Case Information
*1 Before COX, Circuit Judge, and GODBOLD and MESKILL [*] , Senior Circuit Judges.
MESKILL, Senior Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff-appellant Bruce A. Ungerleider appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida, Merryday, J., summarily disposing of his claims sounding in securities fraud, common law fraud, contract, civil theft and conversion. The sole issue raised by Ungerleider on appeal is whether the district court erred in holding that an alleged oral agreement could not be enforced under the parol evidence rule. We find no error and affirm.
BACKGROUND
In 1991, Ungerleider began making a series of investments in defendant Phoenix Information Systems, Inc. (Phoenix), a startup company attempting to develop a travel reservations system for use in the United States and abroad. Defendant-appellee Robert P. Gordon was the chairman and CEO of Phoenix, as well as its largest shareholder. He was also the owner, chairman and CEO of defendant-appellee Harvest International of America, Inc. (Harvest). Between 1991 and 1993, Ungerleider invested over $800,000 in Phoenix, and his interests in the company were memorialized in over a dozen written agreements. *2 In 1992, Gordon and Harvest agreed to pay Ungerleider a finder's fee if he was able to secure additional financing for Phoenix from certain sources, including the prominent investor George Soros. Shortly thereafter, Gordon apparently also arranged for Robert Conrads to pursue additional financing for Phoenix. Conrads succeeded in attracting Soros' interest in the investment. The defendants informed Ungerleider that an outside investor had been found, but they refused to identify him. The defendants also advised Ungerleider that the investor was unwilling to proceed unless Ungerleider relinquished his contractual interests in Phoenix.
On April 15, 1993, Ungerleider, Gordon, Phoenix and Harvest entered into a written agreement whereby Harvest and Phoenix were entitled to retain all the money invested by Ungerleider; Ungerleider was to receive 1.2 million shares of Phoenix; and all the prior agreements, including the finder's fee agreement, were revoked. Two of the relevant provisions of the April 15 agreement are set forth below.
NOW THEREFORE, in consideration of the premises and of the undertakings and obligations herein contained and other good and valuable consideration, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, the parties agree as follows:
. . .
14. Entire contract. This Agreement contains the entire understanding of the parties and supersedes all previous verbal and written agreements. There are no other agreements, representations, or warranties not set forth herein.
Paragraph 5 of the agreement stated that Ungerleider was entitled to receive 1.2 million shares of Phoenix stock, and paragraph 3 stated that Ungerleider was "entitled to receive the [Phoenix] Common Stock referred to in paragraph 5 hereof and no other stock or other consideration."
At the time the agreement was signed, Gordon conveyed to Ungerleider a stock certificate for 1.2 million shares of Phoenix. Both parties agree that the shares were not the same 1.2 million shares that Ungerleider was entitled to under the agreement. Ungerleider alleged that he received these initial shares as part of a contemporaneous parol agreement with Gordon to induce Ungerleider to sign the written agreement. *3 The defendants contended in the district court that these initial shares were merely collateral until Ungerleider received the shares called for in the written agreement.
Gordon shortly thereafter regained possession of the initial shares, apparently by asking Ungerleider to return the stock certificate in order to effect a corporate name change. When Ungerleider was unsuccessful in demanding the return of the certificate, and after discovering that Soros was a significant source of the additional financing, he filed this suit. The defendants moved to dismiss, and the district court granted the motion in part and denied it in part. See Ungerleider v. Gordon, 936 F.Supp. 915 (M.D.Fla.1996). Ungerleider filed an amended complaint, stating claims sounding in securities fraud, common law fraud, contract, civil theft and conversion. The district court granted an automatic stay with respect to defendant Phoenix, which was entering into bankruptcy, and ultimately granted summary judgment against Ungerleider on all claims in an unpublished decision. The district court certified that its decision constituted a final judgment in accordance with Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b), and this appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
The sole issue on appeal is whether the district court correctly held that the purported oral agreement between Ungerleider and Gordon was unenforceable under the parol evidence rule. Ungerleider argues that the oral agreement was enforceable as a contemporaneous agreement that induced the signing of the written agreement. Ungerleider also argues that the parol evidence rule should not apply because the reference to "other good and valuable consideration" in the written agreement rendered the written agreement incomplete. For the reasons set forth below, we reject these arguments and affirm the judgment of the district court.
I
Florida law, of course, recognizes the parol evidence rule. "[E]vidence of a prior or
contemporaneous oral agreement is inadmissible to vary or contradict the unambiguous language of a valid
contract. This rule applies when the parties intend that a written contract incorporate their final and complete
agreement."
Johnson Enters. of Jacksonville v. FPL Group,
Ungerleider argued before the district court that "parol evidence is admissible to establish a
contemporaneous oral agreement which induced the execution of a written contract, though it may vary,
change, or reform the instrument."
