Packgen v. BP Exploration & Production, Inc. , 754 F.3d 61 ( 2014 )


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  •            United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 13-2035
    PACKGEN,
    Plaintiff, Appellant,
    v.
    BP EXPLORATION & PRODUCTION, INC., and
    BP AMERICA PRODUCTION COMPANY,
    Defendants, Appellees.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE
    [Hon. John A. Woodcock, Jr., U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Thompson, Circuit Judge,
    Souter,* Associate Justice,
    and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
    Michael R. Bosse, with whom Travis M. Brennan, George F.
    Burns, and Bernstein Shur were on brief, for Appellant.
    Christina Briesacher, with whom David J. Volkin, Amy Cashore
    Mariani, Kirkland & Ellis LLP, and Fitzhugh & Mariani LLP were on
    brief, for Appellees.
    June 11, 2014
    *
    Hon. David H. Souter, Associate Justice (Ret.) of the
    Supreme Court of the United States, sitting by designation.
    STAHL, Circuit Judge.             In the aftermath of the Deepwater
    Horizon oil spill of 2010, Appellant Packgen, a manufacturer of
    packaging    products,       sought      to   sell   oil   containment       boom    to
    Appellees    BP   Exploration        &   Production,       Inc.   and   BP   America
    Production    Company    (collectively,           "BP").     Despite     months     of
    negotiations,     BP ultimately decided not to purchase any boom from
    Packgen.    Packgen subsequently filed a five-count complaint in the
    federal district court in Maine, invoking diversity jurisdiction
    and alleging various state-law tort claims.                   The district court
    granted summary judgment in favor of BP.                      For the following
    reasons, we affirm.
    I.       BACKGROUND
    The district court's summary judgment order sets forth
    the facts of this case in meticulous detail.                       Packgen v. BP
    Exploration & Prod., Inc., 
    957 F. Supp. 2d 58
    , 63–82 (D. Me. 2013).
    We reiterate them here as necessary to provide context for the
    issues on appeal, but we note that many of the facts are based
    solely on Packgen's own testimony.                   While the district court
    accepted these facts as true for the purposes of the summary
    judgment motion, see Tolan v. Cotton, 
    134 S. Ct. 1861
    , 1863 (2014)
    (per curiam) ("[O]n a motion for summary judgment, the evidence of
    the nonmovant is to be believed, and all justifiable inferences are
    to   be   drawn   in   his    favor.")        (internal    quotation    marks       and
    alternation omitted), in many instances BP disputed Packgen's
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    version of events. The district court's order thoroughly documents
    the points of dispute, and clarifies that it accepted Packgen's
    version of the facts in every instance.        Packgen, 957 F. Supp. 2d
    at 64–83 nn.1–81.
    On April 20, 2010, an oil drilling rig owned by BP named
    Deepwater Horizon caught fire and sank off the Gulf Coast of
    Louisiana, causing a massive oil spill.          Part of BP's response
    involved the deployment of oil containment boom.             It had an
    immediate need for millions of feet of boom, but it encountered
    problems with availability, production, and interconnectivity.
    Packgen is a small business in Maine that designs and
    manufactures composite packaging materials and containers used in
    the chemical, oil, and food-processing industries.         Prior to the
    Deepwater   Horizon   spill,   Packgen   had   never   manufactured   oil
    containment boom. Nevertheless, it saw an opportunity to make boom
    part of its business in the wake of the spill, and it began
    constructing boom manufacturing equipment no later than April 28,
    2010, prior to any discussions with BP.
    By early May 2010, Dan Forte, a marketing consultant for
    Packgen, spoke to Mario Araya, who was procuring boom for BP. Araya
    made an oral commitment to Forte to purchase all of Packgen's
    present and future production of boom for $21.75 per square foot,
    subject to a visit by BP personnel to inspect Packgen's facility
    and boom capacity.    On May 11, 2010, Max Lyoen, a Supplier Quality
    -3-
    Control Specialist for BP, inspected Packgen's facility and met
    with   several    Packgen   representatives,   including   Forte,   John
    Lapoint, and Don Roberts.         Lyoen was impressed by Packgen's
    production capacity, and he stated that the end connectors used by
    Packgen would meet BP's requirements.
    At that time, the American Society for Testing and
    Materials (ASTM) standards were the only specifications that BP had
    for boom.      Lyoen told Packgen's representatives that BP would
    purchase Packgen's full production capacity once an independent
    third party tested Packgen's boom for compliance with the ASTM
    standards.       After that meeting, Lapoint wrote an email to a
    colleague stating that "[we] should have a response by tomorrow
    morning on how much [BP] will commit. . . . [W]e are just waiting
    on BP to make their decision. . . ."
