OPINION
Expro Americas, LLC (“Expro”) sued Sanguine Gas Exploration, LLC (“Sanguine”) for allegedly breaching its agreement to provide defense and indemnity to Expro. Both parties filed motions for summary judgment. The trial court granted Sanguine’s motion and denied Ex-pro’s motion. We affirm the portion of the trial court’s judgment in which the court denied Expro’s motion, reverse the portion of the judgment in which the court granted Sanguine’s motion, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. Background
Sanguine is an Oklahoma-based entity which operated an oil-and-gas lease in Wheeler County, Texas. Sanguine hired Anadarko Consultants, Inc. (“Anadarko”) “to design, manage, and directly supervise” a drilling project on the lease. Ana-darko had previously performed similar services for Sanguine. Tom Garner was the owner of Anadarko.
Roy Judd, an employee of Anadarko, worked as “company man” at the well site. 1 In this capacity, Judd frequently requested services and equipment from contractors and signed hundreds of job tickets pertaining to these services. Judd contacted Expro to request “choke flow services.” Expro employee Brandon Schreck provided the requested services and then presented Judd with a job ticket to sign. The reverse side of the ticket was entitled “Rental and Service Agreement Terms and Conditions” and contained eight separate provisions. Provision seven was entitled “RELEASE & INDEMNITY.” According to verbiage in this provision, the parties agreed to indemnify each other and procure insurance covering their respective indemnity obligations. Schreck did not explain any of the language or refer Judd to the reverse side of the ticket. *919 Further, Judd signed the ticket without reading the provisions. Sanguine received a copy of the ticket and paid for the services rendered by Expro without objection.
Subsequently, Expro was named as a defendant in a lawsuit arising from a fatal accident that occurred at the well site. Expro demanded Sanguine provide defense and indemnity in connection with the underlying suit. After Sanguine rejected the demand, Expro filed a cross-claim against Sanguine. The trial court granted the parties’ joint motion to sever Expro’s cross-claim. The parties then filed opposing motions for summary judgment. The trial court granted Sanguine’s motion without specifying its reasoning and denied Expro’s motion. Expro now appeals.
II. Standard of Review
We review a summary judgment de novo.
Valence Operating Co. v. Dorsett,
A party moving for traditional summary judgment must establish there is no genuine issue of material fact and he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c);
Provident Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Knott,
In a no-evidence motion for summary judgment, the movant must specifically identify the elements for which there is no evidence.
Walker v. Thomasson Lumber Co.,
When both parties move for summary judgment and the.trial court grants one motion and denies the other, we review summary-judgment evidence from both parties and determine all questions presented.
FM Props. Operating Co. v. City of Austin,
III. Objections to Summary-Judgment Evidence
As an initial matter, we note that Sanguine contends certain portions of an affidavit filed by Expro are inadmissible because they incorporate expert opinions but Expro neither designated the affiant as an expert nor established his qualifications. Failure to designate a testifying expert and an expert’s alleged lack of qual
*920
ifications are defects of form on which an appellant must object and obtain a ruling to preserve error.
Duncan-Hubert v. Mitchell,
IV. Breach of Contract
We next consider whether the trial court erred by granting Sanguine’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment. In its no-evidence motion, Sanguine argued Expro cannot present any evidence supporting the elements of its breach-of-contract claim or enforceability of the indemnity provision.
To recover for breach of contract, a plaintiff must show (1) existence of a valid contract, (2) the plaintiff performed or tendered performance, (3) the defendant breached the contract, and (4) the plaintiff suffered damages as a result of the defendant’s breach.
Parker Drilling Co. v. Romfor Supply Co.,
Uncontroverted evidence establishes the following facts: (1) Expro performed services at the well-site; (2) Judd signed the job ticket presented by Expro; (3) the reverse side of the job ticket contained an indemnity provision; (4) Expro demanded indemnity from Sanguine; and (5) Sanguine denied Expro’s demand. Courts presume a party that signs a contract knows its contents, and absent fraud or imposition, a party’s failure to read an instrument before signing is not a ground for avoiding it.
In re Bank of Am., N.A.,
V. Actual and Apparent Authority
Expro contends the trial court should have granted summary judgment in its favor because the evidence conclusively established that Judd had actual or apparent authority to subscribe Sanguine to the indemnity agreement.
A. Actual Authority
1. Relevant Law
A principal is liable for the acts of its agent only when the agent has actual or apparent authority to perform those acts or when the principal ratifies the agent’s conduct.
