MillerKing, LLC v. DoNotPay, Inc., --- F.Supp.3d ----, No.
3:23-CV-863-NJR, 2023 WL 8108547 (S.D. Ill. Nov. 17, 2023)
“This case pits real lawyers against a robot lawyer.” Spoiler:
the robot wins for lack of Article III standing.
DoNotPay is an online subscription service that touts its ability
to allow consumers to “[f]ight corporations, beat bureaucracy and sue anyone at
the press of a button” and bills itself as “The World’s First Robot Lawyer,” offering
legal services “related to marriage annulment, speeding ticket appeals,
canceling timeshares, breaking leases, breach of contract disputes, defamation
demand letters, copyright protection, child support payments, restraining
orders, revocable living trusts, and standardized legal documents.” But DNP isn’t actually licensed to practice
law. MillerKing, a small Chicago law firm that claims to be a direct competitor
of DNP, sued DNP for false association and false advertising under the Lanham
Act and Illinois state law. Along with state consumer protection claims, MK
alleged that DNP was engaged in the unlawful practice of law under Illinois
law. (The false association claim was based on the theory that consumers are
misled to believe that DNP is affiliated with licensed attorneys and that State
bar authorities approve of or sponsor DNP’s services.)
MK “advertises its services online and provides legal
services across various practice areas including personal injury, wrongful
death, family law, divorce law, child custody, criminal law, traffic law,
estate planning, probate, workers’ compensation, business law, municipal law,
and mediation.” It sought to represent a class of similar law firms.
DNP advertises that it uses artificial intelligence” rather
than “human knowledge.” Users can generate personalized contracts, independent
contractor agreements, non-disclosure agreements, bills of sale, prenuptial
agreements, LLC operating agreements, promissory notes, and parenting plans. It
also touts its ability to give advice on property tax appeal procedures, create
customized property tax guides, provide advice on how to appeal traffic tickets
in any city, provide services to initiate litigation and obtain a judgment, and
guide users through the process of filing a court case. For a lawsuit over
$500, DNP states that it “can generate demand letters, court filings and give
you a script to read in court.” It claims to have taken on hundreds of
thousands of parking ticket cases and overturned $4 million in parking ticket
fines; initiated more than 1,000 small claims lawsuits against a single company
in 42 states; and “processed over 2 million cases.” However, it backed off a
claim that the “robot lawyer” would soon represent someone in a courtroom by
whispering in the person’s ear exactly what to say because of “threats from
State Bar prosecutors.” Some online reviews are poor, stating that DNP has
failed to dispute parking tickets as requested, has created inadequate legal
documents, or has included inaccurate information in its forms. DNP removed
some products from its website, but it continued to advertise and promote legal
products and services including defamation demand letters, divorce
certificates, divorce settlement agreements, and numerous other categories of
legal services.
MK argued that it, and the class, have been or are likely to
be injured by the direct diversion of clients from themselves to DNP or by a
lessening of the goodwill associated with MK and the class’s goods and
services. That wasn’t enough. MK didn’t allege any lost revenue or added
expenditures as a result of DNP’s conduct. Nor did it allege that any MK client
or prospective client withheld business, considered withholding business, or even
heard of DNP. For the hundreds of thousands of parking ticket cases that DNP
claims to have taken on, for example, there was no allegation that those
customers originally were clients of MK, had considered hiring MK, or would
have sought the advice of any law firm in the first place if not for the
representations made by DNP.
As to goodwill, although the complaint alleged that DNP
provided some poor customer service, it didn’t allege that DNP’s failures were
imputed to MK specifically or lawyers generally. What about Lexmark?
Unlike MK, Static Control not only
alleged injury due to diversion of sales and reputational harm, but it also
provided the facts necessary to make those allegations plausible. Static
Control alleged Lexmark directly targeted its customers and falsely stated that
doing business with Static Control was illegal. These facts are sufficient to
state a concrete, particularized, and actual injury. MK’s general allegations
that DNP has caused a diversion of clients and loss of goodwill, on the other
hand, are not.
Even if the Court were to find that MK (a law firm) was a
“direct competitor” of DNP (an AI-based legal subscription service), the court
would not presume Article III standing from direct competition. “MK has
conflated the injury requirement for a statutory cause of action under the
Lanham Act claim with Article III’s injury-in-fact requirement.” Maybe presuming
injury works in other cases, but the
products here were different enough that the court declined to do so. “[T]he Court will not infer that MK has suffered harm
through lost clients just because DNP has gained them.”
No comments:
Post a Comment