belated defense of law reviews

Sadly, this post has been delayed while I got an overdue article off my plate!  The NYT’s Adam Liptak writes about law reviews, with this unhelpful comparison: “The judge, lawyer or ordinary reader looking for accessible and timely accounts or critiques of legal developments is much better off turning to the many excellent law blogs.”  Look, I flatter myself that 43(b)log might count among the latter, but “timely accounts” and “critiques” are meaningless without a broader conceptual apparatus allowing us—professors and practicing lawyers alike—to explain what they mean, and you don’t get that from a blog alone, unless perhaps you are Marty Lederman (who, not for nothing, ended up publishing his work in a conventional and high-ranked place as well, where he had a different audience and time to elaborate and revise). 

The cited study, which unfortunately isn’t up on a free archive, shows that many people surveyed, including many law professors, advocate reforms such as peer review and blind review (also, fewer bad edits).  This isn’t a flaw in the survey, but it is a flaw in the prescriptions: saying we should have peer review and blind review is like saying we should add water and also decrease the moisture content.  I have been asked to do peer review on a number of articles over the past few years—see, law reviews are listening!—and they’ve always been formally “blinded” and I’ve always known without doing any research who wrote them, because I go to WIPIP.  This is a well-recognized effect of peer review.  Maybe blinding on intake (by hypothesis, when the less experienced law review editors are inadvertently basing their initial screening less on field-specific knowledge and more on reputation) would help even if the ultimate peer review isn’t blind.  That’s not how peer review works in other fields, but that doesn’t make it wrong for law reviews.

Relatedly, a feature of asking respondents what reforms they support, from a list of possibilities, is that they favor stuff that helps them even if it creates burdens elsewhere in the system—professors wanted articles editors to explain their rejections!  And the methodology has trouble capturing tradeoffs like peer review/blind review.  So nobody but professors was enthusiastic about getting rid of the standard requirement that a citation has to be provided for (almost) every assertion, but everybody thought that law reviews were too long.  Like my colleagues, I would’ve thought that citation metastasis was low-hanging fruit there, but apparently not for many of the respondents—because “cite everything” has different functions for law review editors and people who are reading in order to cherry-pick arguments that are useful for them than it does for writers and other readers.  Nobody is wrong here, but we can’t all be satisfied. 

As for the overediting complaints aired in the study, fair enough.  Lord knows I’ve gotten annoying edits (but I’ve also gotten fantastic edits by students who did incredible work).  But I believe working with editors who ask for weird things serves a pedagogical purpose.  By contrast, most of my non-law review experience has involved minimal editing, for pure copyediting errors at most, and it’s deprived me of input on whether I’m communicating in the way I want to.
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INTA’s brief in Lexmark

Stop the presses: INTA and I are in agreement! 

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When is a sale not a sale?

When employees are directed to pretend it isn’t unless you’re a preferred customer, Mark Ellwood writes in Slate.  I’m guessing that if a small sign stating “sale” is a legal requirement, the NY AG wouldn’t be happy with the deceptive implementation:

Walk-ins from the street who inspect a shoe and spot the same dot will be told it’s stocktaking (dismissive and deceptive, sure, but technically true). Calling the subterfuge “a huge pain in the ass,” one former sales assistant explains that he was asked to demur when casual passersby would dawdle or ask what the dots meant. It was easy, given the minimal evidence.

Posted in advertising, consumer protection, http://schemas.google.com/blogger/2008/kind#post | Leave a comment

law barring "surcharge for credit" signs unconstitutional

Expressions Hair Design v. Schneiderman, 13 Civ. 3775, 2013 WL 5477607 (S.D.N.Y. Oct. 3, 2013)

Under NY GBL § 518, a vendor who wants to impose a surcharge for using a credit card to compensate for the credit card companies’ surcharges risks criminal prosecution if it labels its credit card price a surcharge rather than advertising that it offers a discount for using cash.  The court found this restriction unconstitutional.  Section 518 provides: “No seller in any sales transaction may impose a surcharge on a holder who elects to use a credit card in lieu of payment by cash, check, or similar means.”  Everyone agreed, however that the statute didn’t bar “discounts” for cash.

