Plaintiffs brought a putative class action against Ester-C,
alleging that it misled consumers into thinking that Ester-C products were a
form of immune system defense, misrepresented that Ester-C was a superior
source of Vitamin C, and made its claims without credible scientific support.
They alleged violatoins violations of Missouri's Merchandising Practices Act
(on behalf of a Missouri class); violations of the CLRA, FAL, and UCL (on
behalf of a California class); and violations under New York common law,
including unjust enrichment, intentional misrepresentation, and negligent
misrepresentation as to all class members (the court noted that there didn’t
appear to be a conflict of laws as to these claims).
Ester-C’s products contain 500 mg of Vitamin C, more than
eight times the recommended daily allowance, or 1000 mg (17x the RDA). They also say that they contain Calcium,
“C–Sorb Citrus Vioflavonoids Complex,” and “Naturally Occurring Vitamin C
Metabolites.” There are tablets,
gummies, and a beverage mix. They’re
available at major drugstores.
The labels describe Ester-C as “The Better Vitamin C”; say
it’s the “# 1 Pharmacist Recommended Brand”; and state “Immune Support,” “Ester-C
provides your body with the immune and antioxidant support it needs to help
keep you healthy and strong during times of seasonal change and the stresses of
daily living,” “Antioxidant Support,” “Enhanced Absorption,” and “Make Ester-C
part of your daily routine for optimal health ... no matter what time of year
it is!” Many of these or similar
representations also appear on Ester-C’s website, on which an “expert” “claims
he maintains a healthy and active lifestyle in part through the consumption of Ester-C,”
and which claims that Ester-C increases absorption of vitamin C molecules,
“making it easier for the body to transport [the vitamins] from cell to cell
for numerous health benefits.”
Plaintiffs claimed that they relied on this language and that they
wouldn’t otherwise have bought the products.
Retailers’ marketing is allegedly similar: Amazon advertises
an Ester-C product as “24 hour immune protection. [E]ster-C gives you powerful
immune system support. [E]ster-C provides your body with the antioxidant
protection it needs to help keep you healthy and strong....” Wal-mart claims,
“[s]tay healthy with the Ester-C The Better Vitamin C Supplement Tablets,” and
“[t]he Ester-C vitamin C 1000mg tablets also offer 24 hour immunity from day to
day ailments like flu and fever.”
Defendants’ counsel noted that Ester-C isn’t responsible for other
companies’ statements in marketing it (but see: vicarious/contributory
liability) and that it has in the past reached out to ask other companies to
remove language going beyond its own marketing and labeling representations.
Plaintiffs pled that the false claims increased sales and
prices; a box of 90 Ester-C 500mg tablets costs about $8.44, while a comparable
supplement typically costs about $7.00.
Moreover, they pled that defendants lacked credible evidence that
Ester-C would work as claimed, and cited a publication by Oregon State University's
Linus Pauling Institute that allegedly shows that it doesn’t work. Plaintiffs also referred to various FTC
actions against several of Ester-C’s competitors regarding claims to boost
immunity/protect against illness.
The court found that plaintiffs had adequately pled their
claims, despite Ester-C’s argument that they were merely alleging lack of
substantiation, which isn’t privately actionable.
First, of course, we give a nod to standing. The economic injury pled was sufficient
injury in fact. Plaintiffs pled reliance, making their injuries fairly
traceable to the alleged misrepresentations, and redressability would come from
ending the allegedly deceptive marketing and from monetary relief. Ester-C
argued that there was no standing because the plaintiffs didn’t say which
products they bought or what representations they relied on, the express
language of the complaint was to the contrary: they said they bought Ester-C,
they noted the different types of Ester-C products, and they listed several
examples of the representations upon which they allegedly relied. These were Rule 9(b) arguments, not standing
arguments.
