Berrinkott v. Traphagen

39 Wis. 219
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 39 Wis. 219 (Berrinkott v. Traphagen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berrinkott v. Traphagen, 39 Wis. 219 (Wis. 1875).

Opinions

LyoN, J.

It is claimed on behalf of the plaintiff, that no exceptions to the findings of fact were filed within the time prescribed by statute, and hence that such findings cannot be [224]*224reviewed on tbis appeal. We do not find it necessary to determine whether this position is well taken, for the testimony has been examined, and we are satisfied that it sustains all of the material findings of fact.

We think also-that the notice to the obligor that the plaintiff exercised the option reserved to her in the bond, was given in due time. A payment of $32.48 became due September 18, 1874, and the thirty days mentioned in the bond before such option could be declared, expired on the 16th of October. On the 25th of November, 1874, the plaintiff caused to be served on the obligor, at his residence in the state of Nebraska, a notice in writing of her election that the whole sum of $464, and the arrears of interest thereon, should become due and payable immediately; payment of which was demanded. Although there were previous defaults, we cannot doubt that it was competent for the plaintiff to exercise her option within a reasonable time after any default; and when it is considered that the obligor had removed to a distant state, a period of less than six weeks in which to find and procure service of the proper notice upon him, does not seem to be an unreasonable time.

It is clear that the plaintiff is entitled to a judgment of foreclosure; and the only remaining question, and the most important one in the case is, What sum is due upon the bond which the mortgage in suit was given to secure? The learned circuit judge held that the parties to the bond had therein liquidated the sum which the obligor should pay upon default (if the plaintiff chose to declare her option) at $464, and arrears of interest thereon, and that the case is a proper one for the enforcement of a covenant to pay stipulated damages for a breach of the condition of the bond; and the judgment is upon that basis. But it is contended on behalf of the appellants, that this is error; that the gross sum to which the plaintiff is entitled is not $464, but only the value of a life annuity of $32.48 at the time the plaintiff declared her option, at which time she was fifty-two or fifty-three years of age. [225]*225■Such, value, computed by the Northampton tables, was then a little less than $300.

The form of the covenant is, that in case of default in mating any annual payment the whole debt or obligation should become due and payable at once, at the option of the plaintiff; and if it should become so payable, the covenant fixed the amount thereof at $164, and arrears of interest thereon. So far as form is concerned, the penalty of the bond is $900, and the stipulated damages, in case of a breach of its conditions, are $464. Fletcher v. Dycke, 2 Term, 32; Astley v. Weldon, 2 Bos. & Pul., 346.

But it by no means follows, because the covenant is in form for the payment of a stipulated sum, that the plaintiff must necessarily recover that sum. In many cases the sum named in such covenants has been held to be only a penalty. Should it be so held in this case, then, clearly, the measure of the plaintiff’s recovery would be the gross value of the annuity when she declared her option, and arrears of interest. In Yenner v. Hammond, 36 Wis., 277, the chief justice says: "Whatever words are used in a covenant providing a sum for damages upon breach, the mere words are not conclusive, and courts ought, in the language of O. J". Abbott, to look into the whole of the agreement in order to ascertain whether the sum was intended to be a penalty or liquidated damages. Davis v. Penton, 6 Barn. & Cress., 216; Sedgwick on Damages, 421, and cases cited.” In 3 Parsons on Con., 156, we find this language: The law will permit parties to determine by an agreement which enters into the contract, what shall be the damages which he who violates the contract shall pay to the other; but it does not always sanction or enforce the bargain they may make on this subject. Damages thus agreed upon beforehand, when sanctioned by the law, are called liquidated damages. Where the parties make this agreement, but not in such wise that the law adopts it, then the damages thus agreed upon are a penalty, or in the nature of a penalty.”

[226]*226Tbe question remains, therefore, notwithstanding the form of the covenant, whether the $464 named therein is to be treated as liquidated damages, or considered as a penalty, or in the nature of a penalty. The rules by which this question is to be determined, are thus stated by Mr. Sedgwick: 1. If the sum be evidently .fixed to evade the usury laws or any other statutory provisions, or to cloak oppression, the courts will relieve by treating it as a penalty. Consequently, whenever the sum stipulated is to be paid on nonpayment of a less sum made payable by the same instrument, it will be held a penalty. 2. Where independently of the stipulation the damages would be wholly uncertain, and incapable or very difficult of being ascertained except by mere conjecture, there the damages will usually be considered liquidated, if they are so denominated in the instrument. These rules received the approval of this court in Pierce v. Jung, 10 Wis., 30. See also Fitzpatrick v. Cottingham, 14 id., 219; Ryan v. Martin, 16 id., 57; Laubenheimer v. Mann, 19 id., 519.

The same rules are stated in another form in Bagley v. Peddie, 5 Sandf., 192, by SANiuroRD, J., as follows: “ 1. If the instrument provide that a larger sum shall be paid on the failure of the party to pay a less sum in the manner prescribed, the larger sum is a penalty, whatever may be the language used in describing it. 2. When the covenant is for the performance of a single act, or several acts, or the abstaining from doing some particular act or acts, which are not measurable by any exact pecuniary standard, and it is agreed that the party covenanting shall pay a stipulated sum as damages for a violation of any such covenants, the sum is to be deemed liquidated damages, and not a penalty. The cases of Reilly v. Jones, 1 Bing., 302; Smith v. Smith, 4 Wend., 468; Knapp v. Maltby, 13 id., 587; Dakin v. Williams, 17 id., 447; S. C. in error, 22 id., 201, were of this class.” .

To the same general doctrine we cite the following late cases: Powell v. Burroughs, 54 Pa. St., 329; Wolf Creek Co. [227]*227v. Schultz, 71 id., 180; Trustees, etc., v. Walrath, 27 Mich., 232; Smith v. Hamilton, 3 Daly, 462; Morris v. McCoy, 7 Nev., 399.

It is very certain that the sum fixed in the covenant before ns was not intended to evade the nsnry laws or any other statutory provision; and it is not perceived how it could have been 'intended to cloak oppression or injustice. The covenant was voluntarily made by the obligor, and, so far as appears, he received therefor full value for the sum which he agreed to pay, at the option of the obligee, in case of default. The most that can be said against the justice of it is, that the damages would be the same if default were made and the option declared at a much l'ater period in the life of the obligee. But that is a contingency which it may be fairly presumed the obligor took into consideration when he made his covenant; and it was always in his power to prevent the happening of such contingency by paying the annuity which he covenanted to pay.

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Bluebook (online)
39 Wis. 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berrinkott-v-traphagen-wis-1875.