OPINION
Case Summary and Issues
Dennis Block and Mark Magura executed a letter-of intent that Magura would purchase Block’s interest in a partnership. Magura did not complete the purchase, Block filed suit, and the trial court granted summary judgment to Magura and denied summary judgment to Block on the issue of whether the parties’ letter of intent creates an enforceable contract. Block appeals and raises a single issue which we restate as two: whether the trial court erred when it 1) granted Magura summary judgment and 2) denied Block summary judgment. Concluding the letter of intent is an enforceable contract because it contains the essential terms of the parties’ agreement and expresses them intent to be bound, we reverse and remand.
Facts and Procedural History
The following facts are not in dispute. In September of 1988, Block and others formed the CRH & B Partnership (the “Partnership”). In February of 1989, others including Magura were admitted as partners. Current ownership of the Partnership is divided among Block (85 percent), Magura (20 percent), and five other partners. The Partnership owns a building in Valparaiso, Indiana, with office space leased to some of the partners, including Block and Magura. Until he retired in 2008, Block used his office space to practice oral and maxillofacial surgery; *1263 currently he subleases the space to another doctor who pays rent to the Partnership. Magura continues to use his office space to practice endodontics.
The Partnership Agreement provides each partner a right of first refusal whereby “no Partner may sell, assign, transfer, encumber, or otherwise dispose of any interest in the Partnership, without first offering his interest therein to the other Partners upon the same terms.... ” Appellant’s Appendix at 12. The Partnership Agreement also provides that the partners “shall have equal rights in the management and conduct of the Partnership investments and activities,” subject to authority of the Manager of the Partnership to direct its “ministerial acts” and “usual daily business affairs.” Id. at 10.
In September of 2007, Block approached Magura and discussed selling his partnership interest to Magura. In May of 2009, Block again approached Magura and they discussed the sale of Block’s partnership interest.
Block then drafted and presented to Ma-gura the following document (“Letter of Intent”), which both signed on May 21, 2009:
Re: Letter of Intent to Purchase Interest in CRH & B Partnership
Dear Dr. Block:
This Letter of Intent is delivered to set forth the terms and conditions of the acquisition by Dr. Mark Magura, of the total ownership interest of Dr. Dennis Block in CRH & B Partnership. This Letter of Intent is intended to allow the parties to confirm the business terms in contemplation of a transaction that both parties are willing to complete.
Assets subject to sale:
Thirty-Five percent (35%) ownership interest of Dr. Block in CRH & B Partnership, which represents the total ownership interest of Dr. Block in CRH & B Partnership.
Condition of assets:
CRH & B Partnership owns a commercial building at 911 Wall Street in Valparaiso, which is subject to certain commercial leases. As of the execution of this Letter of Intent, Dr. Block holds a 35% ownership interest and Dr. Magu-ra owns a 20% ownership interest. Dr. Magura is familiar with the Partnership Agreement, the arrangement between the Partners, the status of the leases, and the condition of the commercial building. Dr. Magura will accept Dr. Block’s ownership interest “as-is”, free of all liens, encumbrances, or limitations on ownership, except as provided in the Partnership Agreement.
Purchase Price for Assets:
The purchase price is $600,000. * * * [1]
Formal Agreement:
Pursuant to Section 9.01 of the Partnership Agreement of CRH & B Partnership, no assignment, transfer, sale, encumbrance, or other disposition of any ownership interest is allowed “without first offering [the ownership interest] to the other Partners.” After written notification of the proposed sale, the other Partners have 45 days to either waive any interest in the proposed sale or exercise their right to complete the transaction on the same terms. To the extent that an option is exercised by one or more Partners (except solely by
*1264 Dr. Magura), this Letter of Intent shall be deemed void.
A formal agreement (incorporating the terms of this Letter of Intent) will be promptly prepared by Dr. Magura and submitted to Dr. Block within 5 days after acceptance of this Letter of Intent.
Offer made on this 21 day of May, 2009 by:
[Magura’s signature]
Dr. Mark Magura
Offer accepted on this 21 day of May, 2009 by:
[Block’s signature]
Dr. Block
Id. at 26-27.
Each of the five other partners was provided with, and signed on May 22, 2009, a notice of the Letter of Intent. None of the other partners exercised their right of first refusal or otherwise objected to Ma-gura’s purchase of Block’s partnership interest.
