This case is about pet-food packaging. One pet-food seller, the Wysong Corporation, claims that six of its competitors have been deceiving consumers. How? Here is an example:
*270According to Wysong, this package is misleading. The bag features a photograph of a delicious-looking lamb chop-but Wysong says the kibble inside is actually made from the less-than-appetizing "trimmings" left over after the premium cuts of lamb are sliced away. The same goes for more than three hundred of the Defendants' other packages, which feature photos of delectable chicken breasts, T-bone steaks, and salmon fillets. Wysong claims that this purportedly deceptive marketing is tricking people into purchasing the Defendants' products.
The district court dismissed Wysong's suits for failure to state a claim, and we now review those decisions de novo. Grubbs v. Sheakley Grp., Inc. ,
I.
Each of Wysong's amended complaints asserts one cause of action: false advertising under the Lanham Act. To win, Wysong ultimately would have to show that the Defendants (1) made false or misleading statements of fact about their products, (2) which actually deceived or had a tendency to deceive a substantial portion of the intended audience, and (3) likely influenced the deceived consumers' purchasing decisions.
Route One: Literally False. The first way to prevail on a Lanham Act false-advertising claim is to show that the defendant's advertising communicated a "literally false" message to consumers.
Wysong claims the Defendants' messaging is literally false because the photographs on their packages tell consumers their kibble is made from premium cuts of meat-when it is actually made from the trimmings left over after the premium cuts are gone. The problem for Wysong is that only an "unambiguously" deceptive message can be literally false. Innovation Ventures, LLC v. N.V.E., Inc. ,
Route Two: Misleading. The second way to prevail on a false-advertising claim is to show that the defendant's messaging was "misleading," even if not literally false. Am. Council ,
The facts in Wysong's complaints do not support a plausible inference that the Defendants' packaging caused a significant number of reasonable consumers to believe their pet food was made from premium lamb chops, T-bone steaks, and the like. See Am. Council ,
Why? Because reasonable consumers know that marketing involves some level of exaggeration-what the law calls "puffery." Courts thus view Lanham Act claims challenging hyperbolic advertising with a skeptical eye. See, e.g. , Interactive Prods. Corp. v. a2z Mobile Office Sols., Inc. ,
Wysong responds that consumers would not think the Defendants' packaging was puffery because some pet foods, such as Wysong's, do contain premium-quality ingredients. Thus, Wysong figures, it is not implausible that reasonable consumers believe what they see in the pictures: that the Defendants' pet food is made from high-quality meats. But Wysong's amended complaints are too threadbare to support the inferences it asks us to pile on here. Even given that some pet foods contain premium ingredients, the court is left to wonder how that fact impacts consumer expectations. Are these premium sellers even known to the Defendants' intended audience? Do their products compete with the Defendants', or do they cater to a niche market? Are there obvious ways consumers can distinguish between the Defendants' products and the fancier brands? Wysong does not say. Neither does Wysong explain why the packages' ingredient lists, themselves pictured in Wysong's complaints, do not dispel the photographs' allegedly misleading effects. Contrary to Wysong's suggestion that the packages proclaim the Defendants' pet food is made from premium cuts, many of their packages list various kinds of animal "meal" or "by-product" as an ingredient. See Pernod Ricard USA, LLC v. Bacardi USA, Inc. ,
In sum, as the district court rightly held, context matters . Both the relevant market and the products' labeling are crucial in evaluating plausibility, but Wysong said next to nothing about them. And that is fatal here, since the puffery defense is such an obvious impediment to Wysong's success. See Twombly ,
II.
Upon dismissal, the district court denied Wysong leave to amend its complaints. Wysong now argues that in so doing, the court abused its discretion.
Once again context matters. After three of the Defendants filed their initial motions to dismiss, the district court instructed the parties to confer so that Wysong might fix the deficiencies in its complaints. After those conferences, Wysong filed amended complaints against all six defendants. The court then considered another round of *273motions to dismiss and held a three-hour hearing. Accordingly, upon dismissal, the district court denied Wysong a second round of amendments. In its order, the court explained that it was denying leave, first, because Wysong was on notice about the deficiencies in its complaints and yet made few changes in its first round of amendments; also because the Defendants had spent significant time and money preparing and arguing two rounds of motions to dismiss; and, finally, because the court had expended considerable judicial resources in considering 300-plus pages of briefing and holding a three-hour motions hearing.
These reasons were sufficient to justify denial of leave to amend. See Foman v. Davis ,
We AFFIRM .
A Lanham Act claimant must also show a link to interstate commerce and a causal link between the false advertising and his own injury.
Wysong also argues that it was entitled to amend as of right under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15(a)(1). But Wysong never raised that argument below, and issues "raised for the first time on appeal are not properly before this Court." Kusens v. Pascal Co. ,
