Certain federally funded medical clinics — so-called “Section 340B covered entities” — are able to purchase prescription drugs at a discount from drug manufacturers under a standardized agreement between the federal government and the drug companies. During 2003, for example, these covered entities spent $3.4 billion on outpatient prescription drugs. They claim in this lawsuit that they have been overcharged for those drugs in violation of pharmaceutical pricing agreements between the Secretary of Health and Human Services (“Secretary”) and the drug manufacturer defendants-appellees (“Manufacturers”). Applying the federal common law of contracts, we hold that the covered entities are intended direct beneficiaries of these agreements and thus have the right to enforce the agreements’ discount provisions against the Manufacturers and sue them for reimbursement of excess payments. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and reverse the district court’s dismissal of the complaint under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim.
BACKGROUND 1
In part to “enable ... certain Federally-funded clinics to obtain lower prices on the drugs that they provide to their patients,” see H.R.Rep. No. 102-384(11), at 7 (1992), Congress enacted Section 602 of the Veterans Health Care Act of 1992, Pub.L. No. 102-585, 106 Stat. 4943, 4967. That provision, entitled “Limitations on Prices of Drugs Purchased by Covered Entities,” requires the Secretary of Health and Human Services to:
enter into an agreement with each manufacturer of covered drugs under which the amount required to be paid ... to the manufacturer for covered drugs ... purchased by a covered entity ... does not exceed an amount equal to the average manufacturer price for the drug under [§ 1396r-8(k)(l) ] in the preceding calendar quarter, reduced by [a] rebate percentage described in [§ 256b(a)(2) ].
42 U.S.C. § 256b(a)(l). 2 This drug discounting program is commonly known as the “Section 340B program,” tracing back to its original location within the Public Health Service Act. 3 The program is managed by the Health Resources and Ser *1099 vices Administration (“HRSA”), a subdivision of the Department of Health and Human Services (“DHHS”). See Statement of Organizations, Functions, and Delegations of Authority, 58 Fed.Reg. 19,-137-02 (Apr. 12, 1993). In accordance with statute, the Secretary entered into a standard Pharmaceutical Pricing Agreement (“PPA”) with each of the Manufacturers.
One of the Manufacturers’ principal obligations under the PPA is “to charge covered entities a price ... that does not exceed ... the [average manufacturer price] for the covered outpatient drug reported ... to the Secretary in accordance with the Manufacturer’s responsibilities under [§ 1396r-8(b)(3) ], reduced by the rebate percentage.” See PPA § 11(a). 4 The PPA defines “average manufacturer price,” “covered entity,” “manufacturer” and “rebate percentage” to “have the meanings specified in [§§ 256b and 1396r-8], as interpreted and applied herein.” See PPA §§ I(a)-(o). Also known as the “ceiling price,” the maximum price that covered entities may be charged under the PPA is calculated using proprietary sales and pricing information the Manufacturers disclose only to the Secretary.
The genesis of the present appeal is a putative class action filed in California state court by the county of Santa Clara and a number of county-operated medical facilities (“Santa Clara”), which are covered entities within the meaning of § 256b(a)(4) and PPA § 1(e). Relying chiefly on reports published by DHHS’s Office of the Inspector General (“OIG”), Santa Clara alleged that the Manufacturers have systematically overcharged its medical facilities, and all similarly situated covered entities, for covered drugs. OIG’s March 2003 report estimated that overcharges during the one-year period ending September 1999 totaled $6.1 million. Its June 2004 report, which was withdrawn in October 2004 because of “problems with the underlying data,” concluded that covered entities overpaid $41.1 million in the month of September 2002. In October 2005, OIG confirmed that its June 2004 calculation was erroneous because the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services had provided it with comparison “ceiling prices from the wrong timeframe.” OIG did not retreat, however, from its other, more general findings that HRSA was not adequately overseeing the Section 340B program and that “HRSA lacks the oversight mechanisms and authority to ensure that [covered] entities pay at or below the ... ceiling price.” The October 2005 report also “introduce[d] new concerns” that “systemic problems with the accuracy and reliability” of the government’s pricing data could interfere with HRSA’s ability to monitor the Section 340B program. Finally, a 2006 OIG report estimated that covered entities overpaid $3.9 million in June 2005 alone.
Santa Clara initially brought claims under the California False Claims Act and California Unfair Competition Law in state court. After the Manufacturers removed the action to federal district court, Santa Clara amended its complaint for the first time. The district court granted the Manufacturers’ motion to dismiss, but with leave to amend. Santa Clara’s second amended complaint, now including claims for breach of the PPA, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence and quantum meruit, fared no better than the first. The district court granted the Manufacturers’ second motion to dismiss and denied -as futile Santa *1100 Clara’s subsequent motion for leave to file a third amended complaint. Santa Clara appeals only the district court’s rejection of its PPA breach of contract claim on a third party beneficiary theory.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
“We review de novo the district court’s dismissal of a complaint for failure to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6).”
