Friday, August 20, 2021

Advocacy organization lacked standing to litigate over foie gras claims

Voters for Animal Rights v. D’artagnan, Inc., 2021 WL 1138017, No. 19-CV-6158 (MKB) (E.D.N.Y. Mar. 25, 2021)

Plaintiff, a nonprofit dedicated to advancing the interests of citizens who support animal protection, alleged that defendants violated sections 349 and 350 of the NYGBL by deceptively marketing their foie gras products as originating from humanely treated ducks, which injured it by “(1) setting back its organizational mission to reduce demand for foie gras and obtain the passage of laws banning its sale, and (2) requiring it to spend money and resources to counter Defendants’ misleading messages.” The court dismissed the complaint; these injuries were not cognizable and indirect.

Plaintiff maintained that its efforts had been harmed because “[r]esearch commissioned by the foie gras industry specifically shows that consumers who support a ban on foie gras production may change their views, to oppose such legislation, once they are exposed to misleading pro-industry messaging.”

The NY Court of Appeals has denied recovery for a plaintiff’s “derivative injuries,” that is, injuries that arise solely as a result of injuries sustained by another party. This was the case here; plaintiff did not suffer diversion of trade, which is “direct” injury by reason of deceived consumers. [This is, as the Lexmark court recognized, playing with the concept of directness; proximate cause really does better as an explanation because it’s more honest about being a legal judgment and not some ontological step-counting exercise.]

Plaintiff argued that it was directly injured when defendants’ misleading ads decreased support for its mission, analogous to lost sales, and that it was injured by being forced to expend additional resources to counteract the effects of the advertising, as in opioid litigation, where government entities have been held to have suffered relevant injury based on the costs of addiction/overdose to their law enforcement/healthcare resources.

The court disagreed. The NY Court of Appeals has held that an insurer could not sue a tobacco company that “misrepresented the dangers of smoking and engaged in a campaign to encourage consumers to smoke” even though the plaintiff insurer was required to bear the increased medical costs that resulted, because the plaintiff insurer’s claims were “too remote” and derivative of consumers’ injuries. The Court of Appeals found no legislative history in support of the insurer’s theory, and it “warned against ‘the potential for a tidal wave of litigation against businesses that was not intended by the [l]egislature.’ ” So too with later claims by the State that defendants had misrepresented internet purchases of cigarettes as tax-free and New York consumers had bought them, depriving the state of tax revenue.

I have to admit, if the Court of Appeals is serious that “[a]n injury is indirect or derivative when the loss arises solely as a result of injuries sustained by another party,” then I don’t see how any competitor can logically sue under these statutes, but I have no doubt that the magic word “goodwill” will bring different results in practice. (Even disparagement only occurs when a wrong has been done to the consumer—deceiving them about something; the harm to the plaintiff’s goodwill is the changed mental state of the consumer.) Indeed, the court distinguishes other cases as involving “direct harms to a business,” e.g., via allegedly misleading claims to consumers that the defendants provided independent/unbiased mattress reviews. What makes that “direct”? Well, deceived consumers withheld trade from plaintiffs. [That sounds … indirect.] But here, defendants weren’t targeting the plaintiff directly, but merely affecting public opinion, “which in turn affects how Plaintiff allocates resources to fulfill its organizational mission.” The legislative history supported the court’s holding because it “suggest[ed] a balance between allowing individual plaintiffs to seek relief while limiting the potential for mass litigation.” [The legislature was dubious about class actions, which doesn’t seem like the same thing as here and also is trumped by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, if I recall correctly.]

Plaintiff’s allegedly unique situation—with empirical research establishing the harm to its mission—didn’t change things, any more than the state’s special position with respect to cigarette taxes did for it.

 

1 comment:

Tiltmom said...

Please tell me the filings include a "What am I, chopped liver?" joke...