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Generic Top Level Domain Name (gTLD) Decisions |
Motorola, Inc. v. RTU Inc.
Claim Number: FA0210000127709
PARTIES
Complainant
is Motorola, Inc., Libertyville, IL
(“Complainant”) represented by Lisa K.
Shebar, of Katten Muchin Zavis
Rosenman. Respondent is RTU Inc., Rolling Meadows, IL (“Respondent”)
represented by Stephen H. Sturgeon, of Law Offices of Stephen H. Sturgeon &
Associates.
REGISTRAR AND DISPUTED DOMAIN NAME
The
domain name at issue is <moscad.com>,
registered with Network Solutions, Inc.
PANEL
The
undersigned certifies that he has acted independently, and impartially, and to
the best of his knowledge has no known conflict
in serving as Panelist in this
proceeding.
Rodney
C. Kyle as Panelist.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Complainant
submitted a Complaint to the National Arbitration Forum (the “Forum”)
electronically on October 7, 2002; the Forum received
a hard copy of the
Complaint on October 9, 2002.
On
October 9, 2002, Network Solutions confirmed by e-mail to the Forum that the
domain name <moscad.com> is
registered with Network Solutions and that the Respondent is the current
registrant of the name. Network
Solutions has verified that Respondent is bound by the Network Solutions
registration agreement and has thereby agreed to
resolve domain-name disputes
brought by third parties in accordance with ICANN’s Uniform Domain Name Dispute
Resolution Policy (the
“Policy”).
On
October 10, 2002, a Notification of Complaint and Commencement of
Administrative Proceeding (the “Commencement Notification”),
setting a deadline
of October 30, 2002 by which Respondent could file a Response to the Complaint,
was transmitted to Respondent
via e-mail, post and fax, to all entities and
persons listed on Respondent’s registration as technical, administrative and
billing
contacts, and to postmaster@moscad.com by e-mail.
An
extension to November 19, 2002 for Respondent to submit a Response was granted
by the Forum on October 28, 2002.
A
timely Response was received and determined to be complete on November 19, 2002.
Complainant
filed a timely Additional Submission on November 25, 2002.
Respondent
filed a timely Additional Submission on December 4, 2002.
On December 6, 2002, pursuant to Complainant’s request
to have the dispute decided by a single-member
Panel, the Forum appointed Rodney C. Kyle as
Panelist.
On December 19, 2002, the Panel extended the due date
for its decision to 26 December 2002.
RELIEF SOUGHT
Complainant
requests that the domain name be transferred from Respondent to Complainant.
PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS
Each
Party cited and discussed one or more case decisions as part of their
contentions. Mainly for brevity of these reasons for decision,
the Panel has
generally not set out those citations or discussions at length and has instead
abstracted, or extracted from, those
discussions.
A.
Complainant
In
the Complaint, Complainant basically makes five main contentions numbered
herein as “(1)” through “(5)”:
(1) as to
Policy paragraph 4(a)(i), that
(a) there
exist and are owned by it
(i)
two
Japanese trademark registrations, 3197022 for MOSUKYADO and 3285842 for
MOSUKADO MOSUKYADO, and that said expressions are the
Japanese phonetic
equivalents of MOSCAD (hereinafter generally “said mark”) (paragraph 12) and
(ii)
since
before 10 January 2001, common-law trademark rights for said mark based on use
of said mark in association with “certain communications
products” in the
United States since 1992, said use being through an authorized dealer system
and being not only in the United States
but throughout the world such that said
mark is well known as associated with Complainant and has acquired a
distinctiveness and
secondary meaning signifying Complainant (paragraphs 11 to
14 and paragraph 20),
(b)
said mark is fanciful and arbitrary and deserving of the most heightened
protection (paragraph 20) and
(c)
