In re Evenflo Company, Inc., Marketing, Sales Practices & Prods. Liab. Litig., 2022 WL 17174950, -- F.4th ---, No. 22-1133 (1st Cir. Nov. 23, 2022)
Manufacturers lose an opportunity to create a circuit split
on whether overpaying for a product that generally has a defect, which defect
did not manifest for the class plaintiffs but plausibly reduced the value of
the product, provides standing for a false advertising monetary relief claim.
It does, because the harm is not the defect, but the loss of the benefit of the
bargain when the plaintiffs received a product worth less than represented to
them. (It does not, however, provide standing for declaratory or injunctive
relief.)
The district court dismissed the operative complaint in this
putative class action for lack of Article III standing. The complaint alleged
several misrepresentations about the safety and testing of its children’s Big
Kid car booster seat and that the plaintiffs bought the seat relying on those
misrepresentations. But for Evenflo’s misrepresentations, the plaintiffs allegedly
would not have purchased the seat, would have paid less for it, and/or would
have bought a safer alternative. The court of appeals reversed as to monetary
relief.
Evenflo allegedly misrepresented its Big Kid seat as safe
for children as small as thirty pounds, despite being aware “[a]s early as 1992
... that booster seats were not safe for children under 40 pounds.” Highway
safety and child safety experts allegedly kept sounding the alarm, and in 2012,
“Evenflo’s top booster seat engineer” delivered an internal presentation that
Evenflo should “modify[ ] the [Big Kid’s] weight rating to 40 [pounds]” in
order to “discourage early transitions to booster seats,” which place younger
children at an “increased risk of injury.” A senior marketing director allegedly
“vetoed” this and another weight recommendation.
Evenflo also allegedly misrepresented that the Big Kid had
been “side impact tested,” describing its tests as meeting or exceeding federal
standards and “simulat[ing] the government side impact tests conducted for
automobiles.” But federal side impact testing allegedly assesses the damage
done to crash test dummies after (1) crashing “a 3,015 pound moving barrier ...
at 38.5 miles per hour into a standing vehicle” and (2) pulling “a vehicle
angled at 75 degrees ... sideways at 20 miles per hour into a 25 cm diameter
pole at the driver’s seating location.” By contrast, Evenflo’s test was
allegedly “performed by placing a product on a bench (resembling a car seat),
moving that bench at 20 miles per hour, then suddenly decelerating it.” And Evenflo
considered a booster seat to have failed this test only if “(1) ... a
child-sized dummy escape[d] its restraint entirely, ... or (2) the booster seat
itself [broke] into pieces.” An Evenflo engineer allegedly “admitted under oath
that, when real children move in [ways displayed by crash test dummies in tests
considered successful by Evenflo], they are at risk for injurious head
contact.”
The district court reasoned that the plaintiffs had failed
to establish any economic injury sufficient to pursue monetary relief because
(1) the complaint did not allege that the seats failed to perform -- such that
the plaintiffs had necessarily received the benefit of the bargain in
purchasing them -- and (2) the plaintiffs had not plausibly shown that the
seats were worth less than what they had paid for them or estimated their true
value.
The complaint alleged only economic injury in the form of
overpayment. The court of appeals
rejected Evenflo’s “sweeping” argument that “where a plaintiff is not actually
injured by an allegedly unsafe product, she does not have standing to pursue a
claim for damages.” “This court has repeatedly recognized overpayment as a
cognizable form of Article III injury.” So have the other circuits in false
advertising cases (as opposed to product liability cases).
“Evenflo, supported by its amici, argues that this body of
precedent recognizing overpayment injuries is in tension with the Supreme
Court’s recent decisions in Spokeo v. Robins, 578 U.S. 330 (2016), and TransUnion.”
Those decisions require injury to be “real, and not abstract.” But they also “made
clear that monetary harms such as those alleged here fall firmly on the real,
concrete side of the divide. TransUnion in fact described ‘monetary
harms’ as ‘traditional tangible harms’ that ‘readily qualify as concrete
injuries under Article III,’ and contrasted such harms with more abstract --
although still concrete -- forms of injury, such as ‘reputational harms,
disclosure of private information, and intrusion upon seclusion.’” The court
here commented: “Nothing in TransUnion indicated that some monetary
harms are concrete while others are not; the Court there held that properly
pleaded monetary harms -- like those asserted by the plaintiffs here -- are
sufficiently concrete, as compared to other, nonmonetary forms of injury, which
may or may not be concrete.”
Did the complaint allege sufficient facts to plausibly
demonstrate that, as a result of Evenflo’s misrepresentations, the plaintiffs
spent more money than they otherwise would have? Yes. As to each plaintiff, the
complaint typically alleged that “[h]ad [the plaintiffs] known about the
defective nature of Evenflo’s Big Kid booster seat[ ], [they] would not have
purchased the seat, would have paid less for it, or instead would have
purchased one of many safer available alternatives.” Evenflo argued that the
plaintiffs’ proposed alternatives were implausible because plaintiffs plausibly
“forgo buying [any] car seat, given that the use of a car seat is required by
law in each state where the [p]laintiffs reside.” But the complaint alleged
that booster seats are meant to be used only when children outgrow other models
of car seat, some of which allegedly children up to 90 pounds, and that
Evenflo’s marketing the seat as appropriate for smaller children over thirty
pounds “presented the product as safe for use (and purchase) sooner than it
actually was, making it reasonable to infer that parents could have continued
using other models rather than choosing to buy a new seat.”
Evenflo also attacked the “would have paid less for the Big
Kid” option as offering no measurement for the decreased price. “But it is a
reasonable inference that, if Evenflo had not marketed the Big Kid as safe for
children as small as thirty pounds and as side impact tested, the product would
have commanded a lower price, allowing the plaintiffs to pay less for it.” That
was enough to survive a motion to dismiss on standing grounds “even without
quantification of the change in market value.” Citation of scientific studies
or marketing expert testimony was not required where the theory of harm was
plausible based on common sense.
What about buying a safer alternative seat? Evenflo pointed
out that the complaint does not allege that such alternatives would have been
cheaper -- and in fact alleges that the Big Kid was roughly $10 cheaper than
its chief competitor. “This argument has some force, but we conclude that, at
the pleading stage, it does not defeat the plaintiffs’ standing. Given that
purchasing a different seat is only one of the three alternative courses of
action described in the complaint and the possibility that a cheaper
alternative exists, the complaint, taken as a whole, plausibly supports the
plaintiffs’ argument that Evenflo’s misrepresentations caused them to overpay.”
Evenflo also argued that the plaintiffs must at least offer
“the formula” for measuring damages. “But at the pleading stage, to demonstrate
Article III standing, plaintiffs need not quantify or offer a formula for
quantifying their injury.”
As for injunctive relief: “The plaintiffs’ assertions about their
past behavior do not plausibly allege any likelihood of relying on Evenflo’s
advertising or purchasing Big Kids in the future, and so there is no impending
future injury that an injunction might redress. … [A] hypothetical future
injury to other unnamed ‘parents and grandparents’ does not give these
plaintiffs standing.” But that dismissal would be without prejudice, as
required for a dismissal on Article III standing grounds.
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