MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
The plaintiffs, a magazine and its publisher, negotiated with the defendant American Express to rent the defendant’s cardholder list. The plaintiffs wished to use this list as their circulation list. According to the plaintiffs, the parties orally agreed that the plaintiffs could rent the list for six months. Plaintiffs arranged to begin publication but the defendant refused to permit them to use the list after the second month. The plaintiffs instituted this suit for damages for breach of the alleged oral contract or in the alternative, based upon the theory of promissory estoppel. The defendant moved for summary judgment in its favor relying upon two written contracts between the parties and the parol evidence rule. The contracts on their faces cover the rental of the defendant’s cardholder list and are executed by the parties. Each contract provides specifically that the list is made avail *1109 able for one time only. Each contract contains an integration clause.
The parol evidence rule provides that the terms of a written contract cannot be varied, contradicted, added to, or modified by parol evidence. The rule operates when the written agreement purports to constitute the complete agreement of the parties. However, where it can be shown by competent evidence that no single writing embodies or was intended to embody the whole of the parties’ understanding, parol evidence is admissible to add to the written agreement.
Crispin Co. v. Delaware Steel Co.,
Defendant argued at the hearing on defendant’s summary judgment motion that the existence of the written contracts, each covering one monthly issue of the magazine, precluded plaintiff from offering any evidence of an oral agreement for six months because the written agreements were complete on their faces and the parol evidence rule prohibited evidence to vary or alter their terms. According to the defendant, no exception to the parol evidence rule was available to the plaintiff. Citing
Sokoloff v. Strick,
After the oral argument, the defendant brought to my attention the very recent case of
Betz Laboratories, Inc. v. Hines,
In Betz, the plaintiff had purchased a building from the defendant. Id. at 403. The purchase was covered by a written contract which contained an integration clause asserting that “there are no other terms, ... representations . . . oral or otherwise, of any kind whatsoever.” Id. According to the plaintiff in Betz, there had been an oral representation that the floor of the building was strong enough for plaintiff’s purposes. In fact, after the purchase, Betz was forced to spend some $80,000 to make the floor suitable for its purposes. Betz then sued the defendants for breach of contract and fraud. Although the floor was not mentioned specifically in the contract, the district court in Betz concluded that it was not “collateral” to the written contract. Id. In other words, although the written contract was silent about the floor, the floor was a subject within the ambit of the contract. It followed from that conclusion that the oral representations concerning the floor would “alter or vary” the written contract’s integration clause. Since the parol evidence rule prohibits the use of prior agreements to alter or vary the terms of an integrated written contract, the district court concluded that the parol evidence rule barred both an action on the contract and for fraudulent misrepresentation. Id. at 404. The plaintiff in Betz did not appeal the district court’s decision on the breach of contract count but did appeal the court’s conclusion that the parol evidence rule and the existence of a written contract prohibited it from suing the defendant for fraudulent misrepresentations orally made about the floor. On appeal, the Third Circuit held that the parol evidence rule did not prohibit the plaintiff from showing by clear and convincing evidence that it was fraudulently induced to enter into the contract.
In its letter to me of May 26, 1981, 3 defendant offers several reasons why Betz is inapplicable. First, defendant contends that the most significant difference between this case and the Betz case is that in Betz the written agreement was silent on the subject of the alleged oral agreement while in this case the written agreement does not address the matter which is the subject of the alleged oral agreement, the length of the rental. The defendant points out that in this case the written contracts say that the rental covers one monthly issue while the alleged oral agreement, if proved, would establish a rental for six months. I question whether two written contracts, each for one-time use in the list, are necessarily inconsistent with the alleged oral agreement for a six-month rental. The evidence may show that a six-month umbrella agreement was reached and the two written contracts are simply two documents in a contemplated series of six. Whether or not they are inconsistent is a matter that must be reserved for trial. For the sake of this motion and to illustrate defendant’s misreading of Betz, I will assume that the written contracts and the alleged oral agreement are inconsistent. Nonetheless, this does not lead me to the defendant’s conclusion that Betz is distinguishable. In interpreting Betz, the defendant mistakes the import of the written contract’s silence on the subject matter covered in the alleged oral agreement.
