This appeal arises from a suit originally filed in 1975 by Mrs. Frania Tye Lee, who is the mother of the Appellant herein, Hugh S. Hunt (a/k/a Hugh Lee Hunt, hereinafter “Hugh Hunt”), against the executor of the Estate of H. L. Hunt, alleging a putative marriage with the late H. L. Hunt and, as such, an entitlement to a community interest in property acquired during the alleged relationship. After lengthy litigation on jurisdiction, venue and related matters,
Lee v. Hunt,
Having failed to persuade Hugh Hunt, counsel for the Hunt Estate filed a petition to enforce the settlement agreement on September 26, 1978. On the same' date the district court joined Hugh Hunt as a party defendant to the action, pursuant to Fed.R. Civ.P. 19(a), and ordered him to show cause why the settlement should not be enforced. In response to the petition and these orders, Hugh Hunt filed two motions: (1) to vacate or modify judgment, Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b); and (2) to dismiss the petition pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1), (2), (5) and (6), that is, for lack of subject matter and personal jurisdiction, for insufficiency of service of process, and for failure to state a .claim upon which relief can be granted. On December 7, 1978, the district court held a plenary hearing on the petition. At that time counsel for Hugh Hunt withdrew the Rule 60(b) motion. On December 19, 1979, the district court entered a memorandum ruling,
Lee v. Hunt,
Hugh Hunt now appeals from this order. He does not argue with the district court’s rulings under Rule 12(b) and does not seek to reassert his Rule 60(b) motion. Rather, he raises a confused variety of factual and legal challenges to the memorandum ruling and order of the district court. These arguments fall roughly into the following categories: (1) that there was no “meeting of the minds” and therefore no contract in the January 16 meeting; (2) that he may avoid the contract under doctrines of duress, undue influence and failure of consideration; (3) that the master settlement agreement is not a reasonable expression of the terms of the January 16 agreement; and (4) that certain provisions of the agreement are contra bones mores under Louisiana law. We deal with these arguments in turn after determining the applicable state law and reviewing the circumstances of the January 16 agreement.
I. CHOICE OF LAW
A threshold question in this case is the choice of law by which the settlement agreement should be judged. Although federal courts possess the inherent power to enforce agreements entered into in settle
*1174
ment of litigation,
1
the construction and enforcement of settlement agreements is governed by principles of state law applicable to contracts generally.
E. g., Florida, Education Association, Inc. v. Atkinson,
The form and effect of public and private instruments are governed by the laws and usages of the places where they are passed or executed.
It is not immediately clear how the district court went from this provision to the conclusion that Texas law applies in this case; the contract of settlement was executed in Louisiana. 2 Nevertheless, a close analysis of the applicable choice of law principles convinces us that Texas law does govern the interpretation of the settlement agreement.
Louisianá choice of law rulés (and their interpretation by federal courts) have been in a state of confusion for some time. During the 1960’s a line of cases evolved in both the intermediate Louisiana appellant courts
3
and in federal courts in this circuit
4
which applied a more modern approach to choice of law rules-looking to the “center of gravity,” or to the state with the “most significant contacts’-rather than applying the literal wording of the Louisiana Code.
See generally Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws
§§ 6, 188 (1971). But this approach was rejected by the Louisiana Supreme Court in
Johnson v. St. Paul Mercury Insurance Co.,
By parity of reasoning, the conflict-of-laws rules to be applied by a federal court in Texas must conform to those prevailing in the Texas state courts. A federal court in a diversity case is not free to engraft onto those state rules exceptions or modifications which may commend themselves to the federal court, but have not commended themselves to the State in which the federal court sits.
Following
Challoner,
we are bound by the interpretation of Article 10 adopted by the Louisiana courts. Subsequent to
Challoner,
however, the Louisiana Supreme Court overruled
Johnson
in favor of a more modern approach to conflicts of law.
Jagers v. Royal Indemnity Co.,
That some modern methods for determining whether to apply the law of the forum are faulty in some respects should not deter a court in the application of the law of the forum to its citizens, when not otherwise prohibited.
