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Reading: Coke Likley to Face Vitaminwater Class Action, But Not For Money
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News

Coke Likley to Face Vitaminwater Class Action, But Not For Money

Published on: July 19, 2013 at 9:41 AM ET
Aster Pheonyx
Written By Aster Pheonyx
News Writer

The United States judge is recommending that the Coca-Cola Company face a class action lawsuit. The company is being accused of misleading their consumers by overstating the health benefits of their popular drink, Vitaminwater. The judge even suggested that the class action should not be for money.

In a decision made public on Thursday, US Magistrate Judge Robert Levy in Brooklyn, New York nonetheless said consumers could not sue as a group for money damages, a “central” part of their case, but rather to try to change how Coca-Cola labels and markets the product.

The group accused Coca-Cola of deceptively marketing Vitaminwater as an alternative to water and sugared soft drinks that could promote healthy joints, boost the immune system and help people fight eye disease, among other health benefits.

This is a 4-1/2-year-old lawsuit that includes California and New York residents, with support from the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a health advocacy group. Steve Gardner, litigation director for the Center for Science in the Public Interest, said the decision puts the case on track for a possible trial where Coca-Cola will have to defend “the deceptive claims it has made and continues to make.”

Levy said the plaintiffs had standing to sue by claiming they were misled into believing that Vitaminwater was healthier than it really was, or that other beverages would have been. Plaintiffs “have not presented a class-wide damages model that can be used based on common proof, or a reliable method of distributing damages to putative class members,” he wrote.

Coca-Cola spokeswoman Lindsey Raivich said the Atlanta-based company is pleased that class certification was denied for damages, and believes the plaintiffs’ claims in general “are without merit and will ultimately be rejected.”

The case now goes to U.S. District Judge Dora Irizarry for approval. Federal district judges typically accept magistrate judges’ recommendations. Both sides welcomed parts of the decision.

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