Brink's Inc. v. Kingsbridge Holdings, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedOctober 21, 2025
Docket1:23-cv-16727
StatusUnknown

This text of Brink's Inc. v. Kingsbridge Holdings, LLC (Brink's Inc. v. Kingsbridge Holdings, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brink's Inc. v. Kingsbridge Holdings, LLC, (N.D. Ill. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

BRINK'S INC., ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) vs. ) Case No. 23 C 16727 ) KINGSBRIDGE HOLDINGS, LLC, ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER MATTHEW F. KENNELLY, District Judge: Brink's Incorporated has sued Kingsbridge Holdings, LLC (KBH) for breach of contract. Brink's seeks a declaratory judgment that it had the right to make partial returns of safes covered by leases from KBH and was not required to return all safes listed on a lease schedule (Count 1). Brink's also asserts that KBH breached the parties' contract when it refused to accept partial returns of the safes as the leases ended (Count 2). KBH, in turn, has filed a counterclaim against Brink's asserting breach of contract based on various alleged breaches (Count 1). KBH has moved for partial summary judgment on its counterclaim—specifically on the liability of Brink's for breach of contract and the enforceability of the contract's liquidated damages provision. Brink's has filed a cross-motion for summary judgment in its favor on all claims. Background This case centers around the lease of over 4,400 safes. In 2015, Brink's and AAM Capital Incorporated entered into a master lease agreement. Brink's and AAM entered into two more substantially similar master lease agreements in 2016. Overall, the lease contracts included the master lease agreements and forty-one separate lease schedules that list the equipment to be rented and set forth the initial, five-year lease

term for the equipment included in each lease schedule. The parties also entered into a "renewal terms protocol." AAM sold and assigned its rights and interests in the master leases and related agreements to KBH. Under the lease contracts, Brink's leased safes from KBH and then leased those safes to its commercial customers. Several provisions in the agreements are particularly relevant to the parties' breach of contract claims. First, the master lease agreement allocated the risk of loss, stating that until a safe was returned to KBH, or purchased by Brink's, Brink's "shall bear the risk of the occurrence of a Casualty to Equipment . . . " Pl.'s Stmt. of Material Facts, Ex. 1 ¶ 10(a). The agreement provided that a Casualty would be cured in one of two ways: (1) if KBH determines the Casualty is not a Total Loss, then Brink's must

promptly repair the equipment by utilizing Replacement Parts; or (2) if KBH determines the Casualty is a Total Loss, Brink’s must pay KBH, on the Loss Payment Date, the required rent due as of that date plus the Stipulated Loss Value of the equipment as of that date plus all other payments then due. Id. ¶ 10(c). The agreement defined "Casualty" as "any loss, theft, confiscation, taking, unavailability, damage or total or partial destruction of Equipment due to an insurable loss." Id. ¶ 1. The lease also defined "Total Loss" as (a) the actual or constructive total loss of the Casualty Equipment, (b) the loss, disappearance, theft or destruction of the Casualty Equipment, or damage thereto that is uneconomical to repair or renders it unfit for normal use, or (c) the condemnation, confiscation, requisition, seizure, forfeiture or other taking of title to or use of the Casualty Equipment or the imposition of any Lien thereon by any governmental authority.

Id.

The agreement also required Brinks to "provide prompt written notice to [KBH] of any Casualty to any Equipment where the repairs or replacement costs are likely to exceed $100,000." Id. ¶ 10(b). Second, the parties entered into a renewal terms protocol that reads as follows: At the end of a Base Term, [Brink's] has the right, but not the obligation, to exercise the following but only if [Brink's] gives irrevocable notice to [KBH] unequivocally electing this option ("Exercise Notice") and the Exercise Notice is received by [KBH] at least 30 days but no more than 270 days before the end of the Term.

If no Event of Default is continuing at the time [KBH] receives the Exercise Notice or at the end of the Term and [KBH] determines that no material adverse change in [Brink's] business or financial condition has occurred since the Acceptance, [Brink's] may renew the Base Term for a Renewal Term specified in the Exercise Notice.

In relation to any such Renewal Agreement, the Renewal Rent to be paid by [Brink's] will be negotiated between [KBH] and [Brink's] based upon the following factors: the Residual Value of the Equipment; the Applicable Rate; the Retained Equipment Percentage; and the length of the renewal term selected by [Brink's]. The same methodology and assumptions originally used by [KBH] will be applied. . . . If the foregoing Renewal option or the Redelivery Option in Section 11 of the Master Lease is not exercised, the Base Term will automatically extend for successive 3-month Renewal Terms in which case [Brink's] will continue to pay [KBH] rent at the rate of the total periodic Rental Payment previously in effect for all items of Equipment and Soft Cost Items and all other provisions of the Master Lease will continue to apply. If the Renewal option is not exercised but [Brink's] returns a portion of the Equipment to [KBH] pursuant to the Redelivery Option, the Base Term will automatically extend for successive 3-month Renewal Terms in which case [Brink's] will continue to pay [KBH] rent at the rate of the total periodic Rental Payment previously in effect proportionately reduced in accordance with the Retained Equipment Percentage. . . . Pl.'s Stmt. of Material Facts, Ex. 3 at 1-2. Each of the capitalized terms had a definition in either the renewal protocol or the master lease agreement. In particular, the term "Retained Equipment Percentage" was defined as "the Original Cost of Retained Equipment from a particular Lease Schedule expressed as a percentage of the Original

Cost of all Equipment in the same Lease Schedule." Id. at 1. Finally, the master lease agreement included a liquidated damages provision that reads as follows: If an Event of Default occurs with respect to any Lease, Lessor (or Assignee, if applicable) may (in its sole discretion) . . . (5) demand and recover from Lessee (a) all accrued and unpaid Rent as of the date of the Event of Default, plus (b) as liquidated damages for loss of a bargain and not as a penalty, and in lieu of any further payments of Basic Rent or Renewal Rent (as applicable), the Stipulated Loss Value of the Equipment as of the date of the Event of Default (as if all of the Equipment constitute Casualty Equipment on such date and, subject to the following proviso, such date constituted the Loss Payment Date in connection therewith, provided however, that if the Event of Default does not occur on a Payment Date, the Stipulated Loss Value of the Equipment shall be prorated on a per diem basis between the Stipulated Loss Value of the equipment as of the two Payments Dates closest in time to the date of the Event of Default if the Event of Default does not occur on a Payment Date), plus (c) all Enforcement Costs incurred by or on behalf of Lessor, if any, plus (d) interest at the Default Rate on the total of the foregoing for the period from the date of the Event of Default until fully and indefeasibly paid to Lessor (collectively, "Liquidated Damages") . . . .

Pl.'s Stmt. of Material Facts, Ex. 1 ¶ 17. The parties did not encounter any issues with their agreements until July 2020 when the lease schedules began to expire. At that time, Brink's began returning some, but not all, of the safes that were subject to the expiring lease schedules and reduced its rent payments to KBH based on the proportion of safes returned.

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Bluebook (online)
Brink's Inc. v. Kingsbridge Holdings, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brinks-inc-v-kingsbridge-holdings-llc-ilnd-2025.