See Mallard v. Ewing,
The district court did not address Ungerleider's argument. Instead, "[b]ecause of the specific and comprehensive nature of the written agreement," it gave no credence to the "oral representations which occurred after, and which contradict, the written agreement." We need not remand for the district court to consider the inducement exception in the first instance, i.e., whether there was "clear, precise, and indubitable" evidence of the oral agreement, because we hold as a matter of law that the inducement exception is inapplicable.
Under Florida law, the inducement exception does not apply where "the alleged oral agreement
relate[s] to the identical subject matter embodied in the written agreement and ... directly contradict[s] an
express provision of the written agreement."
Linear Corp. v. Standard Hardware Co.,
When a release of a claim for personal injuries is executed and delivered in the form, viz: "For the sole consideration of the sum of One Hundred Sixty and 00/100 Dollars ... received from Hygeia Coca Cola Bottling Works, Inc., I do hereby acknowledge full satisfaction and discharge of all claims ...", can it be shown by parol testimony that there was a prior or contemporaneous additional consideration for said release?
Id.
at 265-66,
Here, the alleged oral agreement entitling Ungerleider to an additional 1.2 million shares of stock directly contradicts paragraph 3 of the written agreement, which states that Ungerleider was "entitled to receive the [Phoenix] Common Stock referred to in paragraph 5 hereof and no other stock or other consideration." We see no distinction between paragraph 3 here and the reference to plaintiff's "sole consideration" in McComb. The boilerplate "other good and valuable consideration" referred to in the preamble of the written agreement is not enough to avoid the obvious inconsistency between the alleged oral agreement and paragraph 3. Therefore, Ungerleider's reliance on the inducement exception is unavailing.
The decision of the Florida Supreme Court in
Jackson v. Parker,
Here we have four written instruments—a deed, a mortgage, a note, and a complete release and satisfaction of the mortgage and note. Both the mortgage and note and the release were found in the lock-box of the mortgagee ... something over seven years after the deed and mortgage were executed.... [W]hy was the release executed long before most of the payments on the mortgage note fell due, and why was the release not actually delivered to the mortgagors immediately after it was executed, or at least while the mortgagees were still living? Surely the mortgagees had some object in view when they executed this release and acknowledged it before a notary public soon after the mortgage was made to them, though it then had nearly ten years to run, and then left the release along with the mortgage and note in their lock-box at their bank. When a person dies leaving in his lock-box a mortgage and also a release of that mortgage, there must be some explanation somewhere, if it can be found. What was the reason for leaving this release?
Id.
at 636,
In sum, the inducement exception permits parol evidence of a contemporaneous oral agreement to
"vary, change, or reform" a written instrument,
Mallard,
Here, we have no difficulty in concluding that the parol evidence does more than "vary, change, or reform" the written agreement. It directly contradicts the written agreement. Therefore, it is not admissible under the inducement exception to the parol evidence rule.
II
Finally, Ungerleider argues that the reference to "other good and valuable consideration" rendered
the written agreement incomplete. While that may sometimes be the case,
see Jackson,
a. from Harvest a certificate representing 511,000 shares of [Phoenix] Common Stock, $.01 par value, registered in the name of [Ungerleider]; and
b. from [Phoenix] a certificate representing 689,000 shares of [Phoenix] Common Stock, $.01 par value, registered in the name of Independent Trust Corp. Cust. FBO Dr. Bruce Ungerleider Tr. No. 1205303 (243,000 [Phoenix] shares), Independent Trust Corp. TTEE FBO Dr. Bruce Ungerleider Tr. No. 1608459 (58,500 [Phoenix] shares) and Bruce A. Ungerleider, M.D. (387,500 [Phoenix] shares).
Under the circumstances, it is unreasonable to believe that Gordon would have agreed to give an additional
1.2 million shares of Phoenix stock to Ungerleider in an undocumented collateral agreement, or that
Ungerleider would have accepted such an informal agreement.
Cf. Ungerleider,
Furthermore, the parties expressly stated that the agreement of April 15 was a complete integration of the contract: "This Agreement contains the entire understanding of the parties and supersedes all previous verbal and written agreements. There are no other agreements, representations, or warranties not set forth *9 herein." Paragraph 3 of the agreement further emphasizes that the agreement completely memorializes the parties' understanding as to the consideration due Ungerleider. Those provisions should be given effect. See 4 Williston on Contracts § 633, at 1014 (3rd ed. 1961) ("Since it is only the intention of the parties to adopt a writing as a memorial which makes that writing an integration of the contract, and makes the parol evidence rule applicable, any expression of their intention in the writing in regard to the matter will be given effect.").
Finally, even if the agreement were incomplete, Florida law "does not permit proof of an oral
agreement for the purpose of imposing a further contractual obligation on one of the parties, of which there
is no indication or suggestion in the written contract, when such obligation is not only inconsistent with, but
repugnant to, other plain terms of the instrument."
Florida Moss Products Co. v. City of Leesburg,
93 Fla.
656, 661,
CONCLUSION
The district court's judgment is AFFIRMED.
Notes
[*] Honorable Thomas J. Meskill, Senior U.S. Circuit Judge for the Second Circuit, sitting by designation.
