Whiteside v. Kimberly Clark Corp., No. 23-55581, 2024 WL 3435308, -- F.4th --- (9th Cir. Jul. 17, 2024)
Whiteside alleged that KC’s “plant-based” baby wipes were
misleadingly advertised; the court of appeals revived some claims that the
district court had dismissed for failure to sufficiently plead misleadingness. The
same stresses that have caused courts to occasionally modify the (nontextually-based)
Lanham Act distinction between “explicitly false” and “misleading” here show up
with competing interpretations of what an “unambiguous” front-of-package claim
means. Just as the Lanham Act’s text does not make the distinctions courts have
adopted, consumer protection laws don’t use “ambiguous” in their text either.
In practice, “unambiguous” tends to mean “I think reasonable consumers could be
fooled by this.” That might be as good a rule as we can practically get unless
we want to restore caveat emptor, but it would be more useful for courts to write
in terms of “reasonable consumers could think they had all the information they
needed from the front of the package” than of “ambiguity.” The court here takes
useful steps in that direction.
Whiteside alleged that the words “plant-based wipes” (or
“plant-based ingredients”) and “natural care®” on the front label, together
with the nature-themed imagery displayed on the packaging, suggest that
Defendant’s baby wipes contain only “water, natural ingredients, and ingredients
that come from plants and that are not subject to chemical modification or
processing.” But they also contain synthetic ingredients that do not come from
plants and are subject to chemical modification or processing.
Examples of the packaging:
The district court distinguished (1) labels where an
asterisk was placed after “plant-based wipes*” and a corresponding qualifying
statement (“*70%+ by weight”) was present elsewhere on the front label (the
“Asterisked Products”); and (2) labels on which no asterisk or qualifying statement
appeared on the front label. For both, directly preceding the ingredients list
is a statement reading: “NATURAL AND SYNTHETIC INGREDIENTS.” Back label images:
closeup of ingredients list |
After making the distinction, though, the court found that
both sets of labels were ambiguous and therefore it was unreasonable to be
fooled instead of consulting the back label. The district court reasoned that when a
product’s front label is not “unmistakably clear about the facet for which she
seeks more information,” a reasonable consumer is expected to look to other
features of the packaging, such as the fine print on the back label. Anyway,
the term “plant-based” “plainly means mostly, not necessarily all, derived from
plants,” making the Unasterisked Products not misleading as a matter of law,
even without reference to the back label.
The court of appeals reversed as to the unasterisked
products. The Ninth Circuit has long held that reasonable consumers aren’t “expected
to look beyond misleading representations on the front of the box to discover
the truth from the ingredient list in small print on the side of the box.” Thus,
the rule is that, “if a product’s front label is plausibly misleading to
reasonable customers, then the court does not consider the back label at the
pleadings stage. Whether the back label ultimately defeats the plaintiff’s
claims is a question left to the fact-finder.”
On the other hand, if the front label is only plausibly
ambiguous, the back can resolve the ambiguity. Indeed, the Ninth Circuit has held
that “other contextual factors aside from the back label can defeat claims that
a product’s label is misleading,” specifically in its manuka
honey decision. In that case, the court said, the “foremost” reason for finding
only ambiguity was that, “given the foraging nature of bees, a reasonable honey
consumer would know that it is impossible to produce honey that is derived
exclusively from a single floral source,” and “[a] reasonable consumer would
not understand Trader Joe’s label . . . as promising something that is
impossible to find.” Its low price and use of a honey grading scheme also meant
that “100% New Zealand Manuka Honey” was not misleading. Here, the court says,
it was very important in that case that manuka honey is “a niche, specialty
product,” and that buyers were “undoubtedly more likely to exhibit a higher
standard of care than a parent walking down the dairy aisle in a grocery store,
possibly with a child or two in tow, who is not likely to study with great
diligence the contents of a complicated product package.”
