Promissory Estoppel Flashcards

1
Q

Elements of Promissory Estoppel

A
  1. Clear and definite promise.
  2. Promisor intended to induce reliance.
  3. Promisee relied to her detriment.
  4. Promise must be enforced to prevent injustice.
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2
Q

Conrad v. Fields

A

Fields couldn’t afford law school, Conrad agreed to pay her tuition if she quit her job. Court held that Conrad was liable for tuition.

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3
Q

Feinberg v. Pfeiffer Co.

A

Feinberg was promised a pension on retirement. She retired because of this promise.

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4
Q

Neiss v Ehlers

A

(1) Promissory estoppel can only become necessary as a remedy for an underperformed promise if no traditional contractual remedy is available for the nonperformance.
(2) An agreement to agree is not enforceable.

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5
Q

In re marriage of Pyeatte

A
  • Agreement for one to work and support the other while the other was in law school.
  • Husband graduated law school, wife had not started school.
  • Court held that unjust enrichment
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6
Q

Implied Gratuity

A

In some cases (husband and wife, family members) there are implied-in-law contracts presuming gratuitous services between one another. This is not the default for non-family members (ex. Zent).

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