Case 1:22-cv-23782-BB Document 1 Entered on FLSD Docket 11/18/2022 Page 1 of 15
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA
MIAMI DIVISION
Amanda Ramirez, individually and on behalf
of all others similarly situated,
Plaintiff,
- against - Class Action Complaint
Kraft Heinz Foods Company,
Jury Trial Demanded
Defendant
Plaintiff alleges upon information and belief, except for allegations about Plaintiff, which
are based on personal knowledge:
FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS
1. Kraft Heinz Foods Company (“Defendant”) manufactures, labels, markets and sells
microwavable single serve cups of mac and cheese represented as “READY IN 3½ MINUTES”
under the Velveeta brand (“Product”).
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2. The statement of “ready in 3½ minutes” is false and misleading because the Product
takes longer than 3-and-a-half minutes to prepare for consumption.
3. According to the directions on the back of the packaging, there are four steps in
preparing the Product.
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4. First, consumers must “REMOVE lid and Cheese Sauce Pouch.
5. Next, they must “ADD water to fill line in cup. STIR.”
6. Third, “MICROWAVE, uncovered, on HIGH 3-1/2 min. DO NOT DRAIN.”
7. Finally, they should “STIR IN contents of cheese sauce pouch.”
8. Defendant then notes that “CHEESE SAUCE WILL THICKEN UPON
STANDING.”
9. Consumers seeing “ready in 3½ minutes” will believe it represents the total amount
of time it takes to prepare the Product, meaning from the moment it is unopened to the moment it
is ready for consumption.
10. However, the directions outlined above show that 3-and-a-half minutes is just the
length of time to complete one of several steps.
11. The label does not state the Product takes “3½ minutes to cook in the microwave,”
which would have been true.
12. To provide consumers with a Product that is actually “ready in 3½ minutes,” the
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Product would need to be cooked in the microwave for less than 3-and-a-half minutes, so that all
the preparation steps could be completed in the 3-and-a-half minutes timeframe.
13. Consumers are misled to expect the Product will be ready for consumption in a
shorter amount of time than it really takes to prepare.
14. Defendant sold more of the Product and at higher prices than it would have in the
absence of this misconduct, resulting in additional profits at the expense of consumers.
15. As a result of the false and misleading representations, the Product is sold at a
premium price, approximately no less than $10.99 for eight 2.39 oz cups, excluding tax and sales,
higher than similar products, represented in a non-misleading way, and higher than it would be
sold for absent the misleading representations and omissions.
JURISDICTION AND VENUE
16. Jurisdiction is based on the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005 (“CAFA”). 28 U.S.C.
§ 1332(d)(2).
17. The aggregate amount in controversy exceeds $5 million, including statutory and
punitive damages, exclusive of interest and costs.
18. Plaintiff is a citizen of Florida.
19. Defendant is a Pennsylvania limited liability company with a principal place of
business in Pittsburgh, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania.
20. The class of persons Plaintiff seeks to represent includes persons who are citizens of
different states from which Defendant is a citizen.
21. The members of the class Plaintiff seeks to represent are more than 100, because the
Product has been sold with the representations described here from thousands of stores in the States
covered by Plaintiff’s proposed classes.
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22. The Product is available to consumers from grocery stores, dollar stores, warehouse
club stores, drug stores, convenience stores, big box stores, and online.
23. Venue is in this District with assignment to the Miami Division because Plaintiff
resides in Miami-Dade County, which is where a substantial part of the events or omissions giving
rise to the claims occurred, including her purchase, consumption, exposure to and reliance on the
representations, and awareness they were misleading.
PARTIES
24. Plaintiff Amanda Ramirez is a citizen of Hialeah, Florida, Miami-Dade County.
25. Defendant Kraft Heinz Foods Company is a Pennsylvania limited liability company
with a principal place of business in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Allegheny County.
26. Plaintiff is like many consumers who seek to stretch their money as far as possible
when buying groceries.
27. Plaintiff looks to bold statements of value when quickly selecting groceries.
28. Plaintiff purchased the Product at locations including Publix, 3339 W 80th St,
Hialeah, FL 33018, between October and November 2022, among other times.
29. Plaintiff believed and expected that the Product would take 3-and-a-half minutes
total to prepare and be ready for consumption.
30. Plaintiff relied on the words, terms coloring, descriptions, layout, placement,
packaging, and/or images on the Product, on the labeling, statements, omissions, claims,
statements, and instructions, made by Defendant or at its directions, in digital, print and/or social
media, which accompanied the Product and separately, through in-store, digital, audio, and print
marketing.
