380 Pa. 407 | Pa. | 1955
Opinion by
This appeal grows out of an action of assumpsit instituted by the plaintiff seller for the recovery of damages allegedly sustained through the defendant buyer’s breach of contracts for the sale and purchase of wholesale quantities of flour. At the conclusion of the trial, the learned trial judge directed a verdict for the plaintiff for a specific sum of money. Subsequently, the court en banc (one judge dissenting) denied the defendant’s motion for a new trial. Prom the judgment entered on the verdict, the defendant took this appeal. The members of. the court who sat for the argument of the appeal are unanimously of the opinion that the case involves material issues of fact which it is the jury’s province to resolve. The judgment must, therefore, be reversed and a. new trial ordered.
Despite the voluminous record (the pleadings alone, with exhibits, take up 151 pages of the printed record), the principal question of law involved is a
The plaintiff (seller) and the defendant (buyer) executed five identical contract forms for the sale and purchase of specified quantities and qualities of flour to be milled by the seller. The forms were the uniform flour contract form for the milling and baking industries as approved by the Millers’ National Federation and the American Bakers’ Association. The contract forms, as executed by the parties, were severally dated September 11, 1947, October 13, 1947, November 12, 1947 (two), and February 9, 1948, and each concluded with the printed provision that “This Contract constitutes the complete agreement between the parties hereto; and cannot be changed in any manner except in writing subscribed by Buyer and Seller or their duly authorized officers.” According to the averments and testimony of the defendant, the contract forms did not fully or correctly reflect the whole of the understanding of the parties at the time of their execution and that a material provision was deliberately omitted therefrom at the seller’s insistence but with the understanding that it would be separately agreed to by the seller by way of a contemporaneous letter from the seller to the buyer which- was transmitted.
Negotiations between the plaintiff and the defendant looking to the sale and purchase of flour culminated in a meeting of authorized representatives of both the seller and the buyer in the offices of the latter at Pittsburgh on September 11, 1947. Agreement
The next day (September 12th) the seller forwarded contract forms for the buyer’s signature. These
Subsequent to the sale and purchase agreement of September 12, 1947, the parties executed the other four additional contract forms already mentioned. Each of those contracts, identical in form with the contract dated September 12th, was preceded by the buyer’s corresponding purchase order. And, in respect
Beginning on March 9, 1948, and continuing thereafter, the seller shipped and the buyer received and accepted the first nine railroad cars of flour delivered in pursuance of the purchase agreements. The buyer also subsequently accepted two more carload shipments but rejected and refused to accept six carloads because of failure of the flour to meet the specifications referred to in the purchase orders. Of the six cars so rejected, four were returned to and accepted by the seller; one more carload lot was condemned by United States officials as unfit for human consumption; and another carload, when its return was refused by the seller, was sold by the buyer for use as animal food. To make the breach complete, the buyer’s president, by letter dated June 28, 1948, notified the seller that all contracts between the parties were cancelled as of June 18, 1948, since the seller had failed to deliver flour which met the specifications agreed upon between
We believe we have related sufficient of the testimony which, if believed by the jury, would establish that the specifications for the flour, insisted upon by the buyer from the outset, were a very definite and important part of the agreement of the parties and that to permit the seller to exclude the specifications from the form contracts of the parties, as being violative of the parol evidence rule, would be to use that beneficent principle to enable the seller to work a fraud upon the buyer.
The parol evidence rule, as is well known, provides that where parties to an agreement commit their undertakings to a writing with the intention that it shall formally and comprehensively evidence the terms of their agreement, the writing, when executed by the parties, cannot thereafter be made subject to parol alteration, contradiction or variance by way of agreements or understandings had prior to or contemporaneously with the execution of the writing. And, so, the parol evidence rule insures the integrity of written memorials adopted by the parties to an agreement as evidencing the whole of their contractual undertakings. But, while the salutary effect of the rule is not lightly to be impaired by exceptions, evidence of prior or contemporaneous agreements of the parties is admissible to alter, contradict or vary the terms of their writing where the omissions therefrom occurred by reason of either fraud, accident or mistake. See, e.g., Gianni v. Bussell & Co., Inc., 281 Pa. 320, 126 A. 791; Bardwell v. The Willis Company, 375 Pa. 503, 100 A. 2d 102, and cases there cited.
On the other hand, the seller maintains (and the court en banc so decided) that the five printed uniform contracts which include the statement that the entire agreement of the parties is therein expressed constitute fully integrated contracts not subject to alteration, contradiction or variance by parol. The seller further asserts that the fraud alleged by the buyer, even if true, is not such fraud as stays the exclusionary operation of the parol evidence rule, the fraud being merely the breach of a promise to do something in futuro, citing Gianni v. Russell & Co., Inc., supra, and other cases. The seller also argues that, even if the buyer’s averments of fraud were adequate and sufficient to avoid operation of the parol evidence rule, such averments were not competently sustained by evidence of the character which the law requires in the premises, namely, evidence that is “clear, precise and indubitable” or, as it is otherwise sometimes stated, evidence that is “clear and convincing”, citing, inter alia, Gerfin v. Colonial Smelting & Refining Company, Inc., 374 Pa. 66, 67-68, 97 A. 2d 71; and Wagner v.
