USCA11 Case: 19-15014 Date Filed: 03/18/2021 Page: 1 of 18
[DO NOT PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT ________________________
No. 19-15014 ________________________
D.C. Docket No. 1:19-cv-00040-ECM-JTA
TRIP WHATLEY, SUSAN MOORE, TRACY LENTZ,
Plaintiffs - Appellants,
KEITH BOWERS, et al.,
Plaintiffs,
versus
THE OHIO NATIONAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, OHIO NATIONAL LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY, OHIO NATIONAL EQUITIES, INC.,
Defendants - Appellees.
________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Alabama ________________________
(March 18, 2021) USCA11 Case: 19-15014 Date Filed: 03/18/2021 Page: 2 of 18
Before WILSON, GRANT, and TJOFLAT, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
The issue presented by this appeal is whether Plaintiffs Trip Whatley, Susan
Moore, and Tracy Lentz can bring claims against Ohio National and its affiliated
companies (collectively, Ohio National) for failure to pay commissions under a
contract to which the Plaintiffs are not parties. Plaintiffs brought claims for breach
of contract as intended third-party beneficiaries, unjust enrichment, and tortious
interference with business relations. The district court dismissed each claim with
prejudice. After careful review, and with the benefit of oral argument, we affirm.
I.
Ohio National is an insurance corporation that sells financial products. The
financial product relevant to this case is a variable annuity with a guaranteed
minimum income benefit rider (for simplicity, referred to as an Annuity). Ohio
National issues these Annuities to broker dealers pursuant to Selling Agreements. 1
The broker dealers then enlist sales representatives—including Plaintiffs Whatley,
Moore, and Lentz—to sell the Annuities. Plaintiffs have separate contracts with
the broker dealers and are not parties to the Selling Agreements.
1 Plaintiffs Whatley, Moore, and Lentz are registered representatives of broker dealers ProEquities, Inc., LPL Financial, and Securities America, respectively. Each of these broker dealers had a Selling Agreement with Ohio National. But because the Selling Agreements with each broker dealer—as well as the attached Commission Schedules—are substantively identical, we refer to them collectively. 2 USCA11 Case: 19-15014 Date Filed: 03/18/2021 Page: 3 of 18
Section 9 of the Selling Agreements between Ohio National and the broker
dealers is entitled “Commissions Payable.” It provides:
Commissions payable in connection with the contracts shall be paid to [the broker dealer] . . . according to the Commission Schedule(s) . . . . Compensation to the [broker dealer’s] Representatives . . . will be governed by agreement between [the broker dealer] and its Representatives and its payment will be the [broker dealer’s] responsibility.
Section 9 further states that Ohio National’s obligation to pay commissions
pursuant to the Commission Schedule “shall survive this Agreement unless the
Agreement is terminated for cause by [Ohio National].” And the Commission
Schedule provides, in part, that Ohio National is to pay the broker dealer “trail
commissions” in return for selling and servicing Annuities.2
Plaintiffs allege that on September 28, 2018, Ohio National terminated the
Selling Agreements with all broker dealers without cause and refused to pay the
broker dealers trail commissions owed on existing Annuities. The result, Plaintiffs
allege, was that the broker dealers were unable to pass those trail commissions
along to Plaintiffs pursuant to their separate agreements. 3
2 Trail commissions are commissions on previously sold Annuities that remain in force. The Commission Schedule provides that “[t]rail commissions will continue to be paid to the broker dealer of record while the Selling Agreement remains in force and will be paid on a particular contract until the contract is surrendered or annuitized.” 3 The terms of the contracts between Plaintiffs and the broker dealers are not alleged in the First Amended Complaint. 3 USCA11 Case: 19-15014 Date Filed: 03/18/2021 Page: 4 of 18
On January 11, 2019, Plaintiffs filed this lawsuit against Ohio National, and
on April 2, 2019, they filed a First Amended Complaint as a matter of course. The
First Amended Complaint includes five causes of action, but only three are before
us on appeal. 4 Plaintiffs’ first claim is for breach of contract, based on the theory
that they have standing as third-party beneficiaries of the Selling Agreements.
Second, and in the alternative to the breach of contract claim, Plaintiffs allege
unjust enrichment on the basis that it is unjust for Ohio National to benefit from
retaining trail commissions that should have been paid pursuant to the Selling
Agreements. Plaintiffs’ third claim is for tortious interference with business
relations. They claim that by failing to pay commissions, Ohio National interfered
with the separate contracts between the broker dealers and Plaintiffs.
