301 F. Supp. 680 | W.D. Pa. | 1968
OPINION AND ORDER
A jury returned verdicts for the plaintiffs in this case and judgments were entered thereon. The defendant has filed a motion for new trial which we think should be denied.
One of the grounds, listed by defendant, for his motion is that the verdicts were against the weight of the credible evidence as to liability.
The evidence, when viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, is that on September 1, 1960, defendant, Frank Proie, and plaintiff, Proie Brothers, Inc., entered into a written agreement whereby defendant agreed to purchase and plaintiff, Proie Brothers, Inc., agreed to sell 5,888 shares of the common stock of the Pittsburgh Sheet Metal Duet Company (PSMD) for $33,443.84, or $5.68 per share.
The defense pleaded was accord and satisfaction. On this issue the testimony of Frank Proie and John Proie was completely contradictory. The jury rejected the defendant’s version and there is no reason to disturb its findings.
The other two reasons advanced for granting defendant’s motion will be discussed together because they relate to the same proposed evidence.
At trial, counsel for the defendant offered to prove through oral evidence that:
“At the time the parties came together with Mr. Stonage, at the Proie Brothers’ plant, to execute the agreement, the objection was made by Frank Proie that it did not provide, as had been agreed upon, for an immediate exchange of the stock. At that time Mr. John Proie explained to him that Proie Brothers and the plaintiff, John Proie, had learned from the accountants that such provision could not be made, and that Frank should go ahead and sign the agreement; that he knew what the agreement was on the matter, and to show his good faith he had not requested that there be included in the agreement any provision whatsoever*683 for the transfer of real estate on Brighton Road, owned by Pittsburgh Sheet Metal Duct Company, to Proie Brothers, although it was their agreement that this real estate was to be conveyed, and if he was willing to trust Frank Proie to that extent, Frank should be willing to trust him to the extent of signing the agreement in the form in which it was.
“Mr. Stonage would testify that the agreement was signed by Frank on this basis; that the only understanding between the parties was that the written agreement was signed upon this basis, and that in accordance with his promise orally made at this time Frank Proie, shortly thereafter, did cause Pittsburgh Sheet Metal Duct Company to convey the real estate on Brighton Road to Proie Brothers.” (Transcript of Excerpt of Proceedings, pp. 3-4.)
The court sustained the plaintiffs’ objection to this offer
This proof might have been introduced for two purposes: (1) to prove that defendant did not agree to give consideration in the form of money, and (2) to establish the defense of fraud.
If defendant could have proved fraud, the parol evidence would have been competent. One of the essential elements of fraud is a misstatement of a past or present material fact. This element was lacking in defendant’s offer. A breach of faith or of an agreement regarding the doing or refraining from doing something in the future is not fraud. Palone v. Moschetta, 387 Pa. 386, 128 A.2d 37 (1956). Furthermore, the proposed evidence would have negated the issue of fraud since it was to the effect that defendant not only knew
The offer of proof was also violative of Local Rule 5-II-J and the Order of Court Fixing Pretrial Procedure, ¶ 9(c), which states:
“(c) Failure to fully disclose in the narrative written statement or at the pretrial conference the substance of the evidence as to liability, defenses, and damages proposed to be offered at the trial will result in the exclusion of that evidence at the trial. The only exceptions will be (1) matters which the court determines were not discoverable at the time of the pretrial conference, (2) privileged matter, and (3) matter to be used solely for impeaching purposes. * *
Neither in defendant’s pleadings nor at pretrial did he allege or so much as allude to the new defense. The first time that defendant asserted the additional defense was near the end of the trial. It was a complete surprise to counsel for the plaintiffs and the court, and allowance of the proof offered by defendant would therefore have been highly prejudicial to the plaintiffs. None of the exceptions contained in ft 9(c) of the Order of Court Fixing Pretrial Procedure, or Local Rule 5-II-J, applied in this case. The new evidence was not privileged matter; it was not to be used for impeachment purposes; and the new defense, if it was bona fide, must have been known to defendant and discoverable long before the pretrial conference. Accordingly, the objection to defendant’s offer of proof was properly sustained.
Rule 15(b), Fed.R.Civ.P., directs the court to freely allow amendments to pleadings when a party objects to evidence on the ground that it is not within the issues made by the pleadings if the presentation of the merits of the action will be thereby subserved. Clearly, this was not the case with defendant’s motion to amend. The plaintiffs’ objection was that if the amendment were allowed, the evidence supporting it would violate the parol evidence rule, and this objection was well taken. Had defendant been permitted to amend, any evidence presented under his new theory would have been inadmissible. The amendment would thus have been a futile act. It is our opinion that the denial of defendant’s motion to amend was justified.
An appropriate order will be entered.
. Plaintiffs’ Ex. No. 1.
. Plaintiffs’ Ex. No. 2.
. During oral argument on defendant’s motion, counsel for the defendant brought to the attention of the court the fact that plaintiffs’ counsel did not say “I object” to the defendant’s offer of proof, and that this omission is a basis for granting defendant’s motion. Although the usual form of an objection to evidence was not employed by plaintiffs’ counsel, the record is clear that he did object to the defendant’s offer of proof. See : Transcript of Excerpt from Proceedings, pp. 5, 7-8. The words “I object” do not appear in the record, but a reading of the relevant part of the transcript reveals that both court and counsel for the defendant interpreted plaintiffs’ counsel’s words as an objection to defendant’s offer. The defendant at trial did not advise the court of the alleged omission; he did not mention it in his motion for a new trial or in his brief. Assuming, arguendo, that there is a defect in the record, since it does not affect the substantial rights of the parties, the defect must be disregarded. Rule 61, Fed.R.Civ.P.
. Although no formal motion to amend defendant’s answer was made, we treat counsel’s statement, “I think that under Rule 15(b) I can ask leave to amend, as to an additional count of fraud in the securing and execution of this agreement”, as a motion to amend defendant’s answer. (See: Transcript of Excerpt from Proceedings, p. 4.)
. The only purpose for which this evidence was advanced by defendant was to prove fraud. (Transcript of Excerpt from Proceedings, p. 4.)