Mona Estrada v. Johnson & Johnson ( 2018 )


Menu:
  •                                   PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _____________
    No. 17-2980
    _____________
    IN RE: JOHNSON & JOHNSON TALCUM POWDER
    PRODUCTS MARKETING, SALES PRACTICES AND
    LIABILITY LITIGATION
    Mona Estrada,
    Appellant
    _____________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of New Jersey
    District Court Nos. 3-16-cv-07492 and 3-16-md-02738
    District Judge: The Honorable Freda L. Wolfson
    Argued June 14, 2018
    Before: SMITH, Chief Judge, CHAGARES, and
    FUENTES, Circuit Judges
    (Filed: September 6, 2018)
    Timothy G. Blood                    [ARGUED]
    Blood Hurst & O’Reardon
    501 West Broadway
    Suite 1490
    San Diego, CA 92101
    Charles L. Gould
    Alison D. Hawthorne
    W. Daniel Miles, III
    Beasley, Allen, Crow, Methvin, Portis & Miles
    218 Commerce Street
    Montgomery, AL 36104
    Counsel for Appellant
    Adam M. Kaplan
    Matthew D. Powers                   [ARGUED]
    James K. Rothstein
    O’Melveny & Myers
    Two Embarcadero Center
    28th Floor
    San Francisco, CA 94111
    Counsel for Appellee
    ________________
    OPINION
    ________________
    2
    SMITH, Chief Judge.
    The question presented in this appeal from a
    dismissal of a class action is both narrow and novel: Has a
    plaintiff—who has entirely consumed a product that has
    functioned for her as expected—suffered an economic
    injury solely because she now sincerely wishes that she
    had not purchased that product? We hold that such a
    plaintiff has not suffered an economic injury sufficient to
    bring a claim in federal court. More succinctly, buyer’s
    remorse, without more, is not a cognizable injury under
    Article III of the United States Constitution.
    A plaintiff alleging an economic injury as a result
    of a purchasing decision must do more than simply
    characterize that purchasing decision as an economic
    injury. The plaintiff must instead allege facts that would
    permit a factfinder to determine, without relying on mere
    conjecture, that the plaintiff failed to receive the economic
    benefit of her bargain. Because the plaintiff here has failed
    to plead facts sufficient to establish economic harm, the
    District Court’s judgment will be affirmed.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Plaintiff Mona Estrada alleges that a woman’s
    perineal use of Defendant Johnson & Johnson’s Baby
    Powder can lead to an increased risk of developing ovarian
    3
    cancer. JA 47. Without question, that is a serious
    allegation. Yet the validity of Plaintiff’s epidemiological
    theory is not for this court to decide. 1 Nonetheless,
    because Estrada has artfully woven that serious allegation
    into her complaint—despite it having little connection to
    the alleged economic injury that forms the basis of her
    claim—we must begin our discussion by carefully
    describing what this case is not about.
    First, Plaintiff does not allege that a product has
    caused her physical injury. 2 Estrada does not allege that
    she has ovarian cancer, nor does she allege even an
    increased risk of developing cancer. Second, this case
    makes no claim of emotional injury. Estrada does not
    allege, for example, that she suffers from a fear of
    1
    “When reviewing an order of dismissal for lack of
    standing, we accept as true all material allegations of the
    complaint and construe them in favor of the plaintiff.”
    Danvers Motor Co., Inc. v. Ford Motor Co., 
    432 F.3d 286
    ,
    288 (3d Cir. 2005) (quoting Conte Bros. Auto., Inc. v.
    Quaker State–Slick 50, Inc., 
    165 F.3d 221
    , 224 (3d Cir.
    1998)).
    2
    JA 49–50 (“Plaintiff is not claiming physical harm or
    seeking the recovery of personal injury damages.”).
    Excluded from Estrada’s proposed class definition are
    individuals “who assert claims from personal injury.” JA
    71.
    4
    someday developing ovarian cancer. Third, this case does
    not involve allegations of a defective product. Estrada
    purchased Baby Powder labeled as being “designed to
    gently absorb excess moisture,” and marketed as being
    able to “keep[] skin feeling soft, fresh and comfortable,”
    and help “reduce the irritation caused by friction.” JA 52.
    She does not allege that her powder failed to adequately
    perform any of these functions. 3 Fourth, this case does not
    involve a durable product still in a plaintiff’s possession.
    Instead, the complaint concerns a nondurable product that
    has already been consumed in its entirety. 4 Estrada does
    not, for example, seek to be reimbursed for powder that
    she still possesses but cannot use. Finally, this case does
    3
    Nor could Estrada credibly make such an allegation. She
    continued to purchase the powder for approximately six
    decades—presumably because it worked. See JA 49
    (alleging that Estrada purchased Defendant’s baby powder
    “[f]rom about 1950 to sometime in 2013”).
    4
    By “nondurable,” we refer to a product that is consumed
    rather quickly—such as a gallon of gasoline. By contrast,
    a “durable” product is one that is consumed over a much
    longer period of time—such as a new automobile. A
    plaintiff who, for example, alleged that her automobile
    was at risk of imminently malfunctioning because of a
    particular defect would present a much different question
    than the one at hand.
    5
    not involve any number of other economic theories that
    might confer Article III standing on other plaintiffs. For
    instance, Estrada does not seek to be reimbursed for
    medical monitoring expenses, nor does she seek to recoup
    transaction costs associated with reselling or returning
    Baby Powder.
    What, then, does Estrada allege? Her theory of
    recovery is simply that she suffered an economic injury by
    purchasing improperly marketed Baby Powder. JA 49.
    According to Estrada, had she been properly informed that
    using Baby Powder could lead to an increased risk of
    developing ovarian cancer, she would not have purchased
    the powder in the first place. JA 49, 70. Characterizing this
    as an economic injury, she seeks relief for herself and a
    class of similarly situated consumers.5
    Estrada first brought this lawsuit in the United
    States District Court for the Eastern District of California.
    JA 46. On March 27, 2015, that court dismissed Estrada’s
    complaint for lack of Article III standing. Estrada Br. 7.
    5
    Estrada seeks certification of a class defined as “All
    persons who purchased [Johnson & Johnson] Baby
    Powder in California and states with laws that do not
    conflict with the laws asserted here.” JA 71. However
    broad this proposed definition, apparently covering even
    men (who are obviously incapable of developing ovarian
    cancer), we are not presented with issues arising under
    Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
    6
    Estrada then filed an amended complaint, but before the
    Eastern District of California could rule on that complaint,
    the case was consolidated as part of a Multidistrict
    Litigation proceeding and transferred to the United States
    District Court for the District of New Jersey (the “District
    Court”). JA 44; Estrada Br. 7.
    On July 14, 2017, the District Court dismissed
    Estrada’s complaint without prejudice for lack of Article
    III standing, and granted her leave to amend. JA 5. After
    Estrada informed the District Court that she chose not to
    amend and would stand on her complaint, the District
    Court dismissed the case on August 10, 2017. JA 4.
    In concluding that Estrada did not have Article III
    standing, the District Court explicitly considered whether
    Estrada’s allegations fell within any one of three different
    theories of economic injury: (1) alternative product; (2)
    premium price; and (3) benefit of the bargain. JA 16–17.
    Estrada challenges this tripartite analysis, contending that
    the District Court inappropriately funneled her allegations
    into “one of three assumed damage methodologies.”
    Estrada Br. 7. But Estrada was not restricted to the three
    theories considered by the District Court; she was free to
    present additional theories of her own—particularly by
    amending her complaint when the District Court offered
    her the opportunity to do so. In examining Estrada’s
    complaint through the lens of three different theories of
    injury, the District Court merely fulfilled its duty to
    7
    “examine the allegations in the complaint from a number
    of different angles” in order to see if the “purported injury
    can be framed in a way that satisfies Article III.”
    Finkelman v. Nat’l Football League, 
    810 F.3d 187
    , 197
    (3d Cir. 2016).
    Under the alternative product theory, a plaintiff
    might successfully plead an economic injury by alleging
    that, absent the defendant’s conduct, she would have
    purchased an alternative product that was less expensive.
    Under this theory, the economic injury could be calculated
    by determining the difference in price between the
    defendant’s more expensive product and the less
    expensive alternative. Portions of Estrada’s complaint can
    reasonably be read as an attempt to allege this very theory
    of injury. Her complaint states, for example, that had she
    “known the truth about the safety of using [Johnson &
    Johnson’s talc-based Baby Powder], she would not have
    purchased the product,” but instead “would have
    purchased an alternative product containing cornstarch
    instead of talc.” JA 49. 6 According to Estrada’s complaint,
    6
    As explained in Estrada’s complaint, Johnson &
    Johnson’s “Baby Powder is made entirely of talc and
    fragrance. Talc is a mineral composed of hydrated
    magnesium silicate that is mined from the earth. It is an
    inorganic material. Talc is used to manufacture goods,
    such as paper making, plastic, paint and coatings, rubber,
    food, electric cable, ceramics, and cosmetics. In its loose
    8
    “alternative powder products that are cornstarch[-]based .
    . . do not pose a risk of ovarian cancer and are otherwise
    functionally the same as talc products.” JA 54. Upon
    considering these allegations, the District Court concluded
    that Estrada could not avail herself of the alternative
    product theory because she failed “to allege that a
    cornstarch-based product would have been cheaper.” JA
    30. In other words, paying less for Baby Powder than an
    alternative would not constitute an economic injury.
    Under a second theory analyzed by the District
    Court, the premium price theory, a plaintiff may plead an
    economic injury by alleging that the defendant unlawfully
    advertised its product as being “superior” to others.
    Applying this approach, economic injury is calculated as
    the unfair “premium” that the plaintiff was unlawfully
    induced to pay. The District Court concluded that Estrada
    did not sufficiently allege an economic injury under this
    theory because she did not claim that Johnson & Johnson
    “advertised Baby Powder as superior to other products,”
    nor did she allege that “she would not have paid a premium
    for Baby Powder” but for such advertisements. JA 35. In
    other words, Estrada identified no unlawful “premium.”
    Estrada concedes that her claims do not fall within
    either the alternative product or premium price theories of
    economic injury. Estrada Br. 25 (“Estrada’s injury in this
    form and as used in the Baby Powder, talc is known as
    ‘talcum powder.’” JA 54.
    9
    case does not depend on her ability to purchase an
    alternative product at a cheaper price.”); 
    id. at 26
    (“[T]he
    district court’s ‘premium price’ methodology has nothing
    to do with Estrada’s claims.”); Reply Br. 12 (“The District
    Court’s ‘Alternative Product’ and ‘Price Premium’
    Theories Are Irrelevant”). Indeed, Estrada has failed to
    identify either a cheaper alternative or an unlawful
    premium. Any economic injury she may have suffered,
    then, must be conceptualized by applying some other
    theory of injury. Accordingly, the third theory of injury
    analyzed by the District Court, the benefit of the bargain
    theory, merits our attention.
    Under the benefit of the bargain theory, a plaintiff
    might successfully plead an economic injury by alleging
    that she bargained for a product worth a given value but
    received a product worth less than that value. The
    economic injury is calculated as the difference in value
    between what was bargained for and what was received.
    The District Court concluded that Estrada’s allegations
    also failed to fit within this theory of harm because she
    purchased and received Baby Powder that successfully did
    what the parties had bargained for and expected it to do:
    eliminate friction on the skin, absorb excess moisture, and
    maintain freshness. JA 17–18, 29–30. On appeal, Estrada
    rejects the significance of the Baby Powder performing
    these functions. She contends that although she received
    Baby Powder that eliminated friction on the skin, absorbed
    excess moisture, and maintained freshness, she was also
    10
    promised that the Baby Powder would be “safe.” Instead,
    Estrada contends, the product was “unsafe.” Estrada Br.
    19–20. We focus, then, on this contention and consider
    whether Estrada has successfully alleged an economic
    injury sufficient to confer Article III standing.7
    II. STANDING JURISPRUDENCE
    Article III of our Constitution vests “[t]he judicial
    power of the United States” in both the Supreme Court and
    “such inferior courts as the Congress may from time to
    time ordain and establish.” U.S. Const. art. III., § 1. While
    Article III does not outline the exact contours of this
    “judicial power,” the Constitution “does specify that this
    power extends only to ‘Cases’ and ‘Controversies.’”
    Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins, 
    136 S. Ct. 1540
    , 1547 (2016)
    (quoting U.S. Const. Art. III, § 2). In order to avoid
    violating this “Cases and Controversies” limitation, a
    party seeking to invoke the federal judicial power must
    first establish that they have “standing” to do so. 
    Id. 8 This
    7
    “We exercise plenary review over a dismissal for lack of
    standing.” Cottrell v. Alcon Laboratories, 
    874 F.3d 154
    ,
    161 (3d Cir. 2017)
    8
    Although Article III does not explicitly refer to
    “standing,” the judicial doctrine derives from the principle
    of separation-of-powers. See, e.g., Clapper v. Amnesty
    Int’l USA, 
    568 U.S. 398
    , 408 (2013) (“The law of Article
    III standing, which is built on separation-of-powers
    principles, serves to prevent the judicial process from
    11
    standing requirement “limits the category of litigants
    empowered to maintain a lawsuit in federal court to seek
    redress for a legal wrong,” and “ensure[s] that federal
    courts do not exceed their authority as it has been
    traditionally understood.” 
    Id. To establish
    standing, a plaintiff must have “(1)
    suffered an injury in fact, (2) that is fairly traceable to the
    being used to usurp the powers of the political branches.”);
    John G. Roberts, Jr., Article III Limits on Statutory
    Standing, 42 DUKE L.J. 1219, 1226 (1993) (“If Congress
    directs the federal courts to hear a case in which the
    requirements of Article III are not met, that Act of
    Congress is unconstitutional. . . . [T]he conclusion that
    Article III limits congressional power can hardly be
    regarded as remarkable.”); Antonin Scalia, The Doctrine
    of Standing as an Essential Element of the Separation of
    Powers, 17 SUFFOLK U. L. REV. 881, 881 (1983) (“My
    thesis is that the judicial doctrine of standing is a crucial
    and inseparable element of th[e] principle [of separation-
    of-powers], whose disregard will inevitably produce—as
    it has during the past few decades—an overjudicialization
    of the processes of self-governance.”). While Estrada
    presents theories of harm that rest upon California law
    rather than a statute enacted by Congress, the
    constitutional limitations imposed on our jurisdiction
    remain the same. Federal courts are not at liberty to opine
    on state law absent Article III jurisdiction.
    12
    challenged conduct of the defendant, and (3) that is likely
    to be redressed by a favorable judicial decision.” 
    Id. This appeal
    focuses on the “‘[f]irst and foremost’ of standing’s
    three elements,” injury in fact. 
    Id. (quoting Steel
    Co. v.
    Citizens for Better Environment, 
    523 U.S. 83
    , 103 (1998)).
    Satisfying the injury in fact element requires the party
    seeking to invoke federal jurisdiction to establish three
    sub-elements. Mielo v. Steak ’n Shake, 
    897 F.3d 467
    , ___
    n.11 (3d Cir. 2018). First, the party must “show that he or
    she suffered ‘an invasion of a legally protected interest.’”
    
