This is а diversity suit, governed by Indiana law, in which substantial damages are sought on the basis of promissory es-toppel. The suit pits Garwood Packaging, Inc., which created a packaging system designed to increase the shelf life of fresh meat, and its two principals, Garwood and McNamara, against Allen & Company (an investment company) and a vice-president of Allеn named Martin. We shall refer to the plaintiffs collectively as “GPI” and the defendants collectively as “Allen.” The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Allen and dismissed the suit.
There is a threshold question: whether GPI’s appeal was timely. The notice of appeal was filed within 30 days of the entry of judgment, but the judgment-had not dismissed the suit as to one of the defendants and was therefоre, on its face anyway, not final and appealable. GPI then dismissed its suit against the remaining defendant and filed a new notice of appeal, but did so more than 30 days after the dismissal of that defendant had removed the cloud on the finality of the district court’s judgment. The district judge granted GPI’s motion to file a late notice of appeal, but failed in doing so to make a finding that GPI’s tardiness had been due to “excusable neglect.” A district court may extend the time for filing a notice of appeal only if the appellant demonstrates to the court’s satisfaction “excusable neglect or good cause.” Fed. R.App. P. 4(a)(5)(A)(ii). The ruling is regarded as discretionary, e.g.,
United States v. Brown,
No remand is necessary here on a different ground, or rather grounds. One is that the notice of appeal may not have been premature, because the judgment may already have been final. The defеndant who was not formally dismissed from the case at the same time as the other defendants had never been served with the complaint, and it was much too late to serve him by the time the judgment was entered against the other defendants. Since he had never become and never could become a party, the judgment that did not mention him was nevertheless final, complete, and appealable.
Manley v. City of Chicago,
It might be objected that these eases conflate a good reason for entering a final decision with entry of the final decision itself. Suppose a plaintiff filed suit and then appealed the same day, before the district court even looked at the case, and defended his precipitate action by saying that he knew he would lose in the district court under circuit precedent (whiсh he would urge the court of appeals to overrule, but which would bind - the district court) and since his suit was doomed in the district court it was as if there were a final judgment and he should therefore be able to appeal immediately. But in the cases that we have cited, as in the present case, the defendant who hadn’t been dismissed with the others had never actually bеcome *701 a party because he had never been served. The significance of the fact that he could no longer be served was that the dismissal of the suit could not be regarded as a dismissal without prejudice as to him; it was therefore securely final.
The alternative ground for regarding the decision of the district court as final and appealable is bаsed on Rule 4(a)(2) of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure. The rule provides that a notice of appeal filed after the court announces its decision but before the judgment is entered shall be treated as if filed when the judgment was entered. In other words, once the decision is announced, a premature notice of appeal lingers until the final decision is entered.
FirsTier Mortgage Co. v. Investors Mortgage Ins. Co.,
So the appeal was timely and we can proceed to the merits.
GPI had flopped in marketing its food-packaging system and by 1993 had run up debts of $3 million and was broke. It engaged Martin to help find investors. Aftеr an initial search turned up nothing, Martin told GPI that Allen (Martin’s employer, remember) would consider investing $2 million of its own money in GPI if another investor could be found who would make a comparable investment. The presence of the other investor would reduce the risk to Allen not only by augmenting GPI’s assets but also by validating Allen’s judgment that GPI might be salvageable, because it would show that sоmeone else was also willing to bet a substantial sum of money on GPI’s salvation. To further reduce its risk Allen decided to off-load half its projected $2 million investment on other investors.
Martin located a company named Hobart Corporation that was prepared to manufacture $2 million worth of GPI packaging machines in return for equity in the company. Negotiations with Hobart proved arduous, however. There were two sticking points: the amount of equity that Hobart would receive and the obtaining of releases from GPI’s creditors. Hobart may have been concerned that unless the creditors released GPI the company would fail and Hobart wouldn’t be able to sell the packaging systems that it manufactured. Or it may have feared that the creditors would assert liens in the systems. All that is clear is that Hobart insisted on releases. They were also important to the other investors whom Allen wanted to bring into the deal, the ones who would contribute half of Allen’s offered $2 million.
