This is a diversity suit for breach of contract brought by Consolidation Services, Inc. (CSI) against a bank. Applying Indiana law, which the parties agree governs the substantive issues in this case, the district judge granted summary judgment for the bank on the basis of the Indiana Credit Agreement Statute of Frauds, Ind. Code § 32-2-1.5.
CSI, a freight forwarder, had several outstanding real estate loans from the defendant bank plus a bank account and line of credit. Deciding to expand its business it made a number of new contracts with railroads, discovered that it was overextended, and sought an $8 million loan from the bank, which was refused. The bank did, however, agree to lend it $2.7 million for six weeks to give it time to seek longer-term financing. Repayment was due on September 30, 1994, but, with CSI strapped, the bank agreed to extend the loan, first to November 30, then to December 31, and finally to February 15, 1995. The parties met that day but have conflicting versions of what occurred at the meeting. They agree, though, that the bank, through its representative Joseph McGraw, made an oral offer to forbear collection efforts for another 45 days if CSI would allow the bank to take $500,000 from CSI’s bank account and apply it to the repayment of the loan; would execute two mortgages to the bank; would establish a lockbox at the bank for the deposit of CSI’s revenues; and would cross-collateralize the loan, that is, make the collateral for the bank’s real estate loans to CSI also collateral for the $2.7 million loan. CSI claims that it accepted McGraw’s offer (also orally) and that the bank promised to reduce their agreement to writing but never did so. The bank claims that CSI rejected the offer and that the bank then offered a 7-day forbearance in exchange for just the mortgages and the $500,000 and that CSI agreed to this substitute offer.
CSI executed the mortgages and authorized the bank to take $500,000 from its bank account. At the end of 7 days the bank began collection efforts by taking an additional $1.2 million from the account. This action precipitated CSI into insolvency because, in reliance on the 45-day agreement (it claims), it had not yet lined up substitute financing. Eventually it brought this suit for breach of the alleged contract to delay collection by 45, not 7, days in exchange for the four concessions that the bank had demanded.
An ordinary statute of frauds merely requires that the party sought to be charged, in this case the bank, sign a memorandum of the parties’ agreement. The memorandum needn’t be the contract itself; it need only be evidence of the contract and the contract’s essential terms,
Newman v. Huff,
McGraw, the bank’s representative at the crucial meeting of February 15, described the 45-day offer at his deposition. The deposition was of course transcribed, and McGraw signed the deposition, thus attesting to its accuracy, while CSI’s representative had already signed the mortgages. CSI argues that both debtor and creditor thus signed an agreement setting forth the material terms of the forbearance agreement. The argument is frivolous. The execution of the mortgages was not part of the agreement but part of the performance contemplated by it; the deposition was not an agreement; and the terms referred to in the deposition were the terms of an offer, not of an agreement — there was no written agreement, that is, a writing which not only contains terms but also indicates that the terms have been accepted.
Bower v. Jones, supra,
The alleged 45-day forbearance agreement would be unenforceable even if only the general statute of frauds, and not the more stringent provisions governing credit agreements, were applicable here. It is true that the admission by the party to be charged that a contract exists can take the place of the signed memorandum ordinarily required to comply with the statute of frauds.
Bower v. Jones, supra,
CSI argues that partial performance can take a contract out of the statute of frauds (again and throughout the remainder of this opinion we shall be discussing the general statute of frauds, not the special provisions for credit agree *821 ments, which being stricter are even more conclusive against CSI’s arguments). The principal purpose of the statute of frauds is evidentiary. It is to protect contracting or negotiating parties from the vagaries of the trial process. A trier of fact may easily be fooled by plausible but false testimony to the existence of an oral contract. This is not because judges or jurors are particularly gullible but because it is extremely difficult to determine whether a witness is testifying truthfully. Much pious lore to the contrary notwithstanding, “demeanor” is an unreliable guide to truthfulness. Michael J. Saks, “Enhancing and Restraining Accuracy in Adjudication,” 51 Law & Contemp. Probs., Autumn 1988, pp. 243, 263-64.
When, however, there is particularly compelling evidence of the contract’s existence, the strictures of the statute of frauds can safely be relaxed, for example in the case of an admission. Partial performance is often indicative of a contract, but rarely of its terms, and so in most cases of partial performance of a contract subject to the statute of frauds the performer is remitted to his (noncontractual) remedy in quantum meruit for the value of his performance.
Cato Enterprises, Inc. v. Fine,
The fact that CSI executed the two mortgages and allowed the $500,000 to be deducted from its bank account is as consistent with a 7-day forbearance agreement as with a 45-day agreement and so does not help to establish CSI’s version of the contract. CSI’s failure to authorize a lockbox arrangement and cross-collaterali-zation is actually evidence in favor of the bank’s version, though CSI tries to explain away this evidence by arguing that it was waiting for the bank to take the initiative with respect to these aspects of the agreement. And if CSI’s partial performance counts for its version of the contract, the bank’s partial performance, not only the 7-day forbearance but the collection efforts at the end of the 7 days, counts for the bank’s version. In fact neither counts for anything so far as compliance with the statute of frauds is concerned.
Partial performance is appropriately used to save a contract seemingly barred by the statute of frauds when the circumstances leave little or no doubt about the existence and terms of the contract that was partially performed and the promisee’s extracontractual remedies would be inadequate. See, e.g.,
Monetti, S.P.A. v. Anchor Hocking Corp., supra,
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CSI gets no help from the doctrine of promissory estoppel. A doctrine of contract law, its purpose is to enforce promises that while
not
supported by consideration, and so not enforceable under traditional principles of Anglo-American contract law were likely to induce and did induce reliance by the promisee.
First National Bank v. Logan Mfg. Co.,
In some cases reliance on an oral promise may take a form that, as in some cases of partial performance, provides compelling evidence of the existence and terms of a contract, and then, once more, the statute of frauds is relaxed.
Mehling v. Dubois County Farm Bureau Cooperative Ass’n, Inc.,
Under the alternative and not clearly distinguished rubrics of equitable estoppel and fraud, CSI shifts its focus to the bank’s alleged oral promise to reduce the 45-day forbearance agreement to writing. This might be construed as a promise to comply with the statute of frauds. But it would be bootstrapping to allow oral proof of such a promise to take it out of the statute of frauds and the better view,
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which we are free to choose because the Indiana courts have not yet had occasion to take sides, is that the promise is unenforceable.
Reeves v. Alyeska Pipeline Service Co.,
It would be different if CSI could prove that the promise was fraudulent,
Chedick v. Nash,
CSI has, then, no defense to the statute of frauds.
AFFIRMED.
