In re: Deepwater Horizon ( 2015 )


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  •       Case: 14-30269          Document: 00513042440              Page: 1   Date Filed: 05/13/2015
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    No. 14-30269                        United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    IN RE: DEEPWATER HORIZON                                                           May 13, 2015
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------          Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    ROBERT YOUNG,
    Plaintiff
    ELTON JOHNSON,
    Intervenor Plaintiff - Appellee
    v.
    BP EXPLORATION & PRODUCTION, INCORPORATED; BP PRODUCTS
    NORTH AMERICA, INCORPORATED; BP CORPORATION NORTH
    AMERICA, INCORPORATED,
    Defendants - Appellants
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Louisiana
    Before KING, DAVIS, and OWEN, Circuit Judges.
    W. EUGENE DAVIS, Circuit Judge:
    Defendants-Appellants BP Exploration & Production, Inc., BP Products
    North America, Inc., and BP Corporation North America, Inc. (collectively
    “BP”) appeal the district court’s judgment in favor of Intervenor/Plaintiff-
    Appellee Elton Johnson (“Johnson”). The district court, over BP’s objection,
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    enforced a putative $2.7 million settlement agreement against BP in Johnson’s
    favor. On appeal, BP asserts that the parties never formed a binding
    settlement agreement. In the alternative, BP argues that Johnson
    fraudulently induced BP into entering the settlement agreement, and that
    Johnson did not satisfy a condition precedent to recovery because he never
    signed a release. BP also claims that the district court awarded an
    unreasonable rate of prejudgment interest.
    We hold that the parties formed a binding settlement agreement. We
    also hold that the district court correctly excused Johnson’s failure to sign the
    release document. However, the district court should have held an evidentiary
    hearing to determine whether Johnson fraudulently induced BP into entering
    the settlement agreement. We therefore affirm the district court’s order in
    part, but vacate the judgment and remand for further proceedings.
    I.
    In the wake of the April 2010 Deepwater Horizon explosion, 1 BP reached
    an agreement with the White House to establish the Gulf Coast Claims Facility
    (“GCCF”), an independent mechanism created to settle the numerous claims
    against BP. BP authorized the GCCF and its Claims Administrator, Kenneth
    R. Feinberg, to act on BP’s behalf to fulfill its statutory obligations as a
    “responsible party” under the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (“OPA”). BP also
    authorized the GCCF to process certain non-OPA claims involving physical
    injury or death.
    1 The facts of the Deepwater Horizon blowout are set forth in United States v. BP
    Exploration & Prod., Inc. (In re Deepwater Horizon), 
    753 F.3d 570
    , 571 (5th Cir. 2014) and
    Lake Eugenie Land & Dev., Inc. v. BP Exploration & Prod., Inc. (In re Deepwater Horizon),
    
    732 F.3d 326
    , 329 (5th Cir. 2013).
    2
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    Although BP authorized the GCCF to settle claims on its behalf, BP does
    not control the GCCF and cannot prevent it from extending settlement offers.
    However, if the GCCF sends a claimant a determination letter offering the
    claimant more than $500,000 to settle his or her claims, BP may appeal that
    offer within fourteen days from the date of the determination letter.
    A.
    Intervenor/Plaintiff-Appellee Elton Johnson was a crew member aboard
    the M/V DAMON BANKSTON, a supply vessel operated by Tidewater Marine,
    LLC (“Tidewater”). The vessel was mud-roped to the Deepwater Horizon and
    was off-loading drilling mud on the night of the blowout. Johnson claims that
    he sustained physical injuries when the explosion rocked the vessel and threw
    him against a bulkhead. Johnson further claims that the stress from both the
    explosion and his attempts to save other seamen endangered by the casualty
    caused him emotional injury, including post-traumatic stress disorder.
    Johnson sued BP for negligence in Louisiana state court in May 2010. 2
    BP removed the case to the United States District Court for the Eastern
    District of Louisiana.
    While Johnson’s case remained pending before the district court, he
    submitted his claim to the GCCF. His submission included voluminous medical
    records from a number of healthcare providers. Those records suggested that,
    as a result of the explosion, Johnson suffered back and shoulder pain; reduced
    range of motion; popping or crunching in the shoulderblade; headaches;
    hearing problems; a cerebral concussion or other brain injury; anxiety;
    irritability; depression; hallucinations; nightmares and sleeping problems;
    memory problems; temporary hearing loss; tinnitus; and post-traumatic stress
    2   Johnson also sued Tidewater for maintenance and cure in the same case.
    3
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    disorder. Those medical records also indicated that Johnson was taking a
    number of prescription medications both for his physical pain and his
    psychological conditions. Johnson’s submission to the GCCF also contained a
    report from a rehabilitation/vocational specialist indicating that Johnson was
    vocationally disabled and therefore unable to work for the indefinite future.
    Johnson also submitted his past medical expense records, estimates of his
    future medical costs, and an economic appraisal quantifying how his injury
    affected his earning capacity.
    The GCCF analyzed Johnson’s submission and calculated his damages
    as follows:
    The claimant’s final payment offer is comprised of total economic
    loss, total medical expenses and non-economic loss. The claimant’s
    economic loss of $758,452 is the projected loss of income through
    the claimant’s remaining work life. The claimant’s medical
    expenses are composed of $25,568 past medical expenses and
    $271,843 future medical expenses for a total of $297,411. The
    claimant’s non-economic loss calculation is $750,000 plus 3 times
    the medical expenses ($297,411 x 3 = $892,233) for a total non-
    economic loss of $1,642,233.
    The GCCF therefore concluded that Johnson was entitled to receive a total of
    $2,698,095 as a result of his alleged injuries.
    On September 23, 2011, the GCCF sent Johnson a Determination Letter
    containing the following language:
    The amount of the Final Payment Offer (“Final Payment Offer”)[]
    is $2,698,095.00, which is the amount that can be paid now if you
    decide to accept the Final Payment Offer and you sign a Release
    and Covenant Not to Sue (the “Release”). . . . If you want to be paid
    the Final Payment Offer and fully resolve the entire claim now,
    you can accept the Final Payment Offer.
    The Determination Letter instructed Johnson:
    To accept the Final Payment Offer, check the box on the Election
    Form indicating that you accept the Final Payment Offer, sign it
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    and return it to the GCCF no later than 90 days after the date of
    this Letter. We will then send you a Release to be signed and
    returned to be paid the Final Payment Amount. . . .
    BP will have the right to appeal to [a] panel of three neutrals
    because the total monetary award is $500,000 or more. . . .
    [P]ayment of the Final Amount will not be made until the
    expiration of the 14-day period for the right of an appeal of this
    claim by BP. The expiration of the right of an appeal is 14 days
    from the date of this Letter.
    Johnson signed the Final Payment Election Form the day after he
    received the Determination Letter. He checked the box on the Form indicating
    that he “elect[ed] to be paid the Final Payment Offer” and understood that “the
    GCCF w[ould] send [him] a Release and Covenant Not to Sue that [he] must
    sign and return to be paid.” Johnson timely submitted the signed, completed
    Final Payment Election Form to the GCCF.
    B.
    On October 3, 2011, after Johnson submitted the Final Payment Election
    Form to the GCCF, but before BP’s fourteen-day appeal period expired, BP sent
    Tidewater a letter explaining that the GCCF had offered to settle Johnson’s
    claim, and that BP expected Tidewater to indemnify it for the entire settlement
    amount.
    Tidewater strenuously objected. On October 5, 2011, Tidewater
    responded with a letter stating that, “[b]ased on the file materials we have, the
    settlement offered by the GCCF in the amount of nearly $2.7 million is
    excessive and unreasonable given the defenses to Johnson’s claim that are
    available to Tidewater and BP, and the medical records Tidewater has been
    provided.” Notably, however, Tidewater’s letter does not state that it had any
    reason to believe that Johnson fabricated his injury claims – the letter merely
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    expressed Tidewater’s belief that the Final Payment Amount was “excessive
    and unreasonable.” Tidewater “request[ed] in the strongest terms that BP
    appeal the settlement.”
