Dent v. Premier Nutrition Corp., 2025 WL 1282627, No.
16-cv-06721-RS (N.D. Cal. May 2, 2025)
Here, the court applies issue preclusion against Premier,
makers of Joint Juice, which lost a bellwether-type trial under NY law (a
ruling affirmed
in relevant part by the Ninth Circuit), on claims against it based on Illinois
consumer protection laws. The court noted that six other state-wide classes
were stayed before it, and a California class was seeking judgment against
Premier in state court.
Specifically, Premier was precluded from relitigating
materiality, sale in commerce, and the measure of damages.
Premier didn’t dispute that Dent and the Illinois purchasers
saw the same labels as Montera and the New York purchasers during the same
relevant time period. Under California law, which supplied the rule of
decision, “[i]ssue preclusion prohibits the relitigation of issues argued and
decided in a previous case, even if the second suit raises different causes of
action.” However, courts have discretion to deny issue preclusion if its
application does not “comport[ ] with fairness and sound public policy.”
“While Premier may not have expected the Montera
trial to have roll-on effects, it does not follow that any effects would be
fundamentally unfair.” Montera and Dent both alleged that Premier’s
advertisement and marketing of Joint Juice was misleading, harming entire
classes of consumers in each state. The advertisement and labeling of Joint
Juice was identical in New York and Illinois, and the time period covered in
both suits was the same. Whether the advertising is deceptive was evaluated
using the same reasonable consumer standard, not individual consumer
understandings.
Premier argued that new scientific advances in the study of
glucosamine’s potential benefits necessitated a full trial on whether Joint
Juice’s label was in fact deceptive. But “new witnesses or cumulative evidence
do not negate issue preclusion.”
Once issue preclusion was available, the question was what
overlapping issues were decided by Montera. The jury decided that Joint
Juice’s label was misleading, and both NY and Illinois use the same materiality
standard, so there was issue preclusion.
However, the Montera jury didn’t need to reach a
conclusion as to whether Premier intended for the class to rely on the alleged
deceptive act or practice, which is required by Illinois law, so that remained
for trial. (Imagine going to the jury and arguing, sure, it was materially
misleading, but we didn’t intend for consumers to rely on it!)
Dent also conceded that she needed to prove individual
causation, but argued that materiality justified an inference of classwide causation.
Illinois’s ICFA requires that the defendant’s deceptive practice proximately
caused the damages suffered by plaintiff, but not actual reliance. It allows
courts to infer proximate causation on a classwide basis when all class members
are subject to a material, standardized misrepresentation. While the court
found Dent’s argument for preclusion on causation “strong,” it determined that
the issue was not “identical.” “While Dent could certainly demonstrate
causation by proving the class was exposed to uniform, materially misleading
misrepresentations, Montera did not actually do so in her case. Moreover, based
on the caselaw presented, such a showing is necessary, but not sufficient for a
finding of ICFA causation.” The court cited Illinois cases articulating a
standard demanding that “the only logical reason” to buy was as a result of the
deception or that “no rational class member would have acted as they did absent
the misrepresentation.”
What about the measure of harm? The ICFA defines damage as
“the value of what [plaintiff] received less than the value of what was
promised”: a benefit-of-the-bargain theory. This means that a full refund is
justified if a product “had no value to consumers.” “The jury in Montera,
in finding liability and awarding the entire purchase price to consumers,
necessarily concluded Joint Juice was valueless for its advertised purpose.”
Premier presented extensive evidence arguing purchasers received benefits apart
from the potentially deceptive joint health ones advertised on Joint Juice’s
label, but the jury declined to reduce its award based on Premier’s suggested
alternative benefits, such as Vitamin C, Vitamin D, antioxidants, and
hydration. Thus, the damages issues in Dent were narrowed to the
calculation of damages due to the Illinois class based on the number of units
sold and the purchase price, and punitive damages.
Premier also argued that it was entitled to raise a First
Amendment defense, which wasn’t raised in Montera until its renewed
judgment as a matter of law after trial. But “issue preclusion requires only
the opportunity to litigate ... not whether the litigant availed himself or
herself of the opportunity.” Also, “misleading commercial speech is not
protected,” meaning that Premier couldn’t raise a First Amendment defense
anyway because of the jury findings.
The court also advised the parties that they should settle “this
now antique litigation.”
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