A surcharge for credit and a discount for cash are, in theory, equivalent.  But consumer psychology is different: “consumers perceive credit-card surcharges negatively as a kind of loss or penalty, while cash discounts are perceived positively as a kind of gain or bonus.”  (Citing, inter alia, my colleage Adam Levitin—albeit misspelling his name.)  Plaintiffs argued that “surcharge” was “an accurate and effective way to convey to consumers that paying with credit is actually more expensive than paying with cash,” given that the prices charged to merchants by credit card companies are among the largest and fastest-growing expenses for some merchants.  (Citing Levitin again.)  Using “surcharge” would, they argued, make consumers more likely to notice the fees and act to avoid them, producing downward pressure on the credit card fees, known as “swipe fees.”  When notice of surcharges was permitted in Australia, swipe fees there declined significantly.  Without using surcharges labeled as such, “some retailers cannot effectively call consumers’ attention to the price differences between cash and credit, and therefore must charge higher headline prices for everyone.”  Thus, surcharge bans force cash users to subsidize credit card users’ purchases, and this is a problem insofar as cash users tend to be disproportionately poor and minority.  The yearly subsidy from cash-using households has been estimated at $149, with $1333 transferred to each card user.

Defendants responded that the surcharge ban protected consumers from unfair surprise and deception, because consumers “tend to plan and anchor their expectations around the advertised sticker price of a given item they intend to purchase.” A consumer who later learns of a discount isn’t harmed, but if she learns of an additional charge for using credit, her expectations can be frustrated.

Credit card companies used to ban price differences by contract.  Then Congress amended TILA to bar that practice, but enacted a ban on usingthe word surcharge, as GBL § 518 did.  That law lapsed in 1984, which led the credit card companies to lobby states to enact similar laws, which was the genesis of § 518; credit card companies also barred use of “surcharge” by contract.  In 2013, Visa and MasterCard agreed to drop these prohibitions as part of a larger antitrust settlement.

The plaintiff businesses paid swipe fees and would like to charge higher prices for credit.  But they contended that framing this as a cash discount “would make advertised prices look higher than they are, without making it transparent that the higher price would be due solely to credit card transaction costs — precisely the information [they] wish to convey to [their] consumers.”   Four of the five businesses thus simply charged the same price for all transactions.  The fifth used to post a sign that informed customers of a 3% additional charge for credit, until informed by a lawyer-customer that this was illegal.  It still charged more for credit, without characterizing that as a surcharge or extra charge for credit as opposed to a discount for cash. 

Defendants argued that § 518 was an anti-fraud law barring “surcharges” that were increases over the “regular price,” and that the “regular price” was the price communicated to consumers. Thus, defendants argued, if the credit card price was displayed at least as conspicuously as the cash price, then the credit card price would be the “regular price” and there’d be no violation of the law.  Some of the plaintiffs, defendants argued, didn’t propose to advertise credit card prices any less prominently than cash prices, and thus lacked standing.  However, several plaintiffs did want to advertise their surcharges only as a percentage fee on top of their cash prices, and would violate defendants’ reading of the statute.  In any event, the court rejected defendants’ “rather convoluted interpretation” of the statute, which on its face simply banned surcharges and thus chilled retailers from characterizing their prices as surcharges without providing guidance on how prominently prices had to be displayed.  The court found that there was a real risk of prosecution, as New York had enforced the law before, even against someone who testified that his signs clearly stated both the cash price and the credit price, and against people who didn’t post prices but only announced them orally.  While the (lapsed) federal definitions were designed to permit two-tier pricing systems as long as consumers were exposed to the highest price when they saw a tagged or posted price, New York hadn’t adopted those definitions.

After Sorrell v. IMS Health, content-based restrictions on speech require heightened scrutiny and are presumptively invalid, even for commercial speech (even though that category is defined by its content).  Under Caronia, criminal laws warrant even more careful scrutiny.  Plaintiffs argued that §518 restricted speech based on its content: describing an extra charge as a surcharge.  Defendants responded that §518 only regulated nonexpressive conduct, imposing a surcharge, and that in the alternative it only imposed a disclosure requirement, which required only rational basis review.

The court agreed with the plaintiffs. The law drew the line between prohibited surcharges and permissible discounts based on words and labels, not economic realities.  Anyway, even under defendants’ reading, the law still violated the First Amendment.  Though sellers could set the credit card price at any level they wanted, that was the conduct at issue; the speech was in how they communicated that price.  “Pricing is a routine subject of economic regulation, but the manner in which price information is conveyed to buyers is quintessentially expressive, and therefore protected by the First Amendment.”  (And the manner in which price information is conveyed can pretty easily misleading, given the many ways in which prices can be gamed, but we’re not worrying about that right now.)