    BP responded that it “w[ould] not appeal the GCCF’s settlement with
    Mr. Johnson.” As a result, the fourteen-day appeal window closed without BP
    appealing the Final Payment Offer.
    C.
    On October 20, 2011, after BP’s appeal period expired, Tidewater’s
    counsel sent the GCCF a letter, complete with documentary exhibits,
    explaining that it had investigated Johnson’s personal injury claims and had
    reason to believe they were fabricated.
    Tidewater first pointed out that the sworn statements of other crew
    members on the vessel at the time of the explosion directly contradicted
    Johnson’s version of events. One crewman maintained “that Johnson was not
    thrown, did not fall, did not lose consciousness or make any statement or
    complaint that he had been struck” at the time of the explosion. “Because of
    the drilling mud on the deck” of the vessel, Johnson “would have been covered
    in the mud” if he had fallen, yet two crewmen “reported that Johnson was not
    covered with any mud” after the explosion.
    Another crewman stated that, on the morning after the explosion, he
    asked Johnson
    if [he was] OK after the previous night’s events. Although Johnson
    stated that he did not sleep well, he specifically denied that he was
    injured. On several occasions during that day, Johnson (and the
    remainder of the Tidewater crew) were asked if they were injured
    and, each time, Johnson denied injury. Johnson performed his
    assigned tasks that day without incident or issue, never
    complaining to anyone of any injury.
    6
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    Tidewater further stated that, “[h]ad Johnson been injured or involved in any
    incident, it is standard Tidewater policy to prepare an accident report. No such
    report was prepared,” and Johnson in fact “specifically denied that he had been
    injured.”
    Tidewater also opined that Johnson told several physicians inconsistent
    versions of the events leading to his alleged injuries. According to Tidewater,
    Johnson’s various accounts differed with respect to (1) whether the explosion
    threw him against a door or merely caused him to fall down; (2) the distance
    he was thrown; (3) whether or not he lost consciousness; (4) whether he
    reported seeing hallucinations at the time of his alleged injury; and (5) the
    location on the vessel where the injury occurred.
    D.
    A week after the GCCF received Tidewater’s letter, it retained Guidepost
    Solutions LLC (“Guidepost”) to investigate Johnson’s case. On January 24,
    2012, Guidepost issued a report concluding that Johnson’s claim was
    unsubstantiated. Guidepost concluded that there was “no credible evidence
    Johnson suffered injuries as a result of the incident, and multiple fellow crew
    members, one of whom was standing alongside Johnson at the time of the
    explosion, disputed the events and injuries Johnson later reported.”
    Guidepost’s investigation corroborated the evidence that Tidewater set
    forth in its letter to the GCCF. Guidepost found that
    [a]ll crew members were individually questioned shortly after the
    incident about any injuries they might have sustained, and
    Johnson never mentioned having been hurt. Additionally, Louis
    Longlois, who was with Johnson when the explosion occurred,
    disputed Johnson’s claims of being thrown into a door and being
    rendered dazed or unconscious. Johnson’s behavior on the day of
    the explosion and immediately thereafter is inconsistent with
    statements attributed to him regarding his purported injuries.
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    Additionally, Guidepost’s report recounts the following exchange Johnson
    allegedly had with Bill Wayne Marsh, a seaman on the vessel, shortly after the
    explosion:
    Marsh said that once all of the survivors were pulled from the
    water and safely on deck, he saw Johnson again; during this
    meeting Johnson reportedly told Marsh he was going to “get some
    money out of Tidewater.” Marsh recalled that he asked Johnson if
    he was hurt and that Johnson replied, “No, but everyone on the rig
    is going to get some money. Why not me?” Marsh said he then
    asked Johnson, “How do you expect to get money if you are not
    hurt?” According to Marsh, Johnson replied, “I’m all shook up.”
    Marsh said Johnson never told him he was actually injured as a
    result of the explosion or the rescue operation. 3
    Guidepost also interviewed Johnson:
    Johnson described his injuries at the time of the incident as a
    headache and stated that he did not realize he was injured until
    the following day when he was back at the Tidewater office in
    Amelia, Louisiana. Johnson stated that he never advised anyone
    he was injured until then. . . .
    Johnson insisted that no one ever inquired as to his well-being or
    if he was injured at any time while on the vessel or on land . . . .
    When asked about the conflicting statements he had provided to
    several of the different attending physicians regarding what
    happened to him during the explosion, Johnson explained that the
    doctors were all mistaken. Johnson could not explain the
    differences in his statements to physicians about the nature and
    extent of his injuries. Johnson refused to state that he was knocked
    “unconscious” as in being “knocked out.” Instead he explained his
    condition as an “altered state,” after his attorney, Cory Itkin,
    suggested that was what had happened to him. Johnson continued
    to insist that the explosion knocked him back six feet.
    3  The report noted, however, that Marsh exhibited poor recollection regarding many
    of the events surrounding the explosion.
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    Johnson denied speaking to the Associated Press, which had
    reported that he claimed to have been thrown seven feet into an
    engine room door and that he was knocked unconscious. Johnson’s
    attorney, Itkin, suggested that Johnson’s former attorneys, Steve
    Herman and Eddie Knoll[,] may have provided this information to
    the press.
    As a result of its investigation, Guidepost concluded that “Johnson’s claims of
    physical injury as a result of the Deepwater Horizon explosion appear to be
    fabricated.” Nevertheless, Guidepost also concluded that “Johnson did not
    submit any overtly fraudulent document,” so “a Finding of Potetnial [sic] Fraud
    is not supported by this investigation.”
    E.
    After reviewing Guidepost’s investigative report, the GCCF issued a
    denial letter to Johnson (the “Denial Letter”) on February 22, 2012. The Denial
    Letter informed Johnson that the GCCF “has terminated its process with
    respect to Mr. Johnson’s claim, will not send Mr. Johnson a Release and
    Covenant Not to Sue for his signature, and, accordingly, will not issue to Mr.
    Johnson a Final Payment for his submitted claim.”
    BP never sent Johnson a Release to sign, and it has refused to pay
    Johnson the Final Payment Amount. Johnson insists he would have signed the
    Release if the GCCF had sent it to him.
    F.
    Displeased with BP’s refusal to consummate the settlement, Johnson
    intervened in Young et al. v. BP Exploration & Production Inc. et al., a Texas
    state court suit filed by another injured seaman represented by the same
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    plaintiff’s attorney. 4 Johnson candidly admits that he took this unusual
    procedural step in an attempt to quickly get his claim heard by a court.
    Johnson’s petition in intervention asserted claims of breach of contract,
    negligent misrepresentation, and tortious interference relating to BP’s refusal
    to honor the putative settlement agreement.
    BP removed Young to the United States District Court for the Southern
    District of Texas on March 30, 2012. Before the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict
    Litigation could decide whether to transfer Young to the Eastern District of
    Louisiana with the other Deepwater Horizon cases, the district court granted
    summary judgment in BP’s favor. The court concluded that the parties never
    formed a valid settlement agreement because “the lack of a signed release
    prevented the formation of a contract.” The court therefore ruled that “Johnson
    will take nothing from BP.”
    G.
    Johnson appealed the district court’s summary judgment order. A panel
    of this Court ruled
    that the practical and prudent course of action in this case is to
    vacate the judgment of the district court and have that court
    transfer this case to the Eastern District of Louisiana for
    disposition there . . . .
