Sprint, a communications common carrier regulated by the FCC, was sued by customers of Sprint’s “Fridays Free” long-distance calling promotion in a class action originally filed in an Illinois state court. The suit was removed to federal district court, and judgment was soon entered for Sprint. The district judge ruled that although the complaint does not allege any violation of federal law and there is no diversity of citizenship, the suit was removable because the sort of claim that the class is making can arise only under federal, and not under state, law. Characterizing the federal claim as one to invalidate a tariff filed with the FCC, the judge gave judgment for Sprint on the pleadings, on the ground that he would be invading the FCC’s jurisdiction if he invalidated the tariff.
In January 1996, Sprint had filed with the FCC a tariff setting forth the terms of a new service intended to attract long-distance customers to Sprint from other telephone companies. The tariff offered, to small businesses that agreed to subscribe to Sprint for a minimum of $50 in long-distance calls per month, up to $1,000 worth per month of free long-distance calls on Fridays to anywhere in the world for one year. Four months later, Sprint amended the tariff to delete ten countries, including Israel and China, from the offer of free Friday calling, although under the amended tariff customers receive a 25 percent discount off Sprint’s regular rates for all calls (not just Friday calls) to nine of the countries (all but the Dominican Republic, for reasons not disclosed by the record).
The class members, several thousand in number, are “Fridays Free” customers who are continuing to call one or more of the ten countries and paying more, on balance, than they would have had to pay had the original tariff remained in force. Sprint claims to have had good reasons, having to do with congested phone lines and customer fraud (residential customers pretending to be small businesses), for amending the tariff. But there is no evidence on the issue, and for purposes of this appeal we assume that Sprint had no good reason for the amendment — or, worse, that it was planning from the start to renege on the offer of a full year of free Friday calls to anywhere in the world.
The first count in the complaint charges that Sprint broke its contract with its “Fridays Free” customers. It promised them the full year; it received consideration for the promise in the form of the minimum
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monthly paid calls; it broke its promise. Q.E.D. The plaintiff acknowledges that Sprint might interpose as a defense that in reneging on its promise it was merely complying with the amended tariff; that the Communications Act requires á common carrier to comply with its tariffs, 47 U.S.C. § 203(c);
MCI Telecommunications Corp. v. American Tel. & Tel. Co.,
Public utility regulation and common carrier regulation (essentially the same form of regulation, the term “common carrier” being generally used of firms providing transportation or communications and “public utility” of firms providing electricity or gas) have been rolled back very far in recent years. But a piece of it survives in its pristine form in the provision of long-distance telephone service. The terms and conditions of service are set forth in “tariffs,” which are essentially offers to sell on specified terms, filed with the FCC and subject to modification or disapproval by it. Once a tariff is filed and until it is amended, modified, superseded, or disapproved, the carrier may not deviate from its terms.
Lowden v. Simonds-Shields-Lonsdale Grain Co.,
The original declared purpose of the tariff system was to prevent the utility or carrier from discriminating in price or service among its customers; a covert purpose was to discourage price competition by preventing secret discounts (tariffs are published documents). George W. Hilton, “The Consistency of the Interstate Commerce Act,” 9
Journal of Law and Economics
87 (1966). These purposes are no longer widely supported, but the rule remains, vestige though it is: the carrier may not deviate from the terms of •the tariff. It doesn’t matter how eager both the carrier and its customers are to strike a special, off-tariff deal,
Maislin Industries v. Primary Steel, Inc.,
What this means is that the filed tariff is the contract between the plaintiff (and the other members of the class) and Sprint. Or rather tariffs, since there were two. The plaintiff treats the first tariff, the one filed in January of 1996, as the contract between her and Sprint. If Sprint violated the tariff to her detriment, she would be entitled to proceed against Sprint under federal law. She could either seek reparations in an administrative proceeding before the FCC, or bring a suit for damages directly under the Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. §§ 206, 207;
Stiles v. GTE Southwest Inc.,
The plaintiff could thus have obtained all the relief to which she is entitled on the contract count — free calls to the ten countries for a full year, if her contract claim is sound — in a judicial or administrative or combined judicial and administrative proceeding under the Federal Communications Act. The issue is whether her federal remedy is exclusive or whether she can instead seek relief under Illinois’ common law of contracts.
