USCA1 Opinion
United States Court of Appeals United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit For the First Circuit
____________________
No. 94-1568
RAYMOND BOURQUE,
Plaintiff, Appellant,
v.
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION,
AS RECEIVER/LIQUIDATOR AGENT FOR
EASTLAND BANK AND NEWMARK INVESTMENTS, INC.,
Defendant, Appellee.
____________________
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND
[Hon. Francis J. Boyle, Senior U.S. District Judge] __________________________
____________________
Before
Boudin, Circuit Judge, _____________
Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________
and Stahl, Circuit Judge. _____________
____________________
Robert Corrente with whom Anthony F. Cottone and Corrente, Brill ________________ __________________ _______________
& Kusinitz, Ltd. were on brief for appellant. ________________
Sharon C. Boyle with whom Marian Van Soelen, and Russell L. Chin _______________ _________________ ________________
and Associates, P.C. were on brief for appellees. ____________________
____________________
December 28, 1994
____________________
STAHL, Circuit Judge. Plaintiff-appellant Raymond STAHL, Circuit Judge. _____________
Bourque commenced this breach of contract action in district
court against defendants-appellees Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation ("FDIC") and Newmark Investments, Inc.
("Newmark") (collectively, "defendants"). Bourque claims
that the FDIC and Newmark agreed to sell him a piece of
property in Woonsocket, Rhode Island, for $130,000. The
defendants denied that a contract had been formed and filed
separate motions for summary judgment. The district court
granted defendants' motions, and Bourque appeals. We affirm.
I. I. __
BACKGROUND BACKGROUND __________
The FDIC is the receiver and liquidating agent of
Eastland Savings Bank of Woonsocket. In its capacity as
receiver, the FDIC is the sole shareholder of Newmark, a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Eastland. In December 1992,
Newmark retained the FDIC to market its real estate assets,
including the property at issue here.
On June 1, 1993, Bourque's attorney, Edward J.
Casey, wrote to FDIC account officer Curtis Cain that Bourque
was interested in purchasing the property at 846 Cumberland
Hill Road in Woonsocket (the "Property"). Casey asked Cain
whether he was "the person handling the asset," whether he
had authority "to discuss" the Property, and what the current
status of the Property was. At Cain's direction, Cain's
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assistant contacted Casey and informed him that Cain was
indeed the person "handling" the Property, but she apparently
did not inform Casey of any limitations on Cain's authority
to sell the Property.
On June 11, 1993, Casey sent Cain a letter offering
to buy the Property on Bourque's behalf for $105,500. Casey
enclosed a $10,000 earnest money deposit and an FDIC
purchase-and-sale agreement form signed by Bourque that
described the Property and the terms of the offer.
Cain's response, dated June 23, 1993, (the "June 23
letter") was printed on FDIC Division of Liquidation
letterhead and bore the heading "NOTICE OF REJECTION OF NOTICE OF REJECTION OF
OFFER". The letter's critical paragraph read as follows: OFFER
This letter is to advise you that FDIC is
unable to accept Mr. Bourque's offer.
FDIC's counter offer is $130,000.00. All
offers are subject to approval by the
appropriate FDIC delegated authority.
FDIC has the right to accept or reject
any and all offers. I am returning your
customer's contract of sale and earnest
money deposit. If your customer wishes
to accept this counter offer, please
return the amended Purchase & Sale
Agreement to me.
Cain did not return Bourque's $10,000 deposit. Indeed, the
FDIC deposited the check "by mistake," according to the
deposition testimony of Cain's supervisor, Donald Lund. Cain
also failed, contrary to FDIC policy, to attach a standard
"Letter of Understanding" to the FDIC purchase-and-sale
agreement form he returned to Casey along with the rejection
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notice. That form letter explicitly states that the FDIC
account officer has no delegated authority to accept an offer
and that "[n]o contract will arise" until the appropriate
delegated authority notifies the offeror that it has accepted
the offer. Under FDIC policy, account officers may suggest
and negotiate terms and recommend appropriate offers for
approval by the proper delegated authority, but they do not
have the authority to liquidate FDIC assets by binding
contracts. That authority is conferred on other job titles;
in this case, the sale of the Property could have been
approved by an FDIC assistant managing liquidator. Other
than Cain's June 23 letter, there is no evidence that anyone
at the FDIC communicated this policy to Casey or Bourque in
connection with the transaction before this dispute arose.
