Vitamins Online, Inc. v. Heartwise, Inc., --- F.4th ----, 2023 WL 4189604, Nos. 20-4126, 21-4152 (10th Cir. Jun. 27, 2023)
Proceedings below most
recently blogged here.
Vitamins Online sued Heartwise under the Lanham Act and Utah’s
Unfair Competition Law for false advertising about the ingredients of its
competitive nutritional supplements and manipulating those products’ Amazon
reviews. The district court ruled for Vitamins Online at a bench trial and
ordered disgorgement of NatureWise’s profits for 2012 and 2013. The court also
awarded Vitamins Online attorneys fees and costs.
Both parties appealed and the Tenth Circuit favored Vitamins
Online, remanding for further consideration of punitive damages and an injunction—and,
more broadly, approving a presumption of injury in these specific circumstances,
with discussion of using antitrust principles (ugh) to determine whether a
presumption is appropriate.
The supplements here involve garcinia cambogia and green
coffee extract, which both purportedly help with weight loss.
Vitamins Online purportedly offered unique (at least during
relevant time periods) ingredients that were clinically proven “to help support/assist
with weight loss” unlike other versions of the same ingredients. For example,
by the middle of 2013, Vitamins Online was the only seller of garcinia cambogia
with “SuperCitrimax” on Amazon, and Dr. Oz’s 2013 show on garcinia cambogia
featured the chief researcher for SuperCitrimax, leading Dr. Oz to urge his
viewers to buy only that type. After this show, Vitamins Online’s sales
increased substantially. Dr. Oz had similar effects on Vitamins Online’s green
coffee.
NatureWise’s products advertised that they met the same Dr.
Oz-endorsed requirements. To cut a long story short, they often didn’t. E.g.: “Although
NatureWise’s garcinia cambogia did not contain SuperCitrimax, NatureWise’s
founder specifically wanted to advertise SuperCitrimax because Vitamins Online
was selling it, and thus NatureWise referenced SuperCitrimax on its Amazon
product page and included the SuperCitrimax logo on the garcinia cambogia
label.”
Both parties relied on Amazon for sales.
NatureWise asked its employees—who
complied—to up-vote good reviews for its products and down-vote its products’
bad reviews (known as “block voting”), thereby affecting which reviews appeared
at the top of the products’ pages. This was a violation of Amazon’s policies,
and so NatureWise’s management did not want Amazon to learn of this practice.
In addition, NatureWise offered free products to customers in exchange for a
review. This also violated Amazon’s policies.
NatureWise’s entry into the market knocked Vitamins Online
from its #1 seller spot, which has competitive advantages. During 2012-2013,
Naturewise made over $9.5 million in profit from the accused products, which
the trial court ordered disgorged. That court also awarded fees for various
discovery improprieties, which the court of appeals upheld.
Falsity: A fact question reviewed for clear error; there was
none, either on the ingredient claims or the Amazon reviewbombing claims.
Of most interest: The district court didn’t clearly err in
finding that block voting on the helpfulness of reviews and the offering of
free products in exchange for reviews were misrepresentations. Block voting: the
district court found that the number of “helpful” votes was artificially
inflated and therefore literally false. NatureWise argued that nothing in the reviews
themselves was false. “[T]he issue is not the falsity of the reviews themselves
but rather the misleading impression ‘that many unbiased consumers find
positive reviews to be helpful and negative reviews to be unhelpful.’” An
expert explained that reviews “have a very significant impact on the purchase
decision process” when consumers believe that the reviews are “objective and
genuine.” Thus, it was not clearly erroneous for the district court to find
that NatureWise’s block voting misled customers, “given that customers were
likely under the misimpression that it was unbiased consumers—rather than
NatureWise’s employees—who found good reviews of NatureWise products to be
helpful and bad reviews unhelpful.” The court also noted the district court’s
additional finding that NatureWise’s management was worried that customers
would find out about the block voting. “This fact indicates that NatureWise
believed customers were being misled about the helpfulness ratings.”
Free products: The district court found that NatureWise made
literally false representations because it represented that it did not offer
free products in exchange for reviews—even though it did. But, NatureWise
responded, the free products were not contingent on the content of the reviews,
and that the act of giving a free product did not render the reviews themselves
false. Again, “NatureWise’s actions misled consumers about the number of
reviews from unbiased customers and the true ratio of putative unbiased
positive to negative reviews.” Vitamins Online’s expert concluded that the act
of offering a product in exchange for a review is likely to skew the positive
results of the review.
The district court gave Vitamins Online a rebuttable
presumption of injury “because the
markets at issue were essentially two seller markets, so it could be presumed
that sales wrongfully gained by NatureWise were sales lost by Vitamins Online.”
This was correct.
