Patane v. Nestlé Waters N. Am., Inc.
This text of 314 F. Supp. 3d 375 (Patane v. Nestlé Waters N. Am., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT'S MOTION TO DISMISS
BACKGROUND
The principal complaint in these consolidated class actions has been filed in the docket of Patane v. Nestlé Waters North America, Inc. , 3:17-cv-01381(JAM). It alleges that Nestlé has long marketed its ubiquitous Poland Spring water products as "100% Natural Spring Water," despite the fact that it is not "spring water" as that term is very specifically defined by federal law.
By way of background, the federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act (FDCA) establishes basic definitions (known as "standards of identity") for food products and prohibits the false labeling of such food products.2 In accordance with its regulatory authority under the FDCA, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has promulgated a detailed regulatory definition of "spring water" that distinguishes it *379from other kinds of water that may be marketed for public sale. See
According to the FDA, if a water product is to be labeled and sold as "spring water," the water must be "derived from an underground formation from which water flows naturally to the surface of the earth," and there must be a "natural force causing the water to flow to the surface through a natural orifice."Ibid. The FDA's regulation further provides that "spring water" can be "collected only at the spring or through a bore hole tapping the underground formation feeding the spring," and that if it is collected "with the use of an external force," the water must be "from the same underground stratum as the spring, as shown by a measurable hydraulic connection using a hydrogeologically valid method between the bore hole and the natural spring, and shall have all the physical properties, before treatment, and be of the same composition and quality, as the water that flows naturally to the surface of the earth."
Although the crux of the complaint is that Poland Spring water does not comply with federal law, it is undisputed that the FDCA does not give rise to a private federal cause of action for violation of the FDA's "spring water" regulation. Accordingly, the complaint alleges only state law causes of action. The first two counts of the complaint allege general state common law claims for fraud and breach of contract on behalf of a nationwide class whose members have purchased Poland Spring water since November 5, 2003. The next nine counts on behalf of individual state sub-classes allege violations of various consumer fraud and unfair trade practice statutes of Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont.3 All of these counts of the complaint are premised on a common allegation that Poland Spring water is mislabeled as "spring water" in violation of federal law. Nestlé has filed a motion to dismiss plaintiffs' claims for multiple reasons I will discuss below.
DISCUSSION
Nestlé moves to dismiss under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(1) for lack of subject matter *380jurisdiction and under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim. The standard that governs such a motion is well established: a complaint may not survive unless it alleges facts that taken as true give rise to plausible grounds to sustain the Court's subject matter jurisdiction and to sustain plaintiffs' claims for relief. See, e.g., Ashcroft v. Iqbal ,
Nestlé first argues that plaintiffs have no standing as required to sustain this Court's jurisdiction over the complaint. In accordance with the Constitution's "case-or-controversy" requirement, a federal court lacks jurisdiction over a lawsuit unless a plaintiff alleges a concrete and particularized injury-in-fact that is fairly traceable to a defendant's wrongful conduct and redressable by a court order. See, e.g., Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins , --- U.S. ----,
Nestlé argues that plaintiffs could not have been deceived because it has been sued many times before on the same grounds. According to Nestlé, these prior lawsuits and attendant media coverage put plaintiffs on notice that Poland Spring's "spring water" labels were false. But the possibility that any prior lawsuits or media coverage put plaintiffs on notice of anything is a fact question that is not suitable for me to resolve at the pleading stage on a motion to dismiss. Moreover, Nestlé's argument ignores Nestlé's own steadfast denials in prior lawsuits that it was mislabeling Poland Spring water. Nestlé cannot have it both ways: that plaintiffs somehow "knew" Nestlé's labels were false but that *381Nestlé's labels were not in fact false. Plaintiffs have standing to maintain their claims.5
The Rooker-Feldman Doctrine
Nestlé next argues that the Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction because of the Rooker-Feldman doctrine. "Rooker-Feldman
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ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT'S MOTION TO DISMISS
BACKGROUND
The principal complaint in these consolidated class actions has been filed in the docket of Patane v. Nestlé Waters North America, Inc. , 3:17-cv-01381(JAM). It alleges that Nestlé has long marketed its ubiquitous Poland Spring water products as "100% Natural Spring Water," despite the fact that it is not "spring water" as that term is very specifically defined by federal law.