John Chiungos, another FDIC account officer, however,
testified at his deposition that he had explained the policy
to Casey in connection with another, smaller transaction in
January 1993. At his deposition, Casey at first testified
that he had never had prior dealings with the FDIC; then,
when confronted with documentary evidence of the prior
transaction, he said he had "completely forgot" about it. In
any event, Casey did not rebut Chiungos' testimony that
Chiungos had explained the FDIC liquidation policy to Casey
at least on one prior occasion.
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On June 25, 1993, Casey returned to Cain the
purchase-and-sale agreement, which was signed by Bourque and
amended to indicate a $130,000 purchase price (the
"Agreement"). The Agreement set forth July 30, 1993, as the
closing date for the transaction.
On July 7, 1993, another FDIC account officer,
Elizabeth M. Carroll, informed Casey by telephone that the
FDIC had received an offer on the Property substantially in
excess of $130,000.1 Casey responded by sending Carroll a
letter stating that Bourque considered the parties to be
bound by contract and that Bourque would litigate, if
necessary, to obtain the benefit of his bargain.
On July 27, 1993, Carroll sent a letter to Bruce E.
Thompson, Casey's law partner, stating that the FDIC would
not accept Bourque's $130,000 offer, but that Bourque could
submit another offer of at least $250,000 by that afternoon
for consideration by the appropriate FDIC delegated
authority. In her letter, Carroll wrote:
____________________
1. Prior to working for the FDIC, Carroll worked for seven
years at Eastland, initially as an assistant to Arthur
Gauthier, Eastland's executive vice-president for real
estate. Gauthier is the real estate agent who brokered this
higher (and ultimately successful) offer for the Property,
and his office stands to receive a 4.5% commission on the
$253,000 transaction. Carroll's supervisor, Donald Lund,
testified at his deposition that had he known of Carroll's
past working relationship with Gauthier, he would not have
let her market the Property to him. While these questionable
dealings indicate that the FDIC may wish to review its
oversight practices, they do not animate our decision in this
case.
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After reviewing the file and conferring
with the previous account officer, it is
clear that the FDIC's policy that account
officers have no authority to bind the
FDIC or its subsidiary corporation was
communicated to your client. Mr. Cain
indicated to your client that his
authority is limited to recommending an
offer and that all final offers are
subject to approval by the appropriate
delegated authority.
On August 2, after the FDIC refused to sell the
property to Bourque, Bourque filed a notice of lis pendens on
the property and instituted this action, seeking specific
performance from either FDIC or Newmark, and damages from the
FDIC.2
The defendants filed separate summary judgment
motions, arguing that there was no contract between the
parties, that the alleged contract violated Rhode Island's
Statute of Frauds and that Cain did not have actual or
apparent authority to bind the FDIC or Newmark. A magistrate
judge recommended that the motions be granted, and following
oral argument, the district court adopted that
recommendation.3 This appeal ensued.
____________________
2. On August 9, 1993, the FDIC entered into an agreement to
sell the Property to Supreme Corporation of Goshen, Indiana,
for $253,000. The closing of that sale has been postponed
pending the outcome of this case.
3. Although the district court's order does not so state,
the transcript of the oral argument clearly indicates that
the district court based its decision on the contract
formation issue and never reached the apparent or actual
authority issues. The district court also suggested that had
it found that a contract was formed, it would also have held
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II. II. ___
DISCUSSION DISCUSSION __________
We begin by reviewing traditional summary judgment
principles and how they apply in contract formation disputes.
With those principles in mind, we then turn to Bourque's
substantive argument that summary judgment is inappropriate.
Because our resolution of the contract formation issue is
dispositive, we do not reach the statute of frauds or agency
issues.
A. Summary Judgment in Contract Formation Disputes ___________________________________________________
We accord a district court's grant of summary
judgment no deference; the scope of our review is plenary.
