NJ Men File Lawsuit, Claiming They've Been Shorted On Subway Sandwiches

Two NJ men are suing Subway, claiming their advertising practices are "deceptive."
Two NJ men are suing Subway, claiming their advertising practices are "deceptive."
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Updated: 1/24 8:30 am

MOUNT HOLLY, N.J. - Two New Jersey men sued Subway claiming the world's biggest fast-food chain has been shorting them by selling so-called footlong sandwiches that measure a bit less than 12 inches.

The suit, filed Tuesday in Superior Court in Mount Holly, may be the first legal filing aimed at the sandwich shops after an embarrassment went viral last week when someone posted a photo of a footlong and a ruler on the company's Facebook page to show that the sandwich was not as long as advertised.

At the time, the company issued a statement saying that the sandwich length can vary a bit when franchises do not bake to the exact corporate standards.

Stephen DeNittis, the lawyer for the plaintiffs in the New Jersey suit, said he's seeking class-action status and is also preparing to file a similar suit in Pennsylvania state court in Philadelphia.

He said he's had sandwiches from 17 shops measured and every one came up short.

"The case is about holding companies to deliver what they've promised," he said.

Even though the alleged short of a half-inch or so of bread is relatively small, it adds up, he said. Subway has 38,000 stores around the world, nearly all owned by franchisees and its $5 footlong specials have been a mainstay of the company's ads for five years.

DeNittis said both plaintiffs, John Farley, of Evesham and Charles Noah Pendrack, of Ocean City. came to him after reading last week about the short sandwiches.

DeNittis is asking for compensatory damages for his client and a change in Subway's practices.

The Milford, Conn.-based firm should either make sure its sandwiches measure a full foot or stop advertising them as such.

He points to how McDonald's quarter-pounders are advertised as being that weight before they are cooked.

Subway did not immediately return a call to The Associated Press on Wednesday.

(Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)



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The views expressed here do not necessarily represent those of WKRC-TV :: Cincinnati Weather and Forecasts, Cincinnati News, Breaking News, and Sports for the Cincinnati area, Ohio, northern Kentucky, Indiana, and the tristate area

tcates - 1/25/2013 5:34 PM
0 Votes
Stupid lawsuit. Seriously losers?

zookeeper - 1/25/2013 12:36 PM
0 Votes
If they think THAT's pissin' em' off,wait til they compare the amount of meat to the amount of lettuce and vegies on the sandwich.They fill it with vegies to make it look bigger.

steve9306 - 1/24/2013 3:21 PM
0 Votes
Stephen DeNittis beat Eric Deters to the punch.

hikingdude - 1/24/2013 1:31 PM
7 Votes
When these "Jersey boyz" hit the clubs talking up chicks, do they get sued when the ladies don't get the 8 inches they were bragging about?

Ammys2Cuties - 1/24/2013 11:27 AM
2 Votes
Oh, brother...and none of them can afford to have an 'inch pinched', right?

Lee62 - 1/24/2013 10:44 AM
3 Votes
I cannot abide New Jersians. I lived there for several years; you have to buy litigation insurance with your home owner's policy, because those nutjob people are all suit-happy freaks. They sue each other at the drop of a hat up there. Man. Miserable place. Miserable people!

winston57 - 1/24/2013 10:01 AM
1 Vote
How about Krogers and their decades-old practice of placing a sign in a bin that advertises "Such and such $4.99" except the bin is surrounded by something subtly different from the "such and such" precisely described on the sign and it will ring at $12.99, probably unnoticed? Kroger has been doing this since the 1970s. The sign implies that the product piled around it is the described sale product, but you have to read the fine print, and perhaps go digging, to find the actual on sale product. I decided after calling them out on this for decades to join 'em instead and bought Kroger stock. It's doing well actually. So keep up the good profit-generating work. I'll pad my 401K and continue to practice my variation on Reaganism shopping at Krogers: Don't trust, and always verify... in the bin and at the register.
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