Plaintiffs-Appellants Isla Nena Air Services, Inc. and its successor in interest San Juan Jet Charter, Inc. (hereinafter “Isla Nena”) brought suit against defendants-appellees Cessna Aircraft Company (“Cessna”) and Pratt & Whitney Canada Corporation (“PWC”) in the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico. The complaint alleged claims arising from an airplane crash near Culebra, an island municipality of Puerto Rico. Isla Nena now appeals from the district court’s dismissal of its complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. After careful review, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I.
Isla Nena is a Puerto Rico corporation that operates a short-haul commercial airline in Puerto Rico. Cessna is a Kansas corporation that designs, manufactures, and sells aircraft. PWC is a Canadian corporation that designs, manufactures, and sells aircraft engines. On November 26, 2001, Isla Nena purchased a new Cessna 208B (the “Aircraft”) from Cessna and took delivery at Cessna’s factory delivery center in Wichita, Kansas. The Aircraft was powered by a PWC engine.
On August 30, 2003, the Aircraft was carrying nine passengers and a pilot from Fajardo, a city on the northeast coast of Puerto Rico, to Culebra, an island municipality of Puerto Rico approximately twenty miles east of Fajardo. About five miles west of the Culebra airport at an altitude of 2500 feet, in clear weather, the engine failed and the Aircraft lost power. The pilot was able to glide the Aircraft toward Flamenco Beach near Culebra and performed a controlled emergency water landing just off the beach. Following the landing, the pilot assisted all of the passengers — none of whom were seriously injured — to shore. The Aircraft suffered major damage to all of its components and the engine was destroyed.
After the accident, the National Transportation Safety Board (“NTSB”) conducted an investigation. The NTSB determined that certain rivets installed around an engine inlet duct were either fractured or corroded. After the NTSB examined the engine, it was shipped back to PWC. PWC examined the engine’s component parts and found that the damage to the engine was consistent with ingestion of a foreign object. Isla Nena’s theory is that the rivets were defectively designed or installed, causing them to break off, and that the rest of the engine failed when it ingested one of the broken rivets.
On September 20, 2004, Isla Nena filed a six-count complaint against Cessna and PWC 1 in the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico. The complaint asserted diversity jurisdiction and contained claims for strict liability (Counts I and II) and negligence (Counts III and IV)- 2 The complaint sought to recover damages for loss of value to the Aircraft and engine, cost to repair the Aircraft and engine, loss of use of the Aircraft, and lost profits.
On November 12, 2004, PWC filed a motion to dismiss Counts I-IV pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Cessna joined the motion.
On August 9, 2005, the district court granted the motion to dismiss. The court found that admiralty jurisdiction applied and therefore that Isla Nena’s tort claims were barred by the economic loss rule. The court also found that, even if Puerto Rico law applied, the result would be the same because Puerto Rico law would follow the economic loss rule. Finally, the court denied Isla Nena’s motion to supplement but stated that, even if it were to allow the motion, the economic loss rule would still apply. The court therefore entered partial judgment with respect to Counts I-IV. Thereafter, Isla Nena agreed to drop Counts V and VI, and the partial judgment was modified to a final judgment on August 30, 2005. Isla Nena has timely appealed.
II.
A. Standard of Review
We review a district court’s decision to grant a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss de novo, taking as true the well-pleaded facts in the complaint.
Vistamar, Inc. v. Fagundo-Fagundo,
B. The Economic Loss Rule
Under the economic loss rule, a party generally may not recover in tort when a defective product harms only the product itself (instead of a person or other property).
See, e.g., East River,
East River
is an admiralty case; therefore, if we were to apply federal admiralty law, Isla Nena’s claims would be barred by
C. Puerto Rico Law and the Economic Loss Rule
The Puerto Rico Supreme Court has not directly addressed whether the economic loss rule is applicable under Puerto Rico law. We therefore “look to analogous state court decisions, persuasive adjudications by courts of the states, learned treatises, and public policy considerations ... in order to make an informed prophecy of how the Puerto Rico Supreme Court would rule.”
