Paul Tassin ย |ย  April 21, 2017

Category: Consumer News

Till at a Walmart supermarketA California woman is challenging Walmartโ€™s โ€œRollbackโ€ sale pricing, claiming it uses false original prices to deceive shoppers.

The retail giantโ€™s sale pricing advertised as a โ€œRollbackโ€ discountย is in many cases false and deceptive because itโ€™s based on purported original prices that are completely fictional, according to the Walmart class action lawsuit.

Plaintiff Brenna Ceja claims Walmart uses this alleged fake sale pricing to increaseย profits. In her complaint, Ceja includes photographs of Walmart โ€œRollbackโ€ price tags as they appear in retail stores.

In some of these photos, the Walmart โ€œRollbackโ€ price appears to be the same price as the one on the itemโ€™s original price tag. Yet some of these Walmart โ€œRollbackโ€ price tags advertise a former price, or โ€œwasโ€ price, thatโ€™s obviously higher than the โ€œsaleโ€ price.

Not all items marked with Walmart โ€œRollbackโ€ price tags show the original price, according to Ceja. Items so marked are lacking a clear statement of the productโ€™s original price, she says, and consumers at large do not have the expertise to determine the productโ€™s value themselves.

She argues that for these items, shoppers should be able to rely on the posted โ€œRollbackโ€ price tag to determine what the item is worth. But a customer who relies on the โ€œwasโ€ prices on Walmart โ€œRollbackโ€ tags would be deceived as to the itemโ€™s true original price, Ceja claims.

The plaintiffย argues Walmartโ€™s โ€œRollbackโ€ pricing deceives consumers into thinking theyโ€™re getting a bargain that doesnโ€™t actually exist. By creating a false impression of a discount, Walmart is inducing customers to make purchases they would not make otherwise, she claims.

Ceja cites California law that specifically restricts the type of fake sale pricing she is accusing Walmart of. A state statute requires that to advertise a price as a โ€œformer price,โ€ that price must have been the prevailing market price for the item advertised within the three months preceding the advertisement. Otherwise, the advertisement must state the date on which the former price was the prevailing price.

The Walmart class actionย also cites Federal Trade Commission guidance describing circumstances that make sale pricing deceptive. According to that guidance, sale pricing based on a fictitious original price creates an impression of a false bargain. In that case, โ€œthe purchaser is not receiving the unusual value he expects.โ€

Ceja seeks to represent a sizable plaintiff Class that would consist of all persons in the U.S. who from April 20, 2013 through the date of final judgment, purchased merchandise advertised with a Walmart โ€œRollbackโ€ price based on an advertised โ€œwasโ€ price that did not match the actual former price for that item.

She is asking for a court order requiring Walmart to stop its โ€œRollbackโ€ pricing and to conduct a corrective advertising campaign. She is also asking for an award of damages, restitution and disgorgement, and reimbursement of attorneysโ€™ fees and costs of this litigation.

Ceja is represented by attorneys Kiley L. Grombacher and Marcus J. Bradley of Bradley/Grombacher LLP.

The Walmart โ€œRollbackโ€ Fake Sale Class Action Lawsuit is Brenna Ceja v. Wal-Mart Stores Inc., Case No. 2:17-at-00427, in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California.

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742 thoughts onWalmart Class Action Says โ€˜Rollbackโ€™ Pricing Deceives Shoppers

  1. Jackie Lambert says:

    [email protected]

    Please include me.

    Jackie L.

  2. Patricia says:

    Please include me

  3. Breezy Baker says:

    Included me please

  4. Patricia says:

    So very trueโ€ฆinclude me.

  5. Darla Prescott says:

    Please include me

  6. Lorraine silva says:

    I would like to be included

  7. Lorraine silva says:

    I would like to be included

  8. Denise Fields says:

    This is very true. Walmart and other stores do a mark up of the price before โ€œrolling backโ€ the prices. I learned this in college marketing. When a store canโ€™t sell their product they raise the price say by 15% and roll it back by 10% to make it look like itโ€™s a deal cause u would be saving 5% from the markup price and funny thing is the roll back price is still usually more than the original. So count me in..

  9. Elizabeth sadlier says:

    include me

  10. Kim Kraft says:

    Include me

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