Vasquez v. Los Angeles County,
DISCUSSION
We agree with Santa Clara that covered entities are intended direct beneficiaries of the PPA and have the right as third parties to bring claims for breach of that contract. We also conclude that allowing such suits under the PPA is consistent with Congress’ intent in enacting the Section 340B program, even though the statute itself does not create a federal private cause of action. Finally, we reject the Manufacturers’ argument that primary jurisdiction is appropriate.
I.
Federal law controls the interpretation of the PPA, which is a “contradi] entered into pursuant to federal law and to which the government is a party,”
Smith v. Cent. Ariz. Water Conservation Dist.
*1101
Under the federal common law of contracts, “[b]efore a third party can recover under a contract, it must show that the contract was made for its direct benefit — that it is an
intended beneficiary
of the contract.”
Id.
(emphasis added). “A promisor owes a duty of performance to any intended beneficiary of the promise, and ‘the intended beneficiary may enforce the duty’ ” by suing as a third party beneficiary of the contract, whereas an “incidental beneficiary acquires ‘no right against the promisor.’ ”
Id.
at 1211 n. 2 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Contracts §§ 304, 315 (1979)). To qualify as an intended beneficiary, the third party “must show that the contract reflects the express or implied intention of the parties to the contract to benefit the third party.”
Id.
at 1211 (citing
Montana v. United States,
Demonstrating third-party beneficiary status in the context of a government contract is a comparatively difficult task.
See Smith,
Having done this analysis, we are persuaded that covered entities are intended beneficiaries of the PPA and, accordingly, that Santa Clara has stated a breach of contract claim on a third party beneficiary theory. At the outset, we reject the suggestion that the availability of a third party contract claim is conditioned on the contract’s inclusion of a provision expressly granting the third party the
right to sue.
Any intended beneficiary has the right to enforce the obligor’s duty of performance; the right to sue inheres in one’s status as an intended beneficiary.
See Klamath,
*1102
We simply clarify that
if
the plaintiff is an
intended
beneficiary — with
Klamath
and progeny setting forth the requisite showing — then the third party contract claim may go forward.
6
Only when the plaintiff would qualify solely as an
incidental
beneficiary of the government contract is it necessary to have an express, specific statement of the promisor’s contractual liability to that third party (such as by an express right-to-sue clause).
See Smith,
We hold that the parties to the PPA clearly intended to grant covered entities enforceable rights as intended beneficiaries of that agreement.
See Kremen,
In acceding to the PPA, the Manufacturers undertook a specific responsibility to the covered entities: “Pursuant to [§ 256b], the Manufacturer
agrees
.... to charge
covered entities
a price for each unit of the drug that does not exceed” the ceiling price of that drug.
See
PPA § 11(a) (emphasis added).
Smith, Kremen, Orff
and
Klamath
— all of which rejected plaintiffs’ claims to be intended beneficiaries — are distinguishable on this ground alone.
7
There is a stark contrast between “recitation of constituencies,” “explanatory recitals” of purpose and references to individuals that the contracting parties had “in mind”' — all insufficient to “prove [the plaintiffs’] intended beneficiary status”' — -and the terms at issue here.
See Smith,
Consideration of § 256b, the “governing statute” specifying the PPA’s terms, and its purposes reinforces this interpretation.
See Trimble Navigation,
Relying on
D’Amato v. Wisconsin Gas Co.,
D 'Amato
does not support the Manufacturers’ argument. There, the plaintiffs attempted to bring suit as third party beneficiaries of affirmative action provisions whose inclusion in procurement contracts was required by Section 503 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. As a threshold matter, the contracts themselves suggested that the plaintiffs were not intended beneficiaries; they were “not directed at the handicapped in any way but instead focus[ed] exclusively on the government-contractor relationship.”
D Amato,
We perceive four material differences between the contract and statute in
D Amato
and those here. First, as discussed above, the PPA sets forth the contracting parties’ clear intent to directly benefit the covered entities.
Cf. id.
at 1479-80. Second, § 256b says nothing about the covered entities’ remedies, whether judicial or administrative.
Cf. id.
at 1481 (“The statutory grant of
one
remedy ... without mention of any other ... implies that Congress intended to bar
other
remedies.”) (emphasis added). Third, allowing covered entities to bring suit as third party beneficiaries would not conflict with the PPA’s informal dispute resolution process, given that the entities themselves are unable to initiate that process.
11
Last, the voluntary administrative dispute resolution procedure created by DHHS’s regulations expressly leaves open resort to “other remedies which may be available under applicable principles of law.”
