A Class Action Reveals the Horrifying Truth: 'Boneless Wings' Are Breast Meat!
Lawyers representing an allegedly duped Buffalo Wild Wings customer demand that the company disgorge its ill-gotten gains.

Last January, Aimen Halim visited a Buffalo Wild Wings restaurant in Mount Prospect, Illinois, where he bought an order of "boneless wings." Unbeknownst to Halim, these were not "wings" at all: They were actually spicy, deep-fried chunks of chicken breast meat. That horrifying discovery was just the beginning of the Chicago resident's ordeal, which is the basis of a would-be class-action lawsuit that he filed last week in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.
It was bad enough that Halim paid good money for what he assumed was deboned chicken wing meat. Had he "known that the Products are not actually chicken wings," the complaint says, he "would have paid less for them" or "would not have purchased them at all." Worse, Halim is now living in a constant state of "uncertainty" regarding the nature of those products.
While Halim "currently believes the marketing and advertising of the Products are inaccurate," the lawsuit says, "he lacks personal knowledge as to Defendants' specific business practices, and thus, he will not be able [to] determine whether the Products are actually made of chicken wing meat. This leaves doubt in his mind as to the possibility that at some point in the future the Products could be made in accordance with the representations made regarding the Products."
Halim is represented by Treehouse Law, a Los Angeles outfit that bills itself as the country's "premier consumer class action firm." His lawyers argue that Buffalo Wild Wings' shocking scam violates the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act and constitutes breach of express warranty and common law fraud. They propose a class action on behalf of Halim and "similarly situated" consumers across the country, who they say are "entitled to restitution, disgorgement, and/or the imposition of a constructive trust upon all profits, benefits, and other compensation obtained by [Buffalo Wild Wings] from its deceptive, misleading, and unlawful conduct."
Instead of acknowledging its wrongdoing, Buffalo Wild Wings added insult to injury by mocking Halim's claims. "It's true," the company tweeted this week. "Our boneless wings are all white meat chicken. Our hamburgers contain no ham. Our buffalo wings are 0% buffalo."
The chain's indifference to the suffering it has inflicted on consumers like Halim is part of a pattern, Halim's lawyers note. It has been well aware of this issue at least since 2020, when a Lincoln, Nebraska, consumer "called out restaurants like Buffalo
Wild Wings for using the name 'Boneless Wing'" in a "speech he made to his local city council."
That brave man, Ander Christensen, did not hesitate to tell the plain truth: "Nothing about boneless chicken wings actually come[s] from the wing of a chicken. We would be disgusted if a butcher was mislabeling their cuts of meats, but then we go around pretending as though the breast of the chicken is its wing."
In response, Buffalo Wild Wings condescendingly praised Christensen's "passion" but rejected his complaint. "We serve boneless wings—our guests love them and we love them!" it said. "So while we disagree with Ander on his mission, we respect his passion for chicken. So we're giving him free traditional wings for a year. We're also going to donate $1 for every boneless wing sold on Labor Day in Lincoln, Neb., to the local Boys & Girls Club."
That transparent attempt to buy off a critic who dared to call a boneless wing a breast cannot conceal the fact that Buffalo Wild Wings, to this very day, is still "pretending as though the breast of the chicken is its wing." Why would it do that? It all comes down to the bottom line: As Halim's lawyers note, so-called boneless wings are less expensive than actual wings, the cost of which has soared in recent years thanks partly to the Great Recession.
"Restaurants, normally big buyers of breast meat, slashed orders as millions of people cut back on eating out, and breast prices slumped," The New York Times reported in 2009. "But demand for wings has remained strong, partly because people perceived them as a cheap luxury." Halim's complaint notes that "the dramatic rise in chicken wing prices was even recognized by Buffalo Wild Wings itself." It therefore "seems clear why Buffalo Wild Wings began selling boneless wings, and why it has continued to purposefully mislead consumers: a profit motive."
The restaurant chain, in short, sells its "boneless wings" to make money, without regard to the damage it is doing to unwary consumers like Halim and Christensen. True, it describes that product as "juicy all-white chicken." But as the Times points out, it is not clear "whether chicken wings are light or dark meat, and whether the Buffalo Wild Wings advertisement of 'juicy all-white chicken' might have offered a clue about its wings."