The district court granted Ohio National’s motion to dismiss all claims.
First, the court found that Plaintiffs’ lacked standing to bring a breach of contract
claim because they were not intended beneficiaries of the Selling Agreements. The
district court relied heavily on Section 9 of the Selling Agreements which provides
for direct payments from Ohio National to the broker dealer, while providing that
Plaintiffs’ compensation is the broker dealer’s responsibility. Second, the court
4 The First Amended Complaint includes claims for declaratory relief and promissory estoppel, but those claims are no longer raised on appeal. See Oral Argument Recording at 00:39–00:50 (Dec. 18, 2020).
4 USCA11 Case: 19-15014 Date Filed: 03/18/2021 Page: 5 of 18
held that Appellants could not bring an unjust enrichment claim based on an issue
that was expressly governed by contract. Third, the court dismissed Plaintiffs’
tortious interference claim, holding that under the “refusal to deal” doctrine, Ohio
National could not be held liable in tort for terminating the Selling Agreements and
stopping payment on trail commissions. Rather than granting Plaintiffs leave to
amend, the district court dismissed each claim with prejudice. This appeal
followed.
II.
We review de novo a district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss with
prejudice. Almanza v. United Airlines, Inc., 851 F.3d 1060, 1066 (11th Cir. 2017).
“We must accept the factual allegations in the complaint as true and construe them
in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.” Id.
III.
A.
We begin by addressing Plaintiffs’ third-party beneficiary breach of contract
claim. Under Ohio law, a third party has standing to sue for breach of contract
only if they are an intended—rather than an incidental—beneficiary. 5
TRINOVA Corp. v. Pilkington Bros., P.L.C., 638 N.E.2d 572, 577 (Ohio 1994). To
5 This claim is governed by Ohio law because the Selling Agreements provide for Ohio choice of law. 5 USCA11 Case: 19-15014 Date Filed: 03/18/2021 Page: 6 of 18
be an intended beneficiary, a third party must show that the contracting parties
intended to directly benefit the third party. Huff v. FirstEnergy Corp., 957 N.E.2d
3, 7 (Ohio 2011). “Generally, the parties’ intention to benefit a third party will be
found in the language of the agreement.” Id.
Plaintiffs argue that they are intended third-party beneficiaries under the
plain language of the Selling Agreements. In support, they point out that the
Selling Agreements refer to “Representatives” at least 25 times.
Ohio National responds by pointing us to two recent Sixth Circuit decisions.
Cook v. Ohio Nat’l Life Ins. Co., 961 F.3d 850 (6th Cir. 2020); Browning v. Ohio
Nat’l Life Ins. Co., 819 F. App’x 306 (6th Cir. 2020). In these cases, sales
representatives brought claims against Ohio National for breach of contract as
third-party beneficiaries and for unjust enrichment. The claims were based on the
same factual predicate alleged here.
In Cook, for example, the Sixth Circuit rejected the third-party beneficiary
breach of contract claims.6 961 F.3d at 856. It explained that Section 9 of the
Selling Agreements requires Ohio National to pay the broker dealer directly. Id.
And although the Selling Agreements frequently reference sales representatives,
Section 9 explicitly provides that the representatives’ compensation remains the
6 We cite to Cook—a published decision—although Browning applied the same reasoning and reached the same result. Browning, 819 F. App’x at 308 (“Our court’s decision in Cook dictates the outcome of Browning’s appeal.”). 6 USCA11 Case: 19-15014 Date Filed: 03/18/2021 Page: 7 of 18
broker dealer’s responsibility. Therefore, the Sixth Circuit found that the plain
language of the Selling Agreements does not evince the parties’ intent to directly
benefit the sales representatives. Id. Cook is on point here, and, like the district
court, we find its reasoning persuasive.
Yet Plaintiffs argue that Ohio law demands the opposite result. See Visintine
& Co. v. New York, Chi. & St. Louis R. Co., 160 N.E.2d 311 (Ohio 1959) (per
curiam). In Visintine, the State of Ohio had a contract with several railroad
companies and a separate agreement with a contractor to complete a single
construction project. Id. at 312–14. The two contracts made the work of the
railroad companies and the contractor mutually dependent. Id. at 314. When the
railroad companies failed to perform their work, the contractor sued them for
breach of contract. Id. at 313. Although there was no contract between the
railroad companies and the contractor, the court concluded that the contractor
could bring the action as a third-party beneficiary. Id. at 314. The companies had
taken on a duty to perform obligations for the contractor (and vice versa) in the
interest of completing the project as scheduled. Therefore, it was “apparent that
[the companies’ contract with the State] was intended to benefit the contractor.”
