T & M Building Co. v. Hastings ( 2019 )


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    T & M BUILDING CO., INC. v. WILLIAM
    HASTINGS
    (AC 38614)
    Alvord, Bright and Eveleigh, Js.
    Syllabus
    The plaintiff brought this action against the defendant seeking the specific
    performance of a contract for the sale of certain of the defendant’s real
    property to the plaintiff. In 2010, T, the chief executive officer of the
    plaintiff, and the defendant created and signed a handwritten document
    reflecting their intention for the defendant to sell a parcel of certain
    real property to T for development into residential homes. The plaintiff
    hired L, an engineer, to develop plans and to obtain permits from the
    town and other governmental agencies. Thereafter, the defendant
    informed L that he was concerned with the drainage system in L’s plans,
    which extended the drainage system into a portion of the defendant’s
    property that he was not selling. A revised drainage plan required addi-
    tional governmental approvals, and without fully approved plans the
    plaintiff refused to close. The plaintiff subsequently instituted this action
    seeking specific performance and alleged claims for breach of contract,
    unjust enrichment and promissory estoppel as a result of the defendant’s
    failure to transfer the property to it. The trial court found in favor of
    the defendant on all counts of the complaint and rendered judgment
    thereon, from which the plaintiff appealed to this court. Held:
    1. The plaintiff could not prevail on its claim that the trial court erred in
    determining that the document executed by the parties violated the
    statute of frauds: that court found that the document did not identify
    the buyer or seller, describe the property with definiteness, or define
    boundaries for the property or the size of the parcel, nor did it reference
    maps or other documentation that would define and describe the prop-
    erty, and it found that a phrase indicating a ‘‘right to back out’’ was so
    lacking in context that it was itself evidence that the document did not
    satisfy the statute of frauds, and because the document lacked essential
    terms required to satisfy the statute of frauds, the court did not err in
    declining to utilize extrinsic evidence where, as here, such evidence
    was not introduced to aid in the interpretation of a valid contract,
    but was advanced to provide essential missing terms; moreover, the
    plaintiff’s claim that the court improperly failed to consider its claim
    that part performance removed the agreement from the statute of frauds
    was unavailing, as the court, in finding for the defendant on the plaintiff’s
    breach of contract claim on the ground that the document violated the
    statute of frauds, necessarily rejected that claim, and the court found
    that the plaintiff’s actions could have been attributed to the risk it took
    in investing in L’s services and, thus, did not unmistakably point to the
    formation of an enforceable contract, which precluded a conclusion
    that the plaintiff satisfied the requirements of part performance to defeat
    the statute of frauds.
    2. The trial court did not err in rendering judgment for the defendant on
    the plaintiff’s unjust enrichment claim, and its finding that the plaintiff
    did not confer any benefit on the defendant was not clearly erroneous;
    that court found that the defendant was not unjustly enriched by the
    plaintiff’s decisions, including its decision to invest in L’s preparation
    of plans containing a drainage system that the defendant opposed, and
    that there was no credible evidence to support the claim that the defen-
    dant received the benefit of L’s plans, and those findings were supported
    by the record.
    3. The plaintiff’s claim that the trial court erred in rendering judgment for
    the defendant on its promissory estoppel claim was unavailing: the court
    did not err in concluding that the plaintiff did not suffer substantial
    financial injury even though it had incurred expenses, as the court found
    that it had incurred expenses not in reliance on a clear and definite
    promise that the defendant reasonably could have expected to induce
    reliance, but in furtherance of its choice to invest in L’s services, and
    although the plaintiff claimed that the court erred, in its promissory
    estoppel analysis, in considering the ambiguity of the document exe-
    cuted by the parties, the court did not invoke the provisions of the
    document to bar the plaintiff’s claim but, rather, considered the docu-
    ment in the context of whether a promise, which a promisor reasonably
    could have expected would have induced reliance, was made.
    Argued September 17—officially released November 26, 2019
    Procedural History
    Action for specific performance of a contract for the
    sale of certain real property, and for other relief,
    brought to the Superior Court in the judicial district of
    Hartford, where the matter was tried to the court, Elgo,
    J.; judgment in favor of the defendant, from which the
    plaintiff appealed to this court. Affirmed.
    Brandon B. Fontaine, with whom, on the brief, was
    C. Michael Budlong, for the appellant (plaintiff)
    Kevin M. Deneen, for the appellee (defendant).
    Opinion
    ALVORD, J. The plaintiff, T & M Building Co., Inc.,
    appeals from the judgment of the trial court rendered
    in favor of the defendant, William Hastings. On appeal,
    the plaintiff claims that the court erred in (1) determin-
    ing that the agreement between the plaintiff and the
    defendant violated the statute of frauds, (2) rendering
    judgment for the defendant on the plaintiff’s unjust
    enrichment claim, and (3) rendering judgment for the
    defendant on the plaintiff’s promissory estoppel claim.
    We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
    The following facts, as found by the trial court or as
    undisputed by the parties, and procedural history are
    relevant to this appeal. The defendant is the owner of
    a 196-acre farm, on which he farms tobacco. He, along
    with his brother, Walter Hastings, and his sister, Marion
    Jellison, inherited the property in 2007. In 2009, Walter
    Hastings instituted a partition action. Following negoti-
    ations, the defendant purchased his brother’s interest
    in the property, obtaining a mortgage, and also acquired
    his sister’s portion of the property. The defendant
    engaged Edward Lally, a friend and engineer, to explore
    a possible subdivision of a portion of the land. Lally
    obtained a zone change for a portion of the land from
    agricultural to residential use and submitted a request
    for pre-application scrutiny. The defendant asked Lally
    whether he knew of anyone interested in buying a por-
    tion of his property, and Lally introduced the defendant
    to Steven Temkin, chief executive officer of the plaintiff.
    Prior to a formal meeting, Temkin drove out to look
    at the property. The defendant noticed an individual on
    his property and introduced himself. He then invited
    Temkin to look over the property. A meeting was held
    on July 26, 2010, at Lally’s office, and Temkin and the