By way of background, the federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act (FDCA) establishes basic definitions (known as "standards of identity") for food products and prohibits the false labeling of such food products.2 In accordance with its regulatory authority under the FDCA, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has promulgated a detailed regulatory definition of "spring water" that distinguishes it *379from other kinds of water that may be marketed for public sale. See
According to the FDA, if a water product is to be labeled and sold as "spring water," the water must be "derived from an underground formation from which water flows naturally to the surface of the earth," and there must be a "natural force causing the water to flow to the surface through a natural orifice."Ibid. The FDA's regulation further provides that "spring water" can be "collected only at the spring or through a bore hole tapping the underground formation feeding the spring," and that if it is collected "with the use of an external force," the water must be "from the same underground stratum as the spring, as shown by a measurable hydraulic connection using a hydrogeologically valid method between the bore hole and the natural spring, and shall have all the physical properties, before treatment, and be of the same composition and quality, as the water that flows naturally to the surface of the earth."
Although the crux of the complaint is that Poland Spring water does not comply with federal law, it is undisputed that the FDCA does not give rise to a private federal cause of action for violation of the FDA's "spring water" regulation. Accordingly, the complaint alleges only state law causes of action. The first two counts of the complaint allege general state common law claims for fraud and breach of contract on behalf of a nationwide class whose members have purchased Poland Spring water since November 5, 2003. The next nine counts on behalf of individual state sub-classes allege violations of various consumer fraud and unfair trade practice statutes of Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont.3 All of these counts of the complaint are premised on a common allegation that Poland Spring water is mislabeled as "spring water" in violation of federal law. Nestlé has filed a motion to dismiss plaintiffs' claims for multiple reasons I will discuss below.
DISCUSSION
Nestlé moves to dismiss under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(1) for lack of subject matter *380jurisdiction and under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim. The standard that governs such a motion is well established: a complaint may not survive unless it alleges facts that taken as true give rise to plausible grounds to sustain the Court's subject matter jurisdiction and to sustain plaintiffs' claims for relief. See, e.g., Ashcroft v. Iqbal ,
Nestlé first argues that plaintiffs have no standing as required to sustain this Court's jurisdiction over the complaint. In accordance with the Constitution's "case-or-controversy" requirement, a federal court lacks jurisdiction over a lawsuit unless a plaintiff alleges a concrete and particularized injury-in-fact that is fairly traceable to a defendant's wrongful conduct and redressable by a court order. See, e.g., Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins , --- U.S. ----,
Nestlé argues that plaintiffs could not have been deceived because it has been sued many times before on the same grounds. According to Nestlé, these prior lawsuits and attendant media coverage put plaintiffs on notice that Poland Spring's "spring water" labels were false. But the possibility that any prior lawsuits or media coverage put plaintiffs on notice of anything is a fact question that is not suitable for me to resolve at the pleading stage on a motion to dismiss. Moreover, Nestlé's argument ignores Nestlé's own steadfast denials in prior lawsuits that it was mislabeling Poland Spring water. Nestlé cannot have it both ways: that plaintiffs somehow "knew" Nestlé's labels were false but that *381Nestlé's labels were not in fact false. Plaintiffs have standing to maintain their claims.5
The Rooker-Feldman Doctrine
Nestlé next argues that the Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction because of the Rooker-Feldman doctrine. "Rooker-Feldman bars the federal courts from exercising jurisdiction over claims 'brought by state-court losers complaining of injuries caused by state-court judgments rendered before the district court proceedings commenced and inviting district court review and rejection of those judgments.' " Sykes v. Mel S. Harris & Assocs. LLC ,
According to Nestlé, plaintiffs are in essence complaining about an injury caused by Nestlé's settlement in November of 2003 of a similar class action lawsuit that was filed in a state court of Illinois. See Doc. # 53-2 at 5 (Ramsey v. Nestlé Waters N. Am. , No. 03 CHK 817 (Ill. Cir. Ct., Nov. 5, 2003) (final judgment and order of dismissal with settlement agreement) ). That class action-referred to by the parties as "the Ramsey action"-involved a nationwide class of plaintiffs who purchased Poland Spring water from January 1, 1996, to November 5, 2003. Doc. # 53-2 at 8. Nestlé relies in particular on a provision of the Ramsey settlement agreement stating that "[t]he Parties agree that Defendant shall be permitted to continue to bottle, label and sell Poland Spring brand bottled water as 'spring water' using all of the spring water sources it has used since January 1, 1996," and that "[n]othing in this Settlement Agreement shall require that Defendant relabel its Poland Spring brand spring water products as anything other than spring water or alter its spring water advertising in any way with respect to the spring water sources it has used since January 1, 1996." Doc. # 53-2 at 33-34.