Alan Corp. v. International Surplus Lines Ins. Co., 22 F.3d __________ _____________________________________
339, 341 (1st Cir. 1994). We affirm a grant of summary
judgment if our evaluation of the parties' proof on file --
viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
nonmovant -- reveals "that there is no genuine issue as to
any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to
judgment as a matter of law." NASCO, Inc. v. Public Storage, ___________ _______________
Inc., 29 F.3d 28, 32 (1st Cir. 1994) (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. ____
56(c)). An issue is only "genuine" if there is sufficient
evidence to permit a reasonable jury to resolve the point in
the nonmoving party's favor, NASCO, 29 F.3d at 32, while a _____
fact is only "material" if it has "`the potential to affect
____________________
that Rhode Island's Statue of Frauds was satisfied.
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the outcome of the suit under the applicable law.'" Id. ___
(quoting Nereida-Gonzalez v. Tirado-Delgado, 990 F.2d 701, ________________ ______________
703 (1st Cir. 1993)).
It is an axiom of modern contract law that the
formation of a contract requires the "manifestation of mutual
assent" by the parties to the agreement. See Restatement ___ ___________
(Second) of Contracts 17 (1981). Under Rhode Island's law ______________________
of contracts,4 we look to the parties' words and actions to
determine whether they have manifested the objective intent _________
to promise or be bound. Smith v. Boyd, 553 A.2d 131, 133 _____ ____
(R.I. 1989). This manifestation "almost invariably takes the
form of an offer or proposal by one party accepted by the
other party or parties." McLaughlin v. Stevens, 296 F. Supp. __________ _______
610, 613 (D.R.I. 1969) (interpreting Rhode Island law).
Determining whether there was mutual assent may involve
factual questions: What did the parties say (or do) to
manifest their intent? Were the parties' understandings of
each other's actions reasonable under all the circumstances?
Answering these questions is the province of the factfinder
and not the court. See Salem Laundry Co. v. New England ___ __________________ ___________
Teamsters and Trucking Indus. Pension Fund, 829 F.2d 278, 280 __________________________________________
(1st Cir. 1987) (stating that it is "a question of fact
____________________
4. The parties do not dispute that Rhode Island contract law
governs the interpretation and construction of the alleged
contract. To the extent that Rhode Island case law does not
directly address the issues here, we look to other sources of
general contract law, as would a Rhode Island court.
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whether any particular conduct or actions imply a contractual
understanding" (internal quotation omitted)).
Like other questions of fact, however, there is
sometimes no genuine issue as to whether the parties' conduct _______
implied a "contractual understanding." The words and actions
that allegedly formed a contract may be "`so clear themselves
that reasonable people could not differ over their meaning.'"
FDIC v. Singh, 977 F.2d 18, 21 (1st Cir. 1992) (quoting ____ _____
Boston Five Cents Sav. Bank v. Secretary of Dep't of HUD, 768 ___________________________ _________________________
F.2d 5, 8 (1st Cir. 1985)). In such cases, "the judge must
decide the issue himself, just as he decides any factual
issue in respect to which reasonable people cannot differ."
Boston Five Cents Sav. Bank, 768 F.2d at 8. Even if the _____________________________
language of a purported contract is ambiguous, summary
judgment is appropriate when the extrinsic evidence about the
parties' meaning is "`so one-sided that no reasonable person
could decide the contrary.'" Allen v. Adage, Inc., 967 F.2d _____ ___________
695, 698 (1st Cir. 1992) (quoting Boston Five Cents Sav. ________________________
Bank, 768 F.2d at 8). A corollary of this last proposition ____
is that even if the language of purported assent is
susceptible of more than one reasonable interpretation,
summary judgment is nevertheless appropriate if none of those
interpretations would support the nonmovant's legal argument.
See O'Connor v. McKanna, 359 A.2d 350, 354 (R.I. 1976) ___ ________ _______
(stating that summary judgment must be denied if the
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factfinder "could reasonably adopt the opposing party's
version as to what was said and done and intended by the
parties"); Knight v. Sharif, 875 F.2d 516, 523 (5th Cir. ______ ______
1989) (granting summary judgment in contract formation
dispute where nonmovant was unable to "provide a plausible
interpretation" of the documents at issue that would support
his argument that a contract had been formed).
Placed in the context of this case, Bourque can
avoid summary judgment only if we are able to discern a
reasonable interpretation of Cain's June 23 letter that
supports Bourque's legal argument -- that Cain's June 23
letter constituted an unequivocal offer to sell Bourque the
Property for $130,000. This we are unable to do.
