Okla. Stat. tit. 12A, § 2A-504
Oklahoma Code Comment
This provision would appear to be more workable than prior Oklahoma law, which in 15 Oklahoma Statutes §§ 214 and 215 required that damages be difficult or impracticable to determine and, in cases interpreting those statutes, that actual damages be by their nature uncertain, in order to allow liquidated damages which could not be disproportionate to probable actual harm. See § 2A-504, Official Comment. While the older sections are displaced by this section for leases, that may not be as much change as it would seem. For example, in B & B Lines, Inc. v. Ryan Freight Lines, Inc., 601 P.2d 1207 (Okla.App.1979), the court upheld a damage formula of $12 per day when the plaintiff was deprived of the use of a trailer which it might have re-rented and where the accrued contract damages exceeded the value of the property. This result seems difficult to reconcile with the test under 15 Oklahoma Statutes §§ 214 and 215, although not with the rule of this section.
The result in Hargrove v. Bourne, 150 P. 121 (Okla.1915), where the court invalidated a provision to pay $500 in event of breach as it bore no necessary relation to what actual damages might be, also appears consistent with this provision.
For discussion of the relationship between this section and the consequence of the TRAC lease amendment included in the 1990 amendments to Article 2A, see Huddleson, Old Wine in New Bottles: UCC Article 2A-Leases, 39 Ala.L.Rev. 615, 639, 648 (1988).