The argument that § 518 was just a disclosure rule also failed.  Under the law, disclosure wasn’t sufficient; the statute also barred sellers “from advertising their cash price in a way that causes consumers to perceive it as the regular, baseline price against which all other prices are measured.”  By comparison, Minnesota’s surcharge law simply required a seller to inform the buyer of the surcharge both orally at the time of sale and by a conspicuously posted sign.  (Of course, that doesn’t really deal with the bait and switch issue of the consumer who’s already decided to buy then having to accept the higher price or leave, unless we assume—contrary to most of what we know about consumer behavior—that consumers read those signs.  Compare the litigation about the practice of posting “prices,” then charging consumers ablanket percentage over the posted price at checkout no matter what form of payment they used—the stores using that practice claimed that they did disclose it on signs in the store, but unsurprisingly it was still deceptive.  A real disclosure law would require posting cash price/credit price together.)   The court reasoned that a seller “who fully complied with Minnesota’s disclosure requirement would still violate defendants’ reading of section 518 if it displayed its cash price one iota more prominently than the credit card price.” That makes it an anti-disclosure statute, because it bars disclosures of cash prices “even marginally more conspicuously” than credit prices.  (By that standard, the FTC’s disclosure guidelines seem to be anti-disclosure guidelines as well, since they bar adding distractors to an ad that divert consumers from any required disclosures.)  Because § 518 was an outright bar on speech, the relaxed standard of Zauderer was inapplicable.

Thus, intermediate scrutiny applied, and § 518 failed it.  The court therefore didn’t reach plaintiffs’ argument that listing the prices of their goods and services wasn’t commercial speech, but shockingly indicated that it was inclined to agree.  Though commercial speech generally “does no more than propose a commercial transaction,” or is “related solely to the economic interests of the speaker and its audience,” and though price information “no doubt proposes a transaction and relates to economic interests,” this was “more than just a debate about how best to sell toothpaste,” whatever that means.  Plaintiffs wanted to explain why prices were at the level they were and who was responsible for that.  “Given current debates over swipe fees and financial regulation more generally, those questions have a powerful noncommercial valence” (emphasis added).  (WTF?  Look, there are debates about whether fluoride is dangerous and how to preserve dental hygiene “more generally”; that doesn’t mean “our toothpaste has flouride” is noncommercial speech.  This interpretation of “does no more than propose a commercial transaction” empties the category, since all proposals of commercial transactions implicitly and necessarily make arguments about why a person ought to have certain preferences or satisfy those preferences in a certain way.)

Anyhow, intermediate scrutiny: dual pricing was lawful in itself, and the speech covered was non-misleading.  Though surcharges might be misleading if they were hidden or inadequately disclosed, the cases teach that potentially misleading information can’t absolutely be banned if it can be presented in a nondeceptive way.  There was nothing “inherently misleading” about describing a price difference as a credit surcharge or about displaying a credit price “with marginally less prominence than the cash price.”  Truthfully and effectively conveying the true costs of using credit cards could actually make consumers more informed rather than less. 

(Look, I’m actually hugely sympathetic with the outcome here, except for that endorsement of displaying a credit price less prominently.  But this rationale is pretty misleading: the court is equivocating about who bears that “true cost.”  If I’m using credit, the “true cost” is a big benefit to me, according to the court’s own evidence.  It’s the dynamic effects that make a difference, once retailers feel that they can get away with charging a “surcharge” where they couldn’t be bothered to give a “discount,” given the realities of consumer behavior.  And those realities, not for nothing, indicate that consumers are not computers, which means we ought to recognize that displaying the credit price less prominently could easily confuse consumers even if it “shouldn’t”—the use of “discount for cash” instead of “surcharge for credit” shouldn’t affect consumers, but it plainly does.)

Compared to credit card surcharges aren’t misleadingly presented, §518 “perpetuates consumer confusion by preventing sellers from using the most effective means at their disposal to educate consumers about the true costs of credit-card usage.”  Thus, the law doesn’t directly advance consumer protection interests.