    We are especially reluctant to decide the question of whether a
    binding settlement agreement arose here, given the complexities
    of the BP litigation and the administrative handling of related tort
    claims and settlement processes. We recognize that there should
    be some uniformity as to the manner in which such questions are
    answered – without consistency, we may be faced with serious and
    4On appeal, BP does not challenge the propriety of Johnson’s intervention in Young.
    Mr. Young settled his claims against BP and his employers, leaving only Johnson in the case.
    As a result, the case has essentially become a simple two-party dispute with Johnson on one
    side and BP on the other.
    10
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    disruptive unintended consequences. The proper way to insure this
    case is decided in a manner that does justice to all the parties
    involved – as well as those others affected by the Deepwater
    Horizon incident – is to refer the matter back to the court in which
    it arose. That court has detailed knowledge of all the aspects of the
    BP litigation and settlement programs, and is in the best position
    to decide this issue in a way that is consonant with the handling
    of this multitudinous litigation. Accordingly, we vacate the
    judgment of the district court and remand with instructions to the
    district court to transfer this case to the Eastern District of
    Louisiana. 5
    H.
    With the case back before the Eastern District of Louisiana, Johnson
    moved the court to summarily enforce the putative settlement agreement with
    BP. BP opposed Johnson’s motion and filed its own motion for summary
    judgment.
    On March 10, 2014, the district court granted Johnson’s motion and
    denied BP’s motion. 6 The court reached its decision without holding an
    evidentiary hearing. Unlike the United States District Court for the Southern
    District of Texas, the court ruled that
    there is undisputed evidence that a binding settlement agreement
    was reached between Elton Johnson and the GCCF acting on
    behalf of BP. The agreement was to pay the total sum of $2,698,095
    to Johnson in full settlement of all of his personal injury claims
    arising out of the DEEPWATER HORIZON casualty. In exchange,
    Johnson agreed to waive and release all potential claims against
    not only BP, but against any other party who might be liable in the
    casualty . . . The arguments made by BP in its attempt to avoid
    payment of the settlement are unavailing.
    5  BP Exploration & Prod., Inc. v. Johnson, 538 F. App’x 438, 439-40 (5th Cir. 2013).
    6  Although Johnson also filed a motion to remand the case, neither the Eastern
    District of Louisiana nor the Southern District of Texas ruled on that motion before
    addressing the merits of the parties’ arguments. After reviewing the record and the
    applicable law, however, we are satisfied that we may exercise subject matter jurisdiction
    over the case.
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    The court therefore entered a judgment enforcing the settlement and awarding
    “costs and interest at a rate of 5% per annum from October 10, 2011 until paid.”
    BP now appeals that judgment. BP asks the Court to
    reverse the judgment below and direct the district court to grant
    BP’s motion for summary judgment – either because no contract
    was formed or because any contract included the execution of the
    GCCF release as a condition for payment.
    Alternatively, BP requests that the Court vacate the grant of
    summary judgment to Johnson as improper and remand for a
    resolution of BP’s fraud-in-the-inducement defense. Finally,
    whatever occurs on the merits, the interest rate should be
    remanded or reduced.
    II.
    The parties first dispute the applicable standard of review, as well as the
    proper way to characterize the procedural posture of the case. Johnson argues
    that the district court granted a motion to enforce a settlement agreement,
    which we must review under the deferential abuse of discretion standard. BP,
    by contrast, maintains that the district court actually granted summary
    judgment in Johnson’s favor, so we should review that judgment de novo.
    Neither party is fully correct. A district court may summarily enforce a
    settlement agreement if no material facts are in dispute, 7 and in such
    circumstances we review the district court’s order for abuse of discretion only. 8
    However, “when opposition to enforcement of the settlement is based not on
    the merits of the claim but on a challenge to the validity of the agreement itself,
    7 Mid-South Towing Co. v. Har-Win, Inc., 
    733 F.2d 386
    , 390 (5th Cir. 1984) (citing
    Autera v. Robinson, 
    419 F.2d 1197
    , 1200 (D.C. Cir. 1969)).
    8 Harmon v. Journal Publ’g Co., 476 F. App’x 756, 757 (5th Cir. 2012).
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    the parties must be allowed an evidentiary hearing on disputed issues of the
    validity and scope of the agreement.” 9
    This central issue – whether there was any disputed issue of
    material fact as to the validity of the settlement agreement[] – is
    similar to that which any court must address when ruling on a
    motion for summary judgment. This is not mere coincidence. The
    stakes in summary enforcement of a settlement agreement and
    summary judgment on the merits of a claim are roughly the same
    – both deprive a party of his right to be heard in the litigation. 10
    Because BP challenges the validity of its putative settlement agreement with
    Johnson, we will “treat [BP’s] assertions as true, and will affirm the district
    court only if [Johnson] is entitled to enforcement of the agreement[] as a matter
    of law.” 11 If not, we must remand for an evidentiary hearing 12 regarding the
    validity of the settlement agreement, because the district court did not hold
    one in this case. 13
    III.
    Because Johnson alleged causes of action under general maritime law
    and the Jones Act against BP, federal contract law governs the validity and
    enforceability of Johnson’s putative settlement agreement with BP. 14 However,
    9  
    Mid-South, 733 F.2d at 390
    (citing 
    Autera, 419 F.2d at 1200
    ).
    10  Tiernan v. Devoe, 
    923 F.2d 1024
    , 1031 (3d Cir. 1991) (internal citations omitted).
    11 
    Id. at 1032.
            12 In this respect, a contested motion to enforce a settlement agreement differs from a
    motion to summary judgment, which would instead result in remand for a trial on the merits
    if the non-movant identified a genuine issue of material fact.
    13 See 
    Mid-South, 733 F.2d at 390
    (citing 
    Autera, 419 F.2d at 1200
    ).
    14 Borne v. A & P Boat Rentals No. 4, Inc., 
    780 F.2d 1254
    , 1256 (5th Cir. 1986)
    (citations omitted).
    BP argues that Louisiana rather than federal law applies because the Release, which
    BP never mailed to Johnson and Johnson never signed, contains a choice of law clause. We
    need not decide whether that choice of law clause binds us here. BP does not argue that the
    result of the case would differ under Louisiana law, and in any event BP relies heavily on
    cases from outside Louisiana.
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    “the federal common law of release is largely undeveloped,” 15 and federal
    contract law is largely indistinguishable from general contract principles
    under state common law. 16 Thus, in reaching our decision, we will rely not only
    on federal cases, but also on treatises and state contract law cases to the extent
    we find them persuasive.
    IV.
    BP argues that, for numerous reasons, the parties never formed a
    binding settlement agreement. As explained below, none of BP’s arguments
    have merit.
    A.
    The parties first contest whether an offer and acceptance occurred in this
    case. Johnson argues that the Determination Letter constituted a valid offer
    to settle Johnson’s claims, and he accepted that offer by submitting the Final
    Payment Election Form. Because BP did not appeal the GCCF’s offer within
    the fourteen day window, Johnson insists that the parties formed an
    enforceable settlement agreement. BP responds that the Determination Letter
    was merely “a potential settlement valuation,” not an offer. According to BP,
    since the release of Johnson’s claims “represents the entire benefit of the
    bargain for BP, the release is the contract.” Thus, BP argues, the GCCF cannot
    extend a valid offer until it mails a formal release to the claimant, and the
    claimant cannot accept the offer until he or she signs that release. Because
    15See Hisel v. Upchurch, 
    797 F. Supp. 1509
    , 1518 (D. Ariz. 1992).
    16 See, e.g., Flores v. Koster, Civil No. 3:11-CV-0726-M-BH, 
    2013 WL 6153280
    , at *3
    (N.D. Tex. Nov. 22, 2013); United States ex rel. Osheroff v. MCCI Group Holdings, No. 10-
    24486-cv-SCOLA, 
    2013 WL 3991964
    , at *3-4 (S.D. Fla. Aug. 2, 2013); 
    Hisel, 797 F. Supp. at 1518
    .
