Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge GARLAND.
Kathleen Robertson sued American Airlines for damages resulting from burns she sustained on a flight from Denver to Chicago. If that flight qualifies as “international transportation” within the meaning of the Warsaw Convention, Robertson’s suit is barred by the Convention’s statute of limitations. The district court concluded that the flight — which was one leg of a trip that began in London and ended in Washington the same day — did so qualify. We affirm.
I
In 1998, appellant Robertson was a “war games” strategist living in the Washington, D.C. area. On August 7, 1998, she had a travel agent, Nancy Thompson of Gateway Travel, book her a round-trip flight between Denver and London on British Airways (BA), departing on September 2 and returning on September 8. Three days later, on August 10, Thompson also booked Robertson on a round-trip flight between Washington, D.C. and Denver, via Chicago, on American Airlines (AA). That flight was to depart on August 29 and to return on September 8. Thus, as initially scheduled, Robertson was to leave Washington on August 29; to stay in Denver for several days before continuing to London on September 2; and to depart London for home on September 8, with a three-hour layover in Denver. On August 24, Robertson used Gateway Travel to book an alternative route home: a one-way ticket on AA from London to Washington, via New York, departing and arriving on September 10.
As scheduled, Robertson flew from Washington to Denver on August 29. She remained for a few days in Denver, where she conducted a war games exercise with the city’s mayor, and then flew from Denver to London on September 2. That day, Robertson had her initially scheduled return flights — London-Denver on BA, and Denver-Chicago-Washington on AA— changed from September 8 to September 10, the same date for which she held the *501 alternative ticket from London to Washington on AA. Thus, Robertson had two available itineraries for her return home on September 10. First, she could take an 8:00 a.m. AA flight from London, connect in New York, and arrive in Washington at 2:10 p.m. Second, she could take a 10:20 a.m. BA flight from London, arrive in Denver at 1:20 p.m., switch to a 4:32 p.m. AA flight from Denver, connect in Chicago, and arrive in Washington at 11:19 p.m.
Robertson chose the latter — and later— alternative and departed from London on the morning of September 10 aboard the BA flight to Denver. After a three-hour layover in Denver, she boarded the AA flight to Washington by way of Chicago. En route, she asked a flight attendant to cool a “gel pack” she was using to treat a sore back. According to Robertson’s complaint, the attendant returned with an airsickness bag containing the gel pack and dry (rather than ordinary) ice. When Robertson put the bag on her back, she suffered third-degree burns.
Just short of three years later, on September 7, 2001, Robertson sued American Airlines in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia. American removed the action to the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. On January 15, 2003, American filed a motion for summary judgment, contending that the action was governed by the Warsaw Convention
1
because the claim arose out of international transportation, and that the Convention’s two-year statute of limitations,
see
Art. 29(1), 49 Stat. 3021, barred Robertson’s claim. Robertson argued that the Convention did not apply, and that the action was instead governed by the District of Columbia’s three-year statute of limitations, D.C.Code § 12-301. The district court agreed with American and granted its motion for summary judgment.
Robertson v. American Airlines, Inc.,
II
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.
Lathram v. Snow,
The Warsaw Convention governs air carrier liability for claims arising out of “international transportation” of persons and property by air. Art. 1(1), 49 Stat. 3014;
see El Al Israel Airlines, Ltd. v. Tsui Yuan Tseng,
Article 1(2) of the Convention defines “international transportation” as “any transportation in which, according to the contract made by the parties, the place of *502 departure and the place of destination, whether or not there be a break in the transportation ..., are situated ... within the territories of two High Contracting Parties.” 49 Stat. 3014. Article 1(3) further provides that:
Transportation to be performed by several successive air carriers shall be deemed, for the purposes of this convention, to be one undivided transportation, if it has been regarded by the parties as a single operation, whether it has been agreed upon under the form of a single contract or of a series of contracts, and it shall not lose its international character merely because one contract or a series of contracts is to be performed entirely within a territory subject to the sovereignty ... of the same High Contracting Party.
Id. at 3015. Thus, the Convention contemplates that an entirely domestic leg of an international itinerary will be covered by the Convention as part of “one undivided [international] transportation” — even if it is performed by a “successive” carrier and even if the various legs are agreed upon under “a series of contracts” — as long as it has been “regarded by the parties” as part of “a single operation.”
But how do we decide how a particular trip was “regarded by the parties”? In
Haldimann,
we noted that, although the Convention’s language “suggests that we must look to the intention of the parties,” it “would seem rather difficult to do so, for they — especially the traveler — are unlikely ever to have remotely considered the question whether the transportation was ‘a single operation,’ or ever to have pondered what that phrase might mean.”
We begin by asking whether Robertson regarded her London-Denver travel and her Denver-Chicago-Washington travel as a single operation. There can be no genuine dispute over this question. First, on the morning of September 10, 1998, Robertson held alternative itineraries for her flight from London: one on AA through New York to Washington, and a later flight on BA connecting to AA in Denver and on to Washington via Chicago. This indicates that both the intermediate stops and the choice of carriers were incidental to her plan to fly from London to Washington that day.
