enforced according to its terms’” (159 MP Corp., 33 NY3d at 358,
quoting Vermont Teddy Bear Co. v 538 Madison Realty Co., 1 NY3d 470, 475 [2004]).
This principle of New York contract law has “special import” in real property transactions
where, as here, “commercial certainty is a paramount concern” (159 MP Corp., 33 NY3d
at 359, quoting Vermont Teddy Bear, 1 NY3d at 475).
The public policy favoring freedom of contract applies with particular force to the
Surrender Agreement—which is a settlement agreement crafted by the parties to resolve
their dispute without litigation. Settlement agreements “are judicially favored and may not
be lightly set aside” (IDT Corp. v Tyco Group, S.A.R.L., 13 NY3d 209, 213 [2009] [citation
omitted]). Strict enforcement of settlement agreements serves multiple important
purposes, consistent with those underlying freedom of contract. There is a “societal benefit
in recognizing the autonomy of parties to shape their own solution to a controversy” and
assurance that their agreements will be honored provides them “finality and repose upon
which [to] order their affairs” (Denburg v Parker Chapin Flattau & Klimpl, 82 NY2d 375,
383 [1993]). Moreover, settlement agreements are favored because they also promote
“efficient dispute resolution” (IDT Corp., 13 NY3d at 213), “avoid[ing] potentially costly,
time-consuming litigation and preserv[ing] scarce judicial resources” as “courts could not
function if every dispute devolved into a lawsuit” (Denburg, 82 NY2d at 383; see also IDT
Corp., 13 NY3d at 213). As Columbia has consistently argued throughout this litigation,
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these policies, and the significant interests they protect, should guide the resolution of this
dispute between two sophisticated, counseled commercial entities.
The majority casts these principles aside, failing to acknowledge that the Surrender
Agreement constituted a settlement of the claims Columbia possessed upon D’Agostino’s
breach of the lease, which included a right to collect—not only unpaid back rent—but also
future rent owed until the conclusion of the lease term, even if D’Agostino vacated the
premises (Columbia had no obligation under the lease to relet the property). Columbia
agreed to settle under terms that significantly discounted the amount it would collect on
account of D’Agostino’s breach of the lease, but did so only on the condition that
D’Agostino timely make eleven installment payments representing the back rent
D’Agostino already owed at the time the parties entered the Surrender Agreement.
Because that rent was several months overdue, it is no surprise that Columbia required the
inclusion of a clause that “TIME SHALL BE OF THE ESSENCE with respect to the [due]
dates” for those installment payments. The parties’ agreement could not be clearer that
Columbia waived certain claims it possessed arising from D’Agostino’s breach of the lease
only if this condition—timely payment of the installments—was met. Under the plain
language of the agreement, upon D’Agostino’s default or failure to timely cure upon notice,
two things would occur: D’Agostino would immediately be obligated to pay the future rent
due under the lease (among other associated payments) and it would “no longer be entitled
to be released and relieved from and against any Released Claims.” Of course, it is
undisputed that D’Agostino breached yet again.
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Notwithstanding the context of the Surrender Agreement and its plain language, the
majority mistakenly concludes that the Surrender Agreement should be interpreted without
reference to the prior breach of the lease and that D’Agostino was relieved of all obligations
under the lease even if it failed to timely make the installment payments. Although the
Surrender Agreement “terminated the lease,” it most certainly did not unconditionally
release the tenant of all obligations flowing from its breach of that prior agreement, and the
majority’s assertion that Columbia seeks to “enforce a non-existent lease under the guise
of damages for a breach of a separate contract” (majority op at 8) misses the mark.
Columbia does not attempt to enforce the lease—instead, it seeks to enforce the contingent
remedy the parties adopted in the Surrender Agreement in the event D’Agostino failed to
timely make the Surrender Payments.
The practical result of the majority’s holding is that Columbia University received
nothing in exchange for its agreement (1) to give the tenant additional time to make back
rent payments that were already overdue, provided those payments were timely made, and
(2) to forfeit its right to collect future rent from D’Agostino for its breach of the lease.
