A Delaware corporation appeals from the Vice Chancellor’s finding that it breached a contractual obligation to negotiate in good faith and is liable under the doctrine of promissory estoppel. We reaffirm that where parties agree to negotiate in good faith in accordance with a term sheet, that obligation to negotiate in good
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
A. Facts
Plaintiff-Appellee PharmAthene, Inc., and Defendant-Appellant SIGA Technologies, Inc., are both Delaware corporations engaged in biodefense research and development. In 2004, SIGA acquired an antiviral drug for the treatment of smallpox, ST-246. At that time, the drug’s viability, potential uses, safety, and efficacy were all unknown, but the drug had enormous potential.
By late 2005, SIGA had experienced difficulty developing the drug and was running out of money. NASDAQ threatened to delist SIGA’s shares and SIGA’s largest shareholder, MacAndrews & Forbes (MAF), was unwilling to invest additional money. SIGA estimated it needed approximately $16 million to complete the development process.
As a result of SIGA’s difficulties, SIGA’s management began discussing a possible collaboration with PharmAthene. Thomas Konatich, SIGA’s Chief Financial Officer, contacted Eric Richman, PharmAthene’s Vice President of Business Development and Strategies. Richman desired a merger between the two companies, but SIGA resisted because of its past experience with PharmAthene.
In late 2005 and early 2006, Konatich and Richman outlined the terms of a license agreement. Konatich kept Donald Drapkin, Chairman of SIGA’s Board of Directors and MAF’s Vice Chairman, well informed about the negotiations.
Konatich and Richman continued to exchange draft term sheets. Much of the negotiation focused on upfront cash payments and funding guarantees. On January 16, Richman sent Konatich a revised term sheet that provided for a total deal size of $16 million, an increased upfront payment of $6 million, and significant cash milestone payments. When Konatich forwarded this' term sheet to Drapkin, he recommended that Drapkin speak directly to Richman to present SIGA’s Board of Directors’ position on PharmAthene’s proposal.
On January 17, the Vice Chancellor found that Drapkin and Richman discussed the term sheet during a telephone call and Drapkin requested that Richman make two changes.
On January 19, Richman again spoke with Drapkin and told him that the Phar-mAthene board had approved the license agreement term sheet with Drapkin’s two proposed changes. While PharmAthene alleges that by this time, the parties had “a deal” and could move on to discussing a merger, Richman did not send a copy of the revised term sheet to Drapkin until February 10, 2006.
On January 26, a clean copy was made of the two-page license agreement term sheet incorporating Drapkin’s two changes (the LATS). The LATS recites that the parties intended to “establish a partnership to further develop & commercialize [ST-246] for the treatment of [s]mallpox and orthopox related infections and to develop other orthopox virus therapeutics.” The LATS also sets forth terms relating to, among other things, patents covered, licenses, license fees, and royalties. How
The Vice Chancellor summarized the LATS in his posttrial opinion:
Without attempting to cover all the details, the LATS contemplates a license agreement along the following lines to support the further development and commercialization of ST-246 for the treatment of smallpox. First, SIGA would grant to PharmAthene “a worldwide exclusive license and [sic] under the Patents, Know-How and Materials to use, develop, make, have made, sell, export and import Products in Field. The right to grant sublicenses shall be specifically included in the license.” Second, the license would cover ST-246 and all other related products worldwide covered by the patents and know-how relating to ST-246 and its development and manufacture. Third, the LATS described the makeup of a research and development committee, which would include representatives from both Phar-mAthene and SIGA. The parties identified twelve categories of tasks relevant to that committee and assigned responsibility for each one to either SIGA or PharmAthene. In addition, PharmAth-ene agreed to fund the research and development based on a defined budget.
Fourth, the LATS included economic terms. PharmAthene was scheduled to pay a “License Fee” of $6 million in total, which consisted of $2 million cash upfront, $2.5 million as a deferred license fee to be paid twelve months after execution of a license agreement if certain events occurred, and $1.5 million after SIGA obtained financing in excess of $15 million. In addition, the LATS contained a provision under which Phar-mAthene would pay an additional $10 million based on the achievement of specific milestones relating to certain sales targets and regulatory approvals. The LATS also provided for PharmAthene to make annual royalty payments of 8% on “yearly net sales of Patented Products” of less than $250 million, 10% on sales greater than $250 million, and 12% on sales greater than $1 billion. Lastly, the LATS stated that, “[i]n addition, SIGA will be entitled to receive 50% of any amounts by which net margin exceeds 20% on sales to the U.S. Federal Government.”9
On January 18, 2006, the PharmAthene board decided that it preferred a merger with SIGA instead of a license agreement, so representatives of PharmAthene and SIGA met to begin merger discussions on January 23 at MAF’s office in New York City. Because of SIGA’s precarious financial position, SIGA asked PharmAthene to provide bridge financing so that SIGA could continue developing ST-246 while merger negotiations proceeded. Riehman and two other PharmAthene representatives testified that PharmAthene agreed to consider raising funds for a bridge loan on the condition that PharmAthene would obtain at least a license for ST-246 if merger negotiations fell through.
