Elizabeth Potter appeals a summary judgment in favor of Delta Air Lines, Inc. (“Delta”), on her Warsaw Convention and state law negligence claims. Finding no error, we affirm.
I.
As part of a tour package, Elizabeth and James Potter bought a round-trip airline ticket to Europe. During a flight from Atlanta to Dallas, as part of the European trip, Mrs. Potter was seated in row 22, seat A (the window seat). Her husband was in row 22, *883 seat B (the aisle seat). A “rude,” “hostile,” and “intimidating” man occupied seat 21-B, directly in front of Mr. Potter. The rude man had caused a scene at the beginning of the flight by having a confrontation with the woman sitting next to him in seat 21-A. The flight attendant had moved the woman to another seat, and another passenger had taken her place.
About one hour into the flight, Mrs. Potter went to the lavatory. When she returned, the passengers in seats 21-A and 21-B had fully reclined their seats. 1 The rude man in 21-B, the aisle seat, was asleep. Then, in Mrs. Potter’s counsel’s words:
Mrs. Potter’s husband was going to have the man move his seat forward, but Mrs. Potter did not want that to happen for fear of the way that man acted earlier on the flight. Because of the confrontation, she did not wish to engage the man in conversation, nor to wake him when he was asleep.
Instead, Mr. Potter got up so that Mrs. Potter could pass. 2
As Mrs. Potter turned to enter the row and sit down, she twisted her knee. Specifically, her foot remained anchored to the carpet in the aisle while the rest of her body turned, resulting in a tom knee ligament.
II.
Mrs. Potter seeks damages from Delta for the injury. She filed suit in Texas state court, alleging claims under state law and the Warsaw Convention. 3 Delta originally removed the action on the basis of diversity jurisdiction and later added federal question jurisdiction as a basis for removal. 4
The district court denied Mrs. Potter’s motion to remand. Delta moved for summary judgment and for protection from discovery, stating specific objections to Mrs. Potter’s interrogatories. Mrs. Potter responded, filing affidavits and deposition excerpts. The district court, on Mrs. Potter’s motion, permitted her to file additional summary judgment evidence and extended the time for doing so. The court then granted Delta’s motion for protection, denying Mrs. Potter discovery on certain issues, including — inter alia — the design and manufacture of the airplane seats and carpet.
Finally, the court granted summary judgment to Delta, making two relevant holdings. First, the court held that the Warsaw Convention supplied the exclusive cause of action for Mrs. Potter’s injury — i.e., that the Convention completely preempts state law where the former applies, and that the Convention applies here. Second, the court held that Mrs: Potter had failed to prove an element of her Warsaw Convention cause of action — i.e., that an “accident,” as that term is used in the Convention, caused her injury.
III.
We review a grant of summary judgment
de novo. See Hanks v. Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corp.,
Mrs. Potter first contests the holding on her Warsaw Convention claim, arguing that she did show that her injury was caused by an “accident,” as such term is used
*884
in article 17 of the Convention.
5
Liability under article 17 “arises only if a passenger’s injury is caused by an unexpected or unusual
event or happening
that is external to the passenger.”
Saks,
Mrs. Potter argues that the rude, hostile man sleeping in the fully reclined seat in the row in front was an unusual or unexpected event external to her. Assuming arguendo that a rude, hostile passenger is unusual or unexpected, he himself is not an “event or happening.” Similarly, neither a fully reclined seat nor the act of sleeping in it is an unusual or unexpected event or happening on an airplane.
Thus, the circumstances of this case simply do not fit into the definition of “accident” established in Saks. As a result, Mrs. Potter’s Warsaw Convention claim is without merit.
IV.
Having determined that Mrs. Potter has failed to create a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether her injury was the result of an “accident,” we now address whether her state law claims for negligence are preempted by the exclusive cause of action provided in article 17. Mrs. Potter does not contest that article 17 provides the exclusive remedy for actions maintained under the Warsaw Convention, but she asserts that where an injury is not compensable under article 17, a separate cause of action for damages lies under state law. Whether article 17 preempts all state law causes of action, not just state remedies, is res nova in this circuit.
