MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
In what appears to be an adaptation of The Adventure of Silver Blaze, 1 scripted for presentation as a complaint initiating a civil action, this case has as its protagonist Luke, a German Shepherd who suffered no harm. Luke’s owner, plaintiff Jessica C. Rule, undertakes to bring a class action against the manufacturer of allegedly risky heartworm medicine that she administered to Luke, although she was unaware at the time that Luke faced any increased risk from the product. The complaint consists of a dog’s breakfast of products liability, contract, and consumer protection claims under Massachusetts law. The common law and warranty claims will be dismissed principally because Rule has failed to allege any cognizable actual injury. And, although Massachusetts case law construing the meaning and significance of the term “injury” under Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A remains to some degree unsettled, I find no basis for extending the coverage of Chapter 93A to a claim involving a curious incident in which nothing has happened to the putative class representative’s dog. Accordingly, I will grant the defendants’ motion to dismiss.
I. BACKGROUND
Plaintiff Jessica C. Rule commenced this action, individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated, against Defendants Fort Dodge Animal Health, Inc. and
Rule purchased ProHeart® 6 (moxidectin) and had her dog Luke injected with it two times during the period from 2002 to 2003. ProHeart® 6 is a heartworm preventative that was manufactured, distributed and/or sold by Defendants. Unlike Defendants’ ProHeart®, which is orally administered to dogs on a monthly basis, ProHeart® 6 was designed to be injected by a veterinarian and to have a preventive effect of 6 months.
As part of the marketing of ProHeart® 6, Defendants issued “The ProHeart® 6 Complete Control Guarantee”: 2
Fort Dodge Animal Health will reimburse 100% of all diagnostic and treatment-related expenses for any dog properly treated with ProHeart® 6 that develops heartworm disease. In addition, Fort Dodge Animal Health will provide to the client through his or her veterinarian another injection of Pro-Heart® 6 at no cost.
Terms and Conditions
• Dogs less than six months of age are not eligible for the guarantee.
• Dogs over six months of age must have a negative antigen test on the day of initial treatment with ProHeart® 6, followed by a negative antigen test six months after treatment, and then they are fully covered. This allows for development of any pre-existing infection.
• Dogs must be treated with ProHeart® 6 according to the product label. Treatment interval must coincide with the commonly accepted heartworm treatment season in the state(s) where the dog resides or has been travelling.
• Upon diagnosis, Fort Dodge Animal Health Professional Services Department must be contacted immediately at (800) 533-8536. A precurative blood sample must be available.
• Diagnostic and treatment expenses exceeding $450 must be pre-approved by Fort Dodge Animal Health Professional Services.
• Fort Dodge Animal Health reserves the right to amend, modify or terminate this complete control guarantee at any time without notice.
• Guarantee void where prohibited by law.
On or about September 3, 2004, Defendants recalled ProHeart® 6 in response to a request by the Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) due to reported adverse reactions among dogs injected with the product, including in some cases death. Rule alleges that Defendants failed to warn consumers adequately that initial field testing conducted prior to the introduction of ProHeart® 6 had resulted in adverse health effects to some of the test animals. She also alleges that after the
There is no allegation that Luke ever developed heartworm or that he has suffered any adverse reactions from receiving ProHeart® 6. Rule claims, however, that Defendants caused economic damage to her and others similarly situated, as measured by the difference between the actual value of ProHeart® 6 and what its value would have been if it had not been defective. Rule also claims that as a direct and foreseeable consequence of breaching the Guarantee, Defendants damaged the putative class by an amount equal to the veterinary costs that any class member has paid or will have to pay in the future to prevent his or her dog from developing heartworm.
II. DISCUSSION
The standard for granting a motion to dismiss is an exacting one: “[A] complaint should not be dismissed for failure to state a claim unless it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of [her] claim which would entitle [her] to relief.”
