“A claim for damages does not become one for ‘liquidated damages’ merely because a specific amount of money is claimed. “Whenever the amount to which the plaintiff is entitled can be ascertained by calculation or fixed by any scale or other positive data it is said to be LIQUIDATED or ‘made clear’. But when the amount to be recovered depends on all the circumstances of the case and on the conduct of the parties and is fixed by opinion or by an estimate, the damages are said to be UNLIQUIDATED.”- See Odgers on The Common Law (1927) 3rd Ed. Vol. 2, p. 654.”