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George Mason School of Law. Contracts I Promissory Estoppel F.H. Buckley fbuckley@gmu.edu. Estoppel. Estoppel by representation of fact Promissory estoppel. Estoppel: An Ideological Battle?. Samuel Williston. Arthur Corbin. Oliver Wendell Holmes.
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George Mason School of Law Contracts I Promissory Estoppel F.H. Buckley fbuckley@gmu.edu
Estoppel • Estoppel by representation of fact • Promissory estoppel
Estoppel: An Ideological Battle? Samuel Williston Arthur Corbin Oliver Wendell Holmes
Ricketts v. Scothorn • I assume you were as distressed as I was at this example of male chauvinism…
Ricketts v. Scothorn • Was there consideration given by Katie for the promise? • What was the reliance?
George Mason School of Law Contracts I Promissory Estoppel F.H. Buckley fbuckley@gmu.edu
Exam • Writing by laptop • Four questions, Two hours…
What kind of reliance is needed? • Suppose I promise you $1,000,000 and, believing me, you purchase a new car. I renege. • Have you relied? • And would this ground a remedy?
What kind of reliance is needed? • Suppose I promise you $1,000,000 and, believing me, you feel overjoyed. • Have you relied?
Psychic Reliance What happens when the cheque bounces tomorrow… Happy, Happy, Joy, Joy
What kind of reliance is needed? • Suppose I promise you $1,000,000, and have no intention of performing, but think it would be amusing to fool you.
Haase v. Cardoza • Was the promise supported by consideration?
Haase v. Cardoza • Was the promise supported by consideration? • What about reliance?
Haase v. Cardoza • What about reliance? • The former restatement provided for no relief unless the reliance was “definite and substantial.” • What is the effect of the change?
Haase v. Cardoza • What about reliance? • Present Restatement § 90 conditions relief: “injustice can be avoided only by enforcement.” • What does that mean?
Wright v. Newman (p. 160) • How would you decide this? • What was the reliance?
Why might a promisor want to incur legal liability? • And why might he not? • In a case such as Haase…
Why might a promisor want to incur legal liability? • And why might he not? • Cf. Ricketts
Why might a promisor want to incur legal liability? • And why might he not? • Cf. Ricketts • How would you expect promisors to react, in an interfamily setting, if all promises were enforceable.
Why might a promisor want to incur legal liability? • And why might he not? • How would you expect promisors to react, in an interfamily setting, if all promises were enforceable. • Fewer promises • Conditional promises
Why might a promisor want to incur legal liability? • And why might he not? • Might promisees sometimes be better off if family promises are not enforceable?
The Employment Context • Feinberg v. Pfeiffer • What was the promise and why was it made?
The Employment Context • Feinberg v. Pfeiffer • What was the promise and why was it made? • What was the reliance?
The Employment Context • Feinberg v. Pfeiffer • What was the promise and why was it made? • What was the reliance? • What it relevant that she discovered she had cancer?
Why a different result in Hayes? • Feinberg retired after the promise; Hayes decided to retire before the promise, and retired a week after it was made • No formal provision, no board resolution
Why a different result in Hayes? • Did Hayes have a bad lawyer?
Why a different result in Hayes? • Did the promisors intend to assume legal liability in this case? In Feinberg?
Chartiable Subscriptions • Salsbury v. Northwestern Bell • Charles City College operated from 1967 to 1968. It welcomed unconventional students who had not seen success at other colleges. It [was] also attended by a substantial number of young men seeking draft deferments that would allow them to avoid military service during the Vietnam War. (Wikipedia)
Chartiable Subscriptions • You and I meet and agree that we will both donate $5,000 to a college • Consideration?
Chartiable Subscriptions • I pledge $1,000,000 to a college which promises to name a building after me • Consideration? Allegheny College Allegheny College
Chartiable Subscriptions • Salsbury v. Northwestern Bell • Did Salsbury rely on the subscription? • Restatement § 90(2)
Chartiable Subscriptions • Salsbury v. Northwestern Bell • Are you satisfied with the rationale?
Charitable Subscriptions • Can you reconcile Salsbury with DeLeo?
Charitable Subscriptions • Can you reconcile Salsbury with DeLeo? • Illness • Fiduciary relationship • Oral promise • Storage room?
Charitable Subscriptions • Should such promises automatically be binding? • Is that what 90(2) requires? • Comment f
Charitable Subscriptions • Why so few such cases?
The Material Benefits Rule • Webb v. McGowin p. 191 W.T. Smith Lumber Co., Chapman AL
The Material Benefits Rule • Webb v. McGowin J. Greeley McGowin
The Material Benefits Rule • Webb v. McGowin • Recall Bailey v. West • Is Webb a suitable case for relief in quasi-contract?
The Material Benefits Rule • Webb v. McGowin • Recall Bailey v. West • Is Webb a suitable case for relief in quasi-contract? • What did the promise add?
The Material Benefits Rule • Webb v. McGowin • Treat this as a contracts case. Is there a consideration problem?
The Material Benefits Rule • Webb v. McGowin • Treat this as a contracts case. Is there a consideration problem? • The past consideration rule
The Material Benefits Rule • Webb v. McGowin • Treat this as a contracts case. Is there a consideration problem? • The past consideration rule • The material benefits rule: • Restatement § 86
The Material Benefits Rule • Webb v. McGowin • Can you distinguish it from Mills v. Wyman: p.192?
The Material Benefits Rule • Webb v. McGowin • Can you distinguish it from Mills v. Wyman? • What about Boothe v. Fitzpatrick (p. 198)
The Material Benefits Rule • Previously binding promises • Restatement § 82 • Statute of Limitations • Restatement § 83 • Debt discharged in bankruptcy • Restatement § 85 • Voidable duties
The Material Benefits Rule • Pitching ideas: Desny v. Wilder p. 193