We have held previously that the Warsaw Convention creates the cause of action and exclusive remedy for article 18
6
claims and that it preempts state law “in the areas covered.”
Boehringer-Mannheim Diagnostics, Inc., v. Pan American World Airways,
Article 18 covers damages resulting from an “occurrence,” whereas article 17 is limited to damages resulting from an “accident.” Because “occurrence” extends more broadly to cover most instances of damages to checked luggage, whereas “accident” is limited to “an unexpected or unusual event or happening that is external to the passenger,”
see Saks,
Given article 18’s broad scope, Mrs. Potter thus argues that the
Boehringer-Mannheim
*885
court properly construed article 24(1)
7
to preempt state law “in the areas covered” by the Warsaw Convention.
Boehringer-Mannheim,
We note first that “ ‘treaties are construed more liberally than private agreements, and to ascertain their meaning we may look beyond the written words to the history of the treaty, the negotiations, and the practical construction adopted by the parties.’ ”
Saks,
Because the Convention has not expressly preempted state law, we examine the test for non-express preemption, which requires that we determine whether (1) the area requires uniformity vital to national interests such that allowing state regulation “would create potential frustration of national purposes,”
see San Diego Bldg. Trades Council v. Garmon,
A primary function of the Warsaw Convention is to foster uniformity in the laws governing international air carrier liability.
See Zicherman v. Korean Air Lines Co.,
- U.S. -, -,
The Convention’s goals of uniformity and certainty would be frustrated were we to allow Mrs. Potter to assert her state law claims, even where the Convention does not provide her a remedy. First, as the Second Circuit has recognized with respect to the unavailability of punitive damages under article 17, recourse to state law “would sink federal courts into a Syrtis bog where they would not know whether they were at sea or on good dry land when deciding what law a plaintiff can rely upon, what law the court
*886
itself should apply, and why.”
Id.
at 1276 (citation omitted);
see also Eastern Airlines,
The Convention’s express limitation on individual recovery of $75,000, see article 22(1), would be circumvented entirely, and airlines would be subject to distinct choice of law rules and substantive law provisions depending upon the forum in which suit was brought. Because article 28 permits a plaintiff to bring suit where the carrier is domiciled or has a principal place of business, where the carrier has a place of business through which the contract was made, or before a court at the place of destination, plaintiffs, if permitted to file state law causes of action, could forum-shop for jurisdictions with friendly substantive laws on recovery of damages for personal injury and thus could undermine the Convention’s goal of uniformity. 10 Plaintiffs could plead artfully their complaints to avoid characterizing the damages as resulting from an “accident,” thereby creating an opt-out from the Convention’s liability constraints.
Furthermore, where the drafters of the Convention concluded that uniformity could not be achieved, they provided expressly for recourse to local law.
See Zicherman,
- U.S. at-,
Because, before the Convention, passengers who were injured and merchants whose goods were damaged could sue for damages in either tort or contract, and because the Convention’s express cause of action required that these plaintiffs proceed under a contract theory only, article 24(2) was intended to permit a deceased passenger’s heirs, who lack contractual privity with the carrier, to derive their standing to sue from other sources of law.
See Jack,
In support of her argument that article 17 provides the exclusive cause of action and remedy for bodily injury only where the injury was caused by an “accident,” Mrs. Potter juxtaposes article 18’s use of the term “occurrence” with article 17’s use of “accident.” According to Mrs. Potter, the terms are jur
*887
isdictional; preemption applies only where there is liability under the Convention. We disagree. The Supreme Court has interpreted the Convention’s use of different terms for damages under articles 17 and 18 to reflect a difference in the scope of carrier liability: A standard resembling strict liability attaches to damages to checked luggage, while liability for personal injuries attaches in the event of an accident only.
