Ron Paul Order, March
Ron Paul Order, March
Ron Paul Order, March
RON PAUL 2012 PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE, INC., v. JOHN DOES, 1-10, Defendants. _____________________________________/ Plaintiff,
No. C 12-0240 MEJ ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFFS AMENDED EX PARTE APPLICATION FOR EXPEDITED DISCOVERY Docket No. 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 In this lawsuit, the Doe Defendants are alleged to be the owners of a YouTube and Twitter account named NHLiberty4Paul. Compl., Dkt. No. 1, 13. Under this pseudonym, Defendants uploaded a video on YouTube entitled Jon Huntsmans Values that attacks the former Republican primary nominee and concludes with the following text: American Values and Liberty Vote Ron Paul. Compl. 10, 12. Nine days after the videos release, Plaintiff filed a complaint in this Court asserting claims for: (1) false designation of origin in violation of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. 1125(a); (2) false description and representation in violation of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. 1125(a); and (3) common law libel and defamation. Compl. 17-41. Plaintiff then filed an ex parte application seeking to take expedited discovery from YouTube and Twitter so that it could learn the Defendants identities. Dkt. No. 5. The Court denied this application without prejudice because Plaintiff failed to address the proper legal standard for expedited discovery. Dkt. No. 8. Plaintiff has now amended its ex parte application and refiled it with the Court. Dkt. No. 12. The Public Citizen Litigation Group, American Civil Liberties Union Foundation, Electronic Frontier Foundation, and Digital Media Law Project which the Court has permitted to act as Amici in this matter oppose Plaintiffs ex parte application. See Dkt. Nos. 9,
11, and 15. The Court has considered the papers submitted by counsel and reviewed the relevant legal authorities. For the reasons explained below, Plaintiffs amended ex parte application for expedited discovery is DENIED WITHOUT PREJUDICE. One of the principal issues raised by Amici concerns the legal standard that the Court should employ when deciding whether to grant expedited discovery to parties attempting to identify anonymous online speakers. When the Court denied Plaintiffs first ex parte application for expedited discovery, it ordered that any subsequent request must meet the four requirements outlined in Columbia Insurance Company v. seescandy.com: (1) Plaintiff must identify the missing parties with sufficient specificity so that the Court can determine that Defendants are real people who could be sued in federal court; (2) Plaintiff must identify all previous steps taken to locate Defendants; (3) Plaintiffs complaint must be able to withstand a motion to dismiss; and (4) Plaintiff must demonstrate that there is a reasonable likelihood of being able to identify Defendants through the requested discovery such that service of process would be possible. 185 F.R.D. 573, 578-80 (N.D. Cal. 1999). Rather than using the above standard from Columbia Insurance, Amici urge the Court to adopt the tests employed by Dendrite International, Inc. v. Doe, 775 A.2d 756 (N.J. App. 2001), and Highfields Capital Management, L.P., v. Doe, 385 F.Supp.2d 969 (N.D. Cal. 2005). Dkt. No. 15 at 7 (The Court should reaffirm the Dendrite/Highfields Capital standard is the applicable rule in this [D]istrict for deciding whether to grant early discovery to identify anonymous non-commercial speakers). Dendrite explained the standard as follows: (1) Plaintiff must undertake efforts to notify the anonymous posters about the request for expedited discovery; (2) Plaintiff must specifically identify the statements at issue; (3) the Court must carefully review Plaintiffs complaint to ensure that it could withstand a motion to dismiss; (4) Plaintiff must present sufficient evidence to support each element of its claims on a prima facie basis; (5) lastly, the Court must balance Defendants First Amendment right of anonymous free speech against the strength of the prima facie case presented and the necessity for the disclosure. 775 A.2d at 760. Highfields Capital, relying in part on Dendrite, set forth the following standard: (1) Plaintiff must first produce competent evidence 2
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addressing all of the inferences of fact essential to support a prima facie case on all elements of its claims; and (2) if the Plaintiff is able to do this, then the Court must weigh the competing interests between protecting Defendants First Amendment and privacy rights against Plaintiffs interest to advance the litigation. 