31. Plaintiff bought the Product at or exceeding the above-referenced price.
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32. Plaintiff chose between Defendant’s Product and products represented similarly, but
which did not misrepresent their attributes, features, and/or components.
33. Plaintiff paid more for the Product than she would have paid and would not have
purchased it or paid less had she known the truth.
34. Plaintiff intends to, seeks to, and will purchase the Product again when she can do so
with the assurance its representations are consistent with its abilities, attributes, and/or
composition.
35. Plaintiff is unable to rely on the labeling and representations not only of this Product,
but other similar products that claim they are ready in a specific amount of time, because she is
unsure whether those representations are truthful.
CLASS ALLEGATIONS
36. Plaintiff seeks certification under Fed. R. Civ. P. 23 of the following classes:
Florida Class: All persons in the State of Florida
who purchased the Product during the statutes of
limitations for each cause of action alleged; and
Consumer Fraud Multi-State Class: All persons in
the States of Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina,
South Carolina, Utah, New Mexico, Alaska, Iowa,
Tennessee, and Virginia who purchased the Product
during the statutes of limitations for each cause of
action alleged.
37. Common questions of issue, law, and fact predominate and include whether
Defendant’s representations were and are misleading and if Plaintiff and class members are entitled
to damages.
38. Plaintiff’s claims and basis for relief are typical to other members because all were
subjected to the same unfair, misleading, and deceptive representations, omissions, and actions.
39. Plaintiff is an adequate representative because her interests do not conflict with other
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members.
40. No individual inquiry is necessary since the focus is only on Defendant’s practices
and the class is definable and ascertainable.
41. Individual actions would risk inconsistent results, be repetitive and are impractical
to justify, as the claims are modest relative to the scope of the harm.
42. Plaintiff’s counsel is competent and experienced in complex class action litigation
and intends to protect class members’ interests adequately and fairly.
43. Plaintiff seeks class-wide injunctive relief because the practices continue.
CAUSES OF ACTION
COUNT I
Florida Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act,
Fla. Stat. § 501.201, et seq.
44. Plaintiff incorporates by reference preceding paragraphs 1-15.
45. Plaintiff brings this claim on her own behalf and on behalf of each member of the
Florida Class.
46. Defendant violated and continues to violate Florida’s Deceptive and Unfair Trade
Practices Act by engaging in unfair methods of competition, unconscionable acts and practices,
and unfair and deceptive acts and practices in the conduct of its business.
47. Defendant misrepresented the Product through statements, omissions, ambiguities,
half-truths and/or actions, that it would take 3-and-a-half minutes total to prepare and be ready for
consumption.
48. The material misstatements and omissions alleged herein constitute deceptive and
unfair trade practices, in that they were intended to and did deceive Plaintiff and the general public
into believing that the Product would take 3-and-a-half minutes total to prepare and be ready for
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consumption.
49. Plaintiff and class members relied upon these representations in deciding to purchase
the Product.
50. Plaintiff’s reliance was reasonable because of Defendant’s reputation as a trusted and
reliable company, known for its high-quality products, honestly marketed to consumers.
51. Plaintiff and class members would not have purchased the Product or paid as much
if the true facts had been known, suffering damages.
52. Defendant’s conduct offends established public policy and is immoral, unethical,
oppressive, and unscrupulous to consumers.
53. Plaintiff and class members are entitled to damages in an amount to be proven at
trial.
54. Defendant should also be ordered to cease its deceptive advertising and should be
made to engage in a corrective advertising campaign to inform consumers that the Product takes
longer than 3-and-a-half minutes total to prepare and be ready for consumption.
COUNT II
Violation of State Consumer Fraud Acts
(Consumer Fraud Multi-State Class)
55. Plaintiff incorporates by reference preceding paragraphs 1-15.
56. The Consumer Fraud Acts of the States in the Consumer Fraud Multi-State Class are
similar to the consumer protection statute invoked by Plaintiff and prohibit the use of unfair or
deceptive business practices in the conduct of commerce.
57. The members of the Consumer Fraud Multi-State Class reserve their rights to assert
their consumer protection claims under the Consumer Fraud Acts of the States they represent
and/or the consumer protection statute invoked by Plaintiff.
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COUNT III
False and Misleading Advertising,
Fla. Stat. § 817.41
58. Plaintiff incorporates by reference preceding paragraphs 1-15.
59. Plaintiff brings this claim on her own behalf and on behalf of each member of the
Florida Class.
