Vizcarra v. Michaels Stores, Inc., --- F.Supp.3d ----, 2024 WL 64747, No. 23-cv-00468-PCP (N.D. Cal. Jan. 5, 2024)
Vizcarra alleged that Michaels deceptively advertises its
products as discounted when in fact they are always available for at least 20%
less than the purported “regular” price. The court dismissed her unjust enrichment
claim but otherwise allowed her consumer protection claims to proceed.
Allegations: On Michaels.com, Michaels’ entire inventory is
always available at a discount of at least 20% off of the “regular” listed
prices, and these discounts are prominent in stores and on its webpages. E.g.,
in January 2023, in search and product pages, the text “Save 20% with code
22MADEBYYOU” appeared in red text immediately below list prices. At least one
sitewide discount code offering at least 20% off of all merchandise is always
offered (screenshots covered Jan. 2021-Feb. 2023). Similar discounts are
offered in stores via coupons that are available both online and in stores. Thus,
Michaels’ products are always available—in store and online—for at least 20%
off the prices Michaels characterizes as “regular.” For Vizcarra’s in-store
purchase, her receipt indicated she saved $11.65.
California’s FAL specifies: “No price shall be advertised as
a former price of any advertised thing, unless the alleged former price was the
prevailing market price as above defined within three months next immediately
preceding the publication of the advertisement or unless the date when the
alleged former price did prevail is clearly, exactly and conspicuously stated
in the advertisement.”
Michaels argued that it “advertises current—not
former—prices,” so it wasn’t covered by the former price rule. But current prices
can be former prices—or, more to the point, consumers can receive the message
that they are former prices, and that the product was previously available only
at the non-discounted price. (And, since reference prices matter a lot to consumers,
there’s an obvious incentive to advertise prices no consumer ever actually had
to pay, which is where the restrictions on discount advertising have their genesis.)
The question wasn’t whether all discount codes or coupons were covered “former
price” advertising, but whether it’s possible to offer such a scheme in a way that
presents the higher current price as a former price, and whether Michaels did
so. By contrast, club memberships or “[c]oupons offered in exchange for
receiving something from a consumer, like sharing personal information or
repeat purchases, are clearly distinguishable.” The law covered situations
where “former” was implicitly conveyed to a reasonable consumer, rather than only
explicitly. As another court wrote, “the requirement that a consumer enter a
coupon code to obtain the advertised discount is merely a routine, procedural
step in the purchase transaction and is not material.”
Drawing all inferences in Vizcarra’s favor, the court found
it plausible that “most consumers, when confronted with two prices including a
lower price that can be obtained with negligible additional effort, will opt
for the lower price.” That would mean that the prevailing market price was the
lower, discounted price, whether the products were exclusive to Michaels or
otherwise.
The other consumer protection claims also survived because this
conduct was plausibly misleading to consumers, as did claims for intentional
misrepresentation and breach of warranty.
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