3
Reliant Energy Servs.,
*921
Inc. v. Cotton Valley Compression, L.L.C.,
Actual authority refers to responsibility a principal (1) intentionally confers upon an agent, (2) intentionally allows the agent to believe he possesses, or (3) by want of due care allows the agent to believe he possesses.
2616 S. Loop L.L.C. v. Health Source Home Care, Inc.,
Actual authority may be expressed and implied.
2616 S. Loop L.L.C.,
2. Analysis
We begin our analysis by summarizing the summary-judgment evidence. In his deposition, Judd provided the following testimony. He was employed by Anadar-ko as the company man overseeing drilling of the well. It was standard operating procedure for Judd as a company man to sign job tickets thereby “acknowledging that the work had been completed so [the service provider] could get paid,” and he did not understand what other legal effects his signature had. He signed over one-thousand tickets during the project. No one from “Anadarko or Sanguine ever communicated to [Judd] either in writing or orally that [he had] authority to bind Sanguine to certain release, indemnity or hold harmless language like provisions that are already found in the Expro field tickets,” and Judd never told anyone he had such authority. Judd was the person who requested Expro’s services. When Judd signed Expro’s job ticket, he knew there was writing on the reverse side, but he did not read it. He was unaware of the indemnity provision before the accident made the basis of the underlying claim.
Sanguine is listed as “CUSTOMER” on the Expro job ticket, and Judd signed the ticket as “CUSTOMER REP.” Furthermore, the following language appears directly above the signature line:
EQUIPMENT LISTED HEREIN RECEIVED; I HAVE READ AND UNDERSTAND THE TERMS AND CONDITIONS ON THE REVERSE SIDE AND REPRESENT THAT I AM AUTHORIZED TO SIGN THIS AGREEMENT AS A CUSTOMER’S AGENT.
Expro employee Schreck provided the following relevant testimony during his deposition. Judd requested Expro to provide choke flow services at the well site. Schreck performed the services and presented Judd with the job ticket. Schreck believed he was doing business with Sanguine when he communicated with Judd. *922 However, Schreck did not communicate with Judd regarding the language on the reverse side of the ticket. Expro instructed Schreck to obtain a signature on the tickets so Expro could “start rent” and “show proof of delivery of service.” Schreck was also instructed that only a company man may sign a job ticket, not “another foreman or supervisor or driller or tool pusher.”
The following excerpts from the deposition of Sanguine corporate representative Tom Fuller are relevant. Anadarko was hired to provide “the technical expertise to drill a well.” Anadarko’s duties included requesting services and products from other contractors and determining whether choke flow services were necessary. Fuller has been aware since the 1990s that company men sign documents at the well site. The purpose of company men signing job tickets is to confirm that equipment and services have been provided. When Judd signed the Expro ticket, Sanguine was aware that the back side of many job tickets contained terms; however, “none of that had ever really been brought to our attention or had been the subject of any issue” before this lawsuit. Sanguine did not give Anadarko authority to bind Sanguine on the job tickets. Further, Sanguine did not provide any restrictions or instructions to Anadarko regarding Judd’s duties as a company man. Sanguine instructed Anadarko owner Garner to verify the accuracy of the job tickets before forwarding the tickets to Sanguine. Service providers understood that they would receive payment from Sanguine, not Anadarko. Sanguine ultimately received the Expro job ticket and paid for the services rendered without objection.
We hold that the foregoing evidence does not conclusively establish that Sanguine expressly authorized Anadarko or Judd to sign indemnification agreements on its behalf.
See Reliant Energy Servs.,
Nevertheless, arguing that “[wjithout the authority to enter into contracts with service providers, Judd could not have obtained necessary services to perform his duties,” Expro contends the evidence conclusively establishes that Judd had implied actual authority to bind Sanguine. Further, Expro argues that a principal could choose to disregard any terms it found inconvenient, even though the goods or services were already provided, if a company man lacked authority to bind his principal to the terms of a job ticket.
To support its position, Expro cites
Polland & Cook v. Lehmann,
Expro also cites
Augusta Development Co. v. Fish Oil Well Servicing Co., Inc.,
We conclude that
Polland
and
Augusta Development Co.
are distinguishable from the present case. Both cases involved an agent who was assigned the task of hiring contractors and negotiating payment of their services. The courts determined that agreeing to a referral fee or an interest rate was subsumed within such duties. However, under the summary-judgment evidence, we conclude that subjecting Sanguine to massive financial risk of indemnifying Expro for its own negligence would not be an ordinary aspect of Anadarko’s duty of retaining services and equipment for the project.
