A jury awarded the plaintiff damages of $135,000 in a diversity suit governed by Wisconsin law. The damages were broken down as follows: $117,000 for promissory estoppel, $1,000 for misrepresentation, and $17,000 for unjust enrichment. In response to the defendants’ motion under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e) to alter or amend the judgment, the judge rendered judgment for the defendants on the promissory estoppel claim on the ground that the plaintiff had failed to prove reliance; but he let the jury’s verdict stand with respect to the other claims. Later he denied the plaintiffs motion for costs, on the ground that the plaintiff had failed to recover the minimum amount in controversy fixed in the diversity statute. 28 U.S.C. § 1332(b). Both sides appeal (the plaintiff appeals from the order denying costs as well as from the order amending the judgment). The appeals present issues both of common law and of federal procedure.
The principal defendant is Joseph Bartolotta, but his company — Mary-Bart, LLC — is also named as a defendant; and in a diversity case, whenever there is an unconventional party (that is, someone or something other than either a natural person suing in his own rather than a representative capacity, or a business corporation) a jurisdictional warning flag should go up. In the case of a regular corporation, the owners’ state of citizenship is irrelevant to whether there is the required complete diversity; but in the ease of a partnership, it is crucial. The citizenship of a partnership is the citizenship of the partners, even if they are limited partners, so that if even one of the partners (general or limited) is a citizen of the same state as the plaintiff, the suit cannot be maintained as a diversity suit.
Carden v. Arkoma Associates,
Mary-Bart is neither a partnership nor a corporation, but a “limited liability company.” Wis. Stat. Chapter 183. This animal is like a limited partnership; the principal difference is that it need have no equivalent to a general partner, that is, an owner who has unlimited personal liability for the debts of the firm. See generally Larry E. Ribstein & Robert R. Keatinge,
Ribstein and Keatinge on Limited Liability Companies
(1998). Given the resemblance between an LLC and a limited partnership, and what seems to have crystallized as a principle that members of associations are citizens for diversity purposes unless Congress provides otherwise (as it has with respect to corporations, in 28 U.S.C. § 1332(c)(1)),
Carden v. Arkoma Associates,
supra;
United Steelworkers of America v. R.H. Bouligny, Inc.,
Another threshold issue concerns the scope of our review of the judge’s denial of the defendants’ motion under Fed.R.Civ.P! Rule 59(e). They had moved for a directed verdict (or as it is now called, “judgment as a matter of law1’) at the end of the trial, before the jury retired to deliberate. The judge took the motion under advisement and after the jury brought in its verdict he denied the motion and entered judgment for the plaintiff. The defendants filed their Rule 59(e) motion within ten days after the entry of judgment. The ground of the motion was identical to the ground of the defendants’ motion for a directed verdict, so that in effect the defendants were asking for reconsideration of the denial of their motion for a directed verdict. The , district judge, as we said, granted the motion in part, on the ground that the plaintiff had failed to prove an es *732 sential element of his promissory estoppel claim.
Cosgrove argues that the only way the defendants could get such relief was to renew their motion for a directed verdict in the form of a motion under Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(b) for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. That is the standard way, all right.
Lambie v. Tibbits,
This brings us to the merits of the appeals. Bartolotta wanted to open a new restaurant in Milwaukee. He asked a family friend— Barry Cosgrove — for help. The help sought was a $100,000 loan from Cosgrove plus Cos-grove’s business and legal advice, Cosgrove being an experienced corporate lawyer. Bar-tolotta promised Cosgrove not only to repay the loan with interest within three years but also to give him a 19 percent ownership interest in the restaurant. Armed with Cos-grove’s pledge of the $100,000 loan, Bartolot-ta was able to obtain the bank financing that he needed for the venture. In reliance on the promise of a share in the ownership of the restaurant, Cosgrove assisted Bartolotta in negotiating the lease of the restaurant premises and the loan from the bank, and it was on Cosgrove’s advice that the venture was organized in the form of an LLC. But Cosgrove never actually made the loan and was never given an ownership interest in the restaurant. For after all the arrangements were complete, and though Cosgrove was willing and able to make the loan, Bartolotta obtained alternative financing and cut Cos-grove out of the deal. The restaurant opened and was a success, so the ownership interest that Cosgrove would have gotten had Bartolotta not reneged on his premise has turned out to be worth something; hence this lawsuit.
