• On June 22, a California federal judge dismissed a proposed class action against Kellogg Sales Company for their Bear Naked Granola V’nilla Almond product. In the complaint, plaintiff Harlan Zaback alleged that Kellogg falsely and misleadingly labeled and advertised the granola as being flavored “with vanilla flavoring derived exclusively from vanilla beans when the ingredient list reveals otherwise.” Zaback claims he would not have purchased the product or would have paid significantly less had he known it was not flavored with vanilla flavoring derived exclusively from vanilla beans.
  • U.S. District Judge Roger T. Benitez dismissed Zaback’s claims because he did not allege what might be in the product, if not vanilla flavoring from vanilla beans. Instead, Zaback concluded that Kellogg’s listing of “natural flavors” in the ingredient list, as opposed to “vanilla flavor” or “vanilla extract,” is acknowledgement that vanilla flavor or extract is not an ingredient in the product. Zaback provided no other factual basis that the product was mislabeled.
  • Judge Benitez agreed with Kellogg that Zaback was “merely speculating” and did not allege sufficient facts to “nudge [his] claims…across the line from conceivable to plausible.” Rather, Judge Benitez held that Zaback’s logic boiled down to “the omission is the admission.” Zaback may file an amended complaint within 14 days of the order.