Thursday, August 19, 2021

claims that "infant" formula misleadingly implies special formulation survives

Youngblood v. CVS Pharmacy, 2020 WL 8991698, No. 20-cv-06251-MCS-MRW (C.D. Cal. Oct. 15, 2020)

Youngblood bought an acetaminophen product for infants, believing based on its packaging that it was specifically formulated for infants and therefore different from CVS’s acetaminophen product for children. The word “infants,” photo of a mother and infant, and instruction to “Compare to the active ingredients in Infants’ Tylenol Oral Suspension” allegedly drove that belief. Comparing it to the Children’s product would allegedly reinforce that belief, because the children’s product displays an image of a parent holding what appears to be an older child and states that it is “For Ages 2 to 11.” However, they are both dosed at 160 mg/5 mL. The formulations are identical; the only difference is that the Infant Product comes with a syringe while the Children’s Product comes with a plastic cup. But the Infant product costs $6.49 per ounce of medicine and the Children’s Product costs $8.79 per eight ounces of medicine. Plaintiffs brought the usual California statutory claims.

Children's Version
Infant Version

Although the consumer protection statutes don’t authorize the court to set retail prices, that’s not what the complaint did. Plaintiffs didn’t contend that the price was the source of the deception, but relied on: (1) the name “Infants’ Pain + Fever”; (2) the instruction to “Compare to active ingredients in Infants’ Tylenol Oral Suspension”; and (3) the picture of what appears to be a mother holding a young child relative to the older child featured on the Children’s Product. Without any express disclosure that the medicine in the bottle is exactly the same, and provided at the exact same concentration, this could plausibly lead a significant portion of the general consuming public to concluded that the product was unique or specially formulated for children under two. Merely displaying the acetaminophen concentration on each package, or including a syringe in the box, didn’t foreclose all reasonable inferences that the medicine is specially made for infants. Even if the box had no literal untruths, a reasonable juror could nevertheless conclude that it is “has a capacity, likelihood or tendency to deceive or confuse the public.’ ”

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