In this appeal, we must determine if the promissory estoppel exception to the statute of frauds applies to an action for breach of an oral lease in excess of one year. The district court determined the exception applied and entered judgment for the appellee following a jury trial. The court of appeals affirmed the judgment of the district court. On further review, we affirm the decision of the court of appeals and the judgment of the district court.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
Corrine Roth inherited 800 acres of farmland located in Des Moines County from her father following his death in December 1995. At the time, Dean Kolkman farmed the land pursuant to an oral crop-share lease. The lease term was year-to-year, with profits shared on a fifty-fifty basis between Kolkman and Roth’s father. Roth also worked for her father on the farm over the years until approximately two years prior to his death. She was primarily involved in her father’s livestock operation. Kolkman was also involved in the livestock operation, especially during the two years prior to the time Roth inherited the farm. During these two years, Kolkman ran the cattle operation under an arrangement similar to the grain operation.
In the spring of 1996, Roth asked Kolk-man if he would continue to farm the ground and raise the cattle as he did for her father. Roth and Kolkman agreed that Kolkman would continue in the farming operation. They also agreed Kolkman and his wife would reside in one of the houses on the farm rent-free. Unfortunately, this agreement, and any additional terms, was not reduced to writing.
Kolkman and his wife moved to the farm in June 1996, and Kolkman successfully
In 1999 Roth sought to charge Kolkman rent for the farmhouse in which he was residing in the amount of $550 a month. 1 Roth also proposed a written farm lease between them that would terminate in 2000. Kolkman refused to execute the written proposals, and Roth sought to terminate the tenancy.
Kolkman responded by filing an action against Roth for breach of contract. He claimed the 1996 oral agreement with Roth included a term permitting him to live in the house rent free and remain the tenant on a fifty-fifty basis until he “retired or couldn’t work any more.” Kolkman further claimed he relied on this promise in several ways, including selling his former residence and moving to the farm, purchasing various farm equipment, and improving the land by making repairs and removing debris.
Roth denied any term regarding the length of their lease, and sought summary judgment. She claimed the statute of frauds prevented Kolkman from establishing an oral contract between the parties. The district court denied summary judgment and the case proceeded to trial. At trial, the district court, after finding Kolk-man established the elements of promissory estoppel, determined the statute of frauds did not bar oral evidence of a lease. The jury then found the parties entered into a contract, supported by consideration, based on the terms asserted by Kolkman. It found Roth breached this contract and awarded Kolkman damages of $154,429.
Roth appealed and Kolkman cross-appealed. We transferred the case to the court of appeals. The court of appeals affirmed the judgment of the district court and Roth sought further review. The single issue presented on further review is whether the doctrine of promissory estop-pel can be used to remove a claim based on an oral contract to lease land in excess of one year from the domain of the statute of frauds.
II. Scope of Review.
We review a decision by the district court to admit oral evidence of a contract under an exception to the statute of frauds for corrections of errors at law.
Pollmann v. Belle Plaine Livestock Auction, Inc.,
III. Statute of Frauds.
Under our statute of frauds, evidence of certain types of contracts is inadmissible, unless it is “in writing and signed by the party” sought to be charged. Iowa Code § 622.32 (1999). One type of contract included within the statute is a contract creating or transferring an interest in real estate other than leases for a term less than one year.
Id.
§ 622.32(3). The statute “does not void such oral contracts,” but “makes oral proof of them incompetent.”
Pollmann,
Like most other rules, exceptions have been created to the statute of frauds.
The second circumstance that will remove an oral real estate contract from the statute of frauds is derived from the concluding language of section 622.33, which makes the statute inapplicable under “any other circumstance which, by the law heretofore in force, would have taken the case out of the statute of frauds.” Iowa Code § 622.33. We have interpreted this language to mean that the doctrine of promissory estoppel is available to remove an oral real estate contract from the statute of frauds.
See Miller,
Promissory estoppel developed as a doctrine in the law in response to the strict traditional requirements for the formation of a contract, especially the requirement that all enforceable contracts be supported by consideration.
See
Jay M. Feinman,
Promissory Estoppel and Judicial Method,
97 Harvard L.Rev. 678, 679-80 (1984); 4 Williston § 8.4, at 11. Thus, the theory behind promissory estoppel was to make parties “liable for their promises despite [the] absence of’ consideration required under contract law.
Schoff v. Combined Ins. Co. of Am.,
Roth acknowledges both exceptions to the statute of frauds, but argues they must not be expanded so far as to apply to leases claimed to be in excess of one year. Roth points out we have refused to apply the part performance exception to oral leases for a term of more than one year, and, as a compatible doctrine, should similarly restrict promissory estoppel under the same circumstances.
See Snater v. Walters,
We recognize part performance and promissory estoppel to be compatible doctrines as exceptions to the statute of frauds.
Miller,
... though the doctrine of part performance has its basis in an estoppel, the doctrines are not the same, as the doctrine of part performance has historically been applied chiefly to contracts involving the sale of land, while the doctrine of equitable estoppel is more encompassing in this respect. The doctrine of part performance had its origin prior to and independently of the modern doctrine of estoppel by conduct, and its operation is more extensive than that of the ordinary forms of es-toppel; under the doctrine of part performance, a person may not only be precluded from asserting his title or interest in property, but he may even be compelled to make good or to specifically perform his representations. On the other hand, although the acts of one of the parties to an oral contract may be insufficient to amount to part performance, the other party to the contract may be estopped by that party’s conduct to assert the statute of frauds against the contract. Hence, even though in a court of law one may not be entitled to the benefit of the equitable doctrine of part performance, this does not prevent recovery at law based upon the premise that where a proper factual basis is established, thedefendant in a law action may be held estopped to assert the statute of frauds....
