Michael Tuno v. NWC Warranty Corporation , 552 F. App'x 140 ( 2014 )


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  •                                                               NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    ________________
    No. 13-3528
    ________________
    MICHAEL TUNO; WORLD CLASS DEALER SERVICES,
    Appellants
    v.
    NWC WARRANTY CORPORATION;
    NWC ADMINISTRATION INCORPORATED;
    NATIONAL WARRANTY CORPORATION; DIANA HAGMAIER
    ________________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. Civ. No. 2-11-03958)
    Honorable Stewart Dalzell, District Judge
    ________________
    Submitted under Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a)
    March 24, 2014
    BEFORE: FUENTES, GREENBERG, and VAN ANTWERPEN, Circuit Judges
    (Filed: April 3, 2014)
    ______________
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    ______________
    GREENBERG, Circuit Judge.
    Plaintiffs-appellants Michael Tuno and his company, World Class Dealer Services
    (together “Tuno”), appeal from two orders that the District Court entered in accordance
    with the Court’s detailed opinions ruling on three separate motions in this action that
    Tuno brought against defendants-appellees NWC Warranty Corporation, NWC
    Administration, Inc., and National Warranty Corporation (collectively “NWC”) and
    Diana Hagmaier, NWC’s owner and chief executive officer. See Tuno v. NWC Warranty
    Corp., No. 11-3958, 
    2013 WL 3939487
     (E.D.Pa. July 31, 2013).1 The action involves
    NWC’s business, in which Tuno served as its agent, of issuing supplemental automobile
    warranties, service contracts, and supplemental insurance coverage to purchasers of
    automobiles. Although the end consumers of NWC’s products were automobile
    purchasers, Tuno dealt primarily with automobile dealers who marketed NWC’s products
    to the automobile purchasers. Tuno and the dealers received their compensation from
    commissions that NWC paid on the sales. Though NWC usually issued the checks to the
    automobile purchasers to pay approved claims, for the most part its underwriters, in
    particular Great American Insurance Group during the period involved in this action, paid
    the approved claims by reimbursing NWC for the payments that it had made.
    Tuno’s principal complaint against NWC is that it failed to make payments to
    automobile purchasers on claims due on its obligations. When NWC did not make these
    payments, Tuno paid some of them himself. In this action, he is seeking reimbursement
    for those payments as well as a recovery for other damages that he claims to have
    suffered because of NWC’s actions. At first NWC moved to dismiss a portion of Tuno’s
    action and later it moved for summary judgment on the balance of the action. The
    District Court entered orders that partially dismissed the complaint and granted the
    1
    In this opinion when we refer to NWC, we include Hagmaier.
    2
    motion for summary judgment and Tuno appeals from those orders. At the time that
    NWC moved for summary judgment, Tuno moved for an order compelling NWC to
    produce certain documents that he believed could aid his case. The Court denied that
    motion and Tuno also appeals from that order.
    As we have indicated, during the relevant time period Tuno served as NWC’s
    agent in the sale of its products. Tuno and NWC established their relationship in an
    uncomplicated agreement into which they entered in 2005 entitled “NWC
    Administration, Inc. Agency Agreement.” From 2006 to 2010, Tuno marketed NWC’s
    products to automobile dealers in Pennsylvania and New Jersey; consumers buying
    automobiles at participating dealerships could obtain NWC’s products when they bought
    their automobiles. When automobile purchasers made claims they went through the
    dealers from whom they purchased the automobiles. The dealer, in turn, forwarded the
    claim for processing and payment to NWC. When NWC received a claim, a NWC
    claims manager reviewed the claim and decided if NWC should pay it.2
    The agreement between Tuno and NWC defined Tuno’s responsibilities, specified
    how he would be compensated, and set forth the circumstances in which either party
    could terminate the agency. The agreement, however, did not indicate the obligations
    that NWC owed to the automobile purchasers, the consumers of its products.
