Case Title: Wilkinson v. Carpenter

Citation: 276 Or. 311, 554 P.2d 512

Docket Number: 

State: oregon

Court: Oregon Supreme Court

Date: 1976-09-30T00:00:00Z

Document:
554 P.2d 512 (1976)
276 Or. 311
Kenneth R. WILKINSON and Gladys D. Wilkinson, Husband and Wife, Respondents,
v.
Crystal R. CARPENTER and William D. Carpenter, Appellants.

Supreme Court of Oregon, In Banc[*].
Argued and Submitted June 9, 1976.
Decided September 30, 1976.
*513 Mark McCulloch, of Powers & McCulloch, Portland, argued the cause and filed briefs for appellants.
Warren C. Deras, Portland, argued the cause and filed a brief for respondents.
HOWELL, Justice.
Plaintiffs filed this suit seeking specific performance of a contract to sell to defendants a restaurant and lounge in northeast Portland known as "Dad's." Defendants filed a counterclaim seeking rescission on the grounds of fraudulent misrepresentation. The trial court entered a decree allowing specific performance, and defendants appeal.
In October, 1973, plaintiffs and defendants entered into a contract wherein plaintiffs agreed to sell "Dad's" to defendants for a total purchase price of $425,000, payable in installments. As part of the contract defendants also executed a note for $40,000 and another for $15,000.[1] Both the sellers and buyers are business individuals with extensive background and experience in the restaurant, tavern and lounge business. Both sides were represented by counsel in the sale of the premises. The contract contained a clause which stated that the property was sold "as is" and that there had been no warranties or representations made which induced the purchasers to buy the property.[2]
In seeking rescission of the contract, defendants alleged that plaintiffs induced *514 them to enter into the contract by making the following misrepresentations:
We have read the three volumes of transcript and have examined the exhibits. However, it would be of no assistance to the bar to delineate all of the conflicting evidence on both sides. Many of the witnesses presented were parties or were employees or former employees of the parties. Since their testimony is often in conflict, the credibility of the witnesses becomes an important factor. Although we review the evidence de novo, in such cases we give substantial weight to the findings of the trial judge. See e.g., Adamson v. Adamson, 273 Or. 382, 541 P.2d 460 (1975).
In his letter opinion advising counsel that he was finding for plaintiffs, the trial court stated that defendants' evidence did not persuade him "that any fraudulent misrepresentations were made to them by the plaintiffs." (Emphasis ours.) A similar statement appears in the "Conclusions of Law" adopted by the court. Defendants argue  and we agree  that normally it would not be necessary for them to prove that the inducing misrepresentations were made fraudulently in order to entitle them to rescind. See, e.g., Souza v. Jackson Co. Fed. S. & L., 256 Or. 220, 472 P.2d 272 (1970). However, in this case the contract contained a clause specifically excluding any prior warranties and declaring that there had not been any representations made which induced defendants to purchase the property. Although such a clause will not preclude relief upon a showing of actual fraud, see, e.g., Farnsworth v. Feller, 256 Or. 56, 471 P.2d 792 (1970), it does prevent defendants from relying upon any innocent misrepresentations as the basis for a suit for rescission.
The distinction is based upon public policy. No one can be allowed to profit from intentional misstatements of material facts. However, in the absence of some countervailing policy, the parties to a contract should be allowed to allocate the actual risks of the venture as they see fit. See e.g., 12 Williston on Contracts 467, § 1511 (3d ed 1970):
See also 3 Corbin on Contracts 402-03, 411, § 578 (rev ed 1960):
There is a statement contained in one of the older editions of McCormick on Evidence which seems to indicate that a "disclaimer" or "merger" clause, such as this one, protects the seller from liability for damages alone and does not prevent the buyer from suing for rescission on the basis of a prior innocent misrepresentation. Thus, McCormick states that:
However, no reason for this distinction is given, and the authorities cited in the footnotes support only the agency aspects of the statement made in the text. Moreover, the statement made seems plainly inconsistent with the view taken by other authorities on the same subject. See 1 H. Black, Rescission of Contracts and Cancellation of Written Instruments 198, § 74 (2d ed 1929):
In D. Dobbs, The Law of Remedies 644, § 9.5 (1973), a similar statement is made:
See also IX Wigmore on Evidence 125, § 2439 (3d ed 1940):
These authorities are further supported by the analysis made in Arnold v. National Aniline & Chemical Co., 20 F.2d 364, 370 (2d Cir.1927):
In short, the weight of authority recognizes no distinction between actions for damages and suits for rescission based upon innocent misrepresentations which have been specifically disclaimed in the contract of sale. Nor have we been able to discern any persuasive reason why such a distinction should be made. Both causes should be precluded by such a disclaimer unless actual fraud can be established. If actual fraud can be established, neither remedy should be precluded.
The previous decision of this court in Sharkey v. Burlingame Co., 131 Or. 185, 282 P. 546 (1929), is not to the contrary, and Sharkey cites both the Arnold case and § 2439 of Wigmore, supra, with apparent approval. Rescission was allowed in Sharkey on the basis of the defendant's agent's fraudulent representations which induced plaintiff to enter into the contract. In considering the effect *517 of the disclaimer clause in that case, this court analyzed previous cases involving purported disclaimers of fraudulent representations and reached the following conclusion:
Defendants' brief characterizes Sharkey as "holding that a disclaimer clause does not bar evidence of misrepresentations innocently made * * *." In support of that conclusion, defendants quote the following passage from that opinion:
However, defendants' reliance on this language is misplaced. The quoted statement does not discuss the effect of a disclaimer clause, but merely restates the general rule that innocent misrepresentations are ordinarily a sufficient basis for a suit for rescission. The authority cited is to the same effect. What the Sharkey case actually decided was that a contract with an innocent principal could be rescinded on the basis of the fraudulent representations of his agent despite a disclaimer clause because "the fraud complained of vitiates the entire transaction," including the disclaimer clause. The issue presented was no broader than that, and the conclusion which was reached in that case is entirely consistent with our present decision. Unlike Sharkey, this case does not involve any fraudulent misrepresentations, and there is no basis in this case for refusing to give effect to the disclaimer clause on those grounds.
Nor have defendants demonstrated any other basis for avoiding the consequences of their disclaimer. Defendants were represented by counsel at the time they entered into the contract. Under the terms of the agreement, they waived reliance upon any previous representations or warranties. There is no claim that they did not understand the effect of this language or that any representations upon which they had relied were omitted from the written contract by mutual mistake. Therefore, in the absence of a showing of actual fraud, they cannot avoid the effect of their disclaimer, and they are not entitled to rescission.