    defendant created and signed a handwritten document
    (Exhibit 1); see appendix to this opinion; reflecting
    their intention for the defendant to sell a parcel of his
    farmland to Temkin for development into residential
    homes. Exhibit 1 states: ‘‘1) Subject to environmental
    review—seller to remediate if necessary; 2) Based on
    forty-six lots 20,500 each Adjust up or down Right to
    Back out $943,000; 3) Free & Clear title; 4) No water &
    Sewer assessment due; 5) Closing Jan. 5 or sixty days
    after approvals whichever comes first; 5) No mort-
    gage contingency.’’
    The plaintiff hired Lally to begin developing plans for
    the subdivision and to obtain permits from the town of
    Windsor and other governmental agencies. On Septem-
    ber 7, 2010, shortly after Lally completed an initial draft
    of the plans, the defendant immediately informed Lally
    that he had a concern with the plans’ drainage system
    extending into the portion of his property that he was
    not selling. The defendant made clear that he found
    drainage extending into such property unacceptable
    and that he would not agree to drainage rights being
    extended over his remaining land. Lally immediately
    informed Temkin of the defendant’s concerns. Lally
    continued to work on addressing the defendant’s con-
    cerns by seeking permits to have drainage redirected
    to the Farmington River. Lally recommended to both
    parties that he continue to seek approval of the version
    of the plans containing the unacceptable drainage sys-
    tem from the Inland Wetlands and Watercourses Com-
    mission of the Town of Windsor and the Planning and
    Zoning Commission of the Town of Windsor, because if
    he was unsuccessful in obtaining the special use permits
    required for an open space subdivision, the drainage
    issue would be moot. Lally obtained such permits in
    October, 2010.
    A revised drainage plan with drainage flowing into
    the Farmington River required approval from the Army
    Corps of Engineers and the Department of Environmen-
    tal Protection. In January, 2011, the plaintiff paid the
    defendant a 10 percent deposit, in the amount of
    $94,300, which funds were held in escrow. The
    remaining approvals were not in place as of January,
    July, or December, 2011, the dates corresponding with
    the defendant’s inquiries about closing the deal. Without
    fully approved plans, the plaintiff refused to close. The
    defendant had signed applications for extensions of the
    existing approval of the subdivision, the last of which
    he signed in December, 2011. Thereafter, he let the
    approval lapse and ‘‘returned the deposit . . . .’’1
    The plaintiff instituted this action against the defen-
    dant in February, 2013. In the operative complaint, it
    sought specific performance and alleged breach of con-
    tract arising out of the defendant’s failure to transfer
    the property to the plaintiff. It also alleged unjust enrich-
    ment and promissory estoppel, both premised in part
    on the allegation that the plaintiff had spent $243,340
    in engaging Lally and obtaining the regulatory approvals
    necessary to develop the property.2 The matter was
    tried to the court. Four witnesses testified: the defen-
    dant, Lally, Temkin, and Walter Hastings. Both parties
    filed posttrial briefs and reply briefs.
    In a memorandum of decision issued on October 5,
    2015, the court found in favor of the defendant on all
    counts of the plaintiff’s complaint. It first found that
    Exhibit 1 failed to satisfy the statute of frauds, on the
    basis that it failed to identify the buyer or seller, failed
    to describe the property with any degree of definiteness,
    and included the phrase ‘‘right to back out.’’ (Internal
    quotation marks omitted.) With respect to the plaintiff’s
    unjust enrichment claim, the court found that there was
    no credible evidence to support the plaintiff’s claim
    that the defendant had received the benefit of Lally’s
    plans. It further found that despite the defendant’s con-
    cerns with respect to drainage, Temkin assumed a busi-
    ness risk when the plaintiff continued to invest in Lally’s
    services. Thus, the court rejected the unjust enrichment
    claim, finding that the defendant’s conduct had not been
    inequitable or unconscionable such that he had been
    unjustly enriched by the plaintiff’s actions. Turning to
    the plaintiff’s promissory estoppel claim, the court
    again noted that the ‘‘the plaintiff chose to take the risk
    of investing in Lally’s services and other expenses after
    the defendant made clear from the outset that he would
    not give drainage rights over his property, before any
    approvals were secured and well before the drawn out
    process of attempting to get approval for a revised
    drainage plan.’’ (Emphasis in original.) On the basis of
    the ambiguity of Exhibit 1’s terms, including the ‘‘right
    to back out’’ and the lack of clarity as to the subject
    property, the court found that the plaintiff could not
    recover under a theory of promissory estoppel. (Inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted.) The plaintiff thereafter
    filed a motion to reargue, which was denied summarily.
    This appeal followed.3
    I
    The plaintiff’s first claim on appeal is that the court
    erred in finding Exhibit 1 unenforceable under the stat-
    ute of frauds without considering both extrinsic evi-
    dence to resolve ambiguities contained therein and the
    doctrine of part performance. The defendant responds
    that the court correctly determined that Exhibit 1 failed
    to meet the requirements of the statute of frauds and,
    in the absence of an underlying agreement, the doctrine
    of part performance is not applicable. We agree with
    the defendant.
    A
    Acknowledging that Exhibit 1 contains ambiguities,
    the plaintiff asserts that the court ‘‘should have consid-
    ered the substantial extrinsic evidence in the record
    that could have resolved those ambiguities.’’ We con-
    clude that the court did not err in finding that Exhibit
    1 lacked essential terms, such that it was unenforceable
    under the statute of frauds.
    We first set forth applicable principles of law and
    our standard of review. General Statutes § 52-550 (a)
    provides in relevant part that ‘‘[n]o civil action may be
    maintained in the following cases unless the agreement,
    or a memorandum of the agreement, is made in writing
    and signed by the party, or the agent of the party, to
    be charged . . . (4) upon any agreement for the sale
    of real property or any interest in or concerning real
    property . . . .’’ ‘‘To comply with the statute of frauds
    an agreement must state the contract with such cer-
    tainty that its essentials can be known from the memo-
    randum itself, without the aid of parol proof, or from
    a reference contained therein to some other writing or
    thing certain; and these essentials must at least consist
    of the subject of the sale, the terms of it and the parties
    to it, so as to furnish evidence of a complete agreement.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Breen v. Phelps,
    