    2
    Inasmuch as NWC sought reimbursement from its underwriter for payments that it
    made, the claims manager before acting on a claim sometimes would ask the underwriter
    for its opinion as to the legitimacy of the claim. The underwriter’s preapproval for
    payment of claims, however, generally was not required and was not obtained.
    3
    Tuno brought state law claims under Pennsylvania law against NWC in the
    District Court based on his claim that NWC breached the agency agreement and made
    misrepresentations to him. Tuno’s complaint focused on Hagmaier’s actions, and
    asserted that between 2007 and 2010, Hagmaier and NWC adopted a policy of routinely
    denying claims covered by NWC’s products. Tuno asserts that Hagmaier made various
    fraudulent misrepresentations to him to convince him to continue selling NWC’s
    products.
    Tuno claimed direct and indirect financial injury resulting from NWC’s breach of
    contract and the misrepresentations. As we have set forth, he claimed that NWC injured
    him when it withheld payments for legitimate claims because he then made payments
    himself on the claims, expending about $30,000 in this way. In addition, Tuno claims
    that NWC breached its contract with him in the ways that we discuss below. He asserts
    that he was injured beyond the cost to him of the payments that we have described in the
    following ways: loss of clients; loss of commissions from NWC (which were
    contractually owed to him); and the incurring of indebtedness to NWC for “cancellation
    chargeback fees.”3 In particular, Tuno alleged that by 2010 almost all of the dealerships
    that had obtained NWC contracts through him had ended their relationship with him and
    that the dealers who continued to work with him did so to a diminished degree.
    3
    NWC filed a counterclaim for breach of contract and unjust enrichment by reason of
    Tuno not paying those fees. We need not address the counterclaim because the District
    Court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over it and therefore dismissed it
    without prejudice, see 
    28 U.S.C. § 1367
    (c), and NWC has not cross-appealed from the
    dismissal.
    4
    Tuno bases his claims against NWC on three legal theories: (1) fraud; (2)
    misrepresentation; and (3) breach of contract and breach of the implied covenant of good
    faith and fair dealing. As we have indicated, NWC moved to dismiss the complaint and
    later moved for a summary judgment. In a June 12, 2012 order, the District Court
    partially granted and partially denied NWC’s motion to dismiss. It held that Tuno’s
    separate counts for fraud and misrepresentation constituted a single cause of action for
    fraudulent misrepresentation under Pennsylvania law. However, despite noting
    deficiencies in Tuno’s pleadings and supporting brief, the Court declined to dismiss the
    fraudulent misrepresentation claim because it took into account allegations that Tuno
    made in a proposed amended complaint that went beyond his original complaint and were
    sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss. But the Court dismissed Tuno’s breach of
    contract claim and, in doing so, outlined the allegations supporting each purported breach
    and rejected the claims because they were not tied to any damages Tuno claimed or to a
    particular contractual provision. Finally, the Court dismissed the good faith and fair
    dealing allegations as it found that they were redundant with Tuno’s fraudulent
    misrepresentation claim. App. 14-17.4 Consequently, after the Court entered the June
    12, 2012 order, only Tuno’s fraudulent misrepresentation claim survived.
    With the contract-based claims dismissed and the scope of the case substantially
    narrowed, the District Court allowed the parties six months to complete discovery with
    4
    The District Court also dismissed Tuno’s prayer for additional relief, including for
    punitive damages and for attorney’s fees. Tuno does not appeal from this ruling, and we
    will not discuss it further.