    On May 12, 2010, Forte and Araya spoke by phone, and
    Araya stated "I'm placing an order.      We'll take it all."   The next
    day, Araya negotiated the price down to $18.75 per square foot and
    told Forte that BP would not pay up front.     In response, Forte sent
    Araya an email thanking him for "discussing the details of a
    possible transaction."      He stated that the companies "may be able
    to address the issues concerning payment terms and pricing.         What
    remains is the issue concerning the acceptability [of] our design
    and the requirements you have stated. . . . All that we require is
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    a   letter      from   Max   Lyoen   stating    that    the   design     meets    your
    requirements."
    On May 13, 2010, Packgen informed BP that it was "moving
    forward" with the sale and delivery.                   At that point, it began
    gearing up its operations to produce 40,000 linear feet of boom per
    day.     On May 18, 2010, Forte sent an email to Matt Pavlas, BP's
    boom sourcing lead, stating that Packgen was "attempting sales to
    BP and Oil Cleanup companies."            He informed Pavlas that Lyoen had
    visited Packgen's facilities and written a report for BP; he asked
    Pavlas     to     "provide      indications     if     this     report    meets     BP
    requirements."         Pavlas provided Packgen with a copy of Lyoen's
    report, which described Packgen's product as "experimental."
    Packgen hired Dr. Ian Durham to conduct third-party
    testing.     On May 20, 2010, Dr. Durham reported that Packgen's boom
    met ASTM standards.          Packgen provided Lyoen and two BP procurement
    managers with the test results. On May 22, 2010, Don Roberts of
    Packgen sent Pavlas an email expressing his "hope [that] the
    information from the third party review helps in the decision
    making process." Pavlas contacted Roberts by phone and stated that
    BP intended to purchase Packgen's entire stock of boom.                     Roberts
    followed up in an email on May 24, 2010, asking Pavlas for a
    conference call "to discuss [our] possible working relationship."
    Pavlas    responded      that    "first    I    would    like    to    receive     the
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    information requested yesterday such as [quantity] in inventory,
    etc."
    On May 26, 2010, Deenan Arcot of BP emailed Roberts
    requesting the specifications for Packgen's boom, which he said BP
    would have to approve prior to placing an order.        After receiving
    the     specifications,    Arcot   expressed   reservations    about   the
    construction of the boom in an email to Roberts, observing that it
    was "[v]ery different . . . from others being used."          In a follow-
    up email, Arcot wrote "I want to check the possibility that you can
    modify these booms to our standard requirement."          Roberts later
    testified that this was the first time BP ever expressed having any
    standard requirement for boom other than the ASTM standards.
    On May 26, 2010, BP noted potential problems with the
    connector plates and end connectors on Packgen's boom and informed
    Packgen that it could not use the product at that time.           Lapoint
    and Roberts spoke to BP's Charles Bigi about the connector issue,
    and Bigi promised that BP would approve and buy Packgen's boom if
    Packgen obtained new universal connectors.        On May 29, Bigi sent
    two colleagues at BP an email summarizing his discussions with
    Packgen and including the statement "I do not understand why we
    keep placing orders with suppliers like this[.]"
    In late May or early June, Packgen secured universal
    slide connectors.         On June 11, 2010, BP sent Luis Suarez, a
    Supplier Quality Control Specialist, to conduct an assessment of
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    Packgen's manufacturing process.   Following his visit, Suarez told
    Lapoint and Roberts that BP would purchase Packgen's full capacity.
    On June 15, 2010, Suarez requested that Packgen send 500-600 feet
    of boom for evaluation by BP.   He issued a report the following day
    in which he proposed three new modifications that he had not
    previously discussed with Packgen.
    Meanwhile, BP's demand for boom continued to increase.
    It began to institute a new approval process for boom manufacturers
    and hired technical authorities on boom.    As of June 18, 2010, BP
    had completed a written specification for 18" boom. Thereafter, it
    began requesting that boom manufacturers complete a deviation form
    if their boom differed from the specification.       Packgen's boom
    design was so different from BP's specification that Packgen agreed
    to submit a drawing of its boom instead of the deviation form.
    Between June 16 to June 25, 2010, BP requested numerous changes
    from Packgen, none of which were required by the ASTM standards.
    Packgen worked at BP's direction to make the necessary changes.
    On June 21, 2010, Suarez reiterated his request for a
    sample of boom to conduct field tests.      BP conducted its first
    field test on June 30, 2010, at a BP site near Mobile, Alabama.