On February 10, 2006, David Wright, PharmAthene’s Chief Financial Officer, sent Drapkin a draft merger term sheet that included the following provision regarding a license agreement:
SIGA and PharmAthene will negotiate the terms of a definitive License Agreement in accordance with the terms set forth in the Term Sheet ... attached on Schedule 1 hereto. The License Agreement will be executed simultaneously with the Definitive [Merger] Agreement and will become effective only upon the*337 termination of the Definitive [Merger] Agreement.10
Drapkin testified that he thought Phar-mAthene was confused and had no interest in a license agreement. But, the Vice Chancellor found Drapkin undermined that testimony when he admitted “that he understood that PharmAthene wanted to negotiate two documents at once when he received the draft merger term sheet with the license agreement attached.”
On February 22, 2006, the parties once again met at MAF’s office. Drapkin and another SIGA board member attended. Baumel reiterated PharmAthene’s desire to execute simultaneously a merger agreement and a license agreement (in case the merger did not close). Relying on testimony from Baumel, Richman, and Wright, the Vice Chancellor found that Drapkin told PharmAthene he was not going to pay lawyers to draft a formal license agreement and suggested PharmAthene just attach the LATS to the merger agreement. Relying on Baumel’s testimony, the Vice Chancellor found that Drapkin told Phar-mAthene that “this approach would be as good as a license agreement and would guarantee PharmAthene, at a minimum, a license if negotiations for a merger fell through.”
The PharmAthene board reviewed a final merger term sheet on March 1, 2006. That term sheet specifically referred to the LATS and included a copy of the LATS as an exhibit. Again relying on testimony from Baumel, Richman, and Wright, the Vice Chancellor found that during a March 6 meeting, “Drapkin reiterated that ‘in any case, if the merger doesn’t close, [PharmAthene] will get [its] license.’ ”
On March 20, 2006, SIGA and Phar-mAthene entered into a Bridge Loan Agreement in which PharmAthene loaned SIGA $3 million for expenses relating to the merger, developing ST-246, and overhead. The Bridge Loan Agreement designates New York law as its governing law. It also specifically contemplates that the parties might not ultimately agree on either a merger or a license agreement.
Upon any termination of the Merger Term Sheet ..., termination of the Definitive Agreement relating to the Merger, or if a Definitive Agreement is not executed ..., SIGA and PharmAthene will negotiate in good faith with the intention of executing a definitive License
*338 Agreement in accordance with the terms set forth in the License Agreement Term Sheet attached as Exhibit C and [SIGA] agrees for a period of 90 days during which the definitive license agreement is under negotiation, it shall not, directly or indirectly, initiate discussions or engage in negotiations with any corporation, partnership, person or other entity or group concerning any Competing Transaction without the prior written consent of the other party or notice from the other party that it desires to terminate discussions hereunder.15
With the Bridge Loan Agreement signed, PharmAthene provided SIGA with financial and administrative support while the parties redevoted attention to their proposed merger terms. On June 8, 2006, PharmAthene and SIGA signed the Merger Agreement, which selects Delaware law as its choice of law. Merger Agreement Section 12.3 is substantively identical to Bridge Loan Agreement Section 2.3 and provides that if the merger is terminated, the parties agree to negotiate in good faith a definitive license agreement in accordance with the LATS’s terms. Section 13.3 stipulates that each of the parties must use their “best efforts to take such actions as may be necessary or reasonably requested by the other parties hereto to carry out and consummate the transactions contemplated by this Agreement.” Section 12.4 provides that those provisions, among others, survive the Merger Agreement’s termination. The Merger Agreement had a dropdead date of September 30, 2006.
The Vice Chancellor found that SIGA’s key representatives understood that Phar-mAthene and SIGA were likely to enter into a lasting relationship, either by a merger or a license agreement. Several comments by SIGA representatives indicate that SIGA began experiencing seller’s remorse after SIGA received a $5.4-mil-lion-dollar grant from the National Institutes of Health.
