What Happened: A medical lab claimed that the provision in its lease providing for liquidated damages of “net present value of the entire balance of rent due herein as of the date of [landlord’s] notice, using the published prime rate then in effect” was too open-ended to be enforceable. But the Massachusetts court disagreed and ordered the lab to pay the landlord $1.854 million in liquidated damages for defaulting on the lease. The tenant appealed.
Decision: The appeals court upheld the lower court’s ruling that the liquidated damages clause was enforceable.
Reasoning: Liquidated damages clauses stipulating a fixed amount of damages that a landlord or tenant must pay in the event of a breach are generally enforceable if:
The court found that the liquidated damages clause in this case met both criteria. Even though it didn’t state a specific dollar value, the $1.85 million turned out to be “neither grossly disproportionate to actual damages” nor “unconscionably excessive,” the court concluded.