Nestlé's argument relies on a misunderstanding of the scope of the Rooker-Feldman doctrine. The Rooker-Feldman doctrine does not apply merely because there has been a prior state court action or merely because the settlement of a prior state court action has not foreclosed a defendant from continuing to engage in the conduct that forms the basis for a later federal action. Instead, the Rooker Feldman doctrine applies only if it can be said that the prior state court action has caused the federal plaintiff's injuries: "[T]he plaintiff must complain of injuries caused by a state-court judgment," and "[t]he causation requirement is only satisfied if 'the third party's actions are produced by a state court judgment and not simply ratified, acquiesced in, or left unpunished by it.' " Sykes ,
Here the provision relied on by Nestlé at best does no more than ratify Nestlé's future conduct (and only as to those particular sources of sources of water it has used since 1996). The Ramsey action involved purchasers of Poland Spring water before November 5, 2003, while the current action involves purchasers of Poland Spring water after November 5, 2003. The agreement by a prior class of plaintiffs in Ramsey to allow Nestlé to continue some of its conduct is precisely the kind of ratification or acquiescence that does not meet the more demanding causation requirement *382for the Rooker-Feldman doctrine. See, e.g., Green v. City of New York ,
Release and Res Judicata
In a similar vein, Nestlé argues that plaintiffs' claims are foreclosed by the Ramsey settlement agreement. According to Nestlé, the Ramsey settlement precludes plaintiffs' class action for at least two reasons: (1) the Ramsey settlement agreement expressly released Nestlé from plaintiffs' claims, and (2) the Ramsey settlement agreement triggers the rule of res judicata . I don't agree with either of these arguments.
As an initial matter, the record does not presently allow for a conclusion that the Ramsey class is the same as or is in privity with the current proposed class of plaintiffs. The Ramsey action involved purchasers and consumers of Poland Spring water from 1996 to the date of final judgment on November 5, 2003. Doc. # 53-2 at 8. By contrast, the present plaintiffs and proposed class include only purchasers after November 5, 2003. Doc. # 1 at 16-22, 285. Is it possible that one or more of the present class plaintiffs purchased Poland Spring water both before and after November 5, 2003? Likely so. But there is an insufficient factual record at this time to determine the degree of overlap between these two classes, and it would be speculative for me to categorically conclude at this initial pleading stage that all named plaintiffs and prospective class members who purchased or consumed Poland Spring water after November 5, 2003 also did so before November 5, 2003.6
The Ramsey settlement agreement defines "released claims" in relevant part to include claims "that were asserted, that could or might have been asserted in any pleading or amended pleading." Doc. # 53-2 at 25-26 (definition of "released claims"). The agreement further provides that "the Released Claims include all claims, rights, demands, causes of action, liabilities, or suits, including Unknown Claims, as of the Effective Date." Id. at 46; id. at 47-48 (same). The "Effective date" was 30 days after entry of the final judgment in 2003. Id. at 49. These terms do not suggest that the release applies to immunize forever any unlawful conduct that occurred after the date of the release.
