On August 7, 1997, International Marketing, Limited (“IML”) filed a complaint in Oregon state court seeking over $30 million in damages from Archer-Daniels-Midland Company (“ADM”) and Swift-Eckrich (“Swift”). Preferring a federal forum and taking advantage of the diversity of citizenship between the parties, ADM and Swift removed the case to federal court. There, on April 10, 1998, a magistrate judge sitting for the District Court for the District of Oregon dismissed the complaint in its entirety for failure to state a claim. In the same order, the court grаnted IML leave to amend some of the allegations. Last, at the defendants’ request, the court transferred venue to the Northern District of Illinois under the authority of 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a).
When the case arrived in Illinois, IML decided to forgo its opportunity to amend the complaint and instead to pursue an immediate appeal, because the claims that were most important to it had been dismissed with prejudice. In order to do so, it had to secure a final judgment, since intеrlocutory appeals are normally forbidden. IML therefore asked the district court to dismiss all of its claims with prejudice. (Our recent decision in
JTC Petroleum Co. v. Piasa Motor Fuels,
Of course, a final judgment is just that. IML’s strategic decision meant that its case can be resuscitated only if it is able to convince this court that it had in fact properly stated one or more of its claims, in the form they took before the district court in the unamended complaint. Taking an immediate appeal was thus a calculated risk, at least if IML thought that some of the less favored claims were nonetheless salvageable by amendment. But this is the way it chose to litigate, and its decision has helped to bring a potentially sprawling case to a speedy conclusion. We affirm.
I
Because this appeal tests the sufficiency of a complaint, we relate the facts as we find them there.
Kaplan v. Shure Bros.,
The heart of IML’s complaint is its allegation that Swift and ADM breached a series of oral supply agreements. IML recounts seven transactions between itself and buyers who wanted to purchase the commodities that it had planned on procuring from ADM and Swift. In any event, ADM аnd Swift did not deliver the goods. That would have been bad enough for IML, because in theory this nondelivery would have required it to line up alternate suppliers on the open market. But ADM and Swift took matters a step further. In some cases, they initiated direct contact with IML’s customers, negotiated their own deals, and circumvented IML’s brokering function altogether.
From this set of basic facts, IML has distilled a number of different legal theories under which it claims a right to recover. Its complaint alleges breach of oral contract and fraud for each transaction, insofar as the defendants failed to deliver the goods while assuring IML that they would. It pleads quantum meruit and detrimental reliance as alternative, quasi-contractual theories of recovery. Where ADM and Swift entered into their own independent relationships with IML customers, IML alleges the economic torts of interference with contract and interferencе with business relations. Finally, IML points to written non-circumvention contracts it had entered with ADM and Swift in regard to some of its clients and accuses the defendants of breaching those contracts as well.
Although the supply agreements IML hopes to enforce were wholly oral, IML attached a number of documents to its complaint, among which are two written supply contracts between itself and Swift, together covering the period from May 31, 1995 through December 31, 1996, аnd a third written supply contract between itself and ADM for the period from August 19, 1995 through September 30, 1996. These contracts contain some boilerplate terms that are virtually identical. For example, they each require that payment must be made through a letter of credit, drawn in U.S. dollars through an approved bank and confirmed by Bank of America’s Chicago office. Likewise, they each contain the following integration clause: “Entire Agreement: This Contract supercedes any prior agreement, negotiations and discussion between Buyer and Seller and cannot be altered or amended except by agreement in writing signed by the duly authorized representatives of the parties hereto.”
These documents pose an obvious problem for IML. They look and sound like contracts between the parties on the precise subject matter of the alleged oral agreements. It is clear, however, that IML did not hold up its end of the bargain as outlined in the written agreements. For example, even according to its own rendition of events, IML never satisfied the payment terms regarding some of the transactions. Perhaps for that reason IML tried to rely in its complaint on its allegations of oral agreements. Realizing that it must somehow explain away the written agreements, IML added the following allegation to its complaint: “[the written contract with ADM] was signed solely in оrder to satisfy the legal and credit department of ADM, but the parties agreed that it (the written contract) would have no force and effect.” IML does not make similar allegations regarding the written Swift contracts.
