Scott v. Bryn Mawr Arms

312 A.2d 592, 454 Pa. 304, 1973 Pa. LEXIS 761
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 26, 1973
DocketAppeals, 96 and 97
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 312 A.2d 592 (Scott v. Bryn Mawr Arms) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. Bryn Mawr Arms, 312 A.2d 592, 454 Pa. 304, 1973 Pa. LEXIS 761 (Pa. 1973).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Pomeroy,

These two actions in equity involve the liquidation of appellee Scott’s minority stock interest in John Scott Development Company, Inc. and Bryn Mawr Arms, Inc., the two corporate appellants, by the individual appellants, Joseph Y. Somers and Paul D. Somers (hereinafter collectively referred to as Somers). The shares of stock owned by appellee were pledged as collateral security for Scott’s obligation on two promissory notes, payable to and delivered to Somers. The liquidation followed alleged defaults in payment of the notes.

By these suits in equity, Scott sought to enjoin the corporations from transferring his stock; to ascertain his rights as a minority shareholder in the two companies ; to order an accounting by the corporations and Somers, the majority stockholders; and to appoint a receiver for each corporation. After a consolidated trial of the two cases, the chancellor, in his adjudication, found Somers’ liquidation of Scott’s minority stockholdings to be void and of no effect, and restored to Scott his status as a shareholder in both corporations. Exceptions to the chancellor’s findings of fact and conclusions of law were dismissed by the court en bane, which entered a final decree affirming the decree nisi. Defendants appeal.

The basic question in the hearing below was whether the promissory notes executed by Scott, which on their face are demand notes, are in reality notes callable only upon the occurrence of certain conditions and payable only from a specific fund, namely, the proceeds expected to be derived from the sale of real estate owned by the corporate appellants. If that is the case, Scott was not in default for failure to pay the notes on demand because the corporate assets had not then *307 been sold, and liquidation of the collateral was in violation of the agreement.

Over Somers’ objection, the chancellor permitted Scott to testify that the notes did not contain the entire agreement between the parties. Scott testified that it was the understanding of the parties that his obligation to Somers was to become payable only when the real estate which comprised the corporate assets was sold, by deduction from his one-quarter interest in the proceeds of sale. He stated that appellants and their attorney represented to him, at or prior to the time he executed the notes, that the purpose of the notes was merely to insure that his obligation would be paid as described prior to Scott’s receiving any distribution from either corporation. On the basis of that evidence the chancellor found that the demand for payment of the notes violated the agreement of the parties and that Scott was not in default when the collateral, his stock, was liquidated because the corporately held properties had not then been sold.

Both the chancellor in his opinion below and the parties in argument before this Court concede that the parol evidence rule would normally operate to bar proof of the alleged oral statements here asserted. As this Court reiterated in its well-known opinion in Gianni v. Russell & Co., 281 Pa. 320, 126 A. 791 (1924): “ ‘Where parties, without any fraud or mistake, have deliberately put their engagements in writing, the law declares the writing to be not only the best, but the only, evidence of their agreement.’ Martin v. Berens, 67 Pa. 459, 463; Irvin v. Irvin, 142 Pa. 271, 287. ‘All preliminary negotiations, conversations and verbal agreements are merged in and superseded by the subsequent written contract . . . and unless fraud, accident or mistake be averred, the writing constitutes the agreement between the parties, and its terms cannot be added to nor subtracted from by parol evidence.’ Union Storage Co. v. *308 Speck, 194 Pa. 126, 133; Vito v. Birkel, 209 Pa. 206, 208.” 281 Pa. at 323. There can be no doubt that this rule, standing alone, would serve to exclude the proffered evidence in the case at bar, as it has in many similar cases over the years. Thus, for example, the rule has been applied to prevent the introduction of a contemporaneous agreement to show that payment of a promissory note was to be made from the proceeds of a particular fund or that payment would not be demanded until the happening of a specified event, both of which are assertions made by appellee here. Rosenblum & Co. v. Rosenblum, 313 Pa. 49, 169 A. 79 (1933); Speier v. Michelson, 303 Pa. 66, 154 A. 127 (1931).

The chancellor, however, held that the introduction of parol evidence was justified in this case on the theory that the appellants had admitted that the collateral agreement had been entered into. He relied upon our decisions in Boyd Estate, 394 Pa. 225, 146 A. 2d 816 (1958); Allinger v. Melvin, 315 Pa. 298, 172 A. 712 (1934); and Umani v. Reber, 191 Pa. Superior Ct. 185, 155 A. 2d 634 (1959). We cannot agree that those cases are controlling.

In Boyd Estate, supra, Justice (now Chief Justice) Jones, writing for the Court, said: “[T]he parol evidence rule has never barred the introduction of clear, precise, and convincing evidence to show that the party who seeks to enforce the written agreement according to its tenor has admitted and acknowledged that the agreement as written did not express what the parties intended and that what the parties intended was omitted from the agreement by mistake or accident: [citations omitted].” 394 Pa. at 233. And in the Allinger case, supra, the Court stated: “The principal governing the decision in Gianni v. Russell, 281 Pa. 320, 126 A. 791 (in which case the evidence in support of the oral agreement was not, as here, uncontradicted), and cases *309 following it, . . . has no application to a record like this. Those cases held that ‘if the matter proposed to be shown by parol is the subject of a covenant in the agreement, which is complete, such evidence to alter its terms cannot be received’ (Credge’s Est., 289 Pa. 331, 338, 137 A. 455), unless it is admitted that the whole of the agreement is not set forth in the writing: Ward v. Zeigler, 285 Pa. 557, 132 A. 798.” (Emphasis added.) 315 Pa. at 304. It is clear that the burden is on the proponent of the parol evidence to establish such an admission of incompleteness in the writing by evidence which is “clear, precise, and convincing”. Dunn v. Orloff, 420 Pa. 492, 496, 218 A. 2d 314 (1966); Universal Film Exchanges v. Viking Theatre Corp., 400 Pa. 27, 161 A. 2d 610 (1960); Speier v. Michelson, supra. In the case at bar that burden was upon the plaintiff (appellee Scott) as the proponent.

In Boyd Estate, supra, it was held that that burden had been met by the obligor’s estate where (1) the attorney for the obligee of a judgment note testified that at a meeting subsequent to the execution and delivery of the note his client had admitted the existence of the oral agreement, (2) another witness with no connection to the transaction testified to a similar admission by the obligee and (3) the obligee himself, in an earlier action to open the judgment entered on the note, had in his sworn answer substantially admitted to such an understanding. In Allinger v. Melvin

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
312 A.2d 592, 454 Pa. 304, 1973 Pa. LEXIS 761, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-bryn-mawr-arms-pa-1973.