RULING
This matter comes before the Court on the motion of third-party defendant Electrical & Instrumentation Unlimited, Inc. [EIU] for partial summary judgment in its favor dismissing the portion of Kerr-McGee Corporation’s third party complaint that seeks contractual indemnity from EIU. The plaintiff in this suit, Ferdinand Hebert, alleges that he was injured when he slipped and fell on an oily deck while employed by C-E Natco on an offshore platform owned and operated by Kerr-McGee on the Outer Continental Shelf off of the Texas coast. Hebert sued Kerr-McGee under the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, 43 U.S.C. § 1333. Kerr-McGee in turn third-partied EIU alleging that Hebert’s claim was encompassed by an indemnity provision contained in a master service agreement between Kerr-McGee and EIU.
The master service agreement between EIU and Kerr-McGee is dated September 15, 1980. Paragraph 6 of the contract obligates EIU to defend and indemnify Kerr-McGee against the various described claims “whether thе same is caused or contributed to by the negligence of Kerr-McGee, its agents or employees.” On March 27, 1981, Kerr-McGee issued a work order to EIU for an electrical installation job on Kerr-McGee’s High Island Block 508-A platform. The plaintiff allegedly slipped on oil leaking from an EIU temporary generator while operations under the work order were still in progress, on January 24, 1982.
I. ISSUES
In pursuing its motion, EIU contends that the indemnity agreement is invalid under the Louisiana Oilfield Anti-Indemnity Act, La.R.S. 9:2780, or, аlternatively, if Louisiana law is not applicable, that Texas law applies to invalidate the agreement, under Tex.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 2212b. Kerr-McGee in turn responds alternatively (1) that the state anti-indemnity statutes are inconsistent with controlling federal law and that they are therefore inapplicable under the Lands Act, (2) that, if Texas law is in fact applicable, the indemnity provision is enforceable to the extent that EIU has procured insurance pursuant to the master service agreement, and (3) that, if Louisiana law applies, that section 2780 is nonetheless inapplicable on the facts of this case. These varied alternative contentions all lead to one initial issue: Which body of law governs the contractual indemnity claim asserted in this case?
II. CHOICE OF LAW
Federal Law
The laws of the adjacent state are applicable on the Shelf “[t]o the extent that they are applicable and not inconsistent with [OCSLA] or with other Federal laws and regulatiоns of the Secretary [of the Interior].” 43 U.S.C. § 1333(a)(2)(A). In
United States v. Seckinger,
Adjacent State Conflicts Law Under the Lands Act
The interests and contentions of the parties have shifted somewhat during the course of briefing and arguments on this motion. Initially, EIU urged that Texas conflicts law applied here in a fashion that mandated resort to Louisiana contractual indemnity law. As the arguments developed, however, it soon became apparent that this particular contention might better serve Kerr-McGee. The Louisiana Oilfield Anti-Indemnity Act might not apply to bar this particular indemnity claim because the specific work order involved here was issued prior to the statute’s effective date. 1 Yet, regardless of these shifting interests, the preliminary issue remains before the Court of whether the Lands Act incorporates the choice-of-law principles of the adjacent state as surrogate federal law.
Broad language in a recent case by the Supreme Court and in another recent case by the Fifth Circuit indicates that the Lands Act supersedes normal choice-of-law rules such that the adjacent state’s law of contractual indemnity automatically governs indemnity provisions applicable оn the Shelf.
See Gulf Offshore Co. v. Mobil Oil Corp.,
In
Chevron,
the Supreme Court held that Louisiana’s one-year prescriptive period, rather than the maritime doctrine of laches, applied to a personal injury action arising on a platform on the Shelf off the Louisiana coast. The court of appeals below had applied maritime law on the theory that, under Louisiana conflicts law, the one-year prescriptive period contained in former article 3536 was not binding outside of a Louisiana forum and that, hence, article 3536 was not appliсable in a federal forum hearing a Lands Act case.
