Opinion
Thе facts are not in dispute. Plaintiffs and appellants, Ernest Laks and Richard Schubot (hereinafter “appellants”) sought to develop a Sheraton Motor Inn located near the San Francisco International Airport. Appellants had obtained a broker to assist them in finding *887 the financing for the project. On January 9, 1973, Coast Federal Savings and Loan Association (hereinafter “Coast”) sent to appellants’ broker a letter of conditional commitment which read as follows:
Mr. Roger H. Alexander
Vice President
Kassler & Company
555 California Street Suite 4870
San Francisco, California 94104
Dear Roger:
Re: Sheraton Motor Inn - San Francisco International Airport.
Coast Federal Savings, hereinafter referrеd to as Coast, is pleased to move from our letter of intent to commit, dated December 11, 1972, to this conditional commitment, as follows:
Loan Amount: $7,000,000; which must be supported by appraised value with resulting loan to value ratio not in excess of 75%.
Secondary Financing: None permitted.
Interest Rate: 9.00%.
Fees: 1% non-refundable collected at time Commitment Letter accepted and an additional 1 % collected at time of loan closing.
Maturity: Interim - 24 months. Permanent - 25 years.
Construction Financing: Chase Manhattan Bank to be lead lender, Wells Fargo Bank to inspect and make progress payments, Coast to participate in not more than 75% of said loan. Coast tо have the option of reducing said position and increasing Wells Fargo Bank’s by same amount. Coast has begun conversation with Mr. Robert Bevins, Vice President, Wells Fargo Bank (213) 683-7259 in Los Angeles.
Funding: Interim Loan to be recorded no later than March 30, 1973.
*888 Appraisal: Must be acceptable to Coast, Chasе and Wells; Coast acknowledges receipt of a feasibility study prepared by the National Feasibility Corporation. Said study is still under evaluation by Coast; please refer to correspondence between National and Coast.
Mr. Roger H. Alexander
Page 2
January 9, 1973
Ownership of proposed project betweеn Ernest Laks and Richard Schubot to be clarified; Dunn & Bradstreet reports required on both. Final Limited Partnership Agreement subject to Coast review and approval.
Property Management: Management of subject property subject to review and approval by Coast Federal. Resume of owners management histoiy plus copies of Management Contract, if applicable, to be forwarded for review.
Plans, specifications and detailed cost breakdown requested on proposed project.
Cordially,
It is this letter that is the basis for the claim for breach of contract. Coast demurred to the complaint on the ground, inter alia, that it failed to allege facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The court sustained the demurrer without leave to amend, holding that the letter is not an enforceable contract. The sustaining of the demurrer oсcurred *889 after counsel for appellants stated that he could not allege other facts as to the existence of a contract. 1
Subsequently, an order dismissing the action was filed and the appellants appeal from this order.
I
Appellants contend the court erred in sustaining thе demurrer because the complaint sufficiently stated a cause of action for promissory estoppel. They claim that the conditional commitment letter is binding on Coast because (I) all of the conditions to defendant’s commitment set forth in the letter were either met or waived by Coast, and (2) appellants relied on it to their detriment in that they proceeded with the development of the project including forbearance from seeking other financing. At the time Coast repudiated the conditional commitment, appellants had only 45 days within which to break ground on the project in order to maintain their permit. The alternative financing was substantially more expensive than that conditionally committed by respondent. They did, however, succeed in building the Motor Inn, and it is now in operation.
Appellants’ claim of promissory estoppel is based on Restatemеnt of Contracts, section 90,
2
and the cases of
Drennan
v.
Star Paving Co.,
Coast replies that the gravamen of appellants’ claim is its failure to make two loans; an interim loan to finance construction, and a permanent loan. That in a loan contract the single most crucial term is the principal amount committed by the lending institution and the key paragraph of the letter is silent on this point. The paragraph states: “Construction Financing: Chase Manhattan Bank to be lead lender, Wells Fargo Bank to inspect and make progress payments, Coast to participate in not more than 75 % of said loan. Coast to have the option of reducing said position and increasing Wells Fargo Bank’s by same amount. Coast has begun conversation with Mr. Robert Bevins, Vice President, Wells Fargo ...”
