Carlay Co. v. Federal Trade Commission

153 F.2d 493, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3763, 1947 Trade Cas. (CCH) 57,443
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 15, 1946
Docket8735
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 153 F.2d 493 (Carlay Co. v. Federal Trade Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carlay Co. v. Federal Trade Commission, 153 F.2d 493, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3763, 1947 Trade Cas. (CCH) 57,443 (7th Cir. 1946).

Opinion

LINDLEY, District Judge.

Petitioners seek a review of an order of the Federal Trade Commission directing them to desist from disseminating advertisements which represent (a) that excessive weight may be removed from the human body through the use of petitioners’ product and weight reducing plan without restricting the diet and (b) that the removal of excess weight through the use of the product and plan is “easy.” The order further directs that any advertisements shall disclose that the product and plan include adherence to “a restricted diet” and that such adherence is essential to weight reduction. The issue of fact arising upon this order is narrow, involving, as it does, merely determination of whether there was substantial evidence before the Commission to support the finding that petitioners’ weight reducing plan is not “easy” and does necessitate following a “restricted diet.”

Petitioners manufacture and sell caramel candy containing corn syrup, condensed milk, sugar, hydrogenated cocoanut oil, soybean flour, maltose, defatted wheat germ, powdered egg yolk, powdered carrots, dextrose, vitamin A from liver oil, vitamin B1 from thiamin, vitamin D from ergosterol, salt and artificial flavors. They advertise the candy and a weight-reducing plan, averring that eating one or two pieces of the candy before a meal will deter one from over-eating rich, fattening foods, high in calories; that one does not “cut out sweets, fattening and starchy foods” but rather “just cuts them down.” It is not disputed that certain advertised statements are true, such as that this is a wholesome nutritious candy or that the added vitamins A, B1 and D are not found in ordinary candy but are included in order to supply that lack of such vitamins resulting from intake of fewer calories at meal time. The advertisements further represent that the plan is “easy,” “simple” and “safe”; that under it, one eats one or two pieces of the candy before meals and that doing so encourages the eater not to consume rich, fattening foods, high in calories; that the candy, eaten as directed by the plan, curbs the appetite for fattening foods; that the plan is effective only in cases where the product is eaten as directed by the plan; that one’s intake of food is reduced automatically, without the usual effort, without weakening effects and without hunger pains; that it requires no “dangerous diet,” “starvation diet,” drugs or exercise. This advertising the Commission has found and now insists is misleading and deceptive for the reason, as it says, that the plan is not “easy” and involves “essentially” a restricted diet.

It is undisputed in this record that eating sweets just before a meal curbs the desire for food and that, as a result, one eating the candy eats less than he otherwise would. The plan does not require desistance from eating any particular food, but the whole thought is that, by eating the candy, the desire for food is reduced and there follows, quite naturally, smaller intake of fats and starches. The resulting deficiency in vitamins is made up by those supplied in the candy. There is some testimony that the curbing of the appetite is “temporary” in effect but the record is not clear as to what the witness had in mind when he employed the comparative term “temporary.” We think it manifest, however, that, even under this testimony, the most temporary curb of desire for food covers a period of from three' to four hours. Obviously, it *495 will depend upon the individual as to how long this restraint will continue. With some, it will last from one meal to the other; with others, it may last a shorter time. There is no representation to the contrary. Indeed, petitioners suggest that if one becomes hungry, he may take ian additional candy between meals.

The plan, itself, does not appear in the advertisements. It is really in the nature of detailed directions enclosed in the candy box. But each advertisement refers to the plan. Surely, it is impractical to copy or include all the details of the plan in the advertisement, but the reader is advised and knows that when he buys the product and undertakes to follow the plan he must coordinate his action with that plan. The idea does involve eating less food, not as a matter of consciously refraining from eating but as a matter of result in that one eating the candy will, according to well recognized medical principles, have less desire for food and, therefore, eat less. This supports the representation of the advertisements that the intake of food is reduced. In the true sense one is not subjected to a restricted diet but experiences a restricted appetite, a reduced appetite, resulting in a reduced intake of food, all without requirement that the user of the plan shall intentionally refrain from any particular food. This is natural automatic curbing of the appetite and of the desire for food resulting automatically in a reduced intake of food.

These facts are indisputable, we think, from over-all consideration of the testimony of all of the physicians, including two who testified for the Commission and some seven called by petitioners. Neither of those who testified for the Commission had ever made any clinical tests; each was called as an expert to examine the product and its formula and to express an opinion as to the results of use of the candy and plan. Each testified that the caramel was wholesome; that it contained nothing that would, in itself effect reduction in weight; that the vitamin factors would probably be adequate to make up for loss of calories resulting from eating less fattening food; that it was a common thing to eat a sweet to still the appetite; that the calorie intake thereby becomes smaller and that the real accomplishment lay in so following the plan as to result in a “reduced diet.” One physician testified for the Commission that one attempting to bring about a reduction of weight due to overeating ordinarily prescribes for his patient one thin slice of bread, a carbohydrate, a protein, fruit juice or unsweetened fruit, fish, cooked vegetables without any cream, sauce or butter and fruit for dessert. Such is ordinary routine, said the doctor, for iWeight reduction. He agreed that it is quite “a definite thing to do” to curb the appetite by eating candy just before a meal, resulting in lessened intake of all kinds of food at the meal.

Seven experts testified for petitioners, five of whom were reputable physicians, one a pharmaceutical chemist and one a consulting chemist, all apparently highly qualified. Each of them testified that taking petitioners’ candy before a meal would reduce the appetite, resulting in lessened food intake and eventually in reduction in weight; that the candy includes dextrose, which is a primary sugar, which is absorbed rapidly in the blood stream and has, therefore, a special value in immediate curb of the appetite. Their testimony indicates clearly that the difficulty with the ordinary person, in voluntarily reducing, is that he begins with good intentions but that his desire for food tempts him to eat more; that when Ayds candy is taken, it almost immediately gets the sugar into the blood stream, curbs the appetite, prevents one from approaching the table with a ravenous appetite and automatically helps him to eat less without conscious effort. Each of these witnesses testified that the plan is relatively easy and simple.

In addition we have the doctors’ testimony as to clinical observations, one of them testifying to observation of 22 persons, another 45, another 15 and another 8 and another 32. In practically all of these clinical cases, reduction of weight resulted.

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Bluebook (online)
153 F.2d 493, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3763, 1947 Trade Cas. (CCH) 57,443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlay-co-v-federal-trade-commission-ca7-1946.