FindLaw's Common Law

Legal news you can use from FindLaw.com. Updated each weekday.




May 2012

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
    1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31    

FindLaw Blogs


FindLaw Blotter
Free Enterprise
Injured
Law & Daily Life


If you're looking for information on common law marriage, please visit the Common Law Marriage section on FindLaw.

« Vacation, Airline Refunds Never Easy, Not Impossible | Main | Bumped from Flights: Can Airlines Just Bump Me Like That? »

Mom Sues Nutella for Being 'Next Best Thing to a Candy Bar'

Some would say that Nutella is Italy's greatest contribution to history. Some would just call it what it is: an addiction. Embracing the confection's properties, Nutella lovers have been taking spoon to jar every time they need that sugary fix. The stuff can only be considered sinful.

One mom, apparently, did not get the memo, and has instead been feeding her four-year-old child Nutella for breakfast.

Believing advertisements stating that Nutella is a "healthy breakfast" and "nutritious," Athena Hohenberg of San Diego began purchasing the sugary concoction for her child. Upon finding out that Nutella contains an alarming amount of fat and sugar, reports the ABA Journal, the mom called a lawyer.

The Nutella lawsuit alleges a variety of misdeeds, almost all of which surround the claim that Ferrero USA, the spread's manufacturer, engaged in false advertising. Under federal and state law, it's illegal to place false or misleading statements on a product label. The lawsuit appears to base this claim on the presence of a tiny website URL on the label.

Though most people probably have never noticed the URL, the Nutella lawsuit alleges another claim: the content of that website and Nutella's other advertising is misleading unto itself. Advertisements often show mothers feeding their children bread slathered with Nutella. However, these advertisements also say that the spread is part of a balanced breakfast and show fruit, milk, orange juice and other healthier options.

While the allegations may seem weak, one can't help but consider the strangest thing about the Nutella lawsuit--the complaint states that the plaintiff only learned of the health risks from a friend. Seriously, doesn't anyone read nutrition labels anymore?

Related Resources:

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451609d69e20147e244325a970b

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Mom Sues Nutella for Being 'Next Best Thing to a Candy Bar':



Subscribe



Archives




Common Law Vanguard Panel

The following firms have assisted the FindLaw editorial team in identifying emerging trends in consumer protection law and topics of importance to readers of this blog:


Copyright 2008 FindLaw