In a diversity suit for breach of contract governed by Illinois law, the district judge after a bench trial awarded Shannon Has-lund $537,634.41 in damages, plus prejudgment interest, against Simon Property Group (SPG).
During the dot-com boom of the late 1990s, SPG, a real estate company that operates hundreds of shopping malls, decided to form a subsidiary, “clixnmor-tar.com,” to create Internet-related services ancillary to its mall business. It appointed its chief information officer, Melanie Alshab, to be the president of the new subsidiary. She approached Haslund, a management consultant who had done work for SPG in the past and was employed by Ernst & Young, to be clixnmor-tar’s vice president for operations. Has-lund was interested, but told Alshab that she wanted not only a substantial raise (from $125,000, her salary at Ernst & Young, to $175,000), but also equity in elixnmortar. She was taking a chance by leaving an established firm for a startup, and so she wanted upside potential. She made clear that unless she was given equity she wouldn’t sign on with the new company. Alshab got authorization from her superiors to offer Haslund not only the salary increase that she requested but also one percent of clixnmortar’s equity. The deal was confirmed in a letter to Haslund from SPG’s. director of human resources that under the caption “Annual Salary” recited “$175,000 plus 1% equity in clixn-mortar.com, structure to be determined.”
Haslund started her new job at the end of 1999 shortly after receiving this letter. No stock was issued to her, however, either then or later. She kept badgering SPG for the stock to no avail, and 10 months after starting work she was fired, having denounced SPG’s boss in an email to a firm that was in the process of acquiring an interest in elixnmortar. The start-up never turned a profit — in fact never *655 had any significant income — and was soon moribund, though it wasn’t dissolved until last year.
The fact that a contract is incomplete, presents interpretive questions, bristles with unresolved contingencies, and in short has as many holes as a Swiss cheese does not make it unenforceable for indefiniteness. Otherwise there would be few enforceable contracts. Complete contingent contracts are impossible. The future, over which contractual performance evolves, is too uncertain. We once decided a case in which the contract exceeded 2000 pages yet the dispute that gave rise to the suit had not been anticipated (or, if anticipated, provided for).
S.A. Healy Co. v. Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District,
But that is in general and not in every case. A contract is rightly deemed unenforceable for indefiniteness when it leaves out (1) a crucial term that (2) a court cannot reasonably be asked to supply in the name of interpretation.
Academy Chicago Publishers v. Cheever,
So if the employment agreement had said that Haslund would receive equity but hadn’t indicated how much, a court could not supply the missing percentage. Cf.
Architectural Metal Systems, Inc. v. Consolidated Systems, Inc.,
Evidence of trade usage is admissible to supply the answers to such questions. E.g.,
Chicago Bridge & Iron Co. v. Reliance Ins. Co.,
SPG might have presented evidence, presumably in the form of expert testimony by management consultants knowledgeable about dot-com startups during the boom, that equity in a startup would never be given to a new employee without restrictions, specifically a restriction on vesting and sale. SPG presented no such evidence. It is common knowledge that such restrictions are the norm, but that doesn’t mean that they are universal.
So the contract was enforceable, and was broken, and the next question is whether the district judge was right to award Haslund some half million dollars in damages (or, indeed, as we shall see, whether he was right to award her any amount of damages). The amount he awarded was one percent of his estimate that clixnmortar had a net worth when Haslund was fired of $54 million. The principal evidence on which he relied for this extravagant estimate — for remember that when Haslund was fired (indeed at all times) clixnmortar had not shown a profit, on the basis of which a capital value could be estimated by conventional methods, and apparently had no assets whose value could be appraised — consisted of two transactions. In the first a company named CPG Partners bought a 9.3 percent equity interest in clixnmortar from SPG for $5 million, which implies (arithmetically) a total value of clixnmortar of $54 million. In the second transaction a consulting company named Found.com (the investor to which Haslund had sent the *657 email that precipitated her being fired) forgave $8.7 million in consulting fees owed it by SPG in exchange for a 6.9 percent equity stake in clixnmortar, implying, by the same arithmetical procedure of dividing the amount of consideration by the percentage of equity received, a similar valuation of the company.
These transactions — though the one with CPG, at least, was rich in the structure missing from Haslund’s one percent interest, since the number of shares and the type of stock were specified, along with restrictions on transfer — constitute but poor evidence of clixnmortar’s value. Compare
Ashe v. Sunshine Broadcasting Corp.,
As for the “investment” by Found, its $3.7 million receivable in uncollected consulting fees was the softest of soft numbers. For, having essentially no assets, liquid or otherwise, clixnmortar could not be expected to cough up $3.7 million in cash for consulting services. Found would have expected to have to write off much of the bill; and so clixnmortar would not have given Found, or Found insisted on receiving, equity actually worth $3.7 million. The stock Found received was worth only the collectable portion of the debt, not its face value, and no evidence concerning that amount was presented.
Even if, as we do not for a moment believe, clixnmortar was worth $54 million when Haslund was fired, and even if we accept, as we must (though reluctantly), Alshab’s testimony that there would have been no restrictions whatever on Has-lund’s selling the stock had she been issued it, and even though Haslund might well have wanted to sell her stock then had it been issued to her, it is beyond unlikely that she could have persuaded anyone to pay her $537,000 for the stock. Even if we accept, as we should not, that CPG and Found really did invest in a meaningful sense in clixnmortar, there is a big difference between putting money into a startup and buying stock in a startup from another investor. In the first case the investor is strengthening the startup by his investment and thus increasing the likelihood of its succeeding. In the second case he is contributing nothing to the company unless the purchase is big enough to affect the price at which the company might issue new stock. The district judge speculated that CPG or Found might have bought Haslund’s stock. But this is hopelessly speculative and utterly implausible — CPG, remember, had not contributed a nickel to clixnmortar, while Found had contributed only a wooden nickel. Neither company had indicated any willingness actually to invest cash in the startup.
All that Haslund has going for her on the proof-of-damages front is SPG’s failure to propose an alternative damages figure other than zero. As we have remarked in the past, this is a risky strategy for defendants.
Avitia v. Metropolitan Club of Chicago, Inc.,
On this record, we have to say that it is more likely that zero is correct than that $537,000 is, and we are sufficiently confident about this conclusion to pronounce the district judge’s contrary finding clearly erroneous and therefore not binding on us. There is no evidence that there would have been a market for Has-lund’s equity interest, had it been given to her in accordance with the contract, during the limited period between when she was fired and when it became apparent that clixnmortar would never leave the starting gate. The “investments” by CPG and Found are no evidence at all that there would have been a willing buyer for Has-lund’s stock even in the unlikely event that the stock would have been completely unrestricted.
She argues that by breaking the contract and never issuing her the stock, SPG prevented her from testing the market; and it is true that when a defendant by violating the plaintiffs rights makes it difficult for her to prove her damages, all reasonable doubts about the amount of damages are resolved in her favor.
Bigelow v. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., supra,
But, surely, it will be replied, she could have gotten
something
for her equity interest — if only a few hundred dollars. No doubt. But if that is all she could have gotten, she would have held on to the stock in the hope that clixnmortar would succeed — in which event she would have been holding fairy dust when the company failed. Although SPG’s breach of her employment contract appears to have been deliberate and indeed reprehensible, without proof of actual loss Haslund is entitled only to nominal damages,
Kleinworb Benson North America, Inc. v. Quantum Financial Services, Inc.,
The judgment is reversed with instructions to enter judgment for the plaintiff for nominal damages only.
REVERSED AND REMANDED, WlTH DIRECTIONS.