    Spokeo, 136 S. Ct. at 1548
    (quoting Lujan v. Defenders of
    Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    , 560 (1992)). Second, the party
    must show that the injury is both “concrete and
    particularized.” 
    Id. Finally, the
    party must show that his or
    her injury is “actual or imminent, not conjectural or
    hypothetical.” 
    Id. Because Estrada
    is the party seeking to invoke
    federal jurisdiction, “[t]he burden to establish standing”
    rests with her. 
    Finkelman, 810 F.3d at 194
    . Indeed, she
    specifically “bears the burden of showing that [s]he has
    standing for each type of relief sought.” Summers v. Earth
    Island Inst., 
    555 U.S. 488
    , 493 (2009) (emphasis added).
    Because Estrada seeks relief in the form of (1) monetary
    damages, (2) restitution, and (3) injunctive relief, JA 79,
    our standing inquiry will consider, in turn, whether
    Estrada has established standing to seek these three
    categories of relief.
    13
    III. MONETARY DAMAGES
    In considering whether Estrada has standing to seek
    monetary damages, we focus our analysis on two recent
    Article III standing opinions from this Court: Finkelman
    v. National Football League, 
    810 F.3d 187
    (3d Cir. 2016),
    and Cottrell v. Alcon Laboratories, 
    874 F.3d 154
    (3d Cir.
    2017). These precedential opinions represent two sides of
    the same coin. And in each, we considered whether the
    plaintiffs’ theory of economic injury was too conjectural
    to establish standing.
    While in Cottrell we concluded that the plaintiffs’
    economic theory of harm was based on more than mere
    conjecture, in Finkelman we concluded just the opposite.
    The two holdings can be harmonized, however, to provide
    a clear lesson: a plaintiff must do more than offer
    conclusory assertions of economic injury in order to
    establish standing. She must allege facts that would permit
    a factfinder to value the purported injury at something
    more than zero dollars without resorting to mere
    conjecture. Accordingly, Estrada must do more than
    simply characterize her Baby Powder purchases as
    economic injuries; she must allege facts that would permit
    a factfinder to determine that the economic benefit she
    received in purchasing the powder was worth less than the
    economic benefit for which she bargained. A brief
    description of the holdings in Finkelman and Cottrell
    brings this lesson into focus.
    14
    In Finkelman, two plaintiffs alleged that the
    National Football League (“NFL”) had a ticketing policy
    of reserving tickets for League Insiders that resulted in
    Super Bowl tickets being priced higher than they would
    have been had the NFL offered to sell more tickets to the
    general public. 
    Finkelman, 810 F.3d at 190
    . We concluded
    that one of the plaintiffs in that case, Hoch–Parker, had not
    suffered an economic injury sufficient to confer Article III
    standing. 
    Id. at 196.
    That was because Hoch–Parker had
    not even attempted to purchase Super Bowl tickets; he had
    only considered the possibility of doing so. 
    Id. at 195–96.
           A second plaintiff, Finkelman, presented a closer
    case because he alleged that he had actually purchased
    Super Bowl tickets. 
    Id. at 197.
    We therefore examined his
    allegations through the lens of two different theories of
    economic injury. Under the first theory, Finkelman alleged
    that the NFL’s ticket policy injured him by preventing him
    from successfully purchasing a ticket at face value in a
    ticket lottery. 
    Id. But because
    Finkelman never entered
    that lottery, we concluded that this economic theory failed
    to afford a basis for standing. 
    Id. at 199.
    His failure to even
    attempt to purchase a ticket through the lottery meant that
    “there was always a zero percent chance that he could
    procure a face-price ticket.” 
    Id. at 198.
    Any economic
    harm that Finkelman might have suffered as a result of not
    purchasing Super Bowl tickets through the lottery was
    therefore not attributable to the NFL’s conduct. 
    Id. 15 Although
    Finkelman did not participate in the ticket
    lottery, he did allege that he purchased tickets in a
    secondary market where tickets from the lottery were
    resold. 
    Id. at 199.
    Under a different economic theory, then,
    Finkelman contended that the NFL’s ticket policy inflated
    the price of tickets on the resale market in which he had
    participated. 
    Id. at 199.
    In particular, Finkelman alleged
    that had the NFL originally released more tickets for sale
    to the general public, there would have been greater
    availability of such tickets on the resale market. 
    Id. at 199–
    200. That increase in supply, he claimed, would have
    resulted in a reduction in price. 
    Id. Finkelman contended
    that his economic injury
    could be calculated as the difference between what he
    actually paid, and what he claimed he should have paid
    had the NFL released more tickets to the general public.
    
