Battle Born Munitions Inc v. Dicks Sporting Goods ( 2023 )


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  •                                                             NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _____________
    No. 22-1005
    _____________
    BATTLE BORN MUNITIONS INC,
    Appellant,
    v.
    DICKS SPORTING GOODS INC
    _______________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    For the Western District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. No. 2-18-cv-1418)
    District Judge: Honorable Christy C. Wiegand
    _______________
    Argued
    January 12, 2023
    Before: JORDAN, PHIPPS and ROTH, Circuit Judges
    (Filed July 26, 2023)
    _______________
    John M. Shoreman [ARGUED]
    McFadden & Shoreman
    1050 Connecticut Avenue, NW
    Ste. 500
    Washington, DC 20036
    Mario B. Williams
    HDR
    44 Broad Street, NW
    Ste. 200
    Atlanta, GA 30303
    Counsel for Appellant
    Patrick L. Abramowich
    John C. Hansberry [ARGUED]
    Nathan J. Marketich
    Fox Rothschild
    500 Grant Street
    Suite 2500
    Pittsburgh, PA 15219
    Counsel for Appellee
    _______________
    OPINION
    _______________
    JORDAN, Circuit Judge.
    Appellant Battle Born Munitions, Inc. (“BBM”) filed a lawsuit against Dick’s
    Sporting Goods, Inc., alleging a breach of contract claim and three tort claims. Dick’s
    successfully moved to dismiss the tort claims on the grounds that Pennsylvania’s gist of
    the action doctrine bars such claims. It also obtained dismissal of BBM’s request for
    certain incidental contract damages. BBM did, however, eventually prevail on its
    surviving claim for direct damages based on breach of contract. It has now appealed the
    District Court’s order depriving it of tort claims and incidental damages. We will affirm.
    
    This disposition is not an opinion of the full court and, pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7,
    does not constitute binding precedent.
    2
    I.    BACKGROUND1
    BBM, a licensed international broker of firearms ammunition, entered a Vendor
    Agreement in January 2016, pursuant to which it sold custom-branded ammunition to
    Dick’s, a sporting goods retailer. The Vendor Agreement is, by its terms, governed by
    the laws of Pennsylvania and contemplates a series of purchase orders to be negotiated
    between the two parties. The provisions of the Vendor Agreement were to “apply to all
    purchase orders[,]” (J.A. at 38), while the purchase orders themselves would add details
    such as the price and quantity of goods. The Vendor Agreement specified that Dick’s
    would pay for ammunition within sixty days of delivery and would receive a two percent
    discount on payments made within thirty days of delivery. The Agreement further stated
    that it “supersedes all prior written and oral and all contemporaneous oral agreements and
    understandings with respect to the subject matter thereof[,]” and it required that “any
    changes or modifications to or waivers of such terms and conditions must be in writing
    and signed by both Dick’s and [BBM].” (J.A. at 38.) It also contained a limitation of
    damages clause, which excluded “any punitive, special, incidental or consequential
    damages of any kind (including, but not limited to loss of profits, business revenues,
    business interruption and the like)” regardless of whether the claim “is based upon ...
    1
    The following facts are drawn from BBM’s First Amended Complaint and the
    representations in its briefing. Because we are reviewing a ruling on a motion to dismiss,
    we accept factual allegations of the complaint as true, view those facts in the light most
    favorable to BBM, and determine whether, under any reasonable reading of the
    complaint, BBM may be entitled to relief. See Eid v. 
    Thompson, 740
     F.3d 118, 122 (3d
    Cir. 2014).
    3
    breach of contract, negligence, tort, ... or any other legal theory or law,” unless the
    damages “result from a party’s gross negligence, fraud, or willful misconduct.” (J.A. at
    39.)
    BBM alleges that it agreed to fulfil an unusually large purchase order in July and
    August 2016 because Dick’s said it would accept delivery of the ammunition by
    November 2016. According to BBM, however, Dick’s never intended to timely accept
    delivery of the goods. BBM acknowledges that it negotiated that purchase order “under
    the Vendor Agreement.” (J.A. at 20.) Despite the no-modification clause in the Vendor
    Agreement, BBM did not request a written statement, signed by both parties, that
    required Dick’s to take delivery of the ammunition by November 2016. Rather, BBM
    alleges that it relied on Dick’s representation and invested substantial capital – nearly
    $4.5 million – to fulfill the large purchase order.
