DECISION
I hаve before me the defendants’ post-trial motions in this fraud and breach of contract case that pitted Marjorie B. Price against Highland Community Bank and its president, George R. Brokemond. At the end of a four-day trial in June (at which I presided by designation of the chief judge of the circuit to help the district court with its heavy caseload), the jury found in favor of Price and directed the defendants to pay her $25,000 in compensatory damages for the fraud and the breach of contract and $150,000 in punitive damages for the fraud. Although the jury was asked to assess compensatory damages separately on the two counts, the parties had agreed beforehand that the plaintiff was entitled to only a single recovery, since the harms allegedly caused by the two violations were identical. Cf.
Douglass v. Hustler Magazine, Inc.,
I declined to enter judgment on the jury’s verdict and instead set a briefing schedule for post-trial motions. The last brief was filed on August 3 and the case is now ripe for final dеcision. The defendants’ motions ask, alternatively, for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, for a new trial, and for a reduction in the compensatory and punitive damages awarded by the jury.
The suit had originally been filed in an Illinois state court, in June 1987, but because it claimed among other things that the bank had violated the terms of a profit-sharing plan, the defendants were able to remove the suit to this court as an ERISA suit, see
Brundage-Peterson v. Compcare Health Services Ins. Corp.,
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The present case invites the creation of a new exception, for the case where the suit was properly removed and the plaintiff then decided to abandon his federal claim. The existence of such an exception is implicit in the Supreme Court’s decision in
Carnegie-Mellon University v. Cohill,
I said that both sides were eager to try the case but it would be more accurate to say that the defendants were unwilling to settle it. At a pretrial conference on the eve of trial, the plaintiffs lawyer offered to settle the case for a very modest amount and made clear that this was his initial, not his final, offer. The defendants refused to consider settlement, a refusal that in retrospect was imprudent but that is immaterial to my consideration of the issues raised by the post-trial motions.
The essential facts and areas of contention can be described briefly. Highland Community Bank is a successful minority bank in the southern part of Chicago, with assets last year of about $80 million, net income of almost $800,000, and about fifty employees. Its president, chief executive officer, and unquestioned boss, George Brokemond, is an able, knowledgeable, and aggressive banker whose energy and skill appear to be the principal ingredients in the bank’s success. Late in 1983 Brokemond decided to experiment with creating a separate marketing staff in the bank. He hired Linda Hurley to head up the new staff. On March 1, 1984, Hurley hired Marjorie Price, the plaintiff, for the marketing staff. Price at the time was working in a different capacity for Continental bank, but Continental had just announced a reduction in force that would abolish Price’s job, and her prospects for finding another job in Continental were shaky. She initially accepted a substantial reduction in salary to come with Highland—from $37,500 to $25,-000—but later she persuaded Hurley (who persuaded Brokemond) to raise her salary to $30,000. According to Price’s testimony, which Hurley corroborated, Price accepted a lower salary than she was getting at Continental in part because she was promised an incentive-compensation plan, which she had not had at Continental.
Price remained at Highland Community Bank for two years and eight months, leaving voluntarily to accept a marketing position at another minority bank in Chicago. She received no incentive compensation at Highland—indeed no incentive-compensation plan was ever put into effect—and this, she testified, was a determining factor in her decision to leave. Hurley left the bank around the same time and now works for the State of Washington. She has ho successor; the marketing staff has been disbanded.
The first question raised by the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict is whether there was an enforceable contract between the bаnk and Marjorie Price to *458 establish an incentive-compensation plan. The plaintiffs theory is that the contract can be inferred from a pair of letters and from oral statements by Brokemond and Hurley. The first letter, plaintiffs exhibit 4, is from Brokemond to Price and is dated February 11, 1984—before Price signed on. The letter describes the work of the marketing staff in relation to four principal bank products. One is treasury tax and loan deposits, and the letter states that “an incentivе program will be structured to pay you some percentage of the [bank’s] income over and above” a stated base requirement, but the percentage is not specified. With regard to consortium lines of credit (another product), the letter says that “anything over and above [a specified fee income generated] would be part of another type bonus consideration,” and “we can discuss a 5% figure once you reach the [specified] level.” With regard to the other products as well, bonus awards are mentioned with more or less specificity and in addition the letter says “I think that you will find the incentive program to be of great interest and potential profit.”