    Packgen's boom did not perform well.    At that time, BP raised two
    new concerns about Packgen's boom — first, it was constructed with
    material that filled with water as it was towed, and second, it
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    failed to meet certain decontamination standards.   Packgen worked
    to address the two new concerns.
    While they were in Alabama, Bigi informed Roberts that BP
    needed 24" boom and suggested that Packgen could be BP's supplier
    for that product if it could adapt its manufacturing process.    On
    July 7, 2010, Suarez forwarded the latest specification for 24"
    boom to Packgen.     BP's John McFadden asked Packgen to "work on
    getting the material to make 24" boom." At BP's direction, Packgen
    completed a field test of the new boom on July 12, 2010, and
    forwarded a video tape of the test to BP.
    BP capped the Deepwater Horizon well on July 15, 2010,
    and shortly thereafter began winding down its boom purchases.
    Nevertheless, it conducted another field test of Packgen's boom on
    July 21, 2010.     BP's summary of the results show that the boom
    performed well.    Following the field test, McFadden gave verbal
    approval to Packgen's boom.   Suarez informed Packgen that it was
    one of just three approved suppliers for 24" boom and that BP would
    need boom to continue cleanup efforts through the end of 2010.
    At no point did BP tell Packgen to stop producing boom,
    and it never paid for any of the boom Packgen produced.   On August
    18, 2010, Roberts emailed BP expressing the understanding that
    "there is not a need right now for [b]oom" but seeking a place on
    BP's approved vendor list.    BP responded that Packgen had been
    added to the approved vendor list for boom.
    -8-
    Packgen was left with 60,000 feet of completed boom in
    its   warehouse,   which       it   sold     in   September   2010    to   the   only
    purchaser it could find for two dollars a square foot.                     Although
    Packgen was unable to sell or return many of the materials that it
    purchased to manufacture boom, it managed to sell some at a loss
    and incorporate some into its other products. Since the resolution
    of the Gulf Coast spill, Packgen has not manufactured boom.
    II.    ANALYSIS
    "We review orders for summary judgment de novo, assessing
    the record in the light most favorable to the nonmovant and
    resolving all reasonable inferences in that party's favor."
    Barclays Bank PLC v. Poynter, 
    710 F.3d 16
    , 19 (1st Cir. 2013)
    (internal    quotation         marks      omitted).      Summary      judgment    is
    appropriate when "there is no genuine dispute as to any material
    fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law."
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
    A.          Misrepresentation (Counts I & II)
    In   Counts    I    and    II,    Packgen   alleged      negligent    and
    intentional misrepresentation.               While negligent and intentional
    misrepresentation are distinct claims, both require the plaintiff
    to show that the defendant made a "false representation of present
    fact."   Kearney v. J.P. King Auction Co., 
    265 F.3d 27
    , 33 n.8 (1st
    Cir. 2001); see also Guiggey v. Bombardier, 
    615 A.2d 1169
    , 1173
    -9-
    (Me. 1992) ("A common, essential element of both claims is the
    requirement of a false representation.").
    As the district court observed, Packgen bases these two
    claims on three groups or categories of misrepresentations: "(1)
    what, at a particular point in time in the oil spill saga, BP
    required for its specification, (2) its intention to purchase
    Packgen's boom, and (3) how much boom it needed at any particular
    time."   Packgen, 957 F. Supp. 2d at 86. The district court
    concluded that both claims fail as a matter of law because there is
    no   evidence   in    the     record      that     any     of     the   alleged
    misrepresentations were false at the time they were made.1                 Id. at
    86–88.   We agree.    See Jordan-Milton Mach., Inc. v. F/V Teresa
    Marie, II, 
    978 F.2d 32
    , 36 (1st Cir. 1992) (affirming a directed
    verdict in favor of the defendant on a negligent misrepresentation
    claim where "there was a total lack of evidence to prove that [the
    defendant's] statements were false at the time they were made").
    Packgen    argues   on   appeal        that    the    district   court
    improperly weighed the evidence in BP's favor while overlooking
    reasonable inferences that the jury could have drawn in Packgen's
    1
    The district court also discussed the possible application
    of the so-called Shine exception, which allows statements of
    opinion to be actionable as misrepresentations under certain
    circumstances. Packgen, 957 F. Supp. 2d at 85–86; Shine v. Dodge,
    
    157 A. 318
    , 319 (Me. 1931). Because we conclude, along with the
    district court, that the evidence does not show the alleged
    misrepresentations to be false, we do not need to delve into the
    Shine exception.