Id. (framing the core question as: “what was the performance contracted for and
what is the best way to bring it about”).
7 USCA11 Case: 19-15014 Date Filed: 03/18/2021 Page: 8 of 18
The district court found that Visintine does not apply here because its
holding was limited to creditor beneficiaries. But even assuming Visintine is not
so limited, the contractual language in that case established that the contractor and
the railroad companies had assumed reciprocal obligations to one another. In
contrast, Ohio National did not take on any duty vis-à-vis Plaintiffs. To the
contrary, “the performance contracted for” in the Selling Agreements was that
Ohio National would issue compensation only to the broker dealer, while the
broker dealer would remain responsible for Plaintiffs’ compensation. Id.
Therefore, the Selling Agreements do not reflect an intent to benefit Plaintiffs.
It is true, of course, that “[w]e must accept the factual allegations in the
complaint as true” at this stage. Almanza, 851 F.3d at 1066. But because the plain
contractual language of the Selling Agreements demonstrates that the parties did
not intend to benefit Plaintiffs, the third-party beneficiary claim fails as a matter of
law. 7 Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s grant of Ohio National’s motion
to dismiss Plaintiffs’ breach of contract claim for lack of standing.
7 Ohio National also argues that the relief Plaintiffs seek— enforcement of the Selling Agreements as third-party beneficiaries—would violate FINRA Rules, which prohibit direct payments to broker dealers’ sales representatives. See FINRA Rule 2320(g)(1) (providing that “no associated person of a [FINRA] member shall accept any compensation from anyone other than the member with which the person is associated”). Because we conclude that the plain language of the Selling Agreements does not evince an intent to benefit Plaintiffs, we need not decide whether the relief Plaintiffs seek would trigger a violation of FINRA rules. 8 USCA11 Case: 19-15014 Date Filed: 03/18/2021 Page: 9 of 18
B.
We turn next to Plaintiffs’ unjust enrichment claim. As with the breach of
contract claim, Plaintiffs pled this claim under Ohio law. To recover for unjust
enrichment under Ohio law, a plaintiff must prove three elements: “(1) a benefit
conferred by a plaintiff upon a defendant; (2) knowledge by the defendant of the
benefit; and (3) retention of the benefit by the defendant under circumstances
where it would be unjust to do so without payment.” See Hambleton v. R.G. Barry
Corp., 465 N.E.2d 1298, 1302 (Ohio 1984) (per curiam). “Unjust enrichment is an
equitable doctrine . . . that operates in the absence of an express contract.”
Wuliger v. Mfrs. Life Ins. Co., 567 F.3d 787, 799 (6th Cir. 2009) (quoting Beatley
v. Beatley, 828 N.E.2d 180, 192–93 (Ohio Ct. App. 2005)). “Thus, Ohio law is
clear that a plaintiff may not recover under the theory of unjust enrichment or
quasi-contract when an express contract covers the same subject.” Wuliger, 567
F.3d at 799 (internal quotation mark omitted).
As a result, Plaintiffs cannot recover for unjust enrichment. See Cook, 961
F.3d 858–59. Again, Cook is on point and persuasive. The subject of Plaintiffs’
claim is that Ohio National owes them commissions. But, as the Sixth Circuit
explained, the Selling Agreements address that subject directly, stating that Ohio
National is not responsible for the compensation of a broker dealer’s sales
representatives. Id. Therefore, the subject of Plaintiffs’ claim is covered by an
9 USCA11 Case: 19-15014 Date Filed: 03/18/2021 Page: 10 of 18
express contract. And as a result, Plaintiffs cannot recover under a theory of unjust
enrichment.
C.
Plaintiffs also appeal the dismissal of their tortious interference claim. 8 This
time relying on Alabama law, Plaintiffs allege that Ohio National’s refusal to pay
commissions had the effect of interfering with contracts between Plaintiffs and the
broker dealers.
