Firestone Financial Corp. v. Meyer, No. 17-1712 (7th Cir. 2018)

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Justia Opinion Summary

Meyer, a disbarred lawyer, owns JHM, which installed and maintained laundry machines in apartment buildings; Dolphin, which sold commercial laundry equipment to JHM and others; and JH Meyer, which operated a laundry facility. In 2012-2013, Firestone financed JHM’s business with loans totaling about $250,000. Because JHM obtained its equipment from Dolphin, the loans actually financed Dolphin’s purchases from the manufacturer. Firestone retained a security interest in JHM’s assets. Dolphin, JH Meyer, and Meyer guaranteed JHM’s loan obligations. In 2013 Firestone sued JHM for default and sued Meyer, Dolphin, and JH Meyer under the guarantees. The defendants raised the affirmative defense and counterclaim of promissory estoppel, asserting that after Firestone issued JHM two loans, Firestone’s Vice President McAllister told Meyer that Firestone would set up a $500,000 line of credit for JHM and that, until the line of credit was established, Firestone would finance “any” equipment that JHM needed on “identical terms” to the first two loans. Firestone subsequently issued the third loan. After McAllister left Firestone, Firestone’s CEO approved the final loan. The defendants assert that Firestone’s refusal to issue further loans harmed them. The Seventh Circuit affirmed summary judgment in favor of Firestone. Meyer’s allegations were implausible because no financial firm would commit orally to loaning substantial sums to a startup. Meyer conceded that he “made no payments” to Firestone. A reasonable jury could not conclude that Meyer has satisfied any of the elements of promissory estoppel.