See Chevron,
[A] federal court applying Louisiana law under § 1333(a)(2) of the Lands Act is applying it as federal law — as the law of the federal forum. Since the federal court is not, then, applying the law of another forum in the usual sense, ordinary conflict of laws principles have no relevance. Article 3536 is “applicable” in federal court under the Lands Act just as it would be applicable in a Louisiana court.
This reading of
Chevron
is consistent with the law in other contexts in which state law is adopted as surrogate federal law. For example, the Federal Tort Claims Act provides for adoption of “the law of the place where the act or omission occurred.” 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). In
Richards v. United States,
Construing the Lands Act to permit resort to the adjacent state’s conflicts law certainly requires no tortured construction of the statutory language. Section 1333(a)(2)(A) states simply that, where applicable and not inconsistent with other Federal law, “the civil and criminal laws of each adjacent State, now in effect or hereafter adopted, amended, or repealed are declared tо be the law of the United States for ... artificial islands and fixed structures erected” on the Shelf. Looking solely on the face of the statute, the phrase “civil ... laws” can surely encompass a state’s civil laws concerning choice of law in contract actions.
Nor does construing the Act in this manner conflict with the underlying purposes evidenced in its legislative history. The prime motivating factor in Congress’ decision to adopt adjacent state law as surrogate fedеral law was the perceived undesirability of application of federal admiralty law to Shelf structures.
See Rodrigue,
Accordingly; pursuant to the foregoing review Of the jurisprudence, the statutory language and the relevant legislаtive history, the Court concludes that the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, and in partic *772 ular 43 U.S.C. § 1333(a)(2)(A), incorporates the conflicts-of-law rules of the adjacent state as surrogate federal law in cases arising on the Shelf, subject to the reservation under Chevron that the Lands Act forum must be treated as the local forum for purposes of the conflicts analysis. 4 The Court will now turn to the question of how the conflicts law of the adjacent state, Texas, operates in this case.
Application of Texas Conflicts Principles
If an аction similar to this one were to arise shoreside in Texas, the basic contractual choice-of-law scheme could be stated in fairly simple terms. At the outset, in the absence of a contrary manifestation, the initial presumption is that the parties intend for the law of the jurisdiction where the contract is made to govern.
E.g., Lockwood Corp. v. Black,
Although the background conflicts principles are easily stated, the question of how those principles apply in the instant case is not as easily resolved. A critical issue arises as to whether these fundamental principles should be applied to the master service agreement, or instead to the specific work order for the electrical work on the Texas Shelf platform. If the master service contract is the relevant agreement, then Louisiana substantive law would probably apply to the indemnity claim presented here. No particular location for performance of services was contemplated when the parties executed the blanket agreement. Thomas Stokes dep. at 16. EIU may well have performed services under the agreement on platforms governed by Louisiana law in addition to platforms, such as the one in the instаnt case, that are governed by Texas law.
Id.
at 14. As the place of performance was unspecified and was in fact spread across the two jurisdictions, Texas conflicts law would point to application of the law where the agreement was executed. The negotiations leading up to this master service agreement were all conducted in Louisiana and the signatures required to execute the agreement were all affixed in Louisiana. Under Texas law, the agreement was therefore made in Louisiana.
See, e.g., Diaz v. Southeastern Drilling Co.,
The specific work order issued for the electrical installation work on the Texas Shelf platform constitutes the relevant contract for the contractual choice-of-law analysis. As this Court has noted in a related context, a master service agreement does not itself bind the parties to perform any services. It merely sets forth their agree
*773
ment to abide by cеrtain terms should they contract to perform services in the future.
Moser v. Aminoil, U.S.A., Inc.,
Keying the conflicts analysis to the work order rather than the master service agreement is particularly appropriate on the facts of this case. The parties executed the master service agreement here in 1980, over seven years after the passage of the Texas statute barring indemnification against an indemnitee’s negligence in oilfield contracts. To resort to the master service agreement as the relevant contract for the conflicts analysis here would effectively permit the parties to avoid controlling Texas law on the point by merely incorporating terms from a contract executed in another jurisdiction into a separate and independent contract that is to be performed wholly in a jurisdiction governed by Texas law. Parties should not be permitted to avoid the law of one jurisdiction by executing in anоther jurisdiction a blanket agreement that specifies the terms of distinct contracts that they may subsequently perform wholly in the first jurisdiction.
