*987 Opinion
I. Introduction
This is an appeal from a summary judgment for defendants in a fraud action involving a failed commercial transaction. The primary issue is whether a contract clause which states that the parties relied only on representations contained in the contract establishes, as a matter of law, that a party claiming fraud did not reasonably rely on representations not contained in the contract. We hold that such a per se rule is inconsistent with California law and reverse the summary judgment.
II. Statement of Facts
A. The Parties
Appellant, Ronald A. Greenspan (Greenspan) is the sole shareholder of appellant Ron Greenspan Volkswagen, Inc. (RGV) which operated an automobile dealership at 1675 Howard Street in San Francisco until February 1992. The real property at 1675 Howard Street (the Howard Street property) was owned by appellant 1675 Howard Street Associates (HSA) until March 1992. Greenspan is the general partner of HSA.
Appellants’ fraud action is against two subsidiaries of Ford Motor Company, Ford Motor Land Development Corporation (Motor Land) and Ford Leasing Development Company (Leasco). At all relevant times, Leasco owned two contiguous parcels of real property located at 1000 Van Ness Avenue and 901 Polk Street in San Francisco (the Van Ness property).
B. Negotiations and Preliminary Agreements
In March 1990, H.B. Baker Slayback (Slayback), a representative of Ford Motor Company, met with Greenspan and expressed interest in having RGV operate a Lincoln-Mercury dealership at the Howard Street property. Slay-back and Greenspan also discussed a related real property transaction which would help Greenspan capitalize and fund the Lincoln-Mercury dealership. The contemplated transaction would be a tax-deferred exchange of real property between Leasco and HSA (the real property exchange). HSA would transfer title of the Howard Street property to Leasco who would then rent it back to RGV at a favorable rate. The Van Ness property would be sold and proceeds would be distributed to appellants to fund the new Lincoln-Mercury dealership.
*988 Although the real property exchange was not reduced to a binding agreement, it became the centerpiece of all subsequent negotiations between the parties. For example, in April 1990, RGV executed an agreement to purchase a Lincoln-Mercury dealership from Ford conditioned on the completion of the real property exchange outlined above. Thereafter, appellants allege, respondents made several false representations to Greenspan relating to the value of the Van Ness property, the results of an appraisal of that property by the San Francisco real estate firm of Cushman & Wakefield, and the existence of potential purchasers of the Van Ness property.
In June 1990, a company named Urban Pacific made an offer to appellants to purchase the Van Ness property from Leasco for $16.3 million. In August 1990 respondents requested that appellants make a counteroffer to Urban Pacific. Appellants contend they were induced by respondents’ misrepresentations to submit an $18.2 million counteroffer.
By September 1990, there was no written offer to purchase the Van Ness property. Appellants allege that respondents assured them an offer was forthcoming. In October 1990, RGV became the exclusive Lincoln-Mercury dealer in San Francisco pursuant to an agreement which provided the dealership would terminate if, by December 31, 1991, (1) the real property exchange did not occur or (2) RGV could not meet Lincoln-Mercury ’ s capitalization requirements.
In January 1991, Leasco received a written proposal from Koll Company to purchase the Van Ness property for $18 million. 1 Appellants allege that a representative of Leasco told Greenspan that Leasco had a “special relationship” with Koll, that Koll would “close the deal,” and that Koll had a financial partner.
C. The 1991 Agreement
On May 7, 1991, HSA, respondents and Koll entered in a “Purchase and Sale and Exchange Agreement” (the 1991 Agreement). The 1991 Agreement provided that (1) HSA would transfer the Howard Street property to Koll for $17 million, (2) Koll would transfer the Howard Street property to Leasco, (3) Leasco would transfer the Van Ness property to Koll, and (4) Koll would pay Leasco $1 million.
The 1991 Agreement contained the following provision: “11.9 Sole Agreement. This Agreement constitutes the sole agreement among the parties, and *989 supersedes any and all prior oral or written agreements or understandings among them, pertaining to the transactions contemplated in this Agreement. No express or implied representations, warranties, or inducements have been made by any party to any other party except as set forth in this Agreement.”
The 1991 Agreement was conditioned on Koll obtaining, by September 30, 1991, a written commitment for financing from a proposed lender or partner and obtaining city approval for development of a portion of the Van Ness property. On September 30,1991, Koll terminated the 1991 Agreement on the ground it had not obtained the required financing.
On November 5, 1991, the Lincoln-Mercury dealership agreement between RGV and Ford Motor Company was terminated. RGV ceased operating in February 1992. In March 1992, the bank foreclosed on HSA’s mortgage on the Howard Street property.