ADM and Swift moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim. After a thorough analysis of the many claims, the Oregon district court dismissed the complaint in its entirety, specifying that the dismissal of the breach of oral contract claims was to be with prejudice. IML is now appealing that order, so far as it applies to the oral contract and economic tort claims. It has also asked us to direct the district court to allow it to amend its remaining claims on remand.
*729 II
At this early stage in the proceedings, the only question is whether the complaint raised allegations that, if proven, would entitle the plaintiff to relief. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6);
Conley v. Gibson,
The district court rejected IML’s breach of oral contract claims on several grounds. The alleged oral agreements, it held, were unenforceable in light of the superseding written contracts. Any prior oral agreements with either- defendant would be inadmissible under the parol evidence rule, while subsequent oral agreements would be barred by the contracts’ requirement that modifications be made in writing. The court also rejected as a matter of law IML’s effort to portray the written agreements as mere window-dressing, without legal effect. Finally, the written contracts aside, the court noted that each of the alleged oral agreements failed to satisfy the statute of frauds. We agree that the written contracts bar IML from recovering on the basis of oral agreements, and so we do not reach the statute of frauds question.
As an initial matter, we face a choice-of-law question. A federal trial court exercising its diversity jurisdiction over state law claims must generally apply the choice-of-law rules of the state in which it sits.
Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co.,
Oregon instructs its courts to refrain from choosing one state’s laws over another unless there is a conflict among the laws of the competing forums.
Lilienthal v. Kaufman,
Both Illinois and Oregon have largely adopted the Uniform Commercial Code (“UCC”), which governs contracts for the sale of goods over $500. Under the UCC’s parol evidence rule, evidence of prior agreements or contemporaneous oral agreements is inadmissible to vary or contradict the terms of an integrated written contract. Or.Rev.Stat. § 72.2020; 810 ILCS 5/2-202. A contract is integrated if the parties intended it to be a final and complete expression of their agreement.
Abercrombie v. Hayden Corp.,
IML argues that the parol evidence rule can never defeat a claim at the Rule 12(b)(6) stage, because identifying the parties’ intent rеquires fact-finding, a
*730
judicial function that has no place at this early stage in the proceedings. While it is a truism that fact-finding has no part in resolving a Rule 12(b)(6) motion,
Johnson v. Revenue Management Corp.,
When IML alleged that its intent was inconsistent with the written word of its contract with ADM, the court similarly took IML at its word and explored the legal ramifications of this “sham” agreement. It noted that, under Oregon law, allegations of a sham contract cannot shake the effect of an integration clause as between the parties.
Carolina Cas. Ins. Co. v. Oregon Auto. Ins. Co.,
IML next argues that the court came to the wrong legal conclusion about Illinois law. We disagree. It may be true that Illinois, like a number of other jurisdictions, permits parol evidence for the narrow purpose of showing that the partiеs to an alleged agreement did not intend to be bound by it. See,
e.g., Jost v. Cornelius,
IML is thus bound by its written contracts with the defendants, and еach of these contracts has an effective integration clause. This means that IML may not offer proof of any prior or contemporaneous oral agreements. Nor can it stake its claim on any subsequent oral agreements, because the contracts each provide that their terms “cannot be altered or amended except by agreement in writing signed by the duly authorized representatives of the parties hereto.” Such clauses are enforceable in both Oregon and Illinois. Or.Rev.Stat. 72.2090; 810 ILCS 5/2-209(2). All of the alleged oral agreements are therefore *731 unenforceable, and the district court correctly dismissed IML’s breach of contract claims based on those agreements.
Ill
IML also appeals the court’s dismissal of its allegations of tortious interference with business relations and tortious interference with contract. According to IML, ADM and Swift repeatedly and intentionаlly induced IML’s customers to circumvent IML and deal directly with them by informing those customers that IML did not have a valid supply contract.
Again we face the threshold choice-of-law question. After noting that the relevant tort law differs in Oregon and Illinois, the court below concluded that Illinois law' would govern the tort claims. Neither party has appealed from this determination, and so we too examine these claims using Illinois law.
Interference with contract and interference with business relations (sometimes called prospective economic advantage) are related torts. In Illinois, a plaintiff can recover for interference with existing contractual rights by proving “(1) the existence of a valid and enforceable contract between the plaintiff and another; (2) the defendant’s awareness of this contractual relation; (3) the defendant’s intentional and unjustified inducement of a breach of the contract; (4) a subsequent breach by the other, caused by the defendant’s wrongful conduct; and (5) damages.”