The Act does not say, and in fact contains a provision saving other remedies. 47 U.S.C. § 414. Although the provision is broadly written, if it were interpreted literally as permitting a state-law breach of contract suit regarding a tariffed service it would impair the Act’s policy of confining telecommunications common carriers to tariffed services and vesting the FCC with primary jurisdiction to determine the validity of tariffs; indeed, it would effectively nullify the tariff provisions of the Communications Act. Such interpretations of savings clauses in common carrier statutes — interpretations that would empower state courts to gut the federal regulatory scheme or would place the carrier under inconsistent obligations — are therefore rejected. See, for the general proposition,
Nader v. Allegheny Airlines, Inc.,
But all that this analysis establishes is that the plaintiff cannot look to the savings provision as a source of a right to challenge the second tariff under state law. Left unresolved is whether the federal Act extinguishes the right to bring a suit for breach of contract under state law when the effect of the suit would be to challenge a tariff. We think the Act does extinguish that right — that it does not just provide a defense that the carrier might interpose in a suit under state law.
Remember that Sprint’s tariff (either in its original form or as amended) is the contract. Any rights that the plaintiff has to complain about a breach of contract are rights granted to her by the original tariff and protected against the amendment by the principle of reasonableness that the FCC uses to determine the validity of a tariff (or, as here, an amendment to a tariff) when it is challenged. A tariff filed with a federal agency is the equivalent of a federal regulation,
Lowden v. Simonds-Shields-Lonsdale Grain Co., supra,
It is not as if the “Fridays Free” tariff had promised free calls and another provision of a contract between the plaintiff and Sprint had promised to sell the plaintiff a bushel of Ugh fruit at market price. If the promises were severable,
Coplay Cement Co. v. Willis & Paul Group,
We do not think that
Louisville & Nashville R.R. v. Mottley,
Although in our case the claim of breach of contract can be maintained only under federal law, the plaintiff emphatically disclaims any intention of prosecuting a federal claim; and it might seem therefore that the district court could not acquire'jurisdiction and so should have sent the case back to the state. But the only reason to do that would have been to permit the plaintiff to proceed in state court on her breach of contract claim. Yet we have just seen that this claim can be maintained only under federal
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law. If on remand to the state court the plaintiff tried to press the claim in that court, she would be trying to litigate what could only be a federal claim, however denominated by the plaintiff, and so it would again be removable to federal court. The entry of judgment for the defendant was necessary and proper to end the cycle. This is an uncontroversial application of the “artful pleading” doctrine. See
In re Brand Name Prescription Drags Antitrust Litigation,
A separate question is whether the plaintiff’s other counts, which charge fraud, can be said to arise under state law. If so, the district judge, when he dismissed the breach of contract claim on the ground that it could only be federal (and the plaintiff didn’t want to remain in federal court to press a federal claim), should have relinquished jurisdiction over the fraud counts, now recon-ceived as supplemental state law claims to a federal claim dismissed before trial. 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3);
Korzen v. Local Union
705,
The principal relief sought is an injunction against continued misrepresentation, an injunction requiring Sprint to honor the promise in the original tariff, and compensatory damages. The request for an injunction against misrepresentation is a throwaway, since there is no suggestion that Sprint is concealing the terms of the amended tariff from any members of the class. With that put to one side, the relief sought by the fraud counts is identical to that sought by the contract count: the free calls promised in the original tariff. It seems, then, that in this case “fraud” is just another name for “breach of contract,” so that to allow the plaintiff and her class to proceed in state court under state fraud law would allow the original tariff to be enforced, and the amended tariff set aside, in a suit under state law, which we just said is not allowed. Cf.
Aero Tracking, Inc. v. Regal Tube Co.,
This may seem a harsh conclusion. One can imagine Sprint making egregious misrepresentations to poor people ignorant of tariff regulation — promising for example a lifetime of free calls for an advance fee of $5,000, followed the next day by the filing of a tariff changing “lifetime” to “one month.” But we know from
Maislin
that even reasonable reliance on a carrier’s representation will not allow a suit complaining about the representation to be litigated under state law if the representation concerns a tariffed service. And the victims of Sprint’s misrepresentation (if that is what it was) would still have a remedy, only under federal rather than state law, under the same provisions that authorize suits to enforce and to invalidate tariffs, see 47 U.S.C. § 204;
Western Union Telegraph
*491
Co. v. FCC,
Once the plaintiffs claim was properly re-characterized as a challenge to the amended tariff, the doctrine of primary jurisdiction should have been invoked and the plaintiff told to repair to the FCC. But as it is plain that the plaintiff didn’t want to do this, that she wanted to stand or fall on her claim that this is really a suit under state law, the district judge was right to enter judgment for Sprint rather than merely staying the suit to allow the parties to ask the Commission for a ruling on the reasonableness of the second, the amending, tariff.
AFFIRMED.