Martin told Garwood and McNamara (GPI’s principals) that he would see that the deal went through “come hell or high water.” Evеntually, however, Allen decided not to invest, the deal collapsed, and GPI was forced to declare bankruptcy. The reason for Allen’s change of heart was that the investors who it thought had agreed to put up half of “Allen’s” $2 million had gotten cold feet. When Allen withdrew from the deal, no contract had been signed and no agreement had been reached on how much stock either Allen or Hobart would receive in exchange for their contributions to GPI. Nor had releases been obtained from the creditors.
GPI’s principal claim on appeal, and the only one we need to discuss (the others fall with it), is that Martin’s unequivocal promise to see the deal through to completion bound Allen by the doctrine of рromissory estoppel, which makes a promise that induces reasonable reliance legally enforceable.
Brown v. Branch,
The simplest answer to the “why” question is that the doctrine merely allows reliance to be substituted for consideration as the basis for making a promise enforceable.
First National Bank of Logansport v. Logan Mfg. Co., supra,
In other words, reasonable reliance is seen as nearly as good a reason for thinking there really was a promise as bargained-for reliance is. In many such cases, it is true, no promise was intended, or intended to be legally enforceable; in those cases the application of the doctrine penalizes the defendant for inducing the plaintiff to incur costs of reliance. The penalty is withheld if the reliance was unreasonable; for then the plaintiffs wound was self-inflicted — he should have known better than to rely.
A relevant though puzzling difference between breach of contract and promissory estoppel as grounds for legal relief is that while the promise relied on to trigger an estoppel must be definite in the sense of being clearly a promise and not just a statement of intentions,
Security Bank & Trust Co. v. Bogard,
The reason for this difference between breach of contract and promissory estoppel is unclear. A stab at an explanation is found in
Rosnick v. Dinsmore,
But even though the court is “not precluded from finding a promise” by its vagueness,
id.
at 955, the vaguer the alleged promise the less likely it is to be found to
be
a promise.
Mays v. Trump Indiana, Inc.,
We note, returning to the facts of this case, that therе was costly reliance by GPI, which forewent other opportunities for salvation, and by Garwood and McNamara, who moved from Indiana to Ohio to be near Hobart’s plant where they expected their food-packaging system to be manufactured, and who forgave their personal loans to GPI and incurred other costs as well. The reliance was оn statements by Martin, of which “come hell or high water” was the high water mark but is by no means an isolated example. If GPI’s evidence is credited, as it must be in the procedural posture of the case, Martin repeatedly confirmed to GPI that the deal would go through, that Allen’s commitment to invest $2 million was unconditional, that the funding would be forthcoming, and so on; and these statements induced the plaintiffs to incur costs they would otherwise not have done.
But were these real promises, and likely to be understood as such? Those are two different questions. A person may say something that he intends as merely a prediction, or as a signal of his hopes or intentions, but that is reasonably understood as a promise, and if so, as we know (this is the penal оr deterrent function of promissory estoppel), he is bound.
Tipton County Farm Bureau Cooperative Ass’n, Inc. v. Hoover,
The problem, thus, is not that Martin’s promises were indefinite, which they were not if GPI’s evidence is credited, but that they could not have been reasonably understood by the persons to whom they were addressed (mainly McNamara, the financial partner in GPI) to
be
promises rather than expressions of optimism and determination.
Security Bank & Trust Co. v. Bogard, supra,
Suppose McNamara thought that there was a 50 percent chance that the deal would go through and believed that reb-anee on that prospect would cost him $100,000, but also believed that by relying he could expect either to increase the hke-lihood that thе deal would go through or to make more money if it did by being able to start production sooner and that in either event the expected benefit of reliance would exceed $100,000. Then his reliance would be reasonable even if not induced by enforceable promises. The numbers are arbitrary but the example apt. GPI and its principals relied, and may have relied reasonably, but they didn’t rely on Martin’s “promises” because those were not promises reasonably understood as such by so financially sophisticated a businessman as McNarama.
McInerney v. Charter Golf, Inc.,
One last point. Ordinarily the question whether a plaintiff reasonably understood a statement to be a promise is a question of fact and so cannot be resolved in summary judgment proceedings. But if it is clear that the question can be answered in only one way, there is no occasion to submit the question to a jury. See
Mason & Dixon Lines, Inc. v. Glover,
AFFIRMED.
