Bowen v. Energizer Holdings, Inc., --- F.4th ----, 2024 WL 4352496, No. 23-55116 (9th Cir. Oct. 1, 2024)
Bowen sued Energizer for false advertising, alleging that
its Banana Boat sunscreen was adulterated with dangerous
levels of benzene, a carcinogen that scientists have determined can cause
cancer.
Energizer moved to dismiss under
Rule 12(b)(1), arguing that there was no Article III standing because Bowen’s
allegations that small amounts of benzene in sunscreen are unsafe were false. The
district court held that “[i]n light of the [FDA] guideline permitting 2 [parts
per million] of benzene in sunscreen, [Bowen] does not allege facts that tend
to show a non-speculative increased health risk or actual economic harm”
arising from her purchase of Banana Boat products. This was a premature
resolution of the merits issue. “Although a district court faced with a factual
challenge to its exercise of jurisdiction may resolve disputed facts as to
purely jurisdictional questions, it may not do so when those jurisdictional
questions are intertwined with the merits of a claim. When the jurisdictional
and merits issues are inseparable, the court must treat a factual attack on
jurisdiction as a motion for summary judgment and construe disputed issues of
fact in favor of the nonmoving party. Applying that standard here, Bowen has
adequately established an injury in fact for purposes of Article III.”
Remanded.
Bowen had one bottle of the
sunscreen tested at a lab, revealing that it contained 0.29 parts per million
(“ppm”) of benzene. A non-party pharmacy also allegedly tested various Banana
Boat products and found that they too contained benzene, including a bottle
with more than 0.1 ppm of benzene.
Bowen alleged that “[b]enzene
is a carcinogen that can cause cancer in humans,” and that “the application of
sunscreen specifically increases the absorption rate of benzene through the
skin.” A Yale researcher, clinician, and professor of dermatology allegedly
opined that “[t]here is not a safe level of benzene that can exist in sunscreen
products,” given the large surface area of the human body and the amount of
sunscreen needed to properly cover it. This contamination allegedly has led to
public concern and voluntary recalls of Banana Boat products.
Looking to documents produced
or relied on by the FDA, the district court determined that they “impl[y] that
manufacturers like Defendants may continue to release products that are
adequately tested and contain less than 2 ppm of benzene.” It further held that
Bowen’s “alleged economic harm”—i.e., that she paid more than she would have
had she known that Banana Boat contained benzene—“is premised on the
speculative notion that the presence of 0.29 ppm of benzene, or any potential
presence of benzene, makes the sunscreen unsafe.”
Bowen’s allegations relating
to standing weren’t “separable from the merits of the case,” but rather
“intertwined with an element of the merits of the plaintiff’s claim,” such that
the district court was required to “leave the resolution of material factual
disputes to the trier of fact.”
When plaintiffs in a false advertising
case “ ‘contend that [they] paid more for [a product] than they otherwise would
have paid, or bought it when they otherwise would not have done so’ [because of
a false claim or misleading omission] they have suffered an Article III injury
in fact.” Whether the statements they relied on were materially false was also
a merits issue. These allegations weren’t separable from the merits.
The district court thus “mistakenly
required Bowen to show that Banana Boat was noncompliant with FDA guidelines in
order to establish injury under an economic-harm theory.” Her alleged
overpayment was the harm, not the safety/risk profile. In addition, to find
0.29 ppm benzene “safe” was to improperly weigh disputed evidence. The court of
appeals pointed out that, even without considering Bowen’s countervailing
evidence, the FDA hardly blessed the presence of benzene at any level in the
relevant documents. Its guidance was that benzene “should not be employed in
the manufacture of ... drug products because of their unacceptable toxicity or
their deleterious environmental effect. However, if their use is unavoidable in
order to produce a drug product with a significant therapeutic advance, then
their levels should be restricted” to 2 ppm, “unless otherwise justified.” That
“caveat-laden” guidance was hardly a safety endorsement. “Faced with two
sunscreens in the skincare aisle of a pharmacy—one with benzene, the other with
no benzene—it is perfectly reasonable that the consumer would avoid the product
containing benzene, as Bowen alleges that she would have absent Defendants’
alleged false advertising.”
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