A footnote to this statement is as follows: For choice-of-law principles, see Restatement, Second, Conflict of Laws, § 6 (1969):
“(1) A court, subject to constitutional restrictions, will follow a statutory directive of its own state on choice of law,
“(2) When there is no such directive, the factors relevant to the choice of the applicable rule of law include
“(a) the needs of the interstate and international systems,
“(b) the relevant policies of the forum,
“(c) the relevant policies of other interested states and the relative interests of those states in the determination of the particular issue,
“(d) the protection of justified expectations,
“(e) the basic policies underlying the particular field of law,
“(f) certainty, predictability and uniformity of result, and
“(g) ease in the determination and application of the law to be applied.”
Shortly after
Jagers,
this court was faced with a Louisiana choice of law question in
Brinkley & West, Inc. v. Foremost Insurance Co.,
The district court found that Texas has a greater interest in this settlement than does Louisiana and that the law of Texas accordingly must govern the interpretation and validity of the settlement agreement. As virtually all of the parties to the settlement agreement are residents of Texas (only Mrs. Lee is a resident of Louisiana), and the bulk of the property at issue is located in Texas, the district court’s conclusion is clearly correct. We note that the parties do not challenge that holding. 6
II. THE JANUARY 16 AGREEMENT
The judge began the January 16 meeting in his chambers by explaining the purposes of the conference as follows:
Now, as I understand it and for the purpose of the record, there have been discussions concerning a negotiated settlement of this lawsuit, that the parties are in agreement and for the purpose of placing the terms of the agreement in writing, the court has made use of and is now making use of the instantaneous court reporters who will transcribe now the terms of the settlement, which will be then typed and after being typed will be signed by all parties to the lawsuit and other members of both families will have a place to sign their names indicating their full agreement with the terms.
Record at 3456. The judge then requested counsel for the parties to list the provisions of the settlement agreement. Before the parties listed these terms, the judge stated again:
Well, I am providing these offices for the purpose of the parties and when you all have reached an agreement and are ready to execute it, then I want to supervise it.
Record at 3456. The attorney who stated the agreement began by saying the following:
Following the negotiations between all parties that are present here and that the parties here represent that they are authorized to speak on behalf of the other members of their family or respective families and in order to bring this entire litigation to a conclusion and in addition to this litigation any other claims of any nature or kind which any member of the Hunt family may have one against the other of any nature or kind, the following agreement has been reached.
Record at 3458. During the course of the discussion, Hugh Hunt expressed some doubt as to his ability to legally sign away his children’s rights. And, when attorneys for the Hunt Estate said that each branch of the Hunt family would release all of its rights of inheritance from other branches of the family, Hugh Hunt disagreed that this *1177 had been the understanding reached prior to the conference. The court appears to have agreed with counsel for the Hunt Estate. The following colloquy then took place:
THE COURT: In other words, all of the parties who have discussed this, matter up to this point have understood that this was a final settlement.
MR. HUGH LEE HUNT: Your honor, I want to make a statement. I am here because my mother is taking four pills a day for her heart. I have been advised by my attorneys that if she dies, her rights die and I will sign whatever papers you want, and I would like to leave the chambers, please.
THE COURT: You may, sir.
(Thereupon Mr. Hugh Lee Hunt left the chambers.)
Record at 3468. At this point the rest of the parties completed their statement of the terms of the agreement. At the conclusion of the conference, the judge had the transcript typed up. At the end of the transcript is a place for the signatures of all the parties; Hugh Hunt’s signature appears there, along with that of other parties to the agreement.
III. THE “MEETING OF THE MINDS” IN THE JANUARY 16 AGREEMENT
Hugh Hunt contends that there was no “meeting of the minds” in the January 16 conference, and that the transcript of that meeting therefore cannot represent a final binding contract under applicable state law. Most of this argument consists of challenges to factual findings of the district court. These findings include: (1) that Hugh Hunt did intend to bind himself by his signature to the January 16 transcript; and (2) that he understood the January 16 agreement to be a complete statement of the terms of the settlement.
Hugh Hunt also argues that it was' his understanding that counsel for the Hunt Estate would require the signature of his wife and of his descendants, while in fact the Estate did not insistan these signatures. The district court incorrectly relied on Louisiana law in holding that this misunderstanding did not negate the “meeting of the minds” in the January 16 agreement.
