Plaintiff Herbert L. Hutner appeals from Judge Carter’s grant of summary judgment for the defendants and dismissal of *898 his complaint on the ground that the contract he seeks to enforce lacks a material term under New York law.
We affirm in part, reverse in part and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
BACKGROUND
Since the district court granted defendants' motion for summary judgment, we state the facts in the light most favorable to Hutner.
This litigation arose out of the settlement of an earlier dispute concerning the future of C.I. Realty Investors (“C.I. Realty”), a Massachusetts real estate investment trust whose shares were traded at relevant times on the New York Stock Exchange. A controlling interest in C.I. Realty was owned by City Investing Company (“City Investing”), but by the end of 1978, David J. Greene and Company, (“Greene & Co.”), a ■New York limited partnership in the investment banking field, controlled about 9% of the shares of C.I. Realty. A group of C.I. Realty shareholders, including David Greene, the general partner of Greene & Co., and Jerome Greene (no relation to David Greene), believed that C.I. Realty should be liquidated. To that end they formed a shareholders’ group to wage a proxy fight to unseat C.I. Realty’s management, an effort opposed by City Investing.
Hutner, a resident of California, engages in various investment activities, including investing for his own account and facilitating the purchase and sale of businesses by others. Hutner became aware of the C.I. Realty dispute sometime in late 1978. Hutner was acquainted with both David Greene and the officers of City Investing and developed the idea of bringing the two sides together with a view to inducing one to buy out the other’s stake in C.I. Realty. After David Greene asked Hutner to arrange a meeting between the two sides, Hutner broached the proposal to David Brown, City Investing’s general counsel, who expressed a willingness to meet with David Greene. Accordingly, Hutner arranged such a meeting, which was attended by him, David Greene and Brown on January 5, 1979 in Palm Springs, California.
At the meeting, the participants discussed both a sale of City Investing’s C.I. Realty stock to Greene & Co. and a sale of Greene & Co.’s C.I. Realty stock to City Investing. During the discussions, Brown expressly stated that if any such transaction were consummated, City Investing would not pay Hutner a finder’s fee for his role in having brought the two sides together. Hutner then turned to David Greene and indicated that if a purchase or sale of the kind under discussion took place and involved parties represented by David Greene, he would “expect to receive a normal fee for [his] services.” David Greene’s response was, “[w]e will take care of you.” No formal agreement on such a fee was ever executed, however.
A direct transaction between Greene & Co. and City Investing never materialized, although following the meeting Hutner did pass information, offers and counteroffers between City Investing and David Greene. Meanwhile, Jerome Greene, who was also in frequent contact with David Greene about possible transactions involving the purchase or sale of C.I. Realty stock, contacted George Scharffenberger, chief executive officer of City Investing, to discuss a possible sale of City Investing’s shares in C.I. Realty. After initially declining interest, Scharffenberger began negotiations with Jerome Greene regarding such a sale. In the course of these negotiations David Greene obtained from Hutner Scharffenberger’s weekend telephone number, which he gave to Jerome Greene. Scharffenberger and Jerome Greene ultimately agreed that City Investing would sell its C.I. Realty stock, and Jerome Greene set out to find purchasers for it. Such purchasers, including Jerome Greene himself, were eventually located, and the sale of City Investing stock in C.I. Realty went forward in July, 1979. Hutner’s involvement in the discussions between City Investing and Jerome Greene was limited to providing Scharffenberger’s telephone number.
*899 Hutner’s complaint, filed in July, 1981, asserted two alternative claims for relief. 1 In the first, a claim based on express contract, Hutner alleged that the defendants had breached an agreement to pay Hutner a finder’s fee in the event a purchase or sale of C.I. Realty stock between City Investing on the one hand and David J. Greene and other investors on the other occurred. In the second, a claim based on quantum meruit, Hutner alleged that he was entitled to compensation for finder’s services rendered to the defendants in connection with the sale of City Investing stock in C.I. Realty. Identical damages were sought under the two theories of lia bility — viz. $237,981, a sum derived from the “Lehman formula,” which is alleged by Hutner to be widely used in investment banking circles in the calculation of finder’s fees. 2 Federal jurisdiction was based on diversity of citizenship.
After extensive discovery, Judge Carter granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment.