While "wings are technically white meat," the Times notes, they "have similar fat levels to legs and thighs." Although Halim's complaint does not delve into the controversy over how wings should be classified, that debate reinforces his case that Buffalo Wild Wings should have anticipated the confusion and uncertainty that would ensue when it "recklessly disregarded the fact that the Products are not chicken wings."
The lawsuit notes that other chains have behaved more responsibly. Domino's Pizza and Papa Johns call similar products "boneless chicken" and "Buffalo chicken poppers," respectively. Yet Buffalo Wild Wings sticks with its deliberately ambiguous "juicy all-white chicken" description, lest its customers catch a glimpse of breast.
Just as "there is nothing 'Texas' about Texas Pete" hot sauce, as another recent class action revealed, "nothing about boneless chicken wings actually come[s] from the wing of a chicken," as Christensen pointed out three years ago. Think of how many customers have been duped in the meantime.
The lead plaintiff in the Texas Pete case, who is represented by the Malibu-based Clarkson Law Firm, is a Californian named Phillip White. As Reason's Christian Britschgi noted, it seems that White cannot escape the trickery of wily capitalists. He was fooled not only by Texas Pete but also by Benefiber, which is labeled as "100% natural" despite the "multi-step chemical process" used to produce the supplement, and by "reef friendly" Kroger sunscreen containing chemicals that allegedly "can harm" reefs. Other lawsuits filed by the Clarkson Law Firm complain that Snapple drinks are not really "all natural"; that consumers mistakenly think Barilla pasta comes from Italy; and that the opaque packaging of Whole Foods Organic Shells & Cheese (which includes a net weight statement) conceals the fact that the boxes are only partly full.
Halim's lawyers also have been busy in this area. Among other things, they claim that consumers mistakenly think Truffettes de France Truffles are made in France; that Starbucks customers do not realize that its "sprouted grain" bagels are "made primarily with traditional, non-sprouted grains"; and that "100% Biodegradable" WaterWipes "will not completely decompose within a reasonable time period after customary disposal" because they "are customarily thrown in the trash, which means the Wipes ultimately end up in landfills or incinerators."
The injuries perceived by Treehouse Law may seem like small potatoes. Assuming that Halim, for example, paid $13.49 for an order of 10 "boneless wings" (the price in Mount Prospect) and would have been willing to spend somewhat less had he fully understood what he was buying, he may be out just a few bucks. But when you multiply a few bucks by all the customers who have been victimized in the same way at any of the country's 500 or so Buffalo Wild Wings outlets, you can begin to understand the magnitude of this travesty.
Halim's lawyers think basic fairness demands that the chain disgorge those ill-gotten gains and that they get a cut of that sum as compensation for helping to expose and correct this injustice. Unlike Buffalo Wild Wings, which is driven by an unseemly "profit motive," they are simply doing well by doing good.
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Nice try defending this. It’s fraud plain and simple.
And the company’s analogy to ham and a buffalo is stupid.
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I didn't realize until this article that the wings weren't from Wild Buffalos
Given the size of the wings in question, how adorable would those mini buffalo be?
It's ok, I'm sure the chickens were from Buffalo and the sauce was totally made in Buffalo. Thank [$deity] we can count on the fact that chicken fingers are in fact chicken fingers.
Wait, how can they have fingers when chickens have no hands and what part of a chicken is the "nugget"? I've never found a nugget when I break down a whole chicken.
Why the idiot allegedly assumed they were actually wings and not mechanically separated meat is a bit nuts. Let's be honest, how else are they going to get the meat off the bones from such small parts? Ironically they could have squeezed them out from the tips, which are normally tossed, and presumably he'd be fine with that.
Finally, I find it hard to believe that Milwaukee's Best is actually their best or that it's only made in Milwaukee - I mean it would be a shame if someone else actually made that crap but while it likely isn't true, it isn't fraud any more than "boneless wings" or "the world's best [whatever]". It's marketing BS and everyone with the cognitive skills to survive on their own knows that. In fact, it should be a test and if you fail you can't vote and need to be put in a home. Well, unless you're 7 in which case you can't vote and the "nice" people from DCS will be around shortly to "help".
lol "fraud." What mammary glands produce oat milk? You really gonna go down this path?
What does milkweed produce?
Does Milk of Magnesia have milk in it?
Or almond milk, as there is no almond titty.
LOL. Terrible example. The word “oat” tells you all you need to know. What in “boneless wings” tells you you’re not getting wings?
No bones?
Who fucking cares what part of a chicken the meat comes from?
You make chicken soup with white meat, don't you?
