What are the facts?
While hospitalized, John DeLeo orally pledged $25,000 to Congregation Kadimah Toras-Moshe. The rabbi and a board member reported the pledge at a subsequent board meeting, and the congregation recorded the promise in its minutes, informally designating the funds for a study hall or library in DeLeo's honor. The congregation expressed intentions to create the space and to recognize DeLeo's generosity, but it did not commence construction, enter into contracts, expend funds, or otherwise materially change its position in reliance on the pledge before DeLeo died. No writing signed by DeLeo existed, and no payment was made during his lifetime. After DeLeo's death, the congregation asserted a claim against the estate for the $25,000, arguing enforceability either as a binding charitable subscription or under promissory estoppel. The estate refused, and litigation ensued over whether the oral pledge could be enforced despite the absence of consideration and without evidence of substantial detrimental reliance.
What is the legal issue?
Is an oral charitable pledge enforceable against a donor's estate absent consideration or definite and substantial reliance, and should a court adopt a special rule (Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 90(2)) enforcing charitable subscriptions without proof of reliance?
What rule applies?
A promise to make a gift is generally unenforceable unless supported by consideration or enforceable under promissory estoppel upon proof of reasonable, definite, and substantial reliance such that injustice can be avoided only by enforcement. Massachusetts does not recognize a special rule that renders charitable subscriptions enforceable without consideration or reliance and declines to adopt Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 90(2) for that purpose. Unilateral acts of a promisee that are not bargained for by the promisor do not constitute consideration, and mere planning or bookkeeping entries without incurring obligations is insufficient reliance.
What did the court hold?
No. The oral charitable pledge was unenforceable because it lacked consideration and the congregation failed to show definite and substantial reliance; the court declined to adopt a special rule enforcing charitable subscriptions without proof of reliance. Judgment for the estate.
What is the reasoning?
The court began with first principles: a promise to make a gift, without consideration, is not an enforceable contract. The congregation argued that its plan to create and name a study hall or library after DeLeo provided either consideration or reliance. The court rejected the consideration theory because the naming was not bargained for by DeLeo; it was a unilateral decision by the congregation and thus not a return promise or performance sought by the promisor. Unlike in Allegheny College, where the donor expressly conditioned the gift on naming, here the donor did not request such recognition as the price of the promise. Turning to promissory estoppel, the court held that the congregation's actions—recording minutes, expressing intent, and earmarking the funds—did not amount to the sort of definite and substantial change of position required to avoid injustice. There were no contracts signed, obligations incurred, or expenditures made in reliance on the pledge. Without such reliance, enforcing the promise would jettison the consideration requirement and expand estoppel beyond its narrow, equitable purpose. Finally, the court addressed the policy argument for a special, reliance-free rule for charities under Restatement (Second) § 90(2). Although some jurisdictions enforce charitable subscriptions on public policy grounds, the court declined to do so, emphasizing fidelity to established contract doctrine and noting that any broad relaxation of consideration and reliance requirements for charities is better left to the Legislature. Because the promise lacked consideration, was oral, and induced no substantial reliance, the claim against the estate failed.
Why is this case significant?
The case is a key authority in the charitable subscription and promissory estoppel canon. It contrasts sharply with Allegheny College by refusing to transform naming recognition into consideration absent donor request and by insisting on concrete reliance evidence. For students, it illustrates (1) the boundary between donative promises and enforceable bargains; (2) the rigor of the reliance requirement for promissory estoppel; and (3) jurisdictional divergence on Restatement § 90(2). Practically, it teaches charities to secure signed, explicit pledge agreements that specify bargained-for benefits or to undertake measurable, documentable reliance if they plan to litigate enforcement.
What is a charitable subscription, and how did the court treat it?
A charitable subscription is a donor's promise to contribute money or property to a charitable organization. Some jurisdictions enforce such promises on public policy grounds even without consideration or reliance. Massachusetts in this case did not; the court required traditional consideration or substantial reliance and declined to adopt Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 90(2), which would enforce charitable subscriptions without proof of reliance.
Why wasn't naming the study hall after the donor valid consideration?
Consideration requires a bargained-for exchange—performance or a return promise sought by the promisor in exchange for the promise. Here, the congregation unilaterally decided to name the study hall after the donor; there was no evidence that DeLeo requested naming as a condition of his pledge. Without a donor-sought benefit or detriment, the naming was not consideration.
What kind of reliance would have made promissory estoppel more plausible?
Definite and substantial reliance could include entering binding construction contracts, expending funds on the project, or otherwise incurring legal obligations or forgoing significant opportunities based on the pledge. Mere internal minutes, earmarking funds, or preliminary planning, without tangible commitments, are typically insufficient.
How does this case compare to Allegheny College v. National Chautauqua County Bank?
In Allegheny College, the donor conditioned her pledge on the creation of a scholarship fund in her name, which the court treated as a bargained-for element supplying consideration. In Congregation Kadimah, the donor did not request naming; the congregation's unilateral plan and lack of concrete reliance defeated enforcement. The cases illustrate how small factual differences can determine whether a charitable pledge is enforceable.
Could a writing have changed the outcome?
A signed, written pledge that clearly states the donor's obligations and any requested recognition could help establish consideration and avoid factual disputes about the promise. While a writing alone does not supply consideration, it strengthens enforceability and may satisfy applicable statutes of frauds where relevant. Here, there was no signed writing by the donor, and the internal minutes did not suffice.
What practical steps should charities take after this decision?
Charities should: (1) use written pledge agreements signed by donors; (2) include bargained-for elements (e.g., naming rights) explicitly requested by the donor; (3) document any reliance and time it prudently; and (4) avoid incurring obligations until pledges are formalized or secured, or be prepared to prove substantial reliance if enforcement becomes necessary.