    5
    that period to be followed by a two-week period to submit motions for summary
    judgment. Though neither side asked for an extension of the discovery period, on
    December 6, 2012, the last day of that period, Tuno filed a motion seeking an order
    compelling NWC to produce certain documents that he believed could help him establish
    his case. NWC opposed that motion and, in accordance with the briefing schedule still in
    place, submitted its motion for summary judgment. On July 31, 2013, the Court denied
    Tuno’s motion and granted NWC’s motion for summary judgment dismissing Tuno’s
    fraudulent misrepresentation claim. That order was final and appealable because it
    terminated the action. Tuno appeals from the District Court’s orders of June 12, 2012,
    and July 31, 2013, as he contends that the Court erred (1) in dismissing his contract
    claims; (2) in granting NWC summary judgment on his fraudulent misrepresentation
    claim; and (3) in denying his motion to compel the production of certain documents.
    The District Court had diversity of citizenship jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    ,
    and we have jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    . We review the District Court’s denial
    of Tuno’s motion to compel discovery on an abuse of discretion standard. See Camiolo
    v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 
    334 F.3d 345
    , 354 (3d Cir. 2003). But we apply a de novo
    standard of review to the Court’s orders on NWC’s motions to dismiss and for summary
    judgment. See Barefoot Architect, Inc. v. Bunge, 
    632 F.3d 822
    , 826 (3d Cir. 2011). In
    considering the order entered on the motion to dismiss, we accept all of Tuno’s
    allegations in the complaint and view them in the light most favorable to him. See id.;
    see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). Similarly, we draw inferences favorable to Tuno when
    viewing the evidence in our consideration of the order granting summary judgment and
    6
    ask whether there was any genuine dispute of material fact that barred the granting of the
    motion. See Barefoot Architect, 
    632 F.3d at 826
    ; Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). The application
    of a de novo standard of review, however, does not require us to ignore the District
    Court’s careful analyses of the motions to dismiss and for summary judgment. What it
    does require is that we not defer to the Court’s conclusion. See, e.g., United States v.
    Rodrigues, 
    678 F.3d 693
    , 701 (9th Cir. 2012).
    We first will analyze the District Court’s order that dismissed Tuno’s contract-
    based claims before addressing the Court’s order granting NWC summary judgment on
    Tuno’s fraudulent misrepresentation claim while denying Tuno’s motion to compel the
    production of documents. The Court dismissed Tuno’s claim that NWC breached its
    implied duty of good faith and fair dealing, finding those allegations to be redundant with
    the allegations underlying his fraudulent misrepresentation count. We agree with this
    disposition but do so for a reason distinct from that the District Court expressed as we
    conclude that Tuno could not maintain an action for the breach of an implied duty of
    good faith separate from an action for breach of his agreement with NWC. See, e.g.,
    Tourscher v. McCullough, 
    184 F.3d 236
    , 240 (3d Cir. 1999) (observing that we may
    affirm a dismissal of a claim on “any ground supported by the record”). Although
    Pennsylvania courts have recognized “the general duty of contracting parties to perform
    their contractual obligations in good faith,” Baker v. Lafayette College, 
    504 A.2d 247
    ,
    255 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1986) (citing § 205 of the Restatement (Second) of Contracts), aff’d,
    
    532 A.2d 399
     (Pa. 1987), they consistently have held that this implied duty does not
    create a cause of action separate from a cause of action for breach of contract. See
    7
    Hatchigian v. State Farm Ins. Co., No. 13-2880, 
    2014 WL 176585
    , at *7 (E.D. Pa. Jan.
    16, 2014) (citing Pennsylvania’s “extensive authority” for the proposition that “there is
    no separate cause of action for a breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair
    dealing”).5
    In Pennsylvania a claim predicated on a breach of the covenant of good faith is
    “subsumed in a breach of contract claim.” Burton v. Teleflex Inc., 
    707 F.3d 417
    , 432 (3d
    Cir. 2013) (quoting LSI Title Agency, Inc. v. Evaluation Servs., Inc., 
    951 A.2d 384
    , 392
    (Pa. Super. Ct. 2008)). Therefore, in practice, the covenant of good faith functions “as an
    interpretive tool” to aid the court in evaluating breach of contract claims but the implied
    duty is never “divorced from specific clauses of the contract.” Northview Motors, Inc. v.