B. The Law of Offers _____________________
An offer is a "manifestation of willingness to
enter into a bargain, so made as to justify another person in
understanding that his assent to that bargain is invited and ___
will conclude it." Restatement (Second) of Contracts 24 at ________________ _________________________________
71 (1981) (emphasis supplied). See also 1 Corbin on ___ ____ __________
Contracts 1.11 at 31 (rev. ed. 1993) ("So long as it is _________
reasonably apparent that some further act of the purported
offeror is necessary, the purported offeree has no power to
create contractual relations, and there is as yet no
operative offer.").
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The fact that a party uses the word "offer" or
"counteroffer" in a communication with another party "is
deserving of weight, but it is not controlling, and a court
may decide that what is called an offer is merely an _____
invitation to the recipient to make an offer." E. Allen
Farnsworth, Contracts 3.10, at 139 (2d ed. 1990). "On the _________
other hand, the insertion into a proposal of a clause that
reserves to its maker the power to close the deal is a
compelling indication that the proposal is not an offer."
Id. Thus, in Foster & Kleiser v. Baltimore County, 470 A.2d ___ ________________ ________________
1322, 1326 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1984), an agreement by which
Baltimore County purported to purchase land, but that
contained a clause stating that the agreement was null and
void if not approved by the county council, was held merely
part of preliminary negotiations because the seller of the
land "could not have accepted [the county's] `offer' without
further action by the County." See also Dillon v. AFBIC Dev. ___ ____ ______ __________
Corp., 420 F. Supp. 572 (S.D. Ala. 1976), aff'd in part and _____ _________________
rev'd in part, 597 F.2d 556 (5th Cir. 1979) (holding that _____________
woman's "offer" to purchase house "subject to approval" by
husband lacked clarity of intent and mutuality of obligation
and was therefore not an offer that, without more, could bind
the parties); Engineering Assocs. v. Irving Place Assocs., ___________________ _____________________
622 P.2d 784, 787 (Utah 1980) (holding that letter "offering"
to make mortgage loan, with the agreement to become binding
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upon execution of documents by "offeror's" chairman, was
merely invitation to submit offer, because purported offeror
"reserved to itself the last act in the formation of any
agreement between the parties").
Bourque argues that cases such as Dillon and Foster ______ ______
& Kleiser are inapposite because the purported offerors in _________
those cases clearly reserved authority to take further
action, while Cain did no such thing. We agree that Cain
could have expressed his intention with more clarity, and we
do not base our decision primarily on these cases. Rather,
we recognize that where intent and the meaning of contract
language are at issue, cases in which different parties had
an entirely different set of communications are of limited
precedential value. Nevertheless, we think that these cases
do support the general principle that unequivocal language of
offer or acceptance cannot be taken in isolation from other,
qualifying language in the document and that where the
unqualified statement and the qualification coexist, the
qualification is likely to control, at least in the context
of offer and acceptances.
C. Interpreting the June 23 Letter ___________________________________
In arguing that Cain's June 23 letter contained an
offer that bound the FDIC and Newmark, Bourque focuses our
attention on the second and sixth sentences of the letter's
critical paragraph: "FDIC's counter offer is $130,000.00. .
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. . If your customer wishes to accept this counter offer,
please return the amended Purchase & Sale Agreement to me."
Bourque argues that these words are unequivocal, conveying no
possible meaning other than that the FDIC was offering the
Property to Bourque for the stated price, and that Bourque
could accept the offer in the prescribed manner.
If Cain had written no more than those two
sentences, then Bourque's acceptance may well have formed a
contract between the parties. But Cain's letter did say
more, and it is a fundamental tenet of Rhode Island and
general contract law that "[i]n ascertaining what the
[parties'] intent is we must look at the instrument as a
whole and not at some detached portion thereof." Hill v. M. ____ __
S. Alper & Son, Inc., 256 A.2d 10, 15 (R.I. 1969). See also ____________________ ___ ____
In re Newport Plaza Assoc., 985 F.2d 640, 646 (1st Cir. 1993) __________________________
(applying Rhode Island law and stating that "a court is duty
bound to construe contractual terms in the context of the
contract as a whole"); Dial Media, Inc. v. Schiff, 612 F. _________________ ______
Supp. 1483, 1488 (D.R.I. 1985) ("An interpretation which
gives reasonable and effective meaning to all manifestations ___
of intent is to be preferred to one which leaves part of the
manifestation of no effect.") (emphasis supplied).