I only make chicken noodle soup. The noodle is a very difficult part of the chicken to extract but I feel it's worth the effort.
Dude, those aren’t noodles, they’re worms!
What! That's it, I'm suing the worms for fraud!
"The wing bone's connected to the shoulder bone! The shoulder bone's connected to the back bone! The back bone's connected to the rib bone! The rib bone's connected to the breast bone! Now eat or just pass it up!"
😉
Um, the "boneless" part? Anyone bright enough to tie their own shoes knows wings have bones. It's not a huge leap to figure out that "boneless wings" might not consist solely of wings.
Counterpoint: so what?
Fraud’s OK? The damages might be minuscule, and a class action is over the top, but it’s fraud and the company is essentially defending the fraud through mockery and sarcasm.
Where is the harm? Most wing places count each segment of the wing as 1 wing. Is that fraud too? They also don't include the "parson's nose" end piece of the wing. So it's not really a wing at all, just certain parts of a wing. Fraud?
Good point. "De minimis non curat lex" is prolly the most libertarian phrase in Roman jurisprudence.
So, just to clarify — suppose a menu of a restaurant had a dish that was called “Chicken thighs.” And then right below it, in the part of the menu marked “thighs,” it contained another similar menu item that reads “boneless thighs.” Would you be fine with them serving you boneless breast meat instead in that “boneless thighs” dish?
Or, suppose a menu said “ribeye steak” for one entry. Then, in a section labeled “ribeye,” it had another entry labeled “boneless ribeye.” If you ordered the “boneless ribeye” they served you sirloin.
Is that okay?
And by the way, until today I didn’t know that “boneless wings” didn’t contain any wing meat. I’ve never ordered them, nor have I been with anyone who has ordered them. However, I have deboned chicken wings, as part of deboning a whole chicken. It’s a relatively straightforward process. I would assume that “boneless wings” implied… well, wing meat without bones. I don’t think that’s an unreasonable assumption.
I’ve never really thought much about “boneless wings,” though I know they’ve been on menus for several years. However, I didn’t think they actually had people deboning chicken wings in most restaurants, as that would be tedious to do at scale and wouldn’t result in a nice neat result that could be cooked up as a hunk of a “wing.” Nevertheless, without further explanation, I guess I assumed that restaurants would have mechanically separated wing meat from bones or something and smushed it together (like is done with other chicken parts and deli meats, etc.) to create “boneless wings.”
The “harm” is that you are literally being served meat that is literally not what you ordered nor what the words “boneless” and “wings” mean in everyday English.
And before someone quotes the nonsense that the restaurant produced — “Buffalo” wings are named after sauce that originates (supposedly) as an idea from Buffalo, NY. “Buffalo wings” never implied anything about the composition of the meat. Similarly “hamburger” is an abbreviation of “hamburger steak,” which derives its name from Hamburg, Germany, where supposedly people first ate a ground beef steak that was a predecessor of the modern hamburger. It never implied that it contained “ham,” but its place of origin.
However, as far as I know, no one is claiming there’s a city named “Boneless” or a city named “Wings” that mean something different from the literal words “boneless” and “wings.” There is really nothing to clue in the customer on a menu that they would not be getting some form of “boneless” “wing” meat if they ordered such a dish.
Boneless wings might mean breast straps, or it might mean a wing shaped chicken nugget.
What it definitely doesn't mean is a deboned wing.
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"Parson's nose"? Is that like "the Preacher's Biscuit" that would appear whenever my Grandpa accidentally dropped a biscuit on the floor?
🙂
This isn't fraud. If they were slaughtering alley cats and selling the meat as chicken, that would be fraud. Insisting on an ultra-literal definition of "wings" is just silly, and anyone who does so deserves to be mocked.
Halim is represented by Treehouse Law, a Los Angeles outfit that bills itself as the country's "premier consumer class action firm."
"Treehouse Law: For Litigious Assholes Who Never Grew Up!"
🙂
They propose a class action on behalf of Halim and "similarly situated" consumers across the country, who they say are "entitled to restitution, disgorgement, and/or the imposition of a constructive trust upon all profits, benefits, and other compensation obtained by [Buffalo Wild Wings] from its deceptive, misleading, and unlawful conduct."
Does "disgorgement" mean we get to force-feed Syrup of Epicac down the throat of frivolous Plaintiffs and make them yak up the chicken they hate before throwing their money back in their faces?