Respondent registered <moscad.com>
and said domain name is substantially identical and confusingly similar to
said mark (paragraphs 14 and 21);
(2) apparently as to either or both of
Policy paragraphs 4(a)(ii) and 4(a)(iii), as particularized in “(3)” and “(4)”
of this list, that
(a)
without authorization from Complainant (paragraphs 14 and 15)
(i)
said
registration of said domain name occurred on January 10, 2001 (paragraph 14),
(ii)
Respondent
thereafter commenced using said registration of said domain name for a web site
(paragraph 14) and
(iii)
despite
Complainant having “no relationship with, or to, Respondent”, Respondent
maintains said web site which makes repeated reference
to Complainant, said
mark, and a famous mark of Complainant i.e. MOTOROLA (paragraph 15),
(b) said web site states that said web site is
sponsored by Integrated Telecommunications Systems, Inc. (hereinafter “ITS”)
and contains
a link to the ITS web site <itsinfo.com> (paragraph 16),
(c) ITS and Complainant entered a Motorola
Communications Products Value Added Reseller Agreement effective September 15,
1998 (hereinafter
“the ITS Agreement”) whereby ITS is an authorized dealer of
Complainant’s MOSCAD products (paragraph 16),
(d) Respondent is neither an authorized
dealer of Complainant’s MOSCAD products nor otherwise authorized by Complainant
to use said mark
(paragraph 16),
(e) exactly
as stated in the Complaint,
(i) “Even
if ITS has purportedly conferred upon Respondent the right to use Complainant’s
MOSCAD mark, ITS has no authority to do so since
Section 9 of the ITS Agreement
states, in part, that ITS ‘will not adopt . . . or use [Complainant’s]
trademarks or trade names,
or any confusingly similar word or symbol, . . . nor
(to the extent [ITS] may have any power to prevent such use) allow such marks
or
names to be used by others’” (paragraph 17),
(ii) “In
addition, even if ITS’ standing as an authorized distributor of Complainant’s
MOSCAD products would have ordinarily conferred
ITS with the lawful right to
use the MOSCAD mark to advertise its distributorship services, ITS contracted
away any such right in
the ITS Agreement.
Specifically, Section 9 of the ITS Agreement states that ITS may only
use Complainant’s trademarks ‘[w]ith [Complainant’s] prior written
approval,’
and the ‘Trademark and Proprietary Marks’ section of Attachment C to the ITS
Agreement (the ‘Attachment’) prohibits ITS
from using any of Complainant’s
trademarks ‘except in a form specifically approved in advance in writing by
[Complainant].’” (paragraph
18) and
(iii) “Moreover,
the Amendment executed September 15, 1998, to the ITS Agreement (the
‘Amendment’) further restricts ITS’ use of Complainant’s
marks, including
Complainant’s MOSCAD mark, as follows:
[ITS]
hereby acknowledges the validity of the trademark ‘MOTOROLA’ . . . as well as
all other proprietary marks which are affixed
to the [MOSCAD] [p]roducts and
agrees that the aforesaid trademarks and proprietary marks are and shall remain
the property of [Complainant]. [ITS]
shall not do anything to infringe upon, harm, or contest the validity of the
aforesaid trademarks or other proprietary marks
of [Complainant]. . . . [ITS]
agrees that it shall not use the trademark ‘MOTOROLA,’ [or] any other
[Complainant] trademark or tradename
[sic], . . . as part of the name under
which it conducts business.” (paragraph 18) and
(f) on or
before July 3, 2002 there were conversations between Respondent’s
Administrative Contact, ITS, and Complainant, that said conversations
were
futile, and that thereafter written communications occurred, first on July 3,
2002 a cease-and-desist letter from Complainant’s
in-house counsel to ITS which
letter also requested Respondent to transfer the domain name registration to
Complainant and then on
August 14, 2002 a response thereto from an attorney
purporting to represent an entity called UTS, Inc. and stating that said
attorney
had received a copy of said cease-and-desist letter and that UTS, Inc.