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    neither of those events occurred in this case, BP maintains that the parties
    never formed a contract.
    We agree with Johnson. An offer is judged by the parties’ overt acts and
    words, not by the subjective or secret intent of the offeror. 17 Here, a reasonable
    person would construe the Determination Letter as an offer because it
    repeatedly uses the language of offer and acceptance. The Determination
    Letter repeatedly states that the GCCF, on BP’s behalf, is extending a “Final
    Payment Offer,” and informs Johnson: “To accept the Final Payment Offer,
    check the box on the Election Form indicating that you accept the Final
    Payment Offer, sign it and return it to the GCCF no later than 90 days after
    the date of this Letter.” Because Johnson did just that, and BP did not timely
    appeal, the parties formed a contract.
    Furthermore, “[a] settlement is valid and enforceable even if it
    contemplates the parties signing a release at a later date” 18 unless the parties
    explicitly provide that a valid contract will not be formed until the parties
    execute a formal, finalized agreement. 19 Even if one party ultimately fails to
    execute or sign the final formal release documents, that does not void the
    original agreement or render it deficient from the outset. 20 Here, the
    Determination Letter states that the GCCF will send Johnson a Release only
    after he has accepted the offer: “To accept the Final Payment Offer, check the
    box on the Election Form indicating that you accept the Final Payment Offer,
    sign it and return it to the GCCF no later than 90 days after the date of this
    17 1 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 4.1 (4th ed. 2014).
    18 Davison v. Bay Area Credit Serv., LLC, No. 12-03411-CV-S-DGK, 
    2013 WL 627003
    ,
    at *1 (W.D. Mo. Feb. 20, 2013) (citations omitted). Accord, e.g., Mastroni-Mucker v. Allstate
    Ins. Co., 
    976 A.2d 510
    , 522 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2009) (citations omitted).
    19 See Gen. Metal Fabricating Corp. v. Stergiou, 
    438 S.W.3d 737
    , 747-48 & n.8 (Tex.
    App. 2014) (citations omitted); 15A C.J.S. COMPROMISE & SETTLEMENT § 21 (2014).
    20 May v. Anderson, 
    119 P.3d 1254
    , 1256, 1259 (Nev. 2005); Hagrish v. Olson, 
    603 A.2d 108
    , 110 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. 1992).
    15
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    Letter. We will then send you a Release to be signed and returned to be paid
    the Final Payment Amount.” Because the Determination Letter does not state
    that a signed release is a prerequisite to contract formation (as opposed to a
    prerequisite to payment), the fact that Johnson ultimately did not sign the
    Release is immaterial to the question of whether the parties formed a binding
    contract.
    BP insists that, even if the language in the Determination Letter would
    create an offer in the context of a typical settlement reached on the courthouse
    steps, it cannot create an offer in the context of proceedings before the GCCF.
    BP maintains that it, along with the White House, established the GCCF as a
    “sui generis” exception to the ordinary rules of contract formation. Thus, claims
    BP, only a signed release could constitute an offer and acceptance,
    notwithstanding the Determination Letter’s repeated use of the words “offer”
    and “accept.”
    We disagree. Claims resolution facilities like the GCCF are far from “sui
    generis” – they are routinely established in large mass tort cases. 21 BP has not
    identified, and we have not found, any authority for the proposition that
    otherwise unambiguous offer language is less likely to create a binding
    contract in the mass tort claims resolution facility context than in a typical
    litigation environment, or that an objective person would not consider the
    Determination Letter an offer under these circumstances.
    BP also argues that, if the GCCF offered to settle Johnson’s claim
    without first sending him a release, it would be acting outside of its
    authorization. In support of its argument, it points to language in the GCCF’s
    governing protocol and rules that, in its view, demonstrates that “the execution
    21  See Deborah R. Hensler, Alternative Courts? Litigation-Induced Claims Resolution
    Facilities, 57 STAN. L. REV. 1429, 1430-31 (2005).
    16
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    of a release is not just a condition on payment but on acceptance itself.” BP
    argues that, because that these protocols and rules were publicly available to
    claimants, and because Johnson agreed to be bound by those rules by
    voluntarily submitting his personal injury claim to the GCCF, an objective
    person in Johnson’s position would not consider the Determination Letter an
    offer.
    Again, we disagree. The language BP cites from the protocol and rules
    only confirms our interpretation that a signed release is a condition precedent
    to payment, not to contract formation. 22 Moreover, the Protocol and Rules state,
    on at least four separate occasions, that “[a] claimant has the right to consult
    with an attorney of his or her choosing prior to accepting any settlement or
    signing a release of legal rights.” This language makes it clear that an
    acceptance of the settlement offer is independent of signing the Release.
    Thus, because Johnson accepted the offer in the Determination Letter by
    its own terms by timely submitting the Final Payment Election Form and
    agreeing to subsequently sign the Release, and because BP declined to appeal
    that offer within the fourteen-day period, both an offer and acceptance
    occurred.
    B.
    BP next argues that the Determination Letter could not create a valid
    contract because it lacked material terms: namely, the exact terms of the
    Release. According to BP, the personal injury release terms were not publicly
    available, so Johnson could not have known what they were in advance. Thus,
    22See ROA 3972 (“To receive a Final Payment, a claimant will be required to sign a
    release . . .”); 
    id. at 3964
    (“Accepting a final payment requires the Claimant to sign a release
    of past and future claims.”).
    17
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    argues BP, the parties could not have reached a meeting of the minds as to the
    essential terms of the contract.
    A putative contract is unenforceable if it lacks material or essential 23
    terms. 24 Release provisions are generally – though not always – material terms
    of settlement agreements. 25 However, even where the existence of a release is
    material, the precise terms and specific language of the release are not
    necessarily material. 26 Consequently, “even where the scope of the release is
    disputed, . . . courts routinely enforce settlement agreements even where the
    precise wording of a release has not been finalized.” 27 This remains true even
    when one of the parties ultimately fails to sign the finalized release. 28
    23  The terms “essential” and “material” are effectively synonymous in this context. See
    Gen. 
    Metal, 438 S.W.3d at 744
    n.4.
    24 17 C.J.S. CONTRACTS § 91 (2014).
    25 See, e.g., Dillard v. Starcon Int’l, Inc., 
    483 F.3d 502
    , 508-09 (7th Cir. 2007).
    26 See Blackstone v. Brink, Civil Action No. 13-cv-0896 (KBJ), 
    2014 WL 3896018
    , at *9
    (D.D.C. Aug. 11, 2014) (citations omitted) (“[W]hile the general agreement to release
    Plaintiffs’ claims against Defendant Brink was a material element of the settlement
    agreement, the specific language of the release form was not.”); Schaffer v. Litton Loan
    Servicing, LP, No. CV 05-07673 MMM (JCx), 
    2012 WL 10274678
    , at *15 (C.D. Cal. Nov. 13,
    2012) (“[C]ourts generally find there is agreement on all of the material terms of settlement
    where the parties have agreed upon the monetary amount of the settlement payment and the
    fact that plaintiffs will release specific claims. Agreement on the precise terms of a written
    settlement agreement [or] precise release language . . . is not required.”); Nicholas v.
    Wyndham Int’l, Inc., Civil No. 2001-147, 
    2007 WL 4811566
    , at *4 (D.V.I. Nov. 20, 2007)
    (citations omitted) (“[C]ourts routinely enforce settlement agreements even where the precise
    wording of a release has not been finalized.”); McDonnell v. Engine Distribs., Civil Action No.
    03-1999, 
    2007 WL 2814628
    , at *8 (D.N.J. Sept. 24, 2007) (“The disputed terms[] concerning
    the scope of the release . . . all speak to the settlement’s implementation. They are not,
    however, essentials of the settlement.”); Carlson v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 76 F.