    The fight arose when Dick’s refused to accept delivery in November 2016. It
    instead notified BBM in December 2016, that, as BBM characterizes it, delivery would
    not be accepted “in a timeframe that was commercially reasonable.” (J.A. at 22.) Dick’s
    eventually accepted the goods in August 2017, nine months later than promised. In the
    meantime, BBM had paid warehousing fees to store the ammunition and spent additional
    money for product liability insurance, totaling $77,868. Those costs, along with certain
    alleged underpayments and chargebacks, are the direct damages BBM seeks.
    As incidental (or consequential) damages, BBM alleged a substantial loss of
    profits because it had “lost the opportunity to sell twelve ... Bell helicopters to the
    government of Lebanon.” (J.A. at 23.) We call those lost profits the “Helicopter
    4
    Damages.” In December 2016, the government of Lebanon placed a $48 million
    purchase order with BBM for the helicopters, which was approved by the U.S.
    Department of Commerce, Bureau of Industry and Security. To procure the helicopters,
    BBM was required to deposit $3.72 million with the manufacturer, but BBM had
    depleted its available capital because it had invested $4.5 million in fulfilling the large
    purchase order from Dick’s, and it had not yet been paid. As a result, the government of
    Lebanon terminated the contract and BBM lost what is characterizes as reasonably
    anticipated profits of over $5.2 million from the sale.
    After instituting suit, and following an initial round of motions practice, BBM
    filed an amended complaint alleging breach of contract and three tort claims: fraud in the
    inducement to contract, negligent misrepresentation, and a third claim not at issue in this
    appeal.2 As the foundation for those tort claims, BBM says “Dick’s knew at the time” the
    order was placed that BBM was relying on Dick’s representations and yet there was no
    way Dick’s was going to accept the ammunition by November 2016 as promised.
    (Opening Br. at 4.) According to BBM, Dick’s misrepresented its intentions in “order to
    bolster the value of its stock in 2016 and 2017[.]”3 (J.A. at 25.) BBM claims Dick’s
    2
    The third tort claim is what the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 552 calls
    “Information Negligently Supplied for the Guidance of Others.” BBM has not contested
    the dismissal of that claim.
    3
    BBM states that Dick’s stock value was under pressure due to competition from
    internet-based retailers, and Dick’s was using market manipulation tactics to increase the
    value of its stock. BBM alleges that Dick’s manipulated an inventory metric used by
    stock market analysts to appraise a retailer’s financial performance by claiming to have
    available a large amount of ammunition, even though it had not yet accepted that
    ammunition from BBM. BBM states that this scheme was part of Dick’s elaborate plan
    5
    “fraudulent promises were made to induce BBM to agree to the terms of the Vendor
    Agreement and Purchase Orders[.]” (J.A. at 27.)
    Dick’s moved to dismiss the three tort claims against it on the basis that they were
    barred by Pennsylvania’s gist of the action and economic loss doctrines, and to “partially
    dismiss [BBM]’s request for incidental, consequential, or lost profits damages on its
    breach of contract claim given the limitation of damages clause set forth in ... the Vendor
    Agreement.” (J.A. at 50.) As more fully discussed herein, under Pennsylvania law, the
    gist of the action doctrine “precludes plaintiffs from re-casting ordinary breach of
    contract claims into tort claims.” eToll, Inc. v. Elias/Savion Adver., Inc., 
    811 A.2d 10
    , 14
    (Pa. Super. Ct. 2002) (citing Bash v. Bell Tel. Co., 
    601 A.2d 825
    , 829 (Pa. Super. 1992));
    see Bruno v. Erie Ins. Co., 
    106 A.3d 48
    , 68 (Pa. 2014) (holding that the gist of the action
    doctrine bars tort claims if the allegedly breached duties rise solely from the contract
    between the parties).4
    to “t[ie] up the manufacturing capacity of key manufacturers and obtain[] sufficient
    control of the retail calibers to manipulate the market price [of ammunition.]” (J.A. at
    26.) According to BBM, Dick’s plan was to “hoard ammunition inventories in
    warehouses of its vendors ... to set the price [of ammunition] as demand rose.” (J.A. at
    26.)
    4
    The economic loss doctrine operates in much the same way, being designed to
    maintain the conceptual distinction between contract and tort claims. See Dittman v.
    UPMC, 
    196 A.3d 1036
    , 1054 (Pa. 2018) (holding that the economic loss doctrine
    precludes actions where the duty allegedly breached arises under a contract between the
    parties). “Specifically, if the duty arises under a contract between the parties, a tort
    action will not lie from a breach of that duty. However, if the duty arises independently
    of any contractual duties between the parties, then a breach of that duty may support a
    tort action.” 
    Id.