    186 Conn. 86
    , 92, 
    439 A.2d 1066
     (1982).
    ‘‘Whether a contract exists is a question of fact for
    the court to determine. . . . It is not within the power
    of this court to find facts or draw conclusions from
    primary facts found by the trial court. As an appellate
    court, we review the trial court’s factual findings to
    ensure that they could have been found legally, logically
    and reasonably. . . . Thus, the trial court’s factual
    determination that a contract existed must stand unless
    we conclude that it was clearly erroneous.’’ (Citations
    omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Levesque
    Builders, Inc. v. Hoerle, 
    49 Conn. App. 751
    , 754–55,
    
    717 A.2d 252
     (1998). The determination of whether a
    contract is sufficiently definite to satisfy the statute of
    frauds also is a question of fact, and ‘‘the trial court’s
    findings in this regard must stand unless they are clearly
    erroneous.’’ Id., 757.
    ‘‘Appellate review under the clearly erroneous stan-
    dard is a two-pronged inquiry: [W]e first determine
    whether there is evidence to support the finding. If
    not, the finding is clearly erroneous. Even if there is
    evidence to support it, however, a finding is clearly
    erroneous if in view of the evidence and pleadings in
    the whole record [this court] is left with the definite and
    firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., 755.
    In order for a contract for the sale of land to satisfy
    the statute of frauds, it must set forth the essential
    terms of the contract—the purchase price, the parties,
    and the subject matter for sale. SS-II, LLC v. Bridge
    Street Associates, 
    293 Conn. 287
    , 294, 
    977 A.2d 189
    (2009). In the present case, the court found that Exhibit
    1 ‘‘does not identify the buyer or seller; it fails com-
    pletely to describe the property with any degree of
    definiteness. It does not even identify the street, town,
    state or country in which the property is located. It
    does not define boundaries for the property, the size
    of the lots, the size of the parcel, nor does it reference
    maps or other documentation that would define and
    describe the property.’’ The court further found that
    the ‘‘right to back out’’ phrase ‘‘is so lacking in adequate
    context that it is itself evidence that the document does
    not satisfy the statute of frauds.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.)
    We conclude that the court’s findings are not clearly
    erroneous. Although the court found that Exhibit 1 con-
    tains the signatures of both Temkin and the defendant,
    neither party is identified in the document, nor is Tem-
    kin identified in relation to the plaintiff. See DeLuca v.
    C. W. Blakeslee & Sons, Inc., 
    174 Conn. 535
    , 543–44,
    
    391 A.2d 170
     (1978) (holding that contract that men-
    tioned only limited agent and not seller failed to satisfy
    statute of frauds). Moreover, evidence supported a find-
    ing that Exhibit 1 is deficient with respect to the subject
    matter for sale. See Mansour v. Clark, 
    5 Conn. Cir. Ct. 439
    , 440 n.1, 442, 
    256 A.2d 436
     (1968) (writing failed to
    satisfy statute of frauds on basis that precise area of
    land was not ascertained, where writing described sub-
    ject of sale as portion of land lying ‘‘generally southerly
    and westerly of your property’’). Exhibit 1 alludes to
    forty-six lots, but wholly fails to identify the location
    or size of the lots, and it includes the phrases ‘‘adjust
    up or down’’ and ‘‘right to back out.’’ Thus, the court’s
    finding that Exhibit 1 fails to satisfy the statute of frauds
    is not clearly erroneous.
    Moreover, because Exhibit 1 lacks essential terms
    required to satisfy the statute of frauds, we cannot con-
    clude that the court erred in declining to utilize extrinsic
    evidence to add to those terms. Our Supreme Court
    has stated that ‘‘[i]n order to be in compliance with the
    statute of frauds . . . an agreement must state the con-
    tract with such certainty that its essentials can be
    known from the memorandum itself, without the aid
    of parol proof . . . . The statute of frauds is also satis-
    fied [when] the contract or memorandum contains by
    reference some other writing or thing certain.’’ (Citation
    omitted; emphasis added; internal quotation marks
    omitted.) SS-II, LLC v. Bridge Street Associates, 
    supra,
    293 Conn. 294
    ; see also DeLuca v. C. W. Blakeslee &
    Sons, Inc., 
    supra,
     
    174 Conn. 543
    –44 (written memo-
    randa were ‘‘not sufficient in themselves and made no
    reference to any other writing or thing certain to provide
    the missing essentials’’); Gabriele v. Brino, 
    85 Conn. App. 503
    , 509, 
    858 A.2d 273
     (2004) (‘‘[a]lthough under
    certain circumstances, the court may read documents
    together to satisfy the statute of frauds . . . the multi-
    ple writings still must state the essential terms of the
    contract without the use of parol proof’’ [citation omit-
    ted]); cf. Lynch v. Davis, 
    181 Conn. 434
    , 441 n.5, 
    435 A.2d 977
     (1980) (‘‘[a] memorandum under the Statute
    of Frauds, because it serves a purpose different than
    that of an integrated writing invoking the parol evidence
    rule,4 does not exclude the introduction of consistent
    additional nonessential parol terms’’ [emphasis added;
    footnote added]). The court in the present case found
    Exhibit 1 deficient as to its essential terms, and found
    that it lacked reference to any other document. Thus,
    the court was not required to consider parol evidence
    to correct deficiencies in the essential terms of the
    agreement.
    On appeal, the plaintiff relies on Foley v. Huntington
    Co., 
    42 Conn. App. 712
    , 735, 
    682 A.2d 1026
    , cert. denied,
    