    Chrysler Motors Corp., 
    227 F.3d 78
    , 91 (3d Cir. 2000).
    To be sure, in limited situations Pennsylvania courts implicitly have recognized
    exceptions to this rule by recognizing stand-alone claims for breach of the covenant of
    good faith and fair dealing. 
    Id.
     But Tuno’s claim does not fit within that exception for,
    as the District Court noted, Tuno’s allegations and arguments in the District Court
    primarily advanced the same allegations for all of his claims and we find the same to be
    true with respect to his claims in this Court. Indeed, Tuno concedes this point in his brief
    as he sets forth that “[t]he factual allegations for the breach of contract claim are
    essentially the same as the allegations for the fraud claim.” Appellant’s br. 24 n.6. Thus,
    5
    We cite this unpublished case for its collection of authority, not for any precedential
    value.
    8
    Tuno’s claim for breach of the duty of good faith cannot stand separately from his claim
    for breach of contract.
    There is compelling precedent supporting our conclusion inasmuch as Tuno’s
    claim based on the implied covenant of good faith is similar in a legal sense to a claim
    that the plaintiff advanced in Northview Motors. In Northview Motors, the plaintiff, an
    automobile dealer, brought various claims against the defendant, Chrysler, an automobile
    manufacturer, including a claim that Chrysler had breached its duty to act in good faith
    when it failed to send vehicles that were desirable for sales purposes to the plaintiff
    pursuant to the parties’ franchise agreement. We determined that Pennsylvania courts
    would reject that common law claim as they would address only the “claim for fraud
    based on the same set of facts [as the claim for a breach of the implied covenant].” 
    227 F.3d at 92
     (noting that “[s]uch an approach limits the use of the bad faith cause of action
    to those instances where it is essential . . . [as] the covenant of good faith necessarily is
    vague and amorphous”); see also Parkway Garage, Inc. v. City of Philadelphia, 
    5 F.3d 685
    , 701 (3d Cir. 1993) (holding that plaintiff “could seek relief under an established
    cause of action, and there is no reason to imply a separate tort for breach of a duty of
    good faith”).
    So far as we are aware, the Pennsylvania courts have not disagreed with
    Northview Motors, and thus we see no reason to depart from its holding. Accordingly,
    because Tuno’s good faith and fair dealing claim is grounded on allegations that we do
    not regard as being based on the agreement he entered into with NWC and are redundant
    with allegations underlying his misrepresentation claim, the District Court did not err in
    9
    dismissing the covenant of good faith part of his complaint. We thus move on to
    consider his breach of contract claim.
    Under Pennsylvania law to sustain his breach of contract claim, Tuno needed to
    show that there was a contract, that NWC breached the contract, and that the breach of
    contract caused him damages. See McShea v. City of Philadelphia, 
    995 A.2d 334
    , 340
    (Pa. 2010). Tuno’s breach of contract claim that the District Court dismissed in its June
    12, 2012 order asserted, inter alia, that NWC violated its agreement with Tuno by
    disclosing certain confidential information to the automobile dealers selling NWC’s
    products and that it changed underwriters without timely notifying him. The District
    Court held that these two allegations could not sustain a breach of contract claim because
    Tuno did not allege that he suffered damages traceable to the purported violations. Tuno
    does not explain adequately why the Court’s conclusion was wrong, and our independent
    review of the case satisfies us that the Court did not err in reaching its conclusion. We
    add only that, even if true, the latter claim is not predicated on a breach of the agency
    agreement. In reaching our conclusion we note that Tuno invokes the provision of the
    agency agreement that provides that his commission is determined based on the
    “Confidential Agent Price List” to support his breach of contract claim. Yet
    notwithstanding its use of that term, the language in the agreement does not prohibit the
    disclosure of the price list and thus NWC did not breach its contract with Tuno by
    disclosing the terms.