    Supp. 2d 1069, 1076 (D. Mont. 1999) (“Although the release was a material element, the terms
    of the release were not.” (emphasis added)).
    27 
    Mastroni-Mucker, 976 A.2d at 521
    n.5 (citations omitted).
    28 See 
    May, 119 P.3d at 1256
    , 1259; 
    Hagrish, 603 A.2d at 110
    .
    Without contending that the Release included any material terms that Johnson could
    not have reasonably expected, the dissent suggests that the requirement that Johnson sign
    a release before BP and the GCCF disclosed the terms of that release prevented the formation
    of a contract. As the cases cited above demonstrate, however, even where the parties have
    not yet agreed to the precise terms and language of the release, they may nonetheless form
    a binding settlement agreement by agreeing to both the existence of a release and the amount
    of payment. Indeed, in the real world of tort litigation, it would be difficult to operate any
    18
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    Here, the Determination Letter contained the following description of
    the release that the GCCF promised to send Johnson if he accepted the offer:
    The Release waives and releases any claims for bodily injury that
    you have or may have in the future against BP and all other
    potentially responsible parties with regard to the Oil Spill, and
    prevents you from submitting any bodily injury claim seeking
    payment from a court.
    This description fully apprises Johnson of both the existence of the Release and
    its breadth. The GCCF’s decision to include these details of the scope of the
    Release further indicates that it sought to include all material terms of the
    settlement in its offer so that the settlement would be binding on Johnson once
    he signed and returned his acceptance. As a result, the Determination Letter
    contained all material terms. We cannot accept BP’s argument that a binding
    settlement agreement was not perfected simply because the GCCF planned to
    send Johnson a formal release after Johnson accepted all the terms of the Final
    Payment Offer.
    The cases BP cites in support of its argument are readily distinguishable.
    In Nascimento v. Wells Fargo Bank, NA, 29 for example, the court held that the
    parties never formed a valid settlement agreement because the parties never
    agreed to the essential terms of the contract’s release provision. 30 In that case,
    however, the defendant mailed the plaintiff four separate acceptance letters,
    each containing radically different release provisions which in turn differed
    from the release terms contained in the plaintiff’s offer letter. 31 The court
    therefore concluded that the parties never reached a meeting of the minds on
    differently; when an attorney, with his or her client’s consent, agrees to settle a case for a
    sum certain, the plaintiff inevitably realizes that the defendant has bought its peace, and
    will expect to sign a release that will discharge the defendant in the broadest terms.
    29 No. 2:11–CV–1049 JCM (GWF), 
    2013 WL 6579575
    (D. Nev. Dec. 13, 2013).
    30 
    Id. at *2-4.
           31 
    Id. at *3.
    19
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    the release terms. 32 Here, by contrast, there exists a single release description
    in the Determination Letter, and it previewed the Release’s essential terms to
    Johnson. The other case BP cites, Corilant Financial, involved a disputed earn-
    out payment provision in a proposed acquisition agreement, and therefore
    casts little light on whether a description of a release in a settlement offer
    contains all material terms. 33
    BP nevertheless maintains that the parties could not have reached a
    meeting of the minds because the GCCF’s formal release document contains
    terms that go far beyond those described in the thumbnail description in the
    Determination Letter. According to BP, the Determination Letter did not
    inform Johnson that (1) the Release applies to emotional injury as well as
    bodily injury claims; (2) the Release “extends to claims held by the releasing
    party’s spouse, parents, heirs, estate, and other beneficiaries;” and (3) the
    Release contains a two-page list of released parties that are not explicitly
    mentioned in the Determination Letter, including Johnson’s employer,
    Tidewater. 34 BP emphasizes that, whereas the description of the Release in the
    Determination Letter consists of a single sentence, the Release contains nine
    pages of detailed release terms. Thus, argues BP, Johnson could not have
    predicted these terms in advance, so he could not have agreed to all of the
    material terms of the settlement agreement at the time he submitted the Final
    Payment Election Form.
    We disagree. The description of the Release in the Determination Letter
    is particularly broad; it informs Johnson that he will be releasing all claims
    32 
    Id. 33 See
    Fiduciary Fin. Servs. of S.W., Inc. v. Corilant Fin., L.P., 
    376 S.W.3d 253
    , 256-
    58 (Tex. App. 2012).
    34 BP also argues in passing that the Determination Letter is missing an additional
    essential term: a choice of law clause that is present in the Release. Because BP does not
    explain why this term is material, we conclude that BP has waived this argument on appeal.
    20
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    arising from the Deepwater Horizon explosion against all potentially
    responsible parties. 35 Johnson was represented by zealous and competent
    counsel at the time he accepted the Final Payment Offer. Johnson therefore
    would have anticipated that the Release would be lengthy and exhaustive, and
    that it would encompass any and all legal claims arising from the incident that
    he or his successors might bring on his behalf against any defendant.
    Moreover, Johnson must have expected that the term “bodily injury” would
    include his emotional injury claims because he submitted copious psychological
    records to the GCCF. The Release therefore does not contain any terms that
    Johnson could not have anticipated.Thus, the parties reached a meeting of the
    minds as to all essential terms of the settlement agreement.
    C.
    BP also argues, and the dissent agrees, that the settlement agreement
    fails for lack of mutual consideration. BP claims that, if the parties’ roles were
    reversed, and BP was trying to enforce the putative settlement agreement
    against Johnson, no court would force Johnson to sign a release he had never
    seen, given the law’s solicitude for seamen as wards of admiralty. Thus, argues
    BP, if BP could not force Johnson to release his claims under the facts of this
    case, then Johnson should not be able to force BP to give him the Final
    Payment Amount.
    In support of its argument, BP relies on the following language in the
    GCCF’s internal protocols: “A claimant has a right to consult with an attorney
    of his or her choosing prior to . . . signing a release of legal rights.” According
    to BP, this language necessarily means that a claimant could permissibly
    35We reject BP’s argument that an objective seaman would most naturally interpret
    the incredibly broad phrase “all other potentially responsible parties” to only include parties
    who would constitute “responsible parties” as that term is defined by OPA.
    21
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    decline to sign the release after accepting a final payment offer if he or she so
    chose. Thus, claims BP, an enforceable settlement agreement cannot arise
    under the GCCF’s rules until the claimant actually signs a release.
    Johnson has no quarrel with any of the Release’s terms, and there is no
    question that he is willing and ready to sign the Release in its current form
    and settle all of his claims against all potentially responsible parties. But even
    if the roles were reversed, we reject BP’s premise that it would be unable to
    require Johnson to sign the Release. A settlement will be enforced against a
    seaman if he “relinquished his rights with an informed understanding of his
    rights and a full appreciation of the consequences when he executed a
    release.” 36 “The adequacy of the consideration is just one factor, along with the
    adequacy of legal representation, and whether the parties negotiated in good
    faith, or if there is the appearance of fraud or coercion.” 37
    We have no doubt that these factors would favor enforcement of the
    settlement agreement against Johnson if the parties’ roles were reversed. 38
    Johnson stands to receive generous consideration in exchange for the release
    of his claims. 39 Johnson is represented by competent and zealous counsel.
    There is no suggestion of bad faith, coercion, or fraud on the part of BP. Most
    importantly, as explained above, the description of the Release in the
    Determination Letter sufficiently apprised Johnson of the consequences of
    accepting the settlement agreement, as the Release does not contain any terms
    that Johnson could not reasonably have expected. Thus, Johnson relinquished
    36 Stipelcovich v. Sand Dollar Marine, Inc., 
    805 F.2d 599
    , 606 (5th Cir. 1986) (citing
    Bass v. Phoenix Seadrill/78, Ltd., 
    749 F.2d 1154
    , 1161 (5th Cir. 1985)).
    37 
    Id. (internal citations
    omitted).
