This is the plaintiff bank’s appeal. We granted direct appellate review, following requests for direct appellate review by all parties. The appeal relates to counts III, IV and V of the bank’s complaint and to count I of the defendants’ counterclaim. In count III of its complaint, the bank alleges that the defendants Varadian and Nebelkopf, as trustees of Harborside Landing Realty Trust, owe the bank $2,900,000 pursuant to a promissory note. Count IV alleges that Varadian and Nebelkopf are individually liable as guarantors of that note. Count V asserts that Varadian and Nebelkopf are individually liable on a $1,000,000 promissory note (line of credit). The defendants filed an answer denying the bank’s claims. Subsequently, Varadian and Nebelkopf filed amended answers and counterclaims asserting in count I that the bank had breached an oral contract to lend $43,500,000 for the construction of a multi-unit condominium complex in Lynn called the “Harborside Project” with the asserted result that there was no liability on the aforesaid notes and guarantees and, instead, the bank was liable to Varadian and Nebelkopf for breach of contract.
The liability issues were tried to a jury. The parties stipulated to the execution and delivery of the relevant notes and to the unpaid balances. The trial focused on the alleged oral promise by the bank to provide a construction loan of $43,500,000 and on the circumstances relevant to the question whether Varadian and Nebelkopfs engagement in a costly course of action was a result of their reasonable reliance on the bank’s alleged promise. The judge instructed the jury on the legal theory of promissory estoppel and submitted to the jury nine special verdict questions pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 49 (a),
The jury answered the special questions substantially as follows: (1) Roland Lamothe or Robert Britton, bank personnel, had “apparent authority to make the construction loan”; (2) the bank intended to be bound only by an agreement in writing for the construction loan; (3) Varadian and
A trial on damages, before a second jury, followed. Following the jury’s assessment of damages, and in keeping therewith, the following judgment, insofar as the judgment is material to this appeal, was entered:
“With respect to Counts III, IV [and] V ... of the Complaint, the Plaintiff [bank] takes nothing and those counts shall be dismissed, with prejudice and without costs.
“ . . . With respect to Count I of the Counterclaim upon liability by virtue of promissory estoppel:
“(a) The Plaintiffs-in-Counterclaim, Varadian and Nebelkopf, individually and as they are general partners of Lynn Harbor Development Limited Partnership and as they are the trustees of Harborside Landing Realty Trust, recover of the Defendant-in-Counterclaim [the bank] the sum of $2,697,000.00 (consisting of $1,936,000.00 in reliance damages and $761,000.00 inmitigation damages) together with interest from May 7, 1987 as provided by law and costs in the amount of $5,242.02;
“(b) that the Plaintiffs-in-Counterclaim, Varadian and Nebelkopf as they are the general partners of Lynn Harbor Development Limited Partnership, recover of the Defendant-in-Counterclaim [the bank] the sum of $650,000.00 together with interest from May 7, 1987 as provided by law and costs in the amount of $3,510.00; and
“(c) that the Plaintiffs-in-Counterclaim, Varadian and Nebelkopf as they are the general partners of Lynn Land Development Associates Limited Partnership and as they are the trustees of Van Realty Trust, recover of the Defendant-in-Counterclaim [the bank] the sum of $725,000 together with interest from May 7, 1987 as provided by law.”
At the liability phase of the trial, after the defendants as plaintiffs-in-counterclaim introduced their evidence and rested, the bank moved for a directed verdict as to the counterclaims, setting forth specific grounds therefor including those on which the bank now relies. Mass. R. Civ. P. 50 (a),
On appeal, the bank argues, among other things, that the evidence was insufficient as a matter of law to warrant a finding that Varadian and Nebelkopf could reasonably rely on the bank’s oral “promise” to grant a $43,500,000 construction loan, and that therefore the bank is entitled to judgment on counts III, IV, and V of its complaint and on count I of the counterclaim notwithstanding the verdict. We must first consider whether, as the defendants argue, the bank failed to protect its right to challenge the judge’s denial of its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.
Rule 50 of the Massachusetts Rules of Civil Procedure,
“(a) Motion for Directed Verdict: When Made; Effect. A party may move for a directed verdict at the close of the evidence offered by an opponent, and may offer evidence in the event that the motion is not granted .... A party may also move for a directed verdict at the close of all the evidence. ... A motion for a directed verdict shall state the specific grounds therefor. ...
“(b) Motion for Judgment Notwithstanding the Verdict. Whenever a motion for a directed verdict made at the close of all the evidence is denied or for any reason is not granted, the court is deemed to have submitted the action to the jury subject to a later determination ofthe legal questions raised by the motion. Not later than 10 days after entry of judgment, a party who has moved for a directed verdict may move to have the verdict and any judgment entered thereon set aside and to have judgment entered in accordance with his motion for a directed verdict . . . . ”
The defendants (plaintiffs-in-counterclaim) correctly say that, “in the absence of an effective motion for directed verdict at trial, a party may not challenge the sufficiency of his opponent’s evidence on appeal. Deerskin Trading Post v. Spencer Press,
“The requirement that a litigant state specific grounds in support of a motion for directed verdict is an important one.
The purpose of the rule is also met by our concluding, at least in the circumstances of this case, that bank counsel’s renewal of his earlier filed motion for directed verdict, which set forth specific grounds for the motion, fairly brought to the attention of the judge and opposing parties the grounds of the renewed motion. There is no suggestion in this case that either the judge or any defendant was, in effect, “ambushed” by learning of the bank’s contentions as to sufficiency of evidence for the first time after verdict. The following quotation from the court’s opinion in Quinn v. Southwest Wood Prods., Inc.,
In his memorandum of decision on the bank’s motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and for a new trial, the judge said, “In response to the defendants’ claim that the [bank] had orally agreed to lend the defendants in excess of $43 million, the jury answered [in response to special questions pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 49 (a)] that there was no binding contract in the traditional sense since a written agreement was contemplated by the parties. Further answers of the jury established a basis for liability on the part of the plaintiff grounded on a promissory estoppel, i.e. that the plaintiff (‘Bank’) is estopped to avoid the agreement to lend money because it was not in writing. Additionally, the jury found in response to a special question directed to the defendants’ defense to Counts [III, IV, and V] that the Bank induced the execution of the underlying Notes and guarantees by the promise of the construction loan.
“An essential element under the promissory estoppel theory is that there be an unambiguous promise and that the party to whom the promise was made reasonably relied on the representation. Pappas Industrial Parks, Inc. v. Psarros,
As we mentioned earlier in this opinion, the judge ruled that the evidence warranted a finding that the defendants reasonably relied on the bank’s oral promise to provide a $43,500,000 construction loan. We disagree. We conclude
In Loranger Constr. Corp. v. E.F. Hauserman Co.,
Here the evidence most favorable to the defendants (plaintiffs-in-counterclaim) in support of their promissory estoppel claim was that the bank made an oral “promise” which the bank did not intend, and the defendants did not understand, to be a commitment because both parties contemplated a written agreement that would govern the intricacies of a $43,500,000 construction loan. “It is a settled principle of contract law that ‘[a] promise made with an understood intention that it is not to be legally binding, but only expressive of a present intention, is not a contract.’ Kuzmeskus v. Pickup Motor Co.,
The judgment as to counts III, IV, and V of the bank’s complaint is reversed. The case is remanded for an assessment of damages and judgment for the bank consistent with the parties’ stipulation in the trial court.
So ordered.