Inquiring Minds Want to Know!
😉
I agree. Accepting minor fraud will just grow the enterprise.
Calling breast meat wing meat is 100% deceptive fraud.
Perhaps it's not that big of deal at $2 or $7 but what if it was a $100,000 order? Would everyone keep saying it's no big deal? So what you ordered milk and got paste instead?
So just do like Walmart and call the product "Wyngz" ...or "Wyngzzz" to avoid any Trademark enfringement.
🙂
I think just a simple disclosure of true product contents would suffice. Boneless “Chicken Wings” from chicken breast.
Frankly; I’m just tired of ordering things that say it’s one thing on the advertisement and getting something similar bot NOT AT ALL what’s described/specified and it seems to be getting worse and worse. 5000W Inverter that cannot even put out 100W etc, etc, etc… At what point does one start calling out the fraud? Is everyone going to have to try 10-Times to get what they wanted to buy?
Doesn't it say that right on the menu?
I see what you're saying and people who buy such power inverters should be made whole. Even so, though, that would not necessitate lawyers taking over the entire company and field-stripping it like jackals at a lion's kill.
Seriously, how stupid do you have to be to not recognize that "boneless wings" are cuts of breast? And, if the Times really believes that "wings are technically white meat," their writer has never eaten one.
This suit is specious and a clear attempt to get paid to go away.
This is "fraud" like "Buffalo Wings" are fraud. No one actually putting ANY thought into the issue believed, of CARED about, the technical accuracy of the product name.
So whutabout chicken "fajitas?"
Shhhhh! You'll summon Herr Misek and it'll be "NO Mulligan Stew for you!"...Unless it has an actual golf ball.
🙂
The bones are 80% of the fun of eating wings. Boneless wings are for people who hate wings. Maybe the idiot never mastered the "lollipop" technique on the drumettes or the "twist, pop, and lollipop" on the flats. Anyone who doesn't know what I'm talking about doesn't eat chicken wings.
"Twist, pop, and lollipop"? Go on...
🙂
Do you understand the concept of sarcasm?
They got Subway on foot long sandwiches, but they got nothing.
it is not clear "whether chicken wings are light or dark meat."
To the contrary it is very clear from the meat itself.
The drum portion is white meat like the breast it is attached to.
The flat portion is very clearly darker and oilier - it's dark meat.
The tip is skin and bone and cartilage.
The tip is skin and bone and cartilage.
That's why Tony keeps getting them stuck in his throat.
Racist!
Reminds me of an argument 2 of my co-workers had about 25 years ago. They disagreed on whether or not chickens had nipples.
One pointed out that chickens don't nurse their young. The other insisted that since they had breasts, they must have nipples.
An agreement on the existence of chicken nipples was never reached.
But were you able to settle which came first, the chicken or the egg? Or just why did the chicken cross the road?
Why did the chicken cross the playground? To get to the other slide.
Not “to get away from buttplug?”
(Oh, "sllllllide." OK.)
Why did the chicken cross the road, roll in the mud, and cross back? Because he was a dirty double-crosser.
"But were you able to settle which came first, the chicken or the egg?"
I thought it was decided that it was the egg that came first. I must be misremembering something.
I think maybe the evolutionary ancestor of the chicken came first and then it became a chicken which laid an egg. Or maybe it laid an egg that became a chicken?
Whatever DNA evolved evolved in egg form.
The chicken.
20 Then God said, “Let the waters teem with swarms of living creatures, and let birds fly above the earth in the open expanse of the heavens.” 21 And God created the great sea creatures and every living creature that moves, with which the waters swarmed, according to their kind, and every winged bird according to its kind; and God saw that it was good. 22 God blessed them, saying, “Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the waters in the seas, and let birds multiply on the earth.” 23 And there was evening and there was morning, a fifth day.
(After the fruitful and multiply part, we get eggs)
The egg.
Because after the fruitful and multiply part, animals with shorter gestation times than chickens laid eggs before the chickens ever got around to it.
I take most events recorded in Old Testament with a huge grain of salt. Like massive.
Pillar sized even.
Historically, most people understood that large parts of the Bible were allegory, not a science or history textbook. Biblical literalism is a relatively recent innovation.
How could the egg come first? Does it even have a G-spot?
The egg obviously came first. There were eggs for millions of years before there were chickens
The entire argument is posited on the notion that birds are real, ergo non-sequitur.
Because it's not possible that one word might have two distinct meanings.