As noted above, the Ramsey settlement agreement also provides that "[t]he Parties agree that Defendant shall be permitted to continue to bottle, label and sell Poland Spring brand bottled water as 'spring water'
*383using all of the spring water sources it has used since January 1, 1996." Id. at 33. But this provision applies to only a limited number of Poland Spring water facilities that were operational from 1996 to 2003 and at most binds only plaintiffs who purchased or consumed Poland Spring water prior to November 5, 2003, not those who only bought later. This provision does not furnish grounds to conclude across the board that all present plaintiffs and prospective class members have released any claims concerning the full range of Poland Spring sources that have produced water since November 5, 2003. Indeed, even Nestlé does not make this categorical a claim, speculating instead that plaintiffs are "likely members of the Ramsey class" and that "[m]any of them probably purchased or consumed Poland Spring prior to the date of the Ramsey Final Judgment." Doc. # 53-1 at 32 (emphasis added).
Under Illinois law, contractual releases that release a party from future liability "are strictly construed against the benefiting party and must spell out the intention of the parties with great particularity." Stratman v. Brent ,
Nestlé's argument based on the Ramsey judgment's permanent injunction is unavailing for the same reason. The judgment states that "[r]eleasers are permanently barred and enjoined from commencing or prosecuting any direct or representative action ... that involves or asserts any of the Released Claims." Doc. # 53-2 at 18; id. at 25 (same). Because I conclude that plaintiffs have not released any of the claims at issue here, this injunction is inapplicable.
Similar reasons belie Nestlé's res judicata argument. To determine the preclusive impact of a state court judgment, a federal court is "required to apply the preclusion law of the rendering state." Conopco, Inc. v. Roll Int'l ,
I have already explained why there is not necessarily an identity of parties or privies. Nor is there necessarily an identity of cause of action. The Illinois Supreme Court has adopted the "transactional test" for determining whether an identity of cause of action exists. See River Park, Inc. v. City of Highland Park ,
Sensibly enough, res judicata does not apply if "the wrong suffered by the plaintiff is of a recurrent or ongoing nature." Id. at 63,
Nestlé argues that plaintiffs' claims are all preempted by federal law. Federal law may preempt state law in various ways. Sometimes Congress expressly preempts state law by statute, and other times state law may be impliedly preempted if Congress has occupied an entire field or if a state law somehow conflicts with or otherwise stands as an obstacle to the purpose of a federal law. See generally Oneok, Inc. v. Learjet, Inc. , --- U.S. ----,
Nestlé's preemption argument requires me to focus on two separate provisions of the FDCA. The first provision expressly preempts the States from imposing any "standard of identity" for food products (such as spring water) that is "not identical to [the FDCA] standard of identity."
The second significant provision of the FDCA is one that provides that "[a]ll such proceedings for the enforcement, or to restrain violations, of this chapter shall be by and in the name of the United States."
Although § 337(a) does not expressly preempt state law, it has long been understood to have an implied preemptive effect. In Buckman Co. v. Plaintiffs' Legal Comm. ,
The Second Circuit has noted that there can be no state law cause of action if a plaintiff's "true goal is to privately enforce alleged violations of the FDCA." PDK Labs, Inc. v. Friedlander ,
Taken together, these two provisions of the FDCA- § 343-1(a)(1) and § 337(a) -have a broad preemptive effect on state law claims like those at issue in this case. On the one hand, § 343-1(a)(1) precludes the States from adopting their own self-styled *386definitions or labeling requirements for "spring water" that differ or depart from the federal standards. On the other hand, § 337(a) -as interpreted in Buckman -forecloses state law causes of action that are predicated on a violation of the FDCA rather than on some independent provision or requirement of state law.
The upshot is that only a narrow range of state law claims involving mislabeling of "spring water" may escape preemption by the FDCA. In order to survive preemption, a state law claim must rely on an independent state law duty that parallels or mirrors the FDCA's requirement for "spring water," but must not solely and exclusively rely on violations of the FDCA's own requirements.