Also, §518 was riddled with numerous “exemptions and inconsistencies [that] bring into question the purpose” of the statute.  The bait-and-switch concern offered by defendants applied only to credit card surcharges, not other additional charges, and thus the law didn’t actually protect them, “since handling charges, shipping costs, service fees, processing fees, ‘suggested tips,’ and any number of other types of additional charges — which consumers may or may not be able to take steps to avoid — may still be added on top.”  Plus, New York exempted itself and some favored utilities from the statute, indicating that it wanted to escape the blame of higher prices but didn’t want to let other sellers do so.  “Defendants offer no explanation for why credit-card surcharges are somehow less deceptive when imposed by the Water Board, for example, than when imposed by ordinary commercial retailers like the plaintiffs.”

In addition, §518 was far broader than necessary to serve anti-fraud goals; New York could easily have regulated only surcharges that were deceptive or misleading, or it could have used Minnesota’s model.  Anyway, New York already had laws barring false advertising and deceptive acts and practices.  Thus, § 518 was overbroad and violated the First Amendment.

It was also impermissibly vague, since it failed to provide adequate notice of what was barred, as defendants interpreted it.  Making liability turn on the labels sellers used to describe their prices was impermissible because careful or sophisticated sellers could avoid liability by using “discount for cash” while more careless ones would be liable for using “credit price.”  (I don’t know why this is vague as opposed to credit card-company-favoring but ok.)  The narrowing interpretation offered by defendants—credit prices had to be displayed at least as prominently as cash prices—would present a closer question, but was too far from the statutory text to matter.

The court found that whether §518 was preempted as anticompetitive by the Sherman Act presented a factual question that couldn’t be resolved at this stage of the case.
Posted in advertising, antitrust, commercial speech, disclosures, first amendment | Leave a comment

photos can be false by necessary implication

Veve v. Corporan, No. 12–1073 (GAG), 2013 WL 5603263 (D.P.R.| Oct. 11, 2013)

Plaintiffs Veve and his business Batey Zipline Adventure sued defendants, Corporan and Atabey Eco Tours, for trademark infringement, trade dress infringement, false advertisement, and product disparagement.  They moved for default judgment and then summary judgment; the court granted summary judgment except as to the trade dress claim.

Batey Zipline Adventure offers eco-tour services: hiking and sightseeing tours in which customers learn about the natural ecosystems of the Tanamá region.  Plaintiffs spent about $90,000 in advertising and marketing the Batey brand, since 2008 including via the internet, the most effective advertising source with a worldwide reach.  Atabey began in late 2010, offering competing eco-tour services and using advertising banners in the same places Batey did and also using the internet. 

Plaintiffs received phone calls from confused prospective customers, and often had to explain that Batey and Atabey were different.  One witness stated that she constantly had to instruct customers to follow Batey road signs and not Atabey road signs, which confused many customers because they were often found side-by-side; customers complained of the phonetic similarity.  A Facebook chat documented a prospective customer’s confusion.  Atabey’s former half-owner stated that he often received calls at the Atabey phone number from customers asking about Batey services.  One witness stated that she questioned Corporan about the similarity of the names, but Corporan ignored her concerns.

On the Atabey webiste and Facebook page, there are various pictures of the region and of Atabey expeditions, but some images are purportedly of the property of Perez, a person associated with Batey, most noticeably a suspension bridge. Perez told Corpran that she couldn’t enter his property or use photos of his property to advertise her business; he permits other eco-tourism companies to do business on his property. 

Corporan also issued a “press release” regarding Batey and Perez personally, claiming that Batey was in violation of Puerto Rico law because Perez was responsible for cutting down an endemic species of plant, the caoba bush, and that she called the Natural Resources Department of Puerto Rico on him.  Perez denied the cutting and Corporan offered no proof . Corporan also falsely claimed that Batey operated without a business license and that it did not pay taxes.

Given the default, there’s not much to say here about the trademark claims, though the court was careful in running through the factors even without the defendant’s participation.  On the trade dress claims, default was not enough.  Because the claimed trade dress was unregistered, the burden was on plaintiffs to show distinctiveness and nonfunctionality.  The claimed trade dress was “an arrangement of elements that include: the suspension bridge, caves, hiking paths, a sustainable or eco-friendly farming system, forest and hills, and a network of platforms interconnected by zip lines (or canopies).”   But these elements were inherently functional: the suspension bridge, pathways, and ziplines all served a purpose, specifically movement from one place to another.  Since plaintiffs didn’t meet their burden of showing nonfunctionality, the court didn’t address distinctiveness or confusion.