Hutner v. Greene,
This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
Given the interstate nature of the transaction in question, we must determine which state’s law governs the alleged contract between Hutner and David Greene. As a federal court sitting in a diversity case, we of course apply the choice of law rules of the state in which the case was brought,
Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Electric Manufacturing Co. of North America,
Turning to the merits, we agree with Judge Carter that under New York law Hutner’s express contract claim must be dismissed on the ground that it lacked a material term. Hutner concedes that the contract lacked a price term, absence of which ordinarily would render the contract unenforceable. He contends, nevertheless, that the evidence proffered on custom and usage in the investment banking community raised a triable issue of fact as to whether Hutner and David Greene had an understanding that Hutner would be compensated according to the Lehman formula.
The custom and usage evidence offered by Hutner, however, was not sufficient to create a triable issue. It consisted solely of an affidavit by one Walter Miller, an officer in a New York investment firm, which stated that the Lehman formula “is often used as a basis for the negotiation of finder’s fees.” Under New York law, however, custom and usage evidence must establish that the omitted term is “fixed and invariable” in the industry in question.
Belasco Theatre Corp. v. Jelin Productions, Inc.,
However, Hutner’s
quantum meruit
claim is not defeated by the absence of an enforceable contract; indeed, it proceeds on the assumption that Hutner lacks an enforceable contract. Defendants argue that the
quantum meruit
claim should be dismissed on the independent ground that it is barred under the New York Statute of Frauds.
3
We disagree. That statute explicitly exempts attorneys at law in New York from its requirement of a writing for agreements of the kind at issue. N.Y.Gen. Oblig.Law § 5-701 a(10) (McKinney 1978). It is true that Hutner, although admitted to practice in New York, has not practiced law in New York or anywhere else for almost fifty years. Nevertheless, the New York Court of Appeals has declined to construe this exemption narrowly and has thus held that an attorney need not enjoy the attorney-client relationship with the parties from whom he seeks compensation in order to avail himself of the statutory exemption.
Rever v. Kayser-Roth Corp.,
Apparently anticipating this conclusion, the parties have extensively briefed the question of whether Hutner is barred from recovery because of his admitted failure to secure a license required by California law prior to employment as a “broker-dealer.” Such a broker, defined by the relevant statute as “any person engaged in the business of effecting transactions in securities in this state for the account of others or for his own account,” Cal.Corp. Code § 25004, must have a license before “induc[ing] or attempting] to induce the purchase or sale, of any security in this state.”
Id.
California brokers who negotiate transactions in securities but lack such a license have no enforceable right under California law to compensation either un
*901
der a contract,
quantum meruit
or other legal theory.
See, e.g., Rhode v. Bartholomew,
We agree with the appellees that a New York court would apply California law in determining whether Hutner was required to obtain such a broker’s license. This conclusion is in no sense inconsistent with our earlier holding that New York law should be applied to other aspects of the contract dispute between Hutner and David Greene. Under the doctrine of depecage, which is often applied by New York courts,
Holzsager v. Valley Hospital,
We cannot determine on the uncontested facts, however, whether Hutner was a broker under California law. While brokers must be licensed in order to receive compensation for their services, “finders” need not be.
Tyrone v. Kelly,
Whether Hutner’s activities in this transaction were those of a broker, in which case his claim is barred, or those of a finder, in which case it is not, is on this record a fact-sensitive issue not amenable to summary judgment.
See Freeman v. Jergins,
Affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded.
Notes
. In addition to the present defendants, the complaint was filed against six of the seven purchasers of the C.I. Realty stock sold by City Investing. The parties stipulated to a dismissal with prejudice of the claims against these purchasers (with the exception of Jerome Greene) after discovery had begun.
Since the filing of the complaint David J. Greene has died, and by stipulation Alan I. Greene, as executor of his estate, has been substituted.
. According to the Lehman formula, a finder is paid 5% of the first $1,000,000 of the value of the transaction for which he is to be compensated, 4% of the second $1,000,000, 3% of the third $1,000,000, 2% of the fourth $1,000,000, and l°/o of the balance. Hutner alleges that the total price obtained by City Investing for its C.I. Realty stock was $13,079,850; applying the Lehman formula to this sum yields $237,981.
. A New York court would apply New York law to the quantum meruit claim for the same reason that it would apply New York law to the contract claim. See supra.
.
Tyrone v. Kelly
involved a California statute requiring real estate brokers to have licenses. This distinction is not germane, however, for California courts distinguishing finders and brokers in the real estate field routinely rely on cases distinguishing finders and brokers in the securities field, and
vice versa. See, e.g., Tyrone v. Kelly,