See Rourke v. Garza,
We recognize that Judd frequently determined which services were necessary for the project, requested those services, and signed the service providers’ job tickets, some of which included indemnity provisions. As discussed below, Judd’s duties differed from the signatory in
Rourke,
who did not order the services.
Expro also argues Judd held himself out as having the requisite authority because the ticket contained language indicating that the signatory read all terms and conditions of the agreement and has authority to sign.
See also In re Bank of Am.,
Although Judd had authority as the company man to determine and request necessary services and to sign job tickets, no evidence supports an inference that execution of indemnity agreements was a necessary and proper facet of his responsibilities.
See Reliant Energy Servs.,
B. Apparent Authority
We next determine whether a fact issue exists regarding Judd’s apparent authority to bind Sanguine to the indemnity provision.
1. Relevant Law
Apparent authority is the power of an agent to affect the legal relations of the principal by transactions with a third party.
Ames v. Great S. Bank,
Apparent authority arises either from (1) a principal knowingly permitting an agent to hold himself out as having authority, or (2) a principal’s actions which lack such ordinary care as to clothe an agent with the indicia of authority, thus leading a reasonably prudent person to believe that the agent has the authority he purports to exercise.
Gaines,
2. Analysis
Both parties refer to
Rourke,
in which the Texas Supreme Court addressed whether an agent had apparent authority to sign an indemnity agreement on behalf of his principal.
The Texas Supreme Court analyzed whether Har-Con’s prior dealings with Rourke or the fact that Har-Con placed Newton in the position of superintendent gave rise to Newton’s apparent authority to sign the indemnification agreement on Har-Con’s behalf. Id. at 802. First, Rourke argued Newton had apparent authority because in prior dealings, Har-Con had paid several bills based on job tickets signed by various Har-Con employees and these tickets included indemnity provi *926 sions. Id. at 803. The court held Har-Con’s payment of prior tickets did not give rise to apparent authority because (1) Har-Con was not aware of the provisions until after Newton signed the ticket at issue, (2) no facts supported a finding that Har-Con should have been aware of the provision, such as discussions with Rourke pertaining to indemnity, (3) someone at Har-Con’s Houston office, not Newton, requested Rourke’s services, and (4) neither Newton nor the Rourke delivery man was aware of the indemnification provision— they both believed the ticket merely memorialized delivery and rendered Har-Con liable for the delivered equipment. Id.
Second, Rourke argued that Newton’s position as general superintendent of the Galveston-area sites supported the jury’s apparent-authority finding. Id. The court, recognizing that “apparent authority [based on an agent’s position] exists only as to those things ordinarily entrusted to one occupying such a position,” held “the signing of such broad indemnity contracts is not a duty ordinarily entrusted to a person of Newton’s position” because “[such agreements] may have great financial impact on the parties, and are therefore not of the kind ordinarily executed by a superintendent of job sites.” Id. at 804. Although Newton was supervising and directing the work at four or five job sites, “[h]e was not in charge of acquiring supplies, other than small items, but would order them through Har-Con’s office in Houston.” Id. As additional support for its position, the court explained that apparent authority may be established only “by facts known to the party dealing with the agent and [relied] upon by him in such dealings.” Id. No evidence supported an inference that Rourke relied on Newton’s position as superintendent when the ticket was signed. Id. In fact, the evidence indicated that Rourke delivery men were permitted to have the tickets signed by any Har-Con employee, not just a superintendent. Id.
Expro argues the present case is factually distinguishable from Rourke. It is uncontroverted that Judd was the company man who ordered Expro’s services and signed the job ticket. Judd testified any observer would have believed he was representing Sanguine, and Fuller testified service providers such as Expro understood that Sanguine would pay their fees. Fuller testified it is industry standard for company men to sign terms and that he has known this fact since the 1990s. He stated that Sanguine knew there were terms on the back of tickets. However, he also testified that Sanguine did not instruct Judd or Anadarko relative to Judd’s authority to sign tickets. Expro division manager Messer testified it is industry standard that company men request services and products and sign job tickets, and company men generally sign job tickets without question. Messer testified that tickets often contain terms and conditions on their reverse side which “can include” indemnity provisions, and an experienced operator should be aware of this.
Considering the evidence in the light most favorable to Expro, we conclude the evidence raises a fact issue regarding whether Expro could have reasonably believed Judd had authority to bind Sanguine to the indemnity provision.
See Gaines,
In sum, Expro did not conclusively establish that Judd had authority to sign the indemnification provision on behalf of Sanguine, and Sanguine did not conclusively establish the opposite. Accordingly, we hold that the summary-judgment evidence presents a fact issue relative to Judd’s authority to bind Sanguine to the indemnity provision on the reverse side of the job ticket.
