Lawsuit over Trident 'Original Flavor' gum is dismissed

Reuters

Published May 19, 2023 07:19PM ET

Updated May 20, 2023 06:20AM ET

By Jonathan Stempel

(Reuters) - A federal judge in Illinois has dismissed a lawsuit accusing Mondelez International Inc (NASDAQ:MDLZ) of deceiving consumers into believing its Trident "Original Flavor" gum contained real mint.

U.S. District Judge Iain Johnston said it was "fanciful" to believe reasonable consumers would expect the gum to contain mint or peppermint because its packaging featured an "unnaturally blue" leaf with condensation bubbles.

He said the proposed class action by Sycamore, Illinois resident Kristen Lesorgen was "just like" a case against Walmart (NYSE:WMT) Inc, where another Illinois judge in February dismissed claims over that retailer's Great Value Fudge Mint Cookies.

"Mondelez's labeling was not deceptive, misleading, or false as a matter of law," Johnston wrote.

"At most, Trident 'Original Flavor' packaging hints that its flavor is mint, not that its ingredients include mint or peppermint," he added. "The packaging doesn't even use the word 'mint.' Further, mint leaves in a garden are green."

The lawsuit covered consumers in Illinois and eight other U.S. states, and accused Chicago-based Mondelez of violating various consumer protection laws.

Johnston dismissed the case with prejudice, meaning it cannot be brought again. The judge works in Rockford, Illinois.