Valiente v. Simpson Imports, Ltd., No. 23-cv-02214-AMO (N.D. Cal. Feb. 20, 2024)
According to the
complaint, San Marzano tomatoes “originate[] from the town of San Marzano sul
Sarno, near Naples, Italy.” San Marzano tomatoes “bear a special designation:
D.O.P. (Denominazione d’Origine Protetta, ‘Protected Designation of Origin’).” San
Marzano tomatoes grown in the United States do not have the D.O.P. designation
but are labeled “San Marzano style” or “San Marzano” without the D.O.P
designation. San Marzano tomatoes are thicker than Roma tomatoes with fewer
seeds and a stronger, sweeter, less acidic taste. They are thus “perfectly
suited for making sauces” and “are widely considered the best tomato in the
world for the task.” “[C]hefs and home cooks alike seek out canned San Marzano
tomatoes and are willing to pay for them.” Indeed, San Marzano tomatoes
“command double or triple the asking price of regular canned Roma tomatoes or
generic tomatoes.”
sample price chart showing SMT selling at San Marzano prices |
Simpson used to sell San Marzano tomatoes under a label similar to its current label.
Old label showing "San Marzano" on top of elongated, pointed tomatoes |
But now it sells a variety of Roma tomato products under the “San Merican Tomato” or “SMT” brand.
same image, now with SMT on the tomato |
On the label, embedded within the letters corresponding to Simpson’s brand is text: “San” for “S,” “erican” is nested within the letter “M,” and “omato” appears under “T.” The complaint alleges that the text is “so comically miniscule that it is almost impossible to see with the naked eye.” The label also features illustrations of a San Marzano tomato (longer and more pointed than a Roma tomato). The complaint alleged that, with inconsequential differences, all of Simpson’s tomato products, including boxed tomatoes, canned tomatoes, tomato sauces, and tomato pastes, “are all packaged with the same visually distinct and eye-catching label.”
Valiente brought the usual California claims.
She had standing as
to products she didn’t purchase that were substantially similar to those she
did, with uniform misrepresentations, as alleged here.
Nor did the FDCA
preempt Valiente’s claims. Although Simpson characterized Valiente’s claims as
imposing a disclosure requirement that the FDCA does not contain, i.e., a
requirement that Simpson specify the tomato varietal the consumer is purchasing,
Valiente’s claim was based on the additional content on the product label—the
illustration of a San Marzano tomato, the letters “SMT,” and the text “San
Merican tomato”—none of which federal regulation requires. However, this did
mean that Valiente couldn’t bring deception-by-omission (failure to use the
Roma label) claims.
Plausibility: yes, it
was plausible that reasonable consumers would be fooled. Maybe “the illustration is subject to
artistic interpretation” and the label makes clear that “SMT” stands for San
Merican tomato. But it was plausible that reasonable consumers would interpret
the illustration and the letters SMT as Valiente did, and miss the imbedded
“San Merican tomato” text. “The price of Simpson’s tomatoes further contributes
to the plausibility of a consumer’s expectation that Simpson’s tomatoes are San
Marzano tomatoes. A 28 ounce can of Simpson’s whole peeled tomatoes sells for
$5.99, the same price as a 28 ounce can of a D.O.P. product by another seller –
a price which incorporates a premium San Marzano tomatoes command.” (The court allowed
amendment which counsel represented would include more specifics, including
that if she had seen San Merican she would have interpreted it as “US-grown San
Marzano,” which additional allegations would also suffice for a fraud claim.) The
limited changes to the old label – adding “SMT” and illegible text stating “San
Merican Tomato” – “support a strong inference that Simpson intended to make as
few changes as possible to its product label to keep consumers under the
impression that its Roma tomato products were the same as the San Marzano
tomatoes it previously sold.”
Express warranty
claims also survived, but not claims for injunctive relief. Simpson further
argued that Valiente couldn’t pursue any equitable claims because she had an
adequate remedy at law. But at the pleading stage, it was enough to allege that
she “may lack an adequate remedy at law” if the amount of damages recoverable
is less than the price premium she paid for Simpson’s tomatoes. She also alleged
that “[r]estitution and/or injunctive relief may also be more certain, prompt,
and efficient than other legal remedies . . . .” The court accepted these
arguments at this stage (citing, inter alia, Murphy v. Olly Pub. Benefit
Corp., 651 F. Supp. 3d 1111, 1129 (N.D. Cal. 2023) (declining to dismiss the
request for equitable relief where the plaintiffs alleged that legal remedies
were not as certain as equitable remedies because, for example, a full refund
would require a showing that the product at issue had no market value but no
such showing was required for restitution).
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