    6
    The District Court agreed with Dick’s and granted the motion to dismiss the tort
    claims. It held that “the duties [BBM] claims Dick’s breached through its alleged
    misrepresentations, i.e., to accept delivery of the custom-branded ammunition by
    November 2016 and pay for same within 30-60 days of delivery, were created by the
    express terms of the parties’ contracts.” (J.A. at 45.) The Court noted that BBM’s
    complaint admits that the allegedly breached duties do not arise independently of the
    contracts5 and that BBM’s allegations that Dick’s engaged in market and stock
    manipulation “merely provide purported reasons why Dick’s delayed accepting delivery”
    and ignore “the fact that the contract itself created the rights [BBM] seeks to enforce in
    the first instance ... .” (J.A. at 46.) The Court was unpersuaded by BBM’s argument that
    it had pled a fraudulent inducement claim and that the gist of the action doctrine does not
    apply to such claims. While BBM endeavored to separate the large purchase order at
    issue from the Vendor Agreement, the Court rejected that effort, treating the Vendor
    Agreement as the governing contract and concluding that “one cannot be fraudulently
    induced to enter into an agreement by misrepresentations made after the formation of the
    contract.” (J.A. at 47-48.)
    The District Court also dismissed BBM’s request for the Helicopter Damages,
    given the limitation of damages provision in the Vendor Agreement. Acknowledging
    5
    BBM expressly incorporated its factual allegations from its breach of contract
    claim into its three tort claims. The District Court stated that this incorporation is an
    admission “that the duties that Dick’s accept delivery of the custom-branded ammunition
    and pay for it were created by their contracts and do not arise independently of the
    contracts.” (J.A. at 46.)
    7
    that the provision had an exception for fraud, gross negligence, or willful misconduct, the
    Court nevertheless said, “in light of the ... finding that the fraud claims are subject to
    dismissal for failure to state a plausible claim for relief,” the Helicopter Damages “are
    unavailable to remedy a breach of the Vendor Agreement.” (J.A. at 51.)
    The dismissal was with prejudice because the Court decided “any amendment
    would be futile[,] given the ... analysis of defenses of the tort and damages claims[.]”
    (J.A. at 52.) BBM attempted to resurrect its tort claims in a duplicative action in Nevada,
    Battle Born Munitions, Inc. v. Dick’s Sporting Goods, Inc., No. 3:19-cv-00561-MMD-
    CLB, 
    2020 WL 1891859
     (D. Nev. Apr. 16, 2020), but that action was also dismissed, the
    Nevada federal court stating that it “[would] not allow Plaintiff to ‘engage in an end-run
    around’ [the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania]’s
    decisions by allowing Plaintiff to proceed with class allegations and seek Helicopter
    Damages here.” Id. at *6. BBM’s breach of contract claim continued in the Western
    District of Pennsylvania, and, pursuant to the parties’ joint stipulation on damages, the
    District Court entered a judgment for BBM in the amount of $123,070. BBM then
    appealed, contesting the dismissal of its fraudulent inducement and negligent
    misrepresentation claims and its request for Helicopter Damages from its breach of
    contract claim.
    II.    DISCUSSION6
    We first consider the dismissal of the tort claims. Pennsylvania’s gist of the action
    6
    The District Court had diversity jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    . We have
    appellate jurisdiction pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    . We exercise plenary review of a
    8
    doctrine “is designed to maintain the conceptual distinction between breach of contract
    claims and tort claims.” eToll, 
    811 A.2d at 14
    . The doctrine precludes the recasting of
    ordinary breach of contract claims as tort claims, but that does not mean that a contract
    can never be involved in a tort claim. 
    Id.
     “To be construed as in tort ... the wrong
    ascribed to defendant must be the gist of the action, the contract being collateral.” 
    Id.
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    In making a “gist of the action” determination, courts have guidance from the
    Supreme Court of Pennsylvania to this effect: “If the facts of a particular claim establish
    that the duty breached is one created by the parties by the terms of the contract[,]” then
    the claim is viewed as one for breach of contract; but, “[i]f ... the facts establish that the
    claim involves the defendant’s violation of a broader social duty owed to all individuals,
    which is imposed by the law of torts and, hence, exists regardless of the contract, then it
    must be regarded as a tort.” Bruno, 106 A.3d at 68. Accordingly, as further described by
    the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Bruno, the doctrine bars tort claims in four situations:
    “(1) where the tort claim ‘aris[es] solely from a contract between the parties’; (2) where
    ‘the duties allegedly breached were created and grounded in the contract itself’; (3) where
    ‘the liability stems from a contract’; or (4) where the tort claim ‘essentially duplicates a
    district court’s granting of a motion to dismiss. Fowler v. UPMC Shadyside, 
    578 F.3d 203
    , 206 (3d Cir. 2009). A motion to dismiss under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) may only be
    granted if “the allegations in a complaint, however true, could not raise a claim of
    entitlement to relief[.]” Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 
    550 U.S. 544
    , 558 (2007). “But a
    court need not credit a complaint’s bald assertions or legal conclusions when deciding a
    motion to dismiss.” Morse v. Lower Merion School Dist., 
    132 F.3d 902
    , 906 (3d Cir.