Affirmed.
TONGUE, Justice (dissenting).
The majority holds that although a so-called "merger clause" (that no representations have been made other than as stated in the contract) will not protect a seller who has made a fraudulent misrepresentation to a purchaser, such a contract clause will provide protection to a seller who has made a nonfraudulent misrepresentation.
This may be true under existing law in an action for damages, but not in a suit or countersuit for rescission of a contract including such a clause, as involved in this case. The basic distinction, as overlooked by the majority, is that in an action for damages the plaintiff is suing on the contract as a whole, which he must affirm, while in a suit for rescission the plaintiff is denying the validity of the contract, including the merger clause.
One of the primary authorities cited by the majority is 12 Williston on Contracts 467, § 1511 (3d ed 1970). In considering that citation, however, it is important to note the context in which the statement relied upon by the majority is made. Thus, the first sentence in § 1511 is as follows (at 465):
After some discussion of this subject, § 1511 of Williston, supra, then states (at 467), as quoted by the majority:
Thus, it is clear that the statement relied upon by the majority is one limited to the question of liability for damages for honest misrepresentation in a case involving a contract with such a clause, rather than the question whether such a contract may still be rescinded for such an honest misrepresentation.
The second authority cited by the majority in support of its position is 3 Corbin on Contracts § 578 (rev ed 1960). That authority, however, does not support the majority, but states (at 402-03) that:
This is also made clear by Corbin, supra, 406 n. 43, stating that:
Of equal significance is the fact that the majority, in quoting from Dobbs on Remedies 644, § 9.5 (Hornbook Series 1973), omits the sentence immediately following the statement quoted by it, and which states that:
The majority recognizes that the following rule is also stated in McCormick on Evidence 453, § 222 (Hornbook Series 1954):
The majority characterizes that statement as taken from "one of the older editions." That statement was made in McCormick on Evidence 453, § 222 (Hornbook Series 1954). The second edition of McCormick (1972) does not state a different rule, but omits all discussion of the entire subject of the parol evidence rule and related problems, such as the effect of "no representation" clauses upon the admissibility of such evidence.
Such a rule is also consistent with the general rule, as stated in Calamari & Perillo, Law of Contracts 86, § 42 (Hornbook Series 1970), that:
It is also significant to note that the 1927 case of Arnold v. National Aniline & Chemical Co., 20 F.2d 364, (2d Cir.1927), the only court decision quoted by the majority in support of the rule adopted by it, involved a counterclaim for damages for breach of warranty and fraud, rather than a countersuit for rescission of the contract, as in this case.
The previously existing law in Oregon, as I view it, is in accord with the rules as stated in Corbin and McCormick, supra. It is well established that misrepresentation need not be fraudulent to provide sufficient grounds for the rescission of a contract, but that honest misrepresentations are sufficient for that purpose, although not sufficient to impose "liability for damages." See Souza v. Jackson Co. Fed. S. & L., 256 Or. 220, 224, 472 P.2d 272 (1970), and cases cited therein.
The majority states that the decision of this court in Sharkey v. Burlingame Co., 131 Or. 185, 282 P. 546 (1929), is "not * * * contrary," to the rule stated by it and in Sharkey this court allowed rescission "on the basis of the defendant's agent's fraudulent representations." Be that as it may, this court in Sharkey, after discussing at some length (at 203-07, 282 P. at 546) the effect of so-called "merger clauses," concluded with a statement of the following rule (at 207, 282 P. at 553):
*519 This rule, as stated in Sharkey, as well as in Corbin and McCormick, supra, is also consistent with the more recent holding of the court in Farnsworth v. Feller, 256 Or. 56, 471 P.2d 792 (1970). Although that was a suit to rescind a contract with a "merger clause" for a false and fraudulent representation, the basis for decision (as stated at 65-66, 471 P.2d at 797) was not that the representation was fraudulent, but was as follows:
The rule is also consistent with the modern trend by the courts, including this court, to protect purchasers against misrepresentations, whether fraudulent or "innocent," at least to the extent of requiring repayment of the purchase price by one who would otherwise "retain the fruits of a bargain induced by such misrepresentations," rather than to apply the old rule of caveat emptor in such cases.
Under the new rule of law as adopted by the majority in this case, sellers of real property, by the single expedient of inserting in earnest money agreements and other land sales contracts the provision approved by the majority, may completely protect themselves from the rescission of contracts induced by misrepresentations of their agents unless the purchaser is able to sustain the heavy burden of proof that such representations were made fraudulently. Thus, by the simple addition of such a "boiler plate" provision in the "fine print" of a form contract, a purchaser to whom a real estate agent has made a negligent or "mistaken" representation regarding such important facts as the boundaries, acreage, or zoning restrictions, now has no remedy by rescission of such a transaction despite the fact that at the time of the transaction he relied upon the misrepresentation and had no reason to know that it was not true, and thus no reason to question the inclusion of such clause in the contract. This new rule not only represents an important change in the law of Oregon relating to rescission of contracts, but a rule which, in my best judgment, is a "backward step" at a time when, as recognized by most other courts, purchasers of both real and personal property are in need of more, rather than less, protection.
For these reasons, I most respectfully dissent.
[*]  HOLMAN, J., did not participate in this decision.
[1]  Plaintiffs filed a separate law action to recover on the two notes. That action was tried before the court without a jury and judgment entered for plaintiffs. The defendants have also appealed from that judgment, but defendants agree that the decision in the equity suit for specific performance will control the appeal in the law action.
[2]  "7. Warranties. It is understood and agreed that all the properties sold hereunder are sold `as is' and that there have been no warranties expressed or implied as to the condition of the properties or representations made with reference to the business known as `Dad's' or real property which have induced the purchasers to purchase either of the properties described in paragraph 1, hereinabove."
[1]  3 Williston on Contracts § 1500 (1920), as cited in Sharkey v. Burlingame Co., 131 Or. 185, 207, 282 P. 546 (1929), states the following rule, supported by the citation of many cases:

