Kahn v. Walmart Inc., No. 23-1751 (7th Cir. Jul. 3, 2024)
Kahn alleged that Walmart routinely charged more at the checkout
than advertised at the shelf, small amounts individually that add up to hundreds
of millions of dollars a year. The district court found that a reasonable
consumer would not be deceived because the true charge was printed on their
receipt, which they could complain about if they cared. The court of appeals,
in classic Seventh Circuit style modulated by behavioral economics instead of
classical L&E, reverses, saying a lot of things about reasonable consumers
as well as the well-resourced businesses that will fleece them if they can get
away with it.
The complaint alleged that, “in 2012, California assessed a
$2 million fine against Walmart for violating a 2008 ruling requiring it to
resolve pricing errors at checkout. In November 2021, North Carolina fined two
Walmart stores after an investigation found repeated and excessive scanning
errors that caused overcharges on three to seven percent of items purchased
each month. In February 2022, five additional Walmart stores had to pay North
Carolina over $15,000 in fines for overcharging consumers due to price scanning
errors.”
In Kahn’s case, he bought fifteen items, and was allegedly
charged more than listed shelf price on six of them, for ten to fifteen percent
markups. The overcharge was $1.89, nearly seven percent of the pretax total of
his bill. “Small change for Kahn as an individual, no doubt, but keep in mind
the volume of Walmart’s business.” Kahn’s counsel investigated other stores in
Illinois, Florida, Indiana, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, and North Carolina
finding overcharges.
A key question: is the “reasonable” consumer empirical or
normative? You will not be surprised to hear that the Seventh Circuit embraces
an empirical view: “Reasonable consumer behavior is not a matter of pure
economic theory.... [W]hat matters is ‘how
consumers actually behave—how they perceive advertising and how they make
decisions.’” Consumers are not required to behave like “Adam Smith’s homo economicus,
a perfectly rational being who gathers and evaluates the optimal amount of
information about options in the marketplace to maximize utility preferences.”
This is because “human cognitive abilities are not perfect or infinite. We have
limited time, computational skills, and memories, and we rationally use mental
shortcuts to deal with those limits. The classical economic model often fails
to predict accurately how real humans will behave in real-life marketplaces.”
Furthermore, “[p]redictable tendencies in consumer behavior
mean that retail settings can be engineered to influence consumers in ways they
(meaning we) do not fully anticipate or appreciate.” But what about the free
market, you might ask? “The market itself usually cannot correct for these
problems. Instead, consumer protection regulations are often responses to
inefficiencies enabled by market manipulation.” Thus, courts applying the
reasonable consumer standard must focus on “how real consumers understand the
carefully crafted messages aimed at them.”
Grocery shoppers, in particular, are well-studied, providing
plenty of empirical fodder for remand. Especially on a motion to dismiss,
courts shouldn’t “overlook the realities of attempts to influence consumer
behavior.” Here, the nation’s largest retailer “allegedly stands to profit by
hundreds of millions each year from shelf pricing discrepancies.” It was
reasonable to assume that it was engaging in a lot of careful consumer research.
And “we have often stressed that consumers are likely to exhibit a low degree
of care when purchasing low-priced, everyday items.” Such a low degree of care “does
not make consumers unreasonable—it makes them human, and even economically rational
when search costs and transaction costs are included in the utility calculus.
But it also makes them vulnerable to exploitation by unfair and deceptive
practices.”
There was “nothing implausible” about allegations that
Walmart’s inaccurate shelf prices are likely to deceive a significant portion of
reasonable consumers. “It is neither ‘unreasonable’ nor ‘fanciful’ for
consumers to believe Walmart will sell them its merchandise at the prices
advertised on its shelves.” Indeed, Illinois’s consumer protection statutes assume
that consumers rely on advertised prices by specifically singling out “misleading
statements of fact concerning the … existence of … price reductions” as
deceptive acts. The advertised shelf prices weren’t alleged to have been
accompanied by any statements warning they might not be reliable or saying they
were provisional. “If shelf prices are not accurate, they are likely to mislead
reasonable consumers.” (In a footnote, the court noted that Walmart was wise
not to challenge materiality: “Price is obviously a material term of consumer
transactions.”)
The district court erred when it concluded that providing a
receipt after the transaction dispelled any deception created by Walmart’s
facially misleading shelf prices. It reasoned that “Kahn could, and indeed did,
use this receipt to compare the prices Walmart charged him with the advertised
shelf pricing. This comparison revealed the discrepancy and dispelled any potential
deception.”
But, first, providing information after the
transaction doesn’t show that the shelf prices wouldn’t have deceived a
reasonable consumer. And the district court’s rationale would require
unreasonable efforts by consumers to protect themselves. The receipt alone, of
course, doesn’t dispel deception. Instead, the consumer has to go back and compare
the advertised prices for every item. The court:
Who does that? For obvious reasons,
many reasonable consumers will not undertake such audits. Some consumers lack
smartphones to photograph the shelf prices as they shop, requiring them to
write down or remember dozens of distinct shelf prices. Others lack the time to
retrace their steps through the store, comparing their receipts against all the
shelf prices. Even if shoppers somehow retain records of each shelf price, at
checkout, many are trying to corral young children, others are skimming the
tabloid headlines displayed to entice them, and still others are lending a hand
to the baggers or pulling out their wallets. Shoppers can easily miss the
split-second display of a price or two at checkout. Even if consumers do notice
a price discrepancy on a point-of-sale display or on a receipt, they must then
raise the issue to the store’s attention to resolve it. It is reasonable to
infer that many consumers in that situation would be concerned about holding up
the six shoppers in line behind them, reluctant to trouble a busy store manager
over a few pennies per item, or unable to spare the time to track that manager
down.
