People ex rel. Gascon
v. HomeAdvisor, Inc., A154960, 2020 WL 2486970 (Cal. Ct. App. May 14, 2020)
HomeAdvisor appealed
an injunction barring it from broadcasting certain ads (except with a disclaimer,
for a limited time). HomeAdvisor argued that the order was vague, indefinite,
overbroad, and unconstitutional; the court disagreed.
San Francisco’s DA
sued HA for violating the FAL and UCL, alleging that its ads were “false and
misleading because they are likely to deceive consumers into believing that all
service professionals hired through HomeAdvisor who come into their homes have
passed criminal background checks. That is not the case. The only person who
undergoes a background check is the owner/principal of an independently-owned
business.”
For example:
In “Carl,” a middle-aged man explains he can’t always be there when his
mother needs help: “So when her roof started to leak I went to HomeAdvisor and
found the right pro to help. They are background checked.”
In “Happy Homeowners,” a woman standing with two young children states:
“As a single mom, I love that HomeAdvisor does background checks on pros.” The
words “background checks” appear on the screen, and then the advertisement cuts
to a man who says, “Gives me peace of mind.”…
In “TV Ad Featuring Jason Cameron,” a television show host tells the
viewers, “With HomeAdvisor you know that you’ll get a reliable pro because they
must pass criminal and financial background checks before they’re listed.” Then
a woman says, “As a single mom I have to be careful with who I invite to my
home.”
In “HomeAdvisor Testimonials,” another television show host, Amy
Matthews, states: “HomeAdvisor pros pass criminal and financial background
checks before they’re listed.” In “Pros You Can Trust,” the same host states
HomeAdvisor “instantly connects you with top-rated pros who have passed
criminal and financial background checks.” In “HomeAdvisor Testimonials,” a
woman standing in her bathroom says, “I love the fact that they have been
background-checked—that’s a great feeling.” In the same advertisement, another
woman standing in her kitchen says, “You can feel safe with them coming into
your home.”
HomeAdvisor’s mobile
application also stated, “Nationwide, we have a network of hundreds of
thousands of background-checked pros specializing in more than 500 home
renovation projects.”
However, HA only performs
a background check on the “owner/principal” of the businesses that are members
of its network. Its terms & conditions stated that HA performs no
background check when the businesses are “employees, franchisees, dealers, or
independent contractors ... of larger national or corporate accounts.” HA also
screened “ (1) the license holder if there is a state-level license, and (2)
anyone whom the [business] adds to the account for administrative purposes
(e.g., putting the account on hold).” However, if a “franchisee or a dealer is
a corporate account,” then they are not subject to HomeAdvisor’s background
check policy. Extending the background
checks to all employees would be expensive and difficult, and HA has no plans
to do it.
The court found that
the ads were misleading, but that “the statements on the website cure that
misleading nature except that they’re not in the ads themselves and they’re not
conspicuous.” The People proposed a disclaimer: “HomeAdvisor background checks
business owners but not employees.” HA objected that some employees, albeit a
“limited” number, are checked. The court adopted the People’s proposal over “
‘HomeAdvisor background checks business owners and limited employees,’ ” or “
‘HomeAdvisor background checks business owners and account manager employees.’