    1997).
    9
    breach of contract claim or the success of which is wholly dependent on the terms of a
    contract.’” Id. at 67 (quoting eToll, 
    811 A.2d at 19
    ). Fraud in the inducement claims are
    ordinarily not barred by the gist of the action doctrine, “because fraud to induce a person
    to enter into a contract is generally collateral to ... the terms of the contract itself.” eToll,
    
    811 A.2d at 17
    . In contrast, claims of fraud in the performance of a contract are barred
    by the doctrine. 
    Id. at 17-20
    .
    In the present matter, BBM’s tort claims arguably fall under several of the four
    situations described in Bruno. The claims are barred by the gist of the action doctrine
    because the duties at issue arise solely from the Vendor Agreement and follow-on
    purchase orders, regardless of the motives BBM wants to ascribe to Dick’s. By the same
    token, those duties are created and governed in the parties’ contractual relationship, and
    the claimed liability stems from the contractual agreement. There is no “broader social
    duty,” Bruno, 106 A.3d at 68, at play in this case. But for the assertation that Dick’s
    failed to fulfill its end of the bargain, there would be no case at all. The purchase
    agreement established a duty for Dick’s to accept the custom-branded ammunition by a
    certain date, all other terms being provided by the Vendor Agreement. Contractual duties
    alone are at issue.
    BBM attempts to avoid this straightforward application of the gist of the action
    doctrine by arguing that the promise Dick’s made to accept delivery by November 2016
    is an improper framing of the breached duty. By BBM’s lights, Dick’s fraudulent
    misrepresentations “constitute the breach of a social duty not to affirmatively mislead
    10
    where it is known reliance will be placed on the representation.”7 (Opening Br. at 11.)
    Those misrepresentations, says BBM, led to the formation of the July and August 2016
    purchase orders, and those purchase orders were “separate contracts that BBM had
    discretion to accept or reject.” (Opening Br. at 12.)
    BBM’s argument is essentially an attempt to recast its fraud in the performance
    claim as a fraud in the inducement claim, which is not barred by the gist of the action
    doctrine. Its complaint likewise invokes the language of fraud in the inducement, not in
    the performance, but we are not bound to accept the labels a party chooses. See Bruno,
    106 A.3d at 68 (“[T]he mere labeling by the plaintiff of a claim as being in tort, e.g., for
    negligence, is not controlling.”). As the District Court properly noted, the Vendor
    Agreement was signed before the allegedly fraudulent misrepresentations, and the
    misrepresentations cannot have retroactively induced BBM to enter the contractual
    arrangements which underlie every claim in the complaint. BBM says that the
    misrepresentations led to the formations of the purchase orders, not the Vendor
    Agreement, but that contention overlooks that the Vendor Agreement’s terms “apply to
    all purchase orders[.]”8 (Opening Br. at 16.) Although BBM was free to accept or reject
    7
    The amended complaint states that “Dick’s fraudulently induced BBM to enter
    into the subject Vendor Agreement and the subject Purchase Orders[,]” that “Dick’s
    misrepresented to BBM that it would take delivery of branded ammunition no later than
    November 2016 in order to induce BBM to accept the Purchase Orders,” that “Dick’s
    knew the representation ... was false,” and that “Dick’s intended to mislead BBM[.]”
    (J.A. at 29-30.)
    8
    Our dissenting colleague contends that it is unreasonable to infer that the Vendor
    Agreement is fully integrated with the purchase orders as the purchase orders were
    negotiated after the Vendor Agreement and they contain essential price and quantity
    11
    any purchase order, all subsequent purchase orders were subject to the terms of the
    Vendor Agreement. BBM’s claim is one of fraudulent performance on the Vendor
    Agreement, which, by its terms, governed every interaction of the parties, including
    purchase orders entered pursuant to that master contract. A fraudulent performance claim
    is clearly barred by the gist of the action doctrine. See eToll, 
    811 A.2d at 20
     (“[T]he gist
    of the action doctrine should apply to claims for fraud in the performance of a
    contract.”).9
    If we assume, as does BBM, that the purchase orders are separate contracts and the
    breached duty is a general societal duty not to mislead others into entering contracts, then
    BBM has arguably pled a fraud in the inducement claim. But even then, the parol
    evidence rule, coupled with the Vendor Agreement’s integration and no-modification
    terms that are absent from the Vendor Agreement. But that contention overlooks what
    the parties very plainly agreed would bind them. The Vendor Agreement is clear that its
    terms “apply to all purchase orders[.]” (J.A. at 38.) If the purchase orders were
    somehow contracts that had an independent status, separate from the Vendor Agreement,
    one would expect some additional language in them varying or disclaiming the terms of
    the Vendor Agreement, especially considering that the Vendor Agreement’s no-
    modification clause explicitly requires “any changes or modifications to or waivers of
    such terms and conditions” to be “in writing and signed by both Dick’s and [BBM].”