    Id. We concluded
    that this theory failed to provide
    Finkelman with standing, since “League [I]nsiders . . . had
    the same incentive to resell their tickets as the unnamed
    broker who sold Finkelman his two tickets.” 
    Id. at 200.
    In
    recognizing that economic incentive, we explained that
    “while it might be the case that the NFL’s withholding [of
    tickets] increased ticket prices on the resale market, it
    might also be the case that it had no effect on the resale
    market.” 
    Id. 9 9
      We further noted that the NFL’s withholding of “tickets
    from the general public . . . might have even increased the
    16
    In summarizing the issue with Finkelman’s second
    economic theory of injury, we explained that “we have no
    way of knowing whether the NFL’s withholding of tickets
    would have had the effect of increasing or decreasing
    prices on the secondary market. We can only speculate—
    and speculation is not enough to sustain Article III
    standing.” 
    Id. Although we
    noted that courts often “credit
    allegations of injury that involve no more than ‘application
    of basic economic logic,’” 
    Id. at 201
    (quoting United
    Transp. Union v. I.C.C., 
    891 F.2d 908
    , 912 n.7 (D.C. Cir.
    1989)), we further explained that “there is a difference
    between allegations that stand on well-pleaded facts and
    allegations that stand on nothing more than supposition.”
    
    Id. Cognizant that
    “even at the pleading stage, ‘we need
    not accept as true unsupported conclusions and
    unwarranted inferences,’” 
    Id. at 202
    (quoting Maio v.
    Aetna, Inc., 
    221 F.3d 472
    , 500 (3d Cir. 2000)), we
    supply of tickets on the resale market, leading to lower
    prices.” 
    Finkelman, 810 F.3d at 200
    . This was because
    League Insiders—who might have received their Super
    Bowl Tickets for free—could have been more inclined to
    resell their tickets than members of the general public
    were, since League Insiders could “pocket[] the entire
    resale price of the ticket as profit.” 
    Id. 17 concluded
    that Finkelman needed to present the court with
    additional facts in order to establish standing. 10
    Unlike the economic theories in Finkelman, the
    plaintiffs’ theories in Cottrell were sufficient to establish
    Article III standing. In Cottrell, we held that plaintiffs,
    who purchased prescription eye-drops, had Article III
    standing to sue the manufacturers and distributors of those
    eye-drops. 
    Cottrell, 874 F.3d at 169
    –70. The plaintiffs
    alleged that “manufacturers and distributors . . . packaged
    [the solution] in such a way that forced [plaintiffs] to waste
    10
    After remand, Finkelman abandoned his first theory of
    economic harm and presented the district court with
    additional facts supporting his second theory. Finkelman
    v. Nat’l Football League, 
    877 F.3d 504
    , 512 (3d Cir.
    2017). In particular, “Finkelman added facts alleged by . .
    . an economist who specializes in sports and ticketing on
    the workings of secondary ticket markets in events like the
    Super Bowl.” 
    Id. at 509.
    That economist explained, inter
    alia, “that under the NFL’s current system, NFL insiders
    sell their tickets to a concentrated group of brokers, who
    in turn charge more for tickets on the secondary market.
    Without the NFL withholding, [the economist] posited
    that there would be more fan-to-fan direct sales of tickets,
    cutting out more brokers and allowing for lower prices.”
    
    Id. Only after
    the presentation of these additional facts did
    we conclude that Finkelman had Article III standing. 
    Id. at 513.
                                 18
    it.” 
    Id. at 159.
    Specifically, the plaintiffs claimed that the
    eye medication could only be dispensed from “unfairly”
    designed bottles that released drops larger than the human
    eye could hold at one time. 
    Id. at 159,
    161.
    We concluded that the Cottrell plaintiffs had
    standing only after we conducted an analysis of their
    economic theories—as we did in Finkelman—and
    determined that the Cottrell plaintiffs’ attempt to place an
    economic value on the “wasted” portion of the eye-drops
    was not conjectural. 
    Id. at 168.
    Estrada attempts to read
    this important limitation out of Cottrell. She contends that
    Cottrell “confirmed that a consumer’s purchase of a
    product based on the manufacturer’s deceptive and unfair
    business practices constitutes injury-in-fact.” Estrada Br.
    2. In so arguing, Estrada overreads our opinion. The
    Cottrell plaintiffs did not have standing simply because
    they purchased a product that a consumer would view as
    flawed. Rather, the plaintiffs had standing only because
    they were unable to use a portion of the eye-drop
    medication they had purchased, and they alleged an
    economic theory that allowed them to value that unused
    portion. 11
    11
    Were we to accept Estrada’s argument, one might
    reasonably wonder whether the Cottrell plaintiffs were
    foolish for suing only for the value of the portion of the
    eye-drops that they could not use, rather than suing for the
    value of the entire bottle. But unlike Estrada—who alleges
    19
    We did not offer lengthy analyses of the various
    economic theories presented in either Finkelman or
    Cottrell because we wished to sound pedantic. We
    conducted those analyses because Article III requires us
    to ensure that plaintiffs present more than merely
    conjectural assertions of injury. 
    Finkelman, 810 F.3d at 193
    (recognizing a “federal court’s obligation to assure
    itself that it has subject matter jurisdiction”).
    Estrada nonetheless contends that, unlike the
    plaintiffs in Finkelman and Cottrell, she is not required to
    offer any economic theory of injury at the pleading stage.
    As her opening brief puts it, “[t]he amount Estrada and
    other members of the class may receive in damages or
    restitution is a different question than whether [she] has
    standing.” Estrada Br. 26. Estrada further promises that,
    “[a]t the appropriate time after discovery,” she will “put
    forth models for calculating damages and restitution that
    are linked to her theory of relief and are based on the
    evidence in the case.” 
    Id. Estrada’s request
    to indefinitely
    defer what is a pleading obligation is not one we may grant
    and still fulfill our constitutional obligations.
    To start, Estrada’s promise to provide us with a
    means to conceptualize her injury at some future time does
    an economic injury which includes portions of a product
    that she actually consumed—the Cottrell plaintiffs alleged
    an economic injury consisting of only the “wasted”
    portion of the product.
    20
    nothing to assist us in determining whether Estrada has
    standing at this stage. 
    Finkelman, 810 F.3d at 202
    (“Nor
    are we persuaded by plaintiffs’ counsel’s promises of
    future expert testimony when no facts supporting
    plaintiffs’ theory of injury appear within the four corners
    of the complaint.”). Our standing inquiry is restricted to
    the allegations currently before us.
    In order to allege that she has suffered an economic
    injury as a result of simply purchasing Baby Powder,
    Estrada must allege that she purchased Baby Powder that
    was worth less than what she paid for. This is not to say
    that a plaintiff is required to allege the exact value of her
    economic injury at the pleading stage. Calculating and
    proving damages is indeed one of the major phases of a
    civil trial, and a plaintiff need not develop detailed
    economic models at the pleading stage to establish that she
    has standing.
    But even at the pleading stage, a plaintiff must set
    forth sufficient factual allegations that, if proven true,
    would permit a factfinder to determine that she suffered at
    least some economic injury. Danvers Motor Co. v. Ford
    Motor Co., 
    432 F.3d 286
    , 294 (3d Cir. 2005) (recognizing
    that establishing an injury in fact requires alleging an
    “identifiable trifle” of injury (quoting Bowman v. Wilson,
    
    672 F.2d 1145
    , 1151 (3d Cir. 1982)). The Cottrell
    plaintiffs satisfied this relatively low hurdle by providing
    two theories which valued the “wasted” portion of the
    21
    medication that they had purchased. 
    Cottrell, 874 F.3d at 168
    . One of the plaintiffs in Finkelman accomplished the
    same, after remand, by putting forth analysis by an
    economist who could explain how the NFL’s ticketing
    policy allegedly resulted in increased resale prices.
    
