CareDx, Inc. v. Natera, Inc., No. 19-662-CFC, 2023 WL 4561059 (D. Del. Jul. 17, 2023)
Another entry in the “courts treat Lanham Act false
advertising very differently than Lanham Act trademark infringement, despite
identical damages provisions” line. Natera made superiority claims for its
Prospera. CareDx
sued Natera for false advertising. In a trial held last year, the jury
found that CareDx proved by a preponderance of the evidence at trial that: (a)
nine of the ten alleged false advertisements were false; (b) Natera
intentionally and willfully engaged in false advertising; (c) Natera was liable
for false advertising under the Delaware Deceptive Trade Practices Act; (d)
Natera was liable for unfair competition; and (e) Natera intentionally or
recklessly engaged in unfair competition. It also found that CareDx was
entitled to $21.2 million in actual damages “attributable to Natera’s false
advertising and/or unfair competition,” and that CareDx was entitled to $23.7
million in punitive damages “for Natera’s unfair competition.” The court
rejected the damages award.
Actual deception—reliance on the falsity—must be proven to
establish damages for a Lanham Act violation, even if based on an unambiguous
and literally false advertisement. (The missing step is treating state and
federal claims the same here, which presumably everyone already agreed to.)
The jury was instructed that:
to recover damages under the Lanham
Act, the plaintiff must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that, one, the
defendant’s false advertising actually deceived a portion of the purchasing
public in that customers relied on the false advertising in making a purchasing
decision. There’s no presumption here for the damages question. The burden
rests on the plaintiff to prove that by a preponderance of the evidence.
All right. And then the second
thing that the plaintiff must prove by a preponderance of the evidence is that,
as a result of the false advertising, the plaintiff sustained injury. If you
find that CareDx proved these things, then you consider what amount of money to
award to CareDx as damages.
But, the court concluded, there was no evidence at trial that
any person was deceived by or relied on any of the nine advertisements found by
the jury to be false. CareDx’s evidence “does not establish directly or even
circumstantially that a person was in fact deceived by or relied on Natera’s
advertisements.” Specifically, Natera internally characterized a PowerPoint
slide that contained at least one of the false advertisements as “the money
slide.” “But that testimony is not probative of actual customer behavior.”
Nor did significant sales growth linked to the marketing
campaign at issue.
Natera’s marketing plans and its training of marketing
personnel were also insufficient. “Proof of what Natera intended to accomplish
or thought it could achieve with its marketing plans and training efforts in no
way establishes that those plans and efforts succeeded.”
Compare the treatment of intent/expectation on the trademark
side: It is basically inconceivable that a court would reason this way in a
trademark damages case, despite the same statutory language for both.
The court also found that the following testimony didn’t
show reliance:
Counsel: And did this concern you,
that they were marketing that their specificity was better in the Sigdel study
than in the Bloom study?
Witness: You [counsel] kind of
mentioned how many phone calls I got from the University of Pennsylvania, from
Cleveland Clinic, from all around the country about their claiming superiority
based on what, they have a better assay. So this caused a lot of confusion
internally and externally with our customers.
Another witness:
Counsel: So does it matter whether
the other party is claiming superiority or not?
A. Absolutely.
… You know, these two publications
are ones that are not apples to apples, and they’re going around as if they are
and confusing clinicians, confusing patients.
“No rational juror could conclude from this vague,
conclusory, and hearsay-riddled testimony that customers were deceived by or
relied on false advertisements published by Natera.” In a trademark case, it’s
much less likely that this would be considered hearsay, but instead reporting mental
state.
Still, “in the Third Circuit, evidence of an intent to
mislead does not warrant a presumption of actual deception.” Judgment as a
matter of law on Lanham Act damages for Natera. Thus, CareDx also failed to
establish the causation and injury required to sustain a damages award arising
from its state law claims (and this also doomed the entire state unfair competition
claim).
However, there was sufficient evidence of literal falsity. For
example, the jury found literally false Natera’s claim that Prospera is “[m]ore
sensitive and specific than current assessment tools across all types of
rejection.” But Natera’s designated corporate representative admitted at trial
that two studies showed that Prospera’s specificity was lower than AlloSure’s
specificity and that AlloSure was a “current assessment tool[,]” as that phrase
is used in the advertisement. Natera argued that the claim was ambiguous and
thus not literally false because the phrase “sensitive and specific”
“reasonably refers to ‘AUC’—a measure familiar to physicians that combines both
sensitivity and specificity.” But ambiguity is a fact question for the jury.
The DTPA doesn’t require actual confusion, so there was
still liability.
If the judgment was later vacated or reversed, a new trial
would be required.
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