Williams-Sonoma is in the midst of a major class action lawsuit that has captivated consumer advocates and the bedding industry. On September 4, 2025, a California federal judge, U.S. District Judge William H. Orrick, denied Williams-Sonoma’s latest motion to limit the certified class in a high-profile case that alleges the company misled customers about the thread count of its bedding products.
Judge Orrick’s Denial and Its Repercussions
Judge William H. Orrick found that Williams-Sonoma failed to prove consumers agreed to arbitrate claims, citing a lack of clear evidence that users had proper notice of the arbitration terms. The court emphasized that even in the company’s modern digital environment, the design of Williams-Sonoma’s ‘Shopping Cart’ and ‘Place Order’ pages did not make the terms and conditions visually conspicuous enough to bind consumers. This means that consumers who completed purchases online—or who signed up for loyalty programs, gift registries, or credit card…
accounts after certain dates—cannot automatically be excluded on the basis of arbitration agreements, as Williams-Sonoma argued. The judge rejected the company’s motion in its entirety, concluding that it failed to meet its burden of showing that consumers were on inquiry notice of the terms during the relevant time periods.
This order follows a broader, years-long legal tussle beginning in March 2016 when the original class action—William Rushing v. Williams-Sonoma Inc., et al., Case No. 3:16-01421, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California—was filed.
The Origins of the Thread-Count Dispute Plaintiff William Rushing initially filed the lawsuit after buying what was advertised as Signature 600-Thread-Count Sateen Bedding from Williams-Sonoma. Upon having the sheets scientifically tested, he discovered the actual thread count was only 291.
The complaint described a marketing strategy that used misleading claims such as “lustrous 600-thread-count two-ply Egyptian-cotton sateen” to sell the bedding at a premium—allegations at the heart of the ongoing dispute. The class action also accused Williams-Sonoma and sister companies—including Pottery Barn, PBKids,…
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