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The Parol Evidence Rule
For example, in a dispute over the sale
of a home, if the buyer and seller have signed a written contract for the sale
of a home and have written down that the sales price is $500,000, the buyer
will be barred from introducing evidence of a discussion that he had with the
seller where she agreed to sell it to him for $400,000 or that she agreed to
throw in a car as part of the purchase price.
The parol evidence rule can thus be
simplified as “the outside evidence rule.” Outside evidence cannot be used
where there is a written contract. Like most legal doctrines, however, this one
has lots of qualifications and exceptions.
The rule applies to evidence that
relates to a contract, but is not contained in the body of the contract. Outside
evidence can be other written agreements, written promises, oral agreements and
discussions prior to finalizing the written contract.
Contract must be a “complete
integration”
First, the parol evidence rule applies
only when a contract is completely finalized, or “integrated.” This means an unambiguous
execution of the written agreement that leaves no doubt that the parties
intended it to be the final contract. A complete integration captures the
parties’ full and exclusive agreement on a contract matter.
To determine when a contract has become
integrated, courts will look at the circumstances to see whether the parties
wanted the written agreement to be a final and complete agreement. This includes
the provisions of the contract.
For example, an employment agreement can
be said to be integrated when it has all contractual provisions that would
normally be expected of an employment agreement, such as employment length, employee
salary, vacation time, health insurance coverage and other benefits. The circumstances
and terms need to indicate that the writing is intended to be a completed
agreement.
Contracts can also indicate by their own
terms that they are intended to be final and complete agreements. For example, a
complete agreement may have a clause that states something to the effect of: “This written contract contains the final and
complete agreement of the parties. The parties do not intend to be bound by any
additional terms not included in this writing.” A provision like this
virtually ensures a conclusion that it is an integrated agreement.
When is outside evidence
allowed?
There are exceptions to the parol
evidence rule in that outside evidence is allowed to achieve certain goals that
are distinct from the content of the agreement.
The first case in which parol evidence
is allowed is to clarify terms in a contract when a term’s meaning is missing
or ambiguous.
Sometimes, a term is ambiguous and needs
outside evidence to clarify. For example, what is meant by the word “timber”?
When drafting a contract, parties sometimes forget to define such a key term.
In Kerl v. Smith, parties disputed the meaning of this term in an
agreement.[2] The Mississippi Supreme
Court allowed the plaintiff to introduce parol evidence to show the meaning
which the parties themselves attached to words in their own written contract. The
court allowed the plaintiff to introduce evidence of a prior written agreement
the parties had when defining timber, which was “merchantable pine timber”, to
explain the meaning of the word in the current contract.
The second case in which parol evidence
is allowed is to demonstrate evidence of collateral agreements.
Outside evidence can be used to prove
that an independent collateral agreement exists side-by-side with a
completely integrated and finalized written agreement. This means that the
parties made a separate agreement in addition to the one being litigated. This
is only allowed, however, if the collateral agreement:
·
Does not contradict the written and
finalized contract; and
·
Does not contain terms that would normally
be included in the present agreement.[3]
In Green v. Booth, two parties
entered into two agreements: the first was a written and fully integrated option
agreement to purchase real property and the second was a promise made by the
seller that he would pay the option holder a commission if the option holder
sold the property instead of buying it himself.[4]
The second agreement was outside
evidence, but a court permitted its introduction for two reasons. First, the
oral agreement didn’t contradict the written and fully integrated option
agreement. Second, an agreement to a commission isn’t something that similarly
situated parties would normally include in a real property purchase agreement.
Finally, parol evidence may be used to
demonstrate that a party was fraudulently induced to enter into an agreement
In Riverisland Cold Storage, Inc.
v. Fresno-Madera Production Credit Assn., the plaintiffs restructured a
debt agreement. In the new contract, the plaintiffs pledged real property as
collateral for the loan and the defendant, a credit association, promised not
to take any enforcement action for three months after execution of the
contract.
The plaintiffs signed the contract
without reading it and soon defaulted. In the dispute, the plaintiffs alleged
that the credit association acted fraudulently to get them to restructure the
debt agreement. The plaintiffs wanted to introduce outside evidence that the
credit association’s vice president met with them two weeks before the contract
was signed and promised them that the association would extend the loan for two
years and not three months. These alleged promises directly contradicted the
written contract, which provided for a forbearance of only three months, not
two years.[5]
The court held that the outside
evidence of these meetings and promises could be introduced. It
determined that the fraud exception to the parol evidence rule applied to
prevent injustice and because these meetings and promises induced the
plaintiffs to sign the written and finalized contract.
Conclusion
The parol evidence rule is all about
outside evidence and contracts. When a contract is “integrated” and finalized,
a party to a contract is going to have a difficult time introducing outside
evidence of other agreements or promises made. However, there are numerous
exceptions that allow outside evidence to sometimes be introduced.
[1]
David Epstein, “Extrinsic
Evidence, Parol Evidence, And the Parol Evidence Rule: A Call for Courts to Use
the Reasoning of the Restatements Rather Than the Rhetoric of the Common Law”,
44 N.M.L. Rev. 49, (2014).
[2]
51 So. 3 (Miss. 1910).
[3]
Juanda Lowder Daniel, “K.I.S.S. The Parol Evidence Rule Goodbye: Simplifying
The Concept of Protecting the Parties’ Written Agreement”, 57 Syracuse L. Rev.
227, (2007).
[4]
44 So. 784 (Miss. 1907).
[5]
Riverisland Cold Storage, Inc. v. Fresno-Madera Production Credit Assn., 55
Cal. 4th 1169, 291 P.3d 316, 151 Cal. Rptr. 3d 93, 2013 Cal. LEXIS 253 (Cal.
Jan. 14, 2013).