385 F.Supp.2d at 975-76. The Court declines to accept Amicis invitation to determine which of the above legal standards should be employed for the evaluation of Plaintiffs ex parte application. Such a determination is not necessary for the purposes of this decision. Columbia Insurance, Dendrite, and Highfields Capital all require Plaintiff to establish that it has filed a valid complaint so the Court can be assured that the alleged claims will withstand a motion to dismiss. The Court agrees that this determination is mandatory because it is the only way to prevent the unnecessary disclosure of anonymous individuals who may have not committed any misconduct. Because the Court finds, as explained in detail below, that Plaintiff has failed to satisfy this common requirement from Columbia Insurance, Dendrite, and Highfields Capital, the Court denies Plaintiffs amended ex parte application without addressing any other prongs from the three legal standards or which standard should be used in future cases.1 The Court therefore begins its analysis by examining Plaintiffs first two claims under the Lanham Act. Both Plaintiff and Amici agree that these claims are only actionable if Defendants use of Plaintiffs trademark was commercial in nature. See 15 U.S.C. 1125(a); Hancock Park Homeowners Assn Est. 1948 v. Hancock Park Homeowners Assn, 2006 WL 4532986, at *4 (C.D. Cal. Sept. 20, 2006) (citing Bosley Med. Inst., Inc. v. Kremer, 403 F.3d 672, 676 (9th Cir. 2005) (applying Bosley to a claim under 15 U.S.C. 1125(a) and reaffirming that the Lanham Act, The Court notes that at this stage of the proceedings it is only concerned about the viability of Plaintiffs federal claims under the Lanham Act. Plaintiffs jurisdictional statement provides that this Court has subject matter jurisdiction based on these first two trademark claims. Compl. 6. Plaintiffs third claim for libel and defamation only relies on the Courts ability to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over this state law claim. Id. Thus, if Plaintiff cannot establish that it can withstand a motion to dismiss on its trademark claims, issues develop regarding this Courts subject matter jurisdiction over Plaintiffs remaining claim for libel and defamation. See 28 U.S.C. 1367(c)(3) (a court may decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction if it has dismissed all claims over which it has original jurisdiction). 3
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expressly enacted to be applied in commercial contexts, does not prohibit all unauthorized uses of a trademark) (internal quotations omitted)). Accordingly, Plaintiff must establish that its trademark claims are connected with the sale of goods and services. Bosley, 403 F.3d at 676 (explaining that the Lanham Act was only designed to protect consumers who have formed particular associations with a mark from buying a competing product using the same or substantially similar mark and to allow the mark holder to distinguish his product from that of his rivals). Plaintiff argues that it has met the Lanham Acts commercial use requirement for two reasons: (1) Defendants used a Twitter account to post the video on YouTube and both of these websites are commercial in nature; and (2) the video was intended to frustrate Plaintiffs fundraising efforts and increase the amount of money contributed to Presidential nominees other than Ron Paul. Dkt. No. 12 at 17-18. The first reason is meritless. Plaintiff essentially argues that any individual who uses a commercial website whether it is to post a video on YouTube or send an e-mail through Gmail has automatically satisfied the commercial use requirement under the Lanham Act. While it is true that the websites for both Twitter and YouTube may have commercial purposes, it is Defendants conduct that is at issue here. And it is this conduct that in some way must be connected to the sale of goods and services for the Lanham Act to apply. Accordingly, Plaintiffs first reason does not persuade the Court that Defendants own use of Plaintiffs trademark was in a commercial or competitive context. See Stanislaus Custodial Deputy Sheriffs Assn v. Deputy Sheriffs Assn of Stanislaus Cnty., 2010 WL 843131, at *7 (N.D. Cal. Mar. 10, 2010).2 Plaintiffs second reason requires a closer analysis. The Court agrees with Plaintiff that Bosley does not directly address the question of whether an individual who improperly uses the trademarked name of another politician to express an opinion has done so in a commercial context
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In Bosley, the Ninth Circuit evaluated a defendants website that did not have any commercial links but did provide links to a discussion group that in turn contained others advertisements. 403 F.3d at 678. Bosley held that this roundabout path to the advertising of others is too attenuated to render [the defendants] site commercial. Id. In a similar manner, using another companys commercial website to post a comment or video is just far too attenuated to result in an individuals own conduct automatically meeting the Lanham Acts commercial use requirement. 4