After SIGA terminated the Merger Agreement, PharmAthene hired attorney Elliot Olstein to draft a licensing agreement with SIGA. On October 12, 2006, Baumel sent PharmAthene’s Proposed License Agreement to SIGA’s outside counsel, James Grayer. On October 26, Olstein emailed Nicholas Coch, another outside attorney for SIGA, and stated that Phar-mAthene was ready to sign the Proposed License Agreement because it contained “all the essential terms of a license agreement and is completely consistent with the [LATS].” Coch responded that SIGA would not provide a revised license agreement before the parties met, because the “nature of the negotiations required under the Merger Agreement” necessitated “a robust discussion.”
Meanwhile, as the Vice Chancellor found, SIGA had internally discussed alternative structures for a definitive license agreement. SIGA’s controller emailed Ko-natich and several other SIGA representatives a financial analysis concluding that total past and future development costs equaled $36.66 million, and that a $40 million upfront license fee would support a 50-50 profit split.
On November 6, the parties met to discuss the license agreement. Given the clinical progress made since the parties last negotiated, PharmAthene emphasized the need to revise some of the LATS’s economic terms. PharmAthene’s representatives expressed confusion about SIGA’s new emphasis on a partnership and maintained that the LATS’s terms bound the parties. Nevertheless, PharmAthene was willing to listen to SIGA’s proposal in order to avoid a dispute. SIGA then proposed a $4(M5 million upfront payment and a 50-50 profit split. SIGA agreed to draft a formal proposal and send it to PharmAthene.
On November 21, 2006, SIGA sent Phar-mAthene a 102-page Draft LLC Agreement. The Vice Chancellor contrasted the LATS to the Draft LLC Agreement thusly:
[T]he Draft LLC Agreement included the following economic changes: (1) the upfront payment from PharmAthene to SIGA increased from $6 million to $100 million; (2) the milestone payments to SIGA increased from $10 million to $235 million; (3) the royalty percentages owed to SIGA increased from 8%, 10%, and 12% depending on the amount of sales to 18%, 22%, 25%, and 28%; and (4) SIGA would receive 50% of any remaining profit whereas the LATS provided for profit sharing only from U.S. government sales having a margin of 20% or more. In addition, several non-economic terms were revised to favor SIGA heavily and to undermine Phar-mAthene’s control of ST-246. These provisions included: (1) SIGA’s right to resolve disputes unilaterally; (2) SIGA’s ability to block any distribution to Phar-mAthene; (3) PharmAthene’s obligation*340 to fund fully the LLC’s costs, despite having to split profits 50/50; and (4) SIGA’s right to terminate the LLC under certain conditions, with PharmAth-ene having no right to cure and with all rights to the product reverting to SIGA.20
Olstein and Coch exchanged letters discussing SIGA’s Draft LLC Agreement throughout November and December. Ol-stein asserted that the Agreement’s terms were “radically different from the terms set forth in the [LATS],” but that Phar-mAthene was “willing to consider” changes to the LATS, including a 50/50 profit split. SIGA disputed that the LATS was binding because of the “Non Binding Terms” footer, and it never addressed PharmAthene’s proposed profit split. Coch issued an ultimatum on December 12: unless Phar-mAthene responded by December 20 that it was prepared to negotiate “without preconditions” regarding the LATS’s binding nature, the parties had “nothing more to talk about.” On December 20, 2006, Phar-mAthene filed suit in the Court of Chancery.
B. Procedural History
PharmAthene’s Complaint contained seven separate counts, asserting claims of breach of contract, promissory estoppel, and unjust enrichment. On January 9, 2007, SIGA moved to dismiss the Complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. After considering the parties’ briefing and argument, the Vice Chancellor denied SIGA’s motion on January 16, 2008, in PharmAthene I
After extensive discovery, the Vice Chancellor granted PharmAthene’s motion to amend its Complaint on May 4, 2009; and PharmAthene filed its Amended Complaint on May 5, 2009. On May 18, 2009, SIGA filed an Answer and Counterclaim. The Counterclaim alleged that PharmAth-ene breached its contractual obligation to negotiate in good faith and sought dismissal of the Amended Complaint, as well as reliance damages and SIGA’s attorneys’ fees and costs.
On March 19, 2010, SIGA moved for partial summary judgment under Court of Chancery Rule 56(c), seeking to dismiss Counts One through Four of the Amended Complaint and to preclude PharmAthene from obtaining either specific performance or expectation damages. The parties briefed that motion and the Vice Chancellor heard argument on July 22, 2010. In PharmAthene II,
In January 2011, the Vice Chancellor presided over an eleven-day trial in this action. After extensive posttrial briefing, counsel presented their final arguments on April 29, 2011. In PharmAthene III,
In PharmAthene TV,
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Different standards of review apply to different portions of this appeal. We review de novo the Vice Chancellor’s conclusion that Delaware law applies in this action.
