OPINION OF THE COURT
In this аppeal, we are asked to respond to a certified question of law — whether a prospective purchaser of an automobile dealership has standing to challenge the exercise of a manufacturer’s right of first refusal. We conclude that the Pennsylvaniа Board of Vehicles Act grants only limited rights to a prospective purchaser and they have not been infringed. Accordingly, we answer in the negative and remand for appropriate disposition of the case.
In 1999, John S. Lopatto, Jr. and Ann S. Lopatto, the owners of a Ford distributоrship in Plymouth, Pennsylvania, agreed to sell their business to the plaintiff William Rosado. The agreement included the purchase of the dealership assets and real estate for $545,000, less certain credits.
Pursuant to the terms of the franchise, the purchase agreement was submitted to defendant Ford Motor Company, which chose to exercise its contractual right of first refusal. In accordance with statutory provisions, Ford gave timely notice to Ro-sado and offered to pay his reasonable expenses incurred in connection with the aborted purchase agreement. In addition, the Lopattos offered to return the $5,000 non-refundable deposit that Rosado had paid to them. Ford assigned its rights under the agreement to another party in the area, who then purchased the dealership.
Rosado alleges that as a result the Lo-pattos received less compensation than they would have had they sold to him. However, the Lopattos do not dispute that they received all of the consideration that *293 they were due under the terms of the Rosado agreement.
Rosado filed suit in state court and Ford removed to the District Court. The complaint assertеd tortious interference with contractual rights and violations of the Pennsylvania Board of Vehicles Act, 63 P.S. §§ 818.16, and 818.12(b)(3). The statute limits a manufacturer’s right of first refusal and prohibits unreasonable withholding of consent to the sale of a dealership.
The District Court granted summary judgment to Ford on the count alleging unreasonable withholding of consent, but concluded that plaintiff had standing to challenge Ford’s right of first refusal. Consistent with that ruling, the Court also denied Ford’s motion for summary judgment on Rosado’s claim for tortious interference with contract. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), the Court certified as a controlling quеstion of law “whether a prospective purchaser has standing to claim that the selling dealer did not receive the same or a greater consideration under § 818.16.” We accepted the certification.
On appeal, in addition to denying Rosa-do’s standing, Ford contends that its invocation of the right of first refusal did not constitute tortious interference with contract.
I.
The Pennsylvania Board of Vehicles Act is a comprehensive statute governing the relationship between automobile manufacturers and their franchise dealers. The Act prohibits а manufacturer from unreasonably withholding consent to the sale of a franchise to a qualified buyer. 63 P.S. § 818.12(b)(3). To further regulate transfers, the legislation was amended in 1996 to permit a manufacturer to include a right of first refusal in the franchise.
The amended portion of the statute reads:
“A manufacturer or distributor shall be permitted to enaсt a right of first refusal to acquire the new vehicle dealer’s assets or ownership in the event of a proposed change of all or substantially all ownership or transfer of all or substantially all dealership assets [if certain requirements are met, including that] ... (2) the exercise of the right of first refusal will result in the dealer and dealer’s owners receiving the same or greater consideration as they have contracted to receive in connection with the proposed change of all or substantially all ownership or transfer of all or substantially all dealership assets.”
63 P.S. § 818.16.
In addition to restrictions not at issue here, when exercising the right of first refusal, the manufacturer must pay “the reasonable expenses including reasonable attorney fees” to the “proposed new owner” incurred in negotiating a contract to purсhase the dealership. 63 P.S. § 818.16(4).
In the case before us, neither the manufacturer nor the dealer contest the exercise of the right of first refusal. The objections come from the plaintiff who was deprived of his opportunity to purchase the dealership after an aрparently satisfactory agreement had been negotiated with the owner.
In this diversity case,' we look to the law of Pennsylvania. In general, standing depends on whether the plaintiff has suffered a legal injury that the law was designed to protect.
See Pennsylvania Nat’l Mut. Cas. Insur. Co. v. Dep’t оf Labor & Indus., Prevailing Wage Appeals Bd.,
Ultimately, in order to have standing, a party must have a substantial, immediate and direct interest in the subject matter.
See Ken R. v. Arthur Z.,
Rosado relies on section 818.29 of the Act to grant him standing as a prospective purchaser. That section reads in pertinent part: “Any person who is or may be injured by a violation of a provision of this Act of 1 any party to a franchise who is so injured in his business or property by a violation of a provision of this Act ... may bring an action for damages and equitable relief....” 63 P.S. § 818.29.
Rosado asserts that Ford’s exercise of its right of first refusal resulted in a diminution of the compensation due the Lopat-tos and, thus, violated the Act. That being so, he contends that Ford has forfeited its right to a first refusal and the original agreement remains in effect. However, even if it be assumed that the Lopattos received less than Rosado’s offer, Ford responds that the statutory provision at issue here is for the benefit of the dealer, not a prospective purchaser. Essentially the argument is that Rosado does not have any right to litigate the merits of an obligation that Ford owes to the Lopattos.