Immediately following the sentence "FDIC's counter
offer is $130,000.00," Cain wrote: "All offers are subject
to approval by the appropriate FDIC delegated authority.
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FDIC has the right to accept or reject any and all offers."
The defendants argue that these sentences clearly and
unambiguously attached a condition to Cain's $130,000
counteroffer: the approval of the offer by the appropriate
FDIC authority. Bourque argues that these sentences, when
read in the context of the entire paragraph and Casey's prior
communications with Cain, did nothing to dispel his
reasonable understanding that he could indeed enter into a
binding contract by performing the act prescribed by Cain in
the letter's final sentence. At the very least, Bourque
argues, the paragraph is ambiguous and should be construed
against the FDIC, since it drafted the document.
At oral argument, Bourque's counsel stated that,
under the circumstances of this case,5 where Cain had told
Casey that he was the person "handling" the Property, the
paragraph at issue could only mean that the writer of the
letter himself -- i.e., Cain -- was the appropriate FDIC
delegated authority and that he included the "subject to
approval" language even though he had already approved the
$130,000 figure. This interpretation, rather than giving a
"reasonable and effective meaning" to the paragraph's third
____________________
5. In his brief, Bourque points to the FDIC's deposit of his
$10,000 earnest money check as another reason why summary
judgment should not be granted. He fails to explain,
however, exactly how this action could be understood as a
manifestation of intent in light of Cain's express statement
in the June 23 letter that he was returning the check to
Bourque.
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and fourth sentences, foists upon them a tortured, illogical
reading. An offer cannot be both subject to approval and
already approved: it is either one or the other.6 Nor
would one reasonably expect the "appropriate delegated
authority" -- even of the FDIC -- to refer to himself in the
third person in proclaiming that he retained the power to
approve all offers. One would understand that the
appropriate authority must be someone else.
Bourque attempts to avoid these linguistic
obstacles by emphasizing that, on its own terms, Cain's
letter distinguishes "counter offers" from "offers." Thus,
so this argument goes, the third and fourth sentences of the
letter reserve FDIC approval only for "offers" -- i.e.,
offers to buy the Property for less than $130,000 -- and not ______
for the FDIC's "counter offer" to sell it at the specified
____________________
6. Under Rhode Island contract law, "unless a plain and
unambiguous intent to the contrary is manifested, the words
used in the contract are assigned their ordinary meaning."
Westinghouse Broadcasting Co. v. Dial Media, Inc., 410 A.2d ______________________________ _________________
986, 991 (R.I. 1980). "[W]e look in the first instance to
the dictionary meaning of the language at issue to determine
its ordinary meaning." Id. at 992 n.11. The word "subject," ___
when used as an adjective, has several possible meanings,
according to Webster's Third New International Dictionary. ______________________________________________
The only meaning that makes any sense in the context of the
June 23 letter, however, is "likely to be conditioned,
affected, or modified in some indicated way: having a
contingent relation to something and usu[ally] dependent on
such relation for final form, validity, or significance."
Webster's Third New International Dictionary 2275 (1986). _______________________________________________
This meaning, implying future action, is inconsistent with
Bourque's purported understanding that the offer had already
been approved.
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price, which the paragraph's final sentence unambiguously
holds out for acceptance by a prescribed method. This
interpretation fails too, however, for it places undue
reliance on the presence of the words "counter" and "accept,"
while glossing over the manifestation of reluctance to be __________
bound contained in the third and fourth sentences.
It is axiomatic that a counteroffer is simply an
offer that operates also as a rejection of a previous offer;
it is still very much an offer. See Restatement (Second) of ___ _______________________
Contracts 39 (1981). Bourque's argument assumes that the _________
use of the word "counter" by Cain removed the FDIC's $130,000
"offer" from the set of offers referred to in the very next
sentence: "All offers are subject to approval by the ___
appropriate FDIC delegated authority." (emphasis supplied)
There is nothing magical about the word "counter," however;
it is merely a descriptive term, letting us know that another
offer preceded the counteroffer and was rejected, either
explicitly or implicitly by the making of the counteroffer.
Bourque responds to the fact that a counteroffer is
"technically" an offer by calling it a "legalistic
obfuscation" that ignores the fact that the FDIC "explicitly
empowered Bourque to accept its counteroffer, and told him
how to do so."
