Spiegel,
Inc., Petitioner, v. Federal Trade Commission, Respondent
No. 17210
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE
SEVENTH CIRCUIT
411 F.2d 481; 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS
12000
OPINION: DUFFY, Senior Circuit Judge:
This is a petition for a review of a cease and desist order of the
Federal Trade Commission issued at the conclusion of an administrative
hearing upon a complaint filed by the Commission which charged Spiegel,
Inc. (Spiegel) with engaging in unfair methods of competition and
deceptive acts and practices in promoting and advertising certain items
of merchandise.
The Federal Trade Commission contends that in the period of 1962 to
1964, Spiegel violated Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act
(15 U.S.C. § 45) by offering for sale in its catalogs, seven items
of merchandise, the advertisements for which it claims were false and
misleading.
Spiegel, located in Chicago, Illinois, is a catalog house which sells
its merchandise exclusively by mail order. Two major catalogs are
issued each year. In addition, Spiegel regularly issues supplementary
sales and seasonal catalogs.
In some of the supplementary catalogs, Spiegel used a merchandise
technique known as the "dollar sale." Among the lines of merchandise
which it advertised in this manner were seven items: Williamstown
Heirloom Bedspreads; St. Mary's Blankets; Fruit of the Loom Quilts;
Pacific Percale Sheets; Acrilan Comforters; [and] Beacon Blankets.
To illustrate the type of advertisement to which the Trade Commission
objected, we refer to Exhibit A which is reproduced in the printed
appendix. There appears a picture of two double beds each having a
bedspread. A wide arrow is pointed at one of the bedspreads and carries
the slogan "Get This Second Spread for Only $1 More." At the bottom of
the advertisement is the name "Williamstown" heirloom bedspreads, and
the price stated is "only 9.98 each, any 2 for 10.98." In fine print
after describing the bedspreads there appears: "Save $8.98 when you buy
any two spreads." n3 It is admitted by the Commission that any customer
could have purchased one such spread for $9.98 or two for $10.98.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - Footnotes - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n3 There was some variation in the advertisements for the sale of
Williamstown bedspreads. In one exhibit the advertisement stated: "Get
this Bedspread for only one dollar with purchase of this regular $9.98
bedspread." In small print appears "Save to $8.98 on special purchase.
Two of these luxurious Williamstown spreads are yours for only $1 more
than the regular price of one."
- - - - - - - - - - - - End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - -
In advertisements for Fruit of the Loom Quilts, the price of one such
quilt was listed as $8.98 each, two at $9.98. In small print appeared
"Save $7.98 when you buy two of these quality brand quilts." The
Commission admits that any customer could have purchased one such quilt
for $8.98 or two for $9.98.
In the advertisement for the sale of St. Mary's blankets, the price
given was two for $11.96 or three for $12.96. The arrow at the top of
the picture carries the slogan "Get This Third Blanket for Only $1 More
When You buy 2 for $11.96." At the bottom of the advertisement, in
small print it is stated: "During this sale you can get three
nationally known St. Mary's blankets for only $1 more than the low
price of two." It is admitted by the Commission that any customer could
have purchased two of these blankets for $11.96 or three blankets for
$12.96.
It is true that in some of its advertisements, Spiegel did not
expressly use the word "regular" in connection with the price asked for
the merchandise. However, the Commission found that the language and
illustrations which were used clearly implied that the unit price
stated was Spiegel's regular and usual price, and that the combination
sale was for a specially reduced price.
Of the fifty-one advertisements involved, forty-one stated that a
savings could be realized in the purchase of the items in combination.
Nineteen of the fifty-one advertisements expressly referred to a
"regular" price. In twenty-five of the fifty-one advertisements,
statements such as "special purchase", "now sale priced", "amazing
offer", "once-in-a-lifetime chance", or "now one of the greatest offers
we've made", indicate that the combination offer is an unusual
opportunity in comparison with previous prices for the articles. Each
catalog stated that the "sale" ends at a specific time.
The meaning and "impression upon the mind of the reader arises from the
sum total of not only what is said but also of all that is reasonably
implied." Aronberg v. Federal Trade Commission (7 Cir., 1942), 132 F.2d
165, 167.
Since Spiegel does not operate any retail stores and all of its
business is conducted by catalog, a consumer was and is unable
physically to inspect the advertised items prior to a purchase.
Therefore, a fictitious price or a fictitious claim of savings
constitutes a material influence on the consumer's decision to purchase.
It long has been held a deceptive practice violative of the Federal
Trade Commission Act to misrepresent a product's usual and regular
price and the savings available to a purchaser, and this includes such
misrepresentations made in the course of combination sales. Federal
Trade Commission v. Standard Educational Society (1937), 302 U.S. 112;
Kalwajtys v. Federal Trade
Commission (7 Cir., 1956), 237 F.2d 654.
The Commission held that a "regular price" is the price at which an
article or service is openly and actively sold by the advertiser to the
public on a regular basis for a reasonably substantial period of time
in the recent and regular course of business.
The Commission also held that if a sale is made on the representation
that a specified saving will be made by purchasing a second item for an
additional dollar, the claim must relate to the price applicable prior
to the sale.
The Commission further found that from 1962 through 1964, Spiegel never
sold or offered as single units the six items on a regular basis for a
substantial period of time.
True it is that Spiegel referred to various prices
advertised for the sale of bedspreads, quilts, blankets and sheets
wherein the articles were offered singly. Spiegel claims that this
established a prior regular price for such articles. However, the
Commission proved in all such cases that such items carried a different
catalog number from those which were offered in combination, and that
they varied in texture and in size from the articles offered in the
dollar sales.
The crux of the decision of the Commission is its finding that Spiegel
misrepresented the regular price and savings to purchasers of its
merchandise in fifty-one advertisements involving six products.
This Court has stated that "Misrepresentations of the regular and
customary value of a product offered for sale and of savings afforded
by an offered sale price of such product are unfair and deceptive
practices as defined by the Act." Niresk Industries, Inc. v. Federal
Trade Commission, 7 Cir., 1960, 278 F.2d 337, 340.
.....................
IT IS ORDERED that respondent Spiegel, Inc., a corporation, and its
officers, and respondent's agents, representatives and employees,
directly or through any corporate or other device, in connection with
the offering for sale, sale and distribution of bedspreads, quilts,
blankets or any other product in commerce, as "commerce" is defined in
the Federal Trade Commission Act do forthwith cease and desist from:
1. Representing, directly or by implication, that any price is
respondent's former or usual price for said products when such amount
is in excess of the actual, bona fide price at which respondent offered
or sold the said products to the public for a reasonably substantial
period of time in the recent, regular course of business.
2. Representing, directly or by implication, through the device of a
one dollar sale, or in any other manner, that a stated number of units
of respondent's merchandise may be purchased for the price of one or
more units, plus one dollar, or any other amount, when the price of the
unit or units required to be purchased is in excess of the actual, bona
fide price at which respondent offered or sold the said merchandise to
the public for a reasonably substantial period of time in the recent,
regular course of its business.