    (J.A. at 38.) And although the Vendor Agreement lacks quantity and price terms, it
    defined those terms as being specified in later purchase orders. The strong, remarkably
    clear language in the Vendor Agreement indicates that the parties intended for their
    ongoing business relationship to be governed by the Vendor Agreement, and that the
    purchase orders would simply be orders, the terms of which were dictated by the Vendor
    Agreement.
    9
    Because the economic loss doctrine is closely related to the gist of the action
    doctrine and we are satisfied that the gist of the action doctrine bars BBM’s tort claims,
    we need not consider the economic loss doctrine separately.
    12
    clauses, would bar BBM’s tort claims. 10 See Toy v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 
    928 A.2d 186
    , 204-05 (Pa. 2007) (holding that the fraud exception to the parol evidence rule does
    not apply to fraud in the inducement of a contract).
    “The parol evidence rule is a substantive rule of contract law that prevents the use
    of extrinsic evidence to nullify, modify, or augment the terms of a contract.”
    SodexoMAGIC, LLC v. Drexel University, 
    24 F.4th 183
    , 213 (3d Cir. 2022). Parol
    evidence, however, may be introduced to vary a fully integrated contract when the
    contract is ambiguous or when a term was omitted from the contract because of fraud,
    accident, or mistake. Toy, 928 A.2d at 204-05. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has
    restricted the fraud exception to parol evidence “to allegations of fraud in the execution
    of a contract, and has refused to apply the exception to allegations of fraud in the
    inducement of a contract.” Id. “[W]hile parol evidence may be introduced based on a
    10
    The District Court noted that BBM’s tort claims were barred by the parol
    evidence rule because the Vendor Agreement was fully integrated and required any
    modifications to be in a writing signed by both parties. In Pennsylvania, “fraud-in-the-
    inducement claims are commonly barred if the contract at issue is fully integrated.” Hart
    v. Arnold, 
    884 A.2d 316
    , 340 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2005). This rule is based on the rationale
    that “a party cannot justifiably rely upon prior oral representations and then sign a
    contract containing terms that refute the alleged prior oral representations.” 
    Id.
     (internal
    quotation marks omitted). Therefore, the parol evidence rule also requires allegations
    that the representations “were fraudulently or by accident or mistake omitted from the
    integrated written contract.” 
    Id.
     “To require less would make a mockery of the parol
    evidence rule because all a party would have to do to avoid, modify[,] or nullify [a
    contract] would be to aver that false representations were ‘fraudulently’ made.” 
    Id.
    (second alteration in original) (quoting Nicolella v. Palmer, 
    507 A.2d 20
    , 23 (Pa. 1968)).
    Relying on that rationale, the District Court concluded that “insofar as [BBM] contends
    that Dick’s employees misrepresented that it would accept delivery by a date certain not
    specified in the Vendor Agreement nor the [purchase order]’s, any such claim is barred
    by the parol evidence rule.” (J.A. at 49.)
    13
    party’s claim that there was fraud in the execution of a contract, i.e., that a term was
    fraudulently omitted from the contract, parol evidence may not be admitted based on a
    claim that there was fraud in the inducement of the contract, i.e., that an opposing party
    made false representations that induced the complaining party to agree to the contract.”
    Yocca v. Pittsburgh Steelers Sports, Inc., 
    854 A.2d 425
    , 436 n.26 (Pa. 2004).