Under Alabama law, tortious interference with business relations requires:
“(1) the existence of a protectible business relationship; (2) of which the defendant
knew; (3) to which the defendant was a stranger; (4) with which the defendant
intentionally interfered; and (5) damage.” White Sands Grp., L.L.C. v. PRS II,
LLC, 32 So. 3d 5, 14 (Ala. 2009). Plaintiffs’ theory is that Ohio National knew
about the contracts between the broker dealers and their sales representatives, and
that Ohio National’s termination of the Selling Agreements interfered with those
contracts by preventing the broker dealers from passing a portion of the trail
commissions to Plaintiffs.
The district court found that, based on the Alabama Supreme Court’s
decision in Barber v. Business Products Center, Inc., Plaintiffs’ claim fails on the
fourth element—intentional interference. 677 So. 2d 223 (Ala. 1996), overruled
8 Tortious interference was not at issue in the Sixth Circuit’s Cook decision. 10 USCA11 Case: 19-15014 Date Filed: 03/18/2021 Page: 11 of 18
on other grounds by White Sands Group, L.L.C., 32 So. 3d at 14. 9 Barber held that
a “mere refusal to deal” does not constitute tortious interference with business
relations. Id. at 228. In that case, the plaintiffs won a contract with the
government to repair typewriters. Id. at 226. The government had separate
contracts to buy typewriters from Panasonic and Canon. Id. These contracts
required Panasonic and Canon to make available parts and repair information to
local maintenance providers, such as the plaintiffs. Id. But when the plaintiffs
reached out to Panasonic’s and Canon’s local dealers to obtain needed repair parts,
the dealers refused to sell the parts, citing company policies to sell only to
authorized dealers. Id. As a result, the plaintiffs’ ability to perform their
government contract was severely impaired. The plaintiffs subsequently brought
claims against Panasonic and Canon, including for wanton misconduct and tortious
interference with business relations. Id. at 225.
These two claims were dismissed at summary judgment, and the Alabama
Supreme Court affirmed. On the wantonness claim, the court held that “a mere
failure to perform a contractual obligation is not a tort.” Id. at 228. On the tortious
interference claim, it held that “a mere refusal to deal is not an intentional
9 White Sands overruled Barber to the extent that it required evidence of fraud, force, or coercion as an element of the prima facie case for tortious interference with business relations. 32 So. 3d at 14. The parties here seem to agree that White Sands did not overrule Barber to the extent it held that “a mere refusal to deal is not an intentional interference with contractual relations.” Barber, 677 So. 2d at 228 (citing Bear Creek Enters., Inc. v. Warrior & Gulf Navigation Co., 529 So. 2d 959 (Ala. 1988)). 11 USCA11 Case: 19-15014 Date Filed: 03/18/2021 Page: 12 of 18
interference with contractual relations.” Id. (citing Bear Creek Enters., Inc. v.
Warrior & Gulf Navigation Co., 529 So. 2d 959 (Ala. 1988)). The court explained
that “intentional interference” requires evidence of “active interference”—a mere
breach of contract is not enough. Id. (holding that “defendants have the right to do
business with whoever they choose and, although their refusal to deal may be
actionable as a breach of contract, it is not actionable in tort”).
Barber relied in part on an earlier Alabama refusal-to-deal case in which a
contractor’s decision to terminate a subcontractor did not amount to an “intentional
interference” with the contract between the subcontractor and its employees. See
Bear Creek Enters., 529 So. 2d at 960–61. Importantly, the contractor in Bear
Creek did not actively induce the subcontractor to break its contract with its
employees—it merely refused to deal with the subcontractor going forward. Id. at
961. So, even though the contractor’s refusal to deal disrupted the performance of
the subcontractor-employee contract, it was not an intentional interference with
business relations. Id.
As Plaintiffs point out, Bear Creek and Barber are different from this case in
at least two ways. First, those cases were decided at summary judgment rather
than at the pleading stage. Second, and more fundamentally, refusal-to-deal cases
involve a defendant’s decision not to transact business with another entity, or not
to continue enlisting a particular subcontractor. See id. at 960–61; Barber, 677 So.
12 USCA11 Case: 19-15014 Date Filed: 03/18/2021 Page: 13 of 18
2d at 228. The twist here is that Plaintiffs are not arguing that Ohio National must
do business with broker dealers going forward—only that Ohio National must pay
trail commissions owed on existing Annuities that survive the termination of the
Selling Agreements. Therefore, we agree with Plaintiffs that this case does not fall
neatly within the refusal-to-deal line of cases.