KC argued that a front label was ambiguous if it can have
more than one possible meaning. Whiteside argued that a front label can be
unambiguous if it was plausible that a reasonable consumer would view the label
as having one unambiguous (and deceptive) meaning. Whiteside was correct. The
plaintiff doesn’t have to prove unambiguous deceptiveness to avoid dismissal at
the pleading stage. Instead, “a plaintiff must plausibly allege that the front
label would be unambiguously deceptive to an ordinary consumer, such that the
consumer would feel no need to look at the back label.” Thus, a front label is
ambiguous if “reasonable consumers would necessarily require more information
before they could reasonably conclude” that the front label was making a
specific representation. The California courts have followed this rule, for
example in the One-a-Day
case, which “acknowledged that some sophisticated consumers might not
interpret ‘One A Day’ literally and would inquire into the back label. But
other reasonable consumers might take the front label at face value and assume
that they needed to take only one vitamin daily. … Put another way, reasonable
consumers would not necessarily require more information before concluding that
they needed to take only one vitamin daily.”
The unasterisked products were plausibly misleading. “Plant-based” “plausibly conveys a concrete
and unambiguous meaning to a reasonable customer: that the product is entirely
plant- based and exclusively contains ‘natural’ materials.” It was not an “all-but-meaningless
marketing term” like “Nature Fusion,” especially combined with allusions to
“natural care” and nature imagery
Although consumers could consult the back label, “[f]ront-label
ambiguity is determined not by whether a consumer ‘could’ look beyond the front
label, but whether they necessarily would do so.” The district court’s standard
would always require a consumer to consult the back label, which contradicts
controlling precedent. Plus, baby wipes
aren’t a niche, specialty product. “[C]onsumers of everyday items are not
expected to study labels with the same diligence as consumers of specialty
products.”
The district court also reasoned that the products were in
fact “plant-based” because they contained at least 70% plant-based ingredients
by weight. But California prohibits both literally false and misleading ads.
And the district court’s definition of “plant-based” as “mostly, not
necessarily all, derived from plants” had little support.
Even if consumers understand “tomato-based sauce” to mean “mostly
but not all tomatoes,” that’s not helpful here, where the issue was not a
characterizing ingredient. “[T]here is no reason to assume that consumers
interpret all terms ending in ‘-based’ in the same way,” any more than they
interpret “100%” the same way in every label.
Reasonable consumers also
understand that meat does not grow on trees, yet technology has advanced such
that plant-based meat is now available. Consumers could reasonably suppose that
manufacturers have similarly devised a way to make baby wipes using only
plant-based compounds.… Unlike bees … , which are familiar to anyone who has
encountered vegetation, most people
likely have not contemplated how baby
wipes are made. Similarly, most consumers likely have not considered whether
synthetic ingredients are necessary to make wipes “shelf-stable,” a term that
is not part of
The court further pointed to the FTC’s “Green Guides,” which
warn that unqualified representations like “made with renewable materials” are
likely to mislead a reasonable consumer to believe that a product “is made
entirely with renewable materials.” Although the FTC has declined to provide
guidance on the term “plant-based” specifically, it’s the lack of qualification
that is significant here; the FTC recommends using percentages or other
qualifiers.
On the other hand, the use of an asterisk and the qualifying
statement “*70+% by weight” on the front label of the Asterisked Products
“ameliorate[s] any tendency of [the] label to mislead.” Those tracked the Green
Guides’ recommendation for qualifications and complied with California law
adopting the Green Guides. Even assuming that “70%+ by weight” is ambiguous, a
reasonable consumer would require more information from the back label, which
clarifies that the Products contain both “natural and synthetic ingredients.” “Even
before reading the back label, the presence of an asterisk alone puts a
consumer on notice that there are qualifications or caveats, making it
unreasonable to assume that the Products were 100% plant- based.” (I don’t
think the court thinks that it has taken back everything it said in the first
part of the case, but maybe it has. If you thought the message was clear, how
would you know that the asterisk related to the message you thought was clear
and not to some other or peripheral feature? That’s the FTC’s reasoning for why
asterisks and “disclosure” aren’t good qualifiers.)
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