Under the majority’s analysis, the carefully negotiated consequence of D’Agostino’s
continued failure to pay the back rent is unenforceable; indeed, there is no consequence for
D’Agostino’s breach of the Surrender Agreement and D’Agostino is rewarded for serial
breaches of valid and binding contracts. The majority accomplishes this result through a
strained application of this Court’s precedent related to liquidated damages clauses,
reasoning that the provision reinstating D’Agostino’s obligation to pay future rent in the
event of a second breach operates as an unenforceable penalty because the damages
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D’Agostino would be obligated to pay upon breach of the Surrender Agreement were
substantially greater than the discounted damages Columbia agreed to accept in the form
of promptly tendered installment payments. This remedy provision in the contract is best
understood as a component of a settlement after a breach—not a liquidated damages clause
crafted at the beginning of a contractual relationship. Nonetheless, even viewing the
contingent language as a liquidated damages clause, when properly interpreted in the
context of the entire agreement, it is not an unenforceable penalty justifying a deviation
from application of our bedrock freedom of contract principles.
As we have recognized, the public policy favoring freedom of contract can be
“overridden by another weighty and countervailing public policy” (159 MP Corp., 33
NY3d at 360). The majority concludes that such a countervailing public policy is at play
here, viewing the contingent remedy as an unenforceable liquidated damages clause. But
“[a]s a general matter parties are free to agree to a liquidated damages clause ‘provided
that the clause is neither unconscionable nor contrary to public policy’” (172 Van Duzer
Realty Corp. v Globe Alumni Student Assistance Assn., Inc., 24 NY3d 528, 536 [2014],
quoting Truck Rent-A-Ctr. v Puritan Farms 2nd, 41 NY2d 420, 424 [1977]). Liquidated
damages provisions serve an important purpose because they allow parties to estimate—in
advance of a default—the extent of the injury resulting from the breach of the agreement
and are, therefore, particularly useful “where it would be difficult, if not actually
impossible, to calculate the amount of actual damage” (Truck Rent-A-Ctr., 41 NY2d at
424). Nevertheless, “public policy is firmly set against the imposition of penalties or
forfeitures for which there is no statutory authority” (id.)—and thus, a liquidated damages
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clause that operates as a penalty will not be enforced. A liquidated damages clause operates
as an impermissible penalty only when it provides for damages “plainly or grossly
disproportionate to the probable loss,” as such a penalty “is not intended to provide fair
compensation” (id. at 425). By comparison, it is enforceable when “the amount liquidated
bears a reasonable proportion to the probable loss” (id.).
In this case, although the parties referred to the contingent remedy as a “liquidated
damages clause,” the label is ill-fitting. The public policy underlying our liquidated
damages jurisprudence is simply not implicated in circumstances where, as in this case,
there is no need to estimate the damages that might result in the event of a future breach
because the breach has already occurred and the parties are crafting a settlement agreement.
But even viewing the contingent remedy as a liquidated damages clause, the majority’s
conclusion that the provision reinstating D’Agostino’s obligation to pay future rent is an
unenforceable penalty because it provides for damages “exponentially disproportionate” to
D’Agostino’s outstanding Surrender Payments (approximately $1 million versus
$176,000) adopts an overly simplistic view of the Surrender Agreement and fails to “giv[e]
due consideration to the nature of the contract and the circumstances” in which it was
entered, as our precedent requires (172 Van Duzer Realty Corp., 24 NY3d at 536).1 It is
1
The majority reasons that the circumstances here are like that in 172 Van Duzer—but it
then fails to grant the relief provided in that case, which did not declare the provision
unenforceable but, rather, remitted for a hearing to explore whether the damages were
“grossly disproportionate.” In fact, 172 Van Duzer does not stand for the proposition that
a provision is unenforceable merely because it required immediate payment of all future
rent due under a lease. There, the acceleration clause was negotiated in advance of any
breach, the default occurred early in the course of a long-term lease and, as the Court
observed, strict enforcement of the provision would have resulted in a lump sum payment
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evident from the Surrender Agreement that the parties understood that D’Agostino’s
liability for breach of the lease was much greater than the value of the Surrender Payments.
The obligations triggered if those payments were not timely made were not included merely
as compensation for breach of the Surrender Agreement but were also intended to
compensate Columbia for D’Agostino’s earlier breach of the lease. Thus, an analysis of
whether the damages set forth in the Surrender Agreement are grossly disproportionate to
Columbia’s probable losses requires consideration not only of the value of the Surrender
Payments that D’Agostino failed to make, but also of the probable damages already set in
motion by D’Agostino’s prior breach of the lease, viewed from the time the Surrender
Agreement was executed and not the date of the breach (see Truck Rent-A-Ctr., 41 NY2d
at 425).