Second, and in our view dispositive, Robertson scheduled her BA-AA connection in Denver so that her flight to Chicago (and on to Washington) would depart within about three hours of her arrival from London. It is unlikely that a layover of that length would even have given her time to leave the airport, and the record confirms that Robertson had no purpose for being in Denver on that day other than to make the plane connection. See In re Air Crash Disaster of Aviateca Flight 901, 29 *503 F.Supp.2d 1333, 1342 (S.D.Fla.1997) (“Common sense dictates that when a traveler plans such a short layover between the parts of a journey, the traveler regards the layover as merely an intermediate stopping place and not his or her destination.”). Accordingly, there can be no genuine dispute that Robertson regarded the Denver-Chicago trip as part of a unified journey from London to Washington.
Robertson points to a number of circumstances that she maintains are inconsistent with the conclusion that she regarded her travel as a single operation. She notes, for example, that on the outbound trip she stayed in Denver for four days, where she engaged in work that was different from the business she had in London. But the argument that these facts are inconsistent with her regarding the journey as a single operation is foreclosed by
Haldimann,
in which we found a single operation notwithstanding multiple-day stay-overs — with different purposes — between several legs of the plaintiffs’ itinerary.
See
Robertson also points out that she purchased the two round-trip tickets (Denver-London-Denver and Washington-Denver-Washington) on two different airlines, that the tickets were issued in separate booklets, that she purchased them on different days, and that she received them in separate mailings. But the fact that the tickets were purchased on two different airlines is what frames the question, not what decides it: the point of Article 1(3) is that “[transportation to be performed
by several successive air carriers
shall be deemed ... to be one undivided transportation” if regarded by the parties as a single operation. 49 Stat. 3015 (emphasis added). Nor, as we held in
Haldimann,
does the fact that the tickets were issued in separate booklets “militat[e] even in the slightest against finding a ‘single operation,’ ” since “Article 1(3) views transportation as ‘undivided ... whether it has been agreed upon under the form of a single contract or of a series of contracts.’ ”
The remaining question is how American Airlines regarded Robertson’s travel. There is no doubt that if American knew the objective facts of Robertson’s itinerary as set forth above, the airline— like Robertson — would have regarded the Denver-Chieago-Washington flight as part of a single operation with the London-Denver flight. But did American know? American did have a record of a London-New York-Washington ticket for Robertson dated September 10. However, because the AA ticket she ultimately used was only for Denver-Chieago-Washington, it is not clear that the airline would have known she was traveling internationally that day. Noting that other district “courts have held that a travel agent’s knowledge of a plaintiffs travel intentions is imputed to the carrier,” the district court resolved the issue by applying the same rule. Robertson, 277 F.Supp.2d at *504 99. Because Robertson’s appellate briefs do not dispute it, we apply the imputation rule as well. 2
Robertson concedes that a travel agency, Gateway Travel, made the reservations for all of the BA and AA flights up to and including those on September 8 (as well as for the London-New York-Washington AA flight scheduled for September 10). Appellant’s Br. at 3. Although Robertson does not concede that she also used Gateway to change the September 8 tickets to September 10, she does not dispute that Gateway knew of the change, Oral Arg. Tape at 14:45-18:15, and does not assert that she or anyone other than Gateway made the change — a fact that presumably would be within her personal knowledge.
3
Moreover, both BA’s and AA’s internal Passenger Name Records (PNRs) for Robertson’s September 10 flights contain references to “Gateway Travel Nancy.” J.A. 326, 328. Accordingly, because the
only
evidence in the record confirms that American (through Gateway) knew of the London-Denver leg of Robertson’s trip, we concur in the district court’s conclusion that there is no genuine dispute that the airline “was aware of [her] international flight plans.”
Robertson,
III
We conclude that there is no genuine dispute that the flight on which Robertson sustained her burns qualifies as international transportation within the meaning of the Warsaw Convention. The Convention’s two-year statute of limitations therefore applies, barring her claim. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court granting summary judgment in favor of American is
Affirmed.
Notes
. Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules Relating to International Transportation by Air, Oct. 12, 1929, 49 Stat. 3000, T.S. No. 876 (1934), reprinted, in 49 U.S.C. § 40105 note.
. Robertson did dispute the rule during questioning at oral argument, but oral argument is too late to raise an objection for appellate consideration.
See, e.g., Ark Las Vegas Rest. Corp. v. NLRB,
. Although Robertson submitted an affidavit from Helen Klohmann, an owner of Gateway, the Klohmann affidavit does not state whether Gateway made the change. Instead, Kloh-mann (who did not personally handle Robertson's bookings) declares that “Gateway Travel’s understanding was that” Robertson’s Washington-Denver-Washington and Denver-London-Denver “itineraries were separate and distinct.” PL’s Opp’n to Mot. for Summ. J., Ex. 1. The district court properly regarded the affidavit as irrelevant because the Warsaw Convention inquiry "focuses on objective rather than subjective evidence, and particularly [not on] subjective evidence from a party who was not directly involved in the booking transaction.”
Robertson,
. The district court’s opinion contains a footnote stating that ”[t]he record does not indicate whether [Robertson] used a travel agent” to change the flights to September 10,
see
