Barclay v. Icon Health & Fitness, Inc., No. 19-cv-2970, 2022
WL 486999 (ECT/DTS) (D. Minn. Feb. 17, 2022)
NordicTrack allegedly can’t achieve or maintain the
continuous horsepower defendants represented the treadmills were capable of.
Because the Minnesota Uniform Deceptive Trade Practices Act provides only for injunctive relief, plaintiffs lacked Article III standing to bring claims—they weren’t going to interact with defendants again. However, plaintiffs did allege injury and damages: they paid a higher price in reliance on representations that the treadmill could achieve a particular continuous horsepower rating during normal use and that the treadmills’ capacity to achieve the continuous horsepower rating held benefits compared to less expensive treadmills.
The court rejected defendants’ argument that plaintiffs
failed to allege that their motors weren’t rated to the listed ratings, meaning
they were tested and achieved the represented ratings in a lab environment. But
that didn’t matter given plaintiffs’ pleading that the treadmills can’t achieve
the represented continuous horsepower rating in a typical residential or
similar setting where defendants allegedly knew the treadmills would be used. “Plaintiffs
do not—and need not—allege that each of them experienced some noticeable
impairment during use to plausibly plead this theory.”
Their Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act claim was dismissed for
failure to plead a sufficient written warranty. But they plausibly pled
state-law breach-of-warranty claims. They plausibly alleged, with examples,
lots of horsepower claims, and plausibly alleged that an ordinary person would
understand these representations to mean that a treadmill’s in-home continuous
horsepower matched the “CHP” value advertised. Not only did plaintiffs alleged
that they understood the representations that way, several retailers and
industry bloggers allegedly shared their understanding. For example, Dick’s
Sporting Goods and a “Treadmill Reviews” website explained that “CHP measures
how much power the motor maintains throughout the workout” and “shows that the
motor can maintain the power it is rated for without lagging or slowing down
under strain.” They also plausibly
alleged facts showing a breach of this warranty.
Defendants argued that they never “affirm[ed] that the
treadmills would ‘achieve’ the stated CHP, or any horsepower output, during
household use”; they “simply affirmed that a [certain] motor would be
incorporated” into their treadmills. Defendants argued that plaintiffs “tacitly
admit that, with sufficient electrical power, the motors do reach the stated
horsepower.” But even if defendants’ interpretations were reasonable, and other
sources shared defendants’ view, that didn’t make plaintiffs’ understandings
implausible. For example, a 2020 buying guide, after plaintiffs filed suit,
inserted a disclaimer that “CHP motor ratings refer to the motor power achieved
in a testing facility. You are not going to achieve this same amount of power
when using the treadmill in your home due to the smaller wattage limitations of
[a] residential home or apartment.” Without speculating about why this addition
would have been made, this didn’t eshow that an ordinary person couldn’t
plausibly have shared plaintiffs’ understanding at the time they saw the ads.
They needed to file an amended complaint specifying when they gave pre-suit
notice, though. And the choice-of-law clause in their contracts required them to
use Utah law, not Minnesota law, even though the arbitration provision in the
contract didn’t cover their claims by decision of the arbitrators.
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