Jones v. ConAgra Foods, Inc.

  1. June 16, 2014

    ConAgra Customers Denied Class Cert. In False Ad Suit

    A California federal judge on Friday denied customers’ attempt to certify three classes in a suit alleging ConAgra Inc. falsely labeled its Hunt's, Pam and Swiss Miss products, ruling that the consumers' individual issues predominate over common ones, among other findings.

  2. June 06, 2014

    ConAgra Customers Seek Class Cert. On False-Ad Claims

    ConAgra Inc. customers who say the agricultural giant falsely labeled its Hunt's and PAM products as 100 percent natural and Swiss Miss as a good source of antioxidants urged a California federal judge on Friday to certify three classes of consumers seeking damages over their purchases.

  3. December 17, 2013

    No Attys' Fees For ConAgra As Lead Exits False Label Suit

    A California federal judge refused to award ConAgra Foods Inc. $187,172 in attorneys' fees on Monday, ruling the packaged foods behemoth was not entitled to fees from a lead plaintiff who withdrew from a false labeling class action against the company.

  4. December 13, 2013

    ConAgra Consumers Lose Bid To Split 'Natural' Label Claims

    A California federal judge on Friday postponed consumers' bid to certify a class action accusing ConAgra Foods Inc. of falsely labeling cooking spray as 'natural' and refused to separate those allegations from challenges to two other ConAgra products, saying consumers wouldn't gain much by trifurcating the case now.

  5. December 18, 2012

    ConAgra Gets Deceptive-Labeling Class Action Pared

    A California federal judge on Monday dismissed the bulk of the plaintiffs' claims in a class action alleging ConAgra Foods Inc. violated federal law and misled consumers with deceptive labeling that made products like PAM cooking spray seem healthier than they are.

  6. April 04, 2012

    ConAgra Sued Over 'All-Natural,' Antioxidant Claims

    ConAgra Foods Inc. was hit with a putative class action Monday in California accusing it of luring health-conscious consumers by falsely or misleadingly claiming its canned tomatoes, cooking sprays and hot cocoa were 100 percent natural or contained certain antioxidants and nutrients.

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