A presumption of injury began in the Second Circuit for
comparative advertising. Even without a direct comparative statement, if the ad
targets an “obvious competitor,” that can also qualify for a presumption, and
when there’s an essentially two-party market, the ad will always target an
obvious competitor. A “strict two-player market is no longer inflexibility
required. Rather, the market simply must be ‘sparsely populated.’”
Thus, the rule: “once a plaintiff has proven that the
defendant has falsely and materially inflated the value of its product (or
deflated the value of the plaintiff’s product), and that the plaintiff and
defendant are the only two significant participants in a market or submarket,
courts may presume that the defendant has caused the plaintiff to suffer an
injury.” The presence of “a few other insignificant market participants” doesn’t
change anything “so long as the plaintiff and defendant are the only
significant actors in the market, since the defendant will still presumably
receive most of the diverted sales.”
Caveats: even in essentially a two-player market, the presumption
is a presumption that injury occurred, not about its degree. “The sparse
competitor market can support a finding of causation, but damages, if sought,
will typically require some further evidence or analysis.” The sparse
competitor market can support a finding of causation, but damages, if sought,
will typically require some further evidence or analysis. And the presumption
is rebuttable.
Back to the presumption: “Whether the presumption of injury
is applicable therefore turns primarily on the scope and occupancy of the
market. To make these determinations, our antitrust caselaw is instructive.”
[Cue antitrust lawyers talking about the difficulties of market definition in
antitrust! FWIW, I’m giving you essentially all of the market definition done by
the court; you can contrast that to what a market definition analysis by an antitrust
economic expert looks like and consider how “instructive” that really is.]
Product market boundaries are defined by cross-elasticity of demand; high
cross-elasticity means products are substitutes and low means they aren’t. Submarkets
“may be determined by examining such practical indicia as industry or public
recognition of the submarket as a separate economic entity, the product’s
peculiar characteristics and uses, unique production facilities, distinct
customers, distinct prices, sensitivity to price changes, and specialized
vendors.”
Market definition is a question of fact, and it was not
clearly erroneous to find the market sparsely populated. There was evidence “that
the parties were operating in a two-player market and that the existence of
other competitors were de minimis. That is enough to render the presumption of
injury applicable.” But … what about alternatives? Is the market all green
coffee, all green coffee sold on Amazon, all weight loss supplements, something
else? In a footnote: “We are not adopting our entire antitrust corpus as the
relevant standard to use in defining the market. … But the antitrust analogue is
a roughly useful template from which to start the analysis.”
NatureWise failed to rebut the presumption. It argued that
there could be no causation without correlation, but the record showed that
Vitamins Online’s sales dropped at roughly the same rate as NatureWise’s sales
rose for at least specific quarters, which was enough. Nor was Vitamins Online
required to prove a nexus between the false advertising and the lost sales. “Once
Vitamins Online made the requisite showing that the markets in question were
composed of just two significant market players, then the district court was
entitled to presume that NatureWise caused an injury.” [I assume materiality is
in there somewhere.]
NatureWise also argued that there were intervening factors
causing Vitamins Online to lose sales, but they didn’t show clear error. (1) Dr
Oz’s shows allegedly caused a flood of competitors to enter the market—but that
was answered by the trial court’s “essentially two-party market” finding. Further, “this alleged flood of competitors
would presumably have resulted in sales losses for NatureWise as well—but
NatureWise’s sales increased when Vitamins Online’s sales decreased.” (2)
Vitamins Online’s products were “far more expensive” than competitors’. But
expert evidence contradicted this. (3) Vitamins Online’s products had an
average rating of 2.9 out of five stars, which would cause poor sales. “But
most of Vitamins Online’s products had a similar average rating both when its
sales rose before NatureWise entered the markets and when they fell after NatureWise
entered the market and employed in deceptive sales practices.”
Disgorgement was not an abuse of discretion, given the facts
above. But the district court was not required to award disgorgement for 2014
and after. It’s not error to limit profits to a period in which the plaintiff
can show actual damages, considering that as part of the equitable balancing. The
court rejected Vitamins Online’s argument that, under the statute, it had only
to “prove defendant’s sales,” and the burden was on NatureWise to prove which
portion of the sales are not attributable to the false advertising. But §
1117(a) still requires a plaintiff to “show some connection between the
identified ‘sales’ and the alleged infringement.” “Section 1117(a) does not
presumptively entitle Vitamins Online to all NatureWise’s sales proceeds no
matter how temporally disconnected from the false advertising injury.”
The district court denied an injunction on the basis that
Vitamins Online was adequately compensated by a disgorgement of profits, and
because it found that it would be against the public interest to force
NatureWise to remove all its product reviews from Amazon. But it should have
considered enjoining future review manipulation, including block voting and
free products.
The district court also needed to consider punitive damages
under the UCL. Enhanced damages aren’t ok under the Lanham Act when the
plaintiff was already “adequately compensated,” but under Utah law, only one of
the seven relevant factors for punitive damages considers the actual damages
award.
No comments:
Post a Comment