Hall v. Process Instruments & Control, Inc.

890 P.2d 1024, 257 Utah Adv. Rep. 23, 1995 Utah LEXIS 10, 1995 WL 45055
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1995
Docket940054
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 890 P.2d 1024 (Hall v. Process Instruments & Control, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Process Instruments & Control, Inc., 890 P.2d 1024, 257 Utah Adv. Rep. 23, 1995 Utah LEXIS 10, 1995 WL 45055 (Utah 1995).

Opinion

DURHAM, Justice:

Plaintiff Margaret B. Hall petitions for a writ of certiorari, seeking review of a court of appeals decision that affirmed the trial court’s ruling of no cause of action on her breach of contract claim. Hall v. Process Instruments & Control, Inc., 866 P.2d 604 (Utah Ct.App.1993). The court of appeals concluded that the trial court correctly applied the parol evidence rule to exclude testimony regarding the parties’ employment agreement. We affirm.

In February 1981, plaintiff entered into a written employment agreement with defendant Process Instruments and Control, Inc. (“Process”). Under the terms of the employment agreement, Process promised to pay Mrs. Hall $1,000 per month beginning March 1, 1981, and continuing through February 1984. Although Mrs. Hall never went to work for Process, Process paid her for fourteen months. In May 1982, Process informed Mrs. Hall that she had been terminated for failure to show up for work.

*1026 Mrs. Hall filed a complaint in May 1982 alleging wrongful discharge, claiming that she had “fully performed the obligations and rendered the services contemplated by [the agreement]” and that she “continue[d] to be able and willing to perform such obligations.” She failed to pursue the case until August 1990, at which time she amended her complaint to allege that John A. Hall, her ex-husband and the sole shareholder of Process, had represented to her at the time of the agreement that she would never have to work for Process and that the salary specified in the employment agreement would be paid in return for her promise to forego alimony. 1 The court permitted the amendment.

At trial, the court allowed Mrs. Hall to introduce parol evidence, subject to exclusion, for the limited purpose of establishing whether the agreement was integrated. The court then excluded the evidence, finding that the agreement was “unambiguous” and appeared to be “complete.” The court ruled that Mrs. Hall had no cause of action because she had failed to perform her obligations under the employment agreement and had “fail[ed] to establish that the meaning or intent of the employment agreement was anything other than its clearly written terms.” Mrs. Hall appealed the trial court’s decision to the court of appeals, claiming that parol evidence was necessary to “elucidate the real meaning of the employment agreement since the parties never intended the written contract to be the full and complete expression of their agreement.” Id. at 606. The court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s decision.

Mrs. Hall now appeals the court of appeals’ decision, claiming that the court of appeals erroneously applied the parol evidence rule. She claims that the trial court failed to make the required threshold finding of integration of the contract before excluding her testimony regarding the intent of the parties and therefore that the court of appeals erred in affirming the trial court. Mrs. Hall also claims that the trial court should have allowed the testimony of Brent Turley in making its threshold determination of integration 2 and that the court of appeals erroneously affirmed the exclusion by relying solely on the finding that the agreement was clear and unambiguous.

This court has noted that as a principle of contract interpretation, the parol evidence rule has a very narrow application. Union Bank v. Swenson, 707 P.2d 663, 665 (Utah 1985). Simply stated, the rule operates, in the absence of fraud or other invalidating causes, to exclude evidence of contemporaneous conversations, representations, or statements offered for the purpose of varying or adding to the terms of an integrated contract. Id. (citing inter aha Eie v. St. Benedict’s Hosp., 638 P.2d 1190, 1192 (Utah 1981)); see also Restatement (Second) of Contracts §§ 213-14 (1981). Under this general rule, “an apparently complete and certain agreement which the parties have reduced to writing will be conclusively presumed to contain the whole agreement.” Eie, 638 P.2d at 1194. Thus, before considering the applicability of the parol evidence rule in a contract dispute, the court must first determine that the parties intended the writing to be an integration. To resolve this question of fact, any relevant evidence is admissible. Union Bank, 707 P.2d at 665 (citing Eie, 638 P.2d at 1194).

Once a court determines that an agreement is integrated, parol evidence, although not admissible to vary or contradict the clear and unambiguous terms of the con *1027 tract, is admissible to clarify ambiguous terms. Colonial Leasing Co. v. Larsen Bros. Constr., 731 P.2d 488, 487 (Utah 1986). The application of the parol evidence rule therefore involves two steps. First, the court must determine whether the agreement is integrated. If the court finds the agreement is integrated, then parol evidence may be admitted only if the court makes a subsequent determination that the language of the agreement is ambiguous.

In this case, the trial court made a conclusion of law that the employment agreement was “clear and unambiguous on its face and not subject to change by parole [sic] evidence.” Plaintiff argues that this conclusion related only to the question of ambiguity in the contract and that the trial court failed to make the necessary threshold determination of integration.

We disagree with plaintiffs characterization of the trial court’s findings. Although the trial court failed to use the term “integration,” it nonetheless made the necessary threshold findings for a correct application of the parol evidence rule. An integrated agreement is defined as “a writing or writings constituting a final expression of one or more terms of an agreement.” Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 209 (1981). This court has held that whenever a litigant insists that a writing is an integration and requests application of the parol evidence rule, the court must determine whether the parties adopted a particular writing or writings “as the final and complete expression of their bargain.” Eie, 638 P.2d at 1194 (emphasis added).

In its findings of fact, the trial court found that the terms of the employment agreement “appear to be complete.” Moreover, in its pretrial order, the trial court included as a factual question for trial whether the parties intended the employment agreement “to represent [their] full and complete agreement.” Evidently, the use of the term “complete” in place of the term “integrated” has caused some confusion. Notwithstanding this confusion, because the trial cpurt found that the contract was complete, we can infer that the court intended to make the prerequisite finding of integration.

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Bluebook (online)
890 P.2d 1024, 257 Utah Adv. Rep. 23, 1995 Utah LEXIS 10, 1995 WL 45055, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-process-instruments-control-inc-utah-1995.