IV. DURESS, UNDUE INFLUENCE, AND FAILURE OF CONSIDERATION
Hugh Hunt urges several affirmative defenses to any contract which may have been formed in the January 16 conference. These defenses center around the emotional strain and pressures of the settlement negotiations:
The Court should consider the posture in which Hugh Hunt found himself at that tense and compelling moment in this already emotionally charged litigation. He unhappily discovered himself inexorably drawn into the vortex of these settlement negotiations, without benefit of personal legal counsel. He thusly became torn between his own innermost feelings of dismay at what seemed to be transpiring and the unclear effects thereof on his personal welfare, as opposed to what legal counsel for his mother were strongly pressing upon him as being in her best interests.
Appellant’s Brief at 25. Hugh Hunt may indeed have been under great pressure at ■this time, and the record shows that the emotional strain caused him to leave the meeting before it was completed. But these facts do not establish either duress or undue influence under Texas law. One state court has defined duress as follows:
[O]ur courts of Texas have consistently followed the rule, as a matter of law, that (1) there can be no duress unless there is a threat to do some act which the party threatening has no legal right to do; (2) there must be some illegal exaction or some fraud or deception; (3) the restraint. must be imminent and such as to destroy free agency without present means of protection.
Tower Contracting Co., Inc., of Texas v. Bruden Brothers, Inc.,
Hugh Hunt makes the related argument that he received nothing in return for his signature on the transcript of the January 16 meeting. It is true that the agreement guaranteed him none of the final settlement amount, which was to be distributed in accordance with his mother’s directions. But a party need not receive the benefit of a contract in order to be bound by it; it is enough that the party seeking to hold another to the contract suffer a legal detriment. So long as consideration is sufficient to support the contract, which party actually receives the consideration is irrelevant.
E. g., Loomis v. Skillerns-Loomis Plaza, Inc.,
V. THE MASTER SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT
Hugh Hunt argues that the master settlement agreement which the district court ordered him to execute is not a reasonable statement of the terms of the January 16 agreement. The most important area of dispute centers around the scope of the releases contained in the final document. In brief, the master settlement agreement provides for the following releases:
1. Mrs. Lee and her descendants release the other parties from all claims arising from the relationship between Mrs. Lee and H. L. Hunt, including the birth of children from the relationship;
2. All parties accept as valid the duly probated will of H. L. Hunt;
3. All parties waive all forced heirship rights;
4. All parties agree not to prosecute or aid in the prosecution of suits arising from the relationship between Mrs. Lee and H. L. Hunt, including suits to determine status;
5. Mrs. Lee and her descendants assign to the other parties, in shares set forth in the agreement, their rights of inheritance from those parties, including all rights under state intestacy statutes and all testate claims that are not specifically established (or reestablished) after the date of the agreement; and all other parties assign their like rights to inheritances from Mrs. Lee and her descendants, to Mrs. Lee and her descendants in specified shares;
6. All parties agree to dismiss all ongoing litigation among themselves, with the exception of one certain suit brought by Hugh Hunt in Georgia; and
7. Mrs. Lee and her descendants release any and all claims which they have against the other parties which do not arise out of the relationship between Mrs. Lee and H. L. Hunt but are already in existence at the date of the agreement; and the other parties likewise release Mrs. Lee and her descendants.
See Record at 3255-270. Hugh Hunt argues that these provisions depart from the intent of the earlier agreement by broadening the scope of the proposed releases. First, as Hugh Hunt describes the January 16 agreement it contemplated a release of only those claims which arose out of the alleged putative marriage between Mrs. Lee and H. L. Hunt, and did not call for a release of either present or future claims which are independent of that relationship. (Cf. paragraph 7 above.) Second, he maintains that the January 16 agreement did not contemplate the release of inheritance rights other than those derived from the relationship between Mrs. Lee and H. L. Hunt. Although it is not clear precisely what rights he is referring to, they would appear to be testate rights, i. e., claims which Mrs. Lee and her descendants may have by virtue of . wills written by other parties to the settlement agreement. (Cf. paragraph 5 above.) And third, Hugh Hunt maintains that the January 16 agreement did not call for a relinquishment by him of his children’s rights. (Cf. paragraphs 1, 2 and 5 above.)