III. ANALYSIS
A. Delaware law applies.
SIGA appeals the Vice Chancellor’s ruling in PharmAthene I that Delaware law applies to all of the claims in this dispute.
Here, we have two contracts, the Bridge Loan Agreement and the Merger Agreement, which contain competing choice-of-law clauses. Both impose an identical obligation to negotiate in good faith. SIGA agrees that, “[Consistent with [Section] 187, when two contracts are alleged to have been breached and each contract has a governing law provision designating a different state’s law, the Court must determine which contract takes precedence.”
A Southern District of New York judge faced a similar question when having to construe two agreements “signed on the same date and for the same purpose.”
B. SIGA breached its contractual obligation to negotiate in good faith.
SIGA argues that the Vice Chancellor erred when he concluded that SIGA breached an obligation to negotiate in good faith under the Bridge Loan and Merger Agreements.
In Titan Investment Fund II, LP v. Freedom Mortgage Corp., a Superior Court judge held that a letter agreement and term sheet created an enforceable obligation that the parties negotiate a credit facility agreement in good faith.
In VS & A Communications Partners, L.P. v. Palmer Broadcasting Limited Partnership, a Chancellor, applying New York law, considered whether a letter detailing a “preliminary understanding,” reached in a negotiation to purchase certain television and radio stations, created an obligation to negotiate in good faith.
In Gillenardo v. Connor Broadcasting Delaware Co., a Superior Court judge considered a letter of intent setting forth the potential purchase price and other financing and negotiating terms for a sale of two radio stations, including an attached draft of the purchase agreement and related exhibits.
RGC International Investors, LDC v. Greka Energy Corp.
Similarly, although applying New York law, a Southern District of New York judge concluded that where parties “bind themselves to a concededly incomplete agreement in the sense that they accept a mutual commitment to negotiate together in good faith in an effort to reach final agreement within the scope that has been settled in the preliminary agreement,”
The express contractual language in the Bridge Loan and Merger Agreements obligated the parties to “negotiate in good faith with the intention of executing a definitive License Agreement in accordance with the terms set forth in the” LATS. The question becomes whether the language “in accordance with the terms set forth” means that the parties had a duty, as the Vice Chancellor found, “to negotiate toward a license agreement with economic terms substantially similar to the terms of the LATS”
Although the LATS itself is not signed and contains a footer on each page stating “Non Binding Terms,” the record supports the Vice Chancellor’s factual conclusion that “incorporation of the LATS into the Bridge Loan and Merger Agreements reflects an intent on the part of both parties to negotiate toward a license agreement with economic terms substantially similar to the terms of the LATS if the merger was not consummated.”
SIGA notes that requiring parties to propose terms “substantially similar” to those in a term sheet introduces some uncertainty and litigation risk into negotiations. Because a trial judge must find both that a party’s proposed terms are substantially dissimilar and that the party proposed those terms in bad faith, we think SIGA overstates the litigation risk. Under Delaware law, “bad faith is not simply bad judgment or negligence, but rather it implies the conscious doing of a wrong because of dishonest purpose or moral obliquity; it is different from the negative idea of negligence in that it contemplates a state of mind affirmatively operating with furtive design or ill will.”
The record supports the Vice Chancellor’s finding that “SIGA disregarded [the LATS’s] terms and attempted to negotiate a definitive license agreement that contained economic and other terms drastical
C. SIGA is not liable under a theory of promissory estoppel.
We reverse the Vice Chancellor’s conclusion that SIGA was liable on the basis of promissory estoppel.
(i) a promise was made;
*348 (ii) it was the reasonable expectation of the promisor to induce action or forbearance on the part of the promisee;
(iii) the promisee reasonably relied on the promise and took action to his detriment; and
(iv) such promise is binding because injustice can be avoided only by enforcement of the promise.72
The Vice Chancellor based his finding of liability arising from promissory estoppel on “SIGA’s promise to afford [PharmAthene] a good faith opportunity to obtain control of ST-246, and not solely in exchange for interest on a secured loan.”
D. Proper Remedy
We now turn to the question of what is the proper contractual remedy for breach of an agreement to negotiate in good faith where the court finds as fact that the parties, had they negotiated in good faith, would have reached an agreement. Our decisions have not clearly answered this question. In Titan Investment Fund II, LP v. Freedom Mortgage Corp., we reversed the Superior Court judge’s award of a one-percent commitment fee for breach of an agreement to negotiate in good faith.
In RGC International Investors, LDC v. Greka Energy Corp.