McLaughlin v. Boston Harbor Cruise Lines, Inc.,
A. Products Liability and Failure to Warn — Count I
In Count I, Rule alleges that ProHeart® 6 was defective because Defendants failed to warn consumers adequately of the potential adverse health effects to dogs treated with the product. 3 According to Rule, Defendants were aware of the potential adverse effects, which resulted in the deaths of some dogs, both from field testing conducted before the product’s release and from customer reports after the product’s release. (Complaint ¶¶ 8, 10.) Rule contends that Defendants’ failure to warn proximately caused economic damage to her, and to members of the putative class, as measured by the difference between the actual value of the defective ProHeart® 6 and the value the product would have had if it had not been defective. (Id. ¶ 30.)
Massachusetts law follows the traditional “economic loss rule,” under which “purely economic losses are unrecoverable in tort and strict liability actions in the absence of personal injury or property damage.”
FMR Corp. v. Boston Edison Co.,
Rule argues, based on a misreading of
Garweth Corp. v. Boston Edison Co.,
In this case, Rule acknowledges that she “seeks redress solely for economic damages.” (Complaint ¶ 1.) Rule does not claim that Luke ever became infected with heartworm or suffered any adverse consequences from twice being injected with ProHeart® 6. Nor does she claim that the allegedly defective product harmed her personally. Because Rule has not alleged any personal injury or property damage, I find that her products liability claim based on negligence is barred by the economic loss rule, and I will consequently dismiss Count I.
B. Breach of Implied Warranty of Merchantability — Count III
In Count III, Rule alleges a different products liability theory: that Defendants breached the implied warranty of merchantability because ProHeart® 6 was not reasonably suitable for the ordinary uses for which heartworm preventatives are sold. (Complaint ¶ 36.) Rule claims that this lack of suitability proximately caused economic damage to her, and to members of the putative class, as measured by the difference between the actual value of the product and what its value would have been if it had been as warranted. (Complaint ¶ 38.)
Under Massachusetts law, “a warranty that the goods shall be merchantable is implied in a contract for their sale if the seller is a merchant with respect to goods of that kind.” Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 106, § 2-314(1). In order for goods to be considered “merchantable,” they “must at least be such as ... are fit for the ordinary purposes for which such goods are used.”
Id.
§ 2-314(2)(c). A seller breach
Rule claims that she and the putative class members suffered an “injury” that was purely economic, and that Defendants are liable for the difference between the value of ProHeart® 6 as it was provided to the class members and the value of the product as it was warranted (i.e., its value if it had not posed unreasonable health risks to dogs who were treated with it). The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court has described this method of measuring damages as “a variation on the traditional ‘benefit of the bargain’ rule that awards a defrauded party the monetary difference between the actual value of the product at the time of purchase and what its value would have been if the representations had been true.”
Aspinall v. Philip Morris Cos., Inc.,
Unlike the typical breach of warranty case, Rule does not allege that the product she purchased ever failed to perform as warranted. Rule does not contend, for example, that Luke developed heartworm despite being injected with ProHeart® 6, or that Luke suffered any adverse health effects as a consequence of the injections. By contrast, in most breach of warranty cases where the plaintiff alleges a purely economic injury, the defect of the product in question has clearly manifested itself to the plaintiffs detriment, whether in terms of lost profits, repair costs, or the diminished opportunity to use the purchased product.
See, e.g., Bay State-Spray & Provincetown Steamship, Inc. v. Caterpillar Tractor Co.,
Rule relies heavily on
Holtzman v. Gen. Motors Corp.,
No. 021368,
This case, however, is readily distinguishable from
Holtzman
because the product Rule purchased has already fulfilled its anticipated useful life. The plaintiffs in
Holtzman
still possessed and had a justifiable expectation of being able to continue using car jacks that were unreasonably unsafe; Rule by contrast has fully completed the intended usage of Pro-Heart® 6: she twice injected her dog, her dog did not develop heartworm during the warranted period of protection, and neither Rule nor her dog has experienced any adverse effects. In this respect, the present case is more similar to
Feinstein v. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co.,
Other cases have engaged in a similar analysis, concluding that where a product has fulfilled its useful life without any manifestation of defect, a plaintiff has received the benefit of his or her bargain and has not suffered any “injury.”