    -10-
    favor.      None   of    the   possible     inferences   raised   by   Packgen
    controvert the fundamental deficiency identified by the district
    court, however, because Packgen still does not identify specific
    evidence in the record showing that any of BP's statements were
    false at the time they were made.           A party cannot survive summary
    judgment    simply      by   articulating    conclusions   the    jury   might
    imaginably reach; it must point to evidence that would support
    those conclusions.           See Miss. Pub. Emps.' Ret. Sys. v. Bos.
    Scientific Corp., 
    649 F.3d 5
    , 28 (1st Cir. 2011) ("With respect to
    each issue on which [a] plaintiff has the burden of proof at trial,
    it   must   present      definite,   competent    evidence   to    rebut   the
    motion . . . .") (internal quotation marks omitted).
    For example, Packgen posits that "a jury could reasonably
    conclude that BP kept making changes to its specification during
    the spill so that manufacturers would continue to work for BP,
    acceding to different requests made by BP at different times,
    without BP actually having to pay for the boom." [Appellant Br. at
    42–43.]     If a jury reached that conclusion, it would be pure
    speculation.       The evidence shows that BP's boom specifications
    changed repeatedly during its course of dealing with Packgen, but
    nothing in the record indicates that these changes reflect the bad
    intentions that Packgen describes.              Similarly, nothing in the
    record indicates that BP expressed an intention to purchase boom
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    when it actually had no such intention, or that it ever claimed to
    need more boom than it really needed.
    Thus, the district court did not impermissibly weigh
    evidence or ignore reasonable inferences.                     Rather, it pointed out
    the       absence    of   evidence      supporting      Packgen's         position.     Its
    reasoning and conclusions were correct, and we affirm its judgment
    as to Counts I and II.
    B.             Breach of Contract (Count III)
    Under the Maine Statute of Frauds, a contract for the
    sale of goods for five hundred dollars or more is unenforceable
    "unless there is some writing sufficient to indicate that a
    contract for sale has been made between the parties and signed by
    the party against whom enforcement is sought or by his authorized
    agent."       Me. Rev. Stat. tit. 11, § 2-201(1).                    Packgen does not
    claim that there is any written agreement in this case that would
    satisfy      the     Statute     of   Frauds.       Instead,    it    argues      for   the
    application          of    two    statutory         exceptions:      the        "specially
    manufactured         goods"      exception      and    the    "judicial         admission"
    exception.          The district court held that neither applies, and we
    agree.
    1.         Specially Manufactured Goods Exception
    The Maine statute creates an exception to the requirement
    of    a    written    agreement       "[i]f   the     goods   are    to    be   specially
    manufactured for the buyer and are not suitable for sale to others
    -12-
    in the ordinary course of the seller's business."           § 2-201(3)(a).
    The applicability of the exception depends on whether the goods
    themselves have unique qualities that render them unfit for sale
    without major alterations to anyone other than the intended buyer.
    The term 'specially manufactured' . . . refers to the
    nature of the particular goods in question and not to
    whether the goods were made in an unusual, as opposed to
    the regular, business operation or manufacturing process
    of the seller. . . . The crucial inquiry is whether the
    manufacturer could sell the goods in the ordinary course
    of his business to someone other than the original buyer.
    If with slight alterations the goods could be so sold,
    then they are not specially manufactured; if, however,
    essential changes are necessary to render the goods
    marketable by the seller to others, then the exception
    does apply.
    9 Williston on Contracts § 26.19 (4th ed.) (quoting Impossible
    Elec. Techniques, Inc. v. Wackenhut Protective Sys., Inc., 
    669 F.2d 1026
    , 1037 (Former 5th Cir. 1982)) (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    Here, as the district court observed, after BP declined
    to buy its boom, Packgen was able to sell it to another buyer
    without any alterations. It is true the Packgen received a greatly
    reduced price than what BP appeared prepared to pay, but the
    undisputed facts show that the price reduction was caused by an
    overabundance of boom in the market following the capping of the
    leak.     Under these circumstances, the exception does not apply.
    Packgen's   arguments    on    appeal   do   not   persuade   us
    otherwise.     Rather than pointing to any unique qualities of its
    product, Packgen argues that the circumstances surrounding its
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    production and sale of boom indicate that its product was specially
    manufactured for BP.    It points to the fact that BP was purchasing
    ninety percent of domestic boom production in the aftermath of the
    spill, and that Packgen only decided to enter the boom market in
    response to the disaster. These arguments are beside the point. It
    is the nature of the goods themselves that matters, not the
    circumstances under which Packgen tried to do business with BP.