    38 See Strange v. Gulf & S. Am. S.S. Co., 
    495 F.2d 1235
    , 1236-37 (5th Cir. 1974)
    (enforcing settlement agreement against seaman even though seaman refused to execute
    release).
    39 See Durden v. Exxon Corp., 
    803 F.2d 845
    , 848 (5th Cir. 1986)
    22
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    his rights with a full understanding of the consequences at the time he
    accepted the Final Payment Offer. Finally, the cases BP cites in support of its
    argument that it could not force Johnson to sign the Release if the roles were
    reversed all involve facts very different than those presented here. 40
    BP claims, and the dissent agrees, that the language in the GCCF’s
    protocols advising the claimant to seek legal counsel before signing the Release
    necessarily implies that a seaman could freely refuse to execute a release after
    submitting the Final Payment Election Form. We disagree. Even if a claimant
    could not refuse to sign the Release after accepting a settlement offer, that does
    not mean that an attorney’s advice would necessarily be valueless. For
    instance, the attorney could review the Release to make sure it comports with
    the description in the Determination Letter upon which the parties agreed. In
    this case, the release language follows from the thumbnail description in the
    Determination Letter, so BP could require Johnson to sign it if the parties’
    roles were reversed.
    In support of its argument that BP could not have forced Johnson to sign
    the Release if he declined to do so after submitting the Final Payment Election
    Form, the dissent cites the following language from the Release:
    You are under no obligation to accept the final payment offered to
    you by the Gulf Coast Claims Facility (“GCCF”). You are free to
    reject the final payment offered by the GCCF and to pursue other
    means of compensation. If you want to file a lawsuit regarding the
    incident do not sign the Release. 41
    40  See Castillo v. Spiliada Mar. Corp., 
    937 F.2d 240
    , 243 (5th Cir. 1991) (holding that
    district court erred in ruling that seamen’s releases were valid as a matter of law where
    seamen presented evidence of language barriers, coercion, and inadequacy of the source and
    quality of legal counsel); Halliburton v. Ocean Drilling & Exploration Co., 
    620 F.2d 444
    , 445
    (5th Cir. 1980) (holding that seaman demonstrated genuine issue of material fact as to
    validity of release where seaman was not represented by counsel and suffered diminished
    mental capacity).
    41 (Emphasis added).
    23
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    If that language was present in the offer letter, the dissent’s argument would
    have significantly more force. But it is not; the language comes from the
    Release itself, which the GCCF never sent to Johnson, and Johnson never saw.
    Again, an offer is judged by the parties’ overt acts and words, not by the
    subjective or secret intent of the offeror. 42 As explained above, all of the
    documents that Johnson and the GCCF actually exchanged manifest the
    parties’ intent to form a contract to settle Johnson’s claims and release BP from
    liability. Thus, BP could have held Johnson to the material terms of the
    Release, so the settlement agreement does not fail for lack of mutuality.
    In sum, each of the aforementioned challenges to contract formation fail.
    V.
    BP argues in the alternative that, even if a signed release was not a
    condition precedent to formation of a settlement agreement, it is at least a
    condition precedent to payment under the contract. Because Johnson never
    signed the Release, BP argues that Johnson may not recover the Final
    Payment Amount. Johnson responds that, because BP refused to mail the
    Release to Johnson, the doctrine of prevention excuses Johnson’s failure to sign
    the Release.
    “A condition precedent is either an act of a party that must be performed
    or a certain event that must happen before a contractual right accrues or a
    contractual duty arises.” 43 “[T]he failure of a condition to occur excuses
    performance by the party whose performance is dependent on its occurrence.” 44
    42 1 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 4.1 (4th ed. 2014).
    43 13 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 38:7 (4th ed. 2014).
    44 
    Id. 24 Case:
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    However, “[f]ulfillment of a contract promise . . . is not excused by failure
    of a condition . . . which the promisor himself causes to happen.” 45 “It is a
    principle of fundamental justice that if a promisor is himself the cause of the
    failure of performance, either of an obligation due him or of a condition upon
    which his own liability depends, he cannot take advantage of the failure.” 46
    This is known as the doctrine of prevention. 47
    The Determination Letter that BP sent to Johnson states: “The amount
    of the Final Payment Offer . . . is $2,698,095.00, which is the amount that can
    be paid now if you decide to accept the Final Payment Offer and you sign a
    Release and Covenant Not to Sue (the “Release”).” Thus, BP is correct that a
    signed release is a condition precedent to payment under the contract that has
    gone unfulfilled.
    Nevertheless, BP’s refusal to send Johnson the Release excuses his
    failure to sign it. The Determination Letter states that, if the claimant timely
    submits the Final Payment Election Form, and if BP opts not to appeal the
    settlement within fourteen days of the date of the Determination Letter, “[w]e
    then will send you a Release to be signed and returned to be paid the Final
    Payment Amount.” Johnson submitted the Final Payment Election Form, BP
    did not exercise its appellate rights, and the GCCF never mailed the Release
    as promised. Johnson would have signed the release if the GCCF sent it to him.
    Thus, the GCCF – and, by extension, BP – prevented Johnson from signing the
    Release, which excuses his failure to do so. 48 Thus, the fact that Johnson never
    signed the Release does not categorically bar him from recovering under the
    agreement.
    45 Ballard v. El Dorado Tire Co., 
    512 F.2d 901
    , 907 (5th Cir. 1975).
    46 
    Id. 47 E.g.,
    W & G Seaford Assocs., L.P. v. E. Shore Mkts., 
    714 F. Supp. 1336
    , 1341 (D. Del.
    1989).
    48   See 
    Ballard, 512 F.2d at 907
    .
    25
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    BP responds that an exception to the doctrine of prevention exists when
    the party does not “improperly” prevent the condition precedent from
    occurring. According to BP, its refusal to send Johnson the Release was not
    “improper,” so the doctrine of prevention does not excuse his failure to sign the
    Release. We need not decide whether this exception exists as a general matter.
    BP has not identified, and we have not found, any authority that would render
    the doctrine of prevention inapplicable under the facts of this case. 49 We
    therefore reject the argument.
    BP also argues that the GCCF’s rules and protocols, to which Johnson
    agreed to be bound when he voluntarily submitted his personal injury claim to
    the GCCF, authorized the GCCF to withhold the Release from Johnson once it
    uncovered evidence that Johnson submitted a fraudulent claim. We have
    reviewed the GCCF’s protocols and conclude that, although the GCCF is
    authorized to investigate fraud prior to extending a settlement offer, and the
    GCCF is empowered to “refer all evidence of false or fraudulent claims to
    appropriate law enforcement authorities,” the GCCF rules contain no provision
    allowing the GCCF to repudiate an otherwise binding contract after BP’s
    appeals period has expired merely because it later develops reason to believe
    that the claimant has submitted a false claim. Nor does the Determination
    Letter authorize the GCCF to refuse to mail the Release to the claimant after
    the claimant has accepted a Final Payment Offer. 50
    49 Mack Trucks, Inc. v. BorgWarner Turbo Systems, Inc., Civil Action No. 08-2681,
    
    2011 WL 1045108
    , at *5-6 (E.D. Pa. Mar. 22, 2011), which BP cites in its brief, merely holds
    that a party may not raise the doctrine of prevention unless it produces evidence that
    “support[s] an inference that [the opposing party] frustrated [its] compliance with the
    condition precedent.” The case is inapposite because there is no doubt that the GCCF and BP
    frustrated Johnson’s compliance with the condition precedent by refusing to mail him the
    Release.
    50 See Akanthos Capital Mgmt., LLC v. Compucredit Holdings Corp., 
    677 F.3d 1286
    ,
    1297 (11th Cir. 2012) (holding that a party may permissibly prevent a condition precedent
    from occurring if the “alleged ‘prevention’ is authorized by the contract”).
