This appeal comes to us as a procedural motley. Finding a number of loose ends better resolved in the district court, we vacate the judgment and remand for further proceedings.
I.
We limn the travel of the case, mentioning only those events that possess significance for purposes of appellate review.
Plaintiff-appellant Garita Hotel Limited Partnership (Garita) sued in the district court. Its complaint (actually, its amended *17 complaint, Garita’s original complaint having no lingering importance) named as defendants the Government Development Bank (GDB) and Ponce Federal Bank (P-Bank). The complaint charged that GDB, by letter, a copy of which was annexed to the complaint, agreed to lend Garita $8,000,000 for acquisition and refurbishment of a hotel property, contemplating, however, that P-Bank, or some other financial institution, would lend an additional $6,000,000; that Garita accepted GDB’s commitment letter, paying an $800,000 fee; that the defendants “agreed in principle” that P-Bank would lend the entire $14,000,-000, subject to the terms of GDB’s commitment letter; that Garita fulfilled all the requirements of the letter; but that P-Bank, nevertheless, refused to advance the funds and, rubbing salt in an open wound, demanded immediate repayment on certain “bridge loans” issued in anticipation of the permanent financing. The complaint itemized damages totalling $171,900,000.
In due course, P-Bank filed a pleading entitled “Motion to Dismiss and/or for Summary Judgment.” The motion’s central thesis was that the suit should be dismissed because, “[a]ccording to the allegations of the complaint,” it was GDB, not the movant, that issued the loan commitment. The motion contended “[i]n the alternative” that Garita had failed to comply with a condition precedent to the lenders’ obligations.
The district court seized on the “no commitment” ground. It noted that the commitment letter obligated GDB alone to provide the financing and concluded, therefore, that “Ponce Federal Bank was not a party to the contract allegedly breached.” Although acknowledging that, under Rule 12(b)(6), a court “may dismiss for failure to state a claim only if it clearly appears, according to the facts alleged, that plaintiff cannot recover on any viable theory,” the court found there was “no cause of action against Ponce Federal Bank upon which relief may be granted.” A judgment entered reciting that P-Bank’s motion to dismiss had been allowed and the case dismissed “for failure to state a claim for which relief may be granted.”
The plaintiff promptly sought reconsideration, pointing to documentary evidence showing conclusively that P-Bank had assumed GDB’s position and agreed to lend the entire $14,000,000. The district court, in a margin order, denied the motion. This appeal ensued.
II.
The jurisprudence of Civil Rule 12(b)(6) is well defined. An appellate court reviews the granting of a motion to dismiss
de novo,-
applying the same criteria that obtained in the court below.
McCoy v. Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
In this case, the amended complaint, while inartfully drawn, passed mus *18 ter. Under the applicable standard, any ambiguities in the complaint should have been resolved in favor of the pleader’s position. 2 Reading the allegations as a whole, in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, the complaint sufficiently averred that P-Bank, although not the original issuer of the commitment letter, ultimately agreed to undertake the loan, yet failed to consummate it. The “no commitment” ground was, therefore, impuissant, and the motion to dismiss was improvidently granted.
III.
Although P-Bank now concedes that Garita’s suit could not appropriately be dismissed on the “no commitment” ground, 3 it offers several reasons why the judgment should stand. We find these reasons unconvincing.
A.
P-Bank asserts that, when Garita’s motion for reconsideration was filed, the district court must have realized that its ratio decidendi was flawed; and that the court’s refusal to reconsider necessarily signified a shift in emphasis to P-Bank’s alternate ground. The fundamental problem with this approach is that the district court never indicated, either initially or on reconsideration, that it paid the slightest heed to the “condition precedent” argument. Allowing a litigant, on appeal, to put words not spoken below into the trial judge’s mouth would be wrong. Thus, we reject P-Bank’s effort to play the ventriloquist.
We need not paint the lily. This court has consistently followed the practice of reading district court orders according to their tenor and plain meaning.
See, e.g., Lefkowitz v. Fair,
B.