that satisfies the requirements of the Lanham Act. But Bosley does explain that [T]rademark infringement protects only against mistaken purchasing decisions and not against confusion generally. 403 F.3d at 677 (quoting Lang v. Ret. Living Publg Co., Inc., 949 F.2d 576, 582-83 (2d. Cir. 1991). Bosley goes on to stress that the appropriate inquiry is whether [the defendant] offers competing services to the public. Id. at 679; see also Stanislaus, 2010 WL 843131, at *6 (analyzing Bosley and other cases to find that if an actual sale of goods is not involved, the infringer must be engaged in some form of commercial competition). The District Court in Utah summarized the Tenth Circuits view on this issue as follows: In our view, the defendant in a trademark infringement and unfair competition case must use the mark in connection with the goods and services of a competing producer, not merely to make a comment on the trademark owner's goods and services . . . . Unless there is a competing good or service labeled or associated with the plaintiff's trademark, the concerns of the Lanham Act are not invoked. Koch Indus., Inc. v. Does, 2011 WL 1775765, at *3 (D.Utah May 9, 2011) (citing Utah Lighthouse Ministry v. F.A.I.R., 527 F.3d 1045, 1054 (10th Cir. 2008). In Koch, the defendants created a website that impersonated the plaintiffs company website, and then issued a press release that contained a political message and was designed to appear as coming from the plaintiff. Id. at 1. The Koch Court dismissed the plaintiffs Lanham Act claims for failing to meet the commercial use requirement, explaining that the defendants press release and fake website did not relate to any goods or services and were only political in nature. Id. at 3. Koch specifically rejected the plaintiffs theory that the defendants issued the press release to attract more contributions to their activities since the defendants never even identified themselves in their press release or fake website.3 Id. at 4. While Koch is not exactly analogous to this matter, it as well as other decisions in the
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Hancock Park found that the commercial use requirement is not satisfied unless there is a profit motive involved. See 2006 WL 4532986, at *5 (Neither Plaintiffs nor Defendants actions involve commercial transactions in any sense, nor are they acting with a motive for profit. Plaintiffs services cannot be considered commercial merely because they are funded by freely given donations). The Court does not address this issue, but only notes that it raises additional questions that were not discussed in Plaintiffs amended ex parte application, leading the Court to have concerns regarding Plaintiffs complaint being able to withstand a motion to dismiss. 5
Ninth Circuit establish that a critical issue in this analysis is whether the trademark infringer is alleged to have offered any competing services. Plaintiff does not address this issue in its amended ex parte application. And the Courts review of the video shows that Defendants did not identify themselves as a competing organization and did not solicit any contributions. More importantly, and why Plaintiffs request for expedited discovery is denied, the complaint does not contain any allegations that Defendants released the video to compete with Plaintiff.4 In Stanislaus, the Court dismissed the plaintiffs trademark claims for the same lack of factual allegations: Pursuant to Thompson and Bosley, defendants use of plaintiffs name must both affect interstate commerce and also be used in a commercial or competitive context. Here, the First Amended Complaint does not set forth allegations of the commercial use of the trade name. Nor does the FAC allege that defendant used the name to try to secure any kind of commercial benefit or competitive advantage. Plaintiff fails to allege that Defendants [sic] are operating any type of businesses or conducting or offering any services or otherwise using Plaintiffs trade name in connection with any goods or services. Plaintiff must allege that some goods, services or other form of competition [sic] with the infringing organization. The FAC must allege that [sic] use of plaintiffs trademark in a commercial or competitive context. 2010 WL 843131, at *7. For these similar reasons, Plaintiff fails to satisfy the Court in its amended ex parte application that its trademark claims are viable, particularly based on the current allegations in Plaintiffs complaint. Before allowing Plaintiff to conduct discovery to identify the anonymous Defendants, the Court is mindful of the common requirement outlined in Columbia Insurance, Dendrite, and Highfields Capital and wants to be assured that Plaintiffs federal claims will withstand a motion to dismiss. At this point, Plaintiff has failed to assure the Court of this and ///
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Rather, Plaintiffs complaint makes only a few passing references that the video was intended to frustrate Plaintiffs fundraising efforts with prospective donors. The plaintiff in Bosley made a similar allegation, claiming that the defendant used the mark in connection with goods and services because he prevented users from obtaining the plaintiffs goods and services. 403 F.3d at 678. Bosley dismissed this theory since it had nothing to do with whether the defendant offered competing services to the public. Id. at 679. 6
Dated: March 8, 2012 _______________________________ Maria-Elena James Chief United States Magistrate Judge
13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Although the Court does not analyze Plaintiffs claim for libel and defamation, the claim appears on its face to be plausible and well pled. Plaintiffs decision to not pursue this claim in state court and instead assert novel trademark claims that appear to have never previously been addressed by the federal courts requires this Court to first be satisfied that they are viable claims before permitting expedited discovery. 7
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