VI. Fair-Notice Requirements
We next address Expro’s contention that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment against Expro because the indemnity clause did not comply with the conspicuousness element of the fair-notice requirements. 6
Because indemnification of a party from its own negligence involves an extraordinary shifting of risk, the Texas Supreme Court has enacted fair-notice requirements, including the conspicuousness requirement.
Dresser Indus., Inc. v. Page Petroleum, Inc.,
Under the conspicuousness requirement, something must appear on the face of the document to attract the attention of a reasonable person.
Dresser Indus.,
Sanguine argues that (1) language on the front of the job ticket does not sufficiently refer readers to the provisions on the reverse side, (2) the provisions on the reverse side were written in “incredibly small” font and Judd testified that the provisions are “unreadable,” and (3) the tickets were printed on colored, “onion skin-type paper” that further affected the readability of the provisions.
As noted above, the front of the job ticket contained the following capitalized language:
EQUIPMENT LISTED HEREIN RECEIVED; I HAVE READ AND UNDERSTAND THE TERMS AND CONDITIONS ON THE REVERSE SIDE AND REPRESENT THAT I AM AUTHORIZED TO SIGN THIS AGREEMENT AS A CUSTOMER’S AGENT.
This court has recognized that indemnity provisions included among unrelated terms and conditions on the reverse side of a document generally do not satisfy the conspicuousness requirement when the provision is not set apart by contrasting font or typeface.
See U.S. Rentals, Inc. v. Mundy Serv. Corp.,
Here, however, the one-page ticket specifically refers to terms on the reverse side, and the heading, typeface, and font of the indemnity provision are sufficient to attract a reasonable person’s attention.
See Tynes v. Nations Rent of Tex. L.P.,
No. 10-05-00372-CV,
VIII. Texas Oilfield Anti-Indemnity Act
Finally, although it is unclear from the summary-judgment pleadings whether Sanguine actually sought judgment based on Expro’s alleged failure to comply with the mutual insurance requirement of the Texas Oilfield Anti-Indemnity Act (“TO-ALA”), 8 because both parties briefed the issue, we will address it.
Indemnity provisions between oil-well drilling companies are void unless specific requirements are met to make the obligations mutual through the purchase of insurance.
See Cudd Pressure Control, Inc. v. Sonat Exploration Co.,
It is undisputed that the indemnity provision in the Expro ticket contains a subsection whereby the parties agreed to support their indemnity obligations by obtaining insurance coverage. Nevertheless, Sanguine argues that the mutual insurance requirement was not satisfied because Sanguine did not agree to procure the insurance coverage. However, the merit of this argument hinges on whether Sanguine was bound by the indemnity provision — an issue that was not conclusively established by either party in its motion for summary judgment.
IX. Conclusion
In sum, we sustain in part and overrule in part Expro’s sole appellate issue. We affirm the portion of the judgment in which the trial court denied Expro’s motion, reverse the portion of the judgment in which the court granted Sanguine’s motion, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. In its motion for summary judgment, Expro cited the following definition of "company man”: "The representative of the oil company or operator on a drilling location. For land operations, the company man is responsible for operational issues on the location, including the safety and efficiency of the project. Even administrative managers are expected to respond to the direction of the company man when they are on the rigsite.” See Schlumberger Oilfield Glossary, www. glossary.oilfield.slb.com/Display.cfm?Term= company% 20man, last accessed October 2011.
. Apparently, Sanguine also objects that certain portions of Judd’s deposition testimony amount to inadmissible legal conclusions. We do not address this objection because those portions of Judd’s testimony are inconsequential to our disposition.
. At the trial court, Expro filed supplemental briefing regarding ratification. However, on appeal, Expro did not argue ratification until it filed a reply brief. Consequently, we will not consider the ratification.
See
Tex.R.App. P. 38.3;
Marsh v. Livingston,
No. 14-09-00011-CV,
. Although Rourke pertains to apparent authority and is addressed at length in the subsequent section, it is instructive in addressing implied actual authority.
. Expro also argues that disfavor for indemnity agreements is neutralized by the fair-notice requirements of such agreements. However, the fair-notice doctrine does not affect the requirement that enforceable agreements must be signed by someone with authority.
. Expro also argues that the indemnity provision complied with the express-negligence doctrine, a separate element of the fair-notice requirements. We will not address this issue because Sanguine did not argue that the provision violated the express-negligence doctrine.
.
But see Dana Corp. v. Microtherm, Inc.,
No. 13-05-00281-CV,
. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. §§ 127.001-127.007 (West 2011).