    Packgen also argues that it did not sell boom in its
    ordinary course of business, because it never sold boom before the
    spill and it has not sold boom since.     This argument ignores the
    fact that Packgen independently entered the market for boom and
    attempted to sell its product to BP; it did not make that decision
    at BP's request.     As BP accurately points out, "under Packgen's
    analysis, any company [that] attempts to break into any business
    could claim a contract for specially manufactured goods when its
    attempt fails and it liquidates its inventory."     [Appellee's Br.
    18]   This exception does not exist as a safety net for failed
    business ventures. Instead, it protects sellers who might be stuck
    with "goods that are difficult or impossible to sell to others"
    because of their unique nature. 9 Williston on Contracts § 26.19.
    That is not Packgen's position in this case.     Thus, the district
    court correctly declined to apply the "specially made goods"
    exception.
    -14-
    2.        Judicial Admission Exception
    The Statute also creates an exception "[i]f the party
    against   whom   enforcement       is   sought    admits   in   his    pleading,
    testimony or otherwise in court that a contract for sale was made."
    § 2-201(3)(b).       The admission "need not expressly acknowledge the
    existence   of   a    contract,"    but    it    must   "describe     conduct   or
    circumstances from which the trier of fact can infer a contract."
    Gruen Indus., Inc. v. Biller, 
    608 F.2d 274
    , 278 (7th Cir. 1979).
    Packgen offers two bases for the application of this exception.
    First, Packgen points to deposition testimony in which Charles Bigi
    authenticated an email that he sent to colleagues at BP, supposedly
    referring to an order BP placed with Packgen.               Second, it points
    out that BP failed to provide record citations when it denied
    certain statements in Packgen's statement of material facts.
    Packgen argues that under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56, the
    failure to provide record citations constitutes admissions that
    satisfy the exception.
    a.   Charles Bigi's Email
    In the email that Packgen puts forth as an admission,
    Charles Bigi wrote to his colleague, "I do not understand why we
    keep placing orders with suppliers like this[.]"                    The district
    court concluded that "viewing the statement in the context of the
    rest of the undisputed evidence, and viewing the entire record in
    the light most favorable to Packgen, Mr. Bigi's email does not
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    support" an inference that a contract existed between BP and
    Packgen.    Packgen, 957 F. Supp. 2d at 93.          Packgen argues that the
    district    court   "invaded    the    jury's    province   by   impermissibly
    weigh[ing] conflicting evidence" when it reviewed the record to
    assess the significance of Bigi's email.             [Appellant's Br. 25]      We
    disagree.    In order to accurately determine whether a jury might
    infer a contract from Bigi's email, the district court had to look
    at the statement in the context of the ongoing communications
    between BP and Packgen.
    In Gruen, the Seventh Circuit engaged in a similar
    analysis.    In that case, the plaintiff argued that an agent of the
    defendant made statements in a deposition describing conduct from
    which a jury could infer the existence of a contract.              
    608 F.2d at
    278–80.    The court concluded that a "reading of the transcript of
    these   statements,      however,     shows     nothing   more   than    ongoing
    negotiations, because the conduct was accompanied by statements
    making it clear that there was no agreement until the negotiations
    were complete."       
    Id.
     at 279–80 (footnote omitted).
    Here, the district court reviewed the communications
    between Packgen and BP that led up to Bigi's email and concluded
    that the evidence did not support an inference that a binding
    agreement existed at that time.         We do not need to walk through the
    district    court's    review   of    the   record   step   by   step,   but   we
    highlight one key point.        On May 24, 2010, just a few days before
    -16-
    Bigi's email, Packgen requested a conference call with BP to
    "discuss [our] possible working relationship."         That statement is
    an unambiguous indication that Packgen itself did not believe it
    had a binding agreement with BP as of that date.           Nothing in the
    record indicates that a deal occurred between May 24 and 29; to the
    contrary, on May 26, BP stated that it would have to approve
    Packgen's specifications before placing an order.
    Thus, it was appropriate for the district court to wonder
    "to what order does [Bigi's] email supposedly refer?" Packgen, 957
    F. Supp. 2d at 93. The record of Packgen's own statements prior to
    Bigi's email consistently points to ongoing negotiations between
    the parties rather than a binding agreement.               Moreover, Bigi
    testified in his deposition that he had no knowledge of any orders
    that Packgen had from BP, and that he would not have "been part of
    any contracts or commercial agreements."        [App. 967–69]    In light
    of the record as a whole, we agree with the district court's
    conclusion that Bigi's email is not an admission for the purposes
    of the Statute of Frauds.
    b.   Denials Unsupported By Record Citations
    Packgen also argues that the district court should have
    deemed   certain   portions   of   its    statement   of   material   facts
    admitted, because BP failed to properly controvert them with
    citations to the record in violation of Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 56.   Packgen, 957 F. Supp. 2d at 94–95 & n.84.       According
    -17-
    to Packgen, if the district court had admitted its statements as
    uncontroverted, they would satisfy the judicial admission exception
    to the Statute of Frauds.
