This contract is integrated in that according to its terms it merges and nullifies all previous agreements, represents the sole agreement between the parties, and can be amended only in writing. Haas undertook to assume sole liability for price. Nowhere in the instrument *450 is there any language from which an inference might be drawn that he was acting as agent for another. Further, it is under seal. Under these circumstances parol evidence is inadmissible to show agency where the purpose of such evidence is to relieve the agent from personal liability, he having thus assumed personal liability.
In the first place, the contract is a sealed instrument and the general "rule as to defenses can have no application where the instrument sued on is a sealed instrument and the principal does not appear to be a party thereto. In 2 AmJur 311, § 395, it is stated that where the contract sued on is under seal, it is not competent to introduce extrinsic evidence to show that the contract was executed on behalf of an undisclosed principal.”
Hollingsworth v. Georgia Fruit Growers, Inc.,
Of course, from the defendant’s point of view, the alleged principal was not "undisclosed” so far as notice to this plaintiff aliunde the contract is concerned, for she understood that he was acting simply in Peek’s behalf. Further, Haas had an obligation to Peek to purchase for him at cost all stock shares he might obtain from Koskey. Our question may then be phrased: May an agent of a disclosed principal who is not a party to an integrated contract defend on the ground that he and one of the other contracting parties, the plaintiff here, understood and agreed that he was acting, not individually, but only as the agent for his principal?
Bostwick Banking Co. v. Arnold,
Code § 4-406 provides: "Where the agency is known, and the credit is not expressly given to the agent, he shall not be personally responsible upon the contract. The question to whom the credit is given is a question of fact to be decided by the jury under the circumstances in each case.” This is a rule of substantive law. What we are dealing with is how to prove that credit was extended to the principal only, taking into account the parol evidence rule of Code § 20-704(1). In
Garrison v. Piatt,
Parol evidence was held admissible in
Dorsey v. Rankin,
*452 An agent of a disclosed principal who has not so acted as to assume individual liability with or instead of his principal is not liable for a breach of contract, but the burden is on him to prove that he was acting for a designated person, that the opposite party had notice of this fact, and that he did not assume individual liability. Where the agent appears to have assumed individual liability, either with or instead of, such a principal, the burden is upon him to show otherwise. In both cases, of course, he must do so by admissible evidence.
"Integrated Contracts. (1) If it appears unambiguously in an integrated contract that the agent is a party or is not a party, extrinsic evidence is not admissible to show a contrary intent, except for the purpose of reforming the contract. . . (3) If the fact of agency does not appear in an integrated contract, an agent who appears to be a party thereto cannot introduce extrinsic evidence to show that he is not a party, except: (a) for the purpose of reforming the contract; or (b) to establish that his name was signed as the business name of the principal and that it was so agreed by the parties.” Restatement of the Law 2d, Agency 2d § 323, p. 72.
While there is authority to the effect that parol evidence is admissible to prove that an unnamed party is in fact liable as a principal, on the theory that this does not alter, vary, or contradict the contract, nor does it exonerate the agent, but that it merely superadds the liability of the principal, "[t]he foregoing principles cannot, however, be carried to the extent of varying the express terms of the writing, and it has, accordingly, been held that, if a contract purports to be executed by one in his own behalf, or shows without ambiguity that the one so executing, although an agent, binds himself as principal, parol evidence is inadmissible to show that the agent acted for his principal in making the contract. So, where a contract recites that it represents the entire agreement between the parties, it cannot be shown by extrinsic parol evidence that one of the signatories did not sign, as recited therein, on his own behalf, but signed as agent of another.” 32A CJS 501, Evidence, § 991.
The same rule is stated in IX Wigmore on Evidence, (3d Ed.) § 2438, p. 124, where authority is quoted to
*453
support the statement that parol evidence is admissible to show that a written contract executed in the name of the agent is in fact the contract of the principal, whether known or unknown. "Parol evidence, however, is not admissible to discharge the agent, as the party with whom he has dealt has his election as to whether he will hold him or the principal responsible.” Id., p. 125.
Candler v. DeGive,
One who has subscribed and paid for corporate stock is entitled to all the rights and responsibilities of ownership, whether the stock certificates have been issued to him or not.
Ga. Life Ins. Co. v. Bell,
*454 Judgment affirmed.