    Finkelman, 877 F.3d at 509
    .
    It would not have been enough for the plaintiffs in
    Cottrell and Finkelman to simply allege that, although
    they purchased eye-drops and football tickets at a given
    price, they later wished they had not done so. But that is
    as far as Estrada’s allegations of economic injury go.
    Although “[i]njury-in-fact is not Mount Everest,”
    
    Danvers, 432 F.3d at 294
    , it is more than a desert mirage.
    While the evidentiary burdens placed on a plaintiff at the
    pleading stage are minimal, our precedent requires the
    plaintiff to do more than simply pair a conclusory assertion
    of money lost with a request that a defendant pay up.12
    12
    See, e.g., Twp. of Lyndhurst, N.J. v. Priceline.com Inc.,
    
    657 F.3d 148
    , 153, 155 (3d Cir. 2011) (concluding that a
    plaintiff-municipality’s lost tax revenue, which could be
    calculated as the difference between taxes paid on
    “wholesale” rates and taxes paid on “retail” rates,
    constituted an economic injury sufficient to confer Article
    III standing); 
    Danvers, 432 F.3d at 292
    (referring to
    complaint language alleging that the Ford Motor
    Company’s conduct required the plaintiffs-dealerships to
    make “very significant out-of-pocket investments to
    22
    Estrada fails to allege even that the Baby Powder provided
    her with an economic benefit worth one penny less than
    what she paid. We must, therefore, conclude that she
    received the benefit of her bargain and has suffered no
    economic injury.
    But what are we to make of Estrada’s allegations
    that she received only “unsafe” Baby Powder despite
    being promised “safe” Baby Powder? Estrada Br. 19–20.
    comply with Ford’s requirements,” and further noting that
    “[p]laintiffs even break down the amount of money spent
    per dealership”); see also Rivera v. Wyeth-Ayerst Labs,
    
