We can’t beat Judge Silverman’s summary of the case, so we’ll stick with the direct quote:
Yes, this is a class-action lawsuit over the coating on sunflower seeds, and whether the sodium in the coating must be disclosed on the product’s nutrition label.
“Some days we are called upon to consider such profound issues as eleventh-hour death penalty appeals, catastrophic threats to the environment, intense and existential questions of civil and human rights, and the most complicated, controversial problems in civil, criminal and administrative law. Today we consider the coating on sunflower seeds.”
So, is the salty crap on the outside of the shell part and parcel with the shell itself, or is it separate, edible, and required to be included on the label?
The plaintiff argues that the coating is meant to be ingested, quoting the packaging, “Crack the shell with your teeth, eat the seed, and spit the shell. Experienced seeders pop a handful of seeds in their mouth and store them in one cheek, then transfer a seed over to the other side with their tongue, cracking it, then eat the seed and split [sic] the shell.”
The majority of the panel agreed, noting that the coatings come in a variety of flavors, including ranch and nacho.
Dissent: It’s the Shell
Judge Vinson wasn’t convinced. In his dissent, he argued that “[i]t is undisputed that the sunflower seed shells at issue in this case are inedible,” and “[a]lthough we might prefer a regulation that includes the shell’s absorbed salt and to draw a distinction between edible ‘coating’ and an inedible shell, we are nonetheless bound to apply this unambiguous regulation objectively as it has been written.”
Reversed and Remanded
The majority reversed the lower court’s opinion and remanded the case. In refusing to address ConAgra’s argument that no reasonable consumer would be deceived by the labeling because the label mentions kernels, not salty shells, the court noted that this was an issue of fact to be decided by the court on remand.
Related Resources:
- Lilly v. ConAgra Foods (Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals)
- School Uniform’s Slogan is Compelled Speech (FindLaw’s Ninth Circuit Blog)
- Uh, What? 9th Circuit Strikes Cal. Concealed Carry Restrictions (FindLaw’s Ninth Circuit Blog)
You Don’t Have To Solve This on Your Own – Get a Lawyer’s Help
Civil Rights
Block on Trump’s Asylum Ban Upheld by Supreme Court
Criminal
Judges Can Release Secret Grand Jury Records
Politicians Can’t Block Voters on Facebook, Court Rules