See
The Manufacturers’ remaining arguments against the covered entities’ intended beneficiary status are no more convincing. First, they contend it is “illogical” that the United States and the Manufacturers would have intended to expose themselves to suit by the large number of covered entities, about 13,000 reported as of this writing.
12
The breadth and indefiniteness of a class of beneficiaries is entitled to some weight in negating the inference of intended beneficiary status.
See Price v. Pierce,
We are also unmoved by the Manufacturers’ protest that they “surely would not have agreed to subject themselves to a large number of lawsuits that could undermine the confidentiality” of pricing data through discovery, given the PPA’s inclusion of a confidentiality provision.
13
The confidentiality provision itself, however, contemplates that such information could well be subject to disclosure for purposes of enforcing the PPA’s discount pricing requirements beyond any actions the Secretary might initiate. Section V(a) specifies that information disclosed to the Secretary by the Manufacturers,
“except as otherwise required by law,
will not be disclosed
by the Secretary or his designee
in a form which reveals the Manufacturer, except as necessary to carry out the provisions of [§ 256b] and to permit review by the [OIG].” (Emphasis added.) As the italicized phrases highlight, the confidentiality provision anticipates that disclosures could be required other than to or by the Secretary. A district court’s discovery order compelling the production of documents would be a disclosure “required by law”; and it would be the manufacturer, not the Secretary, disclosing the information. To the extent a drug company would rightly be concerned about sensitive pricing information, district courts routinely enter pro
*1106
tective orders to prevent the undue disclosure of commercially sensitive information.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(c);
Phillips ex rel. Estates of Byrd v. Gen. Motors Corp.,
II.
Although we conclude that covered entities are intended beneficiaries of the PPA, and so would ordinarily be entitled to bring suit to enforce it, the Manufacturers urge that this is not the usual intended beneficiary case and that permitting third party enforcement of the PPA would conflict with Congress’ intent in creating the Section 340B program.
14
In this vein, they point to Santa Clara’s concession before the district court that there is no private federal cause of action under § 256b.
15
See generally Alexander v. Sandoval,
The starting point of this argument is the truism that federal common law, of which the federal common law of contracts forms a part, “is. ‘subject to the paramount authority of Congress.’ ”
City of Milwaukee v. Illinois & Michigan,
In
Grochowski,
the Second Circuit did not permit the plaintiffs to bring suit as third party beneficiaries of a contract between the contractor defendants and New York City’s public housing authority.
See
Assuming
Grochowski
was correctly decided, the case is clearly inapposite on its own terms.
17
Its analytical under-pinning was the “ ‘elemental canon’ of statutory construction that where a
statute expressly provides a remedy,
‘courts must be especially reluctant to provide
additional
remedies.’ ”
Id.
at 85 (quoting
Karahalios v. Nat’l Fed’n of Employees, Local 1263,
Permitting covered entities to sue as intended beneficiaries of the PPA is therefore wholly compatible with the Section 340B program’s objectives.
Cf. Trimble Navigation,
III.
Finally, we hold that the doctrine of primary jurisdiction does not require that Santa Clara’s contract claim be stayed or dismissed without prejudice pending its referral to the Secretary for agency resolution. The doctrine of primary jurisdiction “is a prudential doctrine under which courts may, under appropriate circumstances, determine that the initial decisionmaking responsibility should be performed by the relevant agency rather than the courts.”
Syntek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. v. Microchip Tech. Inc.,
In our view, there is nothing “particularly complicated” about Santa Clara’s contract claim on the merits.
19
Santa
*1109
Clara alleges that the Manufacturers did not comply with their obligation under the PPA to charge covered entities a price that “does not exceed ... the [average manufacturer price] for the [covered drug]
reported
... to the Secretary in accordance with the Manufacturer’s responsibilities under [§ 1396r — 8(b)(3) ] ... reduced by the rebate percentage.”
See
PPA § 11(a) (emphasis added). Contrary to the Manufacturers’ suggestion, resolution of this claim presents no “far-reaching question that ‘requires expertise or uniformity in administration.’ ”
Cf. Broum,
277 F.8d at 1172. The PPA is drafted, for instance, so that covered entities are entitled only to the average manufacturer price
reported
to the Secretary; they cannot claim that the reported figure was itself somehow erroneous.
20
Moreover, when a covered entity sues a manufacturer for failing to comply with its ceiling price obligations under the PPA, but “ ‘does not seek to impose any additional or contrary obligations [,] [it] is merely enforcing the existing rebate program responsibilities and does not inject any more variation than if the Department of Justice brought suit.’ ”
See generally Massachusetts v. Mylan Labs.,
CONCLUSION
As intended direct beneficiaries of the PPA, covered entities may enforce the Manufacturers’ ceiling price obligations under the federal common law of contracts. Although the statute mandating the PPA does not create a federal private cause of action, allowing Santa Clara’s contract claim to go forward is consistent with Congress’ intent in enacting the legislative scheme. Because it lies within the conventional competence of the courts, that claim is not within the primary jurisdiction of DHHS.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. Because this is an appeal from an order granting a motion to dismiss, we accept all facts alleged as true and construe them in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.