    283 F.3d 315
    , 319 (5th Cir. 2002) (“Merely asking for
    money does not establish an injury in fact.”); O’Neil v.
    Simplicity, Inc., 
    574 F.3d 501
    , 504–05 (8th Cir. 2009)
    (noting that “[t]his case is similar to other no-injury
    cases,” and concluding that “[t]he [plaintiffs’ product]
    performs just as it was intended, and thus there is no injury
    and no basis for relief”). But see Mazza v. Am. Honda
    Motor Co., 
    666 F.3d 581
    , 595 (9th Cir. 2012) (“Plaintiffs
    contend that class members paid more for [a braking
    system] than they otherwise would have paid, or bought
    it when they otherwise would not have done so, because
    Honda made deceptive claims and failed to disclose the
    system’s limitations. To the extent that class members
    were relieved of their money by Honda’s deceptive
    conduct—as Plaintiffs allege—they have suffered an
    ‘injury in fact.’” (citation omitted)).
    23
    Can we not presume that Estrada would spend more for
    safe powder than she would for unsafe powder? Should we
    further presume that this difference in price constitutes an
    economic injury sufficient to confer Article III standing?
    We cannot do so for at least two reasons—the first based
    in law, and the second based in fact.
    First, such presumptions would turn the standing
    question on its head. It is well-settled law that “[w]e
    presume that federal courts lack jurisdiction unless the
    contrary appears affirmatively from the record.”
    DaimlerChrysler Corp. v. Cuno, 
    547 U.S. 332
    , 342 n.3
    (2006); Renne v. Geary, 
    501 U.S. 312
    , 316 (1991) (same);
    Bender v. Williamsport Area Sch. Dist., 
    475 U.S. 534
    , 546
    (1986) (same); King Bridge Co. v. Otoe Cnty., 
    120 U.S. 225
    , 226 (1887) (same); Pennsylvania Family Inst., Inc. v.
    Black, 
    489 F.3d 156
    , 164 (3d Cir. 2007) (same);
    Philadelphia Fed’n of Teachers, Am. Fed’n of Teachers,
    Local 3, AFL-CIO v. Ridge, 
    150 F.3d 319
    , 323 (3d Cir.
    1998) (same); Presbytery of N.J. of Orthodox Presbyterian
    Church v. Florio, 
    40 F.3d 1454
    , 1462 (3d Cir. 1994)
    (same).
    We cannot conclude that we have jurisdiction by
    presuming that Estrada would pay less for unsafe powder
    when she fails to even plead as much. And our refusal to
    leap to such a conclusion is supported by Estrada’s
    apparent desire to continue purchasing Baby Powder in the
    future despite being aware of its alleged health risks.
    24
    Estrada Reply Br. 2, 18. It is worthy of note that Estrada’s
    desire to continue purchasing Baby Powder is not
    conditioned on the powder being sold at a discounted
    price. In the absence of that condition, we would be hard-
    pressed to presume that Estrada wishes to continue to buy
    Baby Powder at anything other than its current market
    price, i.e., the very price she has repeatedly paid for the
    product over the last six decades.
    The second reason we cannot presume that Estrada
    suffered an economic injury by failing to receive “safe”
    powder is factual. Although Estrada contends that Baby
    Powder is “unsafe,” her own allegations require us to
    conclude that the powder she received was, in fact, safe as
    to her. As we described early in this opinion, Estrada did
    not allege that she developed ovarian cancer, nor did she
    allege she is at risk of developing ovarian cancer in the
    future as a result of her Baby Powder use. Estrada’s
    references to Baby Powder being unsafe as to others are
    not relevant to determining whether Estrada has standing
    herself. 
    Lujan, 504 U.S. at 563
    (1992) (“[T]he ‘injury in
    fact’ test requires more than an injury to a cognizable
    interest. It requires that the party seeking review be
    himself among the injured.”) (quoting Sierra Club v.
    Morton, 
    405 U.S. 727
    , 734–35 (1972)).13
    13
    The Dissent takes issue with our noting that Estrada
    received Baby Powder that was safe as to her. According
    to the Dissent, Estrada has standing because although she
    25
    We could not conclude that Estrada has standing
    even if she were to contend that, by “unsafe” powder, she
    meant not only powder that would cause her to develop
    ovarian cancer but also powder that would put her at risk
    of developing ovarian cancer. To be sure, had Estrada
    alleged that she was at risk of developing ovarian cancer,
    she may have established standing based on a theory of
    future physical injury. Because litigants and jurists cannot
    received safe powder, others allegedly did not. As
    comparative examples, the Dissent refers to a parent who
    purchases organic food that turns out to not be organic, a
    consumer who purchases locksets marketed as being
    “Made in the U.S.A” that ultimately were not so made, and
    an observant Jew who purchases nonkosher meat that was
    improperly labeled as being kosher. But while the Dissent
    might be correct that those hypothetical plaintiffs would
    have standing, Estrada’s case is unlike those examples.
    Instead, Estrada’s claims are similar to those of a parent
    who indeed received organic food, a consumer who indeed
    received locksets domestically made, and an observant
    Jew who indeed received kosher meat—but who wish to
    sue because they claim that other individuals did not
    similarly receive the benefit of their own bargains.
    Although defendants who perform for some consumers
    but not others might be held liable pursuant to other
    mechanisms—by, for example, state attorneys general
    filing suit—Article III does not permit private plaintiffs to
    sue for injuries suffered only by others.
    26
    predict the future, the law will sometimes permit plaintiffs
    to establish standing based on injuries that are likely to
    occur later in time.
    But Estrada chose not to allege any risk of
    developing ovarian cancer in the future. JA 49–50
    (“Plaintiff is not claiming physical harm or seeking the
    recovery of personal injury damages.”). Given the absence
    of such an allegation, Estrada cannot now claim that she
    was ever at risk of developing ovarian cancer.
    To further illustrate this point, imagine that
    Defendants could go back in time to the 1950s when
    Estrada first purchased Baby Powder. Imagine further that,
    the moment before Estrada purchased that first bottle of
    Baby Powder, Defendants informed her that “although this
    powder might cause others to develop ovarian cancer, we
    have seen the future and we can tell you with absolute
    certainty that there is a zero percent chance that this Baby
    Powder will ever cause you to develop ovarian cancer.”
    Can it be said that a plaintiff with a zero percent chance of
    ever experiencing a harm is at “risk” of experiencing that
    harm? The question answers itself. And because Estrada
    does not allege that she suffered harm through an
    increased risk of developing ovarian cancer, we can
    conclude that the powder Estrada purchased was not
    “unsafe.”
    In sum, although Estrada characterizes her Baby
    Powder purchases as economic injuries for which she is
    27
    entitled to relief, she has failed to allege that the economic
    benefit she received from that powder was anything less
    than the price she paid. In short, she received the benefit
    of her bargain. 14 Today, we therefore explicitly hold what
    14
    To this end, we note that our holding does not conflict
    with the Supreme Court of California’s holding in Kwikset
    Corp. v. Superior Court, 
    246 P.3d 877
    (Cal. 2011), a case
    that Estrada favorably cites. In Kwikset, plaintiffs
    purchased locksets labeled “Made in the U.S.A.,” and
    contended that they suffered an economic injury because
    those locksets contained foreign-made parts. 
    Kwikset, 246 P.3d at 881
    . Interpreting a state standing provision
    purporting to reflect Article III’s injury in fact
    requirement, the Supreme Court of California concluded
    that these plaintiffs had suffered an economic harm. 
    Id. at 885.
    As the Court wrote, “[f]or each consumer who relies
    on the truth and accuracy of a label . . . the economic harm
    is the same: the consumer has purchased a product that he
    or she paid more for than he or she otherwise might have
    been willing to pay if the product had been labeled
    accurately.” 
    Id. at 890.
           The key language in that quote, as we read it, is the
    language that the Court chose to italicize: that a consumer
    has “paid more” for a product than she otherwise would
    have had it been properly labeled. 
    Id. In analyzing
    whether
    the plaintiffs “paid more” for their locksets, the Kwikset
    Court noted that “[w]hether or not a party who actually
    received the benefit of his or her bargain may lack
    28
    might heretofore have been obvious: a plaintiff does not
    have Article III standing when she pleads economic injury
    from the purchase of a product, but fails to allege that the
    purchase provided her with an economic benefit worth less
    than the economic benefit for which she bargained.15
    standing, in this case, under the allegations of the
    complaint, plaintiffs did not [receive the benefit of their
    bargain].” 
    Id. at 892.
    Unlike the plaintiffs in Kwikset, who
    failed to receive the benefit of their bargains and thus
    “paid more” for their locksets, Estrada fails to allege the
    same.
    15
    Although Koronthaly v. L’Oreal USA, Inc., 374 F.
    App’x 257, 258 (3d Cir. 2010) is an unpublished opinion
    and therefore not binding precedent, we find the rationale
    presented in that case to be both persuasive and consistent
    with our holding here. In Koronthaly, the panel considered
    whether a plaintiff had standing to sue a cosmetics
    manufacturer for failing to provide warnings about how
    much lead was in lipstick. Koronthaly, 374 F. App’x at
    258. The plaintiff “did not know when she purchased the
    products that they contained any lead, and when she
    learned of the lead content she immediately stopped using
    them. Moreover, had she known of the lead she would not
    have purchased the products.” 
    Id. These facts
    are nearly
    identical to the operative facts in this appeal. In holding
    that the plaintiff did not have Article III standing in
    Koronthaly, the panel reasoned that “[a]bsent any
    29
    IV. RESTITUTION
    In addition to seeking monetary damages, Estrada
    seeks disgorgement of revenues and profit pursuant to the
    law of restitution.16 An examination of Estrada’s
    complaint reveals that her restitution claims are supported
    by only two conclusory assertions. First, Estrada alleges
    that Johnson & Johnson has “been able to sell the product
    for more than [it] otherwise would have had [it] properly
    informed consumers about the safety risks.” JA 48.17
    allegation that [the plaintiff] received a product that failed
    to work for its intended purpose or was worth objectively
    less than what one could reasonably expect, [the plaintiff]
    has not demonstrated a concrete injury-in-fact.” 
    Id. at 259.
    That same rationale holds true in this case.
    16
    JA 79 (seeking “restitution and disgorgement of
    Defendants’ revenues” and further asking the District
    Court to direct “Defendants to identify, with court
    supervision, victims of their conduct and pay them
    restitution and disgorgement of all monies acquired by
    Defendants by means of any act or practice declared by
    this Court to be wrongful”).
    17
    Estrada repeats this same point later in her complaint.
    JA 70 (stating that Johnson & Johnson was “able to charge
    more than [it] otherwise would have had [it] properly
    informed consumers that women who use Baby Powder in
    30
    Second, Estrada contends that Johnson & Johnson “reaped
    and continue[s] to reap enormous profits from [its]
    deceptive marketing.” JA 70.
    These two statements are nothing more than
    conclusory assertions and are therefore inadequate to
    provide Estrada with Article III standing. See Finkelman
    v. Nat’l Football League, 
    810 F.3d 187
    , 201 (3d Cir. 2016)
    (“[W]hen it comes to injury, [Finkelman] looks only to the
    difference between a ticket’s $800 face price and the price
    he paid and says, ‘I have a strong suspicion that this ticket
    would have been cheaper if more tickets had been
    available for purchase by members of the general public.’
    That claim rests on no additional facts at all. It is pure
    conjecture about what the ticket resale market might have
    looked like if the NFL had sold its tickets differently.
    Article III injuries require a firmer foundation.”).
    As Part III explained, in order to seek monetary
    damages, Estrada must do more than simply characterize
    her purchases as economic injuries. The same rationale
    holds true as to her restitution claims—Estrada cannot
    invoke the federal judicial power simply by asserting that
    Johnson & Johnson has earned unlawful profits. Estrada’s
    conclusory assertions are further weakened by her alleged
    desire to purchase Baby Powder in the future despite
    knowing of its alleged health risks. Estrada Reply Br. 2,
    the genital area have a significant increased risk of ovarian
    cancer”).
    31
    18. If Estrada herself wishes to purchase Baby Powder
    whether or not she knows of those health risks, why would
    the same not hold true for other consumers? And if other
    consumers were to purchase Baby Powder whether or not
    they were warned of the alleged health risks, how did
    Johnson & Johnson earn unlawful profits by failing to
    offer such warnings? Estrada’s two conclusory assertions
    provide us not even a hint as to how we might answer these
    basic questions.18
    In sum, Estrada’s restitution claims are based on
    nothing more than mere conjecture. She pleads no facts
    18
    And other questions come to mind. Estrada has observed
    that consumers are already highly informed of the alleged
    health risks associated with Baby Powder given the
    numerous publicly available studies and publications that
    she cites in her complaint. JA 54–67. Estrada’s complaint
    refers to, inter alia, scientific studies from “as early as
    1961,” JA 54, a 1982 New York Times article regarding
    the alleged health risks of talcum powder, JA 67, and a
    pamphlet allegedly distributed “to all ovarian cancer
    patients at nearly every medical facility in the United
    States.” JA 66. Wouldn’t such widespread knowledge
    already have been factored into the current market price of
    Baby Powder? And if so, how did Johnson & Johnson earn
    unlawful profits by withholding information that the
    market might have already taken account of?
    32
    upon which a factfinder could conclude that Johnson &
    Johnson has been able to sell more Baby Powder than it
    could have had it informed consumers of the alleged health
    risks. We therefore conclude that Estrada lacks standing to
    seek relief in the form of restitution.
    V. INJUNCTIVE RELIEF
    Finally, Estrada seeks injunctive relief in the form
    of “corrective advertising” and “enjoining Defendants
    from continuing the unlawful practices” of selling Baby
    Powder without properly warning consumers of the
    alleged health risks. JA 79. 19 In order to have standing to
    19
    Estrada also refers in passing to “declaratory” relief
    three times in her complaint. JA 72, 79. All three
    references to “declaratory” relief are made in connection
    with her request for injunctive relief. JA 72 (“declaratory
    and/or injunctive relief”); 
    id. (same); JA
    79 (“declaratory
    and injunctive relief as permitted by law or equity”).
    Moreover, her third reference to “declaratory” relief
    appears to include both a reference to injunctive relief and
    relief based in restitution. JA 79 (“Awarding declaratory
    and injunctive relief as permitted by law or equity,
    including enjoining Defendants . . . and directing
    Defendants to identify . . . victims of their conduct and pay
    them restitution and disgorgement.”). Because Estrada’s
    references to “declaratory” relief appear to be a mere
    rehashing of her requests for injunctive relief and
    33
    seek injunctive relief, Estrada must establish that she is
    “‘likely to suffer future injury’ from the defendant’s
    conduct.” McNair v. Synapse Group Inc., 
    672 F.3d 213
    ,
    223 (3d Cir. 2012) (quoting City of Los Angeles v. Lyons,
    