See, e.g., In re Canon Cameras Litig.,
Tires and cars have a distinctly limited usable life. At the end of the product’s life, the product and whatever defect it may have had pass away. If a defect does not manifest itself in that time span, the buyer has gotten what he bargained for. Software’s useful life, however, is indefinite. Even though the defect is not manifest today ... [t]he only way for an MS-DOS 6.0 buyer to avoid the possibility of injury is to pay for the upgrade, never use the data compression feature, or use another operating system. The buyer never gets what he bargained for, i.e., an operating system with an effective data compression feature.
Id.
at 609.
See also Hicks v. Kaufman & Broad Home Corp.,
In this case, Rule has already received the full benefit of the bargain she anticipated when she purchased ProHeart® 6. If Rule had learned earlier of the unreasonable risks associated with ProHeart® 6 and had refrained from using the product on that basis, she could arguably claim that she suffered an injury of diminished value and seek damages under Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 106, § 2-714(2). Under the facts as pled, however, I find that Rule has not, as a result of her purchase, suffered any cognizable “injury,” whether economic or otherwise. I will consequently dismiss her products liability claim based on breach of the implied warranty of merchantability. 6
C. Breach of Implied Warranty of Fitness — Count II
In Count II, Rule alleges a third products liability claim: that Defendants
I also find this count must be dismissed because Rule has not adequately alleged a unique, particular purpose for the use of ProHeart® 6. Under Massachusetts law, “[a]n implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose exists ‘[w]here the seller at the time of contracting has reason to know any particular purpose for which the goods are required and that the buyer is relying on the seller’s skill or judgment to select or furnish suitable goods.’ ”
American Shooting Sports Council, Inc. v. Att’y Gen.,
D. Breach of Contract — Count IV
In Count IV, Rule alleges that Defendants promised — through the ProHeart® 6 Complete Control Guarantee — that they would pay for veterinary expenses associated with treating any dog that was diagnosed with heartworm after beginning the ProHeart® 6 regimen. Rule claims that Defendants breached the Guarantee by taking ProHeart® 6 off the market without offering to pay the class’s veterinary costs for heartworm treatment, if necessary, in the future. In connection with this count, Rule seeks damages for the veterinary costs that any class member who meets the requirements of the ProHeart® 6 Guarantee has paid or will have to pay in the future to prevent their dog from developing heartworm. (Complaint ¶ 44.)
Under the plain language of the Guarantee, Defendants promise the owners of “any dog properly treated with ProHeart® 6
that develops heartworm disease
” (emphasis added) to “reimburse 100% of all diagnostic and treatment-related expenses” and “provide to the client through his or her veterinarian another injection of ProHeart® 6 at no cost.” Rule acknowledges that Luke has not developed heartworm. Consequently, Rule is not eligible for veterinarian expenses
E. Violation of Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A — -Count V
In Count V, Rule alleges that Defendants’ acts and practices with respect to ProHeart® 6 constituted unfair methods of competition and unfair or deceptive business practices in violation of Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A. Rule contends that under Chapter 93A, § 9, she and the putative class are entitled to damages as measured by the greater of: (i) the difference between the actual value of Pro-Heart® 6 and its value if it had been as warranted (i.e., non-defective), or (ii) statutory damages in the amount of $25 per injection. (Complaint ¶ 50.) As with Rule’s claim for breach of the implied warranty of merchantability — see section II.B,
supra
— the critical inquiry for her Chapter 93A claim is whether she has alleged a legally cognizable injury. Massachusetts case law construing the Chapter 93A, § 9(1) injury requirement has had a less than intellectually coherent course of development. I have kept this motion under advisement for an extended period of time in the hope that the Supreme Judicial Court would in the interim resolve more completely the tensions in the case law. To date, the cases with which the Supreme Judicial Court has been presented have not permitted it to do so. Nevertheless, I find that the two most recent opinions from the Supreme Judicial
Court
— Her
shenow v. Enterprise Rent-A-Car Co.,
In
Baldassari v. Public Fin. Trust,
In
Leardi v. Brown,
The Leardi court did, however, attempt to temper the potential sweep of its decision by emphasizing the significance of the parties’ landlord-tenant relationship. The court explained:
In so interpreting the injury requirement of G.L. c. 93A, § 9, we do not mean to authorize purely vicarious suits by self-constituted private attorneys-general. One could hardly characterize the relationship of these plaintiffs to the illegal lease at issue here as vicarious. We need not, and do not, decide whether we would reach a similar result under G.L. c. 93A, § 9, in other circumstances. Here the plaintiffs are tenants of the defendants, and the illegality of the defendants’ lease is the subject of the instant c. 93A action.
