Clevenger v. Welch Foods Inc., 2022 WL 18228293, No.: SACV 20-01859-CJC (JDEx) (C.D. Cal. Dec. 28, 2022)
The court denied plaintiffs’ motion to exclude expert
testimony in this consumer protection case about nonfunctional slack fill under
the CLRA. Defendants’ consumer survey expert concluded that the slack fill was
not a material factor impacting consumer purchase interest or perception of the
price. Indeed, a “higher percentage of respondents were ‘definitely interested’
in purchasing” a smaller box of fruit snacks than the actual, larger box of
fruit snacks, which “shows that the purported headspace does not impact the
purchasing behavior of consumers and consumers are not misled into buying” the
larger box. Based on a second consumer survey, the expert opined that “the
first time that consumers purchased the fruit snacks boxes included in the
survey, these consumers felt that the box contained the amount of product
expected more than 84 percent of the time,” and that “only one respondent out
of 566 (or 0.2 percent) answered that the box contained less product than
expected and that the respondent did not purchase it again.”
Plaintiffs argued that the expert opinion was inadmissible
as a matter of law, because the relevant statutes declared slack fill to be
misleading, which also incorporated materiality. The court disagreed, because
the CLRA claim was governed by the reasonable consumer test. “Whether a
reasonable consumer is deceived cannot be determined unless and until all the
circumstances surrounding the packaging of the product are considered.”
Hinojos v. Kohl’s Corp., 718 F.3d 1098 (9th Cir.
2013), stated that “[t]he legislature’s decision to prohibit a particular
misleading advertising practice is evidence that the legislature has deemed
that the practice constitutes a ‘material’ misrepresentation, and courts must
defer to that determination.” But this was not a holding that a legislative
decision that a practice is misleading “must be treated as dispositive
regarding materiality and thus shut the door on any further evidence or
inquiry.” Hinojos also said in a footnote
that materiality was a fact issue rarely resolvable on a motion to dismiss. In
context, “the Ninth Circuit was not precluding the presentation of evidence at
trial on whether a particular misrepresentation was material to a reasonable
consumer. It was merely stating what was sufficient to satisfy the economic
injury pleading requirement for standing.”
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