Several months after Price had begun working for the bank, Brokemond sent her another letter, this one dated August 13, 1984 (plaintiffs exhibit 5), which confirmed the terms of her employment and included a statement that while she would be eligible to participate in the employeе profit-sharing plan at the end of her first year, “the incentive program outlined in my letter dated February 11, 1984 goes into effect immediately.” The letter also reflects the bank’s agreement to pay her an annual salary of $30,000, rather than $25,000 as first agreed. At the bottom of the letter is a space for Price to sign her name under the caption “terms and conditions accepted,” which she duly did.
According to her and Hurley’s testimony, the incentive program was of great interest tо the members of the marketing staff, and Brokemond repeatedly assured them that the program was in the works and would soon be made final. Hurley repeated these assurances to Price, who also heard them directly from Brokemond. But according to Brokemond's own testimony at trial, he never did devise such a program or place it in effect. He regarded the terms sketched in his letter of February 11 as preliminary thoughts, tentative and nonbinding, speculative and ruminative; and, distracted by other matters, he never progressed to the point of settling on the terms of the program and putting it into effect. In part this was because he was dissatisfied with the marketing staff, which he regarded as an experiment and ultimately as a failed experiment. He considered himself the principal marketer of the bank’s products and doubted whether the cost of the marketing department was justified. Since the events in this case, the bank has as I have noted abolished the department.
If there was a contract, there was a breach—but was there a contract? When the question is whether a contract has been formed from a series of writings plus oral statements, the answer is within the lap of the jury, see, e.g.,
Western Industries, Inc. v. Newcor Canada Ltd.,
The jury’s finding that there was a contract in this case was reasonable. Apart from oral promises that the jury was entitled to find that Brokemond had made, the letters of February 4 and August 11 can easily be read to promise the implementation, immediately upon Price’s beginning *459 her employment with the bank, of an incentive-compensation program.
The more difficult question is whether, assuming there was a contract, it is too indefinite to enforce, since a number of terms (e.g., the percentage compensation for the treasury tax and loan deposits) were not specified (“some percentage”). The modern approach to issues of contractual vagueness, heavily influenced by Cardozo’s oрinions for the New York Court of Appeals, asks whether the contract is too vague for the court to be able to provide a remedy for breach. See, e.g.,
Outlet Embroidery Co. v. Derwent Mills, Ltd.,
The bank argues, however, that even if there was a breach, under the instructions I gave to the jury there could be no damages. An agreed instruction required Price to show, in order to obtain damages for breach of contract, that she was the “procuring cause” of Highland bank business; for the parties agreed that the incentive compensation was intended to be based on the amount of business that the bank did for which Price was in some sense responsible. But in what sense? The bank argues that it had to be brand-new business, from new customers, but the instruction does not say this; nor the letters; nor would such a restriction make аny sense, for it would give the marketing staff an incentive to disregard old customers. The jury could reasonably have found that Price was the “procuring cause” of any business that she had a significant influence in bringing into or retaining for the bank, even though it was from an existing customer.
So much for the contract claim. The next question is, Was there fraud? Had I been the trier of fact, I would have found for the defendants on this question. The most plausible explanation of what happened is that Brokеmond initially and as late as August 11, 1984, intended to establish an incentive program consistent with the terms sketched in the February 4 letter, but that he later changed his mind because he was dissatisfied with the performance of the marketing staff. A change of mind can be and here was (as the *460 jury found, I think correctly) a breach of contract, but it is not fraud.
The principal evidence of fraud is Brokemond’s admission that he never intended his representations concerning the incentive program tо be contractually binding. A rational jury could infer from this, with the confidence required in a fraud case, that Brokemond made promises to Price, both orally and in the letters (especially the second letter), intending not to keep them. While it is true that Illinois does not make fraudulent promising actionable as such, there is (as the jury was instructed) an exception if the promise is “the scheme to accomplish a fraud.” The exception, as has rightly been observed, has swallоwed the rule.