    239 Conn. 931
    , 
    683 A.2d 397
     (1996), in support of its
    claim that Exhibit 1, when considered in light of extrin-
    sic evidence, is sufficient to satisfy the statute of frauds.
    In Foley, the plaintiff entered into a contract with the
    defendants for the purchase of a nursing home. Id., 715.
    Although the nursing home was located on a 10.09 acre
    tract of land, the contract provided for the sale of 3.74
    acres of land, which had been proposed by a surveyor
    in furtherance of the plaintiff’s intention to purchase
    enough land to operate the nursing home. Id., 715–16.
    Prior to the closing date, it was discovered that the
    3.74 acre tract of land, which the nursing home would
    occupy after the sale, would violate the town of Fair-
    field’s zoning requirements. Id., 716. The defendants
    rejected several solutions proposed by the plaintiff to
    avoid the zoning violation and the defendants ultimately
    failed to apply for a variance in violation of a court
    order to do so. Id., 716–17. The plaintiff filed suit alleg-
    ing, among other causes of action, breach of contract.
    Id., 718. Following a jury verdict in the plaintiff’s favor
    on his breach of contract claim, the trial court granted
    the defendants’ motion to set aside the jury award.
    Id., 722–23.
    On appeal, the plaintiff in Foley argued that the trial
    court improperly set aside the verdict because there
    was sufficient evidence to establish that the defendants
    had breached their promise to convey enough land to
    operate a nursing home. Id., 726. The parties’ arguments
    concerned whether the defendants were obligated to
    sell only 3.74 acres and the nursing home building or
    whether they were obligated to sell additional land to
    make the nursing home operable. Id., 729. This court
    concluded that the construction of the contract was a
    question of fact for the jury and that the jury could
    have concluded that the contract was ‘‘one for the sale
    of land on which a nursing home business could be
    conducted.’’ Id. In so concluding, the court looked to
    various contract terms that supported a jury finding
    that the parties intended to sell an operable nursing
    home, including that the contract provided for the sale
    of certain assets necessary for operating the business,
    including employee information and certain licenses,
    and that the seller agreed to ‘‘comply with all regulatory
    agencies’ requirements regarding change of ownership
    to allow the Buyer to obtain all necessary licenses,
    Medicaid and Medicare rates and other necessary
    requirements.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id.,
    731–32. This court also looked to extrinsic evidence in
    the record of the parties’ intent, rejecting the defen-
    dants’ argument that the introduction of such evidence
    had violated the parol evidence rule.5 Id., 732–33. This
    court concluded that the challenged evidence was not
    used to vary the terms of the contract, but rather to
    aid in the interpretation of the contract and to determine
    the intent of the parties. Id., 734.
    The defendant next argued that the additional obliga-
    tion of ‘‘enough land to operate a nursing home’’ consti-
    tuted an oral contract that was unenforceable in viola-
    tion of the statute of frauds. (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.) Id., 729, 735. This court explained that ‘‘[t]he
    statute of frauds was not violated because a written
    contract to sell land existed, and the evidence admitted
    was used properly to discern the intent of the parties.’’
    Id., 736. It reasoned that although ‘‘the addendum
    clearly described the sale of 3.74 acres along with the
    buildings on said acres, the contract language indicates
    that the sale was of a nursing home, which is more
    than the sale of a building. Whether the parties intended
    to contract for the sale of a building on 3.74 acres or
    the sale of an operable nursing home is a question of
    fact, which properly was submitted to the jury.’’ Id., 729.
    Because the extrinsic evidence in Foley was admitted
    to discern the intent of the parties to a valid written
    contract, we find Foley distinguishable. In the present
    case, the extrinsic evidence advanced by the plaintiff
    was not introduced to aid in the interpretation of a valid
    contract formed between the parties, but, rather, it was
    advanced to provide essential terms that were missing
    from Exhibit 1.6
    B
    The plaintiff next argues that the court failed to con-
    sider its claim that part performance removed the con-
    tract from the statute of frauds. In the alternative, it
    argues that ‘‘if this court holds that the trial court did
    conduct that analysis, then the plaintiff asserts that the
    trial court’s silent finding that part performance did not
    apply was clearly erroneous.’’ The defendant responds
    that ‘‘there was no meeting of the minds in regards to
    essential contract terms between the parties here, and
    therefore, part performance cannot apply.’’ We agree
    with the defendant.
    We first set forth general principles of law and our
    standard of review. ‘‘[W]hen estoppel is applied to bar
    a party from asserting the statute of frauds . . . we
    . . . require that the party seeking to avoid the statute
    must demonstrate acts that constitute part performance
    of the contract. . . . Specifically, [t]he acts of part per-
    formance . . . must be such as are done by the party
    seeking to enforce the contract, in pursuance of the
    contract, and with the design of carrying the same into
    execution, and must also be done with the assent,
    express or implied, or knowledge of the other party,
    and be such acts as alter the relations of the parties.
    . . . The acts also must be of such a character that
    they can be naturally and reasonably accounted for in
    no other way than by the existence of some contract
    in relation to the subject matter in dispute. . . .
    ‘‘Thus . . . the elements required for part perfor-
    mance are: (1) statements, acts or omissions that lead
    a party to act to his detriment in reliance on the contract;
    (2) knowledge or assent to the party’s actions in reliance
    on the contract; and (3) acts that unmistakably point
    to the contract. . . . Under this test, two separate but
    related criteria are met that warrant precluding a party
    from asserting the statute of frauds. . . . First, part
    performance satisfies the evidentiary function of the
    statute of frauds by providing proof of the contract
    itself. . . . Second, the inducement of reliance on the
    oral agreement implicates the equitable principle under-
    lying estoppel because repudiation of the contract by
    the other party would amount to the perpetration of a
    fraud.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) SS-II, LLC
    v. Bridge Street Associates, 
    supra,
     
    293 Conn. 295
    –96.
    Our review of a court’s determination as to whether a
    party has demonstrated part performance of a contract
    is governed by the clearly erroneous standard of review.
    Patrowicz v. Peloquin, 
    190 Conn. App. 124
    , 139, 
    209 A.3d 1233
    , cert. denied, 
    333 Conn. 915
    ,        A.3d
    (2019); Harley v. Indian Spring Land Co., 
    123 Conn. App. 800
    , 826, 
    3 A.3d 992
     (2010).
    As a preliminary matter, we note that although the
    court did not expressly reject the plaintiff’s part perfor-
    mance argument, it found for the defendant on the
    plaintiff’s breach of contract claim on the basis that
    Exhibit 1 failed to satisfy the statute of frauds. Thus,
    the court necessarily rejected the plaintiff’s argument
    that part performance removed the agreement from the
    statute of frauds. Moreover, the court found that the
    plaintiff’s actions could have been attributed to its
    choice to take a risk in investing in Lally’s services,
    and, thus, its actions do not unmistakably point to a
    contract. This finding precludes a conclusion that the
    plaintiff satisfied the requirements of part performance
    to defeat the statute of frauds.
    Our Supreme Court has stated the principle that, in
    the absence of a meeting of the minds, there can be no
    part performance that removes the agreement from the
    statute of frauds. SS-II, LLC v. Bridge Street Associates,
    