Reasonable consumer behavior does
not require shoppers to audit their transactions and to overcome those
additional hurdles just to ensure that they receive merchandise at the advertised
shelf prices.
Consumer protection laws “do not expect or require real
consumers to undertake such measures over a few pennies per item. Nor, as
plaintiff plausibly alleges, does Walmart expect them to. That is precisely why
these alleged price discrepancies may be highly profitable on a large scale and
over the long run.” Plaintiffs “are entitled to present evidence on how
consumers actually understand these labels” and respond to Walmart’s
advertising. Walmart could, of course, attempt to prove that its shoppers have
photographic memories and plenty of time to scrutinize receipts.
In addition, Kahn adequately pled that, even where the
consumer discovers the discrepancy before completing a purchase, Walmart was
engaged in deceptive bait-and-switch pricing. These are injuries that consumers
“cannot reasonably avoid,” which come “in the form of higher prices and search
costs.”
For similar reasons, Kahn adequately alleged “unfairness”
under Illinois consumer protection law. This claim wasn’t necessarily based on
fraud, since inaccurate shelf pricing practices could “offend an established
public policy, and are immoral, unethical, oppressive, and unscrupulous,” in
ways “substantially injurious to consumers.” This was plausible because the
sunk costs plausibly leave consumers with little choice but to submit. And a
small harm to lots of people can be a substantial injury. Moreover, the FTC
reasons that the substantial injury to consumers “is not outweighed by benefits
to consumers or competition” because “[t]he practice of advertising prices that
are not the full price does not benefit consumers or competition.”
The district court also held that Kahn failed to allege sufficiently
that Walmart intended for him to rely on its inaccurate shelf prices. First, Illinois
consumer protection law “eliminated the requirement of scienter,” so that
“innocent misrepresentations are actionable as statutory fraud.” Kahn needed
only to allege that Walmart intended that he rely on its shelf prices, not that
it intended to deceive him. He did both. (Under Rule 9(b), scienter can be
alleged generally.)
Kahn alleged that “Walmart is well aware that it is
deceiving its consumers,” in part because Walmart stores have been fined for
this practice in multiple states. “There is nothing implausible about these
allegations that Walmart intends consumers to rely on shelf pricing. The contrary
proposition seems absurd. Walmart uses shelf pricing to inform consumers of its
prices so they can compare items and decide what to buy.” There were no
indications that there were disclaimers, which would in any case merely create
a fact issue of sufficiency.
Plus, affirmative intent to mislead was plausible. The
relevant factors: “Walmart’s size, the hundreds of millions of dollars in
profits allegedly available from the pricing discrepancies, and the company’s
heavy focus on sales from brick-and-mortar stores.” It was reasonable to infer
that Walmart, in particular, had access to consumer research and was “aware of
the obstacles that would deter real consumers from trying to hold it to its
advertised shelf prices.”
Of course, Walmart sells hundreds of thousands of products,
and some errors were inevitable. But error rates can be managed:
We assume that neither courts nor
regulators can insist on perfection in retail pricing. They can, however,
address how a retailer tries to prevent and remedy discrepancies like those
alleged here. Even if some low level of price discrepancies is unavoidable,
Walmart is not alleged to have undertaken any preventive or remedial measures
to mitigate overcharges, such as by implementing systemic controls.
That made deceptive intent plausible. (What if they try and
fail to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars a year? Who is the cheapest
cost avoider? What is the proper remedy?)
Walmart’s best argument was its reliance on Tudor v. Jewel
Food Stores, Inc., 288 Ill. App. 3d 207, 681 N.E.2d 6 (1997). Tudor alleged
that Jewel violated the consumer protection law because the prices scanned at
the cash register differed from the advertised or shelf prices. The state court
of appeals found a lack of deceptiveness/lack of intent on the pleadings, which
alleged that the store’s internal audits showed the scanned prices were
accurate 96% of the time. Also, the complaint pled that Jewel had a “policy
providing ‘[i]f the scanned price on any unmarked item is different from the
price on the shelf, you will get the item free.’” The “combination” of “the
high accuracy rate …, along with the issuance of a receipt and defendant’s
policy of providing a money-back guarantee …, indicates there was no deception
by defendant.” Nor was Jewel’s conduct “unfair,” since the provision of a
receipt and the money-back guarantee meant that “oppressiveness and lack of
meaningful choice necessary to establish unfairness” were lacking. These same
two factors also indicated that the “defendant did not intend that plaintiff
rely on an incorrectly scanned price.”
But Tudor didn’t control where here, the only overlapping
exculpatory allegation was that Walmart provided an accurate receipt. Of note,
the state of Illinois participated as amicus on Kahn’s side, and the court of
appeals predicted that the Illinois Supreme Court, if faced with the
allegations in this case, would also distinguish Tudor.
The complaint here didn’t allege a 96% accuracy rate (to be
clear, with millions of transactions a year, that’s still a lot of inaccurate
charges; it would probably be useful to know how many favored the store). Nor
did it allege a money-back policy that went beyond a mere refund and provided the
mislabeled item for free: “Offering consumers the full value of the item as a
bounty gives them an incentive to look for price discrepancies and shifts the
balance of incentives for the retailer closer to optimal deterrence.”
Kahn didn’t sufficiently plead a likelihood of future injury,
though, so the court’s remand would allow an opportunity to replead if possible
for injunctive relief (the only form available under one of the relevant
Illinois laws). “It may be possible for plaintiff to plead a likelihood of
future harm, particularly in light of the injuries to consumers routinely
caused by bait-and-switch pricing schemes …, such as the time and mental energy
reasonable consumers must expend to protect themselves from the alleged unfair
and deceptive practices.”
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