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In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ Nos. 17 1611 & 17 1712 FIRESTONE FINANCIAL LLC, Plaintiff Appellee, v. JOHN R. MEYER, Defendant Appellant. ____________________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 13 C 7241 — Amy J. St. Eve, Judge. ____________________ ARGUED JANUARY 24, 2018 — DECIDED FEBRUARY 1, 2018 ____________________ Before BAUER, KANNE, and BARRETT, Circuit Judges. PER CURIAM. Firestone Financial sued John Meyer as guar antor of defaulted loans. Meyer, proceeding pro se, asserted promissory estoppel as both a defense and counterclaim. Af ter an earlier trip to this court, see Firestone Fin. Corp. v. Meyer, 796 F.3d 822 (7th Cir. 2015), the district court entered sum mary judgment for Firestone. Meyer filed two notices of ap peal, and we consolidated the appeals. We affirm the judg ment in 17 1611 because a reasonable jury could not conclude 2 Nos. 17 1611 & 17 1712 that Meyer has satisfied any of the three elements of promis sory estoppel. We dismiss 17 1712 as duplicative. I. BACKGROUND Meyer, a disbarred lawyer, is the founder and owner of three Illinois companies: J H M Equipment Leasing Company (“JHM”), which installed and maintained laundry machines in apartment buildings; Dolphin Laundry Services (“Dol phin”), which sold commercial laundry equipment to JHM and other customers; and J H Meyer Enterprises, which oper ated a laundry facility. In 2012 and 2013, Firestone Financial Corporation fi nanced JHM’s business with four loans totaling about $250,000. (The lender, a Massachusetts corporation, later merged with appellee Firestone Financial LCC.) Because JHM obtained its equipment from Dolphin at little or no cost, the loans to JHM actually financed Dolphin’s purchases from the manufacturer. Firestone retained a security interest in JHM’s assets. Dolphin, J H Meyer Enterprises, and Meyer also guar anteed JHM’s loan obligations. In 2013 Firestone sued JHM for defaulting on its repay ment obligations and Meyer and his other two corporations for breaching the loan guaranties. The defendants raised the affirmative defense and counterclaim of promissory estoppel. They asserted that in November 2012, after Firestone had al ready issued JHM two loans of about $45,000 each, Firestone’s Vice President for Business Development, Dan McAllister, told Meyer that Firestone would set up a $500,000 line of credit for JHM. He then made the promise that underlies the estoppel defense and counterclaim: McAllister assured Meyer Nos. 17 1611 & 17 1712 3 that, until the line of credit was established, Firestone would finance “any” equipment that JHM needed on the “same” and “identical terms” to the first two loans. Firestone issued its third loan to JHM, this one for $98,000, in February 2013. After McAllister left Firestone that spring, Firestone’s CEO ap proved a final loan, for $66,000. The defendants assert that Firestone’s refusal to issue further loans, as McAllister sup posedly promised, harmed them. Specifically, without further loans, Dolphin could not pay a manufacturer, Maytag, for ma chines that Dolphin had committed to buy; Maytag then re fused to sell equipment to Meyer’s companies, costing the de fendants “millions.” The case proceeded to judgment quickly. After the defend ants answered the complaint, their lawyer withdrew, and the district court entered default judgment against the three un represented corporations. This left the claim of breach of guaranty against Meyer, who was now pro se. The court later dismissed Meyer’s counterclaim and entered summary judg ment for Firestone. It agreed with Firestone that Meyer’s alle gations were implausible because no financial firm would commit orally to loaning substantial sums to a startup. The court accepted Firestone’s argument that the dismissal of Meyer’s counterclaim doomed the defense as well. With no defense remaining, the court entered a judgment for Fire stone. But the case was not over. Meyer appealed, and we re versed the dismissal of the counterclaim, reasoning that the district court had misapplied Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662 (2009), and Bell Atlantic Corporation v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544 (2007). On remand Meyer conceded Firestone’s main allega tions. He admitted that JHM “did not make all the payments 4 Nos. 17 1611 & 17 1712 set forth in the payment terms of the four promissory notes” and that he “made no payments” to Firestone. He also clari fied his promissory estoppel defense and counterclaim, which in his view excused non payment. Both were based on McAllister’s “promise that Firestone would fund JHM’s equipment purchases while Dan McAllister worked on put ting in place the line of credit.” Meyer also asserted a new de fense: Firestone sold some collateral in a commercially unrea sonable manner. This collateral consisted of over 300 laundry machines that JHM had placed in buildings owned by Pangea Ventures, LLC. JHM contracted with Pangea to maintain the machines and share with Pangea the revenue they generated. Firestone sold the machines to Pangea for $40,000. Meyer swore that it would have been more commercially reasonable to sell the machines to a buyer who could take over the con tract. The district court again entered summary judgment for Firestone. The court ruled that Meyer’s reliance on McAllis ter’s alleged promise of additional funding was “unreasona ble as a matter of law.” It also found that Meyer could not establish his damages because he presented no bank state ments, accounting records, or invoices from the relevant years. Finally, the court rejected as undeveloped and unsub stantiated the argument that Firestone’s sale of the laundry machines to Pangea was commercially unreasonable. The judgment was for $427,131 against Meyer. After the district court entered summary judgment for Firestone, Meyer filed a notice of appeal (No. 17 1611) and a document he styled a “Motion Under Rule 52(b) to Amend the Findings and Judgment of [the] Court.” The court denied the motion as procedurally improper, adding that it would Nos. 17 1611 & 17 1712 5 deny the motion on the merits even if construed as a Rule 59(e) motion. Two days later Meyer filed an “amended notice of appeal” (No. 17 1712) in which he specified that he sought to appeal both the district court’s entry of summary judgment for Firestone and its denial of his post judgment motion. We