FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
POM WONDERFUL LLC, a Delaware
limited liability company, No. 10-55861
Plaintiff-Appellant, D.C. No.
v. 2:08-cv-06237-
THE COCA-COLA COMPANY, a SJO-FMO
Delaware corporation, OPINION
Defendant-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Central District of California
S. James Otero, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted
February 8, 2012—Pasadena, California
Filed May 17, 2012
Before: Dorothy W. Nelson, Diarmuid F. O’Scannlain, and
N. Randy Smith, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge O’Scannlain
5245
POM WONDERFUL v. COCA-COLA CO. 5247
COUNSEL
Seth P. Waxman, Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr
LLP, Washington, D.C., argued the cause and filed the briefs
for the plaintiff-appellant. With him on the briefs were Ran-
dolph D. Moss, Brian M. Boynton, Felicia H. Ellsworth, and
Madhu Chugh, Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP,
Washington, D.C.; Craig B. Cooper, Daniel S. Silverman, and
Daniel A. Beck, Roll Law Group P.C., Los Angeles, Califor-
nia; and Andrew S. Clare, Loeb & Loeb LLP, Los Angeles,
California.
5248 POM WONDERFUL v. COCA-COLA CO.
Steven A. Zalesin, Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler LLP,
New York, New York, argued the cause and filed the brief for
the defendant-appellee. With him on the brief were Sarah E.
Zgliniec, Travis J. Tu, and YiLing Chen-Josephson, Patterson
Belknap Webb & Tyler LLP, New York, New York.
OPINION
O’SCANNLAIN, Circuit Judge:
We must decide whether the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
bars a Lanham Act claim alleging that the name and labeling
of a juice beverage are deceptive.
I
Pom Wonderful LLC produces, markets, and sells bottled
pomegranate juice and pomegranate juice blends, including a
pomegranate blueberry juice blend. The Coca-Cola Company
markets and sells bottled juices and juice blends under the
Minute Maid brand. In September 2007, Coca-Cola
announced a new product called “Pomegranate Blueberry” or
“Pomegranate Blueberry Flavored Blend of 5 Juices.” (The
parties dispute the name. We at times refer to Coca-Cola’s
product as “Pomegranate Blueberry” but take no view on
whether this is its actual name.) This product contains about
99.4% apple and grape juices, 0.3% pomegranate juice, 0.2%
blueberry juice, and 0.1% raspberry juice. The front label dis-
plays the product’s name and a vignette depicting each of
those fruits:
POM WONDERFUL v. COCA-COLA CO. 5249
Believing that it was losing sales to Pomegranate Blue-
berry, Pom sued Coca-Cola in September 2008. Pom alleged
that Coca-Cola misled consumers to believe that Pomegranate
Blueberry consists primarily of pomegranate and blueberry
5250 POM WONDERFUL v. COCA-COLA CO.
juices when it actually consists mainly of (the cheaper) apple
and grape juices. Pom challenged the name, labeling, market-
ing, and advertising of Pomegranate Blueberry. It claimed that
Coca-Cola violated the false-advertising provision of the Lan-
ham Act, which authorizes suit against those who use a false
or misleading description or representation about any goods.
See 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a). Pom also claimed that Coca-Cola
violated California’s Unfair Competition Law (UCL) and its
False Advertising Law (FAL), which prohibit deceptive prac-
tices and misleading advertising. See Cal. Bus. & Prof’l Code
§§ 17200 et seq.; id. §§ 17500 et seq.
Coca-Cola moved under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
12(b)(6) to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim.
The district court partially granted and partially denied the
motion. The court ruled that Pom’s Lanham Act challenge to
Pomegranate Blueberry’s name and labeling was barred
because Pom’s suit “may be construed as impermissibly chal-
lenging” Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulations
permitting the name and labeling that Coca-Cola uses and
because Pom’s claim could improperly require the court to
interpret and to apply FDA regulations on juice beverage
labeling. But the court also held that Pom’s Lanham Act chal-
lenge could otherwise proceed. Specifically, the court ruled
that, although Pom could not challenge Pomegranate Blueber-
ry’s name and labeling, it could challenge Coca-Cola’s other
advertising and marketing of the product because those com-
ponents of the claim would not require the court to interpret
FDA regulations. The court also held that the Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act (FDCA), 21 U.S.C. §§ 301 et seq., expressly
preempted Pom’s state law claims to the extent the UCL and
FAL impose obligations that are not identical to those
imposed by the FDCA and its implementing regulations.
