Ciccio v. SmileDirectClub, LLC, 2024 WL 559235, No. 3:19-cv-00845 (M.D. Tenn. Feb. 12, 2024)
The court denied
certification to a proposed class of dentists/orthodontists over SDC’s
allegedly false advertising for its plastic aligners/teledentistry services,
based on difficulties identifying harm/causation.
Under Lexmark,
“a plaintiff suing under [the false advertising provision of the Lanham Act]
ordinarily must show economic or reputational injury flowing directly from the
deception wrought by the defendant’s advertising,” which is usually
accomplished by showing that the defendant’s “deception of consumers cause[d]
them to withhold trade from the plaintiff.” “Each individual member of the
putative class, therefore, would need to establish an actual effect on
consumers resulting in injury—not to the broad community of dentists and
orthodontists—but specifically to him/her and his/her practice.” This they
could not do.
“Consumer
motivations are complex, and a court cannot simply ‘assume[ ] ... that every
[purchase] during the relevant time period was the result of [the defendant’s]
allegedly false statements.’” The consumers here were many, “with different
needs and preferences.” Even if falsity/misleadingness of the ads was a common
issue, that wasn’t enough. “[T]he question of whether, and to what extent, any
given plaintiff was actually injured by one or more of the statements will
depend on plaintiff-specific contextual factors. Drawing a coherent, factually
supported line from a single misleading statement in a company’s advertisement
to an actual economic injury by a competitor is inherently difficult to do,
and, insofar as it would be possible at all for the kinds of statements at
issue in this case, it would be particularly difficult to do on a class-wide
basis.” Thus, causation/harm would predominate.
A presumption of
harm from false comparative advertising wouldn’t help, because this wasn’t a
case in which “the plaintiff’s product was specifically targeted.” And anyway,
a presumption would just help established “minimally sufficient injury—not the extent
of the injury or how it was distributed among class members.” Even accepting
plaintiffs’ expert opinions on damages and even assuming disgorgement as a
remedy, there’d be no way to figure out how harm was distributed. The court
accepted criticisms of one survey, including, interestingly, that it didn’t
give respondents the option of saying that they’d stop pursuing
teeth-straightening treatment altogether, even though many SDC customers might
have done just that if SDC weren’t an option.
Nor did a damage
report adjusting for “[p]otential differences in the prices for” the relevant
services “in different parts of the country and in urban versus rural areas” suffice
because individual dental and orthodontic practices “are likely to differ in
other ways that would be just as relevant—if not more relevant—to whether and
to what extent any given practice was likely to be affected by SmileDirect’s
allegedly improper marketing. For example, some practices may serve a wealthier
patient population than others in the same geographic area, and one cannot
assume that SmileDirect’s pitch—which focused significantly on costs—would
affect each practice’s potential patients in the same way. Similarly, different
patient populations might have different media diets, resulting in different
levels of exposure to the challenged SmileDirect statements.”
Although absolute
precision isn’t required, there’s “a point at which approximation eclipses the
truth so fully that the numbers produced cannot serve the purpose they were
intended to serve.” Lost profits would also be impossible to calculate
classwide because profit margins can vary so much.
Nor was an
injunction-only class appropriate when money damages are so central to the
case.
No comments:
Post a Comment