    461 U.S. 95
    , 105 (1983)). Because Estrada makes clear in
    this very lawsuit that she is well aware of health risks
    associated with using Baby Powder, we readily conclude
    that she is not likely to suffer future economic injury.
    In McNair, we considered whether “former
    customers” of a magazine company had standing to seek
    injunctive relief. 
    Id. at 215.
    The defendant-appellee in that
    case, a magazine marketing company by the name of
    Synapse Group Inc., had allegedly sold subscriptions in an
    unlawfully deceptive way. 20 Because the plaintiffs were
    former customers who were already aware of Synapse’s
    advertising practices, we concluded that any future injury
    restitution, we need not repeat our standing analyses as to
    those forms of relief.
    20
    “The majority of Synapse’s magazine subscriptions are
    offered under what is known as a ‘continuous service plan’
    whereby a customer’s subscription does not expire unless
    and until the customer opts to cancel it. To secure
    subscribers to those plans, Synapse offers introductory
    promotional offers under which customers can receive
    magazine subscriptions for free or at greatly reduced
    rates.” 
    McNair, 672 F.3d at 216
    .
    34
    they might suffer as a result of the company’s advertising
    practices was “wholly conjectural.” 
    Id. at 225;
    see also 
    id. at n.13
    (“If Appellants’ suggestion is that they may not be
    able to help themselves when confronted with a really
    good subscription offer, they have still not provided a
    basis for standing. Pleading a lack of self-restraint may
    elicit sympathy but it will not typically invoke the
    jurisdiction of a federal court.”). The premise that former
    customers could again be deceived by the very sort of
    advertising practices over which they were already
    pursuing equitable relief was a premise unmoored from
    reality.
    Estrada has sued Johnson & Johnson for failing to
    warn her of certain health risks. To state the obvious, then,
    she is presently aware of those risks. As with the former
    customers in McNair, we wonder how Estrada could
    possibly be deceived again into buying Baby Powder
    without being aware of those same risks. She is simply not
    at risk of suffering an economic “injury,” and we will not
    give cognizance to this sort of “stop me before I buy
    again” claim.
    Perhaps sensing that McNair presents her with a real
    challenge, Estrada would have us limit McNair to
    instances when plaintiffs do not allege an intention to
    make purchases in the future. Estrada Reply Br. 17–18.
    Because Estrada desires to purchase Baby Powder in the
    35
    future, she contends that her case can be distinguished
    from McNair. 
    Id. We decline
    to so limit McNair.
    To begin with, we noted in McNair that “[p]erhaps
    [the former customers] may accept a Synapse offer in the
    future.” 
    McNair, 672 F.3d at 225
    . Given that recognition,
    it would require a strained reading of the case to conclude
    that the former customers’ failure to allege a desire to
    subscribe in the future played a key role in our analysis.
    Our holding in McNair was instead more focused on the
    crucial fact that the former customers were already aware
    of the allegedly deceptive business practices from which
    they sought future protection. As we wrote in McNair, “the
    law accords people the dignity of assuming that they act
    rationally, in light of the information they possess.” 
    Id. That same
    rationale applies in the case at hand. The law
    affords Estrada the dignity of assuming that she acts
    rationally, and that she will not act in such a way that she
    will again suffer the same alleged “injury.” We conclude
    that Estrada does not have standing to seek injunctive
    relief.
    CONCLUSION
    Estrada contends that other people have suffered
    health complications from using Johnson & Johnson’s
    Baby Powder. Regardless of whether that serious
    allegation has merit, injuries suffered by others do not
    permit us to conclude that Estrada has herself suffered an
    injury in fact. The only injury that Estrada alleges is purely
    36
    economic in nature—that is, that had she known more
    about Baby Powder, she would not have purchased it in
    the first place. But Estrada’s wish to be reimbursed for a
    functional product that she has already consumed without
    incident does not itself constitute an economic injury
    within the meaning of Article III.
    Estrada fails to provide a non-conjectural basis for
    concluding that she did not receive the benefit of her
    bargain. Estrada similarly fails to show that she is at risk
    of suffering an economic injury in the future, or that
    Johnson and Johnson has sold more Baby Powder than it
    otherwise could have. For these reasons, we conclude that
    Estrada does not have Article III standing to seek any of
    the three forms of relief requested in her complaint. The
    judgment of the District Court will be affirmed.
    37
    FUENTES, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
    Juries across the country have returned verdicts finding,
    among other things, that Johnson & Johnson is liable to
    consumers of Johnson’s Baby Powder for its propensity to
    increase the risk of ovarian cancer in women. 1 This case is not
    about that. Mona Estrada, a longtime consumer of Johnson’s
    Baby Powder, makes no claim that she herself experienced a
    higher risk of ovarian cancer due to her use of the product.
    Instead, she alleges that Johnson & Johnson misrepresented
    what it sold her: a product, safe for daily use,that absorbs
    bodily moisture. She alleges that, had she known that the
    product was not safe, she would not have bought the product.
    The majority is thorough and reaches a conclusion of
    law that, in the abstract, makes perfect sense: a plaintiff who
    receives the benefit of her bargain cannot assert that she has
    suffered an injury-in-fact to establish standing under Article
    III. I write separately because the majority omits key terms
    from the bargain struck between Estrada and Johnson &
    Johnson to reach the conclusion that Estrada received the
    benefit of her bargain. In my view, she did not. I would
    conclude from Estrada’s pleadings that the safety of the
    product—as a general proposition, not specifically as to
    1
    See, e.g., Tiffany Hsu, Johnson & Johnson Told to Pay $4.7
    Billion in Baby Powder Lawsuit, N.Y. TIMES, July 12, 2018,
    https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/12/business/johnson-
    johnson-talcum-powder.html; Tina Bellon, J&J hit with $21.7
    million verdict in another talc asbestos cancer case, REUTERS,
    May 23, 2018, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-johnson-
    johnson-cancer-lawsuit/jj-hit-with-21-7-million-verdict-in-
    another-talc-asbestos-cancer-case-idUSKCN1IO3HD.
    1
    Estrada herself—was an essential component of the benefit of
    Estrada’s bargain. Because Estrada alleges that the safety of
    the product was part of her bargain and that Johnson & Johnson
    misrepresented this key element, I would hold that Estrada has
    alleged injury-in-fact and standing under Article III. At this
    stage of the proceedings, all Estrada must allege is an
    “identifiable trifle” sufficient to establish injury-in-fact for
    standing under Article III. 2 She has done that. Thus, I would
    vacate the order of the District Court and remand this case for
    further proceedings.
    I.
    According to Estrada’s pleadings, Johnson & Johnson
    has encouraged women to dust themselves daily with
    Johnson’s Baby Powder through labeling and advertising.
    Estrada alleges that while the specific language of the label has
    changed over time, its message has remained consistent: “that
    the product is safe for use on women as well as babies.” 3
    Historically, the label and advertising has encouraged women
    to dust themselves with Johnson’s Baby Powder daily to mask
    odors. Under a heading instructing customers when to use
    Johnson’s Baby Powder specifically, the product says: “Use
    anytime you want skin to feel soft, fresh and comfortable. For
    baby, use after every bath and diaper change.” 4
    2
    Bowman v. Wilson, 
    672 F.3d 1145
    , 1151 (3d Cir. 1982)
    (quoting United States v. Students Challenging Regulatory
    Agency Procedures (SCRAP), 
    412 U.S. 669
    , 686–90 & 689
    n.14 (1973)).
    3
    AA050.
    4
    AA053.
    2
    Johnson & Johnson “seek[s] to convey an image as a
    safe and trusted family brand.” 5 It operates a website
    specifically pronouncing “Our Safety & Care Commitment,”
    in which it proclaims that “safety is our legacy” and “[y]ou
    have our commitment that every beauty and baby care product
    from the Johnson & Johnson Family of Consumer Companies
    is safe and effective when used as directed.” 6 On its website
    advertising Johnson’s Baby Powder, Johnson & Johnson states
    that the product is “[c]linically proven to be safe, gentle and
    mild.” 7 None of the product’s labeling or advertising advises
    of an increased risk of ovarian cancer associated with use of
    Johnson’s Baby Powder. 8
    The majority does not dispute that Estrada alleges that
    Johnson & Johnson held the product out as safe. I agree. The
    majority states that “Estrada’s references to Baby Powder
    being unsafe as to others are not relevant to determining
    whether Estrada has standing herself.” 9
    I depart from the majority’s reasoning that Johnson’s
    Baby Powder must be unsafe “as to [Estrada]” in order for
    safety to be part of the benefit of Estrada’s bargain. 10 In
    support of this proposition, it cites Lujan v. Defenders of
    Wildlife, which holds that “the ‘injury in fact’ test requires
    more than an injury to a cognizable interest. It requires that the
    5
    