    Packgen's argument proceeds as though the admission of
    uncontroverted statements of fact is an iron-clad rule.        That
    position does not comport with our case law. In Cabán Hernández v.
    Philip Morris USA, Inc., we explained that "in the event that a
    party opposing summary judgment fails to act in accordance with the
    rigors that such a rule imposes, a district court is free, in the
    exercise of its sound discretion, to accept the moving party's
    facts as stated."   
    486 F.3d 1
    , 7 (1st Cir. 2007).   In other words,
    a party's failure to comply with the formal requirements of Rule 56
    does not trigger a mechanical response from the district court.
    Instead, the district court acts within its discretion to respond
    in a manner appropriate to the circumstances of the case.      This
    approach is consistent with the language in the District of Maine
    Local Rule 56(f), which provides that the court "may disregard any
    statement of fact not supported by a specific citation to record
    material properly considered on summary judgment."    D. Me. Loc. R.
    56(f) (emphasis added).
    Here, the district court did not abuse its discretion.
    It observed that BP "has consistently denied that it entered into
    an oral agreement, and has supported its denial with the sworn
    statements of [its] employees."   Packgen, 957 F. Supp. 2d at 95.
    -18-
    Further, it noted that Packgen had not managed in the course of
    discovery "to establish a BP admission that would qualify under the
    judicial admission exception.           Instead, it posited assertions of
    its own employees as statements of material fact and attempted to
    place the onus on BP not only to deny them, but also to proffer
    evidence justifying the denial."              Id.     It concluded that "[i]n
    these unusual circumstances, the Court holds Packgen to what
    Packgen itself found during discovery." Id.               We find these reasons
    more than adequate to justify the district court's decision not to
    deem       Packgen's   statements    admitted       for   the   purpose   of   the
    exception.
    In sum, the district court did not err in deciding that
    neither exception to the Statute of Frauds applies.                We affirm its
    entry of judgment in favor of BP on Count III.
    C.             Equitable Relief (Count IV)
    In   Count   IV,   Packgen   sought    equitable    relief   under
    theories of unjust enrichment and quantum meruit.2                 The district
    court, relying on Paffhausen v. Balano, 
    708 A.2d 269
     (Me. 1998),
    distinguished the two theories: "Quantum meruit . . . involves
    2
    The caption to Count IV also includes "Restitution," but
    restitution in this context is a type of remedy, not a cause of
    action separate and distinct from unjust enrichment.           See
    Restatement (Third) of Restitution & Unjust Enrichment § 1 (2011)
    ("A person who is unjustly enriched at the expense of another is
    subject to liability in restitution."); Goodwin v. C.N.J., Inc.,
    
    436 F.3d 44
    , 50 (1st Cir. 2006) ("Restitution is a remedy
    associated with the concept of unjust enrichment."). Therefore the
    district court correctly declined to analyze it separately.
    -19-
    recovery for services or materials provided under an implied
    contract.      Unjust enrichment describes recovery for the value of
    the benefit retained when there is no contractual relationship."
    Packgen, 957 F. Supp. 2d at 96 (quoting Paffhausen, 
    708 A.2d at 271
    ).   To prevail on an unjust enrichment claim under Maine law, a
    plaintiff must show that "(1) it conferred a benefit on the other
    party; (2) the other party had appreciation or knowledge of the
    benefit; and (3) the acceptance or retention of the benefit was
    under such circumstances as to make it inequitable for it to retain
    the benefit without payment of its value."                   
    Id.
     (quoting Platz
    Assocs.   v.     Finley,   
    973 A.2d 743
    ,    750   (Me.   2009))   (internal
    quotation mark omitted).           A quantum meruit claim requires proof
    "that (1) services were rendered to the defendant by the plaintiff;
    (2) with the knowledge and consent of the defendant; and (3) under
    circumstances that make it reasonable for the plaintiff to expect
    payment."      
    Id.
     (quoting Paffhausen, 
    708 A.2d at 271
    ) (internal
    quotation mark omitted).          The district court correctly concluded
    that Packgen cannot prevail under either theory.
    1.       Unjust Enrichment
    Packgen argued before the district court that it provided
    technical      information       that    BP     used    to   develop    its   boom
    specification.      It urged the district court to follow APG, Inc. v.
