Late Fees and Default Interest Revived: Metlife Case Overturned
September 1, 1999
Henry J. "Hank" Brothers- Washington
On June 30, 1999, the New Jersey Supreme Court sided with lenders and upheld,
in general, the validity of late fees and default interest in commercial loan
transactions. The ruling in MetLife Capital Financial Corp. v. Washington Avenue
Associates, 1999 N.J. LEXIS 828, 1999 WL 436126 (N.J.) puts to rest heightened
concerns among lenders nationwide, who had feared lengthy, and costly,
loan-by-loan and payment-by-payment battles over actual damages arising from
late payments and other defaults. Indignant (and/or jubilant) commentary and
analysis since the 1998 lower-court decision will now need to be revisited.
This case arose out of a 1992 loan secured by commercial property. The note
and mortgage provided for a late fee equal to five percent of each payment not
made on time, as well as an increased rate of interest in the event of a
default. The borrower made all 48 scheduled loan payments, but 40 payments were
late. The borrower failed to pay the balloon payment due at the end of the term,
and the lender declared the loan in default. When the lender foreclosed, the
borrower challenged the lender's right to collect the late fees and interest at
the default rate.
The trial court held that the five-percent late fee was reasonable and
allowed it. However, this court said the 15-percent default interest rate was in
the nature of penalty and set it aside. The court then substituted its own
default rate of 12.55 percent (three percentage points above the contract rate),
and held that this rate was reasonably related to actual damages.
The Appellate Division applied a 1964 New Jersey case, which adopted a
two-pronged test, derived from the Restatement [1st] of Contracts (1932), for
evaluating late fees and default interest. First, was the charge reasonably
related to the anticipated or actual damages? Second, were these damages
difficult to establish? The court concluded that the lender's collection costs
would be the same regardless of the size of the payment or duration of the
breach, and therefore held that MetLife's late fee failed the first test. The
court also concluded that the late fee failed the second test, because it found
that collection costs and the value of the loss of use of the late payment could
easily be calculated. Finally, the Appellate Division rejected the default
interest rate for the same reasons, and, in the bargain, threw out the trial
court's 12.55 percent substitute rate as "entirely speculative."
The New Jersey Supreme Court looked to the Restatement (2nd) of Contracts
(1981), as well as Uniform Commercial Code § 2-718(1), and adopted the more
modern view that the two-pronged test should be treated as two elements of
"reasonableness" rather than as separate tests. In a 1994 case, this
court had ruled that reasonableness is the "touchstone" for evaluating
stipulated damages clauses, and noted that "the difficulty in assessing
damages, intention of the parties, the actual damages sustained, and the
bargaining power of the parties all affect the validity of a stipulated damages
clause." The court also commented, relying upon a 1983 Wisconsin case, that
"the overall single test of validity is whether the [stipulated damage]
clause is reasonable under the totality of the circumstances."
Applying this reasonableness test, the court found the five-percent late fee
to be a valid measure of liquidated damages. The court rejected the Appellate
Division's conclusion that the damages from a late payment would not vary with
the size of the payment, because "late payments on larger loans would
present a greater risk to the lender, and would require more intense and
expensive supervision." Moreover, a larger late payment causes a larger
lost opportunity and thus the lender suffers larger damages. The court also
rejected the Appellate Division's apparent suggestion that a lender must
establish its actual costs with respect to each late payment for which a late
charge is sought. This approach "underestimates the difficulties and
impracticalities involved in determining the actual damages incurred in dealing
with delinquent borrowers." Also telling were the court's observations that
a five-percent late fee is normal industry custom in similar commercial
mortgages, and that the New Jersey Legislature and the U.S. government had
endorsed late fees as a percentage of the defaulted payment in other contexts.
The court thus held that "liquidated damages provisions in a commercial
contract between sophisticated parties are presumptively reasonable and the
party challenging the clause bears the burden of proving its
unreasonableness."
The court next turned to the default interest rate of three percent over the
contract rate. (MetLife did not appeal the trial court's reduction of the
default rate from 15 percent to 12.55 percent.) The court applied here the same
reasonableness test that it had applied to late fees, and upheld the default
rate in question because it "appear[ed] to be a reasonable estimate of
potential damages [and] f[ell] well within the range demonstrated to be
customary, and because a stipulated damages clause negotiated between
sophisticated commercial entities is presumptively reasonable." Important
to the court's conclusion was the difficulty of determining or predicting actual
losses from defaults which might have very short or very long duration and might
occur many years in the future when market conditions, borrowing costs and other
factors might be radically different.
The court also noted that "New Jersey cases have invalidated enhanced
default rates if their size suggests a punitive intent," but did not go
anywhere with that comment. Left unanswered is how the court would have ruled if
the original 15-percent default rate had been before it.
The New Jersey Supreme Court noted that MetLife - and, one expects, the many
lenders' associations that filed amicus curiae briefs - urged the Court to view
late fees and default interest as "variable-pricing provisions," a
term of borrowing money in a highly competitive industry. This is a strictly
contractual approach, rather than a liquidated-damages analysis. Under this
view, late fees and default interest would be enforced unless they were found to
be unconscionable or illegal. The court agreed that late fees and default
interest are "part of the cost of doing business" among sophisticated
parties. However, the court declined to adopt an unconscionability standard,
stating that the reasonableness standard provides an adequate safeguard for the
lenders and better protection for the borrowers.
So what does this mean? Narrowly, it means that a five-percent late fee and a
default interest rate of three percentage points over the contract rate will
pass New Jersey's "reasonableness" test for commercial loans. More
broadly, we should acknowledge that this case was widely reported and debated
when the Appellate Division held to the contrary last year, and that this new
decision will also be widely hailed (and condemned) in the lending (and
borrowing) industry. Therefore - and because many viewed the lower court's
opinion as an aberration - lenders should now rest easier, for it is now likely
that such late fees and default interest provisions will face fewer substantive
challenges.
For more information, contact Mr. Brothers at 202-957-7089, or hbrothers@hklaw.com.