Cf. Moser,
Thus, for the foregoing reasons, the Court concludes that Texas conflicts principles direct the application of Texas internal law to the indemnity claim presented here.
III. ARTICLE 2212b
Kerr-McGee does not dispute that, absent some statutory exception, Section 2 of the Texas statute pertaining to oilfield indemnity, Tex.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 2212b will bar its indemnity claim. Instead, Kerr-McGee relies upon the exception contained in section 4(c) of the Act, which provides:
(c) The provisions of Section 2 of this Act shall not apply to any agreement providing for indemnity with respect to claims for personal injury or death to indemnitor’s employees or agents, or the employees or agents of indemnitor’s sub-con *774 traсtors if the parties agree in writing that such indemnity obligation will be supported by available liability insurance coverage to be furnished by indemnitor, provided, however, that such indemnity obligation shall be only to the extent of the coverages and dollar limits of insurance agreed to be furnished; but in no event shall said insurance be required in an amount in excess of twelve times state basic limits for bodily injury, approved by the Board of Insurance Commissioners in accordance with Article 5.15 of thе Texas Insurance Code.
Yet EIU has established in response that Hebert was an employee of CE Natco, which is a subcontractor not of the indemnitor, EIU, but rather of the indemnitee, Kerr-McGee. The exception in section 4(c) is therefore inapplicable because the instant claim does not fall within the ambit of “claims for personal injury ... to indemnitor’s employees or agents, or the employees or agents of indemnitor’s subcontractors.” Thus article 2212b applies to bar Kerr-McGee’s claim for contractual indemnity.
Accordingly, the motion of third party defendant Electrical & Instrumentation Unlimited, Inc. for partial summary judgment in its favor dismissing the third-party demand of third-party plaintiff Kerr-McGee Corporation for contractual indemnity is GRANTED.
Notes
. It is settled law that the Act is not applicable to an indemnity claim under a master service contract where the alleged injury occurs before September 11, 1981.
See Smith v. Shell Oil Co.,
.
See also Chevron,
The Court of Appeals acknowledged that Rodrigue forecloses direct applicability of the "inconsistent" laches doctrine through admi *771 ralty law. But, by applying laches as a matter of federal common law, it sought to reintroduce the doctrine through a back door. This approach subverts the congressional intent documented in Rodrigue, id. [395 U.S.]. at 359-66,89 S.Ct., at 1839-42 , that admiralty doctrines should not apply under the Lands Act.
... Congress made clear provision for filling in the "gaps" in federal law; it did not intend that federal courts fill in those “gaps" themselves by creating new federal common law. (emphasis in original) (footnote deletеd).
. In its
Chevron
opinion, the Supreme Court stated that its directive that Louisiana Civil Code article 3536 apply on the Shelf "is not to imply that a federal court adjudicating a claim under state law as absorbed in the Lands Act must function as it would in a diversity case.”
. The Court respectfully disagrees with, and declines to follow, the contrary holding in
Greer,
. The approach to the choice of law question presented here is compatible with Texas case law. In
Grace v. Orkin Exterminating Co., Inc.,
Similarly, even if the master service contract is initially resorted to as the relevant contract for the conflicts analysis, the operations under the March 27, 1981 work order can be easily severed from other operations subject to the master service agreement. As the parties have not manifested a contrary intent, Texas law therefore can apply to these particular operations even though operations subject to the Louisiana-executed master service contract are also pursued in other jurisdictions. This refinement in the choice of law analysis under
Grace
is also consonant with other federal decisions which look to the precise contractual оbligation involved in determining the law applied to the subsidiary indemnity obligation.
Cf. O’Dell v. North River Ins. Co.,