Even though our choice of law analysis mandates that we apply Delaware law, we find other courts’ analyses instructive. Federal courts interpreting New York law recognize two types of binding preliminary agreements, “Type I” and “Type II.”
In Goodstein Construction Corp. v. City of New York, the New York Court of Appeals established that New York law limits a plaintiff to reliance damages for breach of an agreement to negotiate, without distinguishing between Type I and Type II agreements.
The Eighth Circuit then proceeded to analyze the question of whether Goodstein would bar expectation damages for breach of a Type II agreement. The Eighth Circuit noted that the Goodstein court rejected expectation damages because there would be no way to measure them without knowing whether the parties would have reached an agreement.
Similarly, in Venture Associates, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals addressed “a binding agreement to negotiate in good faith toward the formation of a contract of sale” under Illinois law.
Our decision in Titan Investment leaves open the question of whether expectation damages are available where the trial judge makes a factual finding that the parties would have reached agreement but for the defendant’s breach. In fashioning his remedy, the Vice Chancellor noted the lack of consensus.
In this case, the Vice Chancellor made two key factual findings, supported by the record: (1) “the parties memorialized the basic terms of a transaction in ... the LATS, and expressly agreed in the Bridge Loan and Merger Agreements that they would negotiate in good faith a final transaction in accordance with those terms”
E. Attorneys’ Fees
The Vice Chancellor awarded attorneys fees based on both the Bridge Loan Agreement’s contractual fee-shifting provisions and on the bad faith exception to the American Rule.
We affirm the Vice Chancellor’s conclusion that SIGA breached its contractual obligation to negotiate in good faith in both the Bridge Loan and Merger Agreements. The Bridge Loan Agreement contains two provisions that shift attorneys’ fees and expenses for a breach of that agreement.
F. PharmAthene’s Cross-Appeal
PharmAthene’s claims that it is entitled to (1) an alternative payment stream based on the LATS’s terms, (2) specific performance granting it a license in accordance with the LATS’s terms because the LATS is an enforceable contract, or (3) recover damages under the doctrine of unjust enrichment. All those claims are alternative contentions advanced in the event we do not affirm the Vice Chancellor’s judgment.
IV. CONCLUSION
For these reasons, we AFFIRM the Court of Chancery’s judgment in part, REVERSE in part, and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The facts in this section are taken primarily from the Vice Chancellor’s posttrial opinion below, PharmAthene, Inc. v. SIGA Techs., Inc. (PharmAthene III),
. SIGA also lacked much of the institutional experience necessary to take a drug to market successfully. For example, SIGA lacked employees with expertise in regulatory or government affairs, quality assurance, quality control, clinical trials, manufacturing, and business development.
. Near the end of 2003, SIGA and PharmAth-ene had discussed a potential merger, but those discussions failed as a result of Phar-mAthene’s board members' reservations.
.Drapkin testified that he had no knowledge of the license agreement and was not involved with the negotiations, but the Vice Chancellor found that the evidence supported the conclusion that Drapkin counseled Konatich about how to proceed in the negotiations. PharmAthene III,
.Drapkin did not recall that telephone call and denied telling Richman the parties would have a deal if PharmAthene agreed to two changes. The Vice Chancellor concluded Drapkin’s testimony on this point was unreliable based on other witnesses' testimony and the documentary evidence.
. One of the changes required that SIGA receive 50% of any amounts by which net profits on any U.S. government sales exceeded 20%.
. The Vice Chancellor found that Baumel credibly testified that the minutes do not mention the term sheet because he does not incorporate documents into the minutes until they are signed.
. When asked why, Richman explained that Drapkin did not ask for one and that he assumed that Drapldn already had made the changes in his version of the term sheet.
. PharmAthene III,
. Id. at *6 (first alteration and omission in original) (citation omitted).
. Id. (citation omitted).
. Id. (citation omitted). Baumel testified that Drapkin stated that ‘‘[i]f the deal doesn't close, we can negotiate a definitive license agreement in accordance with ... [the LATS] terms and you’ll have the license." Id. (alterations in original) (citation omitted). Wright also testified that "[a]t one point in this meeting [Drapkin] even instructed Jeff Baumel to put language into the term sheet that would say if the merger didn’t happen, then we would get a license based upon the terms that had already been agreed to." Id. (alterations in original) (citation omitted).
. Id. at *1 (first alteration in original) (citation omitted).
. Consistent with the idea that the parties might not succeed in negotiating an ongoing relationship, either through a merger or a license agreement, the Bridge Loan Agreement contained a two-year maturity date and granted PharmAthene a security interest in SIGA’s intellectual property.
