Gulf Oil Corp. v. Spence & Howe Construction Co.

356 S.W.2d 382, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2375
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 29, 1962
Docket13895
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 356 S.W.2d 382 (Gulf Oil Corp. v. Spence & Howe Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gulf Oil Corp. v. Spence & Howe Construction Co., 356 S.W.2d 382, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2375 (Tex. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

BELL, Chief Justice.

An employee of appellee was injured by the negligent acts of an employee of appellant while working on a job that appellee was performing for appellant at appellant’s refinery at Port Arthur, Texas. Appellee’s employee, Mr. Cummings, sued appellant for damages resulting to him. Appellant reached a settlement of the claim and the amount agreed upon was paid. Appellant in this case sued appellee, claiming that under the contract between them appellee had agreed to indemnify appellant against all liability to anyone who was injured in connection with the work to be performed by appellee under the contract, the indemnity being even against liability created by the negligent acts of appellant’s employees.

In a trial before a jury, the jury exonerated appellee of any negligence; found appellant’s agent’s acts to be solely the cause of Cummings’ injuries, and found the settlement made by appellant was reasonable and was made in good faith. The court, however, rendered judgment in favor of appellee. Apparently the basis of the court’s judgment is that the injury occurred at a time when there was an oral contract in effect which encompassed no indemnity agreement, or that the indemnity provision of the written contract, executed subsequent to the injury, did not cover the injury caused solely by appellant’s employee.

The position of the appellant is that all of the work performed by appellee was performed under the terms of the written contract which contained an indemnity provision indemnifying it against all liability for any injury received by anyone in connection with the work to be performed under the contract, including indemnity against liability for acts of appellant’s own employees.

. The position of appellee is that at the time of the injury to Mr. Cummings work was being performed under an oral contract containing no indemnity agreement. Further it contends the written contract on which appellant relies does not indemnify appellant against the acts of its own agents.

The evidence shows that the work of driving piling for six propane tanks was commenced by appellee on October 26, 1954. This work was commenced at the oral direction of appellant. Mr. Cummings was *385 injured October 29. A written purchase order, which all parties treat as the written contract, was executed by appellant November 3 and by appellee on November 4. The written contract contained the indemnity agreement which we will notice specifically later in this opinion. It also contained this provision: “By oral agreement work under this order commenced on October 26, 1954.”

Practically all of the testimony dealing with the negotiations for the contract came from Mr. Hartzog, President of appellee. He did not remember what representative of appellant he talked to but he said it was probably Mr. Marble. Neither could he remember just when negotiations began. He stated it could have been a day or so or a week before October 26. He further stated he could not state precisely how the negotiations commenced but assumed they proceeded as in the previous contracts between the parties for like work. It appeared from other evidence that there had been some 54 contracts involving driving of piling for appellant by appellee between 1951 and October, 1954. The negotiations would, as did this contract, commence by a telephone call from appellant asking appellee for a bid. Appellee would then quote a price. Then, as in this case, appellee would confirm the oral bid by letter. In this case apparently the bid as to prices was accepted orally over the telephone and appellee was told to confirm the bid by letter. This was done by letter, dated October 27. The letter was addressed to appellant and then stated: “We propose to furnish labor, supervision, etc., to drive piling for 6 propane tanks at the following schedule of prices: * * Then follows a listing of hourly charges for various types of work. One item listed reads: “Insurance and assessment at cost.” The evidence given by Mr. Hartzog shows he assumed that the work would be done pursuant to a purchase order similar to the ones that had been issued on prior jobs. He knew it would contain a form of indemnity similar to that on the previous jobs. He knew that appellee must furnish appellant with insurance containing contractual coverage endorsement. On all previous jobs the work had been done under a written purchase order. In a few instances work had commenced by oral direction of appellant and the purchase order subsequently issued. The purchase orders, except the last one signed immediately before the one here involved, contained an indemnity agreement expressly excluding any liability by appellee for the acts of appellant. The one here involved and the one immediately preceding it were worded the same and did not expressly exclude liability of appellee for the negligent acts of appellant. Appellee, however, did not actually know of any change in wording though it executed this and the previous purchase order. In his testimony Mr. Hartzog testified the purchase order expressed the entire agreement between appellee and appellant.

We are of the view there was only one contract and it was the written purchase order and it covered all work done by ap-pellee in the driving of piling for 6 propane tanks.

The rule with regard to whether oral exchanges between an offeror and offeree form a contract between the parties, or, whether a written agreement covering the same subject subsequently executed constitutes the contract so that all previous oral representations are merged into the written instrument, is a matter of the intention of the parties. If by oral exchange all of the terms of the contract have been agreed upon and the parties intend to reduce the agreement to writing only so the writing is intended as a memorandum of the completed contract, there is no merger. If, however, the parties intend there shall be no contract formed by the oral exchange, but intend that the written instrument subsequently executed shall be the contract, there is a merger of the prior and contemporaneous exchanges and the written instrument becomes the contract. If all of the terms of a proposed contract are not orally agreed upon but there is a subsequent writing in which all the terms are agreed upon, the writing becomes the contract and that which *386 preceded it was merely a part of the negotiations leading to the contract. Friedman et al. v. Schleuter et al., 105 Ark. 580, 151 S.W. 696.

The difficulty is not so much as to what the rule of law is as is its application.

Here we think the parties themselves by their acts and the words of their written agreement show, as a matter of law, the intention to make the written purchase order dated November 3, 1954, applicable to all work done. The evidence shows a prior course of dealing between the parties involving the same type of work and in each instance the work was performed under a written purchase order issued by appellant. In some previous instances verbal direction was given to start the work prior to the execution of the written order, but in each such instance the written order followed. Mr. Hartzog testified he knew a purchase order similar to those previously executed would be executed. All of the terms of this particular contract had not been agreed upon until the written order was signed.

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Bluebook (online)
356 S.W.2d 382, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-oil-corp-v-spence-howe-construction-co-texapp-1962.