    26
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    BP insists that, if we rule in Johnson’s favor on this issue, then BP has
    no remedy if a claimant submits a fraudulent claim that goes undiscovered
    until after the fourteen-day appeal window has expired. As BP persuasively
    argues, “[f]iling claims to a settlement facility . . . is not a game of beat-the-
    clock that allows unscrupulous claimants maintaining a deception until time
    runs out to keep their ill-gotten gains.” This concern is well-taken, and we
    address it in the following section.
    VI.
    BP’s final argument is that, even if BP and Johnson formed an otherwise
    valid contract, the settlement agreement is nonetheless unenforceable because
    Johnson fraudulently induced BP to enter the settlement. Specifically, BP
    claims that Tidewater’s letter to the GCCF and Guidepost’s investigation
    report demonstrate that Johnson fabricated his personal injury claims and
    thereby submitted a fraudulent claim to the GCCF.
    A court may set aside a settlement agreement induced by fraud. 51 “The
    essential elements of fraudulent inducement into a settlement are no different
    from any action on fraud.” 52 Thus, BP must prove: 53
    (1) a material representation was made; (2) the representation was
    false; (3) when the representation was made, the speaker knew it
    was false or made it recklessly without any knowledge of the truth
    and as a positive assertion; (4) the representation was made with
    the intention that it be acted upon by the other party; (5) the party
    51   E.g., Howard v. Chris-Craft Corp., 
    562 F. Supp. 932
    , 937 (E.D. Tex. 1982) (citations
    omitted).
    52   15B AM. JUR. 2D COMPROMISE AND SETTLEMENT § 32 (2d ed. 2014) (citations
    omitted).
    53BP argues that it need not make an actual showing of fraud to succeed on its
    defense, but rather need only show that the GCCF possessed sufficient evidence to believe
    Johnson committed fraud at the time it issued its Denial Letter. Because BP’s argument is
    based on an inaccurate characterization of the GCCF’s internal rules and is otherwise
    unsupported by legal authority, we reject it.
    27
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    acted in reliance on upon the representation; and (6) the party
    suffered injury. 54
    As a general matter, a party may not challenge a settlement agreement
    on the basis of an alleged fraud that “relates to the underlying merits of the
    claim that was settled.” 55 Were the rule otherwise,
    It would allow a party to reopen any settled litigation if he later
    discovered evidence bolstering his prior litigation position. If a
    party was able to undo a binding settlement agreement by simply
    couching the prior litigation as “fraudulent,” there would be no way
    to assure the full and final resolution of any matter. 56
    Thus, “[a] settlement will not be set aside . . . merely because one party’s case
    becomes stronger after the settlement is concluded.” 57
    There is, however, a narrow exception to this general rule. Where the
    defendant subsequently uncovers previously unavilable evidence that the
    plaintiff was in fact not injured at all, or sustained only de minimis injuries,
    the defendant may argue that the plaintiff fraudulently induced it to enter into
    a settlement agreement. 58 In such circumstances, the district court must hold
    an evidentiary hearing to weigh the newly-discovered evidence of fraud. 59
    The Ninth Circuit’s opinion in Russell v. Puget Sound Tug & Barge Co. 60
    is particularly instructive in this regard. 61 In that case, a seaman swore at his
    deposition that he was permanently disabled as a result of an on-the-job
    54   O’Hare v. Graham, 455 F. App’x 377, 379-80 (5th Cir. 2011) (citations omitted).
    55   Johnson v. King, No. 10-CV-279-S, 
    2011 WL 4963902
    , at *14 (D. Wyo. Oct. 17, 2011)
    (“King”).
    56King, 
    2011 WL 4963902
    , at *14. Accord 
    Howard, 562 F. Supp. at 933-38
    .
    
    57Howard, 562 F. Supp. at 937
    .
    58 See Russell v. Puget Sound Tug & Barge Co., 
    737 F.2d 1510
    , 1510-11 (9th Cir. 1984).
    59 
    Id. at 1510-11.
          60 
    Id. 61 See
    also City Equities Anaheim, Ltd. v. Lincoln Plaza Dev. Co. (In re City Equities
    Anaheim, Ltd.), 
    22 F.3d 954
    , 957 (9th Cir. 1994) (“[W]e have found enforcement upon motion
    inappropriate . . . where a settlement agreement was apparently procured by fraud.”).
    28
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    injury. 62 The seaman and the shipowner agreed to settle the seaman’s personal
    injury claim. 63 After the parties settled the case, however, the shipowner
    obtained video evidence from its private investigators depicting the seaman
    performing rigorous physical activity without difficulty. 64 The Ninth Circuit
    reversed the district court’s order enforcing the settlement agreement and
    remanded for an evidentiary hearing to determine whether the seaman
    submitted a fraudulent claim regarding his on-the-job injuries. 65 The Ninth
    Circuit reached this conclusion even though the alleged fraud related directly
    to the merits of the seaman’s claims – namely, the existence and extent of the
    seaman’s injuries. 66
    Here, too, BP has produced evidence suggesting that Johnson did not
    sustain any injury on the date of the Deepwater Horizon blowout. As described
    in greater detail above, Johnson’s co-workers stated that the force of the blast
    never caused him to fall, stumble, or lose consciousness. To the contrary, the
    seamen on duty maintained that Johnson performed his duties capably and
    did not exhibit any signs of injury whatsoever. BP also produced evidence that
    Johnson repeatedly denied being injured on the date of the incident. Because
    BP’s evidence suggests that Johnson may have submitted a wholly fabricated
    claim to the GCCF, BP may raise fraudulent inducement as a defense to
    enforcement of the settlement. 67
    62 
    Russell, 737 F.2d at 1510-11
    .
    63 
    Id. at 1511.
          64 
    Id. 65 Id.
          66 See 
    id. 67 See
    id. at 1510-11.
    
    29
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    No. 14-30269
    The district court therefore erred by discounting BP’s substantial
    evidence of fraud without holding an evidentiary hearing. 68 We must therefore
    vacate the judgment against BP and remand for further proceedings. 69
    VII.
    BP argues that the district court erred by granting prejudgment interest
    at a rate of 5%. Because we have vacated the district court’s judgment, we need
    not address this issue. If the district court again rules in Johnson’s favor on
    remand, BP may address the issue with the district court at that time.
    VIII.
    In sum, we affirm the district court’s order in part. We agree with the
    district court that Johnson and BP entered into a binding settlement
    68  We do not suggest that the evidence in the record is not conflicting. Johnson
    submitted his medical records into the record, which could demonstrate that he sustained
    some injury during the explosion. The strength of each side’s evidence ultimately depends on
    a determination of each witness’s credibility.
    69 In this connection, we advise the district court to reconsider the weight it gave to
    Guidepost’s statement that “a Finding of Potetnial [sic] Fraud is not supported by this
    investigation.” Although the Guidepost report does state that “Johnson did not submit any
    overtly fraudulent document” to the GCCF, the report nonetheless unequivocally concludes
    that “Johnson’s claims of physical injury as a result of the Deepwater Horizon explosion
    appear to be fabricated.”
    We are also persuaded that the district court erred by concluding, at least on the
    record then before it, that BP could not prove justifiable reliance. The district court reasoned
    that Tidewater’s October 20, 2011 letter to BP alerted BP to “Tidewater’s suspicions about
    whether Johnson’s accident had occurred as he alleged or whether he had exaggerated his
    injuries” before BP’s appeal period expired. As BP correctly notes, however, Tidewater’s letter
    merely advises BP of Tidewater’s belief that the Final Payment Offer was “excessive and
    unreasonable;” it contains no indication that Tidewater had any reason at that time to believe
    that Johnson fabricated his claims entirely. Even if Tidewater did believe Johnson submitted
    a false claim to the GCCF, the letter does not express that belief to BP. Moreover, Tidewater
    and Guidepost did not complete their investigations of Johnson’s claim until after BP’s appeal
    period had already expired. Thus, as we read the record, BP, Guidepost, and Tidewater only
    became aware of the full extent of Johnson’s alleged fraud after BP’s opportunity to appeal
    had elapsed. In sum, what BP should have known – and when it should have known it – are
    genuine issues of material fact for the district court to resolve after an evidentiary hearing.
