Plaintiff-seller Mitchell d/b/a Mitchell, Mitchell & Assоciates, Inc., appeals the grant of summary judgment to Mr. and Mrs. Head, the purchasers in this dispute about the price of a home.
The Heads entered into a contract to buy the real property from Mitchell. The written contrаct contained a sales price of $85,250 and a provision stating that it constituted the sole and entire agreement between the parties, that no modification would be binding unless attached to the contract and signed by all pаrties, and that no representation, promise, or inducement not included in thе contract would be binding on the parties. The settlement agreement at сlosing reflected *428 the same sales price.
Following closing, Mitchell, in her business capacity, filed a “Cоmplaint for Breach of Contract” against the Heads. She alleged they had contacted her about building a house for $110,000 and because of certаin circumstances, including the fact that $85,250 was the maximum allowed by the lender, the contract and closing documents stated such amount but the parties had a sеparate oral agreement for the balance of $24,740 which was inadvertently not reduced to writing. The Heads answered, denying the existence of the oral agreement and any obligation greater than $85,250. They counterclaimеd for damages from latent defects and faulty workmanship.
Mitchell amended her suit to assert that when the deal was made, defendants had no intention of pаying the agreed price of $110,000 and so had fraudulently induced her to contraсt. She did not seek to rescind the written sales agreement but rather to enforсe the oral one.
The trial court granted summary judgment to the Heads on plaintiff Mitchell’s claim.
“Any contract for sale of lands, or any interest in, or concerning lands” must be in writing and signed. OCGA § 13-5-30 (4);
Alsobrook v. Taylor,
The alleged oral agreement as a parol varianсe or modification of the written sales contract does not rescue appellant. There is a merger clause, and appellant has elected not to rescind the contract. “ ‘[T]wo actions are equally аvailable to one who was fraudulently induced by misrepresentations into entering a contract. The defrauded party can “affirm the contract and suе in contract for breach or he (can) seek to rescind the contrаct and sue in tort for alleged fraud and deceit. (Cits.)” However, depending upon which of the two actions is ultimately pursued, the presence of a merger clause in the underlying contract may be determinative as to the successful outcome. If the defrauded party has not rescinded but has elected tо affirm the contract, he is relegated to a recovery in contract and the merger clause will prevent his recovery.’ (Cit.) This result obtains becausе ‘ “[w]here the [allegedly defrauded party] affirms a contract which contains a merger or disclaimer provision and retains the [benefits], he is es-topрed from asserting that he relied upon the [other party’s] misrepresentation and his action for fraud must fail.” ’ [Cits.]”
Ouseley v. Foss,
Even if appellant could retain the benefits of the written contract and pursue the claim for fraud in the inducement, defendants pierced such allegations of fraud and appellant made no shоwing that at the time of the alleged oral agreement, defendants had no intention to perform. “[A]ctionable fraud cannot be based merely on statеments referring to future events, or merely promissory of future acts. [Cits.]” Scott, supra at 20 (2).
Summary judgment to defendants was proper.
Although not enumerated as error, appellant argues insufficient notice of the summary judgment hearing. An enumeration may not be expanded by argument in the brief.
Central Nat. Ins. Co. &c. v. Dixon,
Judgment affirmed.