had legally secured said domain name and will not tender it
to Complainant
(paragraph 19);
(3) as
to Policy paragraph 4(a)(ii), that
(a) at
all times relevant herein, Respondent has had no legitimate interest in said
mark and, thus, no legitimate interest in the <moscad.com> domain name (paragraph 22), including that
(i)
Respondent’s
<moscad.com> web site
identifies itself as “Your MOSCAD Marketplace” and states, “The MOSCAD
Marketplace is the portal through which you can
order MOSCAD products and
utilities, access documentation, valuable news and information” (paragraph 22)
and
(ii)
while
Respondent appears to offer such products and services through its <moscad.com> web site, Respondent
does so illegitimately by unlawfully holding itself out as being sponsored or
authorized by, or affiliated
with, Complainant when it is not, thereby causing
confusion to consumers (paragraph 22),
(b) if
Respondent purports to derive an interest in the <moscad.com> domain name through sponsorship or authorization
from, or affiliation with, ITS, then Respondent is acting equally unlawfully
(paragraph 23) since
(i)
pursuant to
the ITS Agreement, ITS cannot use the MOSCAD mark in any manner without
Complainant’s prior written approval, let alone
allow other parties to use the
MOSCAD mark (paragraph 23) and
(ii)
indeed, ITS
is prohibited from allowing other parties to use the MOSCAD mark and, moreover,
has an obligation to prevent such use
to the extent that it can (paragraph 23),
(c) Respondent
has no agreements, legal or otherwise, with Complainant authorizing Respondent
to use the MOSCAD mark (paragraph 24),
(d) Respondent
has not been personally identified, or commonly known, by names comprised, in
whole or in part, of the term “MOSCAD” (paragraph
24),
(e) Respondent owns no trademark registration
for any mark comprised, in whole or in part, of the term MOSCAD, nor has
Respondent applied
for any such trademark registration (paragraph 24) and
(f) any use by Respondent of the MOSCAD mark
in connection with the offering of goods and services constitutes infringement
of Complainant’s
valid trademark rights (paragraph 24);
(4) as
to Policy paragraph 4(a)(iii), that
(a) Respondent
registered the <moscad.com>
domain name in bad faith with full knowledge of Complainant and Complainant’s
MOSCAD mark (paragraph 25),
(b) Respondent’s web site and <moscad.com> repeatedly refers to
Complainant (paragraph 25),
(c) by virtue of Complainant’s Japan trademark
registration, Respondent was put on constructive notice of Complainant’s rights
to the
MOSCAD mark prior to registering the domain name (paragraph 25),
(d) Respondent
has been placed on actual notice of such rights by Complainant prior to
Complainant instituting this administrative proceeding
by virtue of
Complainant’s oral and written communications with Respondent’s Administrative
Contact, ITS (paragraph 25),
(e) it
is simply not possible to conceive of any plausible circumstance where
Respondent could have coincidentally registered the domain
name without first
knowing of and intentionally infringing upon the MOSCAD mark (paragraph 25),
(f) Respondent
has used the <moscad.com>
domain name in bad faith in violation of Policy paragraph 4(b)(iv) (paragraph
26), in that
(i)
Respondent
has intentionally attempted to attract, for commercial gain, Internet users to
Respondent’s web site at <moscad.com>,
as well as ITS’ web site at <itsinfo.com>, by creating a likelihood of
confusion with Complainant’s MOSCAD and MOTOROLA
marks as to the source,
sponsorship, affiliation, or endorsement of each web site (paragraph 26) and
(ii)
Respondent
unlawfully holds itself out on its <moscad.com>
web site as being sponsored or authorized by, or affiliated with, Complainant
when it is not, thereby causing confusion to Internet
users (paragraph 26) and
(g) Respondent has used the <moscad.com> domain name in bad faith
in violation of Policy paragraph 4(b)(iii) by preventing customers who are
looking for either or both
Complainant and Complainant’s authorized MOSCAD
dealers at <moscad.com> from
finding them, thereby disrupting the business of either or both of Complainant
and Complainant’s authorized MOSCAD dealers
(paragraph 27); and
(5) that
evidence that is rationally probative of contention
(a) “(1)(a)(i)” of this list is in “registration
information” attached as Complaint Exhibits F and G (paragraph 12),
(b) “(1)(c)” and “(2)(a)(i)” of this list are
in Complaint Exhibit D (paragraph 14),
(c) “(2)(a)(ii)”,
“(2)(a)(iii)”, “(2)(b)” of this list are in a copy of Respondent’s <moscad.com> web site attached as
Complaint Exhibit H (paragraphs 15 and 16),
(d) “(2)(c)”,
“(2)(e)(i)”, and “(2)(e)(ii) and “(2)(e)(iii)” of this list are in a copy of
the ITS Agreement attached as Complaint Exhibit
I (respectively paragraphs 16,
17, and 18),
(e) “(2)(f)”
of this list is in a copy of said communications attached as Complaint Group
Exhibit J (paragraph 19),
(f) “(3)(a)(i)”
of this list is in a copy of Respondent’s <moscad.com>
web site attached as Complaint Exhibit H (paragraph 22) and
(g) “(4)(d)”
of this list is in Complaint “Group
Exhibit I” (paragraph 25).
