Plaintiffs are cosmetic surgeons—a specialty “dedicated
exclusively to the enhancement of appearance through surgical and medical
techniques” but “performed by surgeons from a variety of disciplines.” Plastic surgery, by contrast, is “dedicated
to the reconstruction of facial and body defects.” Plaintiffs alleged a comprehensive effort by
various doctors and plastic surgery associations to eliminate cosmetic surgeons
from competing in the cosmetic surgery market.
Defendants allegedly placed billboards along an interstate
designed to look like PSAs, e.g., a young woman with a distressed look on her
face with the caption “I didn’t know ... [m]y ‘Cosmetic Surgeon’ wasn’t a
Plastic Surgeon.” The billboards also displayed, among other things, the logo
of the American Board of Plastic Surgery (ABPS). Plaintiffs also challenged messages found on
the Utah Plastic Surgery Society’s website, including “Cheaper, Faster,
Scarier” and “Lack of Training Can be Deadly in Cosmetic Surgery.” That website
also had the ABPS emblem, along with brief profiles of each of the UPSS’s
member physician. Also, one of the
individual defendants, Fairbanks, gave a TV interview stating that “there is a
dentist doing breast augmentation and an ob-gyn doing lipo.” Fairbanks said that patients believe these
physicians are plastic surgeons when in fact they are not unless they are board
certified. Another defendant allegedly
told one plaintiff’s PR spokesman that defendants intended to run an ad
campaign against plaintiffs, using billboards to target plaintiff Vincent by
stating: “Did you know your Tummy Tuck was done by a dentist.”
ABPS challenged the court’s jurisdiction over it for lack of
sufficient state contacts. Although the
Lanham Act doesn’t provide for nationwide jurisdiction, the Sherman Act does. Only due process limited the exercise of
jurisdiction, and in a federal question case the Fifth Amendment controls. In such circumstances, the burden is on the defendant
to show that its liberty interests actually have been infringed, and that using
the plaintiff’s chosen forum will make litigation “so gravely difficult and
inconvenient” as to put the defendant at a severe disadvantage.
ABPS had no offices or employees in Utah, didn’t own any
property in Utah, and wasn’t registered to do business there. It certifies doctors in the plastic surgery
field, using a written exam and an oral component. The oral component hadn’t been administered
in Utah since the 1970s. ABPS corresponds
with Utah doctors about certification and mails an annual newsletter, but
denied involvement with the ad campaign at issue.
The court found that ABPS had “very few” contacts with Utah. Nonetheless, defending in Utah wouldn’t be
particularly difficult, because ABPS already operated across state boundaries
and had access to counsel. “Further,
given modern advances in technology and transportation, the distance from
Pennsylvania to Utah does not support a finding of inconvenience.” And judicial economy would be served by
adjudicating claims against all defendants together. Given the remedial nature of the Sherman Act,
it should be construed broadly; to the extent ABPS was involved in a violation
of the antitrust laws, its effects would be felt beyond the states in which ABPS
concededly operated. Thus, ABPS failed
to show that its liberty interests had been infringed at a constitutionally
significant level.
However, the court then dismissed the antitrust claims,
because nobody wins those.
It also dismissed the Lanham Act claim, which was based on (1)
“I did not know ... [m]y ‘Cosmetic Surgeon’ wasn’t a ‘Plastic Surgeon;’ “ (2)
“Cheaper, Faster, Scarier;” and (3) “Lack of training can be deadly in Cosmetic
Surgery.” Plaintiffs argued that, in
combination with other facts, including Fairbanks’ statement to the news, these
statements falsely implied that plaintiffs weren’t qualified to perform
cosmetic surgery.
But, while the billboards and internet ads were commercial
speech, the statements to the news station weren’t. The statement didn’t “eschew” the purchase of
a product or service from one source over another. (?) It
didn’t have a “clear commercial component”; it didn’t directly reference
plaintiffs or promote defendants’ products over plaintiffs’. (What did it
do?) So it wasn’t commercial speech for
Lanham Act purposes.
As for the billboard and internet ads, they were statements
by commercial competitors designed to influence the purchasing decisions of
potential cosmetic surgery patients, disseminated to a broad audience. But they weren’t literally false: the
statements just encouraged awareness on the part of people seeking cosmetic
surgery—at most, they encouraged consumers to use a plastic surgeon instead of
a cosmetic surgeon. (Yes, but was the
reason given for that choice factual? I
think the court wants to say this is negative puffery/not specific enough to be
actionable.) They also weren’t
implicitly false. The use of the term “Public
Safety Announcement” and the seals of various plastic surgery entities “lend
the ads an added layer of credibility,” but didn’t imply that plaintiffs weren’t
qualified to perform cosmetic surgery.
(I’d think that safety would be a pretty important consideration for my
surgeon.) Also, the ads didn’t target
plaintiffs. Noncommercial statements by
certain defendants didn’t show that plaintiffs were the focus of the covered
ads.
Also, plaintiffs failed to adequately plead damages, which
can’t be presumed without literal falsity.
A mere allegation of a “cooling” in business since the ad campaign began
was insufficient.
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