Davidson v. Kimberly–Clark Corp., 889 F.3d 956 (9th
Cir. 2018) (amended)
Previous
discussion. Previously misled
consumers may properly allege a threat of imminent or actual harm sufficient to
confer Article III standing to seek injunctive relief. “A consumer’s inability
to rely on a representation made on a package, even if the consumer knows or
believes the same representation was false in the past, is an ongoing injury
that may justify an order barring the false advertising.” Here, Davidson paid
extra for wipes labeled as “flushable” because she believed that flushable
wipes would be better for the environment, and more sanitary, than
non-flushable wipes. Davidson alleged that she “continues to desire to purchase
wipes that are suitable for disposal in a household toilet,” and “would
purchase truly flushable wipes manufactured by [Kimberly–Clark] if it were
possible to determine prior to purchase if the wipes were suitable to be
flushed.”
First, the court of appeals reversed the dismissal of the complaint
under Rule 9(b). The district court had concluded that Davidson failed to
adequately allege “why” the representation that the wipes were flushable was
false. But Davidson didn’t have to allege that she experienced problems with
her home plumbing or the relevant water treatment plant. Her theory was simple: flushable means “suitable for being flushed,” which requires an
item to be capable of dispersing within a short amount of time. This definition was supported
by multiple allegations in the complaint, including dictionary definitions and
Kimberly–Clark’s own statement on its website.
Davidson alleged that the actual wipes she purchased failed
to “disperse and disintegrate within seconds or minutes.” For example, Davidson
alleged that after using the wipes, she “noticed that each individual wipe felt
very sturdy and thick, unlike toilet paper” and that “[s]he also noticed that
the wipes did not break up in the toilet bowl like toilet paper but rather
remained in one piece.” Her personal experience was supported by additional
allegations, including Kimberly–Clark’s own testing. This was enough.
Similarly, the district court’s conclusion that the
complaint failed because Davidson didn’t allege damages to her plumbing, pipes,
or septic system was wrong. “Under
California law, the economic injury of paying a premium for a falsely advertised
product is sufficient harm to maintain a cause of action.” Additionally, to the extent that the district
court believed that it was important that “plaintiff has not alleged facts
showing how she came to believe that the [Scott Wipes] were not flushable,” this
was error; Rule 9(b) doesn’t require a plaintiff bringing a consumer fraud
claim to allege how she “came to believe” that the product was misrepresented.
As for Article III standing for injunctive relief,
[k]nowledge that the advertisement
or label was false in the past does not equate to knowledge that it will remain
false in the future. In some cases, the threat of future harm may be the
consumer’s plausible allegations that she will be unable to rely on the
product’s advertising or labeling in the future, and so will not purchase the
product although she would like to. In other cases, the threat of future harm
may be the consumer’s plausible allegations that she might purchase the product
in the future, despite the fact it was once marred by false advertising or
labeling, as she may reasonably, but incorrectly, assume the product was
improved.
Although the amended opinion made clear that practical
considerations for enforcing state law weren’t vital to its analysis, this holding
also preserved the federal-state balance, given that the primary form of
relief available under the UCL for unfair business
practices is an injunction, and federal courts shouldn’t be used to prevent
relief under state law.
Judge Berzon wrote a thoughtful concurrence, arguing that Lyons v. LA should not be read to impose
separate Article III tests for each form of relief sought by a plaintiff. “[D]uplicating
the standing analysis in this way does not give effect to the “case or
controversy” requirement of Article III. Instead, it appears to be an artifact
of the discredited practice of conflating the prerequisites for injunctive
relief with the Article III prerequisites for entry into federal court.” As Judge Berzon pointed out,
Davidson seeks restitution for the
premium she paid for a falsely labeled product, and no one doubts that she has
standing in federal court to do so. Under California law, if Davidson prevails
on her false advertising claim and is entitled to restitution, she is equally
entitled to an injunction. No further showing, equitable or otherwise, is
needed to trigger her right to injunctive relief. It follows that we have a
single dispute—a single case, a single controversy—giving rise to multiple
forms of relief.
While conflating entitlement to relief with Article III standing
didn’t matter much where the availability of injunctive relief was governed by federal
common law, it “adds new elements to the entitlement to state-law relief” and
was thus inconsistent with Erie and
other federal-state principles. “[A] defendant should not be able to strip a
plaintiff of remedies dictated by state law by removing to federal court a case
over which there surely is Article III jurisdiction over the liability issues.”
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