The transcript shows that the agreement was not clear in all respects on January 16, and there is ample room for argument about the intended scope of the releases. 7 *1180 With respect to the agreement’s release of claims unrelated to the relationship between Mrs. Lee and H. L. Hunt, there is language in the transcript describing the agreement as “a final settlement” and a release “from any claim.” But the court also describes the agreement as only a settlement “as to this lawsuit and as to any possible inheritance rights.” There is an even more direct conflict on the issue of inheritance rights. When asked about them at the outset, counsel for the Hunt Estate agreed with counsel for Mrs. Lee that “all rights of future inheritance” meant only such rights as exist “by operation of law,” which would appear to exclude testate rights. But at a later point in the transcript the court refers to “any possible inheritance rights should they occur,” and appears to disagree with Hugh Hunt’s understanding that the parties had intended to limit the releases to rights related to the subject matter of the lawsuit. As to releases which affect the rights of the signatories’ descendants, Hugh Hunt expressed some doubt as to his ability to “legally sign away any of my children’s rights.” These doubts were never specifically addressed by counsel for the Hunt Estate, and the master settlement agreement does in effect waive rights of the signer’s descendants. 8
Under Texas law, the interpretation of an unambiguous contract—as well as the determination of whether or not a contract is ambiguous—is a legal question. But once it is determined that a contract is ambiguous, the determination of the actual intent of the parties becomes a factual question.
Trinity Universal Insurance Co. v. Ponsford Brothers,
In addition to the scope of the releases, Hugh Hunt points to several other discrepancies between the January 16 agreement and the master settlement agreement. First, he notes that the requirement for the signatures of Hugh Hunt’s descendants was dropped in the final document. But as we have already stated, the Hunt Estate had preserved a right to do this. Second, he argues that the actual distribution of the settlement funds is not set out in the January 16 agreement. This distribution was left open so that Mrs. Lee could thereafter decide precisely how the money should be distributed for the most favorable tax treátment.
It is understood that Mrs. Lee and her children may want to arrange for the appointment of a different advisory committee or a different trustee. Ray Lee Hunt is agreeable to this being done provided it can be legally done. He will cooperate in every way to provide for a change in either the advisory committee or the trustee.
Record at 1282. As the district court noted, such a change was. not possible under applicable state law.
VI. THE PURPORTED ILLEGALITY OF THE CONTRACT
Finally, Hugh Hunt argues that certain provisions of the master settlement agreement are
contra bones mores
under Louisiana law. In particular, he points to Louisiana cases which prohibit the renunciation of inheritance rights which depend on
*1182
the death of some living person, and to a Louisiana constitutional provision which prohibits discrimination on the basis of illegitimacy in matters of property or inheritance. We doubt that these policies, even if applicable, would void the entire contract. So long as the consideration is legal and the provisions are separable, those contractual provisions which are not illegal may still be enforced.
Williams v. Williams,
We conclude that the January 16 settlement agreement embodied in the transcript of the conference held that day in the judge’s chambers is an enforceable contract of settlement under Texas law and is binding on Hugh Hunt. We also conclude that the master settlement agreement reasonably represents the intent of the January 16 agreement, and that Hugh Hunt may be bound by its terms. The judgment of the district court is affirmed in all respects.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
E. g., Pearson v. Ecological Science Corp.,
. The district court reasoned as follows,
The final subject of dispute consists of Hugh’s related objections to the choice of Texas law to govern the agreement, and to the waiver of future inheritance rights. Hugh properly asserts that Louisiana law looks with disfavor upon attempts to waive future inheritance rights. However, as none of the parties reside in Louisiana, that substantive policy is of no consequence. Article 10 of the Civil Code requires application of the law of the place where the contract is to have effect, which, in the case of the persons being released by Hugh, is Texas. Hugh does not claim that the waiver is void under the law of Texas.
Despite this analysis, the district court relied on Louisiana law elsewhere in its opinion.
.
E. g., Universal C.I.T. Credit Corp. v. Hulett,
But the effect of acts passed in one country to have effect in another country, is regulated by the laws of the country where such acts are to have effect.