    supra,
     
    293 Conn. 301
    ; Montanaro Bros. Builders, Inc.
    v. Snow, 
    190 Conn. 481
    , 487, 
    460 A.2d 1297
     (1983). This
    is because ‘‘the doctrine of part performance requires
    conduct that is referable to and consistent with [an]
    oral agreement between the parties. In the absence of
    an underlying agreement, there is no basis for finding
    that the party seeking enforcement, in reasonable reli-
    ance on the contract and on the continuing assent of
    the party against whom enforcement is sought, has so
    changed his position that injustice can be avoided only
    by specific enforcement.’’ (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.) SS-II, LLC v. Bridge Street Associates,
    
    supra, 298
    .
    In SS-II, LLC, our Supreme Court concluded that
    part performance did not apply where there was no
    meeting of the minds as to the purchase price in an
    option to purchase, in part because ‘‘[a]lthough the
    option to purchase provides that the purchase price of
    the property shall be $1.2 million, subject to certain
    adjustments that are to be calculated by a formula per-
    taining to when the option is exercised, it also provides
    that the price will be further adjusted to take into
    account environmental conditions existing at the leased
    premises, which adjustment shall be mutually deter-
    mined by Lessor and Lessee.’’ (Emphasis in original;
    internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id., 299
    . The court
    reasoned that ‘‘[a] mere statement that the parties will
    mutually determine the future purchase prices does not
    mean that the parties will, in fact, agree,’’ and ‘‘there
    is no provision in the statute of frauds protecting the
    plaintiff in the event that the parties are unable to agree
    or the defendant refuses to sell . . . .’’ 
    Id.,
     300–301.
    Because ‘‘the option to purchase did not guarantee that
    the plaintiff would be able to purchase the property
    but simply constituted an agreement to agree,’’ there
    was no meeting of the minds and could be no part
    performance that removed the option to purchase from
    the statute of frauds. 
    Id., 301
    .
    In the present case, the court found the ‘‘right to
    back out’’ language, among other deficiencies, rendered
    Exhibit 1 insufficient to satisfy the statute of frauds.
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) The court’s finding
    that there was no enforceable contract, based partly
    on the ‘‘right to back out,’’ was supported by the testi-
    mony at trial. (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Tem-
    kin testified that the right to back out was there ‘‘in the
    event that, you know, we got two lots or something,’’
    and he agreed that Exhibit 1 did not indicate that the
    right to back out was solely his right.7 The defendant
    testified that the ‘‘right to back out’’ meant that ‘‘at any
    time either party could cancel this contract . . . for
    any purpose.’’8 As in SS-II, LLC, Exhibit 1 did not guar-
    antee that the plaintiff would be able to purchase the
    property, and, thus, in the absence of a meeting of the
    minds, the plaintiff could not avoid the statute of frauds
    under a theory of part performance. See Montanaro
    Bros. Builders, Inc. v. Snow, 
    supra,
     
    190 Conn. 487
    (plaintiffs could not rely on theory of part performance
    where trial court found that minds never met on which
    six acres were to be excluded from sale, ‘‘a factual
    finding negating the presence of either an oral or a
    written contract’’).
    Moreover, the acts claimed by the plaintiff to consti-
    tute part performance are not of such a character that
    they can be naturally and reasonably accounted for in
    no other way than by the existence of an enforceable
    contract. The court found that ‘‘the plaintiff chose to
    take the risk of investing in Lally’s services and other
    expenses after the defendant made clear from the out-
    set that he would not give drainage rights over his
    property, before any approvals were secured and well
    before the drawn out process of attempting to get
    approval for a revised drainage plan.’’ (Emphasis in
    original.)
    This finding illustrates the risk that the plaintiff
    accepted in investing in Lally’s services while continu-
    ing to seek approval of a drainage plan acceptable to
    both the governmental agencies and the defendant.9
    Thus, we conclude that the plaintiff’s acts do not ‘‘com-
    pel the inference that there was some contract by which
    these acts were required of the plaintiff[s] and therefore
    explainable upon no other theory’’; (internal quotation
    marks omitted) Glazer v. Dress Barn, Inc., 
    274 Conn. 33
    , 67, 
    873 A.2d 929
     (2005); and, thus, the court’s rejec-
    tion of the plaintiff’s part performance argument was
    not improper.
    Accordingly, the plaintiff failed to prove that it had
    an enforceable contract.10
    II
    The plaintiff’s second claim on appeal is that ‘‘[t]he
    court erred when deciding the plaintiff’s unjust enrich-
    ment claim by finding that the plaintiff did not confer
    any benefit on the defendant.’’ Specifically, it argues
    that the defendant was benefited in that he owns the
    final set of plans, for which the defendant paid ‘‘a small
    amount,’’ because ‘‘they were built upon the foundation
    of the nearly $250,000 worth of work that the plaintiff
    paid for beforehand.’’ It further argues that the plans
    accommodating the defendant’s preferred drainage sys-
    tem remain on file with the town of Windsor and that
    ‘‘little effort would be required on the defendant’s part
    to reinitiate the subdivision process.’’ Thus, the plaintiff
    argues that its work has ‘‘removed the risk for future
    developers and substantially enhanced the land’s value
    and marketability for the defendant.’’ The defendant
    responds that the plaintiff failed to meet its burden of
    producing evidence to show an increase in value to
    the defendant and ‘‘has failed to point to any evidence
    indicating exactly how much it has ‘positively impacted
    the value’ of the defendant’s property as a result of
    its actions.’’
    We first set forth general principles of law and our
    standard of review. ‘‘Under well established Connecti-
    cut law, [p]laintiffs seeking recovery for unjust enrich-
    ment must prove (1) that the defendants were benefited,
    (2) that the defendants unjustly did not pay the plaintiffs
    for the benefits, and (3) that the failure of payment
    was to the plaintiffs’ detriment. . . . Furthermore, the
    determinations of whether a particular failure to pay
    was unjust and whether the defendant was benefited
    are essentially factual findings for the trial court that
    are subject only to a limited scope of review on appeal.
    . . . Those findings must stand, therefore, unless they
    are clearly erroneous or involve an abuse of discretion.
    . . . This limited scope of review is consistent with the
    general proposition that equitable determinations that
    depend on the balancing of many factors are committed
    to the sound discretion of the trial court.’’ (Internal
    quotation marks omitted.) Utzler v. Braca, 
    115 Conn. App. 261
    , 267–68, 
    972 A.2d 743
     (2009).
    The plaintiff relies primarily on Gardner v. Pilato,
    