D. Summary Judgment
The first, fifth and the seventh causes of action charge respondents with fraud (the fraud claims). 2 The fraud claims allege intentional misrepresentations and nondisclosures by respondents with respect to (1) the results of the Cushman and Wakefield appraisal of the Van Ness property, (2) the actual value of the Van Ness property, (3) the existence of potential purchasers and actual offers for the purchase of the Van Ness property, (4) Koll’s commitment to participate in the real property exchange, and (5) whether Koll had a financial partner for the real property exchange deal.
On October 27, 1993, the trial court issued its order granting respondents summary judgment on the fraud claims on the ground that “there was no justifiable reliance on the alleged misrepresentations as a matter of law.” The court reasoned that the clause in the 1991 Agreement providing that no representations have been made by any party except as set forth in the agreement was “substantially similar” to the contractual provision, at issue in
Fisher
v.
Pennsylvania Life Co.
(1977)
*990 III. Discussion
A. Fisher Was Wrongly Decided
Appellants candidly admit that Fisher supports the summary judgment with respect to their intentional misrepresentation claims. However, appellants argue that Fisher was wrongly decided and should not be followed. Alternatively, appellants contend that, even if Fisher is good law, it does not bar fraud claims based on alleged concealment and nondisclosure. We do not address this alternative argument because we agree that Fisher was wrongly decided and we decline to follow it.
1. The Fisher Holding
In Fisher, plaintiff sold two businesses to the defendant insurance company. After defendant breached the purchase agreement, plaintiff threatened to sue. Instead, the parties entered into a settlement agreement which contained a general release of all known and unknown claims against defendant and a purported waiver of plaintiff’s rights under section 1542 of the California Civil Code. 3 (Fisher, supra, 69 Cal.App.3d at pp. 509-510.) The settlement agreement also stated that plaintiff did not make or enter into the settlement agreement “in reliance upon any warranty or representation by any person or entity whatever except for warranties or representations specifically set forth herein.” {Id. at p. 510.)
The
Fisher
plaintiff alleged that he entered into the settlement agreement because of defendant’s fraud. He claimed to have relied on false representations made during the negotiations leading to execution of the agreement and on fraudulent concealment of material facts. The
Fisher
court held that the plaintiff could not base its fraud claim on alleged intentional misrepresentations: “Plaintiff here relies on cases that hold that, where an agreement is obtained by fraud, it may be rescinded in spite of provisions therein purporting to waive fraud. But those cases are inapposite to this case. Here, plaintiff had agreed that he (and Shrotman) had entered into the 1971 agreement in reliance
only
on the representations set forth in that agreement. Such an agreement amounts to a statement, now binding on plaintiff, that any other representations previously made to him were not material inducements to his execution of the 1971 agreement. Since he thus, in 1971, agreed that he had not relied on the representations on which he now seeks
*991
recovery, he cannot now claim otherwise.
(Casey
v.
Proctor
(1963)
As discussed below, the analysis quoted above is not supported by the cited authority. Further, this aspect of the Fisher decision is inconsistent with California law. 4
2. Fisher is Not Supported by the Authority Upon Which It Relies
Fisher
cites two cases to support its conclusion that a party cannot base its fraud claims on oral representations when there is a clause in the contract providing that all representations are stated therein:
Casey
v.
Proctor, supra,
In
Casey
v.
Proctor, supra,
Casey
is not directly relevant to
Fisher
because it involved a general release pertaining to tort liability rather that a representations clause in a contract. To the extent the reasoning employed by the
Casey
court can be applied in other contexts, however, it rather clearly does not support the holding in
Fisher.
(See
Aplications Inc.
v.
Hewlett Packard Co.
(S.D.N.Y. 1980)
Kronsberg
v.
Milton J. Wershow Co., supra,
The
Kronsberg
court rejected the contention that paroi evidence was admissible to prove the alleged fraud. The court reasoned that paroi evidence is not admissible when the paroi promise “by its nature” is superseded by a writing, but only when the promise is not inconsistent with the writing but was the inducing cause thereof.
(Kronsberg
v.
Milton J. Wershow Co., supra,
In contrast to the Kronsberg court, the Fisher court did not rely on the paroi evidence rule to support its holding. Further, Kronsberg presented a different factual situation: it involved alleged misrepresentations that directly conflicted with the substantive terms in the contract. Fisher involved a standard contract provision which, according to the Fisher court, automatically and necessarily limited the parties’ fraud liability to false representations actually recorded in the agreement. Neither Kronsberg nor Casey suggests or supports this limitation.
3. Fisher Is Inconsistent With California Law
The
Fisher
court ignored a line of California authority holding that a contract provision stating that all representations are contained therein does not bar an action for fraud.
(Simmons
v.
