Parties involved include the unnamed plaintiff (a former business partner enforcing the non-compete), defendants (former business partners accused of breach), and Judge Schecter, who issued the post-trial decision referencing Section 13.1 of the agreement.[3] The case, titled Levin, was analyzed by Farrell Fritz, P.C., a New York law firm, highlighting risks for trial lawyers relying on such clauses.[3]
Context and timeline: The dispute arose from a business separation with a non-compete containing the disputed clause; it proceeded to trial, post-trial briefing, and the court's decision on April 6, 2026, applying New York law where courts enforce liquidated damages only if proportionate to probable loss and not "grossly disproportionate" or penal.[2][3] Precedents like New York Court of Appeals rulings emphasize substance over labeling, voiding penalties against public policy.[2]
Newsworthy now due to the fresh April 6, 2026 decision, serving as a cautionary tale for drafting non-compete remedies amid scrutiny of fixed sums exceeding actual harm, especially in commercial contracts where actual damages are hard to prove.[3][2] This underscores broader U.S. trends rejecting punitive clauses while upholding genuine pre-estimates.[1][7]