”
Along with enjoining
specific ads, the court enjoined HA from “[i]ncluding in the description of the
HomeAdvisor App in the Apple App Store and the Google Play store words that
state or imply that all service personnel who come to consumers’ homes as a
result of consumers’ having used the HomeAdvisor service have been
background-checked.” However, there was a safe harbor for ads that didn’t state
or imply that all service personnel have been background-checked, and for
advertisements with disclaimers. HA could continue broadcasting eight of the
enjoined advertisements for a period of over four months, and nine of the
enjoined advertisements for a period of over seven months, “as long as a clear
and conspicuous visual disclaimer appears in each television and Internet
advertisement that states: ‘HomeAdvisor Background-Checks Business Owners But
Not Employees.’ ”
HA complained that
the direction not to “imply” that background checks were conducted on all
personnel was impermissibly vague and overbroad, so that it couldn’t tell the
difference “between advertisements that ‘state or imply that all service personnel’
are background-checked and those that merely mention the phrase ‘background
checks.’ ” Not so. The district court reviewed a lot of ads and modified
versions and approved some for a certain period of time with a disclaimer. The
injunction was “sufficiently definite to provide a standard for HomeAdvisor to
use in developing new advertisements, and for the court to ascertain any
alleged violations of the injunction.” The mere mention of background checks
wasn’t enjoined, but rather ads that refer to “background-checked pros,” or its
variants, such as background-checked or prescreened “ ‘home-improvement
professionals’ ” or “ ‘home-improvement pros,’ ” because these terms imply that
the person who comes to the consumers’ home has been background-checked.
Nor did the
preliminary injunction violate the First Amendment. Commercial speech that is
actually or inherently misleading can be banned outright, while potential
misleadingness requires the state to try correction by disclaimer (at least
initially). HA claimed that references to “ ‘background-checked pros,’ ” or “
‘prescreened’ pros” were “entirely truthful information about HomeAdvisor’s
business” because HomeAdvisor “maintains a network of approximately 200,000
service professional businesses that have been background-checked.”
Nope.
The enjoined advertisements and descriptions are inherently likely to
deceive because they exploit the ambiguity of the term “pro.” According to
HomeAdvisor, it offers a service that connects “consumers with providers of
home services such as plumbers, painters, [and] contractors,” but, when
HomeAdvisor uses the term “pros,” it means “service professional businesses,”
not the plumbers, painters, or contractors working for these businesses.
But a “professional”
“is commonly understood to be a person, not a business.” [citing dictionary] A
reasonable consumer “would likely understand ‘pros’ to mean the persons or
professionals coming to their home, not the businesses for whom they work.” HA
argued for the first time in its reply brief that even if the phrase was
misleading, it was nonactionable puffery.
This is a contradiction in terms, but the court declined to address the
new argument on the (un)merits.
The court noted that
other aspects of the ads made deception even more likely. Many of the TV ads
showed search results, which included images of individuals, not businesses. “Pros
You Can Trust” refers to pros “who” have passed background checks, not pros
“that” have done so. And a number of the ads implied that consumers can feel
more comfortable about the people who come into to their homes because of the
background checks. True, “Pros You Can Trust” was discontinued, but the trial
court took that into account in granting HA time to continue broadcasting
non-discontinued ads with disclaimers to give it time to make new ads/lessen
financial harm to HA.
HA argued that there
was no evidence that its ads caused actual harm. But that’s not required for a
finding of inherently deceptive commercial speech. On a de novo review of the
record, the court of appeals agreed that HA’s references to “background-checked
pros” or its variants were inherently likely to deceive reasonable consumers,
and nothing more was required for a preliminary injunction. [Nothing more
should be required for a permanent injunction, either!] When a government entity seeking the
statutorily authorized remedy of injunctive relief shows a reasonable probability
of success on the merits, “a rebuttable presumption arises that the potential
harm to the public outweighs the potential harm to the defendant.” The trial
court found that HA failed to rebut the presumption.
Nor was the order an
unconstitutional prior restraint on speech. “The special vice of a prior
restraint is that communication will be suppressed, either directly or by
inducing excessive caution in the speaker, before an adequate determination
that it is unprotected by the First Amendment.” But once specific speech is
properly ruled unprotected, there’s no problem with an injunction. When it
comes to commercial speech, “[t]he government may ban forms of communication
more likely to deceive the public than to inform it.” While an injunction may
not be “broader than necessary to provide relief to plaintiff while minimizing
the restriction of expression,” the injunction here was fine.
HA argued that the
safe harbor disclaimer was misleading and was unconstitutional compelled
speech. These arguments were moot. The safe harbor expired in January 2019,
over a month before the opening appeal brief was filed.
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