CHICAGO (CN) – The Seventh Circuit on Tuesday questioned whether consumers were deceived by Bud Light’s claim about not using corn syrup in its beer, during the latest hearing in an advertising fight between Anheuser-Busch and the maker of two of its competitors.
MillerCoors, which produces Miller Lite and Coors Light, Bud’s main competition, sued Anheuser-Busch in federal court last March over an ad it ran during Super Bowl LIII accusing Miller and Coors of having corn syrup in them.
MillerCoors claims the ad, and the rest of Budweiser’s campaign, confused consumers on purpose. The brewing giant says corn syrup is a common ingredient used during the fermentation process for many beers, including some made by Anheuser-Busch.
However, it is merely a food for the beer yeast to eat, leaving none in the finished beverage, MillerCoors claims.
“AB singled out MillerCoors use of a common brewing fermentation aid, corn syrup, for a deliberate and nefarious purpose,” the complaint states.
The filing continues, “AB purposefully refers to corn syrup as an ingredient in Miller Lite and Coors Light, conveying the clearly misleading message that corn syrup is present in the beers that consumers drink. It does this to degrade the Miller Lite and Coors Light brands. AB’s campaign does not educate consumers; it confuses them.”
Miller-Coors says in its lawsuit that Anheuser-Busch spent over $13 million to run its Super Bowl ad, and even more on the campaign that followed.
“AB plotted an extensive and pervasive advertising scheme designed to frighten consumers into switching away from Miller Lite and Coors Light to Bud Light,” the lawsuit states.
After the corn syrup commercials ran, billboards and packaging followed.
Bud Light’s cases were changed to say “no corn syrup,” “no artificial flavors,” and “no preservatives,” which Miller-Coors says implies that other beers do include those things.
U.S. District Judge William M. Conley, a Barack Obama appointee, granted two preliminary injunctions in the lawsuit, which alleges both false advertising and trademark dilution under the Lanham Act.
The first barred Anheuser-Busch from using specific terms relating to corn syrup and its competitors in its advertisements.
Miller appealed to the Seventh Circuit because the judge did not find that Anheuser-Busch’s ads intended to deceive consumers, and Conley expanded the injunction last September to prevent Anheuser-Busch from making similar claims on its new packaging.
Anheuser-Busch appealed, and those arguments were heard on Tuesday via telephone by a panel consisting of U.S. Circuit Judges Frank Easterbrook, David Hamilton and Amy St. Eve, who were appointed by Ronald Reagan, Barack Obama and Donald Trump, respectively.
“It’s not something you usually advertise for a beer,” Michael Risch, vice dean and law professor at Villanova University’s Charles Widger School of Law, told Courthouse News about Bud Light’s “no corn syrup” claim before Tuesday’s hearing.
He added, “Saying ‘no corn syrup’ is not the same as saying other beers are made with corn syrup.”
But Risch, who specializes in intellectual property law, said that “even if you don’t mention the other beer, if you falsely advertise, if the implication is that other beers are putting corn syrup in…that can still be actionable.”
“The packaging followed the commercial,” the professor said. “To me, that’s where the argument has to be … that the packaging is part of an entire campaign.”
As for Anheuser-Busch, Risch said “the two arguments are that one, they’re more likely to win on the merits, or two, the public interest should bar the injunction in this case.”
Maybe “suddenly people are rising up because they’re worried about corn syrup in beer,” he said, or “they might argue that time has passed” and consumers are no longer connecting the packaging statements to Bud’s competitors.