. PharmAthene III,
. PharmAthene's representatives testified that Drapkin, worried about the parties’ urgency, explained to them "that he wanted a compressed timeline so that 'everybody will rush. And if we need extensions [SIGA will] grant them.' "Id. at *8 (alteration in original) (citation omitted).
. See id. (citations omitted) ("Indeed, even after Hruby was notified of a $5.4 million funding award ..., he still expected the drug to fall under the control of PharmAthene. When Konatich wrote to him that 'it is a damn shame we had to merge,' Hruby responded, 'You got that right.... Had [the former CEO of SIGA] not gotten us behind the curve through ineptitude, we would still be an independent company and standing to make some real dough ... we could have gone all the way ourselves.' ” (alterations and omissions in original)).
.See id. at *9 ("For example, after receiving the NIH grant, Hruby stated in an email to Drapkin (which he later acknowledged to be an exaggeration) that, ‘I have grave concerns about the merger as it is currently going forward in that the merged company will not be ... [Small Business Innovation Research program] compliant. In that case we would have to shut down [$]30 million in current grants and contracts.’ In response to this email, Steven Fasman, an inhouse lawyer at [MAF], asked, 'should SIGA continue with its merger plans or should it try to go it alone?’ ” (some alterations in original) (footnote omitted)).
. The Vice Chancellor found that both parties had some responsibility for preparing the document and had expected SEC approval before the drop-dead date.
. PharmAthene III,
. PharmAthene, Inc. v. SIGA Techs., Inc. (PharmAthene I),
. PharmAthene, Inc. v. SIGA Techs., Inc. (PharmAthene II),
. PharmAthene III,
. PharmAthene, Inc. v. SIGA Techs., Inc. (PharmAthene IV),
. PharmAthene, Inc. v. SIGA Techs., Inc. (Pharmathene V),
. PharmAthene Inc., v. SIGA Techs., Inc. (PharmAthene VI),
. J.S. Alberici Constr. Co. v. Mid-W. Conveyor Co.,
. Bank of N.Y. Mellon Trust Co., N.A. v. Liberty Media Corp.,
. Gatz Props., LLC v. Auriga Capital Corp.,
. Schock v. Nash,
. Id. (citing Hogg,
. Scion Breckenridge Managing Member, LLC v. ASB Allegiance Real Estate Fund,
. PharmAthene I,
. Travelers Indemn. Co. v. Lake,
. Abry Partners,
. Opening Br. 21. SIGA argues the Bridge Loan Agreement takes precedence. Id. Concerning PharmAthene's unjust enrichment claims, SIGA argues Restatement § 221 requires that we apply the "most significant relationship” test. Id. at 22 (citing Restatement (Second) of Conflicts of Laws § 221 & cmt. d (1971)). We note, without deciding, that Section 221 comment d states that "[wjhen the enrichment was received in the course of the performance of a contract between the parties, ... [t]he applicable law will be that chosen by the parties if they have made an effective choice under the circumstances stated in [Section] 187.” Restatement (Second) of Conflicts of Laws § 221 cmt. d (1971). Because we hold that SIGA is not liable under a quasicontractual theory, and the only meaningful difference SIGA articulates between Delaware and New York law concerns damages, see Opening Br. 22-23, we apply Delaware law and do not reach the issue of whether the contractual choice of law provisions or the "most significant relationship” govern the choice of law analysis on these claims. See Deuley v. DynCorp Int'l, Inc.,
. Elden v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc.,
. While the federal district judge determined that "[u]nder both New York and Ohio law, contracts executed at the same time and for the same purpose are to be read together,” id. (citation omitted), his rationale is analogous to the present case because the Bridge Loan Agreement and Merger Agreement were negotiated within the same framework and both impose the exact same obligation at issue in this case.
. Id.
. SIGA also argues Vice Chancellor erroneously concluded that PharmAthene had not waived this argument below. Opening Br. 14-15. We agree with the Vice Chancellor that "PharmAthene sufficiently preserved its claim ... by making multiple references in its Post[]Trial Opening Brief to SIGA's duty to negotiate in good faith under the Bridge Loan and Merger Agreements.” PharmAthene III,
. Opening Br. 16 (citations omitted). SIGA also argues the Vice Chancellor’s factual determination that PharmAthene would have accepted terms differing substantially from those the LATS contained implicitly recognizes SIGA's right to negotiate for substantially different terms. Id. at 16-17. Finally, SIGA argues that requiring a party to propose terms only substantially similar to a nonbinding term sheet introduces a dangerous uncertainty into our law because a party risks breaching an obligation to negotiate in good faith based on an indefinable amount of variance between its preliminary term sheet and later offer. Id. at 17.