Id.
at 161,
Shortly following
Lord,
the Supreme Judicial Court again addressed the Chapter 93A injury requirement in
Aspinall v. Philip Morris Cos., Inc.,
Granting certification of the class by a 4-3 majority, the
Aspinall
court held that all members of the putative class had been “similarly injured” for purposes of Chapter 93A, § 9, despite the plaintiffs’ concession that some smokers of Marlboro Lights had in fact received the promised lowered levels of tar and nicotine.
Id.
at 393,
The
Aspinall
majority opinion is not, however, altogether clear about the precise nature of the “injury” the court determined the plaintiffs to have alleged. The passage quoted above — describing the defendants’ alleged deceptive advertising as a “per se injury” — seems to indicate that merely purchasing a product that was deceptively advertised is itself sufficient to satisfy the Chapter 93A injury requirement. This interpretation is supported by the majority’s comment that “[t]he plaintiffs need not prove individual physical harm in order to recover
for the defendants’ deception.” Id.
at 397,
Justice Cordy, writing on behalf of three justices in dissent, interpreted this passage from the majority “to mean simply that purchase of a deceptively advertised product
may
in certain circumstances be alone sufficient to meet the injury requirement of G.L. c. 93A, not that the mere purchase of a deceptively advertised product
necessarily
constitutes per se injury.”
Id.
at 404 n. 3,
Other language in the Aspinall majority opinion suggests that the deceptive cigarette advertising in that case effected a “per se injury” only because it caused another form of compensable injury to most class members: an increased exposure to the harmful substances of tar and nicotine. For example, in addressing the “similar injury” requirement, the majority explained:
No individual inquiries concerning each class member’s smoking behavior are required to determine whether the defendants’ conduct caused compensable injury to all the members of the class— consumers of Marlboro Lights were injured when they purchased a product that, when used as directed, exposed them to substantial and inherent health risks that were not (as a reasonable consumer likely could have been misled into believing) minimized by their choice of the defendants’ “light” cigarettes.
Id.
at 397,
In 2006, the Supreme Judicial Court revisited the Chapter 93A injury requirement in
Hershenow v. Enterprise Rent-A-Car Co.,
The Supreme Judicial Court in
Hershenow
did not expressly overrule
Leardi
or
Aspinall,
but instead sought to distinguish the earlier cases by reading them narrowly. The
Hershenow
majority explained that unlike the illegal car rental waiver forms, the tenant lease provisions in
Leardi
had “acted as a powerful obstacle to a tenant’s exercise of his legal rights” because “confronted by unhabitable conditions, the illegal lease terms would deter tenants from exercising their legal rights on pain of loss of their tenancy.”
Id.
at 800,
Three justices did not join the majority opinion in
Hershenow
and in separate opinions rejected the court’s attempts to distinguish the case from
Leardi
and
Aspinall.
Justice Cowin, concurring in the judgment, noted that “[t]he court’s effort to distinguish the cases seems to me to arise not so much from analytical conviction but from a desire to avoid acknowledging that
Leardi
was wrongly decided.”