    68 Conn. App. 448
    , 449, 
    791 A.2d 707
    , cert. denied, 
    260 Conn. 908
    , 
    795 A.2d 544
     (2002), to support its position.
    In that case, the plaintiff, a surveyor, surveyed the
    defendants’ property and made a topographical map at
    the direction of an engineer hired by the defendants to
    advise them on developing a piece of property. Id., 449.
    The defendants then refused to pay the plaintiff and,
    instead, hired another surveyor to do the same work.
    Id. The second surveyor used the plaintiff’s work and
    an old survey that the defendants had in their posses-
    sion. Id., 449–50. The trial court accepted the fact find-
    er’s11 finding that the defendants were unjustly enriched
    for the full amount of the plaintiff’s bill. Id., 450–51. On
    appeal, this court affirmed, rejecting the defendants’
    argument that the benefit was required to be measured
    only by an increase in value to the defendants’ property
    as a direct result of the plaintiff’s work. Id., 453. The
    court stated that ‘‘[a]lthough the defendants are correct
    that the damages in an unjust enrichment case are ordi-
    narily not the loss to the plaintiff but the benefit to
    the defendant, a fact finder may rely on the plaintiff’s
    bill when the benefit is too difficult to determine other-
    wise.’’ (Emphasis in original; internal quotation marks
    omitted.) Id., 454.
    Unlike Gardner, the present case does not involve a
    situation in which the court determined that the defen-
    dant received a benefit and that benefit was too difficult
    to determine. Rather, in this case, the court found that
    the defendant was not unjustly enriched by the plain-
    tiff’s decisions, including the plaintiff’s decision to
    invest in Lally’s preparation of plans containing a drain-
    age system that the court found the defendant to have
    ‘‘vociferously and consistently opposed . . . .’’12 More-
    over, the court found that ‘‘[t]here is no credible evi-
    dence . . . to support the claim that the defendant has
    received the benefit of [Lally’s] plans.’’ This finding is
    supported by testimony of the defendant that he has
    not attempted to sell the land to anyone other than the
    plaintiff, he does not intend to sell the land, and he has
    entered into a contract to lease a portion of the land
    for five years, with four, five-year options, for a total
    of twenty-five years, for a cell tower. Although Lally
    testified that the defendant told him in December, 2011,
    that he was ‘‘going to do the subdivision but not now
    and not with T & M,’’ the defendant testified that he
    made that statement ‘‘[o]ut of frustration.’’ On the basis
    of this evidence, we cannot conclude that the court’s
    finding that the defendant was not benefited is
    clearly erroneous.
    III
    The plaintiff’s final claim on appeal is that the court
    erred in ruling in favor of the defendant on the plaintiff’s
    promissory estoppel claim. We disagree.13
    The following legal principles govern our analysis of
    the plaintiff’s claim. ‘‘[U]nder the doctrine of promis-
    sory estoppel [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. . . . A fundamental element of promissory
    estoppel, therefore, is the existence of a clear and defi-
    nite promise which a promisor could reasonably have
    expected to induce reliance. Thus, a promisor is not
    liable to a promisee who has relied on a promise if,
    judged by an objective standard, he had no reason to
    expect any reliance at all. . . .
    ‘‘Additionally, the promise must reflect a present
    intent to commit as distinguished from a mere state-
    ment of intent to contract in the future. . . . [A] mere
    expression of intention, hope, desire, or opinion, which
    shows no real commitment, cannot be expected to
    induce reliance . . . and, therefore, is not sufficiently
    promissory. The requirements of clarity and definite-
    ness are the determinative factors in deciding whether
    the statements are indeed expressions of commitment
    as opposed to expressions of intention, hope, desire or
    opinion. . . . Finally, whether a representation rises
    to the level of a promise is generally a question of fact,
    to be determined in light of the circumstances under
    which the representation was made.’’ (Citations omit-
    ted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Stewart v. Cen-
    dant Mobility Services Corp., 
    267 Conn. 96
    , 104–106,
    
    837 A.2d 736
     (2003). ‘‘[A] promisor is not liable to a
    promisee who has relied on a promise if, judged by an
    objective standard, he had no reason to expect any
    reliance at all.’’ D’Ulisse-Cupo v. Board of Directors of
    Notre Dame High School, 
    202 Conn. 206
    , 213, 
    520 A.2d 217
     (1987).
    In support of its argument that the court improperly
    rejected its promissory estoppel claim, the plaintiff
    argues that the court erred in concluding that the plain-
    tiff did not suffer substantial financial injury, even
    though it incurred over $250,000 in expenses related to
    its acquisition of the defendant’s property. The court
    found, however, that the plaintiff did not suffer such
    injury ‘‘when the defendant allegedly ‘subsequently and
    unexpectedly’ reneged on his promises.’’ The court did
    not ignore the sums expended by the plaintiff. Rather,
    it found that the plaintiff had spent that money not
    in reliance on a clear and definite promise that the
    defendant could reasonably have expected to induce
    reliance, but in furtherance of its choice to ‘‘take the
    risk of investing in Lally’s services . . . .’’ Specifically,
    the court stated: ‘‘Given the principles of equity underly-
    ing promissory estoppel, the ambiguity of the docu-
    ment’s terms, including but not limited to the provision
    that there was a ‘right to back out’ as well as the indefi-
    niteness of the subject property itself, this court cannot
    find that the plaintiff is entitled to specific performance
    and money damages based on the theory of promis-
    sory estoppel.’’14
    The plaintiff argues that the court erred in consider-
    ing the ambiguity of Exhibit 1’s terms in its promissory
    estoppel analysis, maintaining that the purpose of the
    doctrine of promissory estoppel is to permit recovery
    where a promise is not enforceable under the law of
    contract. In support of this argument, the plaintiff cites
    Montanaro Bros. Builders, Inc. v. Snow, 
    supra,
     