As Judge Posner has put it in a similar context, a State "can impose the identical requirement or requirements, and by doing so be enabled ... to enforce a violation of the [FDCA] as a violation of state law." Turek v. Gen. Mills, Inc. ,
[T]he conduct on which the claim is premised must be the type of conduct that would traditionally give rise to liability under state law-and that would give rise to liability under state law even if the FDCA had never been enacted. If the defendant's conduct is not of this type, then the plaintiff is effectively suing for a violation of the FDCA (no matter how the plaintiff labels the claim), and the plaintiff's claim is thus impliedly preempted under Buckman .
The kind of state law claim that may survive preemption is well demonstrated in the California Supreme Court's decision In re Farm Raised Salmon Cases ,
It is one thing for a State like California to outright adopt an FDCA standard and then for a plaintiff to sue under state law for the violation of that standard. But it is wholly another thing for a State not to adopt or mirror an FDCA standard and then for a plaintiff to sue under a generic state law claim (such as for fraud, breach *387of contract, or unfair trade practices) that would not be actionable absent a violation of the FDCA standard.
Where a state law claim would not exist but for a FDCA regulation, § 337(a) impliedly preempts the claim. For example, in Verzani v. Costco Wholesale Corp. ,
Thus, "in New York and many other states, courts have concluded that where a state has not adopted statutes that expressly mirror the FDCA, like California's Sherman Law, a plaintiff's claim that relies on the defendant's failure to comply with federal regulations is impliedly preempted." In re Trader Joe's Tuna Litig. ,
All that makes sense to me, and I think it is clear here that plaintiffs' claims are preempted by § 337(a) of the FDCA. The principal complaint alleges that Nestlé's Poland Spring water products "are falsely advertised and sold fraudulently to consumers because they do not comply with the FDA's 'standard of identity' for spring water , which defines genuine spring water and specifies the manner in which spring water must be 'collected' (or extracted) from the earth." Doc. # 1 at 12 (¶ 26) (emphasis added). The complaint goes on to describe in detail how the collection of Poland Spring water at multiple sites in Maine fails to comply with what the FDA requires. See, e.g., id. at 12-16 (¶¶ 27-41) (summary of plaintiffs' allegations); id. at 287 (¶ 879(c) ) (describing common questions of law for class certification basis to include "[w]hether Poland Spring Water complies with FDA regulations concerning bottled spring water").
More telling still, the complaint proclaims that because the "FDA lacks resources to police and enforce all of its regulations," the enforcement of the FDA's rules is "largely dependent upon ... private civil lawsuits such as this one." Doc. # 1 at 39 (¶ 106). Of course, that very ambition-to pursue a private cause of action under the FDCA-is exactly what § 337(a) and Buckman forbid.
Each and every one of plaintiffs' claims are wholly FDCA-dependent. Plaintiffs' principal claim of fraud for nationwide class relief refers solely to FDA regulations rather than any provisions of state law. Id. at 290-91 (¶¶ 890-900). Plaintiffs' breach-of-contract claim for nationwide class relief similarly relies on plaintiffs' allegation that the product delivered by Nestlé was not "genuine spring water," previously defined by reference solely to *388FDA regulations. Id. at 292 (¶ 907). Plaintiffs' various state law claims cite specific consumer protection statutes, but each of these generic consumer protection statutes are alleged to be violated because of Nestlé's recurring failure to comply with the FDA's federal standard for spring water. Id. at 293 (¶ 915), 295 (¶ 926), 297 (¶ 939), 298-99 (¶ 948), 301-02 (¶¶ 961, 965, 967), 306 (¶ 986), 310 (¶ 1007), 314-15 (¶¶ 1031, 1034), 319 (¶ 1056).
As if all this weren't enough, plaintiffs' own briefing likewise concedes that "[p]laintiffs' claims are based entirely on their allegation that 'Defendant Nestle Water's Poland Spring Water products are falsely advertised and sold fraudulently to consumers because they do not comply with the FDA's 'standard of identity' for spring water, which defines genuine spring water and specifies the manner in which spring water must be 'collected' (or extracted) from the earth.' " Doc. # 72 at 41-42 (quoting Compl. ¶ 26). Indeed, plaintiffs concede that their "claims are all co-existent with the FDCA and FDA regulations and will rise or fall based solely on whether they can prove that Poland Spring Water fails to meet the FDA's identity standard." Id. at 42.