Id.
at 804,
Last year, the Supreme Judicial Court issued its most recent opinion addressing the Chapter 93A injury requirement,
Iannacchino v. Ford Motor Co.
The plaintiffs in
Iannacchino
alleged that because of a manufacturing defect caused by the defendants, the doors of vehicles they had purchased “might open accidentally in certain types of collisions, putting vehicle occupants at risk of significant personal injury or death.” 451 Mass, at 626,
In reaching this conclusion, the
Iannacchino
court drew a sharp contrast with
Hershenow,
based on what the court described as “the difference between the plaintiffs’ positions in the two cases.”
Id.
at 630,
The plaintiffs here purchased and own vehicles that they allege are noncompliant with applicable safety regulations. In contrast, the Hershenow plaintiffs purchased agreements committing a car rental company, Enterprise, to waive claims against them for damage to their rental cars occurring only during the rental period---- [T]he unlawful contract terms did not and could not cause any harm to the plaintiffs after they had returned their vehicles undamaged at the end of their rental periods.
Here, as mentioned, the plaintiffs continue to own the allegedly noncompliant vehicles.... [T]he purchase price paid by the plaintiffs for their vehicles would entitle them to receive vehicles that complied with [federal] safety standards or that would be recalled if they did not comply.... [T]he plaintiffs would havepaid for more (viz., safety regulation-compliant vehicles) than they received.
Id.
at 630-81,
Applying the reasoning from
Hershenow
and
Iannacchino
to the instant case, I conclude that Rule has not alleged a cognizable “injury” for purposes of Chapter 93A, § 9(1). There is no question that Rule has alleged defendants’ failure to warn consumers about ProHeart® 6’s risks of adverse effects on dogs was “deceptive,” and that she and other consumers might not have paid as much (or might not have paid anything) for the product if defendants had disclosed those risks.
Hershenow
emphasized, however, that despite language in
Aspinall
arguably to the contrary, not every deceptive act or invasion of a legally protected interest constitutes an “injury” under Chapter 93A. While consumer protection statutes may be designed to have a broad reach, Chapter 93A was not “mean[t] to authorize purely vicarious suits by self-constituted private attorneys-general.”
Leardi,
394 Mass, at 161,
It is true that the injury in Aspinall could not have been based on the plaintiffs’ continued possession of a defective product that had not yet fulfilled its expected life of service, as in, for example, Iannacchino. A serviceable interpretation of the Aspinall majority opinion, which is supported by the Hershenow court’s description of that case, is that the plaintiffs’ “similar injury” was the shared exposure by an overwhelming majority of the class to higher levels of tar and nicotine and the associated “substantial and inherent health risks” than had been warranted by defendants’ advertisements. The plaintiffs’ asserted theory of economic damages in that case (i.e., the difference between the price the plaintiffs paid for the cigarettes and the true market value of the cigarettes they actually received) may be seen as simply an approximate means to measure the damages for that injury. 15
In resolving the Chapter 93A claim in the context of unsettled state jurisprudence, I am intensely aware of my duty as a federal judge applying state law to anticipate as best I can how the Supreme Judicial Court would resolve this case.
See Moores v. Greenberg,
Moreover, I must observe that to the degree Chapter 93A case law is read to elide an actual injury requirement from the statute, the federal courts, operating under federal constitutional standing obligations, may be without jurisdiction to entertain Chapter 93A cases in which the private plaintiff suffers no actual harm. In
Rivera v. Wyeth-Ayerst Labs.,
for example, the Fifth Circuit dismissed claims similar to those in this case on grounds that the plaintiffs lacked Article III standing. The plaintiffs in
Rivera
had bought and ingested an anti-inflammatory drug manufactured by the defendant, which was later removed from the market due to reports of liver failure among some users.
For present purposes, however, I find that the somewhat less-than-tidy jurisprudence of the Chapter 93A “injury” requirement under Massachusetts law provides a sufficiently clear basis for concluding that the plaintiff fails to state a claim. There is therefore no occasion here to consider whether a federal court would have jurisdiction over a Chapter 93A claim involving no injury-in-faet.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth more fully above, I GRANT defendants’ motion to dismiss all claims.