    190 Conn. 483
    , 489, in which the defendant landowner
    argued that the plaintiff’s claim for restitution was
    barred by a provision of an unenforceable option con-
    tract. Specifically, the defendants argued in Montanaro
    Bros. Builders, Inc., that because the option contract
    provided for the defendant to retain payments made by
    the plaintiff if the option was not exercised, the plaintiff
    could not recover those payments under a theory of
    unjust enrichment. Id., 489. The court stated: ‘‘Having
    previously relied upon the unenforceability of the
    option agreement to defeat the plaintiffs’ claim for spe-
    cific performance, the defendants cannot now invoke
    the provisions of that unenforceable agreement as an
    absolute bar to the plaintiffs’ claim of unjust enrich-
    ment.’’ Id. In the present case, however, the provisions
    of Exhibit 1 were not invoked to bar the plaintiff’s claim.
    Rather, the court considered the provisions of Exhibit
    1 in the context of whether a clear and definite promise,
    which a promisor reasonably could have expected to
    induce reliance, was made.
    Applying the foregoing principles to the facts reason-
    ably found by the court, we conclude that the court
    did not err when it rejected the plaintiff’s promissory
    estoppel claim.
    The judgment is affirmed.
    In this opinion the other judges concurred.
    Exhibit 1
    1
    The plaintiff states in its appellate brief that any claims regarding the
    deposit were resolved by the parties shortly after the court rendered judg-
    ment and that the deposit is not at issue on appeal.
    2
    The plaintiff also alleged that the defendant violated the Connecticut
    Unfair Trade Practices Act, General Statutes § 42-110a et seq. (CUTPA). The
    court rendered judgment in favor of the defendant on this count, and the
    plaintiff does not challenge this ruling on appeal.
    3
    Thereafter, the plaintiff filed a motion for articulation, which was denied,
    and a motion for review of that denial, which was granted in part. The court
    issued an articulation on October 31, 2017, in which it stated that it ‘‘denies
    the motion for reargument and reconsideration because it does not find
    that the plaintiff asserts claims which this court did not sufficiently address
    in the first instance in its memorandum of decision nor does it find that
    the plaintiff has raised issues which would have controlling effect on this
    court’s ultimate findings or conclusions of law.’’ The court also addressed
    one issue regarding the return of the deposit, which is not at issue on appeal.
    The plaintiff filed a motion for review of the articulation. This court granted
    review, but denied the relief requested.
    4
    The parol evidence rule ‘‘prohibits the use of extrinsic evidence to vary
    or contradict the terms of an integrated written contract.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) Leonetti v. MacDermid, Inc., 
    310 Conn. 195
    , 211, 
    76 A.3d 168
     (2013).
    5
    There was evidence that the defendants had entered into the contract
    to take advantage of a ‘‘soon to change’’ federal law, but later wanted to
    avoid the contract because they began negotiating a new sale with a new
    buyer within one week after signing the contract at issue; had experience
    in the law of real estate and zoning; hired a surveyor and created a lot in
    violation of the zoning regulations, which caused the nursing home to be
    inoperable on the acreage of 3.74 acres; refused to remedy the nonconformity
    by conveying more land sufficient for an operable nursing home; and had
    delayed fulfilling their obligations to supply notice to the state of Connecticut
    Department of Public Health and a list of the current employees to the
    plaintiff, without which the plaintiff could not receive the necessary license
    approval. Foley v. Huntington Co., 
    supra,
     