The key issue was whether plaintiffs were really just
pleading lack of substantiation with statements such as “[e]vidence ...
indicates that Ester-C is not any better than other Vitamin C supplements at
providing Vitamin C to the body,” and that “[d]efendants have no credible
evidence that taking Ester-C will provide immune support or keep one from
getting sick.” The court agreed that
lack of substantiation wasn’t privately actionable under the relevant laws, but
found that plaintiffs had adequately pled falsity. The court distinguished between unproven (not
actionable) and disproven (actionable) advertising claims. Studies that debunk the purported benefits of
an ingredient can disprove
advertising claims. However, claims
sounding in fraud must pass Rule 9(b), so the studies have to be specific
enough.
The court also pointed to Bober v. Glaxco Wellcome PLC, 246
F.3d 934 (7th Cir. 2001), which held that, for a lack of substantiation claim
to be a deceptiveness claim, the challenged advertising needed to imply
substantiation. (Note that this
standard, which is that used by the Lanham Act, is potentially much broader: it
recognizes the possibility that an ad claim might imply substantiation without coming out and saying “tests prove”
X—especially in the health field, where consumers are likely to believe that
scientific evidence is behind any given health claim.)
Here, plaintiffs did more than allege lack of substantiation
by citing the Linus Pauling institute study, which was specific to the ingredients
touted by Ester-C and “found no difference between Ester-C and commercially
available ascorbic acid tablets with respect to the absorption and urinary
excretion of vitamin C.” “Given that Ester-C
markets itself as ‘the Better Vitamin C’ and the ‘# 1 Pharmacist Recommended
Brand,’ a study suggesting that Ester-C is not a superior source of vitamin C
supplementation to the body than other market brands would, indeed, call into
question defendants' representations.”
The study’s conclusion about Ester-C’s lack of superior bioavailability
contradicts several statements on Ester-C’s website, which explicitly claims
that Ester-C has “a unique and patented form of vitamin C” and that the product
contains metabolites that “activate the vitamin C molecules making it easier
for the body to transport them from cell to cell for numerous health benefits.”
Plaintiffs alleged that these claims were false.
In addition, plaintiffs’ allegations that defendants lacked
credible scientific evidence challenged Ester-C’s express claims that clinical
research supported its products. For
example, the website “expert” stated that he takes Ester-C “because it is
gentler on the stomach and because of all the clinical research that supports
the use of this product.” Because Ester-C
expresssly claimed substantiation, plaintiffs’ use of the Linus Pauling
Institute study was sufficient to state a plausible claim of affirmative
misrepresentation. Lack of
substantiation is deceptive when a claim implies (or here, outright states) that
substantiation exists. Here, Ester-C made numerous claims of superiority to
other products and superior bioavailability.
Ester-C challenged the merits of the study, which wasn’t
appropriate on a motion to dismiss. And
the study related to the claims on which the plaintiffs allegedly relied;
defendants’ argument that the study only related to “absorption and urinary
excretion,” not efficacy, was unpersuasive.
Ester-C’s label specifically claimed enhanced absorption and the
like.
Ester-C also argued that the references to FTC settlements
for other products weren’t relevant because they were just settlements and
because they targeted disease prevention claims. Plaintiffs responded that, though Ester-C’s
label didn’t expressly make cold/flu prevention claims, it implied them: it
used a clock with circling arrows to imply “around-the-clock” immune support
and stated: “Ester-C provides your body with the immune and antioxidant support
it needs to help keep you healthy and strong during times of seasonal change
and the stresses of daily living.” They
argued that a reasonable consumer reading that language, on a label already
emphasizing Ester-C’s “better” vitamin C formula offering antioxidant and
immune system support, could fairly interpret that as a cold/flu prevention
message, since those illnesses are typically associated with seasonal changes.
Again, this couldn’t be resolved on a motion to dismiss, even setting aside the
FTC settlements as irrelevant.