73 Am.Jur.2d
Statute of Frauds
§ 474, at 159-60 (footnotes omitted). With this in mind, there is no inconsistency between using one doctrine as an exception to the statute of frauds for leases in excess of one year and excluding the other doctrine.
See
10 Williston § 27.15, at 140 (a party who is unable to invoke part performance is not precluded from raising estoppel to prevent the use of the “statute of frauds as a defense”). Promissory estoppel is broader than part performance and ultimately utilizes special standards to determine whether injustice can be avoided by enforcing a promise otherwise unenforceable under the statute of frauds.
See Warder & Lee Elevator, Inc.,
Despite the broad development of the promissory estoppel doctrine over the years, Roth argues we have previously restricted its use as an exception to the statute of frauds to oral leases in a case decided over a century ago.
See Powell v. Crampton,
In
Powell,
a tenant sought specific performance of an oral lease claimed to be for a term of five years.
Powell,
Finally, Roth claims that such unbridled use of the promissory estoppel exception will essentially swallow the statute of frauds rule when applied to real estate leases because a tenant will always be able to claim the existence of an oral lease in excess of one year. Roth claims this result is incongruous to the purposes behind the statute of frauds and the specific statutory exclusion for leases with a term less than one year. See Iowa Code § 622.32(3). She argues our legislature would not have excluded oral leases for a term less than one year from the category of real estate cases covered under the statute of frauds, and then establish an exception to avoid the statute of frauds for leases in excess of one year.
We recognize other courts have been cautious to use promissory estoppel to overcome the statute of frauds.
See
10 Williston § 27.13, at 124-25;
see also Indus. Maxifreight Servs. v. Tenneco Auto. Operating Co.,
The doctrine of promissory es-toppel does not eviscerate the statute of frauds, but only applies to circumvent the statute when necessary to prevent an injustice. It requires the party asserting it as a means to avoid the statute of frauds to prove:
(1) a clear and definite promise; (2) the promise was made with the promissor’s clear understanding that the promisee was seeking assurance upon which the promisee could rely and without which he would not act; (3) the promisee acted to his or her substantial detriment in reasonable reliance on the promise; and (4) injustice can be avoided only by enforcement of the promise.
Schoff,
We also observe those jurisdictions that limit the use of promissory estoppel often point out the anomaly created by utilizing promissory estoppel to remove an oral promise from the statute of frauds when the very promise relied upon under promissory estoppel is the same promise declared unenforceable under the statute of frauds.
Consolidation Servs., Inc. v. Key-Bank Nat’l Ass’n,
Lastly, we perceive no inconsistency between permitting the promissory estoppel exception to the statute of frauds to be used in cases involving leases in excess of one year under a statutory scheme such as ours that excludes leases less than one year from the domain of the statute of frauds. To the contrary, it would be inconsistent to include certain types of leases within the real estate category of cases covered by the statute of frauds, then refuse to apply a broad exception for real estate cases, established to prevent fraudulent use of the statute of frauds, to such leases.
We further note Roth did not raise the sufficiency of the evidence to support the elements of promissory estoppel as an issue on appeal. Accordingly, it is unnecessary for us to consider whether the district court properly applied the evidence to the elements of the doctrine. We conclude the promissory estoppel doctrine is available as an exception to the statute of frauds for leases claimed to be in excess of one year. We otherwise affirm the decision of the court of appeals and the judgment of the district court.
DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS AND JUDGMENT OF DISTRICT COURT AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Roth was single at the time she inherited the farm, but married Lanny Joe Roth in 1997. In early 1999, Roth informed Kolkman that her husband would be taking over the farming operation and would be making the farming decisions. After this time, Lanny Joe Roth communicated with Kolkman on behalf of Corrine Roth.
. In
Miller,
we did not identify when promissory estoppel arose as a circumstance that would take a case out of the statute of frauds. However, we observe legal scholars have recognized that the legal concept of enforcing promises based on detrimental reliance can be traced back to the eighteenth centuiy.
See
Jay M. Feinman,
Promissory Estoppel and Judicial Method,
97 Harv. L.Rev. 678, 679-80 (1984). We also observe that our legislature has never exercised its authority to amend section 622.33 following our declaration in
Miller
that promissory estoppel was a circumstance to take a case out of the statute of frauds.
See State v. Anderson,
. There is a recognized distinction between equitable estoppel and promissory estoppel as applied to the statute of frauds. Equitable
. Restatement (Second) of Contracts section 139 (1981) enumerates the significant circumstances to consider in determining whether injustice can be avoided only by enforcing the promise. These circumstances are:
(a) the availability and adequacy of other remedies, particularly cancellation and restitution;
(b) the definite and substantial character of the action or forbearance in relation to the remedy sought;
(c) the extent to which the action or forbearance corroborates evidence of the making and terms of the promise, or the making and terms are otherwise established by clear and convincing evidence
(d) the reasonableness of the action or forbearance; and
(e) the extent to which the action or forbearance was foreseeable by the promisor.
We adopted these circumstances in
Warder & Lee Elevator, Inc. v. Britten,