When the agreement was executed, Columbia possessed a right to pursue the full
value of future rent payments until the conclusion of the lease term. At that time, there
was no assurance that Columbia would sign a new tenant (and what costs might be incurred
in that process), nor did the parties know the amount of rent Columbia might be able to
negotiate or whether a new tenant would timely pay during the remainder of the original
lease term. Thus, the remedy negotiated by the parties in the Surrender Agreement was
directly premised on Columbia’s rights under the lease, bears a “reasonable relation” to
of eight years of future rent, not discounted to present value (24 NY3d at 536). Even then
we did not void the clause but directed further litigation of the issue—a remedy Columbia
seeks in the alternative here. The majority inexplicably fails to explain why the hearing
deemed necessary in 172 Van Duzer is not afforded here, where the purported liquidated
damages clause was negotiated after the tenant’s initial breach with only about two years
remaining on the lease.
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Columbia’s probable actual harm, and was intended to fairly compensate Columbia for that
breach (see generally Truck Rent-A-Ctr., 41 NY2d 420). Measured in a way that
adequately recognizes the nature of the bargain struck in the Surrender Agreement,
D’Agostino has not met its burden to show that the damages set forth in that agreement are
so disproportionate as to operate as an unenforceable penalty (see generally JMD Holding
Corp. v Congress Fin. Corp., 4 NY3d 373, 380, 385 [2005]).
It is irrelevant that Columbia’s actual damages here may ultimately be different than
the amount D’Agostino agreed to pay in the contingent remedy provision of the Surrender
Agreement. The enforceability of a liquidated damages clause does not turn on whether
the remedy that the parties contemplated before the breach occurred is identical to the
damages actually suffered. To impose such a requirement would obviate the entire purpose
of such provisions, which is to reasonably estimate the damages that might result,
permitting the parties to avoid the costs and uncertainty of litigating damages in the event
of a future breach. For this reason, the rough relationship between the remedy in the
contract and the damages flowing from a breach must be assessed based on the terms of
the agreement and the information the parties possessed at the time it was executed—not
with the benefit of hindsight based on post hoc proof of damages actually incurred.
Refusing to enforce the contingent remedy that the parties contracted for in their
settlement agreement injects uncertainty into commercial tenancy agreements and the
settlement of disputes thereunder, increasing the parties’ transaction costs. It also rewards
a sophisticated, represented party for breaching its validly-entered agreements. This will
discourage commercial landlords from agreeing to settlements of this nature, to the
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detriment of defaulting tenants like D’Agostino; limiting the damages recoverable when
such settlements are breached to the discounted amount provided for in the restructured
contract, even in the event of a new breach, removes any incentive for landlords to agree
to settle by permitting tenants who have already defaulted to default again without
recourse.
Because there was nothing unfair about the settlement crafted by these well-
counseled sophisticated parties, public policy affords no basis to alter their contract. Since
the back rent payments were already substantially overdue, Columbia reasonably sought
assurance that D’Agostino would uphold its end of the bargain under the Surrender
Agreement (something it failed to do under the lease). As reflected in the plain language
of the agreement, Columbia was willing to forego pursuit of its then-existing right to collect
both unpaid back rent and future rent only if D’Agostino timely made the back rent
installment payments (the owner gave up its right to receive more money overall but would
be assured of prompt payment of a discounted amount on a regular schedule, without the
need for litigation). Of course, that is not what happened. By eliminating the element that
induced the owner to give up its rights, the majority creates a distorted, one-sided
settlement in which—despite its default—D’Agostino was able to enjoy the full benefit of
the bargain. Because freedom of contract should “prevail[] in [this] arm’s length
transaction between sophisticated parties” (159 MP Corp., 33 NY3d at 359) and there is
no countervailing public policy basis that would justify relieving D’Agostino of the bargain
it struck in the Surrender Agreement, I respectfully dissent.
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Order affirmed, with costs. Opinion by Judge Rivera. Judges Fahey, Garcia and Feinman
concur. Chief Judge DiFiore dissents in an opinion in which Judges Stein and Wilson
concur.
Decided November 24, 2020
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