See Saks,
It is not axiomatic that the Convention’s limitation of liability for personal injury to “accidents” connotes an intention to give plaintiffs who are not injured in an “accident” recourse to state law causes of action. In fact, given the Convention’s underlying goals of uniformity and certainty in the application of carrier liability law and its use of broad language to sweep into its ambit “all international transportation of persons, baggage, or goods performed by aircraft for hire,” see article 1(1), quite the opposite is true.
The delegates to the Guatemala City International Conference on Air Law in 1971 recognized as much when they approved an amendment to article 17 that would impose liability on a carrier for an “event which caused the death or injury” rather than for an “accident which caused” the injury.
See id.
at 403-04,
y.
Finally, Mrs. Potter challenges the protective order against certain interrogatories. 14 She claims this was an abuse of discretion, 15 arguing that she “did not have adequate time to perform necessary discovery to oppose Delta’s motion for summary judgment” because of the protective order.
Mrs. Potter, however, did not move for a continuance under Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(f).
16
We have stated that “[r]ule 56 does not require that any discovery take place before [a motion for] summary judgment can be granted; if a party cannot adequately defend such a motion, Rule 56(f) is his remedy.”
Washington v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
Some discovery was permitted. If Mrs. Potter needed more discovery in order to defeat summary judgment, it was up to her to move for a continuance pursuant to rule 56(f). Because she did not, she is foreclosed from arguing that she did not have adequate time for discovery.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The seats may have been reclined when Mrs. Potter left for the lavatory.
. Neither Mrs. Potter nor Delta specified whether Mr. Potter (1) stood up without exiting the row or (2) actually exited the row and stood in the aisle.
. Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules Relating to International Transportation by Air, Oct. 12, 1949, 49 Stat. 3000, T.S. No. 876 (1934), 49 U.S.C.App. § 1502 note.
. The Warsaw Convention is a treaty of the United States,
see Swaminathan v. Swiss Air Transp. Co.,
. Article 17 provides: "The carrier shall be liable for damage sustained in the event of the death or wounding of a passenger or any other bodily injured suffered by a passenger, if the accident which caused the damages so sustained took place on board the aircraft or in the course of any of the operations of embarking or disembarking.” The Supreme Court has noted that the governing text of article 17 — indeed, of the entire Convention — is in French.
Air France v. Saks,
. Article 18 provides: “(1) The carrier shall be liable for damage sustained in the event of the destruction of loss of, or of damage to, any checked baggage or any goods, if the occurrence which caused the damage so sustained took place during the transportation by air.”
. Article 24(1) provides: “In the cases covered by articles 18 and 19 any action for damages, however founded, can only be brought subject to the conditions and limits set out in this convention.”
. Article 24(2) provides: “In the cases covered by article 17 the provisions of the preceding paragraph shall also apply, without prejudice to the questions as to who are the persons who have the right to bring suit and what are their respective rights.”
. Mrs. Potter errs in citing to the publisher's headnote 2 of
Luna v. Compañía Panameña De Aviación, S.A.,
. Cognizant of this fact, courts addressing choice of law issues have applied a federal choice of law rule.
See Bickel v. Korean Air Lines Co.,
. Article 24(2) provides a pass-through, authorizing courts to apply the federal law that would govern in the absence of the Convention.
Zicher-man,
-U.S. at-,
. We disagree with Mrs. Potter that article 24 has two subparts because there are different liability standards under articles 17 and 18. Article 24(2) was made necessary by the inability of the Convention to provide a uniform standing law for wrongful death claimants, not because, as Mrs. Potter suggests, article 18 imposes strict liability for damages to checked luggage, whereas article 17 requires that personal injury stem from an "accident.”
. The Convention was first drafted at an international conference in Paris in 1925. This protocol was revised several times by a committee of experts and then resubmitted to a second international conference that convened in Warsaw in 1929.
See Saks,
.To the extent that the interrogatories were intended to support Mrs. Potter's state law claims of negligence, and because we hold that such causes of action are preempted by the Warsaw Convention, we reject the instant challenge as moot.
.
See Doe v. Stegall,
. The district court twice granted Mrs. Potter’s motion for leave to supplement her response to the motion for summary judgment.
