Judge Carnes offers an engaging introduction to this case:
People who compete against each
other in the same business or profession don't have to dislike one another. A
few years back there was even a song lyricizing about “Lawyers in Love.” But no
one has ever written a song about “Car Dealers in Love,” and if this case is
any indication, no one ever will. These two car dealers are bitter business
rivals in overlapping markets. One of them used a software program to compete
more aggressively with the other one over the internet. That program produced a
multiplicity of mini-websites, a host of hard feelings, and of course
litigation. This is the appellate part of that litigation.
Nor is this the only case involving the parties: just last
year, a state court awarded Shawn Esfahani and his company Eastern Shore Toyota
$7.5 million in slander damages against plaintiff Bob Tyler Toyota and its
sales manager. The slander involved
false accusations of terrorism and financial support for terrorism against
Iranian-born Esfahani. The period of the
slander overlapped the period of Eastern Shore’s anti-Bob Tyler internet
strategy, which gave rise to this
lawsuit. The $7.5 million slander
judgment, $5 million of which represents punitive damages, is currently on
appeal to the Alabama Supreme Court. (I
wonder which one of the parties spent valuable space in the appellate brief
informing the court about this other litigation?)
Esfahani also deals in Hyundais. In 2009, he attended a Hyundai dealers’
conference, where Hyundai officials introduced dealers to David Vaughn, Jr., the
corporate division's internet marketing expert, who offered to help the dealers
revamp their websites and spruce up their technology systems. I quote the court:
“Not that there's anything wrong with that.”
However, Vaughan went a bit further. He pitched defensive and offensive marketing
strategies to Esfahani. The defensive
strategy was to buy and hold desirable domain names to keep them from
competitors; some would incorporate competitors’ marks. These wouldn’t resolve to a webpage. The offensive strategy involved creating many
mini-sites. By entering domain names
into a program he proposed to license to Esfahani, Vaughn could “instantly mass
produce microsites for Esfahani, each one using a name related in some way to
the car business, for example, www.2009camry.com. Those microsites would either
automatically redirect users who clicked on them to Eastern Shore's official
websites or they would display a one-page website advertising Eastern Shore.” Esfahani agreed to both proposals, and
quickly went from owning about 40 domain names to owning around 4000. Some incorporated trademarks from well-known sites,
for example: www.facebooktoyota.com, www.youtubeusedcar.com, and
www.ebayautoprices.com. Others used
competitors’ marks, such as www.bobtylerprices.com. eBay objected to ebaypreownedprices.com
in September 2009, telling Eastern Shore that its registration and use violated
the Lanham Act and ACPA. Esfahani
surrendered the domain name the day after receiving eBay’s email, but didn’t
review any of his other domain names for infringement.
In October 2009, a Bob Tyler sales manager discovered the
bobtylerprices.com microsite, featuring a photo of a model sold by Bob Tyler
and allowing visitors to enter their email addresses and financial information
to apply for a car loan. But the phone
number was Eastern Shore’s. Bob Tyler
employees found five other Eastern Shore microsites with virtually the same
design and some version of the Bob Tyler TM along with Eastern Shore’s phone
number.
A Toyota manger told Eastern Shore that Bob Tyler objected
and urged Eastern Shore to disable the microsites. Continuing in the
slightly-cuter-than-perhaps-I-want-my-appellate-opinions vein, the court
recounted that “Esfahani was shocked—‘shocked,’ he said—to learn that those
domain names were operational, and he immediately ordered Vaughan to disable
the microsites.” A few days later, Bob
Tyler’s lawyers sent a C&D threatening a lawsuit unless Eastern Shore paid
$250,000, though Eastern Shore was already in the process of disabling the
microsites.
Esfahani and Vaughan blamed each other. Esfahani terminated his contract with Vaughan
and accused Vaughan of having misled him into believing that buying the domain
names was legal, while Vaughan said that Esfahani “went rogue” despite
Vaughan’s warnings that buying the domain names and hosting the microsites “was
a real bad idea[ ].” By the end of the
day after the C&D, all the microsites using the Bob Tyler trademark had
been disabled, except for two undetected because misspelled ones. (The total was 14.)
Bob Tyler sued anyway, alleging false advertising, unfair
competition under the Lanham Act and state law, violation of ACPA, state
trademark dilution, and violation of Florida’s “Antiphishing Act.” Bob Tyler moved for summary judgment. Eastern Shore argued that it allegedly
“believed and had reasonable grounds to believe that the use of the domain name[s]
was a fair use or otherwise lawful,”15 U.S.C. § 1125(d)(1)(B)(ii). At trial, Bob Tyler didn’t prove any money
damages, which left it only able to seek damages on its Florida antiphishing
and ACPA claims. The court granted judgment
as a matter of law to Eastern Shore on the antiphishing claim, and also denied
injunctive relief because Bob Tyler failed to show any likelihood that Eastern
Shore would resume the objectionable conduct.
