United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 06-1625
CRAIG BUCK ET AL.,
Plaintiffs, Appellants,
v.
AMERICAN AIRLINES, INC., ET AL.,
Defendants, Appellees.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. Nathaniel M. Gorton, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Howard, Circuit Judge,
Selya, Senior Circuit Judge,
and Shadur,* Senior District Judge.
Evans J. Carter, with whom Evans J. Carter, P.C. was on brief,
for appellants.
Matthew A. Porter, with whom Michael S. Shin and Dechert LLP
were on brief, for appellees American Airlines, Inc., Alaska
Airlines, Inc., Continental Airlines, Inc., Southwest Airlines Co.,
Airlines Reporting Corp., and Air Transport Association of America,
Inc.
Ethan G. Shenkman, with whom Daniel M. Esrick, David W. Ogden,
and Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP were on brief, for
appellee Deutsche Lufthansa A.G.
Kevin C. Cain and Peabody & Arnold LLP on brief for appellees
*
Of the Northern District of Illinois, sitting by designation.
Aer Lingus Ltd., Alitalia-Linee Aeree Italiane S.p.A. d/b/a
Alitalia Airlines, and British Airways, PLC, d/b/a British Airways.
Thomas J. Whalen, with whom Kathleen M. Guilfoyle, Campbell
Campbell Edwards & Conroy, P.C., and Eckert Seamans Cherin &
Mellott, LLC were on brief, for appellees China Eastern Airlines
Co. and China Southern Airlines Co.
February 7, 2007
SELYA, Senior Circuit Judge. When the plaintiffs in this
case purchased nonrefundable airline tickets that they ultimately
were unable to use, they received no payback of any kind. In the
lawsuit that followed, they conceded that they were correctly
denied any refund of their base fares but accused the airlines of
unlawfully failing to refund various fees and taxes that had been
collected as part of the original ticket prices. The plaintiffs'
core theory was that the word "nonrefundable" pertained only to
their base fares, not to the various other charges (none of which
became due without travel).
The district court found the plaintiffs' claims preempted
and dismissed the suit for failure to state a viable cause of
action. We too conclude that the plaintiffs are fruitlessly
endeavoring to fly in unfriendly skies. Consequently, we affirm
the order of dismissal.
I. BACKGROUND
On November 4, 2004, fifteen individuals filed suit
against a number of airlines and related entities in a
Massachusetts state court. The plaintiffs alleged that the
defendants had wrongfully retained fees and taxes collected at the
time of their purchase of nonrefundable tickets. This retention of
funds was wrongful, the plaintiffs maintained, because they never
used the tickets and, thus, the fees and taxes, which did not
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become due until the commencement of air travel, should have been
returned.
The defendants removed the case to the federal district
court. The plaintiffs, now reduced to nine in number, served an
amended complaint (the operative pleading for our purposes) that
named six domestic and seven international airlines as the
culprits.1 The fees and taxes said to have been wrongly withheld
include passenger facility charges, see 14 C.F.R. § 158.5; customs
fees, see 19 C.F.R. § 24.22(g)(1); immigration fees, see 8 C.F.R.
§ 286.2; agricultural quarantine fees, see 7 C.F.R. § 354.3(f);
security fees, see 49 C.F.R. § 1510.5; and charges on behalf of
foreign sovereigns (collectively, the fees). The amended complaint
named as additional defendants two trade associations (Airlines
Reporting Corp. and Air Transport Association of America, Inc.),
alleging that they had been complicit in allowing the airlines
wrongfully to retain the fees.
1
Of the domestic airlines, American Airlines, Alaska Airlines,
Continental Airlines, and Southwest Airlines remain as defendants.
Two other domestic carriers (Northwest and Delta) have been
dismissed due to ongoing bankruptcy proceedings. The international
airlines named in the suit are Aer Lingus, Alitalia, British
Airways, China Eastern Airlines, China Southern Airlines,
Lufthansa, and Olympic Airways. Of these, six remain (Olympic
Airways appears to have been dropped as a party). The Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA) also was named, but the district
court dismissed all claims against the FAA on grounds wholly
unrelated to the issues raised on appeal.
