S.W. v. Cryoport, Inc., 2025 WL 1421909, No.
8:24-cv-02212-AH-(DFMx) (C.D. Cal. Apr. 24, 2025)
Tragic facts in this consumer protection case. Plaintiffs
underwent IVF treatments in 2019 to preserve their options, resulting in six cryopreserved
healthy embryos. They contracted with Cryoport to have the embryos transferred
from a fertility clinic in San Francisco to Irvine, California. Cryoport provided
a travel tank to the clinic, clearly labeled as containing live specimens. What
plaintiffs allegedly didn’t know was that Cryoport hired FedEx to physically
take the package from San Francisco to Irvine; they learned that by receiving
tracking alerts to FedEx. FedEx misdelivered the package to Cryoport’s
logistics center, where a Cryoport employee opened the container and removed
the contents; the embryos were then put back into a container and delivered to
Irvine, no longer viable.
Plaintiffs sued for (1) bailment; (2) negligence and/or
gross negligence; (3) violation of the California CLRA and (4) violation of the
UCL. The contract’s limitations on liability to $200 applied (though not as to
gross negligence); the court found that the contract limitations weren’t
unconscionable or void as against public interest, though the claims otherwise
survived. (Not clear to me whether CLRA/UCL claims are also governed by the
contract; consumer protection laws were designed in part to avoid ordinary
contractual exculpation clauses and the claims here go to whether they would
have engaged in the transaction in the first place had they known the truth.)
The CLRA and UCL claims were based on omissions. “A failure
to disclose a fact can constitute actionable fraud or deceit in four
circumstances: (1) when the defendant is the plaintiff’s fiduciary; (2) when
the defendant has exclusive knowledge of material facts not known or reasonably
accessible to the plaintiff; (3) when the defendant actively conceals a
material fact from the plaintiff; and (4) when the defendant makes partial
representations that are misleading because some other material fact has not
been disclosed.”
Cryoport argued that no reasonable consumer who purchased
Defendant’s standard transport services would be deceived into believing that it
would physically transport the materials at issue. But plaintiffs alleged that
Cryoport repeatedly identified itself as offering “transportation,” “shipping,”
and “courier” services, and conveyed to consumers that it itself transports the
material entrusted to it. They sufficiently alleged that the identity and
participation of FedEx was material information that Cryoport was obligated to
disclose, and that the omission was likely to confuse reasonable consumers; the
complaint pointed to public reviews highlighting that FedEx is involved. “This
indicates that a reasonable consumer would likely not understand from
Defendant’s representations that it utilized FedEx for its services.”
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