Ratterree Land Co.
(1932)
In
Simmons
v.
Ratterree Land Co., supra,
In
Herzog
v.
Capital Co., supra,
In
Vai
v.
Bank of America, supra,
In
Buist
v.
C. Dudley DeVelbiss Corp., supra,
*994
The holding in
Fisher
directly conflicts with the authority discussed above,
5
authority which the
Fisher
court inexplicably ignored.
6
(See also
Palladine
v.
Imperial Valley F. L. Assn.
(1924)
In
Danzig
v.
Jack Grynberg & Associates, supra,
The
Fisher
holding is also inconsistent with the well-settled rule that paroi evidence is admissible to prove fraud in the inducement “even though the contract recites that all conditions and representations are embodied therein.”
(Ferguson
v.
Koch
(1928)
The parties have not identified, nor have we found, a single California case which applies the
Fisher
rule. However, the Ninth Circuit recently applied
Fisher
in
In re City Equities Anaheim, Ltd.
(9th Cir. 1994)
Anaheim is arguably distinguishable because it involved an attempt to hold a party liable for another party’s alleged misrepresentations when there was a specific provision in the contract waiving the right to do so. In any event, to the extent the Anaheim court relied on Fisher, its analysis is no more persuasive than Fisher and is just as inconsistent with California law. 9
4. The Contract Clause in the Present Case Does Not Establish That Appellants Reliance on Parol Promises Was Unreasonable as a Matter of Law
The sole basis for granting respondents summary judgment was that the contract provision renders appellants’ reliance unreasonable as a matter of law. The only authority relied on by the trial court to support this proposition was
Fisher, supra,
The provision in the 1991 Agreement stating that no representations were made by the parties except as set forth in the agreement does not preclude appellants from proving fraud.
(Simmons
v.
Ratterree Land Co., supra,
*997 B. Respondents Have Not Established an Absence of Triable Issues Entitling Them to Summary Judgment *
IV. Disposition
We reverse the summary judgment as to appellants’ first, second, third, fourth, fifth, and seventh causes of action.
Smith, Acting P. J., and Phelan, J., concurred.
Respondents’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied May 18, 1995.
Notes
Koll Company was originally a defendant in this action. After Koll was denied summary judgment, Koll and appellants reached a settlement.
The trial court granted summary judgment as to the sixth cause of action, for breach of contract, on the ground of the paroi evidence rule. Appellants have not appealed this ruling and we therefore do not address it.
Section 1542 provides: “A general release does not extend to claims which the creditor does not know or suspect to exist in his favor at the time of executing the release, which if known by him must have materially affected his settlement with the debtor.” (Civ. Code, § 1542.)
The Fisher court went on to find that plaintiff stated a cause of action for fraudulent concealment. Our disagreement with Fisher is limited to the holding quoted above and does not extend to the court’s fraudulent concealment holding.
As noted above (fn. 4, ante), Fisher also held that the contract provisions at issue there did not bar an action for fraudulent concealment. Some of the authority just discussed also so holds (in some instances similarly treating alleged nondisclosure) and, to that extent, Fisher is not in conflict.
We are not persuaded by respondents’ attempt to distinguish some of these cases, attempts which rely on factual distinctions which had no bearing on the court’s holding or analysis. Nor can we accept respondents’ suggestion that we adopt a new rule that, under certain circumstances (e.g., when parties are represented by counsel or have some level of business sophistication), a standard representations clause in a contract bars justifiable reliance on certain sorts of alleged misrepresentations, as a matter of law. We think it self-evident that the number and delicacy of the lines that would need to be drawn to implement such a rule would be prohibitive.
Summarizing California law, Witkin states: “A party to a contract who has been guilty of fraud in its inducement cannot absolve himself from the effects of his fraud by any stipulation in the contract, either that no representations have been made, or that any right which might be grounded upon them is waived. Such a stipulation or waiver will be ignored, and paroi evidence of misrepresentations will be admitted, for the reason that fraud renders the whole agreement voidable, including the waiver provision. [Citations].” (1 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law, supra, Contracts, § 410, pp. 368-369.) Witkin does not even mention Fisher in this context.
Indeed, the only reference to Fisher that we find in Wilkin’s texts is in his discussion of the fiduciary relationship between the directors and shareholders of a corporation. (9 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (9th ed. 1989) Corporations, § 107, p. 606.)
Another Ninth Circuit case which is arguably relevant is
Brae Transp., Inc.
v.
Coopers & Lybrand
(9th Cir. 1986)
Other federal courts applying California law have refused to apply the
Fisher
holding. (See
Aplications Inc.
v.
Hewlett Packard Co., supra,
See footnote, ante, page 985.