We have stated the facts as favorably to Cosgrove as the record permits, as we must do in deciding whether it was error for the district judge to take the promissory estoppel case away from the jury. Cos-grove’s evidence was vigorously contested, but there was enough to enable a reasonable jury to find the facts that we have summarized. It is true that the jury found against Cosgrove on his breach of contract claim, but this was not inconsistent with its finding promissory estoppel. Cosgrove and Barto-lotta never worked out the exact terms under which Cosgrove would receive a share in the restaurant, so the jury could reasonably find that there was no contract even if it believed his testimony about the promise made to him and the services that he performed in reb-anee on the promise. Promissory estoppel is an alternative basis to breach of contract for seeking damages from the breakdown of a relation. If there is a promise of a kind likely to induce a costly change in position by the promisee in reliance on the promise being carried out, and it does induce such a change, he can enforce the promise even though there was no contract.
U.S. Oil Co. v. Midwest Auto Care Services, Inc.,
*733
Buried in our capsule summary of the law of promissory estoppel is an important qualification: the reliance that makes the promise legally enforceable must be induced by a reasonable expectation that the promise will be carried out. A promise that is vague and hedged about with conditions may nevertheless have a sufficient expected value to induce a reasonable person to invest time and effort in trying to maximize the likelihood that the promise will be carried out. But if he does so knowing that he is investing for a chance, rather than relying on a firm promise that a reasonable person would expect to be carried out, he cannot plead promissory estoppel. See
Major Mat Co. v. Monsanto Co.,
The defendants argue that this was such a case. But the jury was entitled to conclude differently. Bartolotta was quite definite in promising Cosgrove an ownership interest in the restaurant, though at first the size of the interest was uncertain. Bartolotta specified no contingencies that might defeat the promise. A reasonable jury could find that Cos-grove invested time and effort in the venture, and pledged to make a $100,000 loan, not because he hoped that this would induce Bartolotta to give him a share in the new company but because he thought he had already been firmly promised a share, contingent only on his honoring his pledge (if called on to do so) and providing business and legal advice as needed — all of which he did or was prepared to do.
A more difficult question is whether Cosgrove actually relied on the promise. It is dangerous to take a legal term in its lay sense. To “rely,” in the law of promissory estoppel, is mot merely to do something in response to the inducement offered by the promise. There must be a cost to the prom-isee of doing it.
Hoffman v. Red Owl Stores, Inc.,
Since the judge should not have set aside the jury’s award of damages on the claim of promissory estoppel, he should not have denied an award of costs to Cosgrove on the ground (28 U.S.C. § 1332(b)) that Cos-grove had failed to recover the statutory minimum amount .in controversy; the damages award for promissory estoppel carried Cosgrove well above that level. But for future reference, we point out that the judge erred in thinking that the denial of costs in a case in which the plaintiff fails to recover at least the statutory minimum is mandatory rather than discretionary,
Dr. Franklin Perkins School v. Freeman,
The defendants appeal from the part of the judgment that awarded damages for misrepresentation and unjust enrichment. The evidence that Bartolotta misrepresented a present fact — his state of mind when he made the promise — was sufficient to support the jury’s verdict. So was the evidence that Cosgrove conferred on Bartolotta a benefit (the pledge of the loan, which was instrumental in enabling Bartolotta to line up bank financing, along with Cosgrove’s business and legal advice) for which Cosgrove was entitled to be compensated. When one person confers a benefit on another in circumstances in which the benefactor reasonably believes that he will be paid — that is, when the benefit is not rendered gratuitously, as by an officious in-termeddler, or donatively, as by an altruist or friend or relative — then he is entitled to demand the restitution of the market value of the benefit if the recipient refuses to pay.
Ramsey v. Ellis,
Where, however, the plaintiff has a good claim for either breach of contract or, as in this case, promissory estoppel, restitution is not really an alternative theory of liability, but an alternative method of computing damages. Should it turn out to be too difficult to value the restaurant business or to determine just how large an ownership interest in it Cosgrove had been promised or even to determine what it cost him in opportunities forgone to render these services, the value of the services that he rendered was available as an alternative measure of damages — alternative to either the opportunity or other costs to Cosgrove of the services that he rendered (the reliance measure of damages) or the value of Bartolotta’s promise to him (the expectation measure of damages).
This assumes that you can get an award of expectation damages on a claim of promissory estoppel in Wisconsin, and apparently you can, see
Kramer v. Alpine Valley Resort, Inc.,
To summarize, the judgment is affirmed in part and reversed in part with directions to reinstate the original judgment and award the plaintiff his costs.
