Oрinion and Order Granting Defendant’s Motion For Leave to Amend Counter-Complaint, Third Party Complaint (Dkt.# 23)
Defendant’s motion to amend its counter-complaint/third-party complaint was referred to the undersigned for hearing and determination pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 636(B)(1)(a). Fоllowing a telephonic hearing and a review of the parties briefs, and for the reasons stated below, IT IS ORDERED that Defendants motion is GRANTED.
Defendant requests leave to amend its counter-claim/third-party complaint to remove claims for negligеnce and good faith/ fair dealing and add counts for fraud, conversion and for an accounting. Plaintiffs and Third-Party Defendant only object to the addition of the fraud counts — they argue (a) that the amendment comes too late, due to the fact that the parties will be prejudiced if Defendant is allowed to add the claim now that facilitation has already started and the final witness lists have already been exchanged and (b) the claim is futile because Michigan law precludes fraud claims from being raised where, as here, there is an underlying contract at issue with an integration or merger clause.
It is undisputed by the parties that any prejudice the Plaintiffs and Third-Party Defendant may face from being forced to defend against a newly added fraud claim can be remedied by an extension of the scheduling order in this matter. Therefore, the main point of contention is whether Defendant’s fraud claims are defeated by the fact that contracts between the parties cоntain merger clauses which purport to limit the terms of the parties’ agreements to the terms contained therein.
It is true that a merger clause can be worded so as to preclude a party to a contract from bringing forth evidence of prior or even contemporaneous collateral
agreements
between the parties to the contract, even when such agreements were allegedly an inducement for entering into the contract.
UAW-GM Human Resource Center v. KSL Recreation Corp.,
There is an important distinction between (a) representations of fact made by one party to another to induce that party to enter into a contract, and (b) collateral agreements or understandings *929 between two parties that are not expressed in a written contract. It is only the latter that are eviscerated by a merger clause, even if such were the product of misrepresentation. It stretches the UAW-GM ruling too far to say that any pre-contractual factual misrеpresentations made by a party to a contract are wiped away by simply including a merger clause in the final contract. Such a holding would provide protection for disreputable parties who knowingly submit false ac-countings, doctored credentials and/or already encumbered properties as security to unknowing parties as long as they were savvy enough to include a merger clause in their contracts. In fact, the UAW-GM court considered the effect of frаud allegations on a contract with a merger clause and determined that evidence was admissible to prove fraud that would “invalidate the merger clause itself, i.e., fraud relating to the merger clause or fraud that invalidates the entire сontract including the merger clause. 3 Corbin, Contracts, § 578.” Id. at 503. Further, the section of Corbin On Contracts cited by UAW-GM, § 578, states that a merger clause “even though it is contained in a complete and accurate integration does not prevent proof of fraudulent misrepresentations by a party to the cоntract, or of illegality, accident or mistake.” 6 Corbin, Contracts, § 578, p. 114 (reprinted as published in the 1960 edition of Volume 3). Corbin goes on to explain
Fraud in the inducement of assent ... may make the contract voidable without ... showing that the writing was not agreed on as a complete integration of its terms. In such case the offered testimony may not vary or contradict the terms of the writing, although it would be admissible even if it did so; it merely proves the existence of collateral factors that have a legal operatiоn of their own, one that prevents the written contract from having the full legal operation that it would otherwise have had. This is not varying or contradicting the written terms of agreement, although it does vary or nullify in part their legal effect.
3 Corbin, Contracts § 580, p. 142 (emphasis added).
In sum, the UAW-GM court did not bаr a fraud claim in all cases in which the underlying contract has a merger clause, the court simply held that in that case the “plaintiff made no allegations of fraud that would invalidate the contract or the merger clause.” Id. at 505. The question then is, when does fraud invalidate an entire contract, and when is it such that it provides no remedy or recourse if there is a written contract with a merger clause?
The Restatement 2nd of Contracts explains that if, “a party’s manifestation of assent is induced by either a fraudulent or a material misrepresentation by the other party upon which the recipient is justified in relying, the contract is voidable by the recipient.” Rest. 2d ContR. § 164. The answer to the question posed is, therefore, fraud will invalidatе a contract when a party’s assent to said contract is induced through justified reliance upon a fraudulent misrepresentation. A merger clause can render reliance unjustified as to agreements, promises or understandings related to performances that are not included in the written agreement.
The key element in cases involving a merger clause is whether one justifiably relied on the representations of another when the parties’ written agreement clearly statеd that by signing the document they were agreeing that the document made up the parties’ entire agreement regarding the terms of the contract and its performance standards. The Michigan courts have said that, as it pertains to representations regarding additional
*930
agreements or contractual terms, a party would not be justified in relying on them where there is a merger clause. The reasoning behind this is clear, one should not be heard to complain that they relied on oral рromises regarding additional or contrary contract terms when there is written proof, signed by both parties, to the contrary. Yet, a party could still justifiably rely upon representations made by another party regarding things outside the scope оf the contractual terms, such as the other party’s solvency, indebtedness, experience, clientele, client retention rate, business structure, etc. If these representations are false when they are made, not merely opinion and not future promises, they could constitute fraud in the inducement.
Kamalnath v. Mercy Memorial Hosp. Corp.,
Plaintiff has referred the undersigned to three unpublished opinions in support of its position that any pre-contractual representations were wiped away by the merger clаuse, two Michigan state cases and one Eastern District of Michigan case. In
Doty, et. al. v. Bradley, et. al.,
Fleet Business Credit v. Krapohl Ford Lincoln Mercury et. al.,
Last is
Smoracy v. Cook,
Case. No. 02-10103,
For the reasons stated above, Defendant’s motion is Granted.
So Ordered.