    42 Conn. App. 732
    –33.
    6
    The plaintiff also relies on Levesque Builders, Inc. v. Hoerle, supra, 
    49 Conn. App. 754
    –55. In that case, a written contract provided for the sale of
    a thirty-six acre parcel and referenced a map indicating the location of the
    property. 
    Id.,
     752–53. The parties signed a second written contract, which
    referenced a nonexistent map. Id., 753. The trial court found the contract
    sufficient to satisfy the statute of frauds and stated that the description of
    the thirty-six ‘‘plus or minus’’ acres was made sufficiently definite through
    reference to the two written contracts, the map referenced in the first
    contract, other maps and descriptions, and the testimony at trial. Id., 757.
    This court concluded that the trial court’s finding that the contract satisfied
    the statute of frauds was not clearly erroneous. Id.
    Levesque Builders, Inc., is distinguishable from the present case. There,
    the subject of the sale, an essential term, was contained in the two writings
    and referenced map, such that the description of the land could be made
    certain through reference to extrinsic evidence. Id. Here, the subject of the
    sale cannot be known from the writing itself, which does not reference any
    map, and the court did not err in refusing to consider extraneous evidence
    to supply the details.
    7
    On direct examination, the following exchange occurred between Attor-
    ney Budlong and Temkin:
    ‘‘Q. So you would pay him more if there were more lots, less if there
    were less lots. Is that . . . correct?
    ‘‘A. Yeah. And then in the event that, you know, we got two lots or
    something there’s a clause, you know, they had—there was a right to
    back out.
    ‘‘Ed Lally had done quite a bit of preliminary work, I believe, to lead both
    of us to think forty-six was a pretty good chance of getting close to that
    figure. You know it wasn’t like a pig in a poke. It might be two. It might be
    six hundred or something like that.
    ‘‘Q. Right. The right to back out had to do with if he only had two lots
    or three lots it wouldn’t be fair—
    ***
    ‘‘Q. Explain that to me, the—
    ‘‘A. Seeing the way the clause is written in the number two paragraph
    about right to back out, I’m thinking that that was—could have been what
    we meant. Just listen, Mr. Hastings, we’re not looking to, you know, get
    one building lot from you and pay you [$20,500] and have all this acreage
    and build one house.’’
    On cross-examination, the following exchange occurred between Attorney
    Deneen and Temkin:
    ‘‘Q. And so when you wrote, right to back out, does that indicate that it
    was solely your right to back out?
    ‘‘A. I believe if the lot yield was like five lots and he thought—
    ‘‘Q. Well, again—
    ‘‘A. —it wasn’t—
    ‘‘Q. —again—
    ‘‘A. —enough to make it—
    ‘‘Q. —this is a—
    ‘‘A. —worth it he could back out.
    ‘‘Q. Again, let me ask the question. Does it—this piece indicate that the
    right to back out is solely your right?
    ‘‘A. No.’’
    8
    On direct examination, the following exchange occurred between Attor-
    ney Budlong and the defendant:
    ‘‘Q. Right. And it says, Adjust up or down. Right?
    ‘‘A. Yes.
    ‘‘Q. And—and then it says, Right to back out.
    ‘‘A. Right.
    ‘‘Q. That relates to the forty-six lots, in other words, if you could only
    get ten lots out of there you weren’t go[ing] to sell ten lots for [$20,500],
    were you?
    ‘‘A. Correct.
    ‘‘Q. All right. And—so it was a per lot price so that if the forty-six lots
    couldn’t be accomplished either one of you had the right to back out. Right?
    ‘‘A. Or any other number of lots we had the right to back out at any time.
    ‘‘Q. Well, tell me how—why it says that—that occurs? I mean it’s clear
    that that right to back out is in provision two—
    ‘‘A. Yeah.
    ‘‘Q. —and it has—and you have a $943,000 figure, and that the reason
    that provision was there, obviously, was if you didn’t get—someone didn’t
    get forty-six thousand lots or forty-six lots you, certainly, weren’t going to
    sell it for ten times [$20,000].
    ***
    ‘‘A. My—my interpretation would be . . . that as of this right to back
    out included at any time either party could cancel this contract.
    ‘‘Q. For any purpose.
    ‘‘A. For any purpose.
    ‘‘Q. Okay. The fact that it was in that paragraph doesn’t mean anything
    to you.
    ‘‘A. No.’’
    9
    The plaintiff claims on appeal that it was clearly erroneous for the court
    to place emphasis and weight on the defendant’s drainage concerns. We
    disagree that the court was not permitted to consider the drainage concerns
    because they had been resolved at the time of the defendant’s alleged breach.
    Although Lally’s plans had been revised to accommodate the defendant’s
    drainage concerns, as of December, 2011, necessary permits from the Army
    Corps of Engineers and the Department of Environmental Protection were
    still outstanding. The defendant testified that he wanted to close the deal
    but ‘‘[t]he same questions—the—the same idea was then presented that I
    wanted to close this thing and that [Temkin] did not—[Temkin] told me he
    did not have the Army Corps of Engineers permits or the [Department of
    Environmental Protection] permits to do it. . . . At that point I—no other—
    no other engineering had been done on the site, and I threw up my hands
    and said this is never going to happen out of just plain frustration of having
    gone through this for well over a year, and I had to get on with my crops
    and—and figure out what crop I was going to put here, how I was going to
    best utilize this plan because at this rate this project was never going
    to happen.’’
    10
    In light of this conclusion, the plaintiff’s argument that ‘‘the court’s
    suggestion that the plaintiff could have stopped the project at any time after
    September 7, 2010, ignores the legal reality that the plaintiff would have
    been in breach of the deal with the defendant if he did that,’’ is unavailing.
    (Emphasis omitted.)
    11
    The plaintiff’s action was heard before an attorney fact finder. Gardner
    v. Pilato, supra, 
    68 Conn. App. 450
    .
    12
    The court found that the defendant’s conduct was not inequitable or
    unconscionable such that he had ‘‘been unjustly enriched by the plaintiff’s
    decisions . . . .’’ Again, the court cited the defendant’s concerns with
    respect to drainage, which it found ‘‘reasonable and not insignificant.’’ The
    court stated: ‘‘Notwithstanding these concerns, Temkin, a highly successful
    and sophisticated businessman, was clearly highly motivated to develop
    and invest in this potentially lucrative parcel of property by investing in
    Lally’s services. The fact that the plaintiff paid [Lally] to continue efforts
    to acquire the variety of approvals needed, with no guarantee that those
    approvals would be secured, was a business risk he willingly undertook.’’
    13
    We note that our Supreme Court has not addressed ‘‘whether promises
    that otherwise would be subject to the requirements of the statute of frauds
    may be enforced on promissory estoppel grounds in the absence of compli-
    ance with the statute of frauds; see 1 Restatement (Second), supra, § 139
    . . . .’’ See Glazer v. Dress Barn, Inc., supra, 
    274 Conn. 89
    –90 n.38 (declining
    to address issue where neither party had raised or briefed issue); McClancy
    v. Bank of America, N.A., 
    176 Conn. App. 408
    , 415, 
    168 A.3d 658
     (holding
    that even if promissory estoppel exception to statute of frauds exists, plaintiff
    failed to provide evidence of promise claimed to have been made), cert.
    denied, 
    327 Conn. 975
    , 
    174 A.3d 975
     (2017). For purposes of our analysis,
    we assume without deciding that a promise may be enforced on promissory
    estoppel grounds in the absence of compliance with the statute of frauds.
    14
    The plaintiff argues that even if the court properly found that the plain-
    tiff’s actions following the defendant’s raising his drainage concerns were
    a risk taken by the plaintiff, it ‘‘still should be entitled to reimbursement
    for the expenses incurred before the defendant raised the drainage issue
    . . . . The court only addressed the ‘after’ period in its decision, even empha-
    sizing the word. Since the court found an initial promise from July 26, 2010,
    and that initial promise was never in dispute among the parties, the cutoff
    date for the plaintiff’s right of recovery for damages incurred by reliance
    on [the] promise could not have ceased any earlier than September 7, 2010.’’
    (Emphasis in original.)
    We disagree that the court ‘‘found an initial promise’’ requiring application
    of the doctrine of promissory estoppel. The court noted that Exhibit 1 ‘‘was
    produced as a result of an initial discussion between the defendant and
    Temkin on July 27, 2010, reflecting their intention for [William] Hastings to
    sell a parcel of his farmland to Temkin for development into residential
    homes.’’ (Emphasis added.) The recognition of an intention for the defendant
    to sell a parcel of his land does not constitute a finding of a ‘‘clear and
    definite promise’’ for purposes of the doctrine of promissory estoppel. See
    Stewart v. Cendant Mobility Services Corp., supra, 
    267 Conn. 105
    –106 (‘‘[t]he
    requirements of clarity and definiteness are the determinative factors in
    deciding whether the statements are indeed expressions of commitment as
    opposed to expressions of intention, hope, desire or opinion’’).