This case is similar to Loreto v. Procter & Gamble Co. ,
Plaintiffs' claims in this case are comparable to the first theory in Loreto . Plaintiffs allege that Poland Spring's labels are fraudulent and misleading because they violate the FDA spring water identity regulation. Absent the FDA's specific standard of identity requirements for "spring water," plaintiffs would have no claims at all.10
Plaintiffs argue by way of footnote that Buckman is limited to the medical devices context. Doc. # 72 at 42 n.9. I don't agree. Although it is true that Buckman involved medical devices, the key provision on which it relied-§ 337(a) of the FDCA-was part of the original FDCA when enacted *389in 1938. See Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1938, Pub. L. No. 75-717, ch. 675, § 307,
Plaintiffs further rely on the Supreme Court's decision in Bates v. Dow Agrosciences, LLC ,
In short, despite the efforts plaintiffs make to clothe their claims in the garb of state law, the reality is that they are suing solely to enforce the FDCA's federal "spring water" standard. That is what Buckman and § 337(a) do not allow. Accordingly, I will dismiss the complaints on the ground that they are impliedly preempted by § 337(a) of the FDCA.13
*390Dismissal of Consolidated Actions
Four other class action lawsuits were filed after the filing of the Patane complaint and have been consolidated before me with this case. Just like the Patane complaint, these complaints assert nationwide and/or multi-state common law claims for fraud and/or breach of contract or breach of express warranty, as well as sub-class claims for violation of particular consumer protection statutes of particular states.14 As best as I can tell, all of these complaints essentially seek to enforce the FDA's "spring water" standard rather than any "spring water" standard that has been independently established or adopted under any state law.
The consolidated cases Krinsky v. Nestlé Waters North America, Inc. , 3:17-cv-01474, and Lilly v. Nestlé Waters North America, Inc. , 3:17-cv-01566, were consolidated with the Patane case prior to Nestlé's filing of the motion to dismiss. See Patane docket, Docs. # 40, # 41. Nestlé's motion to dismiss expressly requests the dismissal of the Patane, Krinsky , and Lilly complaints. Doc. # 53 at 1. The Brown case was consolidated with this case after Nestlé's motion to dismiss was filed, but the parties stipulated that the motion to dismiss would apply equally to the Brown case. See Brown v. Nestlé Waters North America, Inc. , 3:17-cv-01746, Doc. # 23 at 2-4. Because the Krinsky, Lilly , and Brown complaints are similar in material respects to the Patane complaint, I will dismiss each of the consolidated complaints for the same reason as discussed above: that they are preempted by § 337(a) of the FDCA.
The Ray case was not consolidated with this case until after the motion to dismiss was filed, and the Ray plaintiffs did not stipulate that the motion to dismiss filed in Patane would apply equally to the Ray action. See Ray v. Nestlé Waters North America Inc. , 3:17-cv-01944, Doc. # 24 (stipulation that Nestlé would have 30 days after the Court's ruling on the motion to dismiss to reply to the Ray complaint). Because the Ray complaint is similar in all material respects to the Patane complaint, it looks to me like my ruling here would apply with equal force to the Ray complaint. But because Ray was not subject to the motion to dismiss, I will not dismiss the case at this time. This ruling is without prejudice to Nestle's filing of a motion to dismiss the Ray complaint within 30 days *391and for the Ray plaintiffs to file any response.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Nestlé's motion to dismiss (Doc. # 53) is GRANTED, and the following complaints are dismissed: Patane v. Nestlé Waters North America, Inc. , 3:17-cv-01381, Krinsky v. Nestlé Waters North America, Inc. , 3:17-cv-01474, Lilly v. Nestlé Waters North America, Inc. , 17-cv-01566, and Brown v. Nestlé Waters North America, Inc. , 3:17-cv-01746. This ruling is without prejudice to plaintiffs' filing of amended complaints within 30 days that state any proper claims not preempted by federal law.
