This week’s musings on tech contracts…
Contracting parties often debate whether the limit of liability should apply to indemnity obligations. IT contracts probably answer “no” more often than “yes.” But you can support either answer with good arguments.
The Argument AGAINST Limiting Indemnity Liability
The indemnity is unusual. It seems to address liability, but it really doesn’t, at least in typical IT contracts. Rather, it promises performance. The indemnitor promises to defend a third party lawsuit and to pay settlements and judgments. (Indemnities can do more; they can cover other losses. But they rarely do in IT.) So the clause doesn’t govern damages one party owes the other. It governs performance obligations, like defending a lawsuit. The indemnitor does sometimes pay “damages,” but not to the other contracting party. It pays the third party plaintiff. And the limit of liability doesn’t address that sort of damages. It limits damages one party — to this contract — pays the other. The limit of liability has nothing to say about money paid to third parties — including money spent hiring lawyers to defend a lawsuit.
The indemnity has nothing to say about damages owed to the other contracting party — the subject of the limit of liability — unless the indemnitor breaches the clause.
Approaching it another way, if the indemnitor stopped paying in the middle of a third party lawsuit, because it reached the limit of liability amount, the indemnified party would have to start defending the suit. How does that make sense when the parties have agreed that the indemnitor should handle that sort of suit (IP, data, etc.)? I mean, it’s not like the problem goes away if you limit liability. Someone has to pay the lawyers, settlements, or judgments. It’s just a question of who.
The Argument FOR Limiting Indemnity Liability
Sometimes, the indemnitor can’t or won’t grant the indemnity without some kind of limit. Maybe the indemnitor couldn’t handle the cost of a third party lawsuit, since it’s a small company. (The indemnity has limited value then anyway.) Or maybe the cost of a third party lawsuit, however unlikely, outweighs the benefits of doing the deal in the first place.
Generally, each contracting party defends its own lawsuits, including against third parties. And each pays its own settlements or judgments if it loses. So the indemnity involves an extraordinary remedy. It’s weird. Looking at it that way, why not limit the indemnity’s reach? Why does a weird, extraordinary remedy need unlimited liability?
Super-Caps and No-Compromise Outcomes
Sometimes, a super-cap solves the problem. The parties do limit indemnity liability, but they use a dollar figure higher than the contract’s main limit. Indemnity liability might be limited to three times the normal dollar cap, for instance.
The super-cap solution often involves another edit to the limit of liability. The parties often remove the restriction on consequential damages.
Sometimes, of course, no compromise is possible. One party gives in, or there’s no deal.
We still have an elephant in the room, though it’s hiding. As typically drafted, the limit of liability might not work. It might not limit indemnity liability even if the parties agree that it should. You might need special language. See my earlier article, “Limits of Liability Don’t Work for Indemnities.”
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