But we disagree with Plaintiffs that Alabama case law clearly resolves this
issue in their favor. While Plaintiffs point us to Alcazar Amusement Co. v. Mudd &
Colley Amusement Co., 86 So. 209 (Ala. 1920), that case is inapposite. The
plaintiff in Alcazar sought to enjoin a third party from “enjoying the benefit” of
“conscious[ly] aiding” a party in breaching an existing contract. Id. at 211. The
language Plaintiffs cite from Alcazar—that a third party can be liable in tort
“independent of a right of action against the other party to the contract”—does not
speak to the core issue here: whether a third party’s failure to perform its own
contract amounts to “intentional interference” with another contract. Id. at 212.
Without any binding precedent directly on point, we are left to make “our
best Erie guess” as to the viability of Plaintiffs’ claim under Alabama law. See
Thai Meditation Ass’n of Ala., Inc. v. City of Mobile, 980 F.3d 821, 840 (11th Cir.
2020). To that end, although Barber and Bear Creek are not quite on point, they
do provide some guidance. Despite those cases’ different procedural postures,
both appear to embrace a legal rule that intentional interference requires some type
13 USCA11 Case: 19-15014 Date Filed: 03/18/2021 Page: 14 of 18
of active interference on the defendant’s part that goes beyond terminating or
breaching its own contract.
And looking beyond Alabama case law, there is a line of cases directly on
point that have concluded, with reasoning similar to Barber and Bear Creek, that a
plaintiff cannot reframe a defendant’s contract breach as tortious interference.10
We find two cases cited by Ohio National to be particularly instructive.
First is Wometco Theatres v. United Artists Corp., 186 S.E. 572 (Ga. Ct.
App. 1935). As Ohio National notes, this case is especially relevant since
Alabama courts have closely followed Georgia case law in defining tortious
interference with business relations. See Waddell & Reed, Inc. v. United Inv’rs
Life Ins. Co., 875 So. 2d 1143, 1156 (Ala. 2003) (“declin[ing] to retreat from [its]
earlier acceptance of precedent from Georgia,” and “find[ing] cases applying
Georgia law to be helpful”). In Wometco, a Georgia appellate court held that “the
10 In this line of cases, courts have sometimes found that a tortious interference claim based on a defendant’s breach of its own contract fails on the intentional interference element; others have found that the defendant did not act improperly or without justification; and still others have treated intentional and improper interference as a single element. Compare Alvord & Swift v. Stewart M. Muller Const. Co., 385 N.E.2d 1238, 1241 (N.Y. 1978) (holding that because “the interference must be intentional, not merely negligent or incidental,” a plaintiff does not state a claim by alleging that a defendant’s breach of contract incidentally interfered with a third party’s separate contract), with R.E. Davis Chem. Corp. v. Diasonics, Inc., 826 F.2d 678, 686 n.17 (7th Cir. 1987) (holding that a defendant’s breach of contract that affects a third party’s rights in a separate contract might be considered intentional interference but might not be considered “improper” if it “was purely incidental in character”). Alabama has not squarely addressed this issue. But its refusal-to-deal line of cases suggests that the “intentional interference” element requires some “active interference” beyond a mere contract breach that incidentally affects a third party’s rights. See Barber, 677 So. 2d at 228. Therefore, it seems likely that Alabama courts would analyze this issue under the “intentional interference” element. 14 USCA11 Case: 19-15014 Date Filed: 03/18/2021 Page: 15 of 18
failure of a third person to perform an independent prior contract made with one of
the parties does not give rise to a cause of action [in tort] for inducing the breach of
the contract.” Id. at 575. This is true, the court held, even if the breaching party
knew that its breach would render the other contracting party unable to satisfy
separate contractual duties to a third party. Id. at 574–75. Georgia courts have
continued to cite this rule. See Watkins v. Hereth, 570 S.E.2d 629, 630 (Ga. Ct.
App. 2002); Kenimer v. Ward Wight Realty Co., 135 S.E.2d 501, 503 (Ga. Ct. App.
1964). In light of Alabama courts’ consistent reliance on Georgia case law, we
find Wometco and its progeny to be persuasive.
