Pеtitioner seeks review of a final order entered against it by the Federal Trade Commission. The order stems from an investigation and determination by the Commission that petitioner has made serious misrepresentations in the advertising claims it has used to promote sales of its air conditioning equipment. Specifically, the Commission found that Fedders has claimed in its advertising that its air conditioners are unique, because they have “reserve cooling power,” a term which the parties agree was intended to imply an unusual ability to produce cold air under extremе conditions of heat and humidity. In fact, however, the Fedders conditioners had no objective technical advantage over the equipment manufactured by its competitors. Accordingly, the Commission concluded that petitioner was engaging in misrepresentations in its advertising in violаtion of Section 5(a) of the Federal Trade Commission Act, 15 U.S.C. § 45(a). 1 A cease and desist order was entered by the Commission which prohibits Fedders from: 2
1. Representing, directly or by implication, that any air conditioner, on the basis of a comparison thereof with the air conditioners оf other manufacturers then being marketed in the United States in commercial quantities, is unique in any material respect, unless such is the fact;
2. Making, directly or indirectly, any statement or representation in any advertising or sales promotional material as to the air cooling, dehumidification, or circulation characteristics, ca *1401 pacity or capabilities of any air conditioner, unless at the time of such representation respondent has a reasonable basis for such statement or representation, which shall consist of competent scientific, engineering or other similar objective material or industry-wide standards based on such material.
Review is sought here under 15 U.S.C. § 45(c).
Fedders does not challenge the Commission’s finding that Fedders’ advertising involved misrepresentations.
3
Instead, it contends that the Commission’s order is impermissibly broad in that it prohibits practices which are not sufficiently related to the unlawful practice actually found by the Commission and that these practices are, therefore, outside the proper scope of the Commission’s remedial order.
See Jacob Siegel Co. v. FTC,
There is much broad language in the cases that the Commission has a wide discretion in its choice of a remedy to “cope with the unlawful practices” disclosed by the record.
Id.
at 392, 79 S.Ct. [818] at 824;
Jacob Siegel Co. v. FTC, supra,
is not limited to prohibiting “the illegal practice in the precise form” existing in the past. Federal Trade Comm. v. Ruberoid Co.,343 U.S. 470 , 473,72 S.Ct. 800 , 803,96 L.Ed. 1081 [1952]. This agency, like others, may fashion its relief to restrain “other like or related unlawful acts.” Labor Board v. Express Pub. Co.,312 U.S. 426 , 436,61 S.Ct. 693 , 700,85 L.Ed. 930 [1941].
FTC v. Mandel Bros., Inc., supra,
At the same time we take full cognizance of the petitioner’s point that, as we expressed it in
Country Tweeds, Inc. v. FTC,
There is no dispute that paragraph 1 of the Commission’s order is reasonably related to the unlawful misrepresentations Fedders has engaged in. Ordering Fedders to cease and desist from making claims that its air conditioners are “unique in any material respect, unless such is the fact,” is obviously directly responsive to the Commission’s finding that Fedders’ claim that its products possessed a “reserve cooling power” was a spurious claim of unique product quality. Petitioner properly concedes that the Commission has authority “to frame its order broadly enough to рrevent [the petitioner] from engaging in similarly illegal practices in future advertisements.”
FTC v. Colgate-Palmolive Co., supra,
Paragraph 2 of the FTC order, we think, stands on no different footing. This part of the order, which forbids petitioner from making advеrtising claims as to the “air cooling, dehumidification, or circulation characteristics, capacity or capabilities of any air conditioner” unless substantiated is also reasonably related to the prior misrepresentations which Fedders employed in its sales prоgram. The false claim made by Fedders that its air conditioners possessed “reserve cooling power” implied that some feature of the cooling, dehumidifying or circulation systems of the equipment allowed them to perform better than other air conditioners would at extrеme temperature and humidity conditions. That is to say, *1403 the vague design claim relating to a reserve cooling power implicated the basic performance characteristics of the entire product. The administrative law judge put it somewhat confusedly when he said that “Respondent has admitted disseminating a false performance claim for its room air conditioners relating to the uniqueness of the ability of its room air conditioners to function satisfactorily at conditions of extreme heat and humidity.” The respondent, petitioner here, made nо such admission but rather admitted only false claims of uniqueness, the only deceptions charged in the complaint. But as the Commission held, note 3 supra, the claim of uniqueness in having “reserve cooling power” was also a performance claim by implication. “Uniqueness,” as the Commission footnoted, “is obviously both an attribute in itself and one facet of broader categories of product characteristics, such as price, performance and warranty terms.”