    MCI Telecommunications Corp., 
    436 F.3d 294
     (1st Cir. 2006), in
    which this court allowed an unjust enrichment claim to survive
    -20-
    summary judgment where the plaintiff acted as a middleman in the
    sale of prepaid telephone cards between the defendant and a third
    party.    The defendant in APG ultimately dealt directly with the
    third party, cutting the plaintiff out of the deal. The court held
    that there was sufficient evidence to raise a question of fact
    regarding whether the time and effort expended by the plaintiff to
    secure the deal constituted a benefit for the defendant.               
    Id.
     at
    305–06.
    The   district    court    decided   that   this   case    is   less
    analogous to APG than to Forrest Associates v. Passamaquoddy Tribe,
    
    760 A.2d 1041
     (Me. 2000). In Forrest Associates, the plaintiff was
    a management consulting firm that provided the defendant with a
    market assessment and proposal related to a bingo operation.               The
    Supreme   Judicial   Court    of     Maine   vacated   a   judgment   in   the
    plaintiff's favor on its unjust enrichment claim.              It held that
    "the evidence in the record fails to establish that Forrest
    conferred a benefit on the Tribe.            Although Forrest created the
    comprehensive plan and presented it to the Tribe, there is no
    evidence that the Tribe benefitted from either the presentation or
    the information contained in the plan."         Forrest Assocs., 
    760 A.2d at 1046
    . We agree with the district court that the same conclusion
    applies here.
    On appeal, Packgen repeats its argument that BP used
    information provided by Packgen "to develop a general specification
    -21-
    for boom and to realize cost savings."   It fails, however, to cite
    any evidence in the record supporting that statement, and our own
    review of the record has not uncovered any.    The record shows that
    Packgen provided information about its boom design to BP, but
    nothing indicates that BP used the information in any way for its
    own benefit. Therefore, we affirm the district court's judgment in
    favor of BP on the unjust enrichment claim.
    2.       Quantum Meruit
    Packgen fares no better under a theory of quantum meruit.
    In Paffausen, the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine explained that a
    successful quantum meruit claim requires "proof that services were
    rendered under circumstances consistent with contract relations.
    It must appear that the one who rendered the services expected
    compensation and that the one who received or benefitted from the
    services so understood, and by her words or conduct justified the
    expectation."     
    708 A.2d at 272
     (citation and internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    In this case, it is not apparent what "services" Packgen
    provided that might be the basis for a quantum meruit claim.     It
    took steps to test and modify its product and provide BP with
    information in an effort to complete a sale.    We do not think that
    type of activity is a "service" in the ordinary sense of the word.
    But even setting that point aside, there is nothing in the record
    that suggests either party expected BP to compensate Packgen for
    -22-
    anything other than the product itself.               In other words, the
    negotiations between the parties here were for a sale of goods, not
    the provision of services.          In the absence of any expectation of
    payment for services rendered, the quantum meruit claim must fail.
    D.          Promissory Estoppel (Count V)
    Packgen's final claim is for equitable relief under a
    theory of promissory estoppel.           Maine courts have adopted the
    definition of promissory estoppel in the Restatement (Second) of
    Contracts, which states that "[a] promise which the promisor should
    reasonably expect to induce action or forbearance on the part of
    the promisee or a third person and which does induce such action or
    forbearance     is   binding   if   injustice   can   be   avoided   only   by
    enforcement of the promise."          Restatement (Second) of Contracts
    § 90(1); see Harvey v. Dow, 
    962 A.2d 322
    , 325 (Me. 2008).                   The
    parties dispute whether under Maine law the doctrine applies to a
    promise that is otherwise unenforceable under the Statute of
    Frauds.
    Maine courts have not definitively settled this question.
    In some cases, they have relied on Section 139 of the Restatement,
    which provides that promissory estoppel may apply "notwithstanding
    the   Statute   of   Frauds    if   injustice   can   be   avoided   only   by
    enforcement of the promise."          Restatement (Second) of Contracts
    § 139(1).    Thus, in Chapman v. Bomann, the Supreme Judicial Court
    of Maine allowed a promissory estoppel claim to go forward seeking
    -23-
    enforcement of an oral promise to sign a contract for the sale of
    real estate, despite the fact that the unsigned contract was itself
    unenforceable under the Statute of Frauds.     
    381 A.2d 1123
    , 1129
    (Me. 1978).   But in the context of employment contracts, Maine
    courts have categorically rejected the application of promissory
    estoppel to promises otherwise unenforceable under the Statute.
    See Stearns v. Emery-Waterhouse Co., 
    596 A.2d 72
    , 74–75 (Me. 1991)
    ("Although section 139 of the Restatement may promote justice in
    other situations, in the employment context it contravenes the
    policy of the Statute to prevent fraud.").
