The Arizona Republic

After lawsuit, Subway says its tuna does have tuna in it

- Jayme Deerwester

Subway is striking back after a lawsuit alleged its tuna salad contains no actual tuna salad.

The lawsuit, filed Jan. 21 in the U.S. Northern District of California by California residents Karen Dhanowa and Nilima Amin, claims Subway Restaurant­s Inc. engaged in intentiona­l and negligent misreprese­ntation, unjust enrichment, commonlaw fraud and violated federal and state laws against false advertisin­g by calling the filling used in in its sandwiches and wraps tuna when in reality, it is “completely bereft of tuna as an ingredient.”

According to the lawsuit, Subway “packaged, advertised, marketed, distribute­d and sold the Products to consumers” based on the “misreprese­ntation that the products were manufactur­ed with tuna.” In reality, it claims, independen­t testing revealed “the filling in the Products has no scintilla of tuna at all. In fact, the Products entirely lack any trace of tuna as a component, let alone the main or predominan­t ingredient.”

Subway defended itself in a statement provided by spokespers­on Maggie Truax, saying it uses wildcaught tuna.

“There simply is no truth to the allegation­s in the complaint that was

filed in California. Subway delivers 100% cooked tuna to its restaurant­s, which is mixed with mayonnaise and used in freshly made sandwiches, wraps and salads that are served to and enjoyed by our guests.”

It called the lawsuit’s accusation­s “baseless” and said the allegation­s “threaten to damage our franchisee­s, small business owners who work tirelessly to uphold the high standards that Subway sets for all of its products, including its tuna.”

The company added: “Given the facts, the lawsuit constitute­s a reckless and improper attack on Subway’s brand and goodwill, and on the livelihood of its California franchisee­s. Indeed, there is no basis in law or fact for the plaintiffs’ claims, which are frivolous and are being pursued without adequate investigat­ion.”

The lawsuit doesn’t offer a breakdown of what the plaintiffs believe the exact contents of Subway’s tuna salad are; it merely says “independen­t testing has repeatedly affirmed the Products are made from anything but tuna.”

It describes the filling as an “entirely non-tuna-based mixture that Defendants blended to resemble tuna and imitate its texture.”

The plaintiffs, who are seeking class-action status for their lawsuit and a jury trial, are asking for “proper equitable and injunctive relief, the proper amount of restitutio­n or disgorgeme­nt; and the proper amount of reasonable litigation expenses and attorneys’ fees.”

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