Notes
. A. Conan Doyle, The Adventure of Silver Blaze, 4 Strand 645 (1892) in 2008 Green Bag Alm. 235.
. "Under First Circuit precedent, when ‘a complaint’s factual allegations are expressly linked to — and admittedly dependent upon — a document (the authenticity of which is not challenged),’ then the court can review it upon a motion to dismiss.”
Alternative Energy, Inc. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co.,
. The Restatement provides a comprehensive definition of product defect: "A product is defective when, at the time of sale or distribution, it contains a manufacturing defect, is defective in design, or is defective because of inadequate instructions or warnings. A product ... is defective because of inadequate instructions or warnings when the foreseeable risks of harm posed by the product could have been reduced or avoided by the provision of reasonable instructions or warnings by the seller or other distributor, or a predecessor in the commercial chain of distribution, and the omission of the instructions or warnings renders the product not reasonably safe.” Restatement (Third) of Torts: Products Liability# 2 (1998).
. Actions for breach of the implied warranty of merchantability under Massachusetts law “are the functional equivalent of strict liability in other jurisdictions.”
Cigna Ins. Co. v. Oy Saunatec, Ltd.,
.
Rivera v. Wyeth-Ayerst Labs.,
. I note that this analysis of the "injury” requirement of Rule’s implied warranty claim is consistent with the reasoning in
Iannacchino v. Ford Motor Co.,
. To the extent Rule claims in her Opposition to seek a declaratory judgment defining her potential entitlement to future benefits under the Guarantee if Luke ever
does
develop heartworm, I find this case does not present appropriate circumstances for declaratory relief.
See Medlmmune, Inc. v. Genentech, Inc.,
. Unlike regular cigarettes, Marlboro Lights had "vent holes” on the filter to reduce the level of tar and nicotine that passed through the cigarette.
See Aspinall v. Philip Morris Cos., Inc.,
. A practice is "deceptive” for purposes of Chapter 93A "if it could reasonably be found to have caused a person to act differently from the way he [or she] otherwise would have acted.”
Aspinall,
442 Mass, at 394,
. Justice Cordy vigorously objected to the court’s holding even under this narrower interpretation of the majority’s language, insisting that ”[t]he requirement that the plaintiffs demonstrate an ‘injury’ may not be shrugged off lightly."
Aspinall,
442 Mass, at 404,
. Justice Cordy argues on this basis that the class cannot meet the "similar injury” requirement of Chapter 93A, § 9(2), because "some of its members (the low-tar group) suffered no injury at all.”
Aspinall,
442 Mass, at 404,
. The Hershenow court did not address how the lease terms could act as a deterrent to exercising legal rights where the plaintiffs in Leardi had conceded that no members of the tenant class had ever actually read the unlawful provisions and the provisions had never been invoked.
. This appears to be the same interpretation of the Aspinall majority’s "injury” analysis that Justice Cordy adopted in his Aspinall dissent. See Note 11, supra, and accompanying text.
. The
Iannacchino
court ultimately dismissed the plaintiffs’ complaint without prejudice because it did not adequately plead that the vehicles were "defective.”
Iannacchino v. Ford Motor Co.,
. I recognize that there is language in
Aspinail
arguably supporting other interpretations
. I note that such an interpretation may place Chapter 93A jurisprudence at odds with Massachusetts tort law. Courts applying Massachusetts law have rejected the proposition that exposure to greater risk of disease or illness constitutes an "injury” in the absence of any actual physical manifestation of harm.
See, e.g., Anderson v. W.R. Grace & Co.,
. Even if Rule had argued that her increased concern about her dog's health was a cognizable personal injury, I would have declined to make such a finding. Massachusetts has not extended recovery of damages in tort for emotional distress resulting from an injury to a third party to include persons who suffer the loss of a companion animal.
See Krasnecky v. Meffen,
