OPINION
[¶ 1] Ray Delzer and Betty Jean Delzer appeal a dismissal of their long-running action against United Bank for deceit and breach of a contract to loan money. We reverse and remand for entry of judgment for Delzers on the jury verdict for compensatory damages and for exemplary damages as reduced by the trial court.
[¶ 2] Delzers ranched near Bismarck. In 1979, Delzers and United Bank entered into a loan agreement for Delzers to pledge all of their assets and their son’s equipment as collateral for repayment of money to be loaned by United Bank. Delzers contend United Bank orally agreed to lend them $300,000 — an operating loan of $150,000, to be followed by additional loans totaling $150,-000 for the purchase of cattle. Delzers executed a promissory note for $150,000, and the Bank advanced that amount. The Bank never advanced any funds to purchase cattle. As a result, Delzers contend, they were unable to pay their debts, they lost their ranch when the holder of the first mortgage foreclosed, and they lost all of the other assets pledged as security for the United Bank loan.
[¶ 8] Delzers sued United Bank on May 24, 1985. In
Delzer v. United Bank,
[¶4] After the remand in
Delzer II,
the trial court bifurcated liability and damages. After a trial on liability, the jury returned a verdict finding that (1) United Bank did not make a binding oral contract to lend $150,000 to Delzers for the purchase of cattle as part of an agreement to loan a total of $300,000, and (2) United Bank knowingly deceived Delzers into giving all their property as security for a $300,000 loan when the Bank knew it was only going to loan them $150,000. The trial court ruled the jury’s findings were inconsistent, granted United Bank’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict on Delzers’ deceit claim, and conditionally granted a new trial on that claim if the judgment notwithstanding was reversed on appeal. In
Delzer v. United Bank,
[¶5] After the remand in Delzer
III,
the case was again tried to a jury. The jury verdict found that (1) United Bank breached an “oral contract to lend $150,000 to [Delzers] for the purchase of cattle as part of an agreement to loan the total sum of $300,000;” and (2) “United' Bank willfully deceived the Delzers by promising the Delzers $150,000 for cattle when United Bank had no intention of lending Delzers an additional $150,000 to purchase cattle.”
2
The jury
[¶ 6] United Bank moved for judgment as a matter of law on the deceit claim or, alternatively, for a new trial. The trial court held that United Bank (1) “shall be granted a judgment as a matter of law and [Delzers’] deceit and punitive damages claims shall be dismissed;” (2) “Alternatively, United Bank should be granted a new trial on all issues;” and (3) “Alternatively, the Court will reduce the exemplary damage award so it does not exceed two times the amount of compensatory damages.” The court entered a judgment of dismissal, and Delzers appealed.
I.
[¶ 7] The trial court relied on
Pioneer Fuels, Inc. v. MontanaDakota Utils. Co.,
The underlying evidence presented by the [Delzers] to show breach of contract and deceit is the same alleged promise to lend money for cattle. Under Pioneer Fuels and Delzer III, a deceit claim falls as a matter of law when the jury finds both breach of contract and deceit on the same evidence. [United Bank] shall be granted a judgment as a matter of law and [Del-zers’] deceit and punitive damages claims shall be dismissed.
[¶ 8] We addressed punitive damages and tort arising out of a breach of contract in
Pioneer Fuels,
Exemplary damages are not ordinarily recoverable in actions arising out of a breach of contract. Exemplary damages may be recoverable if the breach of contract is or is accompanied by an independent willful tort. Tortious conduct must exist independently of the breach of contract and there must be proof of actual damages resulting from the independent tort.
We affirmed a judgment as a matter of law because “Pioneer did not show that MDU committed an independent tort, separate and distinct from its breach of contract.”
Id.
at 710. We also pointed out that a mere breach of contract, without more, will not support liability in tort.
Id.
at 710. As we explained in
Delzer III,
[¶ 9] When someone fraudulently induces another to enter into a contract by making a promise with no intention of performing it, that conduct is actionable fraud.