    Tuno’s remaining two arguments supporting his breach of contract claim fail for
    the same reason: he has not set forth facts that if proven at trial would demonstrate that
    10
    NWC violated the agency agreement. He asserts that Hagmaier “stated that NWC
    programs were covered by insurance, when no insurance policy actually existed,” and
    these representatives “induced” him to “continue selling NWC’s programs.” Appellant’s
    br. 23. But Tuno does not point to any contractual provision supporting this argument
    and, in our reading of the agreement, we have not found any such provision.
    We recognize that Tuno argues that NWC “fraudulently acted to trigger” a section
    in the agency agreement that allowed NWC to terminate the agreement “for cause” and
    thus avoid paying Tuno the commissions it owed. Appellant’s br. 23. At first blush, as
    the District Court noted, this allegation would seem to “implicate the duty of good faith
    and fair dealing.” App. 16. Moreover, the allegation might have given Tuno a basis to
    have survived the motion to dismiss because, as we have explained, when tied to a
    particular agreement provision, the covenant of good faith can act as an interpretive tool
    to bolster a breach-of-contract claim.
    But the allegations underpinning this argument betray Tuno’s real claim. He is not
    actually complaining that NWC wrongfully terminated the agreement; instead, he claims
    that “NWC’s fraudulent acts . . . caused dealers to leave NWC Programs.” App. 86-87
    (proposed amended complaint submitted by Tuno on opposition to the motion to dismiss,
    ¶ 33) (emphasis added). Tuno claims that NWC effectively terminated his agency for its
    actions terminated his receipt of commissions. But as far as we can tell, Tuno has not
    alleged or argued that NWC ever formally ended the agency agreement. As a result, to
    establish his claim that NWC breached their agreement he cannot rely on a provision in
    11
    the agreement that specifies when such termination is permissible. Accordingly, we will
    affirm the District Court’s partial dismissal of Tuno’s complaint.
    As we have noted, Tuno appeals from both aspects of the District Court’s order of
    July 31, 2013, that granted NWC summary judgment on Tuno’s fraudulent
    misrepresentation claim and denied Tuno’s motion to compel the production of
    documents. To prevail on a claim for fraudulent misrepresentation under Pennsylvania
    law, a plaintiff must establish six elements:
    (1) a representation; (2) which is material to the transaction at hand; (3)
    made falsely, with knowledge of its falsity or recklessness as to whether it
    is true or false; (4) with the intent of misleading another into relying on it;
    (5) justifiable reliance on the misrepresentation; and (6) the resulting injury
    was proximately caused by the reliance.
    Overall v. Univ. of Pa., 
    412 F.3d 492
    , 498 (3d Cir. 2005) (quoting Gibbs v. Ernst,
    
    647 A.2d 882
    , 889 (Pa. 1994)). And he must do so “by clear and convincing
    evidence.” Porreco v. Porreco, 
    811 A.2d 566
    , 570 (Pa. 2002). With respect to the
    last element, Pennsylvania courts ask whether “a defendant’s acts or omissions
    were a ‘substantial factor’ in bringing about the plaintiff’s harm.” Bouriez v.
    Carnegie Mellon Univ., 
    585 F.3d 765
    , 771 (3d Cir. 2009) (quoting First v. Zem
    Zem Temple, 
    686 A.2d 18
    , 21 n.2 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1996)).
    The District Court granted summary judgment on the fraudulent
    misrepresentation claim because it found that NWC did not make fraudulent
    misrepresentations that injured Tuno. In contending that the Court erred in
    granting summary judgment, Tuno largely relies on the deposition testimony of
    Bridget Bullion, NWC’s claims manager from 2005 through 2010. Her job at
    12
    NWC was to decide whether a claim should be honored by checking NWC’s
    contractual provisions relating to the claim and by obtaining necessary proof and
    documents supporting the claim.