See Karam v. City of Burbank,
. Hereinafter, all citations are to Title 42 of the United States Code unless otherwise noted.
. Section 602 of the Veterans Health Care Act of 1992 added a new Section 340B to Part D of Title III of the Public Health Service Act.
See
. The PPA establishes different discounts for other classes of drugs that are not relevant here. See PPA §§ II(b)-(c).
. "[F]ederal jurisdiction cannot be created by contract,” of course, and we have an independent obligation to scrutinize our jurisdiction.
ARCO Envtl. Remediation, L.L.C. v. Dep’t of Health & Envtl. Quality of Mont.,
. The Manufacturers suggest that
US Ecology, Inc. v. United States,
.
Cf. Smith,
. Although the PPA does not state in so many words that it was entered into “for the benefit" of the covered entities,
see Far West,
. Protected purchasers also include the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Department of Defense, the Public Health Service and the Indian Health Service. See Veterans Health Care Act of 1992 § 603(a), Pub.L. No. 102-585, 106 Stat. 4943, 4972 (codified at 38 U.S.C. § 8126(b)); H.R.Rep. No. 102-384(11), at 7-8.
. The informal dispute resolution remedies against the covered entities run through the
*1104
Secretary, who has the power to "establish a mechanism to ensure that covered entities comply” with the Section 340B program's requirements and sanction them for noncompliance.
See
§ 256b(a)(5)(A)(ii), (D). We construe these PPA provisions as simply restating the covered entities' statutory obligations, because as a matter of federal common law, even a third party beneficiary "cannot be bound to a contract it did not sign.”
See Comer v. Micor, Inc.,
.
Cf. FMC Corp.,
. See Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Pharmacy Affairs, Growth of 340B Covered Entity Sites From 01/1998 to Present, http://opanet.hrsa.gov/opa/ReporV StatisticalReport.aspx.
. This argument is problematic for another, more pragmatic reason, which is that the PPA was not a conventionally negotiated contract. Presumably, the Manufacturers would have preferred not to give covered entities any discount at all, but they faced an overwhelmingly powerful incentive to accept the PPA. Eligibility for a number of substantial federal healthcare programs is conditioned on having an effective § 256b agreement with the Secretary. See § 1396r-8(a)(l), (a)(5)(A); see generally Joint Explanatory Statement on H.R. 5193, 138 Cong. Rec. SI 78 90, 1992 U.S.C.C.A.N. 4186, 4211 (explaining that § 256b makes the "use of federal matching funds for payment for a covered outpatient drug [by State Medicaid programs] ... contingent on ... a manufacturer’s entering into [ ] an agreement ... under which the manufacturer agrees to provide rebates or discounts to” covered éntities).
. Although this argument was raised for the first time in the Manufacturers’ reply to Santa Clara’s opposition to its motion to dismiss and the district court did not address it, we will pass on the merits here. The issue is one of law and has been fully briefed by both parties.
See Pocatello Educ. Ass’n v. Heideman,
. Santa Clara has not pursued this matter on appeal, so we assume without deciding that § 256b does not create a private cause of action.
. This is a different and less demanding inquiry than that used to evaluate whether a federal statute preempts a state-law cause of action,
see City of Milwaukee,
. Because the
Grochowski
plaintiffs’ contract claims were based on state law, not federal law, it is puzzling that the majority did not frame its analysis in terms of whether Congress intended to preempt those claims.
See, e.g., Grochowski,
. Section 256b does provide a number of remedies against covered entities. See, e.g., § 256b(a)(5)(C) ("A covered entity shall permit the Secretary and [manufacturers] ... to audit ... records of the entity that directly pertain to the entity’s compliance” with the program.); (a)(5)(D) (“If the Secretary finds ... that a covered entity is in violation ... the covered entity shall be liable....”).
. Although the issue of whether covered entities are entitled to sue as third party beneficiaries of the PPA is by no means straightforward, DHHS’s regulatory authority does not extend to the federal common law of con *1109 tracts, so we have no occasion to defer to the agency’s expertise in deciding this appeal.
. We do not decide whether the PPA's "reporting” limitation is consistent with § 256b(a)(l)’s requirements for pharmaceutical purchasing agreements.
. The relationship between states and manufacturers under the Medicaid State Rebate Agreement is roughly analogous to that between covered entities and manufacturers under the PPA. Neither party requested that the district court or we seek the views of the Secretary of Health and Human Services as amicus curiae.