The court also found false advertising based on the use of photos depicting plaintiffs’ property: pictures of the suspension bridge and caves located on their land.  These pictures constituted false statements of fact. Though they didn’t explicitly state that the bridge and caves were part of the Atabey experience, the necessary implication was that they comprised part of it.  That was also material because it depicted “attractive elements of the eco-tour experience,” which would likely influence purchasing decisions.  A statement that defendants were “the only certified sustainable operation endorsed by the Puerto Rico Tourism Company in the region” was also false because it was unsubstantiated by any evidence.

The court likewise found for plaintiffs on the commercial disparagement, defamation, and trespass claims.  For the former, the relevant statements were commercial speech because made with the intent to influence potential customers, and attacked an essential part of the quality of Batey’s services—safety and commitment to environmental protection. 
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Transformative work of the day

Ann Friedman’s response to Emily Yoffe.

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Static Control’s brief in Lexmark

Available here.

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Lanham Act and ACPA damages not dischargeable in bankruptcy

In re Butler (Skydive Arizona, Inc. v. Butler), Bkcy. No. 11–40930, No. 11–4037, 2013 WL 5591922 (N.D. Ca. Sept. 9, 2013)

Here, the debtor was unable to discharge his liability for violation of ACPA, trademark infringement, and false advertising, because of the collateral estoppel effect of judge and jury findings in the underling cause of action.  The judge granted summary judgment on the false advertising claim, while the jury found Butler (and other defendants) liable for trademark infringement and cybersquatting.  The jury found, by clear and convincing evidence, that the infringement and false advertising were willful.  The district court awarded attorneys’ fees, emphasizing the defendants’ “seeming disregard for the people they harmed or the reputation they sullied….” and that exceptionality can come from willfulness, which the jury had found.  While the Ninth Circuit reversed the district court’s punitive doubling of the jury’s award of actual damages, it did not touch the underlying factual findings.  Plaintiff’s proof of claim in the bankruptcy case was therefore diminished but still in the multimillion-dollar range.

Exceptions to discharge are construed narrowly, but debts incurred by “willful and malicious injury by the debtor to another entity or to the property of another entity” are nondischargeable.  The question was the collateral estoppel effect of the earlier proceedings.  ACPA violations require both bad faith and an absence of safe harbor protection for a reasonable belief in fair/lawful use.  Thus, a finding of liability for cybersquatting requires an intent to cause harm and constitutes “willful and malicious injury,” and the debtor was collaterally estopped from asserting dischargeability.

The court reasoned similarly on the trademark infringement and false advertising claims, though intent is not a required element on those.  The jury specifically found that the trademark infringement was willful; though the verdict by itself didn’t specify whether the acts themselves were willful or they were willfully done with intent to cause harm, “intentional infringement is tantamount to intentional injury under bankruptcy law” because “the intent to infringe and the intent to deprive the mark’s owner of the value and benefit of his property are opposite sides of the same coin.”   Also, even in the absence of record evidence on the defendant’s intent to cause harm, the trial court’s additional findings on the need for attorney’s fees answered the question. 

The trial court’s finding took the damages award, as well as the fee award, into the nondischargeable category.  

The same logic applied to the false advertisng claims: the jury found willfulness and injury is an element of false advertising (note that it isn’t for trademark, apparently!).  “Therefore, a defendant could not willfully commit false advertising without intending to cause harm.”  The trial court found that defendants falsely claimed to own skydiving centers in various locations where they didn’t and unfairly used plaintiff’s photos on their own website. Combined with the court’s finding of exceptionality, this was enough for collateral estoppel to kick in.
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Software update defeats class certification

Waller v. Hewlett–Packard Co., No. 11 cv0454, 2013 WL 5551642 (S.D. Cal. Sept. 29, 2013)

So I’m trying to cut down on California coverage and just give the highlights.  That said, I recommend this case for some of the most detailed discussion of the Article III standing v. class action mechanism issue that’s percolating (or perhaps just thrashing around) in the California district courts.  Here’s my previous discussion of the claim that HP misleadingly advertised hands-free automatic backup, when in fact backing up certain file types required individual customer programming.

As the court explained, it had stayed Waller’s motion for class certification pending the appeal of a different case, expecting that “the Ninth Circuit would confront and resolve a question that has become a kind of spike strip in the class certification of lawsuits” under the UCL—whether all members of a putative class must have Article III standing and what that would mean, given that the underlying claim has no injury requirement but Article III standing does.  The potential consequence of requiring Article III standing for every unnamed class member is that “[s]imple removal by the defendant would be a game-changer.”  Plus, a lot turns on whether actual reliance is required, or merely a purchase of a product with misleading labeling: the former would generally preclude certification.  Here, the court reconsidered its decision to stay the case and denied Waller’s motion with prejudice, while leaving him with individual claims.