We respond thusly. First, it is hardly a
technical, legalistic obfuscation to say that counteroffers
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are offers; we think that is rather elementary. Second,
Casey is a lawyer, and had some familiarity with how the FDIC
works; even if this argument is "legalistic," it is not one
that should have entirely eluded him when he read the letter.
See Trifiro v. New York Life Ins. Co., 845 F.2d 30, 33 (1st ___ _______ _______________________
Cir. 1988) (stating that when confronted with conflicting
manifestations of intent, "a reasonable person investigates
matters further; he receives assurances or clarification
before relying"). Third, the FDIC only "empowered Bourque to
accept its counteroffer" according to the terms of that
offer, which included obtaining the approval of the
appropriate delegated authority. See In re Newport Plaza ___ ____________________
Assoc., 985 F.2d at 645 (stating that under Rhode Island law, ______
the offeror controls the offer and the terms of its
acceptance).
Bourque attaches great significance to the fact
that Cain, through his assistant, confirmed to Bourque that
he was indeed the person "handling" the Property and that he
did not expressly state that his authority to sell the
Property was limited.
We deal with the latter point first. Cain did in
fact state that his authority was limited, by informing Casey
that "[a]ll offers are subject to approval by the appropriate
delegated authority." As we explained above, Cain cannot
reasonably be viewed as referring to himself here. As for
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Cain's statement that he was "handling" the Property, he was
indeed: he was handling bids on the Property, much like a
real estate agent or a loan officer at a bank "handles"
preliminary negotiations before submitting a tentative
agreement or offer to the principal for approval. "Handling"
is not a synonym for "authorized to sell." Hence, Cain's
answer to Casey's query that he was the FDIC person with whom
Casey should be dealing was correct, and should not have
suggested to Casey that Cain was vested with authority to
close a deal for the Property.
While hardly a model of clarity,7 we nevertheless
hold that the only reasonable interpretation of the entire
paragraph at issue places the recipient of the letter on
notice that the FDIC's "counter offer" of $130,000 was
subject to further approval. This interpretation gives a
reasonable meaning to each sentence; it alters the plain
____________________
7. Following the initiation of this lawsuit, the FDIC
changed the "macros" on account officers' computers so that
they could not fire off "counteroffers" with a simple
keystroke. If Cain were to write his letter today, it would
not contain the word "counteroffer," but would instead invite
another offer from Bourque.
We agree that handling the transaction in this way
provides the potential buyer virtually no opportunity to
mistake the FDIC's communication as an offer, and we would no
doubt not be deciding this case had the FDIC taken this step
in responding to Bourque's first offer. Nevertheless, just
as a subsequent modification does not prove negligence in a
defective design case (indeed, it is not even admissible for
that purpose under the Federal Rules of Evidence), the FDIC's
change is not probative of what Cain's letter meant to a
reasonable reader in Bourque's position (i.e., one aided by
an attorney such as Casey).
-18- 18
meaning of the paragraph's second and last sentences -- the
apparent extension of an offer and the invitation of
acceptance by a prescribed method -- only if one reads those
particular sentences in isolation. When read as a whole, as
it must be read, the paragraph sets forth with sufficient
clarity that the recipient may "accept" Cain's "counteroffer"
of $130,000, but only subject to final approval by the
appropriate FDIC authority. We are unable to discern any
other reading of the paragraph -- and Bourque has not guided
us to one -- that gives some reasonable meaning to each
sentence.
D. Conclusion: The June 23 Letter Was Not an Offer ___________________________________________________
Because the only reasonable interpretation of the
June 23 letter is that Casey's "acceptance" of the
counteroffer would still be subject to approval, Casey was
not justified in believing that his assent to the offer would
conclude the deal; it was "reasonably apparent" that some
further act by the FDIC would be necessary to close the deal.
Cain's June 23 letter, therefore, even though it used the
words "counter offer," was no offer at all; it was instead an
invitation for Bourque to make an offer to buy the Property
for $130,000. Bourque made that offer when he returned the
amended purchase-and-sale agreement to the FDIC. The FDIC
never accepted the offer, however, so as a matter of law, no
contract was ever formed between the parties.
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Thus, the defendants are entitled to summary
judgment and the district court's decision is
AFFIRMED. Costs to appellee. AFFIRMED. Costs to appellee.
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