Can a Buyer on a Real Estate Contract
May be Held Liable Beyond His Earnest Money Deposit?
by William Bronchick, Esq.
from legalwiz.com
The "standard" real estate contract usually has
a provision spelling out the legal remedy of the buyer or
seller upon default of the agreement. In most cases, the buyer
wants to limit his risk of loss by offering a small earnest
money deposit and inserting a "liquidated damages"
provision.
A liquidated damages provision states that if the buyer breaches
the agreement by failing to close title, the seller's sole
legal remedy is to keep the buyer's earnest money. Without
a liquidated damages provision, the seller could sue the buyer
for his actual, provable damages or force the buyer to purchase
the property (called "specific performance"). The
liquidated damages provision is thus an agreed-upon, estimated
guess of the actual damages the seller would sustain if the
buyer breached the agreement by failing to close.
Many court battles have been fought over the validity or
enforceability of liquidated damages clauses, since they often
result in unfair consequences to the buyer. For example, if
the buyer placed 10% or more of the purchase price in escrow
with the seller or his agent, the seller would get a windfall
if the buyer did not close. The seller could resell the property
for full price, even more, and still legally keep the buyer's
earnest money. The buyer's legal argument in challenging the
clause is that it result in a civil penalty which is against
public policy.
In determining whether a liquidated damages clause is unenforceable
as a penalty, the courts generally look at whether the amount
settled upon is a "genuine pre-estimate of damages"
in the case of breach. C. McCormick, Damages, §149. In
most cases, the issue in litigation is whether the amount
is too large and thus penalizes the buyer. However, McCormick
further states that if the stipulated amount is unreasonably
small in relation to the actual damages sustained, the Court
will disregard it and permit the injured party to recover
actual damages.
The Federal Bankruptcy Court in In Re Ilana Realty, Inc.,
154 B.R. 21 (S.D.N.Y. 1993) applied this rationale in awarding
damages to the plaintiff upon breach of a real estate contract.
In Ilana Realty, the purchasers wrongfully refused to close
and then sued for return of their earnest money deposit held
in escrow. The earnest money was only 5% of the purchase price.
The Court used its equitable powers to award damages beyond
the amount of the liquidated damages. The Court did so because
it found that the amount stipulated was disproportionately
lower than damages actually sustained by the sellers. The
Court further reasoned that the buyer's breach and failure
to release the earnest money upon breach resulted in further
consequential damages to the sellers.
This case brings up another point: what if the buyer is in
breach of contract, yet refuses to let the escrow agent release
the earnest money to the seller? Courts have sometimes ruled
that the liquidated damages provision may not apply and the
seller could sue for further damages. The rationale is that
the release of the earnest money is a condition of the limitation
of liability afforded to the buyer under the liquidated damages
clause
This exact issue was presented in Fuels Research Company
v. Roberts, 458 P.2d 751 (1969). In Fuels Research, the defendant
agreed to purchase a business from the plaintiff, which involved
holding certain papers in escrow (stock certificates, formulae,
trademarks, etc.). The defendant defaulted on the payment
of purchase money after making total payments of $1,000 and
refused to return the escrow items to the plaintiff. Plaintiff
then sued for breach of contract, and the trial Court awarded
the Plaintiff a judgment for $15,000. On appeal, the defendant
argued that the liquidated damages clause limited plaintiffs'
recovery to the purchase money paid, that is, $1,000. The
Court rejected this argument:
"[W]e consider the return of the escrowed items as
a condition subsequent to the effectiveness of the liquidated
damages provision . . . The condition subsequent not having
occurred, the provision limiting plaintiff's recovery to liquidated
damages is not operative."
The liquidated damages clause is for the benefit of the buyer,
to limit their liability in the case of breach. If the buyer
has breached a real estate contract by failing to close and
have refused to forfeit the escrow money, the seller is not
bound by the liquidated damages clause.
There is little case law on this subject, so the result of
a court trial would be unpredictable. The moral of the story?
If you fail to close on a contract, don't play games. Do the
right thing and release the earnest money from escrow to the
seller.
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