Opinion for the Court by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
This is the second appeal by Azhar Ali Khan and his wife, Asma Azhar- Khan, from a judgment on their claims against his employer and its agents (collectively “Parsons”) to recover for injuries sustained as a result of Parsons’ alleged mishandling of ransom demands by Mr. Khan’s kidnappers. In the first appeal, the court reversed the grant of summary judgment for Parsons, holding that the Khans’ recovery on their tort claims was not limited by Mr. Khan’s employment contract to workers’ compensation insurance.
Khan v. Parsons Global Servs., Ltd.,
I.
The events underlying the Khans’ complaint arose during Mr. Khan’s employment by Parsons in the Philippines. On one of his days off, when Parsons’ offices were closed, he was kidnaped and subsequently tortured. Parsons allegedly delayed paying the ransom that was demanded until after Mr. Khan’s kidnapers carried out their threat to cut off part of his ear. The allegations in the complaint are set forth in
Khan
/,
In May 2003, the Khans filed negligence and intentional infliction of emotional distress claims against Parsons in the D.C. Superior Court. Parsons removed the case to the federal district court pursuant to the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (“New York Convention”), opened for signature June 10, 1958, 21 U.S.T. 2517, 330 U.N.T.S. 38. See also 9 U.S.C. §§ 202-03; 205. On July 29, 2003 Parsons filed a single motion to dismiss or, alternatively, for summary judgment or to compel arbitrаtion. Specifically, Parsons argued in its motion that all of the Khans’ claims were addressed by the workers’ compensation clause. In support of its motion, Parsons submitted testimony on its behalf, including two declarations by its employees, one of which stated that workers compensation had covered part of Mr. Khan’s lost wages, and an email from Parsons to Mrs. Khan on the applicability of workers’ compensation, asserting that Parsons’ insurer agreed with its position that Mr. Khan’s injuries were work related. The motion independently sought dismissal of the complaint against four Parsons entities for alleged pleading defects. The Khans filed an opposition, set forth material issues of disputed fact, and submitted two declarations, one of which outlined potential discovery pursuant to Fеd. R.Crv.P. 56(f). Parsons filed a reply reiterating its argument regarding workers’ compensation. On March 22, 2004, the district court granted summary judgment to Parsons on the ground that workers’ compensation was the Khans’ exclusive remedy; it denied Parsons’ motion to compel arbitration as moot. The district court denied the Khans’ motion for reconsideration, which was opposed by Parsons, on September 2, 2004.
This court, ovеr Parsons’ objections, reversed the grant of summary judgment.
Khan I,
II.
The Supreme Court has held that “questions of arbitrability must be addressed with a healthy regard for the federal policy favoring arbitration .... whether the problem at hand is the construction of the contract language itself or an allegation of waiver, delay, or a like defense to arbitrability.”
Moses H. Cone Mem’l Hosp. v. Mercury Constr. Corp.,
In this circuit, the court views “the totality of the circumstances [in deciding whether] the defaulting party has acted inconsistently with the arbitration right.... [0]ne example of [such] conduct ... is active participation in a lawsuit.”
National Foundation,
A.
As an initial matter, Parsons’ contention that its right to compel arbitrаtion was originally “unknown or inchoate” and thus could not be waived until this court’s decision in Khan I clarified that the Khans’ claims were arbitrable because workers’ compensation did not apply, Appellees’ Br. at 18, is not credible. Parsons understood that it possessed a potential right to arbitration prior to Khan I. Its removal of the Khans’ lawsuit to federal court was based on the New York Conventiоn addressing foreign arbitration, and its motion in the district court included arbitration as an alternative to summary judgment and dismissal. In addition, before the district court ruled on its motion, Parsons’ counsel proposed that the Khans submit to arbitration, advising that the Agreement specified “arbitration of disputes related to [Mr. Khan’s] employment.” Letter from Eugene Scalia, Esq., to Cyril V. Smith, Esq. (July 21, 2003). These actions do not suggest any confusiоn over the right to compel arbitration.
The court has not previously held that a motion for summary judgment, standing alone, suffices to constitute a waiver of colorably arbitrable claims. In
National Foundation
the court held that a motion for summary judgment, pursued until denied by the district court despite intervening legal decisions clarifying that arbitration was possible,
Parsons maintains that it “sought dismissal of the Khans’ claims not because [they] were meritless but rather because ... workers’ compensation provided the exclusive relief.” Appellees’ Br. at 18. Further, Parsons maintains, under the standard in National Foundation, its involvement in litigation of the Khans’ claims was too limited in scope to constitute waiver. Noting that it did not move for discovery, nor file an answеr asserting affirmative defenses, Parsons contends that “at most ... [only] a motion for summary judgment on the merits of an arbitrable claim, filed after substantial discovery, can waive the movant’s right to arbitrate that claim.” Id. at 19 (emphasis omitted).