Does the new fallen snow have nipples too?
Does freshly fallen snow have breasts?
Snow angels?
It's getting tough to keep abreast of all the new angles here.
Are you not familiar with A Visit From St. Nicholas? There are some great turns of phrase in there.
"The moon on the breast of the new-fallen snow, gave a luster of midday to objects below."
Oh, yeah? I'm suing those who label meat as chicken breast because those chickens don't lactate!
Go to the comment thread directly above you.
There's no way to debone a chicken wing without cutting the meat into very small pieces. To get something that's boneless, shaped like a bone in chicken wing and made of chicken wing meat, you would have to grind the meat to a hamburger consistency and mold it into shape. It would take 2 or 3 whole wings to make one boneless wing.
Or breed boneless chickens.
google "Far Side Boneless Chicken Ranch"
Fond memories!
My favorite was the cow taking an obscene phone call. "It's that heavy chewing sound!"
🙂
https://cowandchicken.fandom.com/wiki/Boneless_Chicken
I used to love Cow and Chicken. Esp the "banned episode" with the female biker gang called "The Bulls".
Right, there really isn't much meat there. But could "they" genetically engineer a chicken with giant wings for just this purpose?
Condor wings!
They've engineered bigger breasts
Mechanically separated meat, they could use just the tips which are most likely tossed anyway.
They should have just gone the route a bunch of frozen food producers went and just call them "chicken wyngz."
The horror, the horror, of finding out that boneless chicken wings are not deboned chicken wings.
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Dude should have taken the free wings. It's probably more than he'd get from the class action if it actually succeeds.
Class actions are profit centers for lawyers, not clients or the class. The lawyers typically get 1/3 of the settlement so if it's $3M they get $1M and the 2M class members get $1.00. Sure, maybe the client actually gets a bit more but it's almost always less than the lawyers.
Over the years, I have "won" a few class action lawsuits. I have yet to find one where the settlement was worth the effort to admit I was part of the class.
How's this grab ya for litigation reform?
If this came into my Small Claims Night Court while I was playing behind the bench with my Fidget Spinners, Fidget Poppers, and Groucho Glasses, I would immediately tell the Plaintiff that I will personally pay the Plaintiff out of my own pocket for the full price of the chicken, including pro rata unused portion, the used portion, and an Über or Lyft ride home, on condition that the Plaintiff NEVER darken the doors of my Court again! If they are back later, contempt of court and 30 days in the hole!
Then, if the order was big enough, I'll share it with the Bailiffs, Attorneys, Jury, and Police and party 'til I pop in recess!
That's how you do it, folks!
🙂
And the defendants' lawyers still get paid even if they lose. The only real winners in a typical class action suit are the lawyers.
Yep. Those evil corporations. Imagine, they stooped to the level of substituting a higher quality meat instead of wing meat.
Yeah... Calling something a chicken wing when it's not a chicken wing *is* false advertising. But where's the harm?
Has anyone told this clown about "hot dogs"?
Everyone else is too chicken to tell him.
delicious with crunchy peanut butter.
I don't think it's the same. In-bone chicken wings are actually wings. Boneless chicken wings are not. That's not nearly as obvious as "hot dog", where pretty much everyone is familiar with the term and nobody thinks it's made from dogs because we don't eat dogs in this country.
I'm still owed considerable amounts of land after my initial investment in Thousand Island Dressing.
throw it out and make him pay defense costs whatthefuck
Yeah. When we were all subject to The Crown, American Rule made sense. Now that we're the wealthiest, most litigious nation on the planet, English Rule seems rather efficient and equitable.
At least they don't offer eggless mayo as an optional dipping sauce.
Now do "Root Beer."
Firstly: No self respecting man orders boneless wings. They're for children and women with a fresh manicure.
Secondly: Everyone knows that "boneless wings" are just breast tenders.
I thought they were chicken fingers. Oh well, who knew?
Talking of which, my local Shop-Rite sells what it calls "chicken paws". As I thought when I saw that, perhaps Foghorn Leghorn and Barnyard Dawg got it on.
A cross-species gay-by?
🙂
I was likewise a bit bumfuzzled the first time I saw my local Walmart selling chicken feet labelled as "paws".
When you're in a business you are expected to be truthful about the products you are selling. Poppers or nuggets would be a much better name.
Lawyers are pedants. QED
More like pedant-ophiles, amirite?