Las Palmas As
soc.
v. Las Palmas Center Assocs.,
[¶ 10] Delzers’ contract claim is, essentially, based upon the following elements: (1) When United Bank made Delzers a $150,000 operating loan, the Bank also promised to loan them an additional $150,000 for the purchase of cattle; (2) in reliance on that promise, Delzers pledged all of their assets and their son’s equipment as collateral; (3) United Bank breached the contract by failing to
[¶ 11] We conclude that the trial court erred in granting United Bank judgment as a matter of law on Delzers’ deceit and punitive damages claims.
II.
[¶ 12] United Bank contends there is no evidence Delzers sustained any damages from United Bank’s deceit and, therefore, the trial court correctly granted judgment of dismissal as a matter of law. As we explain in the next part of this opinion, we conclude there was evidence of damages to Delzers.
III.
[¶ 13] The trial court alternatively granted United Bank a new trial on all issues, ruling that the jury verdict on the deceit claim was against the weight of the evidence. In reaching that conclusion, the trial court relied on three things: (1) all the loan documents were for $150,000; (2) Ray Delzer’s October 30,1979, letter and a followup note to Chuck Cowan that the trial court thought showed that the line of credit was for $150,000 and that Delzers hoped to buy cattle later with their own money; and (3) a bankruptcy document that the trial court thought showed that Delzers did not rely on a promise by United Bank of money for cattle.
[¶ 14] In
Delzer I,
we reversed a summary judgment for United Bank, holding that there were genuine issues of material fact on the meaning of the ambiguous $150,000 line of credit agreement and on whether there was a separate oral agreement for United Bank to extend an additional line of credit to Delzers for the purchase of cattle. In
Delzer II,
[¶ 15] United Bank asserted additional reasons for the order conditionally granting a new trial. United Bank contends “... there is no evidence the Delzers sustained any damages because of the alleged deceit. At the very least, a finding of damages is against the weight of the evidence.” There was evidence that, if United Bank had loaned the money to buy cattle, Delzers would have had equity of over $550,000 in every year between 1979 and 1985, when the ranch was lost to foreclosure. Waldon A. Jensen, a retired banker with experience in agricultural loans, testified that “without livestock the
IV.
[¶ 16] United Bank contends that the trial court’s instruction on damages for deceit was erroneous because it allowed the jury to award damages whether or not the detriment from the Bank’s deceit could have been anticipated and for more than lost profits. The trial court instructed:
If you find that the Bank willfully deceived the Delzers, you may award adequate damages for the tort of deceit. Damages, if allowed, should be adequate fairly to compensate the Delzers for the detriment suffered. The measure of damages is the amount that will compensate for all detriment proximately caused by the Bank’s deceit, whether or not it could have been anticipated. Damages in all eases must be reasonable, but may not be greater than the amount claimed or proved by the Del-zers.
The statutory measure of damages for tort is defined in NDCC 32-03-20:
Measure of damages for tort. For the breach of an obligation not arising from contract, the measure of damages, except when otherwise expressly provided by law, is the amount which will compensate for all the detriment proximately caused thereby, whether it could have been anticipated or not. 4
The trial court’s instruction that “[t]he measure of damages is the amount that will compensate for all detriment proximately caused by the Bank’s deceit, whether or not it could have been anticipated,” was a nearly verbatim expression of the statutory measure of damages.
See
NDJI-CIVIL 1210. As
Kuntz v. Stelmachuk,
[¶ 17] “[T]he measure of damages in tort is broader than that in contract,” as the court in
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp. v. Harbor Ins. Co.,
V.
[¶ 19] United Bank contends the trial court erred in allowing the testimony of Saxowsky and Jensen because each one’s testimony was based on an irrelevant analysis. United Bank’s primary reason is that the measure of damages should have been limited to lost profits. We have already concluded that Delzers’ permissible recovery was not limited to lost profits.
