Simpson v. Walgreen Co., — F.Supp.3d —-, 2026 WL 413565,
No. 23-cv-16465 (N.D. Ill. Feb. 13, 2026)
Simpson bought Walgreens’ Complete Home Heavy Duty (Complete
Home) plastic cutlery. The front and back of the product were labeled
“DISHWASHER SAFE” and “HEAVY DUTY” in all caps. The sides of the product were
also labeled “HEAVY DUTY.” Simpson allegedly bought the product in part because
she believed it was dishwasher safe, which means something different than
“top-rack-only” dishwasher safe. “As it turns out, the bottom of the Complete
Home box cautions: ‘DISHWASHER SAFE IF CLEANED ON THE TOP RACK.’” She didn’t
turn the box over (a move likely to dump all the utensils out if the box has
been opened already) and suffered the consequences. Simpson also alleged that “it
is common practice in the plastic dish industry to clearly indicate when a
product can only be washed safely on the top rack” and that the commonly used
“dishwasher safe” symbols are distinct from the “top rack only” symbols. These
labels are allegedly “particularly important for cutlery, because a
dishwasher’s cutlery basket is ordinarily located on the bottom rack.”
![]() |
| front and bottom of box |
She brought the
usual California claims on behalf of a California subclass, as well as state
law claims of common law fraud, unjust enrichment, intentional
misrepresentation, and negligent misrepresentation.
The court refused to dismiss the claims because deception
was plausible.
Walgreens argued that, under McGinity v. Procter &
Gamble Co., 69 F.4th 1093 (9th Cir. 2023), when a label is merely ambiguous, it
is not misleading, and a reasonable consumer would check the bottom of the box
for more details. The packaging for the plastic cutlery, it argued, clarifies
any potential ambiguity with term “dishwasher safe” by adding in all caps the
statement “dishwasher safe if cleaned on the top rack.” Simpson responded that
“disclosures that are not on the consumer-facing front label do not cure
misleading front-label representation because a reasonable consumer is ‘not
expected to look beyond misleading representations on the front of the box to
discover the truth in fine print on the back label.’ ”
I’ve been thinking about the consumer protection concept of
ambiguity that courts seem to be leaning into, and how it differs from Lanham
Act ambiguity, and I think that the consumer protection concept is distinct
(and probably wrongheaded) in folding materiality into the ambiguity inquiry.
Here’s my current thesis, subject to revision:
In consumer protection cases, courts seem to be asking
whether a substantial number of reasonable consumers could think that their
questions were answered by the front matter, and thus not look further. By
contrast, in Lanham Act cases courts find ambiguity when at least one
reasonable interpretation is true, or nonactionable puffery. So, if courts frame
the consumer protection concept as “if one reasonable interpretation of the
front matter is that the consumer’s questions were answered but that answer would
be false, then deception is plausible,” there may not be much, if any, daylight
between the two standards, and I think that’s the right treatment.
The difficulty is that the facts of Trader
Joe’s, which the Ninth Circuit used to announce its consumer protection
ambiguity standard, are so extreme about what “reasonable” consumers are
supposed to know. It seemed that, in Trader Joe’s, the materiality of
manuka honey’s supposed qualities was used to heighten the degree of care
exercised by reasonable consumers. That is, if you care about it, you’re
supposed to read more about it. But that move conflates epistemology (how do
you learn what features a product promises?) with value. Thus, the reason the
consumer protection version of ambiguity seems more stringent than the Lanham
Act version is stealth importation of a heightened consumer care standard. One
way for plaintiffs’ lawyers to proceed, it seems to me, is to specifically
allege that, regardless of what we think a careful consumer should do, consumers
who do care about product features often make judgments about those features
based on the front label, because reasonable consumers don’t think about the details
of everything they care about. That would be an exhausting and impossible way
to move through the world! Alleging facts about standard practices, as the
plaintiff did here, is one way to do make that conclusion more plausible.
The court agreed that McGinty didn’t apply because
there, it was clear that the phrase “Nature Fusion” was ambiguous. But “dishwasher
safe” was not ambiguous in the same way. Since McGinty, other 9th
Circuit cases have come closer to my proposed “if one reasonable interpretation of the front
matter is that the consumer’s questions were answered but that answer would be
false, then deception is plausible” standard. E.g., Whiteside
v. Kimberly Clark Corp., 108 F.4th 771 (9th Cir. 2024), found that “
‘Plant-based” on the front of a package was plausibly misleading even though
the back of their packaging disclosed the presence of synthetic ingredients.
“Plaintiff plausibly alleges that the front label of the
Complete Home plastic cutlery is unambiguously deceptive to a reasonable
consumer.” I wish the court hadn’t used the word “unambiguously” here, because
that risks conflating “no reasonable consumer would think otherwise” with “a
substantial number of reasonable consumers would receive this message,” and it’s
the latter that sets the standard. Reasonable consumers can vary in the amount
of thought they give to a given purchase, and that’s why we use the “substantial
number” standard: so that we’re not only protecting the most careful subset of consumers.
Anyway, it was plausible that a reasonable consumer “would
look at a box of ‘heavy duty’ plastic cutlery labeled as ‘dishwasher safe’ on
the front and take it at its word.” Whether there was actual ambiguity was for
later (again, worrisome language—the court cites the correct standard, which is
whether there was deceptiveness).
[Other issues omitted, including the dismissal of claims for
injunctive relief on standing grounds.]
from Blogger https://tushnet.blogspot.com/2026/06/dishwasher-safe-wasnt-too-ambiguous-to.html