It is so ordered.
The consolidated cases include: Krinsky v. Nestlé Waters North America, Inc. , 3:17-cv-01474(JAM); Lilly v. Nestlé Waters North America, Inc. , 17-cv-01566(JAM); Brown v. Nestlé Waters North America, Inc. , 3:17-cv-01746(JAM); and Ray v. Nestlé Waters North America Inc. , 3:17-cv-01944(JAM).
See
The state consumer statutes alleged to be violated include: Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act,
Because I conclude that plaintiffs have standing to pursue their claims, there is no need for me to address at this time Nestlé's further argument that plaintiffs have no standing to seek injunctive relief.
For argument's sake I will assume-as Nestlé urges-that "[a] class member of a previous class action is bound by the judgment in the class action" and that "[j]udgments in a class action are binding on all the members of a class and those who may become members of a class." Hooker v. Simon ,
In view of my conclusion that plaintiffs have not released their claims against Nestlé and are not barred by res judicata because of the Ramsey judgment, there is no need for me to address plaintiffs' claim that the Ramsey settlement was invalidly procured by collusive means.
"(a) [N]o State or political subdivision of a State may directly or indirectly establish under any authority or continue in effect as to any food in interstate commerce-(1) any requirement for a food which is the subject of a standard of identity established under [
See
The complaint alleges in part that Poland Spring labels "are misleading under FDA rules" because they "depict pristine scenes of water flowing down a verdant hillside or a forest pond to convey an image of natural purity." Doc. # 1 at 8. Plaintiffs do not mention these pictorial-based allegations in their briefing or suggest that these allegations may withstand preemption even if their other allegations do not. To the contrary, plaintiffs insist that their "claims are premised entirely on the allegation that Nestle's Poland Spring water does not meet the FDA's standard of identity for 'spring water.' " Doc. # 72 at 39. Accordingly, I conclude that these claims about the pictorial representation on Poland Spring labels are similarly dependent on the FDA's spring water definition or otherwise are subject to express preemption under § 343-1(a)(1).
Nor do I conclude that Buckman is inapplicable or distinguishable on any other grounds. Despite the fact that none of the parties cite or discuss it, I have also considered the Second Circuit's decision in Desiano v. Warner-Lambert & Co. ,
Similarly, to the extent that plaintiffs heavily rely on the reasoning of the district court in Vermont Pure Holdings, Ltd. v. Nestlé Waters N. Am. Inc. ,
Because I conclude that this action is impliedly preempted under § 337(a) of the FDCA, I need not consider for now Nestlé's alternative argument (Doc. # 53-1 at 48-54) that plaintiffs' claims are expressly preempted to the extent that plaintiffs effectively seek to invoke and enforce "spring water" requirements that differ from those set forth under the FDCA and accompanying regulations. Nor is it necessary for me to consider at this time Nestlé's highly fact-laden arguments that state regulators have authorized its actions in a manner that precludes plaintiffs' breach of contract claim and that qualifies Nestlé for a "safe harbor" from enforcement of state consumer protection statutes. I will also not consider for now Nestlé's argument that I should defer to the primary jurisdiction of the FDA. Similarly, I decline at this point to address plaintiffs' equally fact-laden arguments about Nestlé's alleged corruption of state regulatory processes.
See Krinsky v. Nestlé Waters North America, Inc. , 3:17-cv-01474 (alleging nationwide class claim for "fraud" and sub-class claims under New York, New Jersey, and New Hampshire consumer protection statutes); Lilly v. Nestlé Waters North America, Inc. , 3:17-cv-01566 (alleging nationwide class claim for "fraud" and 25-state class claim for breach of express warranty); Brown v. Nestlé Waters North America, Inc. , 3:17-cv-01746 (alleging nationwide class claim for breach of contract and sub-class claims under New York, Connecticut, and Pennsylvania consumer protection statutes); and Ray v. Nestlé Waters North America Inc. , 3:17-cv-01944 (alleging nationwide breach of contract claim and sub-class claims under New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine consumer protection statutes).
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