    Id. 6 Id.
    (alteration in original).
    7
    
    Id. 8 Id.
    9
    Majority Op. at 26 (emphasis in original).
    10
    
    Id. (emphasis omitted).
    3
    party seeking review be himself among the injured.” 11 The
    majority’s application of Lujan to exclude “safety as to others”
    from Estrada’s bargain misapplies Lujan and misapprehends
    the nature of Estrada’s injury. Estrada’s pleading makes it
    clear that Estrada does not allege that she is among those who
    have contracted or who have been exposed to an increased risk
    of contracting ovarian cancer due to her use of Johnson’s Baby
    Powder. Estrada alleges that her injury was the economic harm
    caused by purchasing a product due to Johnson & Johnson’s
    misrepresentations that the product was safe. She is,
    undisputedly, among the injured within the meaning of Lujan
    when it comes to the actual basis of her alleged injury-in-fact.
    I believe the Ninth Circuit succinctly stated the requirements
    of Article III as applied to economic harm when it wrote:
    “[W]hen, as here, ‘Plaintiffs contend that class members paid
    more for [a product] than they otherwise would have paid, or
    bought it when they otherwise would not have done so,’ they
    have suffered an Article III injury in fact.” 12
    II.
    The majority contends that Estrada received the benefit
    of her bargain because it was safe “as to her.” 13 This
    improperly confuses the benefit of the bargain relating to
    Estrada’s alleged economic harm with the non-economic
    11
    Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    , 563 (1992).
    12
    Hinojos v. Kohl’s Corp., 
    718 F.3d 1098
    , 1104 n.3 (9th Cir.
    2013) (quoting Mazza v. Am. Honda Motor Co., 
    666 F.3d 581
    ,
    595 (9th Cir. 2012)) (alteration in original).
    13
    Majority Op. at 26 (emphasis omitted).
    4
    harm—the actual danger allegedly posed by Johnson’s Baby
    Powder—which is not at issue in this case.
    What makes a product safe? If I buy a car of a make
    and model that reportedly explodes when driven, it seems
    obvious that the car is not safe. But what if I know that the
    specific car that I have purchased, and any subsequent cars of
    that make and model that I purchase, will never explode while
    I am in the car? The car or cars that I purchase contain the
    same structural defect that makes those cars explode but I,
    through the powers granted to me by legal fiction, know they
    will never explode while I am in the car. Under the majority’s
    reasoning, this means that the car is safe as to me and,
    therefore, I have conceded that it is safe in any legal action I
    take against the manufacturer for selling a car with an evident
    inclination to explode. After all, I am totally protected from
    the risk posed by the defect. But no one would describe the car
    as safe.
    When we talk about a product being “safe,” and when
    manufacturers and vendors hold a product out as “safe,” we are
    talking about two related but distinct concepts. The first is
    exactly what the majority describes: safety as to the immediate
    purchaser. This is a common conception of safety, the
    consumer who considers the product and asks: “Is this going to
    hurt and/or kill me?” This form of safety undergirds the claims
    that Johnson & Johnson misrepresented the safety of its
    product brought by plaintiffs who allege that they contracted
    or were exposed to an increased risk of contracting ovarian
    cancer. It is not at issue here.
    But this is not the only form of safety. The second form
    of safety—the safety that was part of Estrada’s bargain—
    5
    concerns the safety of a product generally, or its safety as to
    others. The parent who buys a toy for a child considers the
    safety of the toy not necessarily as to him or her but as to the
    child. A man might buy Johnson’s Baby Powder that will be
    used by a woman with whom he cohabitates, and might very
    well consider the safety of that product as to the other person,
    not to himself. 14 In other words, understanding this form of
    safety relies in part on recognizing that the purchaser of a
    product may not be the consumer of a product. The connection
    need not be that direct, however. A product is advertised as
    safe for the same reason it is advertised as effective: to induce
    people to purchase it. A person may rely on various
    representations made by a manufacturer or vendor when
    determining whether to make a purchase.
    Kwikset Corp. v. Superior Court, 15 a case decided by
    the Supreme Court of California, adjudicates standing in light
    of the very statute under which Estrada brings her claims. It is
    14
    The majority conflates safety as a representation with safety
    as insulation from risk to Estrada specifically, which perhaps
    is why it notes skeptically that men could join Estrada’s
    proposed class. I leave aside that class certification is well
    beyond the scope of subject-matter jurisdiction. I also leave
    aside that the putative class action elements of this case are
    entirely separate from whether Estrada herself has standing to
    pursue her claim. Here, however, the majority again seems to
    forget that Estrada does not allege that she was exposed to the
    danger allegedly posed by Johnson’s Baby Powder. She
    alleges that Johnson & Johnson’s representations of safety
    were among the terms under which she purchased the product.
    This valuation of safety is not gender-exclusive.
    15
    
    246 P.3d 877
    (Cal. 2011).
    6
    worth noting, though hardly dispositive, that the standing
    requirements of this law are “substantially narrower than
    federal standing under article III, section 2 of the United States
    Constitution.” 16 The majority dismisses Estrada’s citation of
    this case because it concerns plaintiffs who did not receive the
    benefit of their bargain (where, purportedly, Estrada has), 17 but
    Kwikset is relevant because it illustrates why Estrada did not
    receive the benefit of her bargain. In Kwikset, plaintiffs
    purchased locksets labeled “Made in U.S.A.” that contained
    parts manufactured abroad. The defendant made an argument
    that is identical to the majority’s reasoning here: “[C]onsumers
    who receive a fully functioning product have received the
    benefit of their bargain, even if the product label contains
    misrepresentations that may have been relied upon by a
    particular class of consumers.” 18
    Perhaps illustrating the fundamental simplicity of the
    case before us, the Kwikset court disagreed, stating:
    Plaintiffs selected Kwikset’s
    locksets to purchase in part
    because they were “Made in
    U.S.A.”; they would not have
    purchased them otherwise; and, it
    may be inferred, they value what
    they actually received less than
    either the money they parted with
    or working locksets that actually
    were made in the United States.
    They bargained for locksets that
    16
    
    Id. at 886.
    17
    Majority Op. at 28 n.14.
    18
    
    Kwikset, 246 P.3d at 892
    .
    7
    were made in the United States;
    they got ones that were not. 19
    The Kwikset court further reasons:
    The observant Jew who purchases
    food represented to be, but not in
    fact, kosher; the Muslim who
    purchases food represented to be,
    but not in fact, halal; the parent
    who purchases food for his or her
    child represented to be, but not in
    fact, organic, has in each instance
    not received the benefit of his or
    her bargain. 20
    Estrada has alleged that there was a misrepresentation
    made by Johnson & Johnson as to the safety of Johnson’s Baby
    Powder and, moreover, that the misrepresentation was material
    to her decision to purchase Johnson’s Baby Powder.
    At least this stage of the proceedings, where we only
    endeavor to determine whether a plaintiff has standing to
    pursue her claim, I see no reason we should devote ourselves
    to understanding why a plaintiff values what she values. As
    Kwikset notes:
    This economic harm—the loss of
    real dollars from a consumer's
    pocket—is the same whether or
    not a court might objectively view
    the products as functionally
    equivalent. A counterfeit Rolex
    19
    
    Id. 20 Id.
    8
    might be proven to tell the time as
    accurately as a genuine Rolex and
    in other ways be functionally
    equivalent, but we do not doubt the
    consumer (as well as the company
    that was deprived of a sale) has
    been economically harmed by the
    substitution in a manner sufficient
    to create standing to sue. Two
    wines might to almost any palate
    taste indistinguishable—but to
    serious oenophiles, the difference
    between one year and the next,
    between grapes from one valley
    and another nearby, might be
    sufficient to carry with it real
    economic differences in how much
    they would pay. Nonkosher meat
    might taste and in every respect be
    nutritionally identical to kosher
    meat, but to an observant Jew who
    keeps kosher, the former would be
    worthless. 21
    I am persuaded by this rationale. The parent who
    purchases “organic” food that is not organic need not justify
    her decision to purchase food labeled “organic.” The Kwikset
    plaintiffs were not obliged to explain why they cared if the
    locksets they purchased were manufactured in the United
    States. It was sufficient that the misrepresentation of the
    manufacturer deprived them of the benefit of their bargain such
    21
    