The Ninth Circuit has held that UCL claims are governed by the reasonable consumer standard, meaning that individualized proof of reliance and causation isn’t necessarily required. Stearns v. Ticketmaster Corp., 655 F.3d 1013 (9th Cir. 2011).  Relatedly, there was no Article III problem as long as class members “were relieved of their money”; and only the standing of the representative party mattered anyway. Mazza v. American Honda Motor Co., Inc., 666 F.3d 581 (9th Cir. 2012), contained a throwaway line “[N]o class may be certified that contains members lacking Article III standing,” citing a Second Circuit case but then immediately citing Stearns and not explaining the contradiction, and then setting a low bar for standing: as the court here summarized, “[s]imply spending money on something that doesn’t do what it claims to do is all the injury absent class members need” under Mazza.  The district court opinions are also in disarray.

Considering the precedent, the court here concluded that where a class representative has standing, arguments about unnamed class members’ injuries should be analyzed through Rule 23, not through examining the Article III standing of unnamed class members.  For one thing, Mazza didn’t acknowledge what it was arguably saying or deal with earlier conflicting circuit and Supreme Court authority.  Lewis v. Casey, 518 U.S. 343, 395 (1996) (“One class representative has standing, and with the right to sue thus established … the propriety of awarding classwide relief … does not require a demonstration that some or all of the unnamed class could themselves satisfy the standing requirements for named plaintiffs.”) (Souter, J., concurring).  Also, HP removed this case to federal court, and it would be unfair to let HP do that and then “seize on federal constitutional standing requirements to say the case cannot proceed as a class action.… HP, for perfectly understandable reasons, doesn’t like that relief is available under the UCL without any proof of reliance or injury, and it is trying to backdoor those elements into this case with an Article III standing requirement.”

Even if the court was wrong about Article III, it would find that absent class members had Article III standing here.  The meaning of “injury in fact” isn’t entirely clear in a misrepresentation-based UCL case. Some cases suggest that “simply buying a product that doesn’t do what it claims is an automatic economic injury, even if the misrepresentation is irrelevant to the purchaser’s usage.”  But arguably the injury must be traceable to the defendant’s conduct “in some thicker sense: the plaintiff must have actually focused on the alleged misrepresentations in deciding to buy the product, and suffered some injury by relying on the misrepresentation.”  If misrepresentation is enough, then standing isn’t much of a barrier as long as absent class members bought a product of diminished capabilities and therefore diminished economic value.  But if reliance is required, that’s almost invariably a highly individualized inquiry. 

The court concluded that Article III would be satisfied by the purchase of a product containing the alleged misrepresentations.  First, a contrary rule would make class actions of this kind “dead on arrival in federal court.”  All a defendant would have to do would be to remove under CAFA and kill them.  Second, Article III’s requirements turn on the nature of the claim asserted, and in California UCL and FAL cases don’t require individualized proof of deception, reliance, and injury. The UCL is focused “on the defendant’s conduct, rather than the plaintiff’s damages, in service of the statute’s larger purpose of protecting the general public against unscrupulous business practices.”  “That being the law of the substantive claims at issue in this case, it makes little sense to concoct and impose a standard for Article III standing that effectively contains the very reliance and deception requirements the actual claims do not.”

Third, the court had a (relatedly) broader conception of Article III injury than HP argued for.  Reliance on misrepresentation causes loss.  But there’s also an economic loss “where a product simply doesn’t do something it purports to do—irrespective of whether that hampers the consumer’s intended use and irrespective of its hypothetical, retrospective impact on the consumer’s purchasing decision.”  That’s just basic economics: the market price has been inflated.  “A car with dysfunctional headlights, for example, is simply less useful and therefore less valuable than one with working headlights; it’s no rebuttal to say that the owner of the former doesn’t drive the car at all or drives it only in broad daylight and never in tunnels. Everyone who pays for a car is paying some amount of money for working headlights.”  Fourth, the court was unwilling to draw the fine distinction between product defects “that are imminent, unmitigatable, and pose a constant risk of harm, and defects that are hypothetical and may never cause a consumer any injury or loss in value.”  Defective airbag sensors, for example, only harm drivers who actually get in accidents.  “[O]n some level, the question of injury caused by a product will always be hypothetical; it will always turn on an individual’s particular usage of that product.”