. Titan Inv. Fund II, LP v. Freedom Mortg. Corp.,
. Titan Inv. Fund II, LP v. Freedom Mortg. Corp.,
. See Great-W. Investors LP v. Thomas H. Lee Partners, L.P.,
. VS & A Commc'ns Partners, L.P. v. Palmer Broad. Ltd. P’ship,
. Id. at *8 (citing Candid Prods. Inc. v. Int'l Skating Union,
. Id.
. Id. at *9. The price adjustment provision was not at issue in the case. Id.
. Id. The Chancellor concluded that "[t]he November 5 letter agreement [did] contain an express agreement to negotiate in good faith with respect to the details of a price adjustment ..., but that provision is not in issue here. As concerns this case, [while] there is no express covenant to continue negotiations,” the letter's language "inescapably [contained] an inferential obligation” to continue negotiations for the other provisions. Id. The plaintiff interpreted this inferred duty to negotiate as requiring the defendant "to go forward from the points that had been agreed to (albeit in a non-binding fashion) in the ... letter [and] address remaining open issues” and barring both the plaintiff and defendant from going "back to re-open those items agreed upon in that letter.” Id. The Chancellor held that the plaintiff's interpretation was "a radical interpretation ... that is obviously inconsistent with the characterization of the letter in its first paragraph (a "preliminary understanding”) and, more importantly, inconsistent with the express provisions making all of the agreements concerning the substantive terms of the proposed transaction nonbinding.” Id. We distinguish the instant case because here the obligation to negotiate in the LATS is express rather than inferred and that we apply Delaware law, not New York law.
. Gillenardo v. Connor Broad. Del. Co.,
. Id. at *7 (citing VS & A Commons, 1992 WL 339377, at *4). The Superior Court judge further explained that "the VS & A letter of
. Id.
. Id. (citing Anchor Motor Freight v. Ciabattoni,
.
. Id. at *10.
. Id. at *13 n. 79.
. Id. at *14.
. Teachers Ins. & Annuity Ass’n. of Am. v. Tribune Co.,
. Teachers,
. Id.
. PharmAthene III,
. Id. (describing SIGA's position that “the parties intended the LATS simply to provide a jumping off point’ by specifying the basic structure of a potential licensing agreement or partnership”).
. Id. The Vice Chancellor found that "[tjhe extent to which the parties negotiated the economic terms of the LATS in January 2006 and the inclusion of the LATS in the Bridge Loan and Merger Agreements buttresses the conclusion that they intended those terms to be more than a mere jumping off point’ in later negotiations.” Id. at *23. He found it unlikely, especially in light of SIGA's cash needs at the time, "that the parties would have wasted time and money negotiating specific economic terms for the LATS without intending to give those terms significance in later negotiations.” Id. He also found it "unlikely that the parties would have incorporated the LATS into the subsequent Bridge Loan and Merger Agreements if they intended the LATS to provide only a rough and easily modified outline of the basic structure of the licensing agreement.” Id. As support for his factual conclusions, the Vice Chancellor credited, among other things, "the testimony and documentary evidence PharmAthene adduced that it would not have loaned $3 million to SIGA without an assurance from SIGA that PharmAthene reasonably could expect to control ST-246 through either a merger or a license agreement in accordance with the terms of the LATS.” Id.
. Id. at *26.
. Id.
. CNL-AB LLC v. E. Prop. Fund I SPE (MS REF) LLC,
. PharmAthene III,
. Id. at *25. In making this factual determination, the Vice Chancellor made credibility judgments which deserve deference. Id. at *25 n. 129 ("Drapkin actually may have had as superficial an understanding of the situation as he claimed or simply may have forgotten the substance of the parties’ communications. In any event, I find Drapkin’s testimony to be largely subjective and otherwise unreliable, especially as it pertains to his belittlement of the LATS as a mere ‘jumping off point.' ”).
. Id. at *25.
. Id. at *24; see id. at *8 (citation omitted) (during merger negotiations and after receiving a significant grant, “Konatich wrote to [Hruby] that ‘it is a damn shame we had to merge,’ [and] Hruby responded, ‘You got that right.... Had [the former CEO of SIGA] not gotten us behind the curve through ineptitude, we would still be an independent company and standing to make some real dough ... we could have gone all the way ourselves’ ” (omissions in original)); id. at *9 (citation omitted) (before terminating the merger, an in-house MAF lawyer asked in an email, "should SIGA continue with its merger plans or should it try to go it alone?" (internal quotation marks omitted)).
