OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiffs, Paul and Camille Hoffmann, filed this lawsuit to obtain a work of contemporary art, Brice Marden’s “Grey # 1,” which they claim defendant Mary Boone, owner of a New York art gallery bearing her name, agreed to sell for $120,000 in April 1988. Alternatively, they seek compensation for defendant’s failure to deliver the painting. Defendant now moves to dismiss the complaint, asserting that the alleged oral contract is barred by the statute of frauds. Plaintiffs filed two affidavits with their reply papers and asked this court to convert the motion to one for summary judgment. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56. As defendant filed an affidavit herself on this motion, plaintiffs have specifically requested that the motion be for summary judgment, both parties were informed by the court in its order dated January 30, 1989 that the motion would be converted into one for summary judgment and neither side objected to conversion, there is no possible prejudice from my doing so. Furthermore, plaintiffs were afforded full discovery relevant to whether defendant had any writing sufficient to constitute an agreement. Plaintiffs found no such writing. 1 For the reasons stated below, defendant’s motion is granted.
I.
Other than agreeing that no written contract exists, the parties concur on few of the specifics surrounding the alleged oral contract. Mary Boone states that, at an exhibition of Marden’s works mounted by her gallery, Paul Hoffmann approached her and asked whether “Grey # 1” was for sale. Boone quoted a price of $125,000. Boone Aff. at ¶ 5. According to her, Hoffmann “neither offered to purchase ‘Grey # 1’ for $125,000 nor did I agree to sell ‘Grey # V to Hoffmann at any price. At most, Mr. Hoffmann and I discussed entering into a sales contract but no specific terms were agreed on.” Boone Aff. at ¶ 6. Boone further avers that her gallery ordinarily sends an invoice after an agreement is made; no such invoice exists here. Finally, the painting remained on display for the remainder of the exhibit.
*80 Paul Hoffmann’s version of the events, needless to say, is very different. Hoffmann claims he came at defendant’s request to view the exhibition before its opening. The Hoffmanns in the past had purchased 16 paintings from the gallery at a total price of $500,000, including a Marden —all pursuant to oral agreements. Hoffmann Aff. at 11 9. On April 7, Hoffmann flew to New York from Florida. Hoffmann Aff. at ¶ 4. At the gallery, Hoffmann asked defendant the price for “Grey # 1;” defendant quoted a price of $120,000. Hoffmann then placed a “reserve” on the painting ensuring that defendant would not sell the painting without contacting him. Hoffmann Aff. at if 5. Hoffmann told defendant that he needed approval from his wife and would call the gallery on April 9. Back in Florida, he arranged to have his wife see the painting. On April 15, he and his wife met defendant at the gallery. Having secured his wife’s approval, Hoffmann told defendant that he wanted the painting; defendant agreed to sell it. Hoffmann Aff. at If 6. However, according to Hoffmann, “Ms. Boone later expressed concern that ‘Grey # 1’ was similar to the Marden painting which we had purchased from her in 1987 and suggested that we wait until the next exhibit of Marden’s work to purchase another painting.” Hoffmann Aff. at 116. Defendant also told Mrs. Hoffmann that their purchase “was creating problems for her with two of the Gallery’s other customers who were also interested in purchasing Marden paintings from this Exhibit. She said that she had told these two customers that they could not purchase paintings from this Exhibit because they had purchased paintings from the previous Marden exhibit.” Hoffmann Aff. at II7. According to Hoffmann, however, defendant confirmed later that “ ‘Grey # 1’ was ours.” Hoffmann Aff. at 118.
Several days after the April 15 meeting, defendant called Hoffmann and told him that she and Marden felt a different painting, “Blue,” would be more appropriate for Hoffmann’s collection. Hoffmann Aff. at 1110. Hoffmann “requested that [defendant] sent [sic] transparencies of both paintings to me for review.” Id. After looking at the transparencies, the Hoffmanns decided they preferred “Grey # 1” and so informed defendant. Hoffmann Aff. at 1111. On May 3, Mr. Hoffmann tried unsuccessfully to meet with defendant to arrange to ship the painting, but received no response. Hoffmann Aff. at 111113, 14.
