REX – Real Estate Exchange, Inc. v. Zillow, Inc., 2023 WL
5334389, No. C21-0312 TSZ (W.D. Wash. Aug. 18, 2023)
Zillow aggregates listings of real properties that are for
sale or for rent. Before January 2021, Zillow’s websites displayed on one page
(or in one tab) all homes for sale in a certain region regardless of how they
were listed, i.e., by a real estate agent, a real estate broker, a realtor, or
an unrepresented owner. Then Zillow unveiled a two-tab design, which segregated
content between tabs (or webpages) labeled as “Agent listings” and “Other
listings.”
According to Zillow, the two-tab display resulted from
Zillow’s efforts to comply with the National Association of Realtors model
“no-commingling” (or segregation) rule, which had been adopted by roughly
two-thirds of the multiple-listing services (MLSs) that had agreed to provide
Zillow with data feeds. This rule requires segregating listings obtained
through such data feeds from listings obtained from other sources.
REX’s listings come from licensed brokers and agents; they
qualified as agent listings, as opposed to for-sale-by-owner (“FSBO”) or
non-agent listings. Nevertheless, REX’s for-sale listings were relegated, along
with FSBO and non-MLS listings, to the “Other listings” page because REX’s
brokers and agents were not members of the MLSs from which Zillow was receiving
data feeds.
Before Zillow launched the two-tab system, it evaluated the
associated risks. A 2019 investigation of tabs labeled “Agent listings” and
“Other listings” revealed “critical comprehension concerns warranting further
iteration.” In November 2020, Zillow’s research indicated that eight of the
twelve participants in a study (described as “buyers,” meaning individuals
trying to purchase a home who had previously used one of Zillow’s platforms)
“assumed” that “other” meant “non-agent” listings, while the other four buyers
thought “other” meant non-Zillow-agent or agent “not approved by Zillow.”
Zillow’s FAQ said:
“Agent Listings” are properties
listed by real estate agents in the MLS. “Agent Listings” do not include homes
for sale by owner, non-MLS auctions or foreclosures. “Other Listings” are for
sale by owner, non-MLS auctions, foreclosures and other properties. “Other
Listings” do not include properties listed by agents in the MLS.
…
If an agent lists your home on the
MLS (even through a limited-service brokerage), it will appear under “Agent
Listings.” If you advertise your home on Zillow as for sale by owner, it will
appear under “Other Listings.”
The FAQ did not indicate that the “Other listings” tab might
include homes for sale by agents or brokers who were not MLS members. It also
failed to define MLS or to clarify that some licensed real estate agents and
brokers do not belong to an MLS.
Zillow recorded a 32% increase in complaints during the
weeks after the transition. Comments included: “Why prop up agents when the
whole point of your app is to circumvent the need for a high commission agent?”
and the like. A user test comment: “Oh...oh no...I wouldn’t even think to click
on a separate list. I just assumed all the homes would be in this list.” The
Other tab was clicked during only 4–7% of sessions, and 80% of the FSBO page
views were lost.
Meanwhile, Zillow perceived REX to be “an industry
disruptor” that had not been well received by other agents and brokers because
it did not share its listings with MLSs (in other words, it did not
“syndicate”), and it did not “pay a buy side commission.” The National
Association of Realtors requires that MLS participants, when listing homes for
sale, make “blanket unilateral offers of compensation” to other MLS members serving
as buyers’ agents. Zillow internally acknowledged that REX was “poised to be a
casualty” of the change, and in fact it was.
Falsity/misleadingness: Misleadingness was a fact issue that
couldn’t be resolved on summary judgment; Zillow’s own internal records might
suffice as extrinsic evidence for that.
Literal falsity: The Third Circuit has held that, although a
plaintiff has the burden to prove falsity, a court may find that “a completely
unsubstantiated advertising claim by the defendant is per se false without
additional evidence from the plaintiff to that effect.” And an assertion of
fact may be literally false by necessary implication “when, considering the
advertisement in its entirety, the audience would recognize the claim as
readily as if it had been explicitly stated.” Under these standards, “Agent
listings” and “Other listings,” considered together and in context, were
literally false by necessary implication. “When the labels are viewed
side-by-side, the unambiguous assertion is that one tab includes homes listed
for sale by agents and the second tab contains all other listings, i.e., homes
for sale by their owners or by non-agents.”
It was undisputed that REX was a broker and/or agent. Thus,
“[b]y relegating REX’s listings to the ‘Other listings’ tab, Zillow falsely
stated by necessary implication that REX was not (or did not employ) an agent.”
Zillow’s own study showed that no participant construed the tab labels in the
way that Zillow proposed to the court (i.e., agent listings and additional
agent listings). (Unsurprisingly, because that’s a Borgean category: what could
distinguish “agent listings” from “additional agent listings”?) The FAQ didn’t
fix the deceptiveness because it didn’t define “MLS” or indicate that agents
didn’t have to belong to an MLS. Summary
judgment on falsity to REX.
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