.
E. g., Franklin v. Texas International Petroleum Corp.,
. In
Challoner,
the Supreme Court rejected the “false conflicts” doctrine as an exception to the rule of
Klaxon.
But it left the door open for state courts to adopt the doctrine as an exception to their own local choice of law statutes.
Challoner v. Day and Zimmerman, Inc.,
. Louisiana will honor a stipulation of
the
parties regarding the choice of law. La.Civ.Code Art. 11;
Fine v. Property Damage Appraisers, Inc.,
. The attorney for the Hunt Estate stated the agreement as follows:
MR. COOK (counsel for the Estate): Item two. That Mrs. Lee and all of her descendants would sign a release releasing all parties from any claim, including future inheritance rights in the Estate of any members of the Hunt family, which release will contain appropriate indemnity provisions.
MR. FRITCHIE (counsel for Mrs. Lee): You are now talking—excuse me—I have to ask you at this point when you say “All rights of future inheritance” he means by operation of law?
THE COURT: By operation of law.
MR. COOK: That is right.
MR. FRITCHIE: When you say, “Mrs. Lee and all of her descendants,” you are talking about Mrs. Lee and those of her descendants who are of the age of majority?
*1180 MR. COOK: And their respective spouses, and I think at this time it might be well to list all of the parties to be included.
Record at 1263. Later in the meeting Hugh Hunt was asked whether his children would sign the agreement. The following colloquy then took place:
MR. HUGH LEE HUNT: You see, we never talked about inheritance rights, God forbid that something should happen that the entire first family should be wiped out, let’s sáy something like that did happen.
MR. HIRSCHKOP (counsel for Herbert and Lamar Hunt): Give you all inheritance rights?
■ MR. HUGH LEE HUNT: We would have inheritance rights I understand by Texas law.
MR. COOK: This is what is being settled at this time, this is being released.
MR. HUGH LEE HUNT: We never agreed to this, there was no discussion on this.
MR. HUNTER: Yes, there was.
MR. HUGH LEE HUNT: There was discussion on the fact that we would not do anything on public statements and everything else like that.
MR. FRITCHIE: That you would give up inheritance rights.
MR. HUGH LEE HUNT: Anything having to do with this suit, with the issue of this suit we would not be involved in, but if you remember there was some discussion about—
MR. HUNTER: (Interposing) What inheritance rights is anybody conceivably talking about other than possibly collateral heirs inheriting from someone else if they did not leave a will or something?
THE COURT: That’s the question and that is the only thing that is being discussed and it was discussed here in chambers that the settlement was as to this lawsuit and as to any possible inheritance rights should they occur, and I understand that to be the basis of the settlement also.
MR. HUNTER: I understand that, too, Judge, there is no question.
THE COURT: In other words, all of the parties who have discussed this matter up to this point have understood that this was a final settlement.
Record at 1265-1267. It was at this point that Hugh Hunt became upset and left the judge’s chambers. No further discussion involved the releases to be included in the final document, aside from an agreement among the parties that all lawsuits would be dismissed except for Hugh Hunt’s existing suit in Georgia.
. The master settlement agreement purports to bind the heirs, successors, assigns and legal representatives of all of the signatories. Under Texas law, the waiver of future interests and expectancies may contractually bind the descendants and other successors of the actual signatory to the agreement.
E. g., Trevino v. Turcotte,
. These arguments are not all discussed in the opinion of the district court. That opinion does not explicitly deal with Hugh Hunt’s contentions that (1) the January 16 agreement did not even call for a release of present claims that were unrelated to the relationship between Mrs. Lee and H. L. Hunt, and (2) the January 16 agreement did not contemplate his release of his children’s rights. We note that Hugh Hunt’s argument to the district court did not clearly delineate the different aspects of his disagreement with the release provisions of the master settlement agreement. Memorandum of Hugh L. Hunt in Opposition to Defendant’s Motion to Enforce the Settlement Agreement, Record at 2825. In the context of the arguments made to the district court, and of that court’s order and opinion, it is clear that the district court nevertheless rejected these contentions as a matter of fact.