On Sunday, July 12, 2009, Block wrote Magura the following email:
The end of this week is very busy for me.... Thus, I would like to take care of our business prior to that. If you can call me as early as possible tomorrow, I can have [attorney] Patrick draw up the document. I would like to shoot for Tuesday (anytime) to get things signed. Also, Patrick asked how we plan to handle the $ in the CHRB [sic] accounts that would be due to me. My preference would be for you to write me a check for this amount, but you might have an alternate option? Let me know.
Id. at 152. At some later point, Block through his attorney demanded that Ma-gura provide a formal written agreement to confirm the purchase. Magura did not prepare such an agreement and has not paid for or otherwise taken steps to complete the purchase of Block’s partnership interest.
On October 13, 2009, Block filed his complaint against Magura for breach of contract. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Following a hearing, the trial court granted Magura’s motion for summary judgment and denied Block’s motion for summary judgment, concluding that “the letter of intent at issue in this cause does not contain sufficient language to make it enforceable as a contract.” Id. at 4. Block now appeals.
Discussion and Decision
I. Standard of Review
We review the grant or denial of summary judgment de novo.
Tri-Etch, Inc. v. Cincinnati Ins. Co.,
II. Letter of Intent
Both parties’ arguments center on whether the Letter of Intent they execut
*1265
ed creates an enforceable contract for the sale of Block’s interest in the Partnership. Neither party points to any material facts in dispute, and we note that the existence of a contract is a question of law.
Conwell v. Gray Loon Outdoor Mktg. Grp., Inc.,
A. Definiteness of Terms
In Conwell, our supreme court restated the requirements for an enforceable contract at common law:
To be valid and enforceable, a contract must be reasonably definite and certain. All that is required to render a contract enforceable is reasonable certainty in the terms and conditions of the promises made, including by whom and to whom; absolute certainty in all terms is not required. Only essential terms need be included to render a contract enforceable. Thus, where any essential element is omitted from a contract, or is left obscure or undefined, so as to leave the intention of the parties uncertain as to any substantial term of the contract, the contract may not be specifically enforced. A court will not find that a contract is so uncertain as to preclude specific enforcement where a reasonable and logical interpretation will render the contract valid.
Id. (citations omitted).
Initially we note that the parties’ Letter of Intent specifies definitely what was to be purchased (Block’s entire 35-percent interest in the Partnership), by whom (Ma-gura), the purchase price ($600,000), and the condition of the asset (free of all liens, encumbrances, or limitations not specified in the Partnership Agreement). Yet Ma-gura argues the Letter of Intent lacks sufficiently definite and certain terms to create an enforceable contract, and points to its silence regarding such matters as when the sale was to occur and close, how the ownership interest was to be transferred, how the purchase price was to be paid, and whether the purchase price was subject to financing.
As for the “when” of the purchase, such terms were incorporated from the Partnership Agreement which the Letter of Intent specifically referenced. The Partnership Agreement provides that once the other partners are given notice of a transaction, they have forty-five days to exercise their right of first refusal, and if that right is not exercised, the selling partner has ninety days after expiration of the forty-five day period in which to consummate the transaction. We have stated that “all applicable law in force at the time an agreement is made impliedly forms a part of the agreement,”
Johnson v. Sprague,
Magura notes the absence of a number of terms relating to business affairs of the Partnership, such as what distributions would be made from Partnership funds, how maintenance and repairs to the Partnership property would be handled, and how disputed issues involving past-due rent, common area maintenance, and accounts receivable would be resolved. However, such matters could not properly be decided by an agreement between two partners, and in fact by the terms of the Partnership Agreement required a majority vote or other consent of all the partners. Appellant’s App. at 8-9 (“Distributions from the Partnership to the respective *1266 Partners shall be made ... as may be determined by an unanimous vote of the Partners....”); id. at 10 (“Control of the Partnership and all of its affairs shall be in the Partners, who shall have equal rights in the management and conduct of the Partnership investments and activities.”).
Thus, to the extent more terms were not included in the Letter of Intent, they were either irrelevant to the sale of Block’s partnership interest or, even if customary or desirable, inessential to enforcement of the agreement. The present case is akin to
Illiana Surgery & Med. Center, LLC v. STG Funding, Inc.,
B. Intent to Be Bound
Next, Magura argues that the Letter of Intent shows the parties did not intend to be bound until a subsequent formal agreement was prepared and executed within five days, as the Letter of Intent required. It is well settled that “a mere agreement to agree at some future time is not enforceable.”