    30
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    agreement. Although Johnson’s failure to sign a release might ordinarily bar
    him from recovering under the settlement agreement, BP’s refusal to send
    Johnson the release excuses that failure here.
    However, the district court should have held an evidentiary hearing to
    evaluate whether Johnson fraudulently induced BP into entering the
    settlement agreement by submitting a fabricated claim to the GCCF. We
    therefore vacate the district court’s judgment and remand for further
    proceedings.
    AFFIRMED in part, VACATED, and REMANDED for further
    proceedings.
    31
    Case: 14-30269     Document: 00513042440      Page: 32    Date Filed: 05/13/2015
    No. 14-30269
    PRISCILLA R. OWEN, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    I disagree with the panel majority’s conclusion that a contract was
    formed.   Mutuality is lacking, 1 and I therefore respectfully dissent.         The
    documents that the Gulf Coast Claims Facility (GCCF) prepared in connection
    with Elton Johnson’s claims unequivocally permitted Johnson to change his
    mind before he actually signed a release, even after he had indicated that he
    was willing to accept the amount of $2,698,095.00 in settlement of his claims
    against the BP entities. Nothing that Johnson signed or to which he agreed
    obligated him to sign a release. To the contrary, the documents reflected that
    the formation of an enforceable agreement would not occur until Johnson
    actually assented to the Release. Johnson could have refused to sign a release,
    and BP could not have enforced a settlement agreement with Johnson. There
    was no settlement agreement that either BP or Johnson could have enforced
    when the GCCF sent the October 2011 letter denying Johnson’s claims after
    further review.
    The Determination Letter that the GCCF sent to Johnson provided that
    “[t]he amount of the Final Payment Offer . . . is $2,698,095.00, which is the
    amount that can be paid now if you decide to accept the Final Payment Offer
    and you sign a Release and Covenant Not to Sue (the “Release”).” It is clear
    from these terms that accepting the Final Payment Offer and signing the
    Release are both necessary components of a settlement agreement.
    Importantly, the Determination Letter, in bold and italicized text, also
    informed Johnson that he had “the right to consult with an attorney of [his]
    1  1 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 7:14 (4th ed. 2014) (explaining that mutuality of
    obligation can be viewed as simply another “way of stating that there must be valid
    consideration”).
    32
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    own choosing prior to accepting any settlement or signing a release of legal
    rights.” This statement unquestionably permitted Johnson to consult with an
    attorney “prior to accepting any settlement” or “signing a release of legal rights.”
    If checking the box on the Final Payment Form indicating an “elect[ion] to be
    paid the Final Payment Offer” constituted the formation of a settlement
    agreement, then the statement that Johnson had the right to consult with an
    attorney of his own choosing before accepting a settlement or signing a release
    would have conflicted with the Form, would have been virtually meaningless,
    and would have been misleading.
    Consistent with the provisions in the Determination Letter regarding
    the right to consult counsel, the box Johnson checked on the Final Payment
    Election Form read: “I elect to be paid the Final Payment Offer described in
    my Determination Letter . . . .          The GCCF will send you a Release and
    Covenant not to Sue that you must sign and return to be paid.” This language
    informed Johnson that he could choose not to sign the Release, with the obvious
    consequence of not being paid. Johnson’s ability to decline signing the Release
    demonstrates that BP could not enforce any agreement with Johnson until the
    Release was signed.
    The language contained in the Release itself, although never read by
    Johnson, reflects that checking the box on the Final Payment Election Form
    did not give rise to an enforceable contract. The Release states that if a
    personal injury claimant decides not to accept a Final Payment from the
    GCCF, the claimant has the right to file suit. 2 The Release emphasized: “You
    2   The Release provides:
    If you do not accept a Final Payment from the GCCF for your physical
    injury claim, you have the right to file a claim in court, including in the
    multidistrict litigation pending before the United States District Court for the
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    are under no obligation to accept the final payment offered to you by the
    [GCCF]. You are free to reject the final payment offered by the GCCF and to
    pursue other means of compensation. If you want to file a lawsuit regarding
    the incident do not sign the Release.”            If the Form containing the Final
    Payment Offer constituted a binding settlement agreement, then the GCCF
    would not advise a claimant in the Release of his right to decline to sign the
    Release and to pursue a lawsuit. The Release is another clear indication that
    checking the box on the Form sent to Johnson did not constitute the formation
    of a binding contract.
    The panel majority opinion asserts that “language in the GCCF’s
    protocols advising the claimant to seek legal counsel before signing the
    Release” does not mean that Johnson could refuse to sign the Release. 3 The
    majority opinion reasons that an attorney’s advice would not be “valueless,”
    even if Johnson was obligated to sign the Release, since an “attorney could
    review the Release to make sure it comports with the description in the
    Determination Letter upon which the parties agreed.” 4 But the structure of
    the sentence that appeared in bold type and was italicized in the
    Eastern District of Louisiana, titled, In re Oil Spill by the Oil Rig “Deepwater
    Horizon” in the Gulf of Mexico, on April 20, 2010 (MDL No. 2179). The
    multidistrict litigation is a consolidated grouping of federal lawsuits arising
    out of the Incident. Information regarding the multidistrict litigation may be
    obtained from the court’s website at ww.laed.uscourts.gov.
    ...
    You are under no obligation to accept the final payment offered to you
    by the Gulf Coast Claims Facility (“GCCF”). You are free to reject the final
    payment offered by the GCCF and to pursue other means of compensation. If
    you want to file a lawsuit regarding the incident do not sign the Release.
    3   Ante at 23.
    4   
    Id. 34 Case:
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    No. 14-30269
    Determination Letter Johnson received advising him that he had “the right to
    consult with an attorney of [his] own choosing prior to accepting any settlement
    or signing a release of legal rights” does not make such a distinction clear. It
    did not clearly tell Johnson that once he checked the box on the Form, he was
    obligated to release his personal injury claims even if he thereafter consulted
    an attorney and was advised to pursue a different avenue to redress his claim.
    The panel majority opinion concedes that the argument that there was
    no binding agreement “would have significantly more force” 5 if the statements
    in the Release advising the claimant that he is under no obligation to accept
    the final payment offered by the GCCF and that he may file suit were also
    present in the Determination Letter. The majority opinion characterizes these
    Release provisions as “the subjective or secret intent of the offeror” 6 since
    Johnson did not see the Release prior to checking the box on the Form.
    However, the Release was not tailored for Johnson’s individual claim. The
    Release is the standard release for personal injury claims used in the GCCF
    process, as Johnson recognized in the district court. It is an integral part of
    the GCCF claims process and reflects that unless and until a claimant signed
    the Release, the voluntary GCCF claims process did not result in any
    relinquishment of a claimant’s rights against the BP entities.                The
    Determination Letter that Johnson did receive reflected the GCCF’s intent
    that there was no binding agreement until the Release was signed by stating
    that Johnson had the right to be paid only if he accepted the “Final Payment
    Offer and [he] sign[ed] a Release and Covenant Not to Sue.”
    5   Ante at 24.
    6   
    Id. 35 Case:
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    The documents are consistent throughout. Johnson had the right to
    walk away from the GCCF process even after he sent the Final Payment
    Election Form to the GCCF. Since Johnson had the right to walk away, the
    GCCF did as well. There was no binding settlement agreement at the time
    that the GCCF sent the letter denying Johnson’s claims.
    *****
    For the foregoing reasons, I dissent.
    36