In the instant case the defendant alleged and adduced or proffered evidence to support its allegations that the five printed-form contracts were not intended by the parties to express their entire understanding; that the buyer had demanded that purity specifications, which it required, be made part of the form contract; that the seller refused so to do for reasons peculiar to its own general policy but suggested that the matter of the specifications be covered by delivery of a cognate letter from the seller to the buyer; that the buyer thereupon gave the seller a purchase order Avhich embodied the specifications and which order the seller promptly accepted; that the next day a letter tying the specifications to the contract Avas dispatched by the seller to the buyer; and that, on the same day, the seller submitted for the buyer’s execution contract forms which made no mention of the specifications.
The buyer contends that for the seller to submit, in the foregoing circumstances, for the buyer’s execution, contract forms containing a stereotyped integration clause without informing the buyer that it (the seller) intended later to assert and insist upon the full legal force and effect of the integration clause, notwithstanding the parties’ collateral understanding evidenced by the seller’s contemporaneous letter to the buyer, constituted fraud such as renders inoperative the exclusionary effect of the parol evidence rule. Stated otherwisé, by procuring authorization to omit the purity specifications from the written contract forms in exchange for the- seller’s promise to -cover- that matter in a separate writing, Avhich it -forthwith transmitted, and then invoking the printed clause of the contract form purporting to integrate the parties’ understanding, the seller became eo instante guilty of
In support of its argument that the buyer’s allegation of fraud is nothing more than a promise which was unfulfilled and that a promise to do something in the future, even of the promise be not fulfilled, is not such fraud as avoids operation of the parol evidence rule, the seller cites Gianni v. Russell & Co., Inc., supra; First National Bank of Hooversville v. Sagerson, 283 Pa. 406, 129 A. 333; Humphrey v. Brown, 291 Pa. 53, 139 A. 606; Fidelity Title and Trust Co. v. Garland, 291 Pa. 297, 139 A. 876; Emmanuel v. Hughes, 295 Pa. 492, 145 A. 586; Hein v. Fetzer, 301 Pa. 403, 152 A. 388; and Blose v. Martens, 173 Pa. Superior Ct. 122, 95 A. 2d 340. The rule to which the seller makes reference is not presently applicable. In none of the cases cited was it charged that a term was omitted from a contract at the insistence of one party who, although agreeing to incorporate the omitted term in a separate writing, nevertheless, employed a printed contract form which denominated itself the entire agreement of the parties. Contrary to the conception of the learned court below, this case is not merely an instance of a broken promise. Bather, if the jury believes the evidence adduced by the defendant, it is an illustration of deliberate misrepresentation. The presence of an integration clause cannot invest a writing with any greater sanctity than the writing ' meifits where, as here, it assertedly does not fully express the essential elements of the parties’ undertakings.
Nor is there any requirement that a contract be evidenced by a single instrument! If contracting parties
In Calderoni v. Berger, 355 Pa. 418, 421, 50 A. 2d 332, where the plaintiff had purchased an automobile from the defendants and, in connection with the purchase, the parties executed an agreement of sale, a bailment lease and a receipt, the question involved was
The testimony adduced by the buyer was sufficient in quality and quantity, if accredited by the jury, to support a finding of the alleged fraud. The issue as to the extent of the parties’ contractual undertakings should, therefore, have been submitted for the jury’s determination. The seller’s contention that the buyer’s evidence in such connection, instead of being clear and convincing, was vague and uncertain is not well founded. The fact that some of the witnesses failed to recall incidental details with specificity does not detract from their testimony as a whole which was clear and convincing with respect to the parties’ intended engagements. In addition to the oral and documentary evi
That brings us to the seller’s argument, in the alternative, that, even assuming the agreement of the parties was as the buyer alleges, still the buyer failed to adduce any competent evidence to prove the default ascribed to the seller, viz., failure to deliver flour conforming to the specifications contractually imposed. The buyer, on the contrary, contends that the requisite proof of the seller’s default was contained- in the proffered reports of the American Institute of Baking which the trial court excluded, on the plaintiff’s objection, as being hearsay. The buyer assigns several reasons why the ruling was error, only one of which it is presently necessary to consider, namely, that, by virtue of the agreement of the parties, as pleaded and proven by the buyer, the reports were not hearsay but agreed-upon definitive proofs.
Among the specifications, which the buyer’s proofs show were a part of the entire contract, was an overall provision that the' flour, which the seller was to deliver, would not. contain more than 35 insect fragments, per
If the reports of the Institute had been admitted, there would then have been sufficient evidence for a jury to find that, if the specifications were a part of the parties’ agreement, the seller was in default. The reports of the Institute actually disclosed that the insect fragment count in the flour delivered by the seller ranged from a low of 70 to a high of 576 fragments per pound, whereas the maximum permissible count was, as already indicated, an average of 35 fragments per pound. It follows, therefore, that any lack of evidence in the record to sustain the buyer’s allegation of the seller’s default resulted not from the buyer’s failure to proffer such evidence but from the learned trial judge’s erroneous refusal to admit in evidence the reports of the Institute.
Since the case goes back for a retrial, it becomes unnecessary to discuss the appellant’s remaining contentions that, apart from any question as to the specifications required by the buyer, the trial court erred in failing to submit t© the jury the question whether the flour delivered by the seller was merchantable and fit for human consumption (see Section 15 of The Sales
Judgment reversed with a v.f.d.n.
The exact wording contained in the series of purchase orders was as follows. Purchase Order No. 19197, dated October 14, 1947: “This flour to be guaranteed to meet specifications attached”; Purchase Order No. 19410, dated November 12, 1947: “This flour to be guaranteed to meet specifications attached regarding insect fragments”; and Purchase Order No. 19432, dated November 13, 1947: “This flour to be guaranteed to meet specifications attached regarding insect fragments.”