Hwang sued on behalf of consumers who bought CleanWell
sanitizing products, alleging California consumer protection claims and
violation of the Magnuson Moss Act. Until relatively recently, Hwang alleged, the
labels of defendants’ foaming hand sanitizer, hand sanitizer spray, hand
sanitizing wipes, and antibacterial foaming hand soap products prominently and
falsely represented that they: (1) “[k]ill[ ] 99.9% of germs naturally,” (2)
“kill 99.99% of germs including MRSA, Salmonella, Staph, and E.coli,” (3) “kill
99.9% of the harmful germs that can make you sick,” and (4) “Sanitize hands
when you can't wash with soap and water.”
Defendants argued that the claims were preempted under the
FDCA. The governing law is that a state
law claim will survive if it doesn’t depend entirely on a violation of the FDCA
but rather is premised on conduct that would give rise to liability under
traditional common law principles. “Thus, consumer fraud claims based on
statements that are alleged to be literally false, as a factual matter, have
generally been found to be permissible under the FDCA.”
Pom Wonderful LLC v. CocaCola Company, 679 F.3d 1170 (9th
Cir. 2012), didn’t aid defendants’ position.
Pom isn’t really a preemption
case but rather a primary jurisdiction case, in which the court of appeals held
that, to the extent that the regulations about juice names on labels were
unclear, it was for the FDA to fix the problems. Pom
was a Lanham Act case, and preserved the possibility of state law claims on
remand. Where FDA provisions require no
original judicial interpretation, application of Pom isn’t appropriate.
Here, no statutory or regulatory provision expressly
preempted the claims, and there was no implied preemption because Hwang’s
claims weren’t based on the FDCA but rather on parallel state laws that mirror
the relevant FDCA sections. The only
specific regulations cited by defendants were a Tentative Final Monograph,
which were never adopted. The court was
merely required to make a factual determination as to whether the challenged
statements were false.
As for primary jurisdiction, “where a claim is within the
purview of the FDA's regulatory authority and the determination requires the
expertise of the FDA, the court should not decide the question before the FDA
has had an opportunity to address it.”
Here, the FDA has the authority to regulate the labeling and testing of
defendant’s products, but the Tentative Final Monograph proposing specific
regulations was never enacted. Even
assuming (not in evidence) that the FDA had plans for further regulations, Pom didn’t require deferring to the FDA
when state consumer protection law claims were based on factual falsity, “at
least where, as here, there are no regulations suggesting the FDA has adopted a
contrary position.” The FDA’s expertise
wasn’t required as to what renders a statement misleading, because incorrect
factual statements are by definition false and misleading. Pom
didn’t get rid of the many cases permitting state law and Lanham Act claims
based on falsity.
The court rejected challenges to the sufficiency of the
pleading: Hwang identified the key statements and alleged that they weren’t
true. Defendants argued that she failed
to plead materiality, but that wasn’t a question suitable for a motion to dismiss. She alleged that she relied on the statements
to make her purchase. “Given that the
purpose of Defendants' Sanitizing Products is to kill germs and the statements
allegedly overstate the effectiveness of the products in achieving that
objective, these allegations are at least plausible and therefore satisfy the
pleading standards of Iqbal and Twombly.” The statements were directed to “what is
undisputedly the primary purpose of the products at issue, namely, to kill
germs, giving rise to a plausible inference that a reasonable consumer would
consider them material.”
Further, the court rejected the argument that the class
claims failed to the extent the class includes members who may not have seen
the statements or weren’t deceived. This
was the wrong stage at which to address class claims. The procedural posture also prevented the
court from ruling that a nationwide class couldn’t be certified as to Hwang’s
California claims under Mazza v. American Honda Motor Co., Inc., 666 F.3d 581
(9th Cir. 2012), which, the court held, didn’t establish a bright-line rule
rejecting all nationwide classes under California consumer protection statutes.
Choice of law analysis is more
appropriate at the certification stage.
Similarly, the court declined to strike damages claims and
class allegations under Rule 12(f), since they weren’t included in the meaning
of “any insufficient defense or any redundant, immaterial, impertinent or
scandalous matter.” It also allowed her
to amend her CLRA claim to add a damages claim once the required 30-day notice period
had passed.
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