II.
Both sides agree that this alleged oral contract is governed by the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), as enacted into law by the New York legislature, because it involves the sale of goods at a price in excess of $500. Defendant contends that the statute of frauds, UCC § 2-201(1) (McKinney 1986), bars enforcement of the oral agreement:
(1) Except as otherwise provided in this section a contract for the sale of goods at a price of $500 or more is not enforceable by way of action or defense unless there is some writing sufficient to indicate that a contract has been made between the parties and signed by the party against whom enforcement is sought____
Plaintiffs assert the applicability of only one of the UCC’s exceptions to the writing requirement: an oral contract is enforceable if the party against whom enforcement is sought admits in his court pleadings or testimony that the contract was made. UCC § 2-201(3)(b). Defendant, however, has filed an affidavit explicitly averring that no agreement was entered into. Judge Posner, faced with the same situation in
DF Activities Corp. v. Brown,
Plaintiffs also contend that defendant is barred by the doctrine of promissory estoppel, Restatement of Contracts Second,
*81
§ 217A, from relying on the statute of frauds. A threshold question is whether New York recognizes estoppel in UCC cases. A number of state courts have ruled that estoppel principles are inapplicable in contracts governed by the UCC because, otherwise, the explicit exceptions to the writing requirement, which exceptions appear in § 2-201, would be undermined.
See McDabco, Inc. v. Chet Adams Co.,
Although the New York Court of Appeals has yet to address this issue, several appellate and trial court decisions have simply applied estoppel principles to UCC actions without acknowledging that such application is itself a matter of dispute.
See Country-Wide Leasing Corp. v. Subaru of America, Inc.,
The elements of promissory estoppel in New York are (1) a clear and unambiguous promise,
City of Yonkers v. Otis Elevator Co.,
Plaintiffs also allege that defendant made a clear promise, see Hoffmann Aff. at ¶ 8, although Hoffmann’s own account of his actions belies somewhat his contention that a clear and unambiguous promise was made. If he believed that he had already purchased Grey # 1, one would imagine that he would reject outright defendant’s suggestion that he consider a different painting instead. However, because defendant might conceivably guarantee that one painting was Hoffmann’s while still offering him the chance to purchase another in its place, I find that plaintiffs have adduced sufficient facts at this stage to suggest a clear and unambiguous promise.
Plaintiffs claim several injuries to meet the last requirement necessary to make out an estoppel — unconscionable injury. First, plaintiffs travelled to New York from Florida three times in order to settle the contract. Hoffmann Aff. at 4, 6. Second, plaintiffs included the painting in listings for a planned exhibition of their collec *82 tion at Chicago’s Museum of Contemporary Art in December 1988, Hoffmann Aff. at ¶ 12. Finally, plaintiffs aver that Grey # l’s “special characteristics led us to purchase this particular painting and not to purchase other unsold Marden works which were part of the Exhibit at the Gallery or to wait until the next Marden exhibition to purchase a Marden painting.” Hoffmann Aff. at ¶ 15.
New York courts, however, do not regard such injuries as unconscionable, even assuming
arguendo
that they are all traceable to the alleged promise. Thus, “[a] change of job or residence ... by itself is not sufficient to call promissory estoppel into play____”
Swerdloff,
There is simply no evidence here that plaintiffs expended significant resources in reliance on the agreement.
Compare Buddman Distribs., Inc. v. Labatt Importers, Inc.,
Plaintiffs argue that summary judgment at this point is improper because injury is a question of fact for trial, citing a New York case,
Buddman Distribs.,
Accordingly, summary judgment for defendant is appropriate. The complaint is dismissed.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Plaintiffs’ request for further document production of defendant’s contracts for sales of other paintings contained in their letter to the court dated March 14 is denied as it could not possibly yield proof of a written agreement relating to this transaction necessary to satisfy the statute of frauds. Any other agreement would be irrelevant to the dispute at hand.
Trebor Sportswear Co. v. The Limited Stores, Inc.,
