Brown v. Hain Celestial Group, Inc., No. C 11-03082, 2014 WL
6306581 (N.D. Cal. Nov. 14, 2014)
Hain has staved off class actions several times, but not
here: the court certified a class of purchasers of Avalon Organics and Jason
cosmetic products, based on allegations that they were labeled “organic” when
they weren’t, in violation of California’s Organic Products Act (COPA), the
UCL, the CLRA, and express warranty.
Before 2011, the product lines contained less than 70% organic
ingredients, with few exceptions. In
2011, Hain changed the formulations and labels of substantially all the
products. Plaintiffs bought products
from the two lines, in the belief that they were completely/mostly made from
organic ingredients, and were willing to pay more for that feature.
Federal law governing foods requires that food labeled
“organic” or “made with organic” must be at least 70% organic. This doesn’t apply to cosmetics, but
plaintiffs alleged that the federal definition shaped consumer expectations for
all organic products, including cosmetics.
Moreover, COPA requires that cosmetic products advertised, marketed,
sold, labeled, or represented as organic in California be made of at least 70%
organic ingredients; plaintiffs alleged that COPA was a “legislative
determination” that it is deceptive to represent as organic cosmetic products
that have insufficient organic content.
Jason’s tagline “Pure, Natural & Organic” and Avalon
Organics’s name and “pro-organic” pledge on their front labels allegedly misled
consumers, given that they didn’t comply with the 70% rule, whether measured by
weight or volume. For example, only the
9th out of 19 listed ingredients in Jason Face Wash was certified
organic, which can’t possibly be 70%. (Hain
argued that after the 2011 reformulation, Avalon Organics products contained
more than 70% organic ingredients; plaintiffs disagreed. The answer turned on whether one could count
water added to reconstitute dehydrated aloe powder as part of the percentage of
organic ingredients. If yes, then the products all had more than 70% organic
ingredients; if no, they didn’t.)
Hain challenged the class definitions as containing
non-actionable products and as non-ascertainable because based on
self-identification without receipts. The court found that the class definition
for Jason products tracked the temporal use of the “Pure, Natural, &
Organic” tagline, and properly excluded products that are USDA-certified as
organic. The Avalon Organics class was
similar; post-June 2011 purchasers were part of the class, but if water used to
rehydtrate aloe powder counts towards the 70% threshold, they’d lose on the
merits—something the court wasn’t going to resolve before certification.
As for ascertainability, the court rejected the Third
Circuit rule requiring receipts or external identification of class members as
gutting the Rule 23(b)(3) class action precisely where it’s most needed—where
individual harm is small but aggregate impact significant. While reliance on affidavits can be
problematic, the analysis must be case by case.
Extreme variety in covered products might make memory and affidavits
unreliable, but here all but 8 of 362 products were the same with regard to the
organic claims and product formulations used as the basis for the claims; the 8
were Jason products that weren’t popular.
Consumers could reasonably be expected to recall the word “organic,”
which was even part of the Avalon Organics name. Given the likelihood that consumers could
correctly recall their purchases, self-identification by affidavit was
acceptable for a small-ticket claim, especially since the alternative would be
lack of redress for false advertising.
This conclusion was bolstered by the fact that “total damages” would be
proved and fixed at trial, because they were restitutionary. Hain’s profit “will
be measured without regard to any individual plaintiff; then, after the total
figure is set, individual claimants will divide the award.”
Numerosity, commonality, typicality, and adequacy were
satisfied. Because COPA, the UCL, and
the CLRA all use an objective reasonable consumer standard, once the claim was proved
material to that objective reasonable consumer, inferences of reliance and
causation would arise. Hain argued that both Avalon Organics and Jason products
bore “other label statements (such as ‘no parabens’ and ‘no animal testing’)
that surely influenced some consumers’ purchase decisions.” But that didn’t destroy typicality, given the
inference of reliance that would arise from material misrepresentations. One plaintiff bought from an online vendor
and paid less than wholesale; this didn’t make him atypical, only affected his
individual damages. Here, as distinct
from in cases where certification was denied for want of typicality, uniform
misrepresentations about one word on the products’ labels were at issue across
the entire class:
Whatever the precise formulations
and uses of Hain’s various products, and whatever additional reasons consumers
had for buying them, the plaintiffs’ claims against them are simple and
uniform: the products were presented as organic when, under COPA, they were
not. The plaintiffs’ claims, in other words, have nothing to do with the unique
characteristics of the various Hain products; they have to do only with what is
allegedly shared by all those products. The court thus thinks that the
plaintiffs’ core claims can be adequately proved, for example, by someone who
has bought shampoo for someone who has bought hand cream.
For similar reasons, the court found predominance. While,
accepting Hain’s characterizations, 6 of 184 Jason products had no organic
representation, and 2 had 70% organic content, that represented only a small
percentage of products that could be easily excluded and didn’t destroy
predominance.
Nor would materiality, reliance, and causation raise
individual issues under California law given the objective reasonable consumer
standard. This standard “reflects the
UCL’s focus on the defendant’s conduct, rather than the plaintiff’s damages, in
service of the statute’s larger purpose of protecting the general public
against unscrupulous business practices.”
Moreover, even if other representations also motivated purchases, there
can be more than one material reason for purchase. “This is how consumers shop: they buy
products all the time for more than one reason.” In addition, plaintiffs adequately showed
that, if they proved their claims on the merits, they could show that an
“organic premium” existed and would’ve been paid by all consumers, regardless
of their reasons for purchase. Thus all would have suffered injury regardless
of purchase motive.
This brought the court to the issue of damages models. The plaintiffs offered the declaration of Dr.
Stephen Hamilton, chair of the Department of Economic s at California
Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo.
He calculated Hain’s revenue/profit from sales of the products at
issues, and also calculated a price premium for the “organic” attribute, not
based on individualized information about class members. Hain challenged Hamilton’s models with
testimony from an economist, arguing that his methods wrongly defined
restitutions and flunked the Supreme Court’s requirements for damages models
set forth in Comcast.
Under circuit precedent, plaintiffs needed to present a
damages model that ties damages to their theory of liability. And, to comport
with due process, the court must “preserve” the defendant’s right “to raise any
individual defenses it might have at the damages phase.” The court concluded that plaintiffs adequately
showed that damages could be calculated on a classwide basis in a way adequately
tied to the plaintiffs’ liability theory.
Hamilton used three different methods to separate out the “organic”
premium from other product features. The
fact that he hadn’t performed the calculations dictated by his models wasn’t
dispositive; in part this was apparently because discovery was ongoing. “The point for Rule 23 purposes is to
determine whether there is an acceptable class-wide approach, not to actually
calculate under that approach before liability is established.” Hain could offer any defenses to individual
claims in the damages phase.
The class action, naturally, was superior to no lawsuit,
which was the only realistic alternative.
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