Itt Continental Baking Company, Inc. v. Federal Trade Commission, Ted Bates & Company, Inc. v. Federal Trade Commission

532 F.2d 207, 45 A.L.R. Fed. 587, 1976 U.S. App. LEXIS 12622
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 1, 1976
Docket356, Docket 75-4141
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 532 F.2d 207 (Itt Continental Baking Company, Inc. v. Federal Trade Commission, Ted Bates & Company, Inc. v. Federal Trade Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Itt Continental Baking Company, Inc. v. Federal Trade Commission, Ted Bates & Company, Inc. v. Federal Trade Commission, 532 F.2d 207, 45 A.L.R. Fed. 587, 1976 U.S. App. LEXIS 12622 (2d Cir. 1976).

Opinion

ROBERT P. ANDERSON, Circuit Judge:

These are petitions to review an order of the Federal Trade Commission (Commission or FTC) requiring that the petitioners, ITT Continental Baking Co., Inc. (ITT Continental) and Ted Bates & Company, Inc. (Bates), cease and desist from making various types of nutritional claims in advertising food products. 1 The cease and desist order was predicated on the Commission’s finding that, in a series of advertisements, ITT Continental and Bates, its advertising agency, violated §§ 5 and 12 of the Federal Trade Commission Act by falsely representing ITT Continental’s product, “Wonder Bread”, to be “an extraordinary food for producing dramatic growth in children.” The petitioners claim that the Commission’s finding of a violation was both procedurally defective and unsupported by the record. They also claim that, even on the basis of the finding itself, the Commission’s cease and desist order is too broad and vague to be sustained. 2 For the reasons hereinafter stated, we affirm the Commission’s order as to the violation found but modify the cease and desist portions thereof.

I.

Although there is evidence that American consumers do not pay much attention to nutritional content when purchasing bread, 3 for many years the advertisers of Wonder Bread apparently operated on the contrary assumption; and petitioner Bates used the nutritional qualities of Wonder Bread as that product’s “unique selling proposition” 4 in the advertisements it helped develop for ITT Continental. In particular, the petitioners ran two advertising campaigns em *211 phasizing Wonder Bread’s nutritional value which formed part of the basis, for the FTC proceedings here reviewed. The first, referred to as the “Wonder Years” campaign, took place between 1964 and Í970, and featured, inter alia, television 5 commercials referring to the “Wonder Years — ages one through twelve — when your child actually grows to ninety percent of his adult-height” and enumerating the “vital elements” found in Wonder Bread “for growing minds and bodies.” 6 The second campaign, which ran in 1970 and 1971, involved the so-called “How Big” commercials, which typically portrayed responses of several- children to the question, “How big do you want to be?” — e. g., “Big enough to ride a two-wheeler” — and suggested that the viewer could help “by serving nutritious Wonder Bread.” 7 The television commercials in both campaigns generally contained what the petitioners refer to as a “fantasy growth sequence,” a visual insert in which, “through some unexplained filming technique,” a small child is shown growing to the size of a 12-year-old in a few seconds.

The above-described advertisements were aimed mainly at women between 18 and 49 years of age with children below the age of 18, 8 but “substantial numbers” of children *212 were stipulated to be in the viewing audience as well. 9 In addition, the petitioners presented on children’s television programs advertisements for Wonder Bread which were specifically directed at children. For example, on the “Captain Kangaroo” show, the host was portrayed discussing with “Mr. Moose” the latter’s goals concerning physical growth, and, while conceding that Wonder Bread would not cause Mr. Moose to grow “quite as big as a tree,” the Captain asserted that “Wonder does help boys and girls grow up big and strong . . . .” 10 These commercials did not contain the so-called fantasy growth sequence.

On August 24, 1971, the FTC issued a complaint against the petitioners alleging that their Wonder Bread advertisements were false, misleading, deceptive, and unfair in several different respects. The complaint also contained allegations relating to advertisements for another group of ITT Continental’s products, “Hostess Snack Cakes,” which allegations were ultimately dismissed and are irrelevant for purposes of this review except possibly insofar as the fact of their dismissal bears on the reasonableness of the Commission’s cease and desist order, to be considered infra. The crucial allegations concerning Wonder Bread were contained in paragraphs eight, ten, and eleven of the complaint. Paragraph eight charged that the petitioners had represented, “directly and by implication,” that:

“(a) . . . Wonder Bread is an outstanding source of nutrients, distinct from other enriched breads.
(b) Consuming . . . Wonder Bread in the customary manner that bread is used in the diet will provide a child age one to twelve with all the nutrients, in recommended quantities, that are essential to healthy growth and development.
(c) Parents can rely on Wonder Bread to provide their children with all nutrients that are essential to healthy growth and development.
(d) The optimum contribution a parent can make to his child’s nutrition during the formative years of growth is to assure that the child consumes Wonder Bread regularly.
(e) The protein supplied by said Wonder Bread is complete protein of high nutritional quality necessary to assure maximum growth and development.”

Paragraph ten alleged:

“Certain of the [Wonder Bread] advertisements are addressed primarily to children or to general audiences which include substantial numbers of children, which advertisements tend to exploit the aspirations of children for rapid and healthy growth and development by falsely portraying, directly and by implication, . . . Wonder Bread as an extraordinary food for producing dramatic growth in children. * * * 7f

Paragraph eleven alleged:

“Certain of the [Wonder Bread] advertisements are addressed primarily to parents of children or are addressed to gen *213 eral audiences which include substantial numbers of parents of children, which advertisements tend to exploit the emotional concern of such parents for the healthy physical and mental growth and development of their children by falsely portraying, directly and by implication, Wonder Bread as a necessary food for their children to grow and develop to the fullest extent during the preadolescent years. * * * »

For the most part the petitioners admitted that Wonder Bread did not have the nutritional qualities alleged to have been claimed for it in the challenged advertisements, but they denied that the advertisements represented that the bread did have those qualities. The case turned, therefore, on the meaning of the Wonder Bread advertisements themselves.

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Bluebook (online)
532 F.2d 207, 45 A.L.R. Fed. 587, 1976 U.S. App. LEXIS 12622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/itt-continental-baking-company-inc-v-federal-trade-commission-ted-bates-ca2-1976.