Chicken wings and feet are far less expensive than chicken breasts. That company substituted a better cut of meat than what was advertised so the customer was not harmed. Nevertheless, I felt cheated when I discovered that chocolate moose contains no venison at all but is just foamed sugar. What's the number of that law firm again?
You got moose and not mousse?
Of course, if you got the wrong kind of mousse, you'd be putting it in your hair instead of eating it. Talk about confusion.
Chicken wings and feet used to be less expensive than chicken breasts. That was perfectly reasonable because the wings contain little meat of rather poor quality, which you have to work to pick from all the bone.
That changed when people started using the wings to convey excesses of spices and sauces to their mouths. I'm not sure how many of those people even try to get more than skin and sauce out of the wing. There's only two wings per chicken, and the consumer demand considerably exceeded that. So supply and demand made wings more expensive, and restaurants and stores started creating fake wings from other parts of the chicken.
I never imagined that a "boneless wing" was actually a wing. I ate real wings when they were the second-most despised part of the chicken (after the neck) - because my family was once poor, and when we ate something, we at it _all_. (Necks too.) So I know that if you remove the bones from the wing, what's left is sking and a less than bite-sized pile of shredded and chopped meat. And it's not very good meat at that.
What sort of over-privileged SOB doesn't know that?
Sure. And next you'll be telling me there is no corn in my corned beef. And no Irishmen in my Irish stew.
"...are they made from real Girl Scouts?"
Counterpoint: If we don't stop this somewhere, eventually, not only will there not be wings in the boneless chicken wings, there won't be chicken either.
Chicken wings are a real thing which are probably even served by the place. Don't call your food that if it's not what they are.
What sort of thing should they be called to satisfy your inability to think beyond what you are told?
Collect a group of people scared about getting served something other than chicken, wound them all without killing them, turn the product into bar snacks: Chicken Wings.
And no Irishmen in my Irish stew.
Pretty sure the Irish in Irish stew refers to whiskey.
"To do so she would have had to lie...
and lying she knew was a sin, a sin, and lying she knew was a sin."
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Did you think someone sat there picking the bones out of the wings?
What we need is another Section 230, a “1A of bar food” if you will. A law, passed by Congress, that protects bartenders from frivolous prosecution for Good Samaritan efforts to provide snacks. Otherwise, the entire recreational drinking establishment industry as we know it would collapse under the weight of the legion of litigious trolls and disappear forever.
By keeping the surname "Halim," Buffalo Wild Wings was led to believe that the plaintiff was "forbearing, understanding, slow to anger," which he does not appear to be. Clearly a case of buyer fraud!
Happened to me. I voted against the Nixon party and got a cowardly jackass. Then after listening to an ancap infiltrator I voted FOR the Nixon party and got a girl-bullying senile prohibitionist. Only when I found actual libertarian candidates to support did spicy flavor return to my menu choices. Hint. LP spoiler votes tell voters where the real flavor is.
Wait until he finds out that the things McDonald's is selling don't actually come from the bird's "nuggets."
Worse: chicken "tenders". I think it was Dr. Boli that pointed out that "tenders" aren't part of the chicken, they are people who take care of the chicken.
This is a clear violation of the sales contract. The company should have recognized and corrected the deceptive practice before the case came to this point.
Whether the plaintiff is attempting unethical profiteering off the lawsuit is a different matter entirely. So is the issue of whether the company attempted an unethical end-run around the law on the casino-gambling premise that no one would be stupid or rich enough to bring a lawsuit on the matter.
What exactly is the problem? Am confused.
I just don't understand where there are any damages. This article is the first time I have ever thought about whether "boneless wings" are made from actual chicken wings. All I have thought about is how they are inferior to real wings, no matter what part of the chicken they come from. They basically are chicken nuggets with sauce on them. I guess I am just savvy enough of a shopper to be duped by something so obvious.
This suit is as stupid as going into a "massage parlor" in a red-light district and complaining when what you got was a hummer.
Of filing suit because a hooker promised you some pussy for 20 bucks and you didn't get a cat!
Current job openings: Chicken wing bone remover. You must have a four year degree in chicken wing engineering. Wages base on wings de-boned per hour. Apply within.
Can I sue Sleder's Tavern in Traverse City, Michigan because the last Sleder who was interested in running a restaurant died 30 years ago?
Perhaps it depends on whether the buffalo burgers are still as good as Louie Sleder's were. Are they still made from farm-raised bison?