-3-
The plaintiffs averred that, in keeping the fees, the
defendants violated a host of federal regulations, most notably a
regulation that provides:
A passenger shall not be bound by any terms
restricting refunds of the ticket price,
imposing monetary penalties on passengers, or
permitting the carrier to raise the price,
unless the passenger receives conspicuous
written notice of the salient features of
those terms on or with the ticket.
14 C.F.R. § 253.7. The plaintiffs claim that the retained fees
constitute a forbidden monetary penalty, imposed without due
notice. In this connection, they admit having had adequate notice
that their tickets were nonrefundable; in their view, however, this
only alerted them to the fact that they could not recover the base
ticket price. They had no notice that the fees would be forfeit as
well.
The plaintiffs cloaked this theory in pleochroic raiment;
their multitudinous statements of claim included counts for
declaratory judgment, rescission, breach of contract, unjust
enrichment, breach of a covenant of good faith and fair dealing,
breach of fiduciary duty, and civil conspiracy. In addition, the
plaintiffs purposed to sue pursuant to an implied right of action
arising under a federal regulation. Their prayer for relief
requested certification of a class; a declaration that (i) the
airlines had failed to provide adequate notice of an intention to
withhold the fees and (ii) the airlines' retention of the fees was
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wrongful; treble damages; injunctive and other equitable
remediation; and attorneys' fees.
A majority of the defendants moved to dismiss on the
ground, inter alia, that all the claims were preempted by section
105(a) of the Airline Deregulation Act (ADA), 49 U.S.C. §
41713(b)(1). The district court granted the motion to dismiss.
Harrington v. Delta Air Lines, Inc., No. Civ. A. 04-12558, 2006 WL
1581752, at *7-8 (D. Mass. Feb. 21, 2006). The court, acting sua
sponte, extended its ruling to cover those defendants that had not
joined in the original motion.2 See id. This timely appeal
followed.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
This case arrives on our doorstep following the entry of
a judgment of dismissal pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). Consequently,
"we review the lower court's dismissal order de novo, accepting the
plaintiffs' well-pleaded facts as true and indulging all reasonable
inferences to their behoof." McCloskey v. Mueller, 446 F.3d 262,
266 (1st Cir. 2006). In conducting that tamisage, however, "bald
assertions, unsupportable conclusions, periphrastic
circumlocutions, and the like need not be credited." Aulson v.
Blanchard, 83 F.3d 1, 3 (1st Cir. 1996).
2
Those defendants had chosen instead to contest personal
jurisdiction.
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III. DISCUSSION
We begin our analysis with the plaintiffs' lone federal-
law claim3: their claim of an implied right of action under 14
C.F.R. § 253.4 and § 253.7. These provisions govern the disclosure
of terms in contracts for air travel. Among other things, they
prevent airlines from claiming the benefit of contract terms not
incorporated by reference in a specified manner. See 14 C.F.R. §
253.4(a). They go on to restrict the authority of airlines to
impose monetary penalties on passengers without clear notice. See
id. § 253.7. In this instance, the plaintiffs argue that they were
denied notice that they would forfeit the fees (in addition to the
base fares) in the event that they did not use their nonrefundable
tickets.
In support of this argument, the plaintiffs invoke the
test formulated in Cort v. Ash, 422 U.S. 66 (1975), which they
insist controls whether a private right of action is to be implied
in connection with a federal statute. Under that test, courts are
to ask four questions:
3
Although the plaintiffs style "declaratory judgment" as a
cause of action, the provision that they cite, 28 U.S.C. § 2201(a),
creates a remedy, not a cause of action. See, e.g., Muirhead v.
Mecham, 427 F.3d 14, 17 n.1 (1st Cir. 2005) (noting that section
2201 "neither provides nor denies a jurisdictional basis for
actions under federal law, but merely defines the scope of
available declaratory relief" (internal quotation marks omitted)).
The actual claims asserted by the plaintiffs, save only for the
implied right of action claim, have their genesis in state law.
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[I]s the plaintiff a member of the class for
whose "especial benefit" the statute was
passed? Is there any cogent indication of
legislative intent to create or deny the
remedy sought? Would recognition of the
remedy be "consistent with the underlying
purposes" of the statutory scheme? Would it
be inappropriate to infer a federal remedy
because "the cause of action [is] one
traditionally relegated to state law . . ."?