After Coca-Cola refused to respond to discovery requests,
Pom amended its complaint to bring itself within the scope of
the court’s earlier ruling on its Lanham Act claim. The
amended complaint repleaded Pom’s Lanham Act, UCL, and
POM WONDERFUL v. COCA-COLA CO. 5251
FAL claims. In an apparent effort to overcome the court’s
preemption ruling, Pom added to its UCL claim a misbrand-
ing allegation under California’s Sherman Law, which
includes language that is materially identical to the FDCA’s
misbranding provision. See Cal. Health & Safety Code
§ 110660; compare id. with 21 U.S.C. § 343(a)(1).
Coca-Cola moved under Rule 12(b)(6) to dismiss the
amended complaint. The court denied Coca-Cola’s motion
and ruled that Pom could conduct discovery to clarify which
aspects of Coca-Cola’s alleged conduct constituted labeling
(and thus could not, under the court’s earlier ruling, support
Pom’s Lanham Act claim) and which aspects constituted
advertising or marketing (and thus could support the Lanham
Act claim). The court did not address preemption. Discovery
followed.
When discovery was completed, the district court partially
granted summary judgment to Coca-Cola. The court reiterated
that Pom’s Lanham Act challenge to Pomegranate Blueber-
ry’s name and labeling was barred by the FDCA’s implement-
ing regulations. The court reasoned that through its
regulations, the FDA “has directly spoken on the issues that
form the basis of Pom’s Lanham Act claim against the nam-
ing and labeling of the Juice, and has therefore[ ] reached a
conclusion as to what is permissible.” The court emphasized
that the FDA “has concluded that manufacturers of multiple-
juice beverages may identify their beverages with a non-
primary, characteristic juice, as Coca[-]Cola does here.”
Because in its view Coca-Cola’s label “sufficiently comports
with the requirements of” FDA juice-labeling regulations—
and because it believed that any further “determination that
naming and labeling must be displayed in a particular way or
fashion” must be made by the FDA—the court held that
Pom’s claim challenging the name and labeling of Pomegran-
ate Blueberry was barred. The court reached a similar conclu-
sion specifically about the label’s fruit vignette.
5252 POM WONDERFUL v. COCA-COLA CO.
The court did not revisit its earlier preemption ruling. It
simply ruled that Pom lacked statutory standing to pursue its
state law claims. The court reasoned that Pom had not estab-
lished the statutory standing prerequisite of “lost money or
property,” Cal. Bus. & Prof’l Code §§ 17204, 17535, because
Pom had not shown that it was entitled to restitution.
The court concluded that triable issues remained on the
non-naming-and-labeling aspects of Pom’s Lanham Act claim
and permitted Pom to proceed to trial on those matters. But
Pom conceded that the summary judgment order prevented it
from carrying its burden on the claim and the court therefore
entered judgment for Coca-Cola. Pom timely appealed.
II
On appeal, Pom contends that the district court erred in its
holdings that the FDCA bars its Lanham Act claim, that Pom
lacks statutory standing to pursue its state law claims, and that
the FDCA expressly preempts Pom’s state law claims against
the name and labeling of Coca-Cola’s Pomegranate Blue-
berry.
A
[1] The Lanham Act broadly prohibits false advertising. It
authorizes suit against those who use a false or misleading
description or representation “in connection with any goods.”
15 U.S.C. § 1125(a). Such suits can be brought by any person
“who believes that he or she is or is likely to be damaged by”
the use of that false description or representation. Id.
[2] The FDCA, meanwhile, comprehensively regulates
food and beverage labeling. It provides that a food is mis-
branded if “its labeling is false or misleading in any particu-
lar,” 21 U.S.C. § 343(a)(1), or “[i]f any word, statement, or
other information required by” the FDCA or its regulations
“to appear on the label or labeling is not prominently placed
POM WONDERFUL v. COCA-COLA CO. 5253
thereon with such conspicuousness . . . and in such terms as
to render it likely to be read and understood by the ordinary
individual under customary conditions of purchase and use,”
id. § 343(f). Though a private plaintiff may sue under the
Lanham Act’s false-advertising provision, the FDCA may be
enforced only by the FDA or the Department of Justice. See
id. § 337(a). The FDA, for its part, has promulgated regula-
tions that address how a manufacturer may name and label its
juice beverages. See, e.g., 21 C.F.R. § 102.33(c), (d).