60. Defendant made misrepresentations of material fact regarding the total length of time
it would take to prepare the Product for consumption, through its advertisements and marketing,
through various forms of media, on the packaging, in print circulars, direct mail, product
descriptions, and targeted digital advertising.
61. Defendant’s false and deceptive representations and omissions are material in that
they are likely to influence consumer purchasing decisions.
62. Defendant knew that these statements were false.
63. Defendant intended for consumers to rely on its false statements for the purpose of
selling the Product.
64. Plaintiff and class members did in fact rely upon these statements.
65. Reliance was reasonable and justified because of Defendant’s reputation as a trusted
and reliable company, known for its high-quality products, honestly marketed to consumers.
66. As a result of Defendant’s misrepresentations, Plaintiff and class members suffered
damages in the amount paid for the Product.
67. Plaintiff and class members are entitled to damages and injunctive relief as set forth
above.
COUNT IV
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Breaches of Express Warranty,
Implied Warranty of Merchantability/Fitness for a Particular Purpose and
Magnuson Moss Warranty Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 2301, et seq.
68. Plaintiff incorporates by reference preceding paragraphs 1-15.
69.
70. The Product was manufactured, identified, marketed, and sold by Defendant and
expressly and impliedly warranted to Plaintiff that the Product would take 3-and-a-half minutes
total to prepare and be ready for consumption.
71. Defendant directly marketed the Product to Plaintiff through its advertisements and
marketing, through various forms of media, on the packaging, in print circulars, direct mail,
product descriptions distributed to resellers, and targeted digital advertising.
72. Defendant knew the product attributes that potential customers like Plaintiff were
seeking, and developed its marketing and labeling to directly meet those needs and desires.
73. Defendant’s representations about the Product were conveyed in writing and
promised it would be defect-free, and Plaintiff understood this meant that that it would take 3-and-
a-half minutes total to prepare and be ready for consumption.
74. Defendant’s representations affirmed and promised that that the Product would take
3-and-a-half minutes total to prepare and be ready for consumption.
75. Defendant described the Product so Plaintiff believed it would take 3-and-a-half
minutes total to prepare and be ready for consumption, which became part of the basis of the
bargain that it would conform to its affirmations and promises.
76. Defendant had a duty to disclose and/or provide non-deceptive descriptions and
marketing of the Product.
77. This duty is based on Defendant’s outsized role in the market for this type of Product,
a trusted company, known for its high-quality products, honestly marketed to consumers.
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78. Plaintiff recently became aware of Defendant’s breach of the Product’s warranties.
79. Plaintiff provides or will provide notice to Defendant, its agents, representatives,
retailers, and their employees that it breached the Product’s express and implied warranties.
80. Defendant received notice and should have been aware of these issues due to
complaints by third-parties, including regulators, competitors, and consumers, to its main offices,
and by consumers through online forums.
81. The Product did not conform to its affirmations of fact and promises due to
Defendant’s actions.
82. The Product was not merchantable because it was not fit to pass in the trade as
advertised, not fit for the ordinary purpose for which it was intended and did not conform to the
promises or affirmations of fact made on the packaging, container or label, because it was marketed
as if it would take 3-and-a-half minutes total to prepare and be ready for consumption.
83. The Product was not merchantable because Defendant had reason to know the
particular purpose for which it was bought by Plaintiff, because she expected it would take 3-and-
a-half minutes total to prepare and be ready for consumption, and she relied on Defendant’s skill
and judgment to select or furnish such a suitable product.
COUNT V
Negligent Misrepresentation
84. Plaintiff incorporates by reference preceding paragraphs 1-15.
85. Defendant had a duty to truthfully represent the Product, which it breached.
86. This duty was non-delegable, based on Defendant’s position, holding itself out as
having special knowledge and experience in this area, a trusted company, known for its high-
quality products, honestly marketed to consumers.
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87. Defendant’s representations and omissions regarding the Product went beyond the
specific representations on the packaging, as they incorporated the extra-labeling promises and
commitments to quality, transparency and putting customers first, that it has been known for.
88. These promises were outside of the standard representations that other companies
may make in a standard arms-length, retail context.
89. The representations took advantage of consumers’ cognitive shortcuts made at the
point-of-sale and their trust in Defendant.
90. Plaintiff reasonably and justifiably relied on these negligent misrepresentations and
omissions, which served to induce and did induce, her purchase of the Product.