Turning to class status, the court easily found numerosity and commonality (what HP represented its SimpleSave hard drive would do and whether that was misleading to a reasonable consumer).  Waller’s claim was typical: he alleged that he relied on HP’s misrepresentations about SimpleSave and lost money thereby; it didn’t matter that not every member of the class would’ve suffered a data loss, and some might not have had the “outlier” file types that weren’t automatically saved.  The representation at issue—that SimpleSave automatically backed up all file types—was either absolutely true or absolutely false.  “It may back up all of a purchaser’s files, but that just means the purchaser is lucky, and it doesn’t mean that he possesses a product that’s of less utility than is advertised.” Even customers with no outlier file types “bought and now own a device that just doesn’t do what it’s alleged to do, and is therefore of diminished utility and value.”

Waller and his counsel were also adequate representatives.

The court rejected HP’s arguments that individualized questions of reliance and injury defeated predominance because different users might’ve understood how SimpleSave worked differently.  This misunderstood what a UCL and FAL claim required: “very little.”  Deceptiveness was a question of materiality, which was for a jury to decide rather than a court at the certification stage.  As a policy matter, California focuses on the defendant’s objective conduct. “If a product is advertised with a misrepresentation, that is more or less the end of it; it can be presumed at the class certification stage that the consumer would have paid less for the product, or not purchased it at all, with more accurate information.”  HP argued that this produced a windfall to unharmed or oblivious consumers; this was true “to the extent that the UCL and FAL are extremely consumer-friendly statutes that require very little to establish liability.”  But there were checks on runaway liability: the UCL is an equitable statute generally limiting plaintiffs to injunctive relief and restitution, not damages or attorneys’ fees, and HP had “presentable” arguments for a small, relatively painless restitution award given that the files not automatically backed up were used by less than 1% of the population; studies showed that most people would’ve bought the product anyway; and the user manual also disclosed that the product could be programmed to back up the outlier files.  A trier of fact might well find no material misrepresentation or only a tiny one.  “Of course, Waller puts the value differential somewhere between $12 and $30 per hard drive, but these are all questions for the trier of fact to resolve.” 

A second check on runaway liability “is the requirement that class members at least have been exposed to the misrepresentation,” per Mazza.  HP argued that putative class members weren’t exposed to a uniform representation, since the 1 TB drive had different packaging from the 320 GB drive Waller bought, and since online purchasers didn’t all see the same representations: one website “neither described the SimpleSave or included text from the product packaging in the listing,” while Amazon apparently included the misrepresentations at issue but it wasn’t clear that the text was identical to the actual packaging or how responsible HP was for that description.  HP’s point could be addressed by modifying the class definition, possibly with a website-by-website analysis.  At a minimum, certification of a class of all in-store purchasers of SimpleSave devices could be appropriate.

However, “several months after Waller purchased his SimpleSave and after he filed his original complaint in this case, HP released a free software update for the SimpleSave that makes it automatically back up all file types.”  And already-purchased SimpleSave devices automatically checked for updates when connected to the internet.  The update remains available even though SimpleSave devices are no longer made or sold.  Indeed, Waller’s own SimpleSave had the update soon after it was released.  Waller conceded at his deposition that the update addressed his grievance.

HP argued that common questions couldn’t predominate given that individualized inquiries would be needed to determine when class members took advantage of the upgrade.  “Not only do individual issues potentially predominate when there’s an available remedy for the grievance of the putative class, but the availability of that remedy calls into question the Court’s very benefit-of-the-bargain theory of injury in this case.”  Once purchasers got a device that automatically saved all their files, they then had exactly what they paid for.

Relatedly, HP argued that Waller didn’t fairly and adequately protect the class’s interests given the remedy already available without a costly lawsuit.  When disappointed class members would be better off with refunds or replacements, the high transaction costs—notice and attorneys’ fees—arent’ justified.  This tied in to HP’s argument that the upgrade was superior to a class action.  Although Rule 23(b)(3) speaks of “other available methods for fairly and efficiently adjudicating the controversy,” and upgrades aren’t a form of “adjudication,” remedial measures taken by a defendant can be taken into account in superiority analysis. 