As sometimes happens with two broad federal statutes, the
Lanham Act and the FDCA can conflict with each other.
When faced with a potential conflict, “[c]ourts try to give as
much effect to both statutes as possible.” Schering—Plough
Healthcare Prods., Inc. v. Schwarz Pharma, Inc., 586 F.3d
500, 508 (7th Cir. 2009). In that effort, courts have focused
on Congress’s decision to entrust to the FDA the task of inter-
preting and enforcing the FDCA.
In light of that focus, courts have agreed that the FDCA
limits claims under the Lanham Act. A plaintiff may not, for
example, sue under the Lanham Act to enforce the FDCA or
its regulations because allowing such a suit would undermine
Congress’s decision to limit enforcement of the FDCA to the
federal government. See, e.g., Mylan Labs., Inc. v. Matkari, 7
F.3d 1130, 1139 (4th Cir. 1993). Nor may a plaintiff maintain
a Lanham Act claim that would require a court originally to
interpret ambiguous FDA regulations, because rendering such
an interpretation would usurp the FDA’s interpretive author-
ity. See, e.g., Sandoz Pharms. Corp. v. Richardson-Vicks,
Inc., 902 F.2d 222, 231-32 (3d Cir. 1990) (claim that drug
label falsely described ingredient as “inactive” was barred
because FDA had not decided whether ingredient was active
or inactive).
Where the FDA has not concluded that particular conduct
violates the FDCA, we have even held that a Lanham Act
claim may not be pursued if the claim would require litigating
5254 POM WONDERFUL v. COCA-COLA CO.
whether that conduct violates the FDCA. PhotoMedex, Inc. v.
Irwin, 601 F.3d 919, 924 (9th Cir. 2010). In PhotoMedex, a
manufacturer of a dermatological laser alleged that its com-
petitor violated the Lanham Act by misrepresenting that its
product had been “cleared” (approved) by the FDA. The
FDCA allows a manufacturer to market such a laser only if
the FDA has cleared the device or a similar device. Id. at
925-26. But the FDCA and FDA regulations permit a manu-
facturer to determine in the first instance whether its device
is covered by an earlier clearance and to market the device
even if the FDA has not stated that the device is cleared. See
id. at 922, 925-26, 928. In keeping with the statute and regula-
tions, the defendants in PhotoMedex represented that their
device had been cleared based on the FDA’s approval of a
similar device. The FDA had not weighed in on whether that
representation was accurate. We held that the plaintiff ’s Lan-
ham Act claim against that representation was barred. Recog-
nizing that the claim would have required us to “[t]est[ ] the
truth” of the defendants’ clearance statement, we refused “to
usurp the FDA’s prerogative to enforce the FDCA” by decid-
ing whether the defendants’ device was covered by the FDA’s
earlier clearance of a different device. Id. at 928.
[3] PhotoMedex teaches that the Lanham Act may not be
used as a vehicle to usurp, preempt, or undermine FDA
authority. That teaching, however, operates as a presumption
or a general principle—not as an automatic trump or a firm
rule. Our task in cases involving potentially conflicting stat-
utes is “to give as much effect to both statutes as possible.”
Schering-Plough, 586 F.3d at 508. To do that, a court must
focus on the circumstances before it to strike a balance that
disrupts the two statutory schemes as little as it can. Thus, in
PhotoMedex, while we resolved not “to usurp the FDA’s pre-
rogative” to enforce the FDCA or to apply its own regula-
tions, 601 F.3d at 928, we grounded that resolution in “the
particular circumstances of th[e] case,” id. at 922: the author-
ity Congress entrusted to the FDA, the regulatory regime put
in place by the FDA, the FDA’s actions relevant to the plain-
POM WONDERFUL v. COCA-COLA CO. 5255
tiff ’s claim, and other similar factors, id. at 922, 925-28. In
this case we must again focus on the circumstances before us
to strike the right balance.
B
Applying the teaching of PhotoMedex to the circumstances
of this case, we conclude that the FDCA and its regulations
bar pursuit of both the name and labeling aspects of Pom’s
Lanham Act claim.
