Della v. Colgate-Palmolive Co., 2024 WL 457798, No. 23-cv-04086-JCS (N.D. Cal. Feb. 6, 2024)
Della’s consumer protection claims turn on allegedly false
labeling of toothpaste products as “recyclable” when, as alleged, recycling
facilities that actually accept the used tubes are basically unavailable.
Indeed, allegedly “there is not a single program that accepts toothpaste tubes
of any kind” in California or in the United States” “because of the processing
concerns that they pose.” Colgate argued that the tubes were made out of a type
of plastic that is widely accepted by recycling facilities and therefore, that
they are intrinsically capable of being recycled, which is also what a
reasonable consumer would expect. The court declined to dismiss the claims on
this ground.
The court distinguished Swartz v. Coca-Cola Co., 2022 WL
17881771 (N.D. Cal. Nov. 18, 2022), where reasonable consumers would not understand
“100% recyclable” to mean that no bottles would end up in landfills or
incinerators, which allegedly occurred due to a lack of recycling capacity and
a lack of demand for recycled plastic. That case did say that “a reasonable
consumer would understand that making an object recyclable is just the first
step in the process of converting waste into reusable material, and not a
guarantee that the process will be completed.” But the context was quite
different: the court there pointed to the FTC Green Guides allowing an
unqualified claim of recyclability may be made “if recycling facilities are
available to at least 60% ‘of consumers or communities where the item is sold.’
” Here, plaintiffs didn’t allege that Colgate’s claims were misleading because
consumers would understand them to “guarantee” that the tubes would actually be
recycled. Instead, they alleged that a reasonable consumer would not expect
that the tubes were not accepted for recycling by any existing recycling
program, and that they are intrinsically unsuited for recycling due to their
shape (indistinguishable from non-“recyclable” tubes) and the fact that they
can’t be fully emptied, thus contaminating a recycling system.
Colgate argued that this wasn’t its fault, but that’s not
the standard for misleadingness. Nor were Colgate’s “learn more” statements on
its packaging sufficient as disclaimers.
“[C]ourts are generally reluctant to charge a reasonable
consumer with the obligation of reviewing product websites or other written
product materials before purchasing the product.”
Although the court didn’t rely on the Green Guides in
assessing misleadingness, it disagreed with Colgate that they allowed its
representation. Under the Green Guides, “marketers can make unqualified
recyclable claims” only “[w]hen recycling facilities are available to a
substantial majority of consumers or communities where the item is sold.” They
add that “[i]f any component significantly limits the ability to recycle the
item, any recyclable claim would be deceptive. An item that is made from
recyclable material, but, because of its shape, size, or some other attribute,
is not accepted in recycling programs, should not be marketed as recyclable.”
California law allows the California Department of Resources
Recycling and Recovery to grant an exemption from the general standards that
govern what is considered “recyclable” under state law where materials are “trending
toward” meeting the requirements of recycling availability “through either
statewide recycling programs or alternative programs, such as take-back
systems, and for which the continued increase in the collection, sorting, and
viable responsible end market development the department determines will be
disrupted by a loss of a recyclable designation.” But Colgate hasn’t received
such an exemption.
Finally, plaintiffs had standing to seek injunctive relief
because they wanted to buy recyclable toothpaste tubes.
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