Even if the update didn’t affect predominance, it did bear on adequacy and superiority.  The upgrade also went to the core of the economic injury argument at the heart of UCL certification as the court interpreted it. “The UCL may not require any individualized proof of deception, reliance, and injury, but what that really means is that it doesn’t require proof of deception, reliance, and injury beyond a buyer paying more for a product than he otherwise would have.”  Without that threshold economic injury, there’s no UCL claim. Waller’s extra injuries—the cost of retrieving files that weren’t backed up—weren’t enough to satisfy the injury and causation requirements for standing in a restitution class action.  Thus, the update caused certification to fail.

The court did reject HP’s argument that Waller didn’t offer a reliable method for calculating restitution, something that need not be shown with certainty at the certification stage. The financial injury could be measured by calculating the cost differential between the price of the SimpleSave and the price of a device that had to be manually configured to save certain file types.
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Willful false advertising insufficient to justify fee award

Eastman Chemical Co. v. Plastipure, Inc., No. A–12–CA–057, 2013 WL 5555373 (W.D. Tex. Oct. 4, 2013)

Previous discussion here.  Based on its successful Lanham Act false advertising trial result, Eastman sought attorneys’ fees and costs (the latter of which it got as a matter of course).  The court found the case unexceptional, at least in the relevant way, and declined to award fees.  Exceptional cases require underlying violations that are “malicious, fraudulent, deliberate, or willful,” and the required level of culpability is high and must be shown by clear and convincing evidence.

This case was really nothing more than a battle of experts, with testimony on both sides. Though the jury found willfulness, that didn’t bind the court on exceptionality.  The case required jurors to “sift through complex scientific testimony,” and the court would’ve upheld a verdict for defendants as well.  “From the evidence presented at trial, reasonable jurors could have found either side’s scientific testing to be flawed.”  Defendants’ belief in the validity of the testing and data underlying their statements was central to their defense theory, and a good faith belief should generally preclude a finding of exceptionality.  “Defendants presented considerable evidence demonstrating their good faith basis for believing the statements they made were true,” except possibly for the claim that plaintiff’s product Tritan itself was harmful to humans (um, seems like a pretty big “except”!).  Though no witness was willing to testify that Tritan was harmful because the relevant testing hasn’t been performed, that exception didn’t make the case exceptional in light of all the facts and circumstances.

Along with the “speculative nature” of liability, Eastman’s failure to prove money damages was also suggestive of nonexceptionality.  Eastman’s expert didn’t survey plastic manufacturers—Eastman’s direct customers—but instead surveyed end consumers, and her methodology was seriously called into question.  (The court also criticized her fee, “more than $65,000.00 for a basic Internet survey.”)

Eastman also asked the court to consider defendants’ litigation conduct, but the Fifth Circuit hadn’t endorsed that as a consideration: “the Court believes the safer course is to rely on the actual evidence rather than the squabblings of the attorneys who represented these parties.”  Even if it did consider litigation conduct, the court wouldn’t find the case exceptional.  There’s nothing exceptional about “petty discovery disputes and run-of-the-mill litigation tactics, particularly where both sides have willingly run up their fees to the tune of several million dollars.”  The case was aggressively litigated, but “neither side was sure what this case actually was until the trial was over. Pleaded causes of action, defenses, and other issues melted away as the actual evidence failed to provide any support for the parties’ asserted positions.”  Though Eastman failed even to seek money damages from the jury, before the trial its settlement offer was over $5 million plus other relief.  “Defendants had at least five million good reasons to proceed to trial, as even a total loss at the hands of the jury left Defendants in a better position than settling this case would have.”

In a footnote, the court snarked that this was an “exceptional” case in the lay rather than legal sense, since the lawyers spent more than $7 million on a one-issue case with no damages; the jury resolved the issue in under four hours of deliberation but the parties filed over 185 pages of post-trial motions; and there were multiple discovery disputes that contributed to the “needlessly contentious” litigation. “And who could forget the parties’ generous decision to extend the dispositive motions deadline by five weeks without seeking leave or even giving the Court notice, in violation of this Court’s rules? Truth be told, this case has been, and continues to be, an exceptional example of precisely how not to try a lawsuit.”  (Eek.  I have to say, I’m a bit more sympathetic to plaintiff here, given that defendant’s ads accused it of being harmful to people—that’s pretty disparaging, if untrue, and I can see why they would’ve considered it bet-the-company litigation.  That doesn’t mean the case was pleasant to try, or that every part of the burden can be placed on defendants’ shoulders, though.)
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