Defendants argued that no reasonable consumer could receive
a disease prevention claim because of the disclaimer, which stated: “This
product is not intended to diagnose, cure, treat or prevent any disease.” This disclaimer was indeed on the label,
preceded by an asterisk, and several of the relevant statements on the label
were followed by an asterisk. But disclaimers have to be examined in context
with the allegedly misleading statements.
Similar to Williams v. Gerber Prods. Co., 552 F.3d 934 (9th Cir. 2008),
the presence of the disclaimer didn’t mean that a reasonable consumer couldn’t
be misled. Reasonable consumers
shouldn’t be expected to look beyond misleading representations on the front of
the box to discover the truth in small print. Again, a motion to dismiss was
the wrong place to resolve this, especially given other allegations about how
the product was marketed. For example,
Walmart’s website allegedly promised “Stay healthy with the Ester-C The Better
Vitamin C Supplement Tablets…. The Ester-C vitamin C 1000mg tablets also offer
24 hour immunity from day to day ailments like flu and fever.” Even though those aren’t claims made by
Ester-C, plaintiffs argued that they showed that even retailers interpreted the
product as a cold and flu prevention product.
Thus, plaintiffs plausibly pled that a reasonable consumer could be
misled into believing that Ester-C’s products could prevent or shorten the
duration of colds or flu.
After that, the court turned to Rule 9(b), and found it
satisfied: the complaint adequately provided the “who, what, when, where, and
how” of the alleged fraud. They
identified the products at issue, the specific alleged misrepresentations,
where the misrepresentations were made (particular retail stores and on certain
pages of the website), the time period at issue including specific purchases,
the nature of the deception, and the reasons that the claims were allegedly
fraudulent. This was enough for the
California CLRA, FAL, and UCL claims (the court found that plaintiffs had
successfully pleaded violations of all three prongs of the UCL: unlawful,
fraudulent, and unfair).
Similar results obtained with Missouri’s Merchandising
Practices Act, which requires an ascertainable loss of money or property (and a
product bought for personal, family, or household purposes). Likewise with the NY claims for unjust
enrichment, which doesn’t require a direct relationship between the parties,
and intentional misrepresentation. Plaintiffs adequately pled that Ester-C knew
the claims were false when made by pointing to the lack of substantiation, the
Linus Pauling Institute’s study, and the FTC settlements. The parties disputed whether the court could
consider whether reliance was justified on a motion to dismiss. In this case, the court couldn’t conclude as
a matter of law that consumers couldn’t reasonably rely on the cited
statements.
As for the NY negligent misrepresentation claim, this
requires that the defendant have been careless “‘in imparting words upon which
others were expected to rely and upon which they did or failed to act to their
damage,’ and where the author of the statement has ‘some relationship or duty
... to act with care’ vis-à-vis the party at whom the statement is directed.” This requires a special or privity-like
relationship as well as justifiable reliance, which the court found to be
related issues: a court considering reliance under NY must consider “whether
the person making the representation held or appeared to hold unique or special
expertise; whether a special relationship of trust or confidence existed
between the parties; and whether the speaker was aware of the use to which the
information would be put and supplied it for that purpose.”
Here, the court found that it could infer a special
relationship between the parties, because Ester-C’s marketing allegedly held it
out as having a special expertise on the products’ purported health benefits,
including the “Ask an Expert” section of the website. That page also stated that Ester-C “has good
clinical research and is the easiest form of vitamin C to take in my opinion
because it is non-acidic. The company is also completely committed to clinical
studies.” The label also at least
suggests “some level of medical or scientific backing for its claims.” Thus, it was plausible that Ester-C
understood that its marketing would “would be used by consumers for the purpose
of evaluating Ester-C in comparison to the numerous other brands of vitamin
supplements on the market,” and that it knew that it was “targeting individuals
who generally lacked the scientific or medical background necessary to
carefully assess and truly evaluate Ester-C's assertions before purchase, and
who would have to trust the representations as stated in Ester-C's marketing.”
This was sufficient to infer a special relationship under NY law.
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