Royal Business Grp., Inc. v. Realist, Inc., 933 F.2d 1056, 1060
(1st Cir. 1991) (quoting and paraphrasing Cort, 422 U.S. at 78)
(alternations in original).4 The plaintiffs maintain that the
regulations' goal is to protect consumers and, thus, that it is
appropriate to imply a private right of action.
This argument cannot withstand scrutiny. In the first
place, the plaintiffs misapprehend the relevant unit of analysis.
Regulations alone cannot create private rights of action; the
source of the right must be a statute. See Alexander v. Sandoval,
532 U.S. 275, 291 (2001); Iverson v. City of Boston, 452 F.3d 94,
100 (1st Cir. 2006). The regulations upon which the plaintiffs
rely were promulgated pursuant to 49 U.S.C. § 41707 — a statute
that has its roots in the CAB Sunset Act, Pub. L. No. 98-443, § 7,
98 Stat. 1703, 1706 (1984). The CAB Sunset Act embodies a series
4
We previously have questioned the continuing vitality of the
Cort test. See Rolland v. Romney, 318 F.3d 42, 52 n.9 (1st Cir.
2003). At the very least, the second factor — legislative intent
to create a remedy — appears to be ascendant. See id. Here,
however, the plaintiffs cannot prevail even under the original Cort
test. Thus, we elect to address their argument in the terms in
which they have presented it.
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of amendments to the ADA, which six years earlier had significantly
revamped the Federal Aviation Act.5 We recently rejected an
entreaty to imply a private cause of action pursuant to other
regulations implementing the ADA. See Bonano v. E. Carib. Airline
Corp., 365 F.3d 81, 84-85 (1st Cir. 2004). In the process, we made
clear that, for the purpose of implying private rights of action,
the Federal Aviation Act (and, hence, the ADA, see supra note 5) is
barren soil. See id. There is nothing about the case at bar that
shakes our confidence in that assessment.
To cinch matters, "[e]very court faced with the question
of whether a consumer protection provision of the ADA allows the
implication of a private right of action against an airline has
answered the question in the negative." Casas v. Am. Airlines,
Inc., 304 F.3d 517, 522 n.7 (5th Cir. 2002) (quoting Musson
Theatrical, Inc. v. Fed. Express Corp., 89 F.3d 1244, 1252 (6th
Cir. 1996)); see Statland v. Am. Airlines, Inc., 998 F.2d 539, 540-
41 (7th Cir. 1993) (declining to imply a private right of action
under the statutory provision at issue in this case). We see no
justification for creating a circuit split. Thus, we hold that the
consumer protection provisions of the ADA do not permit the
imputation of a private right of action against an airline and
5
For ease in reference, we henceforth will refer to the ADA,
employing that acronym to encompass the entire scope of the
revamped statute, including provisions that originated in the
Federal Aviation Act.
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that, therefore, the plaintiffs do not have an implied right of
action under 14 C.F.R. § 253.4 or § 253.7.
Lacking a federal-law cause of action, the plaintiffs are
relegated to their array of state-law claims. See supra note 3.
Yet, even though Massachusetts law offers them a cornucopia of
vehicles for their theory that the fees should have been refunded,
this bounty avails them naught; state-law claims premised on that
theory cannot survive the ADA's broad preemptive sweep. We explain
briefly.
Pertinently, the ADA declares that no state may "enact or
enforce a law, regulation, or other provision having the force and
effect of law related to a price, route, or service of an air
carrier." 49 U.S.C. § 41713(b)(1). The Supreme Court has offered
considerable guidance as to how this preemption provision should be
construed. In Morales v. Trans World Airlines, Inc., 504 U.S. 374
(1992), the Court referred to the "sweeping nature" of the
preemption provision, emphasizing the reach of the provision's
"relationship" language.6 Id. at 384. The Morales Court held that
6
The version of the ADA in effect when the Court decided
Morales used the phrase "relating to" in place of the phrase
"related to" (used in the current version). We heretofore have
noted, and today reaffirm, that this slight change in terminology,
which occurred in 1994, had no substantive effect on the provision
and does not undercut the precedential value of Morales. See N.H.
Motor Transp. Ass'n v. Rowe, 448 F.3d 66, 75 n.11 (1st Cir. 2006).
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the provision should be construed broadly.7 Id. at 384-85. This
court has explained that, under Morales, the ADA preempts both laws
that explicitly refer to an airline's prices and those that have a
significant effect upon prices. See United Parcel Serv., Inc. v.
