Following an accident that occurred in the course of international air travel, plaintiff-appellant Eileen M. McCarthy filed a suit for damages against defendant-appellee Northwest Airlines, Inc. (Northwest). Concluding that the Warsaw Convention stood in the way, the district court grounded the suit.
See McCarthy v. Northwest Airlines, Inc.,
I. BACKGROUND
Because the district court granted summary judgment in the defendant’s favor, we array the material facts in a way that puts the best face on the plaintiffs claims without distorting them.
On July 2,1990, the plaintiff and her sister departed Boston via Northwest en route to the Orient. They flew to Tokyo and stayed for four days. At that point their itinerary called for them to fly to Osaka and then on to China. The sisters repaired to the airport and, since they had not yet obtained boarding passes, they joined a queue that had formed at the Northwest ticket counter.
When the sisters reached the desk, they expressed uncertainty about whether time had grown too short. The plaintiff claims that they told the Northwest ticket agent that they were perfectly willing to take a later flight in order to avoid rushing. The agent brushed aside their concerns, tagged their luggage, issued boarding passes, and led them “at a fast trot” in the general direction of the customs area. Still following the agent (who retained possession of their passports, tickets, and boarding passes), the sisters took an escalator accessible to the general public from one level of the terminal building to a lower level. The escalator malfunctioned and McCarthy fell.
Although the plaintiff sustained an injury, she proceeded through customs, entered a bus that drove her to the approximate point of departure, and thereafter boarded the airplane that took her to Osaka. She continued on to China as she had planned. Upon her return to the United States, she consulted a physician who determined that she had broken her knee. The doctor’s diagnosis led to both a lengthy convalescence and a suit for damages. 1
II. THE SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARD
Summary judgment has a special niche in civil litigation. Its “role is to pierce the boilerplate of the pleadings and assay the parties’ proof in order to determine whether trial is actually required.”
Wynne v. Tufts Univ. Sch. of Med.,
A court may grant summary judgment “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). We have discussed this rule in a cascade of cases,
see, e.g., Coyne v. Taber Partners I,
Once a properly documented motion has engaged the gears of Rule 56, the party to whom the motion is directed can shut down the machinery only by showing that a trial-worthy issue exists.
See National Amusements,
When all is said and done, the trial court must “view the entire record in the light most hospitable to the party opposing summary judgment, indulging all reasonable inferences in that party’s favor,”
Griggs-Ryan,
Because the summary judgment standard requires the trial court to make an essentially legal determination rather than to engage in differential factfinding, appellate review of an order granting such a motion is plenary.
See Pagano,
III. DISCUSSION
We bifurcate the body of our opinion. First, we explicate the Warsaw Convention, the etiology of Article 17, and the accepted analytic approach to Article 17 cases. Next, we shine the light of our gleaned understanding on the case before us.
A. The Legal Landscape.
Generally speaking, the Warsaw Convention, formally known as the Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules Relating to International Transportation by Air, Oct. 12, 1929, 49 Stat. 3000, T.S. No. 876 (1934), note foil. 49 U.S.C. app. § 1502,
2
arose out of
*316
a perceived need to provide a fledgling industry with a uniform set of legal rules that would govern accidents occurring in international air travel. Under the Convention, air carriers are absolutely liable, up to a preset monetary ceiling, for any accident in which a passenger suffers bodily injury or death as long as the accident “took place on board the aircraft or in the course of any of the operations of embarking or disembarking.”
Id.,
art. 17,
“Treaty interpretation is a purely legal exercise,”
In re Extradition of Howard,
The Warsaw Convention was the product of ponderous deliberation. Conferees who met in Paris in 1925 appointed a committee of experts, the Comité Internationale Technique d’Experts Juridique Aériens (CITE-JA), to prepare a suggested accord. CITE-JA’s recommendations were considered at a second conference, held in Warsaw in 1929. CITEJA recommended extending accident coverage to passengers “from the time [they] enter the airport of departure until the time when they exit from the airport of arrival.” Minutes, Second International Conference on Private Aeronautical Law, October 4-12, 1929, Warsaw 171 (R. Horner & D. Legrez trans. 1975) (Warsaw Minutes). The breadth of the proposed language inspired heated debate.
See, e.g.,
Warsaw Minutes at 49;
see also Day v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,
In an effort to accommodate conflicting views, a French delegate, Prof. Georges Ri-pert, suggested that the article should “employ a general formula ‘during air carriage’ in leaving to the courts the duty of deciding in each case if one is within the contract of carriage.” Warsaw Minutes at 73;
see also Martinez Hernandez v. Air France,
The single substantive issue presented in this appeal is whether plaintiff was injured while “embarking” within the meaning of Article 17. Though the Supreme Court has not yet had occasion to define the words “embarking” or “disembarking” in the context of Article 17, the Court has generally read Article 17 parsimoniously.
See, e.g., Eastern Airlines, Inc. v. Floyd,
Given the historical record and the signals that the Supreme Court has sent, most courts have interpreted the terms “em
*317
barking” and “disembarking” to connote a close temporal and spatial relationship with the flight itself. In the process, these courts have found a three-pronged inquiry to be useful. The inquiry focuses on (1) the passenger’s activity at the time of injury, (2) his or her whereabouts when injured, and (3) the extent to which the carrier was exercising control at the moment of injury.