The Pennsylvania courts have not interрreted these sections of the Act, but we have had the occasion to review pertinent portions of the legislation in two instances,
Crivelli v. General Motors Corp.,
In
Crivelli
the franchise agreement provided the manufacturer with a right of first refusal, a matter on which the statute, at that time, was silent.
Crivelli,
As we explained, a right of first refusal requires the manufacturer to match the terms of the original proposal and, thus, *295 protects dealers by creating two prospective purchasers for every offer they receive. Id. at 389-90. In most instanсes, the dealer would be largely indifferent to the identity of the new owner, and the prospective purchaser’s expectations must take into account the uncertainty over whether the manufacturer will exercise its rights.
In contrast, by preventing a manufacturer from arbitrarily rеfusing consent to a transfer, the Act enables dealers to sell their businesses to qualified successors. Similarly, prospective purchasers’ opportunities to acquire dealerships may not be thwarted by manufacturers’ obstinate and unjustifiable blocking of sales. Without the statutory provision, manufacturers, at no risk or expense, could foreclose transfers advantageous to both dealers and prospective purchasers. A violation of the unreasonably withholding consent provision would directly injure both dealers and qualified prospective purchasers. Thus, the unreasonable withholding consent provision offers more protection to purchasers than a right of first refusal.
Crivelli concluded that, because the two contractual clauses were substantially different, the manufacturer’s right of first refusal should not be subject to the еxisting statute’s ban on unreasonable denial of consent. In short, the Court upheld the freedom to contract in the absence of limiting legislation.
The case had been tried on the merits and therefore the standing issue was not raised by the parties. However, in a footnote we cоmmented that “[a]l-though some courts have dismissed such cases on lack of standing [citations] in interpreting the Pennsylvania Act, we held that prospective purchasers have standing.”
Crivelli,
Obviously, the footnote was inserted to acknowledge
Big Apple’s,
superficial relevance. In that case, a significant issue was whether a prospective purсhaser had standing under the Vehicles Act to pursue a claim against a manufacturer that unreasonably withheld consent to the transfer of a franchise. We decided in that circumstance section 818.29 (previously section 818.20), granting a cause of action to anyone injured by violation of the Act, conferred standing on a prospective purchaser.
Big Apple,
However, Big Apple’s, holding on standing in the unreasonable withholding context does not logically carry over to the first refusal setting. The holding in that case on standing must be reаd in light of the fact that the claim was limited to a contention that consent was unreasonably denied.
The statute does, however, require the manufacturer to give timely notice and to reimburse a prospective purchaser with reasonable expenses incurred from negotiating the original agreement •with the owner. Obviously, a prospective purchaser would have standing for violation of those statutory provisions, and to that extent Big Apple and the footnote in Crivelli are applicable. But there are no *296 such violations at issue here. The fact that the Act grants the prospective purchaser specific benefits tends to negate any suggestion that other limitations on the right to contract were intended to be included. Nothing in the Act confers authority on one party to seek recovery on the part of another.
Here, it is critical that the prospective purchaser’s complaint is based on the contention that the owner did not receive what he was entitled to under the Act when Ford exercised its right of first refusal. But, if the prospective purchaser prevailed on that theory, it would not be he, but the owner, who would be entitled to the loss resulting from the violation by the manufacturer.
See Sprague,
In reality, it is not the loss that the Lopattos might have suffered that Rosado seeks. Rather, he wants to recover the benefits of his bargain. Unfortunately for him, the Act only grants prospective purchasers the right to timely notice and reimbursement of reasonable expenses incurred from negotiating the original sales contract.
Ultimately, the Crivelli footnote does not aid Rosado because it is dictum and, by its dependence on Big Apple, is limited to the unreasonable withholding of consent context. That is all the more obvious in view of the enactment of the 1996 amendment to the Board of Vehicles Act.
We conclude that our response to the question certified to us must be in the negative. A prospective purchaser lacks standing to claim that the selling dealer did not receive the same or greater consideration under section 818.16.
II.
The parties have also briefed the issue of whether Rosado’s claim for tortious interference with contractual rights continues to be viable.
Our scope of review is not limited to the issue articulated in the section 1292(b) certification motion. Generally, we may address any question fairly included within the certified order because it is the order, and not the controlling question of law, that is appealable.
Abdullah v. American Airlines,
Here, the tortious interference claim obviously depends on whether the defendant acted in violation of the Vehicles Act. Criv-elli denied a similar claim, finding that Pennsylvania law would not allow a recovery in such circumstances. We need not repeat Crivelli’s thorough analysis of the tortious interference issue. It cleаrly applies here and mandates denial of recovery.
We conclude that the District Court erred in failing to grant summary judgment in favor of Ford Motor Company on the tortious interference claim.
Accordingly, we will remand the case to the District Court for the entry of the appropriate orders.
Notes
. The use of '‘of” instead of "or” appears to be a typographical error. The original Act used “or” rather than “of.”