Wolvos v. Meyer,
In
Equimart Ltd., Inc. v. Epperly,
Here, unlike in Equimart, the parties’ Letter of Intent does not refer to future negotiations or use conditional, contingent language. Neither does it imply that the subsequent formal agreement could include new material terms. Rather, it states the subsequent formal agreement “will” incorporate “the terms of this Letter of Intent,” not these and other terms. Appellant’s App. at 27. Put differently, the Letter of Intent states it is to “confirm” the terms of the purchase. Id. at 26. In addition, it states the parties presently “are willing to complete” the purchase and uses the terms “[ojffer made” and “accepted” to denote the consequence of the parties’ signatures. Id. at 26-27. The language as a whole indicates the parties’ intent to be bound, such that the requirement to execute a formal memorandum of their agreement within five days was not a condition precedent to enforceability of the agreement. 2
C. Other Arguments
Magura additionally argues that Block’s conduct after executing the Letter of Intent is inconsistent with an intent to be bound and estops Block from arguing otherwise. Assuming for the sake of argument that Block’s subsequent conduct is relevant, it is not directly inconsistent with an understanding that Block and Magura had a binding agreement. Block participated in an email discussion of Magura’s and partner Ken Hyde’s July 4, 2009 offer to “purchase the entire building from CRH & B Partnership for $1.2 million.” Appellant’s App. at 150. Yet thereafter, on July 12, 2009, Block emailed Magura and stated his desire to “take care of our business” by having “the document” prepared and signed within two to three days.
Id.
at 152. Further, Magura does not point to any affirmative representation by Block that the Letter of Intent was not a binding contract, and as a result, neither equitable nor judicial estoppel applies.
See Morgan County Hosp. v. Upham,
Finally, while we do not agree with Ma-gura’s sweeping characterizations that “letters of intent are not normally enforceable” and “Letters of Intent are not valid contracts under Indiana law,” Brief of Ap-pellee at 10 (emphasis omitted), neither do *1268 we imply that the opposite is true. As the above discussion illustrates, it is the substance of an agreement that controls whether it is enforceable, not the title of a document as a letter of intent or something else. While letters of intent can be enforceable contracts, it is a question depending on the facts of each case whether sufficient terms and language are included. Given the undisputed facts of this case, we conclude as a matter of law that the parties’ Letter of Intent is enforceable because it contains the essential terms of the transaction and expresses the parties’ intent to be bound notwithstanding the obligation to execute a subsequent more formal agreement. 3
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude the trial court erred in entering summary judgment in favor of Magura, and we reverse and remand with instructions to enter summary judgment in favor of Block as to Magura’s liability for breach of contract.
D. Damages
Regarding damages, we find that issues of material fact remain as to the extent of Block’s damages resulting from Magura’s refusal to complete the purchase. Contrary to Block’s assertion on appeal, his complaint did not request specific performance. While in his complaint and on appeal Block requests an award of $600,000 plus pre-judgment interest, the designated evidence fails to establish this as the proper measure of damages. “In a breach of contract case, the measure of damages is the loss actually suffered by the breach. However, the non-breaching party is not entitled to be placed in a better position than he would have been if the contract had not been broken.”
Sheppard v. Stanich,
Conclusion
The trial court erred in granting summary judgment to Magura and denying summary judgment to Block. We reverse and remand with instructions for the trial court to enter summary judgment in favor of Block as to Magura’s liability for breach of contract and to conduct further proceedings with respect to damages.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
1. The Letter of Intent as typewritten included a non-competition clause restricting Dr. Block’s practice of dentistry, but this clause was marked out and the designated evidence indicates the marking out occurred before or at the time the parties signed the Letter of Intent.
. While in his affidavit Magura averred he did not intend to be bound by the Letter of Intent unless and until a formal agreement was subsequently executed, Magura’s subjective understanding in that regard is insufficient to create a genuine issue of fact because intent to be bound is measured objectively, by the parties' words and conduct, not their subjective state of mind.
Real Estate Support Servs., Inc. v. Nauman,
. We note this conclusion is consistent with two recent, related cases decided by this court.
See MH Equity Managing Member, LLC v. Sands,