Second is Artwear, Inc. v. Hughes, a New York case in which a company,
SNC, contracted with Andy Warhol’s estate for the exclusive rights to Warhol’s
artwork and trademarks. 615 N.Y.S.2d 689, 690–91 (1994). Under this contract,
Warhol’s estate had the final right of approval, subject to a reasonableness
requirement. Id. at 691. SNC then granted Artwear a sublicense to make T-shirts
using Warhol’s trademarks. Id. The sublicense agreement gave SNC and
Warhol’s estate the right of final approval, not subject to a reasonableness
requirement. Id. When the relationship between Warhol’s estate and SNC soured,
none of Artwear’s product was approved. Id. Artwear brought claims against the
estate for, among other things, breach of contract as a third-party beneficiary and
tortious interference with contractual rights. Id. at 691–92.
15 USCA11 Case: 19-15014 Date Filed: 03/18/2021 Page: 16 of 18
The New York state court found that Artwear was not an intended third-
party beneficiary of SNC’s license agreement with Warhol’s estate. It then
dismissed Artwear’s tortious interference claim, holding that:
Artwear’s cause of action for tortious interference with contract is . . . by its own terms, based on the estate’s alleged breach of the license agreement, which breach brought about SNC’s failure to perform the sublicense agreement. In reality, this is nothing more than a claim for damages incidentally flowing from the breach of the license agreement, to which Artwear was not a party and of which it is not, for the reasons indicated, a third-party beneficiary . . . . There exists no tort liability to incidental beneficiaries not in privity . . . . Thus, Artwear . . . cannot transform an alleged breach of the license agreement by the estate, a party with which it is not in privity, into a tort claim against that party. Artwear’s remedy is against the party with whom it dealt, SNC.
Id. at 695.
Wometco and Artwear are on point, and their reasoning meshes with that of
the Alabama Supreme Court in Barber. The common thread running through the
two lines of cases is that to satisfy the intentional interference element, the
defendant must actively procure the breach of a separate contract; a mere failure to
satisfy its own contractual obligation, which incidentally impacts the rights of a
third party, does not suffice. See Barber, 677 So. 2d at 228 (“[A] mere refusal to
deal is not an intentional interference with contractual relations[;] although [the]
refusal to deal may be actionable as a breach of contract, it is not actionable in
tort.”); Wometco Theatres, 186 S.E. at 574–75 (“The mere failure of a party to a 16 USCA11 Case: 19-15014 Date Filed: 03/18/2021 Page: 17 of 18
contract to carry out its terms will not give rise to a [tort] cause of action . . .
against it” even if the breaching party knows “that the opposite party will not be
able to perform its contract with [a] third party.”).
Connecting Alabama’s refusal-to-deal cases with the Wometco and Artwear
line of cases, “our best Erie guess” is that Alabama law does not allow plaintiffs
who have failed to establish intended third-party beneficiary standing to transform
the alleged contract breach into a tort claim. See Thai Meditation, 980 F.3d at 840.
For this reason, we conclude that Ohio National’s refusal to pay commissions
owed under the Selling Agreements is not, as a matter of law, an intentional
interference with the contracts between the broker dealers and their sales
representatives. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s finding that Plaintiffs
failed to state a claim for tortious interference with business relations.
D.
Having concluded that the district court correctly dismissed each of
Plaintiffs’ claims, we must consider whether the district court correctly dismissed
the claims with prejudice. Leave to amend is to be freely given when justice so
requires. Bryant v. Dupree, 252 F.3d 1161, 1163 (11th Cir. 2001) (per curiam).
“Generally, where a more carefully drafted complaint might state a claim, a
plaintiff must be given at least one chance to amend the complaint before the
district court dismisses the action with prejudice.” Id. (alteration adopted and
17 USCA11 Case: 19-15014 Date Filed: 03/18/2021 Page: 18 of 18
internal quotation mark omitted). An amendment as a matter of course does not
count as this “one chance to amend.” Id. at 1163–64.
But there are exceptions to this rule. A district court need not grant leave to
amend where amendment would be futile. Id. at 1163. To show that amendment
would not be futile, a plaintiff must show how the complaint could be amended to
cure its faults. Almanza, 851 F.3d at 1075.
Here, in Plaintiffs’ memorandum in opposition to Ohio National’s motion to
dismiss, they included a footnote asking for leave to amend should the district
court find their claims deficient. But Plaintiffs did not indicate to the district court
the substance of a proposed amended complaint—nor do their briefs indicate how
their complaint could be amended to cure its faults. Id. As a result, we cannot say
that the district court abused its discretion in dismissing Plaintiffs’ First Amended
Complaint with prejudice.
AFFIRMED.