It’s been a very good week for the New England Patriots.

After learning that former video employee Matt Walsh knows nothing about the videotaping of the Rams’ walk-through prior to Super Bowl XXXVI and after having the Boston Herald retract its story that the Patriots videotaped the Rams’ walk-through prior to Super Bowl XXXVI, the Pats have won a victory in court.

The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court has ruled that the team may collect more than $65,000 from a fan who defaulted on a ten-year contract to buy tickets to games at Gillette Stadium.  Under the agreement, the purchaser agreed that the full amount of the unpaid tickets would be paid if the purchaser defaulted on the agreement to buy the tickets.

The high court in Massachusetts found that the so-called “liquidated damages” clause was enforceable because it wasn’t a penalty.  Though we haven’t studied the opinion yet (and don’t plan to do so until confronted with our next bout of insomnia), the requirement that the fan pay for tickets that presumably were sold to someone else flies in the face of the concept of mitigation of damages.