JIAHERB INC. v. MTC INDUSTRIES, INC.

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 5, 2025
Docket2:18-cv-15532
StatusUnknown

This text of JIAHERB INC. v. MTC INDUSTRIES, INC. (JIAHERB INC. v. MTC INDUSTRIES, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
JIAHERB INC. v. MTC INDUSTRIES, INC., (D.N.J. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY

JIAHERB INC., Civil No.: 18-cv-15532 (KSH) (CLW) Plaintiff,

v. MTC INDUSTRIES, INC.,

OPIN ION Defendant.

Katharine S. Hayden, U.S.D.J. I. Introduction Jiaherb, Inc. (“Jiaherb”) has sued MTC Industries, Inc. (“MTC”), alleging that the saw palmetto oil it purchased from MTC was intentionally adulterated in violation of Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a), and the parties’ contract of sale, among other claims arising out of the Uniform Commercial Code and state law. Following motion practice, the Court held a four-day bench trial. As required by Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a)(1), the Court now issues its findings of fact and conclusions of law. II. Background & Procedural History Jiaherb and MTC are each in the business of manufacturing and selling natural ingredients used in the dietary supplement industry. In 2018, a dispute arose between them over the quality of certain batches of saw palmetto oil, a supplement with potential health benefits, that MTC sold to Jiaherb in 2016 and 2017. Jiaherb claims that testing it ordered reveals that the product was adulterated with coconut oil. Jiaherb’s initial complaint, filed on October 31, 2018, asserted seven counts, including a claim for false advertising and unfair competition under Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act. (D.E. 1.) MTC moved to dismiss that count because the complaint alleged that Jiaherb’s injury stemmed from a purchaser/supplier relationship with MTC, which precludes a Section 43(a) claim. The Court dismissed the claim without prejudice, holding that amendment would not be futile if Jiaherb could sufficiently plead a competitive relationship with MTC and that it suffered

“an injury to a commercial interest in reputation or sales” sufficient to confer it statutory standing. (D.E. 41, Mot. to Dismiss Op., at 5, 7-8 (citation omitted).) Jiaherb successfully amended, and the operative amended complaint alleges violations of the Lanham Act (Count One), fraudulent inducement (Count Two), breach of contract (Count Three), breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing (Count Four), breach of the implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose (Count Five), breach of the implied warranty of merchantability (Count Six), and unjust enrichment (Count Seven). (D.E. 85, Am. Compl.)1 A bench trial was held on March 10, 14, 17, and 18, 2025.2 Seven witnesses testified, including an expert on each side. Jiaherb called Scott Chen, Jiaherb’s president; Xiaohong Wang, Jiaherb’s quality control manager; Min Du, a representative from Isura laboratories

(“Isura”); and James P. Kababick, offered as an expert on adulteration detection in supplements.

1 On June 3, 2022, nearly two years after it answered Jiaherb’s amended complaint and four years after it answered Jiaherb’s first complaint, MTC moved to amend its answer to add counterclaims for trade secret misappropriation. (D.E. 116.) Jiaherb opposed. (D.E. 119.) The Court dismissed the counterclaims with prejudice, finding that MTC failed to plead that a protectable trade secret existed. (D.E. 127, May 4, 2023 Op., at 5-8.)

2 When discovery, which did not include depositions, and the remaining pretrial proceedings concluded, a final pretrial order (the parties’ second attempt at one) was entered. (D.E. 146.) The parties did not file any motions in limine, and indicated in the final pretrial order that they intended to raise any expert issues at trial through voir dire and live objections. (Id. at 7-8.) MTC called Jimmy Wang, MTC’s CEO; Zhang Bo, a representative from Xi’an SaiNa Biological Technology Company; and Dr. Poguang Wang, offered as an expert in analytical chemistry. Post trial, Jiaherb filed its proposed findings of fact (“Pl. FF”) and conclusions of law

(“Pl. CL”) (D.E. 167), and MTC filed its proposed findings of fact (“Def. FF”) and conclusions of law (“Def. CL”) (D.E. 166). III. Findings of Fact Before setting forth the Court’s narrative of the facts, it is important to note that there is no dispute about whether the parties had a contract (they did) and what the terms were, or what happened that led to this lawsuit, with one towering exception: Jiaherb says that drums of saw palmetto oil it bought from MTC and resold to a customer were adulterated, and the adulterant was coconut oil, which MTC flatly denies. As Jiaherb states in its Preliminary Statement to its post-trial proposed narrative statement of facts: “The admissible evidence introduced at trial overwhelmingly support[s] Jiaherb’s pre-trial proposed findings of fact.” (D.E. 167, at 1.)

Jiaherb’s pre-trial findings of fact, which are set forth in discrete paragraphs, are that its independent lab testing showed the presence of vegetable oils in the samples of the product at issue, and specifically that “[r]esults of the analysis show the presence of coconut oil while coconut oil should not have been present.” (D.E. 154 ¶¶ 38, 40-43.) MTC frames the factual dispute as landing in one of two inquiries. The Court could decide to concentrate on whether MTC fulfilled the letter of the parties’ contract; or the Court could look to the larger picture and weigh the evidence Jiaherb presented on its testing results. From the Introduction to the post-trial proposed findings of fact MTC submitted: If the Court concludes that the contract only required MTC to supply Saw Palmetto Oil that contained fatty acids greater than 85% as determined by the GC method per USP 37, all of Plaintiff’s claims fail because that is what MTC supplied to Jiaherb. If the Court goes beyond the terms of the contract and looks at the non-contractual tests relied upon by Plaintiff, all of Plaintiff’s claims fail because Jiaherb did not prove adulteration by a preponderance of the evidence.

(D.E. 166, at 1.) There was no pre-trial ruling that prevented Jiaherb from relying on its independent testing results to prove adulteration, and the Court focuses on what the parties focused on: did Jiaherb prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that MTC adulterated the saw palmetto oil that it sold Jiaherb with a cheaper vegetable oil, specifically coconut oil? A. The Parties Jiaherb manufactures and sells natural ingredients primarily used in dietary supplements. (T13 12:3-14 [Chen].) Jiaherb sources these raw ingredients from other manufacturers and sells them to its customers; these customers manufacture products from the ingredients to sell to everyday consumers in the marketplace. (T1 12:18-13:2 [Chen].) Jiaherb has been in this business for 16 years. (T1 12:8-10 [Chen].) Scott Chen, Jiaherb’s president, has been working at the company since its inception and is in charge of the company’s management and operation. (T1 11:8-18 [Chen].) Jiaherb’s quality control manager, Xiaohong Wang, oversees quality issues raised by Jiaherb’s customers and has worked at the company for nine years. (T1 177:23- 178:4, 178:23-179:3 [X. Wang].) When quality issues arise, she communicates with Jiaherb’s in-house laboratories in China or third-party laboratories it does business with. (T1 178:24- 179:20 [X. Wang].)

3 “T1” refers to the trial transcript dated March 10, 2025; “T2” refers to the trial transcript dated March 14, 2025; “T3” refers to the trial transcript dated March 17, 2025; and “T4” refers to the trial transcript dated March 18, 2025. MTC also manufactures and sells natural ingredients used in dietary supplements and has been in business for 31 years. (T3 417:22-23, 419:20-420:3 [J. Wang].) Originally, MTC was in the pharmaceutical industry. (T3 419:20-22 [J. Wang].) In the late 1990s it pivoted to the nutraceutical industry which was expanding rapidly and not highly regulated.

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