Vance Pearson, Inc. v. Alexander,
But wаs there clear and convincing evidence that the promise was deliberately false? There was. Brokemond
testified
that he never intended to commit himself to set up the promised incentive-compensation program. A party’s admission in testimony can be clear and convincing evidence.
United States v. Ostrowsky,
The defendants have a back-up position: that there was no reliance on the false promises; that Marjorie Price would have gone to work for the Highland bank and stayed there even if there had been no promise of incentive compensation. She testified that she would not have, and, although I am skeptical, I cannot second-guess the jury’s determination in the matter. People don’t like to accept salary cuts, and without the incentive-compensation program she might have tried harder to find another job at Continental or elsewhere. She appears to be eminently employable, for she is now the director of marketing at the Drexel National Bank, another national bank in Chicago, at a salary of $45,000 (with no incentive program— she testified that she has had it with such programs!). Of course she has five years more experience than when she signed on with Highland Community Bank for $30,-000, and there has been some inflation during this period, although not a great deal. Nevertheless the jury was entitled to infer that the promise of an incentive-compensation program was a material inducement in her decision to aсcept Highland’s offer.
I therefore deny the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and move on to the issues raised by the defendants’ other post-trial motions. Eleven points are raised, but I shall discuss only the salient ones; I have considered, and reject, the rest. The first issue I discuss is whether I erred by instructing the jury on the theory of contractual liability announced by the Supreme Court of Illinois in
Duldulao v. St. Mary of Nazareth Hospital,
Next, the defendants, relying very heavily on opinions of the Seventh Circuit in which I have criticized plaintiffs for the quality of their evidence of damages, see, e.g.,
FDIC v. W.R. Grace & Co.,
The remaining issues concern the fraud count. First and least, the defendants argue that the plaintiff should not have been allowed to use at triаl oral representations that Brokemond allegedly made to her, since the complaint mentioned only the February 4 and August 11 letters; and fraud must be pleaded with particularity. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b). However, the plaintiff was using to prove the fraudulent character of the promise to establish an incentive-compensation program not Broke-mond’s oral
representations
(except incidentally and cumulatively), but his statement that he never intended to put the program into effect. This statement has nothing to do with the pleading requirements of Rule 9(b). All the cases ever require to be pleaded with specificity is the misrepresentations, not the circumstances that demonstrate their falsity. See, e.g.,
Haroco, Inc v. American National Bank & Trust Co.,
The defendants complain that instruction number 20 was in error in allowing the jury to award punitive damages for fraud if it found “from a preponderance of the evidence that the plaintiff is entitled to actual or compensatory damages.” The fraud instruction correctly placed on the plaintiff the burden of proving fraud by clear and convincing evidence. Instruction 20 was not erroneous, for its office was not to set the burden of proof for fraud but merely to require that the jury find
some
actual damages before it went on to consider whether to award punitive damages. Nor do I think it likely to have misled the jury, in the context of the full instructions. See
Needham v. White Laboratories, Inc.,
Finally and in a variety of ways the defendants objеct to the award of punitive damages and particularly to the amount of the award. The first objection has no merit. Punitive damages are routinely awarded for deliberate torts, and if there was fraud here it was deliberate. The defendants do not question the vica
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rious liability of the bank for punitive damages, and would be on weak footing if they did, for while Illinois follows the “complicity rule” and thus refuses to allow punitive damages to be awarded on a theory of respondeat superior, see
Oakview New Lenox School District No. 122 v. Ford Motor Co.,
But I agree with the defendants that the award was grossly excessive. Of course it is wrongful to promise an employee a benefit knowing that you do not intend to give it to him and by doing so to discourage the employee from exploring alternative opportunities. But on the scale of wrongs prevalent in our sоciety this one ranks pretty low, and I think a year’s salary—$30,000—is, in the circumstances, the maximum punishment that each defendant should be made to pay for such a wrong, consistent with contemporary norms of fair dealing and commercial reasonableness. No evidence was offered that Brokemond committed this fraud as part of some larger and nefarious scheme to enrich himself or his bank at the expense of his employees, and the award of compensatory damages is a generous one. Considering the gravity of the wrong, and the plaintiff’s failure to present evidence concerning Brokemond's financial wherewithal, see generally
Hazelwood v. Illinois Central Gulf R.R.,
SO ORDERED.