Flores-Galarza, 318 F.3d 323, 335 (1st Cir. 2003).
Three years after Morales, the Supreme Court reaffirmed
the breadth of the ADA's preemption provision. See Am. Airlines,
Inc. v. Wolens, 513 U.S. 219, 223 (1995). However, the Court
carved out an exception for "suits alleging no violation of state-
imposed obligations, but seeking recovery solely for the airline's
alleged breach of its own, self-imposed undertakings." Id. at 228.
It follows that, in order to avoid preemption, the plaintiffs in
this case must demonstrate either that their state-law claims do
not constitute state enforcement related to airline prices or
services, or that they can navigate the straits of the Wolens
exception.
The plaintiffs' doctrinal starting point is the assertion
that their claims are outside the ambit of ADA preemption because
they seek to enforce federal, not state, regulatory requirements.
7
In adopting this expansive reading, the Morales Court relied,
in part, upon its interpretation of similar language in the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. §
1144(a). See Morales, 504 U.S. at 383-87. This umbilical cord has
since been severed. See United Parcel Serv., Inc. v. Flores-
Galarza, 318 F.3d 323, 335 n.19 (1st Cir. 2003). Thus, the meaning
of the ADA's preemption provision is no longer entwined with the
meaning of ERISA's preemption provision.
-10-
At the heart of this assertion lies the dubious premise that since
federal rules govern the airlines' collection of the fees and
provide certain forms of passenger protection in the contracting
process, only federal policies are being advanced by this
litigation. On this telling, "[s]tate court enforcement of Federal
law is not the same as enforcement of a State-imposed requirement,"
and the fact that the causes of action themselves spring from state
law is less important than the source of the underlying policies.
Appellants' Br. at 29. This is so, the plaintiffs asseverate,
because federal preemption should not disrupt federal policies;
after all, nationwide uniformity is the driver for preemption, see
Morales, 504 U.S. at 378, and that uniformity is not offended by
enforcement of federal policies.
This sleight of hand will not work. While the plaintiffs
strive to characterize their suit as one that invokes state
remedies to right a federal wrong, that characterization does not
ring true. More accurately, they are attempting to invoke state
remedies to further a state policy: that those who are wronged
should have individualized access to the courts in order to
remediate that wrong. Cf. Santagate v. Tower, 833 N.E.2d 171, 176
(Mass. App. Ct. 2005) (discussing how Massachusetts provides an
"equitable remedy" for those without "an adequate remedy at law").
It is the imposition of this state policy that would constitute
forbidden state enforcement, in violation of the ADA's preemption
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provision, because the ADA itself provides no private right of
action.
As an alternative, the plaintiffs posit that allowing
their suit to proceed "does not — and in fact cannot — affect the
prices (or rates), routes, or services [of airlines], since the
redress occurs only after the prices (or rates), routes, and
services have been determined by the Air Industry." Appellants'
Br. at 19-20. In their view, "[a]irline ticket prices (or rates)
are composed of two separate components: (1) the fare prices (or
rates) set by the airlines, which comprise the base cost of a
ticket, and (2) the taxes, fees, and, charges imposed by the
Government or other fee-levying authorities." Id. at 21.
This dichotomy blurs when contextualized within the
contours of the "significant effect" doctrine. Although the fees
are in one sense separate from the base fare, the two are
inextricably intertwined. In all events, an air traveler's concern
is with the overall cost of his or her ticket. Thus, when an
airline establishes the base fare, it must take cognizance of any
surcharges that will be imposed by operation of law.
It is freshman-year economics that higher prices mean
lower demand, and that consumers are sensitive to the full price
that they must pay, not just the portion of the price that will
stay in the seller's coffers. For that reason, an airline must
account for the fees when setting its own rates. It follows that
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a finding for the plaintiffs in this case would impact base fares
— and since past judgments affect future behavior, this is as true
of the retrospective relief requested by the plaintiffs as it is of
the prospective relief that they request.