Pérez-Trujillo v. Volvo Car Corp.,
Article 1802 of Puerto Rico’s Civil Code, 31 P.R. Laws Ann. § 5141, provides for a right of action stemming from a person’s negligence. Although neither Article 1802 nor any other provision of the Civil Code has explicitly incorporated the doctrine of strict liability, it is well-settled that Puerto Rico courts have adopted that doctrine under Article 1802.
See Guevara v. Dorsey Labs., Inc.,
1. Article 1802 and the Economic Loss Rule
Article 1802 provides that “[a] person who by an act or omission causes damage to another party through fault or negligence shall be obliged to repair the damage so done.” 31 P.R. Laws Ann. § 5141. After careful consideration, we believe that the Puerto Rico Supreme Court would rule that the economic loss rule bars an action under Article 1802 where a defective product harms only itself.
We addressed an issue similar to the present one in
Betancourt v. W.D. Schock Corp.,
Even when the harm to the product itself occurs through an abrupt, accident-like event, the resulting loss ... is essentially the failure of the purchaser to receive the benefit of its bargain.... [A] manufacturer in a commercial relationship has no duty under either a negligence or strict products-liability theory to prevent a product from injuring itself.
Betancourt,
The instant case presents basically the same situation as
Betancourt.
However, Isla Nena argues that our decision in
Be-tancourt
misapprehended Puerto Rico law because Puerto Rico law “does not preclude claims for strict liability or negligence simply because a warranty claim is not available or not pursued.” Isla Nena argues that, under the doctrine of concurrence of actions, a party may elect which cause of action to bring if the party has a choice between valid contract and tort claims. Isla Nena relies principally on two cases in support of its argument:
Marquez v. Torres Campos,
In Marquez — which we discussed in Be-tancourt — the defendant sold the plaintiff cattle that had tuberculosis and failed to tell the plaintiff that the cattle had been quarantined. As a result, the plaintiffs farm was put under quarantine and the plaintiff suffered damage to other cattle and farm animals. The plaintiff brought suit, and the defendant claimed that the suit was barred by a statute of limitations governing suits for hidden product defects.
The Puerto Rico Supreme Court ruled that “the action of warranty for hidden defects does not by itself exclude other actions that may lie under the special circumstances of the case.” Id. at 1094. The court eventually held that the suit could be brought under a theory of contractual deceit, as opposed to warranty, and that a longer limitation period applied. In support of this holding, the court emphasized that
plaintiffs cause of action arises, not from the objective fact of the defect in the object of the contract, which is what gives life to an action of warranty, but from a subjective circumstance provoked by the defendant’s deceitful action which resulted in damages that go beyond the defect in the object of the contract and which is thus outside the frame of the concept of warranty.
Id. at 1105 (emphasis added). Unlike the plaintiff in Marquez, Isla Nena’s claims rest solely upon “the objective fact of the defect in the object of the contract.” Id. Further, the damages that resulted from the defect did not go beyond the defect in the object of the contract; they were limited to the product itself. In other words, the damages that Isla Nena seeks are squarely inside “the- frame of the concept of warranty.” Id. We thus find that Marquez is unhelpful to Isla Nena’s case.
Isla Nena also argues that our holding in
Betancourt
has been undermined by
Ramos Lozada,
which was decided two years after
Betancourt.
In that case, some leased property was destroyed following a fire that was attributable to the lessee’s negligence. The lessor sued under a theory of breach of contract (the lease agreement), which had a longer stab-
After careful consideration, we do not think that Ramos Lozada changes the result we reached in Betancourt. We base this conclusion on several factors. First, Ramos Lozada involved a lessor-lessee relationship. It did not involve a commercial transaction, and we see nothing in the case to indicate that the Puerto Rico Supreme Court intended to replace the general rule that Article 1802 does not apply in commercial transactions.