    We have opined that, under Pennsylvania law, “the parol evidence rule acting
    alone does not prevent fraudulent inducement claims arising out of integrated contracts”
    because “the purpose of extrinsic evidence is to prove a precontractual misrepresentation
    or concealment – not to alter or vary the terms of the contract.” SodexoMAGIC, 24 F.4th
    at 213. But contract drafters can “extend[] the reach of the parol evidence rule” by
    writing a fraud-insulating clause into their contract, which “prevent[s] a party from
    satisfying the justifiable-reliance element of a fraudulent inducement claim.” Id. at 213-
    14. When a contract has a fraud-insulating provision, “it is virtually impossible to
    establish the justifiable-reliance element needed for a fraud claim.” Id. at 214; see Toy,
    928 A.2d at 207 (“[D]ue to the parol evidence rule’s operation, a party cannot be said to
    have justifiably relied on prior representations that [a party] has superseded and
    disclaimed[.]”). Two such examples are clauses that state that the representations in the
    contract supersede all prior representations, Yocca, 
    854 A.2d 425
    , 431 (Pa. 2004), or are
    the only representations made, 1726 Cherry St. P’Ship v. Bell Atl. Props., Inc., 
    653 A.2d 663
    , 670 (1995).
    BBM does not dispute that the Vendor Agreement is integrated, nor did it contest
    the validity of the integration clause before the District Court. It has thus forfeited any
    14
    arguments to the contrary. See Garza v. Citigroup Inc., 
    881 F.3d 277
    , 284 (3d Cir. 2018)
    (“To preserve a matter for appellate review, a party ‘must unequivocally put its position
    before the trial court at a point and in a manner that permits the court to consider its
    merits.”); DirecTV, Inc. v. Seijas, 
    508 F.3d 123
    , 125 n.1 (3d Cir. 2007) (“It is well
    established that arguments not raised before the District Court are [forfeited] on
    appeal.”). But arguments to the contrary would not be compelling anyway. The Vendor
    Agreement’s integration clause is clear, and its terms, including the integration clause,
    “shall apply to all purchase orders[.]” (J.A. at 38.) Although some terms, like price and
    quantity, are contained in the purchase orders, the Vendor Agreement defines those terms
    in relation to such purchase orders. For instance, the price of ammunition “shall be the
    prices specified in the purchase orders[,]” and the quantity of ammunition must not be “in
    excess of [the quantity] set forth in a purchase order[.]” (J.A. at 87.) The Vendor
    Agreement, and therefore any subsequent purchase order, also incorporates the Routing
    and Transportation Guide for Dick’s Sporting Goods, which presumably set the essential
    terms for delivery.11 In light of the integration clause and description of all essential
    terms, the Vendor Agreement and all subsequent purchase orders are properly understood
    as being integrated.12
    11
    As the Routing and Transportation Guide for Dick’s Sporting Goods is on a
    website that requires a vendor’s credentials to access, we cannot examine the precise
    requirements for delivery.
    12
    The dissent contends that we misapply the parol evidence rule because it is
    unreasonable to infer at the pleading stage that the Vendor Agreement is fully integrated
    15
    Instead of arguing that the Vendor Agreement and purchase orders are not
    integrated, BBM asserts only that the Vendor Agreement’s integration clause is not
    fraud-insulating, as it contains no reference to representations made after the Vendor
    Agreement was signed but before the purchase orders were executed. Not so. The
    Vendor Agreement states that it “supersedes all prior written and oral and all
    contemporaneous oral agreements and understandings with respect to the subject matter
    hereof[.]” (J.A. at 38.) Although the integration clause does not expressly mention
    representations made after the Vendor Agreement’s execution – understandably so
    because the contract would have already been signed – the no-modification clause
    requires that “any changes or modifications to or waivers of such terms and conditions
    must be in writing and signed by both Dick’s and [BBM].” (J.A. at 38.) This language
    plainly indicates the parties’ intent that the Vendor Agreement be fraud insulating, as any
    later interactions between the parties were to be in a signed writing to have any effect. If
    BBM intended to rely on Dick’s oral representations, it should have requested a written
    and signed modification.
    We turn next to whether the District Court properly dismissed BBM’s request for
    Helicopter Damages in its breach of contract claim. BBM argues that the District Court
    “did not find that BBM’s fraud claims were insufficiently pled[,]” and it was therefore
    error to ignore the fraud exception in the limitation of damages provision. (Opening Br.
    with the subsequent purchase orders. For the reasons already noted, supra note 8, the
    Vendor Agreement and any subsequent purchase orders are best viewed as integrated.
    16
    at 18.) Although BBM is correct that the District Court did not scrutinize the fraud
    claims under a Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b) analysis, the District Court was not required to do so
    since it found that the fraud claims were barred by the gist of the action doctrine. Given
    that doctrine’s application, the Court concluded “that the fraud claims are subject to
    dismissal for failure to state a plausible claim for relief[.]” (J.A. at 51.) Citing no legal
    authority, BBM suggests that, because the misrepresentations predate the purchase orders
    and “were made in order to secure BBM’s acceptance of Purchase orders for substantially
    increased amounts of ammunition[,]” the exception in the limitation of damages
    provision is met. (Opening Br. at 18.)
