Anthony G. Guidry appeals from the district court’s order enforcing the settlement reached by Guidry and defendants Halliburton Geophysical Services, Inc., Edison Chouest Offshore, Inc., and Galliano Marine Services. Guidry contends that the district court erred in finding that the settlement agreement precluded any future claim for maintenance. We affirm.
I.
Anthony Guidry became ill in the course of performing his duties on the R/V Sea Star during the summer of 1990. Guidry’s illness was diagnosed as pneumonia and he remained in England for treatment. Upon returning to the United States, Guidry’s physicians found that his pneumonia had been cured. Guidry later developed osteo-myelitis, however, which his doctor attributed to the pneumonia. On July 3, 1991, Guidry brought suit in United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas against Galliano Marine Service, his employer, Edison Chouest Offshore, Inc., owner of the vessel, and Halliburton Geophysical Services, Inc., charterer of the vessel. Guidry sought personal injury damages as well as maintenance and cure under the Jones Act and general maritime law.
[Guidry’s counsel]: And it is Plaintiff’s understanding that it is the opinion of counsel for the Defendant that insofar as this man’s osteomyelitis of the chest area, that this — that future payments will be paid either under the provisions— paid in accordance with — or paid under the obligation of maintenance and cure— under the cure obligation or paid by the hospitalization insurance.
The Court: As I understand it there is some question about whether payment to date have been covered by hospitalization policy which may or may not remain in effect.
[Defense Counsel]: That is true, Your Honor.
The Court: Is that right?
[Defense Counsel]: That is true.
The Court: Because plaintiff is no longer an employee, and there may be a question depending on the provisions of the policy, whether they continue to cover him. If they do not continue to cover him, then his claim for cure for the osteo-myelitis is unaffected by the settlement, is that a fair statement?
[Defense Counsel]: That is a fair statement, Your Honor.
The Court: All right.
The district court dismissed the case without prejudice by reason of settlement on February 10, retaining jurisdiction to reopen the action upon a showing that the settlement had not been completed.
Guidry received funds and closing papers from defendants on March 10. The release reserved only Guidry’s claim for cure. Gui-dry questioned the release’s failure to reserve future claims for maintenance and filed a motion to enforce the settlement on March 27. After a conference among the district court and counsel (also unrecorded), the court found that the settlement reserved Guidry’s cure claim but precluded any future claim for maintenance. The court ordered the settlement to be enforced in accord with this finding. Guidry has appealed to this court.
II.
The parties disagree on the appropriate standard of review. Guidry contends that the district court’s interpretation of the settlement agreement should be reviewed de novo. The defendants argue that we may reverse only if we find that the district court’s reading is clearly erroneous. We agree with defendants that the oral settlement’s ambiguity makes clear error review proper.
A settlement agreement is a contract.
In re Raymark Indus., Inc.,
After stating that the settlement reserved claims for both maintenance and cure, Guidry’s counsel announced that the parties had agreed that treatment for Gui-dry’s osteomyelitis would be covered by “the cure obligation or paid by the hospitalization insurance.” Judge Parker at this time attempted to clarify this point in the agreement by offering what he believed to be a “fair statement” of the matter: “If [the insurance policy provisions] do not continue to cover him, then his claim for cure of the osteomyelitis is unaffected by the settlement.” This explanation received the assent of defense counsel and the discussion concluded.
Defendants maintain that Judge Parker’s comment either renders the oral settlement ambiguous or establishes that the agreement reserves only the claim for cure. According to defendants, the assertion that Guidry’s “claim for cure ... is unaffected by the settlement” indicates that his claim for maintenance is affected, that is, precluded, by the settlement. Judge Parker’s comment in their view constitutes a correction of Guidry’s counsel’s mistaken prior statement reserving both claims. But it is also possible to read Judge Parker’s statement in a way that does not contradict counsel’s prior reservation of claims for maintenance and cure. Since Judge Parker’s comment immediately followed a statement in which cure was the only claim mentioned, his omission of the maintenance claim might not bear the freight defendants suggest. One could contend that Judge Parker was not correcting counsel’s prior misstatement, but was merely responding to the particular issue raised by counsel in the preceding statement. Moreover, one might argue that if Guidry’s counsel’s assertion that the settlement reserved both maintenance and cure was a total misstatement of the agreed-upon terms, as defendants now claim, surely defense counsel or the court would have corrected this error in a more direct manner. These two plausible interpretations of the transcript lead us to conclude that the oral settlement agreement is ambiguous. It was therefore appropriate for the district court to use extrinsic evidence as an aid in determining the intent of the parties.
Defendants stress the presence and participation of Judge Parker during settlement negotiations in contending that his reading of the agreement should not be disturbed. We agree. Where the interpretation of a settlement agreement turns on an evaluation of extrinsic evidence, a district court’s findings deserve great deference. This is especially true in cases where the court has been intimately involved in the process.
See, e.g., Raymark,
AFFIRMED.
