Petterson v. Circle K Stores, Inc., 2022 WL 17974463, No. 3:21-cv-00237-RBM-BGS (S.D. Cal. Nov. 23, 2022)
The court certifies a consumer class action for monetary
relief with some observations about the kind of evidence required for
certification. Petterson bought a lot of cigarettes at Circle K, expecting
discounts from their discount program, but they didn’t give him a discount on
cartons when he expected a discount based on buying multiple packs at once
(their position was apparently that the discount applied to multiple loose packs,
but not full cartons of 10 packs). Although the discounts varied, they regularly
offered a discount for buying two packs at once.
“The central issue in this case is whether Circle K’s
discount advertisements misled customers into believing that the multi-pack
discount applied to purchases of cartons.” Petterson brought claims under California’s
UCL and FAL and moved to certify a class of “All persons in California who
purchased a carton of cigarettes from a Circle K store in California and did
not receive an advertised multi-pack discount from December 4, 2016 to the
present.”
Two representative ads:
I’m going to skip the easy parts (e.g., numerosity). Variations in which ads class members saw/what Petterson remembered/that he occasionally got a clerk to give him the discount by opening up a carton did not defeat typicality. “Minor variations in the fact patterns underlying class members’ claims do not defeat typicality where the plaintiff has otherwise shown that he has suffered the same or similar injury as those he seeks to represent.”
Because the claim was based on the objective reasonable
consumer standard, both commonality and predominance were present. Variations
in the ads/discount programs were not big enough to defeat them, even though
some ads were sent only to customers who joined Circle K’s Tobacco Club program
and others weren’t. Likewise, it didn’t matter that ads displayed discounts in
different ways, for example: (i) a specific discount amount on the cigarettes
purchased; (ii) a generalized offer of savings while purchasing multiple items
(“Buy 2 packs and save”); and (iii) a specific per-pack price that a customer
would expect to pay. They also had different durations, different funding
sources (manufacturer discounts vs. Circle K discounts), and were occasionally
combined to determine the final customer price. But these variations were not
material to “the central issue of whether purchasers of cartons received the
multi-pack discount that was advertised. Circle K has produced numerous
advertisements that show commonality among Circle K’s discount programs:
multi-pack purchases receive discounted prices.”
Reliance: The named plaintiff has to show reliance at the
certification stage. Petterson did, even though he didn’t recall seeing certain
advertisements at issue. A plaintiff does not “need to demonstrate
individualized reliance on specific misrepresentations to satisfy the reliance
requirement.” “[W]here, as here, a plaintiff alleges exposure to a long-term
advertising campaign, the plaintiff is not required to plead with an
unrealistic degree of specificity that the plaintiff relied on particular
advertisements or statements.” Petterson testified to the general contents of
the ads he saw and their locations, which sufficed under these circumstances.
Circle K argued that he would have bought cigarettes there
regardless, because sometimes he did even without a discount. But he also
testified that “before purchasing an undiscounted carton at Circle K, he would
go to a nearby 7-Eleven to determine if that store offered a discount; if
neither store offered a discount, he would purchase the undiscounted carton at
Circle K.” This testimony established that he would change his behavior based on
the presence of a discount, which was enough for materiality. “California case
law is clear that reliance does not require that the allegedly misleading
statement be the ‘sole or even the predominant or decisive factor influencing
his conduct[,]’ rather the misrepresentation must have played a substantial
part in influencing his decision.”
What about materiality, and thus reliance, for the class?
“[A] presumption, or at least an inference, of reliance arises wherever there
is a showing that a misrepresentation was material.” Because “[q]uestions of
materiality and reliance are determined based upon the reasonable consumer
standards, not the subjective understandings of individual plaintiffs,” this
could be amenable to class treatment. The court agreed with Petterson that
materiality “need not be proven at class certification; instead, Plaintiff
needs to show only that a ‘common question of materiality and reliance’
exists.”
Circle K criticized plaintiff’s expert for failing to produce
any data regarding how consumers interpret the advertisements at issue, conduct
a consumer survey, or speak to Circle K customers about the ads. While some
courts have found a plaintiff’s motion for class certification to be deficient
where the plaintiff’s expert did not conduct a consumer survey, Amgen Inc. v.
Connecticut Retirement Plans & Trust Funds, 568 U.S. 455 (2013), “
instructed that Rule 23(b)(3) requires a showing that ‘questions common to the
class predominate, not that those questions will be answered, on the merits, in
favor of the class.’” Further, Amgen noted that when materiality is
judged on an objective standard, it is a common question for purposes of Rule
23(b)(3). That was the case here.
To generate common answers, plaintiffs can use consumer
surveys, expert testimony, Circle K’s Rule 30(b)(6) testimony, and Circle K’s
internal documents. Given that materiality is judged on an objective reasonable
consumer standard, “the issue is susceptible to generalized, class-wide proof.”
Damages: Petterson argued that he could easily calculate the
restitution damages he seeks by multiplying the number of cartons sold by the
discount amount offered. This was sufficient at the class certification stage.
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