In view of these practical realities, it is not
surprising that most of the courts to have considered suits for
refunds of government fees associated with air travel have found
those suits preempted.8 See, e.g., Statland, 998 F.2d at 542;
Lehman v. USAIR Grp., Inc., 930 F. Supp. 912, 916 (S.D.N.Y. 1996);
Kaucky v. Sw. Airlines Co., No. 96 C 750, 1996 WL 267875, at *4
(N.D. Ill. May 17, 1996). These cases corroborate the
inevitability of a finding of preemption.9
The plaintiffs next argue that their suit was
improvidently dismissed because their contract-based claims fit
within the Wolens exception. But the plaintiffs' amended complaint
identifies only a single word — "nonrefundable" — as common to
their contracts of carriage with a multitude of airlines. It seems
fanciful to suggest, in the circumstances of this case, that the
word "nonrefundable" alone can anchor a breach of contract claim.
8
We say "most" because at least one court has found to the
contrary. See In re Air Transp. Excise Tax. Litig., 37 F. Supp. 2d
1133, 1140 (D. Minn. 1999). We regard that decision as mistaken.
9
In addition to alleging that the instant suit relates to
price, the defendants also have argued that the suit relates to
airline service. Since we find preemption on price grounds, we
need not reach the question.
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The same result would follow even if, as the plaintiffs
insist, the word "nonrefundable" is ambiguous. At best, an
ambiguity would furnish a rejoinder to a claim that the airlines
gave clear notice about fees being forfeit. It could not, without
more, support a claim that the defendants have breached their duty
to treat the tickets as "nonrefundable" by withholding both the
fare and the fees.
The plaintiffs attempt to circumvent this conspicuous
obstacle by latching onto the federal regulatory guidelines
relating to the disclosure of terms in airline contracts. These
guidelines, they suggest, are "federally mandated terms of their
air travel contracts." Appellants' Br. at 20. In making this
point, the plaintiffs again emphasize 14 C.F.R. § 253.7, the
provision prohibiting the imposition of monetary penalties without
clear notice.10 The plaintiffs allege that this regulation is
written implicitly into every airline contract of carriage and
10
The plaintiffs list a dizzying assortment of other federal
regulations and describe them as relevant. See, e.g., 7 C.F.R. §
354.3(f); 8 C.F.R. § 286.4; 14 C.F.R. §§ 158.45, 158.47; 19 C.F.R.
§ 24.22(g)(4); 49 C.F.R. § 1510.9. These regulations, which
dictate how airlines are supposed to collect and hold the fees, are
too far removed from the contracts of carriage to give rise to a
colorable claim that they are incorporated as contract terms. In
all events, the plaintiffs offer no developed argumentation for the
proposition that these peripheral regulations comprise federally
mandated contract terms. Any such argument is, therefore,
abandoned. See United States v. Zannino, 895 F.2d 1, 17 (1st Cir.
1990).
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thus, by retaining the fees, the airlines have breached their
contractual duty not to levy an unwarned monetary penalty.
The plaintiffs have not directed us to a single case
holding that a federal regulation incapable of spawning an implied
private right of action may be enforced between private parties as
an implicit contract term. The precedent that they most loudly
trumpet — the Texas Supreme Court's decision in Delta Air Lines,
Inc. v. Black, 116 S.W.3d 745 (Tex. 2003) — is inapposite. The
contract at issue there explicitly incorporated federal
regulations. See id. at 755.
We conclude, without serious question, that the
proposition asserted by the plaintiffs is untenable. As they
conceded at oral argument, construing all federal regulations
touching upon air travel as automatically incorporated into every
airline's contracts of carriage would allow litigants freely to
skirt the implied right of action doctrine. There is nothing to
distinguish the regulation at issue here from the mine-run of
federal regulations touching upon air travel, and we will not
countenance the flagrant undermining of Supreme Court doctrine that
the plaintiffs invite.
Our reluctance is evidently shared by the Fifth Circuit,
which confronted a similar problem in Casas. There, the plaintiff
argued for a remedy under federal common law with respect to
violations of regulations prescribed by the federal Department of
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Transportation. The court rejected this argument, observing that
a contrary holding "would be, in substance, to craft a private
right of action for violations of [the regulation] — and thus to
circumvent the conclusion that the ADA, and therefore the
regulations enacted pursuant to it, creates no private right of
action." Casas, 304 F.3d at 525. Like the Fifth Circuit, we
refuse to abet a blatant evasion of the implied right of action
doctrine.