    Bullion testified that beginning in 2009 and continuing through the time that NWC
    terminated her employment, Hagmaier stopped approving about 60-75% of the claims,
    even when Great American or another underwriter had cleared them. As a result, Bullion
    began receiving complaints from automobile dealers about unpaid claims. Great
    American apparently became aware of the dealers’ complaints, as its representatives went
    to NWC’s office to investigate the delays and perform an audit and it subsequently dealt
    with some types of claims directly.
    In an exchange with Tuno’s counsel during her deposition, Bullion explained that
    when fielding calls from automobile dealers and their customers, she would say
    “whatever [she] needed to say or do to basically talk them off the ledge.” Bullion did not
    want to paint Hagmaier “in a bad light.” So, she began to make excuses on Hagmaier’s
    behalf:
    I said . . . whatever I needed to . . . within some confines . . . . I might tell
    them that we changed our system. I might tell them that we have some new
    people working for us and we’re a little backlogged. There was a lot of
    song and dance that I did . . . .
    App. 232-33. Hagmaier knew about the complaints and the excuses but never told
    Bullion why she was not approving seemingly valid claims. Bullion later clarified that
    while she thought Hagmaier’s “excuses were rather lame,” she did not know whether
    Hagmaier eventually denied the claims based on exclusions in the automobile purchasers’
    13
    contracts or whether she ultimately approved them. When pressed, however, Bullion
    agreed with Tuno’s counsel that Hagmaier was engaging in fraudulent practices, which to
    Bullion meant that Hagmaier was not “living up to [a] contract.”
    Tuno uses the testimony, that we quote above, focusing on the “song and dance”
    refrain, in an attempt to establish that NWC was guilty of misrepresentation because it
    was giving false explanations with respect to its failure to pay claims, and Tuno applies
    the song and dance refrain to several justifications that Bullion and Hagmaier made to
    various individuals as to why certain claims had not been approved. For instance, Tuno
    complains about the response that Hagmaier gave to William Messick, a purchaser of
    NWC’s products who made a claim. Hagmaier assured Messick via email that his claim
    was covered but, according to Tuno, Hagmaier nevertheless refused to honor the claim.
    The District Court rejected this allegation because Tuno did not cite evidence supporting
    his assertion that NWC did not pay Messick’s claim.
    Tuno has not pointed us to any evidence that the District Court overlooked in its
    careful analysis. Instead, he argues that the Court erred in considering his allegations
    “separately, as if in a vacuum” and that the Court should have read them together with
    Bullion’s testimony that Hagmaier refused to pay a majority of claims. Tuno uses this
    reasoning to disagree with the Court’s rejection of other claims asserting that Hagmaier
    made misrepresentations, arguing that although “Bullion did not testify as to specific
    instances where she made false statements, she did testify as to her continual ‘song and
    dance’ with regard to these exact types of communications with dealers and customers.”
    Appellant’s br. 48.
    14
    We are not persuaded. Tuno correctly contends that as the nonmoving party he
    should have received the benefit of favorable inferences, but he ignores the circumstance
    that the clear and convincing standard would be applied at trial. Northwestern Mut. Life
    Ins. Co. v. Babayan, 
    430 F.3d 121
    , 137 (3d Cir. 2005) (observing that on summary
    judgment, the plaintiff’s burden is “commensurately high because the court must view
    the evidence presented in light of the [clear-and-convincing] substantive evidentiary
    burden at trial”). That standard “requires [a plaintiff] to provide evidence so clear, direct,
    weighty, and convincing as to enable a clear conviction, without hesitation, about
    whether or not the defendants acted in a way that renders them liable.” Kendall v. Daily
    News Publ’g Co., 
    716 F.3d 82
    , 92 (3d Cir. 2013) (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    Tuno could not survive the motion for summary judgment with respect to those
    purported misrepresentations as he has not presented evidence that the representations
    were false beyond Bullion’s “song-and-dance” testimony. According to Bullion,
    Hagmaier did not raise any inappropriate issues with respect to many of the claims. And,
    as Bullion admitted, NWC ultimately might well have paid some claims that Hagmaier
    initially questioned, even if the claims had been questioned for what Bullion believes
    were “lame” reasons. In other words, Bullion did not testify that every justification for
    initial nonpayment uttered by an NWC employee was false. Consequently, to show a
    genuine dispute with regard to falsity, Tuno had to submit evidence bearing on particular
    statements. As far as we can tell from his brief, he did not do so—at least not for those
    representations that he claims on appeal should have been deemed false solely by reason
    of Bullion’s “song and dance” testimony.