HPI Health Care Servs., Inc. v. Mt. Vernon Hosp., Inc.,
There are numerous privileges that serve as a complete defense to each tort.
Herman v. Prudence Mut. Cas. Co.,
The court dismissed IML’s interference with contract claims because IML failed to allege a critical element, namely that the third parties, IML’s customers, breached their contracts with it. IML argues that it did make such an allegation and relies on the following language, which it repeated for every interference with contract claim: “Defendant ADM inten *732 tionally and knowingly interfered with the aforesaid contract by inducing [IML’s customer] to breach its contract with plaintiff and deal directly with it.” Literally, this language addresses only ADM’s allegedly wrongful inducement; it stops short of saying that the customers did in fact breach their contracts. This may seem to be a minor defect or a hyperteehnical reading inconsistent with the spirit of Rule 8, which is probably why the court dismissed these claims without prejudice and granted IML leave to file an amended complaint. And it is easy to see how IML might have cured the deficiency in its pleadings with some simple redrafting. But IML did not do so. Instead, IML sought an immediate appeal and asked the district court to dismiss these claims with prejudice. Unfortunately for IML, we agree that the claim is defective, and its pursuit of a final judgment has cost it its ability to amend.
If the language really does allege only inducement and not actual breach, it would be a close question whether the complaint nonetheless satisfied basic notice pleading standards. Giving IML the benefit of the doubt, and assuming that the goals of notice were met, the claims are still inadequate. They are premised on the notion that ADM and Swift acted wrongfully when they informed IML’s customers that IML did not have a valid supply contract. But given that the written agreements were, as a matter of law, the only valid agreements between IML and the defendants, and given that IML by its own admissions apparently failed to meet the payment terms that would have triggered the defendants’ duty to perform, neither ADM nor Swift acted wrongfully in informing IML’s customers of the truth: neither defendant had a binding supply agreement with IML.
Nor do IML’s claims based on interference with business relationships survive scrutiny. In those claims, which IML repeated verbatim in regard to its different customers, IML alleged that “[defendants interfered with the aforesaid business relationship of plaintiff with an improper motive by inducing [IML’s customer] to break off it’s [sic] business relationship so that defendants] could deal directly with [the customer].” The court dismissed these claims because ADM’s and Swift’s competitive motive — a privilege providing a complete defense — appears on the fаce of the complaint. As noted above, this defense can be counteracted at the pleading stage by allegations of ill will or spite, motivations that defeat the competitor’s privilege, but IML makes no such allegations. Its invocation of an “improper motive” is too broad and ambiguous for us to read it as “ill will” or “spite,” especially where nothing else in the complaint sup•plies a reason to believe that this is the sort of improper motive IML has in mind.
IML argues that the court misread its complaint and points us to the following allegations, which it also repeated in regard to different customers: “Defendant ADM’s interference with contract was done with an improper motive by falsely representing to [IML’s customer] that plaintiff did not have a direct contract for supply of [commodity].... ” We agree that this allegation, because it does not reference a competitive motivation, would be adequate to charge the motive required for tortious interference with business relations under the liberal federal rules of notice pleading. See
Harrell v. Cook,
*733 IV
Finally, we reject IML’s request to allow it to amend those claims that had originally been dismissed with leave to amend. Even if we were to remand any of the claims on which IML hаs staked its appeal, we would not allow IML another run at its remaining claims. That would only serve to defeat the limits Congress has set on our interlocutory jurisdiction in 28 U.S.C. § 1292 and the complementary final judgment requirement of 28 U.S.C. § 1291. As we have explained, litigants gamble when they ask a district court to dismiss live claims with prejudice so that they can pursue an immediate appeal. See
Boland v. Engle,
Nor will we breathe new life into any of those claims on the merits. Even if the court was mistaken to dismiss IML’s breach of non-circumvention contract, fraud, quantum meruit, and detrimental reliance claims, IML has abandoned them by failing to argue them here.
Duncan v. State of Wisconsin Dep’t of Health & Family Servs.,
IML first filed its complaint in state court. Oregon, like Illinois,
cf. Bartholet v. Reishauer A.G. (Zurich),
Affirmed.
