foc
Subscriber
The industry referred to it as "subject Failure"
Yes subject failure was usually where you had a subject in a predominant colour which caused over correction in the final print. The classic example is Santa Clause sitting in a red grotto. His white beard (and everyone else) will have a cyan cast.
Back in the day machine printers (before software) had limited electronics to calculate exposure and colour correction. Negatives (density and colour) that were under or over exposure by up to 2 stops were controlled by printer slope, which could be set by using a bulls eye (Sherly control negative) and a printer ring a round.