The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Canada Dry settles case of ginger ale ingredient­s

- COBY ZUCKER

Canada Dry settled in court for $200,000 with a B.C. man who claimed the company falsely advertised its ginger content to have medicinal properties.

Most of the $200,000 will be going to a legal foundation.

The plaintiff, Victor Cardoso, started a class action lawsuit on Jan. 21, 2019, on behalf of all Canadians outside of Quebec, arguing that Canada Dry’s label was misleading. This came after similar lawsuits were filed in the U.S. Shortly afterward, two similar cases popped up in Quebec and Alberta.

Cardoso alleged that the marketing of the ginger ale as “Made from Real Ginger” was deceptive because the product contained no ginger, according to court documents. The argument was later shifted to the ginger ale containing “negligible” amounts of ginger.

“They do buy actual ginger, but then what they do is they boil it in ethanol, and that essentiall­y destroys any nutritiona­l or medicinal benefits,” Mark C. Canofari, one of the lawyers from Boughton Law Corporatio­n who represente­d Cardoso’s claim, told CTV News.

Ginger is commonly used as an herbal remedy. There’s strong evidence that ginger can relieve nausea, as well as weaker evidence for other benefits, such as acting as an anti-inflammato­ry.

The owners of the ginger ale, Canada Dry Mott’s, produced documents showing it was made with ginger derivative­s. The fact that the ginger ale contained a derivative took a lot of steam out of the lawsuit, regardless of how much was actually present in a given can of Canada Dry ginger ale.

After two years of effort and hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal expenses, the settlement won’t even cover the legal fees. Consumers won’t be compensate­d in any way and there’s no sign that Canada Dry will change its advertisin­g. According to the court documents, Canada Dry Mott’s Inc. “expressly denies liability and is not required to change its product labelling or advertisin­g for products marketed in Canada.”

The resolution applies to the Alberta lawsuit and heads off further suits filed with the same claims of false advertisin­g.

Of the $200,000, around $100,000 will go toward legal fees, even though Cardoso’s counsel spent more than $220,000 researchin­g and litigating the case at $950 per hour. The lawyers accepted the case on a contingenc­y basis, meaning they could only pursue a share of the settlement — between around 30 and 40 per cent.

Cardoso and the Alberta plaintiff, Lionel Ravvin, will get small honorarium­s of $1,500 to recognize the work they did researchin­g for the case.

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