To say more on this point would be supererogatory. At
bottom, the plaintiffs would have us believe that the implied right
of action doctrine contains a gaping aperture that allows federal
regulations, promulgated pursuant to a statute that creates no
right of private enforcement, to be privately enforced through
state-law mechanisms. We cannot imagine that the Supreme Court,
which has devoted nearly three decades to cabining the implied
right of action doctrine, see Richard H. Fallon et al., Hart &
Wechsler's The Federal Courts and the Federal System 781-82 (5th
ed. 2003), would approve so vagarious a course. We hold instead
that, because no implied right of action exists under the ADA and
the regulation at issue here, the regulation cannot be read as an
implied contract provision.
Next, the plaintiffs launch a naked appeal to public
policy. They tell us that if state-law causes of action are denied
them, there will be a wrong (the airlines' withholding of the fees)
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without a remedy. Put in more hyperbolic terms, a rejection of the
plaintiffs' claims would render "almost all airline contracts and
certain provisions of Federal law" meaningless. Appellants' Br. at
34.
The first half of this lament — that a finding for the
defendants will jeopardize the enforceability of all airline
contracts of carriage — is empty rhetoric. A finding for the
defendants merely retains the configuration of the Wolens exception
crafted by the Supreme Court, which limited that exception to
"self-imposed undertakings." Wolens, 513 U.S. at 228. The second
half of this lament — that a finding for the defendants will
undercut the federal regulatory scheme — is equally baseless.
Refusing to treat federal regulations as implied contract terms
does not in any way diminish the efficacy of the regulatory scheme
itself. Contrary to the plaintiffs' importunings, we do not think
it "inexplicabl[e]" that Congress might view certain regulations as
sufficiently important to warrant their promulgation, yet "not
sufficiently important to permit [private] enforcement in any
court." Appellants' Br. at 35.
What the plaintiffs fail to grasp is that the
unavailability of private enforcement is not the same as the
unavailability of any enforcement at all. We made that point in
Bonano, 365 F.3d at 85, where we remarked upon the power of the
Secretary of Transportation to conduct investigations and issue
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orders with respect to the airline industry. This led us to the
conclusion that Congress's preference in this area is for public,
rather than private, enforcement. See id.; see also 49 U.S.C. §
46106. In other words, Congress reasonably expected the
regulations to be enforced by the Secretary. See Statland, 998
F.2d at 542.
In a last-ditch effort to pull a rabbit out of the hat,
the plaintiffs venture a pair of procedural arguments. First, they
say that their suit should not have been dismissed prior to the
discovery of additional contract terms. This ipse dixit
misapprehends the mechanics of Rule 12(b)(6) which, as we have
interpreted it, requires that plaintiffs "allege a factual
predicate concrete enough to warrant further proceedings." United
States ex rel. Karvelas v. Melrose-Wakefield Hosp., 360 F.3d 220,
240 (1st Cir. 2004) (internal quotation marks omitted); see
Educadores Puertorriqueños en Acción v. Hernández, 367 F.3d 61, 68
(1st Cir. 2004) (explaining that, to survive a Rule 12(b)(6)
motion, "the complaint should at least set forth minimal facts as
to who did what to whom, when, where, and why"). In a contract
action, this irreducible minimum requires the pleader to "explain
what obligations were imposed on each of the parties by the alleged
contract." Doyle v. Hasbro, Inc., 103 F.3d 186, 195 (1st Cir.
1996). The plaintiffs failed to achieve that benchmark here.
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Absent a minimally sufficient complaint, they were not entitled to
discovery. See McCloskey, 446 F.3d at 271.
Second, the plaintiffs make a half-hearted argument that
because some defendants annexed exhibits to their motions to
dismiss, the district court should have converted the motions to
motions for summary judgment. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b). This
argument is triply flawed. For one thing, conversion is wholly
discretionary with the district court. See Beddall v. State St.
Bank & Trust Co., 137 F.3d 12, 17 (1st Cir. 1998). For another
thing, none of the submitted materials bore upon the preemption
issue, which is dispositive here. Third, and finally, the
plaintiffs' brief is devoid of any developed argumentation on this
point. Therefore, the issue is not properly before us. See
Martinez v. Colon, 54 F.3d 980, 990 (1st Cir. 1995); United States
v. Zannino, 895 F.2d 1, 17 (1st Cir. 1990).
IV. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. For the reasons elucidated above,
we uphold the district court's order of dismissal.
Affirmed.
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