Sihler v. Fulfillment Lab, Inc, No. 20cv1528-LL-DDL, 2023 WL 4335735 (S.D. Cal. Jun. 23, 2023)
Common sense is a big part of advertising law, as implemented
by the reasonable consumer. It can be hard to distinguish one case from another
in its formal characteristics. Here, the view of a reasonable consumer is
established by empirical evidence of deceptions and complaints, the court says—though
is it really making a normative judgment?
Defendants allegedly use fake celebrity and magazine
endorsements, as well as misrepresentations about price and limited
availability, to induce consumers into buying “keto” weight-loss pills. As
described:
Consumers click on ads that appear
to be news articles with false celebrity endorsements of the Keto Products.
This ad takes them to a landing page for the product with more
misrepresentations. When they click on the purchase button, they are presented
with several purchase offers including “Buy 3 Bottles, Get 2 Free.” Consumers
are warned that supplies are limited or that the special offer will expire soon.
These landing pages are allegedly inaccessible to anyone who does not view the
advertisements or are deleted after a few weeks or months to avoid detection.
After consumers complete their purchase, they are allegedly overcharged for the
full price of all five bottles of product instead of the discounted “Buy 3
Bottles, Get 2 Free.” When consumers dispute the charge with their bank or
credit card company, Defendants allegedly present investigators with a “false
front” website for the Keto Products that includes the actual purchase prices
of the different options, no false advertising, and an easy-to-find “terms and
conditions” hyperlink. Defendants allegedly use the false front websites to
deceive the bank and credit card companies into believing that consumers
purchased Keto Products from those websites rather than the landing pages.
Plaintiffs brought both California statutory claims and RICO
claims; the court certified a nationwide RICO class and a California subclass.
If you want a sense of how this is going to go, defendants
contested numerosity because there was only shipping data, not data on how many
different consumers bought and used products. With tens of thousands of
shipments, and sales of about $93 million in two and a half years, the court
found numerosity. (They also argued that there was no typicality because a
named plaintiff described viewing a website promoting “Buy 3 bottles, Get 2
free” but the website examples submitted instead promote “Buy 3, Get 2 Free.”
The court disagreed.)
Commonality of deception on a classwide basis: Under California law, no individualized proof
of deception, reliance, or injury is required if the conduct would deceive a
reasonable, ordinary consumer in the target population. Defendants argued that
there was no evidence of deception of reasonable consumers other than named
plaintiffs’ own declarations, but the court disagreed:
Plaintiffs provided examples of
webpages with the same allegedly false and misleading endorsements and pricing
information similar to what they viewed and relied on. They also submitted instructions for Keto
Products call center employees that describe three standard buying packages,
which match the package options and unit prices on the webpages that Plaintiffs
viewed and in the examples that they provided. The
only other buying packages described in the instructions are for unadvertised
special promotional packages. The call center instructions also describe
typical calls, which include complaints of being overcharged in the same manner
that Plaintiffs describe: that they believed they would be charged the listed
price for two or three bottles and receive one or two bottles free, but were
instead charged the listed price for all bottles received.
Along with a witness who testified to the lack of change in
ads over time, plaintiffs showed that they and absent class members viewed the
same or substantially similar endorsements and pricing information.
Would this be likely to mislead a reasonable consumer?
The three package options are
advertised as follows: (1) text reads “Buy 3 Get 2 Free!” followed by
“$39.74/bottle” with a depiction of a group of three bottles next to a group of
two bottles with a plus sign between them; (2) text reads “Buy 2 Get 1 Free!”
followed by “$49.97/bottle” with a depiction of a group of two bottles next to
one bottle with a plus sign between them, and (3) text reads “Buy 1 Bottle”
followed by “$69.99/bottle.”
Are those additional bottles "free"? |
Defendant argued that a reasonable consumer would understand that they’d be charged $39.74 for each of 5 bottles if they bought five. It’s obvious to an ordinary English speaker that you wouldn’t offer that deal that way (you’d say “buy 5 at $39.74 each!” etc.) if you wanted it understood. The FTC’s guides on the use of “Free” would also count against this, if considered.
The court found the same declarations, webpage examples, and
call center scripts to be sufficient evidence that a reasonable consumer is
likely to be misled. (E.g., a standard script for "I was overcharged" that begins when a caller says words to the effect of "I thought it was $39.74 x 3 bottles which would be $119.22.") Here, the “ambiguity” in the pricing information supported
misleadingness—compare the treatment of “ambiguity” in cases that reject
consumer claims. Would this work if there were fine print disclosures “resolving”
the ambiguity? My suspicion is that it wouldn’t—and shouldn’t—because a
substantial number of reasonable consumers would have no reason to think that “free”
was ambiguous. But how, otherwise, are we to tell what counts as “correctable
ambiguous” and “misleadingly ambiguous”? As the court points out, “even a
perfectly true statement couched in such a manner that it is likely to mislead
or deceive the consumer, such as by failure to disclose other relevant
information, is actionable under [the FAL].” I tend to think the “correctable
ambiguity, thus plaintiffs lose” cases downplay misleadingness without a good
theory.
And since misleadingness is an objective test, it’s capable
of classwide resolution. The rest (including predominance) follows, including certification
on the RICO claims of all things.
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