Calchi v. Topco Assoc., LLC, 2024 WL 4346420, No. 22-cv-747 (N.D. Ill. Sept. 30, 2024)
Is there any circuit style more distinctive than the Seventh
Circuit style? (Cf.)
This is one of a number of lawsuits against purportedly non-drowsy
cold meds that are allegedly in fact drowsiness-promoting because of an active
ingredient called Dextromethorphan Hydrobromide, which studies allegedly
confirm causes drowsiness. The court was snarky about the multiple lawsuits and
their resemblances. Calchi herself sued a different manufacturer in the SDNY. “She
might have a big fool-me-once, fool-me-twice problem (and an adequacy of class
representation problem, too).”
TopCo argued FDA preemption. The FDA expressly considered
the claim that “DXM caused drowsiness and determined that insufficient data
existed to support such a finding.” So it doesn’t require a drowsiness warning.
Thus, TopCo argued, Calchi’s claim would create separate requirements that are
“not identical” to the federal requirements and are thus preempted.
Calchi responded that, regardless, TopCo cannot add false or
misleading information to the label. Controlling Seventh Circuit precedent
agreed with her (possibly to the court’s dismay). True, a state law that
prohibits using the label “non-drowsy” for DXM seems “different from” the
federal regulation, which doesn’t ban calling DXM “non-drowsy.” But Bell v.
Publix Super Markets, Inc., 982 F.3d 468 (7th Cir. 2020), reasoned that, when
the FDA standard of identity required only that the label call the item “Grated
Parmesan Cheese,” and was silent about whether the products could be labeled as
“100%” cheese, a deception claim wasn’t precluded. States may not “tack on
further required disclosures” but they may prohibit advertisers “from
voluntarily adding deceptive language to the federally permitted labels.” This
was so because doing so doesn’t create any new requirement, given that the FDCA
already provides that false or misleading labels constitute misbranding. This FDCA
provision seems to distinguish consumer protection claims from attempts to add requirements
orthogonal to the federal scheme. The court imagined a hypothetical where the federal
government said things to park visitors like “don’t feed the bears” and “stay
on the paths” and the state then wanted to add a “don’t swim in the rivers”
rule. But here, the federal rule is similar to “don’t engage in dangerous
behavior,” and the plaintiff is trying to establish that something is “dangerous.”
If she’s right, then there’s no “difference” between the law and its
application, just a level of specificity. The preemption question is whether
states—whether through statutory torts or otherwise—can specify whether something
is false or misleading if the FDA hasn’t opined on the issue.
Indeed, the court concluded, states can’t add to the list of
required disclosures, but “if the federal government has not addressed a
statement about D, then states can ban a statement about D if the states
believe that D is false.” If the state law is directed to banning false and
misleading statements, it “doesn’t add anything new, because federal law
already prohibits false and misleading statements.” Thus, unless a monograph
“protects a particular statement,” the preemption provision of the FDCA “does
not expressly preempt state-law prohibitions on deceptive statements that
sellers add voluntarily to their labels or advertising.”
Following the course of my thoughts exactly, the court
suggested that “this issue boils down to an all-too-common, all-too-important
question: who decides? … If the FDA looked at a statement, and took no position
on whether it is false or misleading, can the states ban it?” But Bell
made the question academic. (Thanks! I agree, it’s a super important question!
Not much reasoning in the cases! FWIW, I incline towards the Bell
position, because the FDA has way too much on its plate to go after whatever new
language marketers think of next. But the ability of state legislatures
to declare something to be false or misleading as a matter of law worries me.
Does the First Amendment require advertisers to have an opportunity to disprove
falsity/misleadingness of their commercial speech (outside the IP context?).)
Calchi alleged that TopCo shouldn’t have voluntarily placed
a misleading “Non-Drowsy” label on its medicine. That’s not preempted.
A reasonable consumer could plausibly be materially deceived
by “non-drowsy,” since there were plenty of obvious reasons to want to avoid
drowsiness.
Calchi alleges that she bought a product, and would not have
purchased the product without the misrepresentation. That’s enough to allege an
injury. She also alleges that she paid more for the product than she otherwise
would have paid. Based on this complaint, that theory is a bit shakier, but it
is enough to get to the next stage of the case. She also alleged a pocketbook
injury—she paid more than she otherwise would have—and that was enough at this stage,
though the court expressed some skepticism about proof.
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