[4] The naming component of Pom’s claim is barred
because, as best we can tell, FDA regulations authorize the
name Coca-Cola has chosen. The FDA has concluded that a
manufacturer may name a beverage using the name of a fla-
voring juice that is not predominant by volume. See 21 C.F.R.
§ 102.33(c), (d). Section 102.33(c) recognizes, for example,
that a blend of juices can represent a juice in its name or label
even if the blend “also contains a juice other than the . . .
juice” named or represented on the label. And the FDA has
explained, by way of example, that a three-juice blend where
apple is the juice identified on the label can be named “Apple
blend; apple juice in a blend of two other fruit juices.” Id.
§ 102.33(c) (internal quotation marks omitted). The FDA has
also said that a “named” juice need “not [be] the predominant
juice” by volume. Id. § 102.33(d). Thus a raspberry-and-
cranberry-flavored product whose predominant juice is not
raspberry or cranberry can be called “ ‘Raspcranberry’; rasp-
berry and cranberry flavored juice drink.” Id. § 102.33(d)(1).
Taken together, these provisions reflect that: (1) Coca-Cola
may give its product a name that refers to juices that provide
the characterizing flavor, and (2) those juices need not be pre-
dominant by volume if Coca-Cola states that those juices are
not predominant. Thus, Pom’s challenge to the name “Pome-
granate Blueberry Flavored Blend of 5 Juices” would create
a conflict with FDA regulations and would require us to
undermine the FDA’s apparent determination that so naming
the product is not misleading. Cf. PhotoMedex, 601 F.3d at
5256 POM WONDERFUL v. COCA-COLA CO.
928. The district court was right to hold that Pom’s Lanham
Act claim against Pomegranate Blueberry’s name is barred.
[5] The same goes for the labeling component of Pom’s
claim. Pom focuses its labeling argument on how Coca-Cola
presents the words “Pomegranate Blueberry” and “Flavored
Blend of 5 Juices” on the product’s label. (Pom does not
meaningfully contend, on appeal, that the label’s fruit vignette
—which depicts all of the fruits of which the product is
composed—is improper.) Pom apparently wants to force
Coca-Cola to alter the size of the words on its labeling so that
the words “Pomegranate Blueberry” no longer appear in
larger, more conspicuous type on Coca-Cola’s label than do
the words “Flavored Blend of 5 Juices.” But allowing Pom to
achieve this result would again undermine the FDA’s regula-
tions and expert judgments. In extensively regulating the
labeling of foods and beverages, the FDCA and its imple-
menting regulations have identified the words and statements
that must or may be included on labeling and have specified
how prominently and conspicuously those words and state-
ments must appear. See, e.g., 21 U.S.C. § 343(f), (i); 21
C.F.R. § 102.33(c), (d). These provisions ensure that state-
ments are presented on labels in such a way “as to render
[them] likely to be read and understood by the ordinary indi-
vidual.” 21 U.S.C. § 343(f).
[6] Congress and the FDA have thus considered and spo-
ken to what content a label must bear, and the relative sizes
in which the label must bear it, so as not to deceive. Despite
speaking extensively to how prominently required words or
statements must appear, the FDA has not (so far as we can
tell) required that all words in a juice blend’s name appear on
the label in the same size or that words hew to some other
standard that Pom might have us impose. If the FDA thought
such a regulation were necessary “to render [that information]
likely to be read and understood by the ordinary individual,”
21 U.S.C. § 343(f), it could have said so. If the FDA believes
that more should be done to prevent deception, or that Coca-
POM WONDERFUL v. COCA-COLA CO. 5257
Cola’s label misleads consumers, it can act. But, under our
precedent, for a court to act when the FDA has not—despite
regulating extensively in this area—would risk undercutting
the FDA’s expert judgments and authority.
Pom urges us to follow three district courts that concluded
that similar Lanham Act claims brought by Pom may proceed
because those claims did not require the court to interpret or
to apply FDA regulations. See Pom Wonderful, LLC v. Tropi-
cana Prods., Inc., 2010 WL 3590162, at *1-*2 (C.D. Cal.