As to this finding, that the uniqueness claim as to reserve cooling power implies to consumers a claim of high cooling рerformance in extreme conditions of heat and humidity, we are in the very realm of the Commission’s greatest expertise — what constitutes deception in advertising.
See United States
v.
J. B. Williams Co.,
Fedders mаkes two additional arguments bearing upon the scope of the Commission’s order, but these are subject to speedy disposition. Petitioner argues that since the unlawful acts complained of had been discontinued prior to the filing of the Commission’s complaint, its cessation оf the offending activity, combined with its written assurance that it will not again resume it, weighs in favor of limiting the order.
See Country Tweeds, supra,
Fedders also claims that the Commission’s order is overly broad because it is not, by its terms, limited to objective representations of uniqueness or performance characteristics but also
*1404
prohibits subjective product claims which are, by definition, incapable of being proven by “scientific or engineering” data. But we do not read the order to have intended the restriction suggested by petitioner. It is only the claim which fairly, if not necessarily, implies some underlying objective basis that the order reaches. We would not hamstring the Commission by reading its order to apply only to “objective” claims, sinсe it is the impliedly as well as actually objective assertions which effect the deception the Commission is attempting to forestall. On the other hand, we need not and do not consider, in the light of the proceeding below,
see Swift & Co. v. United
States,
Petition dismissed.
Notes
. 15 U.S.C. § 45 provides in pertinent part:
(а)(1) Unfair methods of competition in commerce, and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in commerce, are declared unlawful.
(б) The Commission is empowered and directed to prevent persons, partnerships, or corporations . . . from using unfair mеthods of competition in commerce and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in commerce.
. Other provisions of the Commission’s order require the petitioner to maintain records available for FTC staff inspection which show the documentary materials in support of any claim disseminated in Fedders advertising concerning “the air cooling, dehumidification, or circulation characteristics, capacity, or capability of, or the uniqueness of any feature of, any of respondent’s air conditioners.” The order was issued on January 14, 1975, and is to be in effect for a period of ten years.
. There were in fact three misrepresentations found by the Commission, none of which are challenged here: (1) that “reserve cooling power” is a unique feature of the Fedders room air conditioners; (2) that Fedders room air conditioners compared with all other conditioners have a significantly increased cooling capacity at high loading conditions under customary use; and (3) that Fedders had a reasonable basis for concluding that compared with all other room air conditioners its product had that increased cooling capacity.
As will be discussed in the text below the Commission also found that
[i]n claiming that only Fedders' air conditioners possessed RCP, respondent was clearly making a statement about the performance of its product, namely that this performance was unmatched. What rendered these false representations material in the eyes of consumers, and no doubt what led respondent to make them, was the message they conveyed about the relative performance of the produсt, and not merely the message of “uniqueness” in some disembodied sense.
. The Commission in its original complaint set forth an order which it had “reason to believe should issue” if the facts were found as indeed they were. Paragraph 4 of this draft order forbade any performance claims unless substantiated and from its initial answer petitioner has objected to any restriction on “performance” claims. Paragraph 2 of the administrative law judge’s order applied to any and all unsubstantiated performance claims but the Commission’s final order, set forth in the text at footnote 2, limited this paragraph to performance claims relating to “air cooling, de-humidification, or circulation characteristics.”
.
See United States v. J. B. Williams Co.,
Professor Jaffe attributes the Vanity,
Fair
and
Country Tweeds
modifications of FTC orders to the suggestion in
FTC v. Henry Broch & Co.,
. The Commission, in its brief, has admitted that “to the extent that Fedders makes claims that are solely subjective for their product, there is no need for substantiation.”