When the court instructed the jury on the ACPA statutory
defense, it stated that Eastern Shore had the burden to prove that it had both
“reasonable grounds to believe that the use of the domain names was [a] fair
use or otherwise lawful” and that it actually “had this belief.” The court told
the jury that “reasonable grounds” meant that “an ordinary person in [the]
defendants' position would have had those grounds.”
The jury, by special interrogatory verdict, found that Bob
Tyler proved a violation of ACPA by Eastern Shore, but that the defendants had
“a reasonably held belief that their use of the domain names was a fair use or
otherwise lawful.” Thus Bob Tyler got
nothing.
Bob Tyler appealed. I
will ignore most of the many procedural/waiver issues. It first argued that it was entitled to
equitable relief on its false advertising/unfair competition claims, a holding
reviewed only for abuse of discretion.
There was a reasonable basis for the district court’s conclusion, so the
court of appeals affirmed. Eastern Shore
disabled the infringing microsites right after the C&D (a little longer for
the undiscovered misspelled ones). “Eastern Shore acknowledged its error in
creating the microsites, fired its internet consultant, and promised to stop
any infringing activity.” There was no
evidence of a likelihood of continued infringement, so the district court’s
ruling was justified.
Florida’s antiphishing law allows the owner of a web page or
trademark “who is adversely affected by [a] violation” to bring a lawsuit under
that act, but Bob Tyler failed to prove any damages at trial or otherwise show
that it had been adversely affected, so the claim was properly dismissed as a
matter of law.
ACPA was the big issue.
Bob Tyler argued that the district court shouldn’t have let the
statutory safe harbor defense go to the jury because Eastern Shore’s bad faith
barred it from the safe harbor. The
Fourth Circuit has held that a “defendant who acts even partially in bad faith
in registering a domain name is not, as a matter of law, entitled to benefit
from the Act's safe harbor provision.”
Here, Eastern Shore conceded that six of the nine statutory ACPA factors
for determining bad faith were present and weighed against it. But bad faith intent to profit isn’t a “score
card” of statutory factors; the statute says they’re nonexclusive factors that
“a court may consider.” There is no per
se tipping point that excludes a defendant.
The Fourth Circuit case involved a defendant’s undisputed bad faith
intent to profit by selling or threatening to sell the infringing domain name
to the highest bidder if the plaintiff did not buy the name from it. Nothing like that happened here; there was
some evidence of intent to profit from the infringing domain names, but also
contrary evidence. Resolving the dispute
was for the jury.
Eastern Shore’s defense wasn’t mistake of law: it was that
Eastern Shore believed and had reasonable grounds to believe that its actions
were lawful based on Vaughan's professional advice. There was evidence supporting this.
The court of appeals also rejected Bob Tyler’s challenges to
the jury instructions; there was no evidence that things like an instruction
that even one improper motive is enough for liability would have changed the
verdict. Likewise, Bob Tyler argued that
the jury’s answers were inconsistent, and they were: the jury found that
Eastern Shore had violated ACPA and also that it qualified for the safe harbor,
but a defendant who falls within the scope of the safe harbor provision
necessarily lacks the bad faith intent to profit that is necessary to violate
the statute. But Bob Tyler waived the
argument by not objecting before the jury was discharged.
Bob Tyler also argued that it should have been granted
judgment as a matter of law, or a new trial based on the weight of the
evidence. The former turned on whether
there was enough evidence for the jury to find that Eastern Shore reasonably
believed its actions were lawful.
Regardless of the number of statutory factors in play, there would be no
bad faith intent to profit and thus no liability if Eastern Shore nonetheless
“believed and had reasonable grounds to believe that the use of the domain name
was ... lawful.” This requires both a
subjective belief and an objectively reasonable belief in the lawfulness of its
actions. The standard of review is one
designed to support the jury’s verdict:
“when all credibility determinations are made and all inferences are
drawn in favor of the verdict, and all evidence disfavoring the verdict that
the jury was not required to believe is disregarded, was there enough evidence
to support the verdict that Eastern Shore lacked a bad faith intent to profit
because it believed and had reasonable grounds to believe that its actions were
lawful? There was.”
To start with, Esfahani testified that he believed that
owning the domain names was legal. There
was evidence that Vaughan assured him that this was so, and that Esfahani
reasonably relied on Vaughan’s expertise:
Esfahani had every reason to
believe that Vaughan was a bona fide and independent internet marketing
professional on whom he could rely. Vaughan had worked in the car dealership
business for about twenty-seven years and had started working in internet
marketing as early as 1995. He owned Advanced Dealer Systems, an internet
marketing company whose clientele included car dealerships and manufacturers,
such as Hyundai, Dodge, Jeep, and Chrysler. It was Hyundai's corporate division
that introduced Vaughan to its dealership owners, including Esfahani, as a
“preferred vendor” and the corporate division's internet marketing expert,
someone who could help dealers revamp their websites and internet marketing
strategies to compete in the twenty-first century economy.