Sept. 7, 2010); Pom Wonderful LLC v. Ocean Spray Cranber-
ries, Inc., 642 F. Supp. 2d 1112, 1119-20 (C.D. Cal. 2009);
Pom Wonderful LLC v. Welch Foods, Inc., CV 09-567 AHM,
D.E. 29, at 6-7 (C.D. Cal. June 23, 2009). These decisions
cannot be harmonized with PhotoMedex. Although these
courts were right to recognize that a Lanham Act claim is
barred when it would require a court to interpret ambiguous
FDA regulations, that is not the only circumstance in which
such a claim is barred. PhotoMedex teaches that courts must
generally prevent private parties from undermining, through
private litigation, the FDA’s considered judgments.
[7] In concluding that Pom’s claim is barred, we do not
hold that Coca-Cola’s label is non-deceptive. Pom contends
that the words “Pomegranate Blueberry” appear in larger,
more conspicuous type on Coca-Cola’s label than do the
words “Flavored Blend of 5 Juices.” If the FDA believes that
this context misleads consumers, it can act. But the FDA has
apparently not taken a view on whether Coca-Cola’s labeling
misleads consumers—even though it has acted extensively
and carefully in this field. (The FDA has not established a
general mechanism to review juice beverage labels before
they reach consumers, but the agency may act if it believes
that a label in the market is deceptive.) As best we can tell,
Coca-Cola’s label abides by the requirements the FDA has
established. We therefore accept that Coca-Cola’s label pre-
sumptively complies with the relevant FDA regulations and
thus accords with the judgments the FDA has so far made.
5258 POM WONDERFUL v. COCA-COLA CO.
Out of respect for the statutory and regulatory scheme before
us, we decline to allow the FDA’s judgments to be disturbed.
[8] We do not suggest that mere compliance with the
FDCA or with FDA regulations will always (or will even gen-
erally) insulate a defendant from Lanham Act liability. We are
primarily guided in our decision not by Coca-Cola’s apparent
compliance with FDA regulations but by Congress’s decision
to entrust matters of juice beverage labeling to the FDA and
by the FDA’s comprehensive regulation of that labeling. To
give as much effect to Congress’s will as possible, we must
respect the FDA’s apparent decision not to impose the
requirements urged by Pom. And we must keep in mind that
we lack the FDA’s expertise in guarding against deception in
the context of juice beverage labeling. In the circumstances
here, “the appropriate forum for [Pom’s] complaints is the
[FDA].” PhotoMedex, 601 F.3d at 929.
III
Which brings us to the question of whether Pom’s state law
claims may proceed.
[9] To have standing to bring a claim under the UCL, a pri-
vate plaintiff must show that it “has suffered injury in fact and
has lost money or property as a result of” unfair competition;
to have standing under the FAL, a private plaintiff must make
the same showing of injury and loss as a result of an FAL vio-
lation. Cal. Bus. & Prof’l Code §§ 17204, 17535. The district
court interpreted the “lost money or property” language to
require a plaintiff to show that it is entitled to restitution from
the defendant—even if the plaintiff seeks only injunctive
relief. That was error. The California Supreme Court has now
made clear that standing under section 17204 (the UCL stand-
ing provision) does not depend on eligibility for restitution.
See Kwikset Corp. v. Superior Ct., 246 P.3d 877, 895 (Cal.
2011); Clayworth v. Pfizer, Inc., 233 P.3d 1066, 1088 (Cal.
2010). We are inclined to interpret the materially identical
POM WONDERFUL v. COCA-COLA CO. 5259
language in section 17535 (the FAL standing provision) the
same way. Nevertheless, because these cases came down after
the district court entered judgment in this case, we will vacate
the judgment as to Pom’s state law claims and remand to the
district court to rule on standing in light of Kwikset and Clay-
worth.
If the district court concludes that Pom has statutory stand-
ing, it may need to address such issues as whether Pom’s state
law claims are expressly preempted and whether California’s
safe-harbor doctrine insulates Coca-Cola from liability on any
of Pom’s state law claims. We leave those matters to the dis-
trict court to address as needed.
IV
To summarize: We affirm the district court’s summary
judgment to the extent it barred Pom’s Lanham Act claim
with respect to Pomegranate Blueberry’s name and labeling.
We vacate the summary judgment to the extent it ruled that
Pom lacked statutory standing on its UCL and FAL claims;
we remand so that the district court can rule on the state
claims in accordance with this opinion.
AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND
REMANDED. Each party shall bear its own costs.