B.
Respondent
In
the “Introduction” and “Conclusion” of the Response the Respondent respectively
makes two somewhat repeated and interwoven contentions,
basically as to the
Panel’s powers in this proceeding. They
are, first, that a respondent’s contention that its dispute with a complainant
is “not a clear case of ‘cybersquatting’ and ‘cyber
piracy’“ and is instead
“legitimate” creates a disability, of a panel appointed in a mandatory
administrative proceeding under the
Policy, against that panel determining the
dispute; and, second, that a panel appointed in a mandatory administrative
proceeding
under the Policy has a disability against determining disputed
factual matters.
In
the main body of the Response, Respondent basically makes four main contentions
herein numbered “(1)” through “(4)”. They are that
as to Complaint contentions
as to
(1) Policy paragraph 4(a)(i), “the Complaint does
not provide adequate proof, evidence or substantiation to prove that the
Complainant
has trademark rights that are controlling in this proceeding” and
“the Complainant fails to present competent evidence that it has
legal rights
in the trademark”, and more particularly (but seemingly without limiting the
generality thereof) that
(a) Japan is a distant country and trademark
registration therein, of a phonetic equivalent therein, does not suffice and
(b) “there is not adequate proof of any
common law trademark rights”, such that since “Complainant herein has not
provided adequate proof
of trademark rights, the Complaint fails to prove the
first element that is required to obtain transfer of a domain name”;
(2) Policy paragraph 4(a)(ii), Complainant
has the burden of proof under Policy paragraph 4(a)(ii) and “has failed to
prove that the Respondent
has no rights or legitimate interest in respect of
the domain name”, and more particularly that
(a) as to Complaint contentions referred to
above in “(3)(a)” and (5)(f)” of the list of Complainant’s contentions,
(i) “Respondent is sponsored by, is an
affiliate of and is of common ownership with [ITS]” and
(ii) “ITS is a bona fide reseller of
Motorola products as described in the Complaint”,
(b) as to Complaint contentions referred to
above in “(3)(b)” of the list of Complainant’s contentions,
(i) the
word “moscad”
(A) is not mentioned in the ITS Agreement and
(B) has not been proven to be a trademark or
trade name of Complainant which is subject to the ITS Agreement,
(ii)
“Complainant relies on a provision of a contract between Complainant and ITS
stating that ‘with prior written approval, VAR may
also use the Motorola
trademarks and trade names to promote and solicit sales of the Product if VAR
does so in strict accordance
with the terms of (Attachment) to this Agreement”,
and more particularly that
(A)
a bona fide
reseller must utilize the trademarks and trade names of the products that the
reseller is selling,
(B) ITS
has for many years utilized the Motorola trademarks and trade names to promote
and solicit sales of the Motorola products and
(C) management
of Complainant expressed their approval and commendation for the efforts of ITS
and its affiliate RTU, Inc.,
(iii) a
panel appointed in a mandatory administrative proceeding under the Policy, has
a disability against deciding a contract action
and “Complainant’s arguments
based on the interpretation of contract language” are an attempt to make this
proceeding a contract
action and are therefore an attempt to have the Panel act
“outside the jurisdiction of the UDRP authority” and
(iv)
the ITS Agreement is “a contract between the Complainant and ITS -- an legal
entity separate and distinct from Respondent”,
(c) as to Complaint contentions referred to
above in “(3)(f)” of the list of Complainant’s contentions,
(i) “Complainant has not proven trademark
rights” and
(ii) “Respondent’s sponsor was an
authorized distributor of Complainant’s products”, plus exhaustion of rights
(i.e. “a reseller of
products has a right to utilize the product name as a part
of the marketing activities”, and more particularly that “a reseller may
display the brand of a product as a part of the marketing of the product”) and
accordingly “that a respondent may display the name
of the product in a domain
name that the retailer uses as a part of the marketing of the product” and
(d) a panel, appointed in a mandatory