[¶20] The Bank complains that Saxowksy presented a computer model of what would have happened if the Bank had loaned the promised cattle money and that Saxowsky’s analysis covered the whole Delzer operation, rather than just the feeder calf enterprise. We see nothing wrong with analyzing the effect of the promised loan and the Bank’s failure to fulfill its obligation on the whole operation, rather than only on an isolated portion. The Bank did not distinguish between the different parts of this ranch enterprise when it required Delzers to pledge all their assets as collateral for the operating and cattle loans. Relevant evidence is generally admissible. NDREv 402. A trial court’s determination on the relevance of evidence will not be reversed absent an abuse of discretion.
Williston Farm Equip., Inc. v. Steiger Tractor, Inc.,
VL
[¶ 21] Delzers contend the trial court erred in alternatively reducing the jury’s exemplary damage award from $3,000,000 to twice the amount of compensatory damages awarded. The controlling statute, in effect when this claim arose, NDCC 32-03-07,
7
contained no requirement that exemplary damages be proportionate to the compensatory damages awarded.
8
Smith v. American Family Mut. Ins. Co.,
[¶ 22] “The reason for awarding punitive damages is to punish the wrongdoer in order to deter him, and others, from repetition of the wrongful conduct.”
Dahlen v. Landis,
[¶ 23] In light of our dispositions, we need not address Delzer’s contention that the trial court erred in excluding evidence of events after March 1,1980.
[¶24] We reverse the judgment setting aside the jury verdict and remand for entry of a judgment largely reinstating the jury verdict in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
. Agreeing with the view expressed by Justice Story in
Ocean Ins. Co. v. Fields,
18 Fed.Cas. 532, 539 (C.C.D.Mass.1841), this court held in
City of Wahpeton v. Drake-Henne, Inc.,
. The deceit claim was premised on the assertion that United Bank promised to loan Delzers money to purchase cattle and never intended to perform its promise. "[A] promise made without any intention of performing it, can constitute either deceit if there is no contract between the parties, or fraud if there is a contract and one party’s apparent consent to the contract is obtained as a result of that promise.”
Delzer v. United Bank,
. Kenneth Reno, Chief Executive Officer of United Bank, testified that on November 1, 1979, when Delzers executed the loan documents, United Bank did not "intend to provide the Delzers with money for cattle.”
. This statute has remained virtually unchanged from § 1860 of the Field Code proposed for, but not adopted by, New York in 1865. It was first adopted by Dakota Territory in 1865. See Civil Code of the Territory of Dakota, § 1860 (1865). See also, Civil Code of the Territory of Dakota § 1967 (Rev.Code 1877). California enacted the same provision in 1872 as § 3333, Cal.Civ.Code.
. The court was comparing §§ 3333 and 3300, Cal.Civ.Code (which are the same, respectively, as NDCC 32-03-20 (tort damages) and as 32-03-09 (contract damages) that also contains the same language as Cal.Civ.Code § 3301).
. United Bank anticipated it might acquire the Delzers' ranch if they did not repay the Bank’s loan. A former director of United Bank testified that when he expressed concern about Raymond Delzer’s ability to "make the payments” on the loan being negotiated, bank officer Reno said "He’ll make them. If he don’t, we’ll just take the ranch from him.” Loss of the ranch to another lender as a result of United Bank's actions could equally have been anticipated.
. NDCC 32-03-07 directed:
In any action for the breach of an obligation not arising from contract, when the defendant has been guilty of oppression, fraud, or malice, actual or presumed, the court or jury, in addition to the actual damages, may give damages for the sake of example and by way of punishing the defendant.
This section was repealed in 1987. 1987 N.D. Laws Ch. 404, § 13.
.We have observed that tying an exemplary damage award to the amount of compensatory damages awarded, through a proportionality rule, "may defeat the punitive and deterrent objectives of exemplary damages” and “conflict[sl with the well-established principle that the punitive award may properly vary with the defendant's financial circumstances.”
Dahlen v. Landis,
. NDCC 32-03.2-11(4) limits exemplary damages to “two times the amount of compensatory damages or two hundred fifty thousand dollars, whichever is greater.” This subsection was enacted in 1993. See 1993 N.D. Laws Ch. 324, § 3.