Coast further argues that other essential terms are missing. In essence, they are as follows:
(1) The letter lists no schedule of payment for either the interim or . construction loan as required by regulation of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board.
(2) The security for the loan is not identified.
(3) The identity of the borrower is not clear.
(4) Miscellaneous items are missing; namely, prepayment conditions, terms for interest calculations, method for loan disbursements and rights and remedies of the lender in the case of default.
II
The required elements for promissory estoppel in California are set forth in
Thomson
v.
Internat. Alliance of Stage Employes,
*891 Coast did not make a clear and unambiguous offer. In the initial paragraph of the letter, it states it is a conditional commitment. This immediately places the offeree on notice that finalization of the terms will undoubtedly require further negotiations. This also becomes apparent from the offer itself. The paragraph on Construction Financing is clear in only one respect, namely, that Coast has begun conversation with the vice president of Wells Fargo Bank—a fact that immediately implies that final terms are far from completed. The remainder of the рaragraph defies interpretation. Chase Manhattan Bank is to be lead lender, with Wells Fargo acting as the bank that will inspect the construction and based thereon make the progress payments. Fair enough. But then the very fatal language “Coast to participate in not more than 75% оf said loan. Coast to have the option of reducing said position and increasing Wells Fargo Bank’s by same amount.” (Italics added.) Coast can only increase Wells Fargo’s loan if Wells Fargo has committed itself—and of course it hasn’t as negotiations are still pending. Added to this is the fact that Coast has not made a binding commitment to loan its mоney on the interim financing, but has merely an option to take up to 75 percent of it. The letter is completely silent on the lead lender’s (Chase Manhattan Bank’s) commitment and the terms of its loan. In view of the fact that Coast would not under any circumstances take all (and maybe none) of the construction loan, and could not commit the other lenders, a full commitment was missing.
Other essentials are absent, namely, payment schedules for each loan, identification of the security, prepayment conditions, terms for interest calculations, loan disbursement procedures, and rights and remedies of the parties' in case of default. None of these, standing alone, would necessarily make the offer conditional if missing. However, the fact that so many important conditions are absent, further emphasizes the conditional nature of the letter and strengthens the argument that thе parties were still in the negotiation stage.
In
Burgess
v.
Rodom,
And in
Kessler
v.
Sapp,
Although the case at bar deals with a loan on real prоperty rather than sale of real property, most of the essentials for a binding contract are the same. As stated above, many of the essentials are missing here but one in particular is fatal, namely a clear and unambiguous promise on the construction loan. Accordingly, the first requisite for a complaint for promissory estoppel is missing.
We also believe the third element (the offerees’ reasonable and foreseeable reliance on the promise) is absent. While we are inclined to agree with appellants that lending institutions should be held to a high degree of responsibility in such commercial transactions, appellants are not completely free of blame. They appear, from the record, to be experienced businessmen. They retained the services of a loan broker to assist them. We cannot believe that they did not understand the conditional offer to be just that—and that the many essentials referred to were missing. They should have resolved the ambiguities and obtained a finalized agreement and not relied on the January 9, 1973, offer. In other words, they could not have had legitimate expectations that this was a binding offer; therefore, they cоuld not reasonably have relied on it.
The order of dismissal is affirmed.
Kaus, P. J., and Stephens, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied September 8, 1976, and appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied October 6, 1976.
Notes
Appellant’s motion' for rehearing of order sustaining demurrer, a proposed amended complaint was аttached to the motion. The court, in its order denying the motion, stated: “The court recognized that counsel should have an opportunity to amend; but where counsel didn’t want it and/or wasn’t able to plead facts to get over the demurrer, the court relied thereon.” However, we reviewed thе proposed amended complaint and it is also fatal in that it does not state a cause of action for promissory estoppel. It pleads the January 15, 1973, letter as an executed contract between the parties, and that Coast waived the conditions required of appellants. The conditions allegedly waived, however, do not cure the defects surrounding the construction loan. The essential terms and commitment of the lenders are still missing.
Section 90 of the Restatement of Contracts states: “A promise which the promisor should reasonably expect to induсe action or forbearance of a definite and substantial character on the part of the promisee and which does induce such action or forbearance is binding if injustice can be avoided only by enforcement of the promise.”
These cases are easily distinguishable from the case at bench in that the promises relied upon were certain and unambiguous.