    We understand the District Court’s holding to be that the simple inclusion of one
    word – fraud – in the limitation of damages provision is not sufficient to overcome the
    gist of the action doctrine. If the parties had intended to convert a breach of the Vendor
    Agreement from a potential claim in contract to one in tort, they would have been far
    more explicit in saying so. BBM gives us no way to understand the fraud exception in
    the limitation of damages provision outside of its general assertion that the inclusion of
    “fraud” indicates that the parties intended to be exposed to tort claims in a breach of
    contract action. But, without clearer language from the parties in their contract, we must
    read the limitation of damages provision to be consistent with Pennsylvania’s gist of the
    action doctrine and parol evidence rule. As the gist of the action doctrine precludes fraud
    in the performance claims, and the parol evidence rule along with the inclusion of fraud-
    insulating language within the contract precludes fraud in the inducement claims, the
    word “fraud” in the provision must be understood to cover fraud in the execution claims.
    17
    See Yocca, 854 A.2d at 436 n.26 (“[P]arol evidence may be introduced based on a party’s
    claim that there was fraud in the execution of a contract, i.e., that a term was fraudulently
    omitted from the contract[.]”). As BBM has not pled any allegations of fraud in the
    execution, the limitation of damages provision prevents BBM from recovering Helicopter
    Damages on its contract claim.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm.
    18
    Battle Born Munitions Inc. v. Dick’s Sporting Goods, Inc., No. 22-1005.
    PHIPPS, Circuit Judge, dissenting in part.
    Contrary to the governing pleading standard, the Majority Opinion draws
    unreasonable inferences against the plaintiff, Battle Born Munitions Inc., in assessing the
    plausibility of its fraud allegations. Cf. Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. 662
    , 678 (2009); Lutz
    v. Portfolio Recovery Assocs., LLC, 
    49 F.4th 323
    , 334 (3d Cir. 2022). Based on those
    improper inferences, the Majority Opinion then affirms the dismissal of Battle Born’s
    misrepresentation claims based on the gist of the action and economic loss doctrines as
    well as the parol evidence rule. I see it differently and respectfully dissent in part.
    The Majority Opinion infers from the operative complaint that the Vendor
    Agreement between Dick’s Sporting Goods and Battle Born – together with later
    purchase orders – combine to form a singular, fully integrated contract. Neither the
    complaint nor the Vendor Agreement, which is attached to the complaint as an exhibit,
    says that. Rather, the Vendor Agreement sets forth general terms and conditions under
    which Battle Born would serve as a vendor for Dick’s. The Vendor Agreement does not
    identify the type of goods that Battle Born would supply, nor does it specify prices or
    quantities. The parties could agree to those key components of a sale of goods through
    subsequent purchase orders – none of which are attached to the complaint. So, based on
    the pleadings, it is not reasonable to infer that the Vendor Agreement did anything other
    than establish the ground rules for a business relationship between the parties. Likewise,
    with scarce allegations about the subsequent purchase orders, it is not reasonable to infer
    that the integration clause in the Vendor Agreement covers the later purchase orders,
    especially since that clause, by its own text, does not extend to subsequent agreements.
    See Vendor Agreement ¶ 24 (App. 89) (“This Vendor Agreement supersedes all prior
    written and oral and all contemporaneous oral agreements and understandings with
    1
    respect to the subject matter hereof . . . .”). Thus, at the pleadings stage, a reasonable
    inference in Battle Born’s favor is that subsequent purchase orders separately created
    additional contractual obligations.
    I agree with the Majority Opinion that the Vendor Agreement applies to later-
    negotiated purchase orders. But that does not mean that the Vendor Agreement is fully
    integrated with all subsequent purchase orders. An integration clause confirms the
    completeness of the parties’ agreement on the subject-matter of the agreement and, in
    conjunction with the parol evidence rule, prevents additional terms from being read into
    that agreement (at least without subsequent modification of the agreement by the parties).
    See generally Integration Clause, Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014). Thus, it is
    unreasonable to infer that the integration clause in the Vendor Agreement reaches later-
    negotiated purchase orders that contain price and quantity terms that were wholly absent
    from the Vendor Agreement. While many terms of the Vendor Agreement may apply
    prospectively, its integration clause cannot. Accordingly, the reasonable inference is that
    the purchase orders created additional, separately agreed-upon contractual obligations.
    The Majority Opinion bases its application of the gist of the action and economic
    loss doctrines on the contrary inference. From its perspective that the Vendor Agreement
    and purchase orders comprise a singular, fully integrated contract, the Majority Opinion
    concludes that the alleged misrepresentations made by Dick’s in negotiating the
    subsequent purchase orders would be at worst fraud in the performance of a contract.