Second, Ramos Lozada in no way implicated the economic loss rule, which is a rule peculiar to the law of products liability and applies only where a defective product harms itself. Ramos Lozada holds only that if a party has valid claims stemming from both tort and contract, that party may choose under which theory to bring her claims. However, the argument in this case is that Isla Nena does not have a valid tort claim due to the economic loss rule. Ramos Lozada never addressed this particular point — what it means to have a valid tort claim in the product liability context — and for good reason, since the case involved a lessor-lessee relationship and did not implicate the economic loss rule. In other words, in Ramos-Lozada, the injury arose not from a defect in the leased property but from the lessee’s negligence. There is simply no indication that the Puerto Rico Supreme Court intended to apply Ramos Lozada in the products liability context or intended to make a pronouncement on the economic loss rule or our decision in Betancourt, even though it must have been aware of that decision. 5
Third,
Ramos-Lozada
emphasized that a party may not choose whether to proceed in contract or tort “when the damage suffered exclusively arises as a consequence of the breach of an obligation specifically agreed upon, which damage would not occur without the existence of a contract.”
Id; see also Nieves Dome-nech,
We also think that application of the economic loss rule is in accord with the policies underlying contract and tort law, which the United States Supreme Court has extensively discussed in
East River.
Although
East River
is an admiralty case, and its decision is therefore not controlling in determining Puerto Rico law, we think the policy rationales explained by the Court logically apply to the decision we reach today.
See Lockheed Martin,
In conclusion, we see nothing in
Ramos Lozada
to indicate an intention to set aside our holding in
Betancourt
or to provide for the application of Article 1802 in commercial transactions. Further, even if we were to read
Ramos Lozada
that broadly, it would be of no use to Isla Nena because the damages claimed arose entirely from the parties’ contractual relationship and would not have occurred apart from the parties’ contract. We therefore find that, under Puerto Rico law, Isla Nena’s claims are barred by the economic loss rule.
See Torres-Mas v. Carver Boat Corp.,
2. Strict Liability
Although the previous section applies to both Isla Nena’s negligence and strict liability claims, there are additional reasons — that do not apply to Isla Nena’s negligence claims — to find that the economic loss rule bars Isla Nena’s strict liability claims due to the history and evolution of the doctrine of strict liability in Puerto Rico. We address these briefly.
First, one of the seminal cases setting forth the economic loss rule is from the California Supreme Court. In
Seely v. White Motor Co.,
In sum, the majority common law view, including the view of the California Supreme Court, is that a party may not recover in strict liability if a product’s defect damages only the product itself. Given the Puerto Rico Supreme Court’s general reliance on United States common law strict liability principles and its specific reliance on California Supreme Court precedent — and absent any indication to the contrary — we think it clear that the Puerto Rico Supreme Court would hold that the economic loss rule bars Isla Nena’s strict liability claims. 8
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The complaint also alleged as defendants a John Doe, Jane Doe, River Doe, and Insurance Companies A, B, and C.
. The complaint also asserted a direct claim against Insurance Companies A, B, and' C (Count V), and a claim for indemnity for any claims brought by the Aircraft’s passengers (Count VI). Neither count is. part of this appeal.
. The parties do not appear to dispute whether Isla Nena has claimed damages for only economic loss — that is, to the Aircraft itself.
. Although Ramos Lozada has not yet been included in the Official Translations of the Opinions of the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, the parties have provided an official English translation. When we cite to specific pages of the case, we are referring to the pages of the translation provided by the parties.
. If Isla Nena were arguing that the appel-lees' alleged negligence breached a contract or warranty and also caused damage to other property besides the defective product, Isla Nena would potentially have valid contract and tort claims and could, under the doctrine of concurrence of actions, choose whether to proceed in contract or tort.
.We have stated that "[t]he Supreme Court of Puerto Rico has made clear that the common law of the United States is not controlling, when filling gaps in the civil law system.”
See Guevara,
. In
East River,
the United States Supreme Court cited to and discussed
Seely
with approval and also noted that
Seely
represented the majority view on the economic loss rule.
East River,
. Isla Nena cites to several cases that, it argues, indicate that the Puerto Rico courts would not adopt the economic loss rule in cases involving strict liability. These cases are easily distinguishable from the present case. For example, Isla Nena relies on
In Re