Parsons’ position that its motion did not address the merits of the Khans’ claims is unpersuasive. The motion sought not just dismissal, but also summary judgment; the district court granted summary judgment; Parsons opposed the Khans’ motion for reconsideration; and Parsons reaffirmed its desire that summary judgment be upheld as late as the oral argument before the court in
Khan I, see
Oral Arg. Transcript (No. 04-7162, Oct. 6, 2005) at 25. This record allows no ambiguity concerning Parsons’ involvement in litigation on the merits. A summary judgment motion by definition “goes to the merits of the case.” 10A Chaeles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller
&
Mary K. Kane, Federal Practioe and Procedure § 2712 (3d ed.2007);
accord Prakash v. Am. Univ.,
Parsons’ suggestion that the merits of its workers’ compensation argument are completely separated from the merits of the Khans’ claims is also unconvincing. Parsons insisted on reserving the right to present its workers’ compensation argument to any future arbitration panel considering the Khans’ claims — suggesting a close relationship between the merits issues it asserts are independent of each other.
See
Memorаndum in Support of Defendants’ Motion to Compel Arbitration at 5 n. 2,
Khan II,
480 F.Supp.2d. 327
*427
(D.D.C.2007) (“2006 Motion to Compel”); Defendants’ Statement Regarding Proposed Scheduling Order at 3 n. 1,
Khan II,
B.
It is true that Parsons submitted its motion for summary judgment as an alternative to dismissal or compelled arbitratiоn. In addition, unlike the brokerage firm seeking arbitration in
National Foundation,
Firstly, we do not find probative Parsons’ characterization of its motion as one for dismissal of the complaint, or, in the alternative, for summary judgment. Admittedly a motion to dismiss may not be inconsistent with the intent to arbitrate, as where a party seeks the dismissal of a frivolous claim.
See St. Mary’s Med. Ctr. of Evansville, Inc.,
Secondly, Parsons cannot salvage its right to seek arbitration, upon prevailing on its motion for summary judgment but losing on appeal, solely because it sought arbitration in the alternative to summary judgment. Parsons’ motion effectively requested that the district court decide either to retain the case or to send the dispute to аnother forum. The first alternative presupposed that the district court was the appropriate forum for the adjudication of the Khans’ claims, whereas the second proceeded from the opposite
*428
premise. Having ceded the choice of forum to the district court, Parsons cannot avoid the consequences of that court’s decision to rule on its motion for summary judgment, which relied on sources outside of the pleadings in engaging the merits of the Khans’ claims. Just as “[t]he defendant who files [a Rule] 12(b)(6) motion takes the risk” that the court will dispose of the motion under Rule 56,
Sweater Bee by Banff, Ltd.,
Consequently, the limited extent of Parsons’ litigation activity is of no moment. Had Parsons prevailed on appeal in
Khan I,
then it would have secured all that it could have obtained in arbitration on the basis of a substantial defense on the merits. Moreover, even if filing a motion for summary judgment alone did not definitively waive Parsons’ right to compel arbitration, independent of other litigation activity, two additional considerations would render waiver appropriate here. First, the specifics of Parsons’ litigation posture allowed for fewer indicia of litigation activity than in cases like
National Foundation
and
St. Mary’s Medical Center of Evansville, Inc.
Parsons’ non-pursuit of discovery is unsurprising given that “discovery w[ould] likely focus almost entirely on documents and testimony in the possession and control of [Parsons].” Appellants’ Br. at 20. In addition, once its first motion resulted in a favorable judgment on the merits, Parsons had achieved its litigation aims, making further litigation activity unnecessary. Second, the Khans have suffered significant prejudice. They have been forced to expend time and resources to oppose two motions in the district court and to brief two appeals in this court. As the court held in
National Foundation,
“[b]y moving for summary judgment, [Parsons] forced [the Khans] to litigate the substantive issues in the case[;] ... [b]eing compelled to bear the expense of this proceeding constitutes prejudice.”
We hold that, irrespective of other indicators of involvement in litigation, filing a motion for summary judgment based on matters outside of the pleadings is inconsistent with preserving the right to compel arbitration; if the motion is accompanied by a motion to cоmpel arbitration in the alternative, the movant takes the risk that the district court will choose to rule on the motion for summary judgment, thereby preventing the movant from subsequently seeking arbitration. Parsons’ motion invited the district court to consider the merits of the Khans’ claims and the district court’s grant of summary judgment signified acceptance of the invitation. Parsons must now accept the result of its chosеn litigation strategy: waiver of its right to compel arbitration. Because Parsons waived its right to any arbitration, the court need not address the Khans’ challenges to the enforceability and applicability of the arbitration clause.
III.
Under District of Columbia law, a claim of intentional infliction of emotional distress requires a showing of “(1) extreme and outrageous conduct on the part of the defendant which (2) intentionally or recklessly (3) causes the plaintiff severe emotional distress.”
Darrow v. Dillingham & Murphy, LLP,
The district court, acting
sua sponte,
reasoned that Parsons had not engaged in “extreme or outrageous” cоnduct and that “there is no evidence that this situation was caused either directly or indirectly by [Parsons].”
Khan II,
Accordingly, we reverse the order and judgment granting Parsons’ motion to compel arbitration, denying the Khans’ discovery requests, and dismissing Mrs. Khan’s claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress, and we remand the case to the district court. Now that the arbitration predicate for removal will no longer obtain, the district court might consider whether to remand the case to the D.C. Superior Court.
Notes
. While Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital and National Foundation for Cancer Research arose out of Chapter 1 of the Federal Arbitration Act, and our case arises under the New York Convention, Chapter 1 applies whenever not inconsistent with the New York Convention. 9 U.S.C. § 208.