    And such a claim, because it arises out of a contractual duty, is not separately actionable
    in tort under both the gist of the action and the economic loss doctrines. See Bruno v.
    Erie Ins. Co., 
    106 A.3d 48
    , 68 (Pa. 2014) (holding that gist of the action forecloses tort
    claims based on alleged breaches of solely contractual duties); Dittman v. UPMC,
    2
    
    196 A.3d 1036
    , 1054 (Pa. 2018) (holding that the economic loss doctrine prohibits tort
    claims seeking to recover purely economic losses that are rooted only in contractual
    duties); see also eToll, Inc. v. Elias/Savion Advert., Inc., 
    811 A.2d 10
    , 19–20 (Pa. Super.
    Ct. 2002). But that conclusion collapses if the purchase orders, rather than the Vendor
    Agreement, were the source of Battle Born’s contractual obligation to deliver specified
    quantities of ammunition at set prices. In that scenario, Dick’s would be under a general
    societal duty not to intentionally deceive Battle Born into undertaking those new
    contractual responsibilities. See SodexoMAGIC, LLC v. Drexel Univ., 
    24 F.4th 183
    , 217
    (3d Cir. 2022) (“[A] precontractual duty not to deceive through misrepresentation or
    concealment exists independently of a later-created contract.”). And if Battle Born were
    afforded the reasonable inference that the later negotiated purchase orders created
    additional, separately agreed-upon contractual obligations, then neither the gist of the
    action nor the economic loss doctrines would bar tort claims related to misrepresentations
    by Dick’s in negotiating the purchase orders.
    For similar reasons, the Majority Opinion misapplies the parol evidence rule. That
    rule applies only to integrated contracts,1 and as explained above, it is unreasonable to
    infer that the Vendor Agreement is fully integrated with later purchase orders. That is not
    to say that the Vendor Agreement says nothing about terms and conditions for subsequent
    purchase orders; it means only that those later orders separately impose additional
    obligations, and for that reason, they should not be inferred to be encompassed within the
    1
    See, e.g., Toy v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 
    928 A.2d 186
    , 205 (Pa. 2007) (“[F]or the parol
    evidence rule to apply, there must be a writing that represents the parties’ entire
    contract . . . .” (citing Yocca v. Pittsburgh Steelers Sports, Inc., 
    854 A.2d 425
    , 436 (Pa.
    2004))); Yocca, 854 A.2d at 436 (“[F]or the parol evidence rule to apply, there must be a
    writing that represents the ‘entire contract between the parties.’” (quoting Gianni v.
    Russell & Co., 
    126 A. 791
    , 792 (1924))).
    3
    Vendor Agreement’s integration clause. Accordingly, the parol evidence rule does not
    foreclose consideration of extrinsic evidence arising after entry of the Vendor Agreement,
    especially evidence of later misrepresentations regarding purchase orders.
    Despite these differences, I join the outcome reached by the Majority Opinion
    with respect to Battle Born’s fraud claim for the failed sale of helicopters to Lebanon.
    Although proximate cause is not universally an element of a fraud claim at common law,2
    Pennsylvania requires it. See Gibbs v. Ernst, 
    647 A.2d 882
    , 889 & n.12 (Pa. 1994); see
    also SodexoMAGIC, 24 F.4th at 205. And even under a favorable construction of the
    allegations in Battle Born’s complaint, the delayed payment for the ammunition is too
    attenuated from Battle Born’s inability to finance a helicopter deal to qualify as
    proximate cause.
    For these reasons, I would vacate the dismissal of all components of Battle Born’s
    misrepresentation claims except those related to the helicopter sale.
    2
    Compare Restatement (Second) of Torts § 548A (Am. L. Inst. 1977) (“A fraudulent
    misrepresentation is a legal cause of a pecuniary loss resulting from action or inaction in
    reliance upon it if, but only if, the loss might reasonably be expected to result from the
    reliance.”), with Restatement (First) of Torts § 546 (Am. L. Inst. 1938) (“The maker of a
    fraudulent misrepresentation in a business transaction is liable for pecuniary loss caused
    to its recipient by his reliance upon the truth of the matter misrepresented if his justifiable
    reliance upon the misrepresentation is a substantial factor in determining the course of
    conduct which results in his loss.”). See generally Mark P. Gergen, A Wrong Turn in the
    Law of Deceit, 
    106 Geo. L.J. 555
    , 589–92 (2018) (summarizing the emergence of the
    proximate causation element of fraud claims).
    4