    15
    Tuno does, however, purport to offer specific proof of falsity for other NWC
    statements. His claim for these representations fail for the reasons provided by the
    District Court. For instance, he asserts that on one occasion, responding to a BMW
    dealer, Bullion stated that Great American was paying claims for its Tire-and-Wheel
    program directly, even though in a different letter she stated that NWC was still the entity
    responsible for administering these claims. The Court reconciled these statements by
    citing evidence that under a changed claim system, Great American would process claims
    that it insured, while NWC processed claims insured by a different underwriter. Tuno
    does not point to any error in that conclusion, and in our review of the evidence we have
    not found any error.
    In one situation in which Tuno purports to offer specific evidence that a
    representation was false, he refers to a 2008 letter that he received from Hagmaier in
    which she explained that under NWC’s policy, sidewall damage to a tire would be
    covered. Tuno asserts that this representation was inconsistent with a statement that
    another NWC representative made in 2010 that “any tire with sidewall damage, in any
    form, is not a covered loss.” Appellant’s br. 51. The District Court reconciled the
    differences in these statements by quoting Hagmaier’s deposition testimony in which she
    explained that the coverage NWC offered for tires changed in the spring of 2008, a
    change that was reflected in the different forms completed by the purchasers. The Court
    observed that these letters showed “two different, but accurate, representations of the two
    different plans for coverage.” Tuno, 
    2013 WL 3939487
    , at *7. Tuno does not give us a
    reason to disagree with this conclusion, and our independent review of the evidence leads
    16
    us to the same conclusion reached by the District Court, i.e., there was no basis for the
    fraudulent misrepresentation claim.
    Tuno argues that he opposed NWC’s motion for summary judgment “with both
    hands tied behind” his back because the District Court refused to compel NWC to
    produce certain documents that would reveal evidence that could support his case.
    Appellant’s br. 52. Although Tuno was not required to show that if the Court had granted
    his discovery request he necessarily would have uncovered admissible evidence, Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 26(b)(1), he had the burden to explain why his request was not “speculative,” lest
    he be allowed to engage in a “fishing expedition” to find some evidence to support his
    claim. Williams v. Beard, 
    637 F.3d 195
    , 210-11 (3d Cir. 2011). In other words, he had
    to show that his request was “reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible
    evidence.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1).
    Applying the foregoing standard we cannot find that the District Court abused its
    broad discretion in denying his motion. See Sempier v. Johnson & Higgins, 
    45 F.3d 724
    ,
    734 (3d Cir. 1995) (“Under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and our jurisprudence,
    district courts have broad discretion to manage discovery.”). In this regard, Tuno has not
    pointed to any flaw in the Court’s conclusion that the documents he sought could not
    show what he thought they could show, namely that Hagmaier was diverting funds from
    NWC’s trust account. The record supports this conclusion because Hagmaier testified
    that Great American was the sole signatory on the account. Therefore, the Court did not
    err when it did not compel NWC to produce evidence merely to test the plausibility of
    17
    something that appeared to be impossible. Accordingly, we affirm the Court’s order
    denying Tuno’s motion to compel.
    For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the District Court’s June 12, 2012 and
    July 31, 2013 orders.
    18