In Betz, the contract which had an integration clause purported to be the complete agreement of the parties. Yet, it said nothing about the floor. It neither contradicted nor supported the plaintiff’s alleged oral representations. This silence required the district court to determine, considering the subject of the written contract, whether the alleged oral representations were of a type that the parties would have been expected to include in the written contract. The district court concluded that they were of this type when it found that they were not *1111 “collateral.” Because they should have been but were not included in the written contract, proving the oral agreement would be inconsistent with the integration clause. Thus the parol evidence rule prohibited their proof absent fraud.
The fact that the contract in this case does cover the subject matter of the alleged oral agreement only eliminates a step in the analysis that had been called for in Betz. The existence of an alleged oral agreement in this case is not only inconsistent with the integration clause, according to the defendant, but also it is inconsistent with a specific term of the contract. Thus, under defendant’s theory, it is clear that the parol evidence rule applies in our case. It was not clear that it applied in Betz until the district court concluded that the oral representations about the floor were not collateral to the written contract. But once it is concluded that the parol evidence rule applies, the analysis is the same in Betz and in this case. In both cases, the question becomes whether the written contract is void or voidable. Proving fraud by clear and convincing evidence would vitiate the written contract, and as in Betz, overcome the parol evidence rule.
Secondly, the defendant argues that Betz is inapplicable because the plaintiff in Betz was seeking recovery for the tort of fraudulent misrepresentation while this plaintiff seeks a remedy for breach of contract and in the alternative, based on promissory estoppel. The difference in the underlying theories of recovery does not distinguish the cases for purposes of the parol evidence rule. The question is whether proof of a prior representation or agreement is barred in the first instance by the existence of an integrated, written agreement. If it is, the next question is whether there is cause to invalidate the written agreement. If there is, the written agreement falls, the parol evidence rule is rendered inapplicable in the absence of a written agreement, and the plaintiff can proceed to prove the oral representations. In Betz, as will frequently happen, the cause for invalidating the written agreement (fraud) was also part of the plaintiff’s underlying claim for fraudulent misrepresentation, but this need not always be so.
Defendant’s third argument is that
Betz
deals with an exception to the rule upon which this plaintiff does not rely. The defendant contends that the plaintiff is relying upon the “sham transaction” exception to the parol evidence rule. The plaintiff reports that it is not relying on the sham exception, however, I will consider the defendant’s argument. According to the defendant, the leading Pennsylvania case on the sham exception is
Sokoloff v. Strick,
Sokoloff
appears to be concerned in large part with the plaintiff’s failure to follow state court pleading rules requiring parties to plead facts with specificity. To the extent that
Sokoloff
does address the substantive law of the parol evidence rule, it discusses and relies upon the Pennsylvania cases dealing with fraud as an exception. In particular, it cites and quotes as controlling precedent
Bardwell v. Willis Co.,
Even before
Betz, Sokoloff
was not sturdy support for the position that the sham exception does not apply in Pennsylvania. Earlier the Pennsylvania Supreme Court had held that “the parol evidence rule has no application where parol testimony reveals that the instrument never had any legal existence or binding force.”
Smilow v. Dickerson,
Finally, there is specific support in Betz for recognition of the so-called sham exception. The Betz court quoted with approval and predicted that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court would follow this language from the Restatement Second of Contracts:
What appears to be a complete and binding integrated agreement may be a forgery, a joke, a sham, or an agreement without consideration, or it may be voidable for fraud, duress, mistake, or the like, or it may be illegal. Such invalidating clauses [sic] need not and commonly do not appear on the face of the writing. They are not affected even by a ‘merger’ clause.
Accordingly I conclude that the plaintiff has shown that it is a question of fact whether the plaintiff is entitled to recover. Therefore, I shall deny the defendant’s motion for summary judgment.
Notes
. The Pennsylvania courts differentiated the two concepts as follows: Fraud in the execution is involved when a party thinks he is signing one document and is actually signing a different one, either because important terms have been fraudulently added or omitted or because a wholly different agreement has been substituted.
Bardwell v. Willis Co.,
. By bringing this case to my attention, defendant’s counsel fulfilled the duty imposed by the disciplinary rules. Rule 7-106(B)(l) provides:
In presenting a matter to a tribunal, a lawyer shall disclose:
(1) Legal authority in the controlling jurisdiction known to him to be directly adverse to the position of his client and which is not disclosed by opposing counsel.
ABA Code of Professional Responsibility DR 7-106(B)(l) (footnotes omitted). Defendant’s counsel is commended for this action.
. Defendant’s letter was made part of the record, see docket entry number 61. The plaintiffs reply was also filed, see docket entry number 62.