See, e.g., Schroeder v. Lufthansa German Airlines,
What is more, the language of Article 17 — which speaks to accidents that occur “in the course of any of the operations of embarking” — strongly suggests that there must be a tight tie between an accident and the physical act of entering an aircraft.
See Martinez Hernandez,
B. Analysis.
In applying these principles to the case at hand, we deem it useful to start by considering specific examples of accidents that have been found to come within the encincture of Article 17. Perhaps the most venturesome of the reported appellate decisions are
Day
and
Evangelinos.
When passengers had surrendered their tickets, passed through passport control, entered the area reserved exclusively for those about to depart on international flights, and queued up at the departure gate — a prerequisite to boarding— the Second Circuit ruled that they were engaged in performing a necessary step in the boarding process. Thus, Article 17 applied to an ensuing injury.
See Day,
The case at bar is of a significantly different genre. The plaintiff here, unlike the plaintiffs in
Day
and
Evangelinos,
had yet to fulfill most of the conditions precedent to boarding; at the time of the accident, she had not left the common area of the terminal, located the bus that would transport her to the vicinity of her assigned aircraft, reached an area restricted to travelers, nor isolated herself from the throng of other passengers flying to other destinations. In addition, the activity in which the plaintiff was engaged at the time of injury — proceeding on an escalator from one level of the terminal’s common area to another — cannot in any sense be seen as comprising a necessary step in the boarding process. In both
Evangelinos
and
Day,
the only way passengers could have entered the designated aircraft was to pass through the departure gate at which the injury occurred.
See Evangelinos,
Last — but far from least — the accident here, unlike in Evangelinos and Day, hap *318 pened at a considerable distance from the departure gate and well before any actual embarkation was possible. In other words, plaintiffs fall was far removed from the act of embarkation, both temporally and spatially. Most importantly, it took place in a part of the terminal not restricted to passengers. We believe it is no mere happenstance that the plaintiff has not cited — and we have been unable to deterrate — a single instance in which Article 17 has been found to cover an accident that occurred within the public area of a terminal facility.
A typical case is
Buonocore v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,
The disembarkation cases are grouped along a comparable axis.
See, e.g., Maugnie,
Although both the nature oí the activity and the location of the accident stand as obstacles in her path, plaintiff, relying primarily on a dictum contained in
Martinez Hernandez
(suggesting that “the scope of article 17 should be limited to those situations either where the carrier has taken charge of the passengers, or possibly where it customarily would have done so,”
In the first place, after we discard the rhetorical flourishes and focus on the facts,
see, e.g., Medina-Munoz,
In the second place, even were we to conclude that the agent’s peremptory instructions, coupled with the possession of plaintiffs travel documents, constituted a kind of “control,” this, alone, would not be enough to bridge the moat that surrounds Article 17. If it were, the Day/Evangelinos test would be a hoax, for two of its three prongs— activity and location — would be rendered inoperative, and the third — control—would lack the nexus with the others that informed the final version of Article 17. At bottom, plaintiffs activity had only an attenuated connection with entering an aircraft, and it is augmented by nothing more than an indulgent interpretation of control. Thus, these factors cannot overcome the remoteness of the accident site from the aircraft.
In the third place, if the
Martinez Hernandez
dictum is accorded the meaning plaintiff ascribes to it, then it is broadly overinclusive and we reject it. But we think that the plaintiff reads the dictum through rose-colored glasses. After all, the
Martinez Hernandez
court held that Article 17 did
not
apply on the facts of that case,
see
IV. CONCLUSION
Having dismissed the notion that the Martinez Hernandez dictum demands a repudiation of the result reached by the court below, we taxi toward the hangar. Scrutinizing the evidence of record in the ambience most soothing to the plaintiff, and applying settled legal principles, a rational jury could not find that, at the time of the injury, McCarthy was “embarking” within the purview of that term as it is used in Article 17 of the Warsaw Convention.
We need go no further; the lower court appropriately granted Northwest’s motion for brevis disposition.
Affirmed.
Notes
. McCarthy originally sued Northwest on both negligence and strict liability theories. Following an adverse ruling in the district court, she abandoned the negligence claim. Consequently, her appeal concerns only her strict liability claim.
. The United States initially adhered to the Warsaw Convention on October 29, 1934. Except as otherwise specifically indicated, however, all references to the Convention in this opinion are to the document as modified by the Montreal Agreement, formally known as the Agreement Relating to Liability Limitations of the Warsaw Convention and the Hague Protocol, CAB Agreement *316 18900, note foil. 49 U.S.C. app. § 1502 (approved by CAB Order E-23680, May 13, 1966, 31 Fed.Reg. 7302).
. To be sure, a somewhat similar dictum is found in
Knoll,
where the court wrote of judicial reluctance to extend coverage under the Warsaw Convention "to injuries incurred within the terminal,
except in those cases in which plaintiffs were clearly under the direction of the airlines." Knoll,