"It is not necessary in order that a contract may be rescinded for fraud or misrepresentation that the party making the misrepresentation should have known that it was false. Innocent misrepresentation is sufficient. For though the representation may have been made innocently, it would be unjust to allow one who has made false representations even innocently, to retain the fruits of a bargain induced by such representations. * * *"
Restatement of Agency 2d § 260 (1958), although not directly in point, states the rule that:
"(1) An innocent principal can, by contract with another, relieve himself of liability for deceit because of unauthorized fraud by a servant or other agent upon the other party.
"(2) A contract with, or conveyance to, the principal obtained by his agent through misrepresentations can be rescinded by the other party to the contract or conveyance prior to a change of position by the principal, even though the contract provides that `it shall not be affected by misrepresentations not contained therein' and includes a statement that the agent has made no representations." (Emphasis added)
[2]  This rule is also consistent with our previous holding in Johns-Manville Corp. v. Heckart et al., 129 Or. 505, 277 P. 821 (1929), involving a counterclaim for damages for breach of oral warranties in a sale made under a contract with a similar clause to the effect that there were "no promises" not expressed in the contract. This court held that evidence of such oral warranties was admissible even though the oral warranties were not claimed to have been made fraudulently. The court held (at 510, 277 P. 821) that "the whole evidence" showed that the statement in the contract clause "was not true."