Next, P-Bank contends that, because its alternative motion contained several documentary exhibits, the motion was automatically converted to a motion for summary judgment; and, accordingly, the record should be reviewed not under Rule 12(b)(6), but under the more astrictive Rule 56 standard. We believe that this contention sweeps too broadly.
To be sure, the civil rules provide that: If, on a motion [under Rule 12(b)(6)] to dismiss for failure of the pleading to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, matters outside the pleading are presented to and not excluded by the court, the motion shall be treated as one for summary judgment and disposed of as provided in rule 56 ...
Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). There is some division in the authorities as to how, and under what circumstances, the process of conversion occurs.
See Gilbert v. City of Cambridge,
We think the proper approach to Rule 12(b)(6) conversion is functional rather than mechanical. A motion to dismiss is not automatically transformed into a motion for summary judgment simply because matters outside the pleadings are filed with, and not expressly rejected by, the district court. If the district court chooses to ignore the supplementary materials and determines the motion under the Rule 12(b)(6) standard, no conversion occurs. 4
*19
Accord Hall v. Bellmon,
In this instance, the district court made no reference to the exhibits attached to P-Bank’s motion and phrased its decision entirely in the idiom of Rule 12(b)(6). Under the circumstances, there was no conversion. Hence, the summary judgment standard was inapposite.
Cf., e.g., Advance Fin. Corp. v. Isla Rica Sales, Inc.,
C.
P-Bank’s final asseveration urges us to hinge our decision on the alternate ground specified in its motion, notwithstanding that the district court neither invoked Rule 56 nor considered the “condition precedent” defense. Although an appellate court in the federal system is not married to the district court’s reasoning, and has discretionary authority to affirm a judgment on any independently sufficient ground exemplified in the record,
see, e.g., Chongris v. Board of Appeals,
For one thing, the record is not entirely clear as to the scope of the condition precedent upon which P-Bank relies. 5 For another thing, Garita claims that the district court foreshortened discovery and that the limitation was premature. Given the lower court’s focus on the “no commitment” issue, we think Garita is entitled to further discovery before confronting a straight Rule 56 motion addressed to the “condition precedent” ground. Cf., e.g., Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(f).
IV.
We need go no further. It comes with a special sort of ill grace for P-Bank, having mapped alternative routes to guide the district court in disposing of the case, to complain when one of its handpicked routes turns into a dead end. Thus, we decline the appellee’s invitation to take a surrealistic view of the record and confine our inquiry to what actually transpired below. On that basis, we rule that the judgment of dismissal must be vacated and the case remanded to the district court for further proceedings.
Vacated and remanded. Costs to appellant.
Notes
. We have required more detailed statements of claim in racketeering and civil rights cases,
see, e.g., Miranda
v.
Ponce Federal Bank,
.Moreover, the request for reconsideration eliminated any possible ambiguity as to P-Bank's commitment to the commitment. When a timely request for reconsideration clarifies an otherwise fatal ambiguity in a complaint, an order for outright dismissal will not ordinarily be perpetuated.
See Rivera-Gomez v. de Castro,
. P-Bank admits that the documents referenced in Garita's motion for reconsideration satisfactorily “evidence (P-Bank’s] approval of the loan and assumption of GDB’s commitment letter," thus requiring abandonment of the "no commitment” argument. Appellee’s Brief at 8 n. 3.
. We find support for our position in
Jacob v. Curt,
. P-Bank’s position is that Garita failed to comply with condition 7(h) of the commitment letter. That condition required the borrower, by a date certain, to submit "acceptable evidence” that it has "obtained a franchise of a hotel chain acceptable to GDB and/or a management contract has been signed ... for the operation of the hotel and casino_” P-Bank claims that this condition obligated Garita to "obtain[] a franchise or management agreement for the operation of a casino." Appellee’s Brief at 5 (emphasis supplied). We do not think the language of condition 7(h) must inevitably be read in that restrictive fashion. And, the record is less than conclusive as to either the parties’ intent or the availability of a hotel-chain franchise (sans casino).