    We have not found a Maine case addressing this question
    in the specific context of this case, a sale of goods over five
    hundred dollars.   Nevertheless, we think the court's discussion in
    Chapman is sufficiently thorough for us to anticipate how the state
    court would proceed.   See Noonan v. Staples, 
    556 F.3d 20
    , 30 (1st
    Cir. 2009) ("Although we recognize that in exercising our diversity
    jurisdiction we must tread lightly in offering interpretations of
    state law where controlling precedent is scarce, we are also
    obliged to provide our 'best guess' as to open questions of state
    law when necessary.") (citation omitted).
    In Chapman, the court invoked the "general equitable
    principle that since it is the purpose of the Statute of Frauds to
    prevent fraud, that Statute cannot be permitted to be itself an
    instrument of fraud." 
    381 A.2d at 1128
    . It also expressly adopted
    -24-
    Comment f to Section 178 of the Restatement, which explains that
    promissory estoppel may apply to a promise that is unenforceable
    under the Statute "if the statute would otherwise operate to
    defraud."    
    Id. at 1129
     (internal quotation mark omitted).    The
    court clarified that its adoption of the standard in Comment f does
    not require that the promisor "made the promise with an actual
    subjective intention to relinquish the right to assert the Statute
    of Frauds or with an actual intention otherwise to deceive."   
    Id.
    Rather, the criterion is "whether all the particular circumstances
    . . . show, objectively, that a fraud, or a substantial injustice
    tantamount to a fraud, would be perpetrated upon the promisee were
    the promisor allowed to assert the Statute of Frauds as a bar."
    
    Id.
    Although the facts of Chapman are not analogous to this
    case,3 the court spoke in terms of general principle.   It appears
    3
    In Chapman, the defendants (a husband and wife) invoked the
    Statute of Frauds as a defense against the enforcement of a
    contract for a sale of real estate that they had not signed. 
    381 A.2d at 1128
    . The wife, however, had made a "separate ancillary
    promise . . . that she and her husband would sign, and return, the
    document." 
    Id. at 1126
    . The issue facing the court was whether the
    separate promise to sign the document was enforceable under
    promissory estoppel. The court noted that the promise to sign was
    "not itself within the textual language of the Statute of Frauds,"
    but is nevertheless "deemed to be within the penumbra of the
    Statute's policy and thus becomes unenforceable like the underlying
    agreement to which it relates." 
    Id. at 1128
    . Thus, the court drew
    a distinction between the "penumbral policy" and the "actual terms"
    of the Statute, 
    id. at 1129
    , and there is a strong argument that it
    would prohibit the use of promissory estoppel outright when, as in
    the case before us, the actual terms of the Statute apply. See
    Stearns, 
    596 A.2d at 74
     (explaining that "although we invoked the
    -25-
    to seek a middle course between an outright bar on the use of
    promissory estoppel on one hand and the wholesale use of the
    doctrine to evade the Statute on the other.             Thus, it adopts a
    useful limiting principle, consistent with the purpose of the
    Statute, that allows courts to apply promissory estoppel when "it
    would be grossly unjust and, therefore, tantamount to a fraud on
    the plaintiffs to allow [a] defendant to assert the Statute of
    Frauds."    Id. at 1129.
    Of course, it is entirely possible that the Maine courts
    would bar the use of promissory estoppel claims entirely for the
    sale of goods, just as they did in the employment context in
    Stearns. See supra n.4. But whether we follow Stearns or Chapman,
    Packgen's   claim   fails.       Under   Stearns,    the   claim   would   be
    categorically barred, and there is no evidence from which a jury
    could find that Packgen has met the standard set forth in Chapman.
    There is nothing in the record, such as evidence of deliberate
    deception    or   bad   faith,   revealing   "a     substantial    injustice
    tantamount to a fraud."      See Chapman, 
    381 A.2d at 1129
    .        Thus, the
    rubric of promissory estoppel, our decision in Chapman actually
    applied an equitable estoppel and extended it only to an ancillary
    promise to make a writing") (emphasis added); Jolovitz v. City of
    Waterville, No. Civ.A. AP-01-82, 
    2003 WL 22100663
    , at *2 (Super.
    Ct. Me. Aug. 26, 2003) ("The agreement [in Chapman] was not the
    sales contract itself, which would bump more squarely into the
    Statute of Frauds considerations.").    As we explain, Packgen's
    claim fails whether we follow the standard set forth in Chapman or
    bar the claim outright as the court did in the employment context
    in Stearns. Therefore, we can leave that question for the Maine
    courts to settle.
    -26-
    district court correctly concluded that the promissory estoppel
    claim fails as a matter of law.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court's
    ruling.
    -27-