COUNT VI
Fraud
(Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b) Allegations)
91. Plaintiff incorporates by reference preceding paragraphs 1-15.
92. Defendant misrepresented and/or omitted the total length of time it would take to
prepare the Product for consumption.
93. The records Defendant is required to maintain, and/or the information
inconspicuously disclosed to consumers, provided it with actual and constructive knowledge of
the falsity and deception, through statements and omissions.
94. Rule 9(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides that “[i]n alleging fraud
or mistake, a party must state with particularity the circumstances constituting fraud or mistake.”
95. To the extent necessary, as detailed in the paragraphs above and below, Plaintiff has
satisfied the requirements of Rule 9(b) by establishing the following elements with sufficient
particularity.
96. WHO: Defendant, Kraft Heinz Foods Company, made material misrepresentations
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and/or omissions of fact in its labeling and marketing of the Product by representing that the
Product would take 3-and-a-half minutes total to prepare and be ready for consumption.
97. WHAT: Defendant’s conduct here was and continues to be fraudulent because it has
the effect of deceiving consumers into believing that the Product takes 3-and-a-half minutes total
to prepare and be ready for consumption.
98. Defendant knew or should have known this information is material to all reasonable
consumers and impacts consumers’ purchasing decisions.
99. Yet, Defendant has and continues to represent that the Product takes 3-and-a-half
minutes total to prepare and be ready for consumption, when it does not.
100. WHEN: Defendant made material misrepresentations and/or omissions detailed
herein, including that the Product would take 3-and-a-half minutes total to prepare and be ready
for consumption, continuously throughout the applicable Class period(s).
101. WHERE: Defendant’s material misrepresentations and omissions, that the Product
takes 3-and-a-half minutes total to prepare and be ready for consumption, were located on the front
of the Product’s packaging, through the statement “ready in 3½ minutes,” which instantly catches
the eye of all reasonable consumers, including Plaintiff, at the point of sale in every transaction.
102. The Product is sold in grocery stores, dollar stores, warehouse club stores, drug
stores, convenience stores, big box stores, and online.
103. HOW: Defendant made written and visual misrepresentations right on the front label
of the Product, that it would take 3-and-a-half minutes total to prepare and be ready for
consumption even though the Product takes longer than 3-and-a-half minutes total to prepare and
be ready for consumption.
104. As such, Defendant’s representations are false and misleading.
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105. And as discussed in detail throughout this Complaint, Plaintiff and class members
read and relied on Defendant’s representations and omissions before purchasing the Product.
106. WHY: Defendant misrepresented that the Product takes 3-and-a-half minutes total to
prepare and be ready for consumption, for the express purpose of inducing Plaintiff and class
members to purchase the Product at a substantial price premium.
107. As such, Defendant profited by selling the misrepresented Product to at least
thousands of consumers throughout the nation.
COUNT VIII
Unjust Enrichment
108. Plaintiff incorporates by reference preceding paragraphs 1-15.
109. Defendant obtained benefits and monies because the Product was not as represented
and expected, to the detriment and impoverishment of Plaintiff and class members, who seek
restitution and disgorgement of inequitably obtained profits.
JURY DEMAND AND PRAYER FOR RELIEF
Plaintiff demands a jury trial on all issues.
WHEREFORE, Plaintiff prays for judgment:
1. Declaring this a proper class action, certifying Plaintiff as representative and the
undersigned as counsel for the class;
2. Injunctive relief to remove, correct and/or refrain from the challenged practices and
representations, and restitution and disgorgement for members of the class pursuant to the
applicable laws;
3. Awarding monetary, statutory and/or punitive damages;
4. Awarding costs and expenses, including reasonable fees for Plaintiff's attorneys and
experts; and
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5. Other and further relief as the Court deems just and proper.
Dated: November 18, 2022
Respectfully submitted,
/s/William Wright
The Wright Law Office, P.A.
515 N Flagler Dr Ste P-300
West Palm Beach FL 33401
(561) 514-0904
[email protected]
Sheehan & Associates, P.C.
Spencer Sheehan (Pro Hac Vice forthcoming)
60 Cuttermill Rd Ste 412
Great Neck NY 11021
(516) 268-7080
[email protected] 15
ClassAction.org
This complaint is part of ClassAction.org's searchable class action lawsuit
database and can be found in this post: Velveeta Mac and Cheese Cups Not
‘Ready in 3 ½ Minutes’ as Advertised, Class Action Says