.PharmAthene argues that SIGA waived its argument that the Bridge Loan and Merger Agreements precluded application of promissory estoppel. Answering-Opening Br. 27. We disagree. We do not address whether SIGA failed to present this argument to the Vice Chancellor because the Vice Chancellor's ruling identifies valid contracts governing the promise he found gave rise to a promissory estoppel claim. Therefore, SIGA’s current argument arises from the Vice Chancellor's decision and the interests of justice require we address it. Supr. Ct. R. 8; Reddy v. MBKS Co.,
. Chrysler Corp., (Del.) v. Chaplake Hldgs., Ltd..,
. PharmAthene III,
. Cf. Chrysler,
. Titan Inv. Fund II, LP v. Freedom Mortg. Corp.,
. Id.
. Id.
.
. See supra notes 72-74 and accompanying text (explaining that promissory estoppel cannot arise based on a promise contained in a fully enforceable contract).
. RGC Int'l,
. Id.
. Fairbrook Leasing, Inc. v. Mesaba Aviation, Inc.,
. Adjustrite,
. Teachers Ins. & Annuity Ass’n. of Am. v. Tribune Co.,
. Id. A Type II agreement "does not guarantee” the parties will reach agreement on a final contract because of "good faith differences in the negotiation of the open issues” may preclude final agreement. Id. A Type II agreement "does, however, bar a party from renouncing the deal, abandoning the negotiations, or insisting on conditions that do not conform to the preliminary agreement.” Id.
. Goodstein Constr. Corp. v. City of New York,
. Fairbrook,
. Id. at 428 n. 7 (citations omitted).
. Id. at 429.
.
. Fairbrook,
. Id. (quoting Goodstein Constr. Corp. v. City of New York,
. Id.
. Id. at 430.
. Venture Assocs.,
. Id. at 278 (citations omitted). Judge Pos-ner, writing for the majority, addressed "the practicality of the remedy” and noted that "[t]he difficulty, which may well be insuperable, is that since by hypothesis the parties had not agreed on any of the terms of their contract, it may be impossible to determine what those terms would have been and hence what profit the victim of bad faith would have had.” Id. at 278-79 (citations omitted).
. Id. at 281 (Cudahy, J., concurring) ("As a matter of policy, I think it is undesirable to force agreement on parties under threat of a bad faith finding and subsequent imposition of consequential damages” and would instead limit a plaintiff to reliance damages for “breach of an agreement to negotiate in good faith.”).
. PharmAthene IV,
. An expectation damages award presupposes that the plaintiff can prove damages with reasonable certainty. Callahan v. Rafail,
. PharmAthene III,
. PharmAthene TV,
. See PharmAthene III,
. PharmAthene III,
. Id. at *45 & n. 263.
. Mahani v. Edix Media Grp., Inc.,
. See id. (citations omitted) ("An exception to [the American] rule is found in contract litigation that involves a fee shifting provision.”).
. Bridge Loan Agreement Section 7.5 provides that the "Issuer [SIGA] shall pay, and hold the Holder [PharmAthene] harmless against all liability for the payment of, all costs and other expenses incurred by any such Holder in connection with the Issuer’s performance of and compliance with all agreements and conditions set forth herein.” PharmAthene III,
The Issuer will defend, indemnify, and hold harmless the Holder ... from and against any and all claims, demands, penalties, causes of action, fines, liabilities, settlements, damages, costs, or expenses of whatever kind or nature ... (including, without limitation, counsel and consultant fees and expenses ...) arising out of this Agreement ... or the transactions contemplated hereby ...; or in any way related to the inaccuracy, breach of or default under any representations, warranties or covenants of the Issuer set forth herein....
Id. (omissions in original).
. See id. (“Based on the plain meanings of SIGA’s obligations under Section 7.5 to ‘pay all costs and other expenses incurred by [PharmAthene] in connection with [SIGA’s] performance’ of the Bridge Loan Agreement as well as under Section 7.6 to 'defend, indemnify, and hold harmless’ PharmAthene from ‘expenses of whatever kind or nature ... (including, without limitation, counsel and consultant fees and expenses)' that ‘in any way relate[ ] to ... [SIGA’s] breach of ... any ... covenants,' I also conclude that Phar-mAthene is entitled to recover its attorneys’ fees and expenses in this action related to SIGA’s breach.” (alterations and omissions in original)).
. See id. at *44. We do, however, address the basis for his award to the extent that we note the Court of Chancery’s power to award attorneys' fees in an appropriate case stems not from the statutory power to award costs embodied in 10 Del. C. § 5106, but rather from his inherent equitable authority. Scion
.Mahani,
. PharmAthene III,
. Id. at *45.
. See Answering-Opening Br. 37, 38, 48.
. Id. at 44-47.