Indeed, Vaughan continued to tout his defensive strategy of
registering multiple inactive domains in his deposition, so convinced was he of
its legality and propriety:
If I was a guy like Shawn Esfahani,
I would buy my competition up; and I would just not let them use it. I would
just keep [the domain names] dormant. I think that's a good strategy.... I've
actually helped Hyundai buy Toyota domains just to keep them away from
Toyota.... Everybody does it.
There was, in addition, evidence that Vaughan inadvertently launched
the microsites that used the Bob Tyler trademark instead of keeping those domain
names dormant, as Esfahani testified he had believed Vaughan would do. The one-click nature of the computer program
allowed for inadvertent activation, and Vaughan was the one who did the detail
work. Vaughan denied responsibility for
activating the infringing microsites, but the jury didn’t have to believe him;
at least one of them bore the name of his company in the tagline “Powered by
Advanced Dealer Systems.” Vaughan undisputedly
had exclusive access to the operational back-end of the microsites, where he
could upload content and track visitors to the sites. Esfahani testified that he “personally had no
idea these things were hooked to [the] website generating machine.”
The jury could have accepted Esfahani’s reaction to the news
that infringing domain names were in use as more evidence that he didn’t want
them used offensively and hadn’t known about that use. He immediately ordered Vaughan to deactivate
them, before receiving Bob Tyler’s C&D, and terminated Vaughan’s contract a
few days later, stating that he’d been misled into thinking that purchasing the
domains was legal. Eastern Shore
surrendered the Bob Tyler domain names to GoDaddy before this lawsuit was filed
in this case, and surrendered the domain names using trademarks of its other
competitors soon thereafter.
Overall, though the court noted that it wasn’t saying that
it would have reached the same result as the jury, defendants’ actions and
reactions “were starkly different from those of defendants who have been held
to have violated the anticybersquatting act.”
Bob Tyler argued that the eBay C&D email put Eastern Shore on notice
of likely ACPA violations. But the email
said that the “registration and use” or “use, [sale], or offer for sale” of the
domain name likely violated the law. A
jury could reasonably have found both that Esfahani still reasonably believed
that his defensive strategy was ok, and that he didn’t know the Bob Tyler
microsites were operational.
Bob Tyler contested Esfahani’s subjective lack of knowledge,
because Esfahani testified that a number of years ago a competitor’s
disgruntled ex-employee offered to sell him the competitor’s domain names, to
which he had access because he’d bought them at the competitor’s direction
while still employed there. Esfahani
turned this offer down as “dirty pool.”
But a reasonable jury could have found that Esfahani distinguished between
pilfered property and buying unregistered names from GoDaddy, especially when
Vaughan told him he could do the latter.
Another wrinkle was that Bob Tyler obtained a party
admission under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 36(a) from Eastern Shore
admitting that it “purchased the Bob Tyler Domain Names with the intention of
diverting consumers from [Bob Tyler Toyota's] website or business to [Eastern
Shore's] own website.” This would normally conclusively establish the admitted
fact, but “what ordinarily happens and what should have happened did not happen
in this case.” Though Eastern Shore
never moved to withdraw this omission, Bob Tyler never objected to Eastern
Shore’s contradictory position at trial that it only intended to hold the
domain names defensively.
The only people who noticed the inconsistency were members
of the jury, which sent a question to the court about how it should resolve the
conflict between the party admission and the “[p]resented testimony that
[Eastern Shore] did not willfully activate a site.” Bob Tyler’s lawyer, for whatever reason,
agreed that the jury should simply be instructed to give the admission and the
trial testimony “the weight you believe it deserves.” The district court instructed the jury that:
“The Request for Admissions relates to the purchase of a domain name. The
testimony which you describe in your communication relates to the activation of
a website. The two are different things. You should give each the weight you
believe it deserves.” The jury then
asked whether Eastern Shore had admitted only to defensive use or to both
defensive and offensive use. The court,
again with the agreement of the parties’ lawyers, told the jury that “the
defendants' response simply admitted that sentence as it is worded.” Given the invited error, Bob Tyler couldn’t
complain now.
Eric Goldman would undoubtedly suggest some good business lessons here. I can see why the jury sympathized with Esfahani (I don't know whether the slander issue was admitted as evidence here)--if they believed his testimony, he was misled by a consultant who seemed highly legit and endorsed by the Hyundai hierarchy. It may be hard for a nonspecialist to make legal distinctions--though I will say that even what Vaughan called the "defensive" strategy smells bad to me, and is also unlikely to provide any return given how consumers find websites in the age of search engines. These registrations might have earned Vaughan fees, but it's hard to imagine how they helped Eastern Shore's competitive position even setting aside this expensive lawsuit.
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