    Id. at 890.
    9
    that they would not have purchased the product had the product
    been labeled accurately. As courts construing Kwikset have
    stated: “[A] consumer’s subjective willingness to pay more for
    the product than he or she would have been willing to pay in
    the absence of the misrepresentation is itself a form of
    economic injury ‘whether or not a court might objectively view
    the products as functionally equivalent.’” 22 That is the same
    scenario presented before us today.
    Estrada effectively alleges that she values “safety” as a
    label, akin to “organic” or “Made in U.S.A.” When contrasted
    with the real danger allegedly posed by Johnson’s Baby
    Powder, this misrepresentation might seem petty. However,
    that does not make it immaterial to Estrada’s bargain as she
    alleges it.
    III.
    The majority invokes two of our recent precedents to
    characterize Estrada’s alleged injury as some attenuated,
    unknowable entity. The majority’s invocation of Finkelman v.
    National Football League is misplaced. 23 Finkelman lacked
    standing because the basis of his alleged injury—the
    purportedly inflated price of Super Bowl tickets—was only
    speculatively affected by the NFL’s conduct. 24 Finkelman
    bought his tickets at the inflated price, but did not at that point
    allege a set of facts under which the NFL’s conduct caused the
    22
    Hansen v. Newegg.com Americas, Inc., 236 Cal. Rep. 3d 61,
    72 (Cal. Ct. App. 2018) (quoting 
    Kwikset, 246 P.3d at 890
    ).
    23
    See Majority Op. at 14–18.
    24
    Finkelman v. Nat’l Football League, 
    810 F.3d 187
    , 200 (3d
    Cir. 2016) (hereafter “Finkelman I”).
    10
    price inflation. 25 Finkelman did not allege that he would not
    have bought the tickets at the inflated price or, more applicably,
    that he would not have bought the tickets had he known that
    the NFL withheld tickets in such a way that the price was
    inflated. Instead, Finkelman needed to establish with some
    particularity the chain of events that led to his economic injury
    because the injury itself—what money was actually lost—
    could not be established without that chain. The majority
    misapplies Cottrell v. Alcon Laboratories similarly, and to the
    same effect. In Cottrell, the plaintiffs did not dispute that they
    received the benefit of their bargain as to the portion of
    medicine that they were able to use from the dispensers at
    issue. 26
    The majority correctly notes that we did not analyze the
    economic theories presented in Finkelman and Cottrell
    “because we wished to sound pedantic.” 27 We are obliged by
    Article III to ensure that plaintiffs allege injury in fact, not
    conjecture. In Finkelman, we needed to ascertain that a
    plaintiff who received the benefit of his bargain—tickets to the
    Super Bowl—was in fact injured by being compelled to pay
    more for his tickets because of the improper conduct of the
    seller. We needed to determine whether the pleadings
    25
    See id.; cf. Finkelman v. Nat’l Football League, 
    877 F.3d 504
    , 512 (3d Cir. 2017) (holding that Finkelman’s amended
    complaint, which alleged “a casual chain justifying why the
    NFL’s withholding set into motion a series of events that
    ultimately raised prices on the secondary market,” alleged
    Article III standing) (hereafter “Finkelman II”).
    26
    See Cottrell v. Alcon Labs., 
    874 F.3d 154
    , 169–70 (3d Cir.
    2017).
    27
    Majority Op. at 20.
    11
    established that said compulsion occurred. In Cottrell, we
    needed to ascertain an injury (and the measurability of that
    injury) where the plaintiffs undoubtedly received the benefit of
    their bargain as to some portion of the medicine that they
    consumed. More complex theories of injury may be necessary
    where a plaintiff gets the benefit of his or her bargain in some
    of the product, or where the injury might be obscured by layers
    of market forces.
    That is not the case here. Estrada alleges that she paid
    for a product based, in part, on Johnson & Johnson’s
    representation of its safety. That representation was part of the
    benefit of her bargain. Because that representation was false,
    Estrada did not receive the benefit of her bargain.
    Unlike Finkelman, Estrada need not allege a chain of
    events to show that she paid a price she would not have
    otherwise paid for Johnson’s Baby Powder. In my view, it
    suffices that she alleges that she would not have purchased the
    product. The price increase in her bargain with Johnson &
    Johnson caused by the company’s alleged misrepresentation as
    to safety is the total sum she paid for the product.
    Unlike the Cottrell plaintiffs, Estrada does not concede
    that she received the benefit of her bargain as to some of her
    purchase—that some of the product was safe as represented by
    Johnson & Johnson. 28 Estrada alleges that the whole product
    fails to satisfy the representation of safety made by Johnson &
    Johnson. If Johnson & Johnson or Estrada can, by expert
    28
    Additionally, for this reason, the majority’s assertion that
    Estrada’s theory of standing would have entitled the Cottrell
    plaintiffs to sue for the contents of the entire bottle is wrong.
    12
    testimony, demonstrate that only a certain portion of Johnson’s
    Baby Powder is unsafe, that is certainly a question of damages,
    not of injury-in-fact.
    Moreover, the majority’s logic is incompatible with
    Cottrell. After all, the Cottrell plaintiffs used all the medicine.
    Their bargain could be circumscribed just as the majority edits
    the terms of Estrada’s bargain: the Cottrell plaintiffs bargained
    for the benefits of the medicine, not medicine delivered in a
    minimum effective dose so as to maximize the medicine’s
    utility. But we wisely recognized in Cottrell that the benefit of
    the bargain encompasses the whole bargain, and that the
    bargain should not be redefined to neatly encompass only what
    plaintiffs actually received, instead of what they were
    promised.
    IV.
    The majority further holds that Estrada has failed to
    plead facts sufficient to establish standing to pursue restitution
    and to pursue injunctive relief. I disagree, largely for reasons
    already articulated.
    With respect to restitution, the majority concludes that
    Estrada only makes conclusory allegations that Johnson &
    Johnson sold Johnson’s Baby Powder for more money than it
    would have made had it disclosed the alleged risk of ovarian
    cancer. In this case, I would rely on the precedent of this Court
    that “federal courts typically credit allegations of injury that
    involve no more than application of basic economic logic.” 29
    29
    
    Finkelman, 810 F.3d at 201
    (internal quotation marks and
    citation omitted).
    13
    Dealing only with the allegations of the pleadings, it seems
    sufficiently elementary that a product held out as safe will
    command a higher price than a product held out as markedly
    increasing a woman’s risk of developing ovarian cancer. As
    such, I believe Estrada has alleged that Johnson & Johnson
    profited from its allegedly unlawful misrepresentation.
    With respect to injunctive relief, I do not read Estrada’s
    allegation as in fundamental tension with McNair v. Synapse
    Group Inc. 30 I read Estrada’s allegations about desiring to
    purchase the product as inextricable from the bargain she
    struck with Johnson & Johnson. While the majority reads her
    pleadings to state that Estrada is willing to purchase the
    product as-is, given her allegations it makes more sense to
    understand that Estrada’s pleaded desire to purchase baby
    powder in the future is contingent on Johnson & Johnson
    offering a product that meets the terms of her bargain. She is
    only unlikely to suffer future economic injury if we presume
    that Johnson & Johnson has lied and will continue to lie in its
    labeling, or that Estrada will assume that any label offered by
    Johnson & Johnson is untruthful.
    Moreover, I believe plaintiffs alleging harm caused by
    defendants’ misrepresentations are entitled to seek injunctive
    relief against those misrepresentations, in part because that is
    explicitly permitted under California’s Unfair Competition
    Law under which Estrada sues. 31 A plaintiff who is
    sufficiently aware of misrepresentations and who alleges
    injury-in-fact under a theory of economic harm, or any theory
    of harm, is unlikely to continue purchasing that product as
    30
    
    672 F.3d 213
    (3d Cir. 2012).
    31
    See Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code § 17204.
    14
    offered beforehand. If our reasoning compels us to interpret
    Article III to effectively strike down a provision of state law,
    and the law of a state not within this Circuit, I believe we have
    erred.
    V.
    Article III standing is the minimum hurdle that a
    plaintiff must meet to bring her claim in federal court. To
    conclude here that Estrada has pleaded standing, we need not
    and, in fact, cannot determine whether she has stated a claim
    sufficiently to withstand a motion to dismiss under Federal
    Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). We cannot address whether
    this claim as pleaded establishes a sufficient basis for class
    certification under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23. As
    previously stated, our only duty here is to determine whether
    Estrada alleged an “identifiable trifle” sufficient to establish
    injury-in-fact for standing under Article III. 32 Because Mona
    Estrada has met that bare minimum requirement, I respectfully
    dissent. I would vacate the District Court’s order and remand
    for further proceedings.
    32
    
    Bowman, 672 F.3d at 1151
    (citation omitted).
    15
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 17-2980

Filed Date: 9/6/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/7/2018

Authorities (21)

No. 98-5136 , 165 F.3d 221 ( 1998 )

Bowman, Jerry v. Wilson, Lieutenant Scott E., Brig Officer, ... , 672 F.2d 1145 ( 1982 )

philadelphia-federation-of-teachers-american-federation-of-teachers-local , 150 F.3d 319 ( 1998 )

the-presbytery-of-new-jersey-of-the-orthodox-presbyterian-church-a-new , 40 F.3d 1454 ( 1994 )

pennsylvania-family-institute-inc-ronald-cohen-charles-l-stump-v-thomas , 489 F.3d 156 ( 2007 )

joseph-maio-jo-ann-maio-and-gary-bender-on-behalf-of-themselves-and-all , 221 F.3d 472 ( 2000 )

Mazza v. American Honda Motor Co., Inc. , 666 F.3d 581 ( 2012 )

O'NEIL v. Simplicity, Inc. , 574 F.3d 501 ( 2009 )

United Transportation Union v. Interstate Commerce ... , 891 F.2d 908 ( 1989 )

elizabeth-rivera-arkansas-carpenters-health-and-welfare-fund-on-behalf-of , 283 F.3d 315 ( 2002 )

King Bridge Co. v. Otoe County , 7 S. Ct. 552 ( 1887 )

United States v. Students Challenging Regulatory Agency ... , 93 S. Ct. 2405 ( 1973 )

Sierra Club v. Morton , 92 S. Ct. 1361 ( 1972 )

Bender v. Williamsport Area School District , 106 S. Ct. 1326 ( 1986 )

Renne v. Geary , 111 S. Ct. 2331 ( 1991 )

Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife , 112 S. Ct. 2130 ( 1992 )

Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Environment , 118 S. Ct. 1003 ( 1998 )

DaimlerChrysler Corp. v. Cuno , 126 S. Ct. 1854 ( 2006 )

Summers v. Earth Island Institute , 129 S. Ct. 1142 ( 2009 )

Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins , 136 S. Ct. 1540 ( 2016 )

View All Authorities »