consolidated the two appeals for decision. II. DISCUSSION We begin with two preliminary matters. First, appeal 17 1712 is duplicative. Meyer raises no arguments about the denial of his post judgment motion. And if he had, he did not need to file a second appeal to raise them. See Borrero v. City of Chicago, 456 F.3d 698, 699–70 (7th Cir. 2006). We therefore dismiss 17 1712. That brings us to 17 1611, which presents a threshold question of which state’s law governs Meyer’s promissory es toppel defense and counterclaim. Our prior decision used Il linois law, yet the district court on remand applied Massachu setts law, and the parties now seem to agree that Massachu setts law governs under a choice of law provision in the guar anties. We follow the parties’ lead but note that the answer to this choice of law question makes little practical difference here. Compare Dumas v. Infinity Broad. Corp., 416 F.3d 671, 677 (7th Cir. 2005) (“Under Illinois law, a claim for promissory es toppel will only succeed where all the other elements of a con tract exist, but consideration is lacking.”), with Neuhoff v. Marvin Lumber & Cedar Co., 370 F.3d 197, 203–04 (1st Cir. 2004) (explaining that, under Massachusetts law, “promissory es toppel is nothing but a contract absent consideration”). 6 Nos. 17 1611 & 17 1712 On to the merits, where Meyer argues that the district court erred in entering summary judgment on his promis sory estoppel defense and counterclaim. He insists that he reasonably believed that, until Firestone set up JHM’s line of credit, Firestone would fund any equipment purchase re quested, on the “same” terms as the first two loans, “without further question, the signing of documents, or any further re view of Meyer’s finances.” To get past summary judgment on this defense and counterclaim, Meyer needs evidence that (1) Firestone made an unambiguous promise to Meyer for unlim ited funding, (2) he took or refrained from action in reasona ble reliance on the promise, and (3) he suffered damage as a result. See Anzalone v. Admin. Office of Trial Court, 932 N.E.2d 774, 786 (Mass. 2010). A reasonable jury reviewing this record could not find that Meyer carried his burden of proof for any of these elements. First, Meyer cannot show that McAllister made an unam biguous promise of unlimited funding on the “same” terms used as the first two loans. Such a promise does not even make sense because the first two loans had different principal amounts ($45,788 vs. $44,165) and interest rates (9.25% vs. 10.75%). And the third loan differed from the first two. The first two loans called for 36 monthly payments, but the third loan, issued in February 2013 for yet another amount— $98,000—called for 60 monthly payments. “Particularly in the case of a sizable commercial loan, it is unlikely that oral un derstandings which leave essential terms to future negotia tion will support an enforceable loan agreement.” Lambert v. Fleet Nat’l Bank, 865 N.E.2d 1091, 1097 (Mass. 2007) (quoting Coolidge Bank & Trust Co. v. First Ipswich Co., 401 N.E.2d 165, 165–66 (Mass. App. Ct. 1980)). Because the parties negotiated Nos. 17 1611 & 17 1712 7 different terms for each loan, there was no unambiguous promise for unlimited, identical loans. Moving on to the second element, Meyer contends that Dolphin purchased machines from Maytag in reliance on McAllister’s promise. But this argument suffers from two problems, one evidentiary and one legal. First, the promise could not have prompted Meyer to guarantee all the loans. He guaranteed the first two loans before McAllister made the al leged promise, and he guaranteed the fourth loan after Fire stone’s CEO told him that Firestone would issue no more loans to JHM. At most, the promise of additional funding fac tored into Meyer’s decision to guarantee the third loan. But even as to that (or any) loan, any reliance by Meyer was un reasonable as a matter of law. As the district court correctly stated, “[i]t would be incongruous if Firestone had a review process for the $500,000 line of credit but simultaneously would effectively grant an unlimited line of credit by agreeing to provide JHM with unlimited loans for an indeterminate amount of time.” And if Meyer misapprehended McAllister’s promise in November 2012, that misapprehension should have been dispelled in February 2013 when JHM’s third loan request went through Firestone’s regular underwriting pro cess. Finally, as to the damages element, Meyer submitted in sufficient evidence to show that Firestone’s promise caused “several million dollars” in harm. Meyer submitted no busi ness records from the relevant years to support his contention that Firestone caused any damage to his companies. Meyer replies that he lost the records when his computer was stolen and his email account was closed for non payment. But this loss is not Firestone’s fault and does not relieve Meyer of his 8 Nos. 17 1611 & 17 1712 evidentiary burden. Because a jury would have to speculate about damages, a reasonable jury could not conclude that Meyer was damaged as a result of any reliance on McAllis ter’s alleged promise. Meyer’s brief concludes with an undeveloped argument. He contends that Firestone did not properly mitigate its dam ages because Firestone’s sale of the laundry machine collat eral to Pangea was not commercially reasonable. Under Mas sachusetts law, a secured party that disposes of collateral en joys a rebuttable presumption of commercial reasonableness. See MASS. GEN. LAWS ch. 106 §§ 9 610, 9 626(a)(1). Meyer has not rebutted this presumption. He insists that the machines would have been worth as much as $710,000 to a third party who could have taken over JHM’s contract with Pangea. But he appears to base this valuation on an off the cuff guess of the revenues that the laundry machines might have gener ated. With no business records from the relevant years, a jury would have no reliable way of determining whether Meyer’s estimation is accurate. In any event, Meyer identifies no other party who would have paid more than Pangea did for the col lateral. III. CONCLUSION Because all three elements of Meyer’s defense and coun terclaim fail, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment in ap peal 17 1611 and DISMISS appeal 17 1712 as duplicative.
Primary Holding

Loan guarantor failed to establish promissory estoppel as a defense to nonpayment of commercial loans.


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