administrative proceeding under the Policy, has a disability against
determining disputed factual
matters;
(3) Policy paragraph 4(a)(iii), Complainant
has the burden of proof under Policy paragraph 4(a)(iii) and “Complainant’s
filing does not
provide adequate proof or evidence to support the allegation
that Respondent acted in bad faith” and instead “the Respondent did
not
register the domain name in bad faith” but rather had “a legitimate interest”,
and more particularly
(a)
as to
Complaint contentions referred to above in “(4)(a)” and “(4)(c)” of the list of
Complainant’s contentions,
(i)
“Respondent’s principal did, in fact, conduct a US trademark search and, of
course, did not find a trademark registration or application”
and
(ii) “[i]t is unreasonable to hold that a
respondent is put on constructive notice because of a phonetically similar
trademark registered
in a distant country” because “[i]t is virtually
impossible for any registrant of a domain name to search for phonetically
similar
trademarks in all countries of the world”,
(b)
as to
Complaint contentions referred to above in “(4)(f)” of the list of
Complainant’s contentions, “resellers of a product have a
right to utilize the
trademark and description of the products as a part of the marketing of the
products “,
(c)
as to
Complaint contentions referred to above in “(4)(g)” of the list of
Complainant’s contentions,
(i) “Respondent is marketing the products
of Complainant”,
(ii) “Respondent is not attempting to
give the impression that it is, in fact, the manufacturer of the Complainant’s
products” and
(iii)
“[d]istributorships are intended to attract customers for the sale of a
manufacturer’s products”, so “the use of a product name
as a source or
identification of the products is a perfectly acceptable use of the name of the
manufacturer’s name in marketing activities”
and “[a]ny retailer must advertise
and market the brand of the product that is being retailed” whereas “[t]his argument
presented
by Complainant could be used to allege the wrongdoing of any
retailer” and instead “[a]ny retailer has the implicit permission to
display
the brand name as an integral part of the retailing process” and
(d) “[n]either Respondent, his company, his
business activities nor any of his associates have”
(i)
“had any intent for commercial gain to misleadingly divert consumers or to
tarnish any alleged trademark/service mark”,
(ii) “registered or acquired the domain
name in question for the purpose of selling, renting, or otherwise transferring
the domain
name registration to the complainant who is alleged to be the owner
of the trademark or service mark or to a competitor of the complainant,
for
valuable consideration in excess of the documented out-of-pocket costs directly
related to the domain name”,
(iii) “registered the domain name in
question in order to prevent the owner of any trademark or service mark from
reflecting the mark
in a corresponding domain name, (and neither he, his
company, his business activities nor any of his business activities have
engaged
in a pattern of such conduct)”,
(iv)
“registered the domain name for the purpose of disrupting the business of the
complainant or any competitor” or
(v) “[b]y using the domain names in
question, … attempted to attract, for commercial gain, Internet users to their
web sites or other
on-line location, by creating a likelihood of confusion with
any alleged mark as to the source, sponsorship, affiliation, or endorsement
of
a web site or location or of a product or service on a web site or location”;
and
(4) that evidence that is rationally
probative of contention
(a) “(2)(b)(ii)(C)” of this list is in “an
affidavit of Mr. Thomas J. Cahill who was the National Business Manager of the
VAR channel
for Complainant” (displayed in the Response as Exhibit B) and
(b) each
of “(3)(d)(i)”, “(3)(d)(ii)”, “(3)(d)(iii)”, “(3)(d)(iv)”, and “(3)(d)(v)” is
in said Response Exhibit B and in an “Affidavit
of Respondent’s owner”
(displayed in the Response as Exhibit A) and in an “Affidavit of a business
associate of Respondent” (displayed
in the Response as Exhibit C).
C.
Additional Submissions
Complainant’s
Additional Submission basically includes the following:
(1) as set out in Part II.A thereof: the
Response should be refused as untimely in that the Respondent improperly
(indeed under false
pretenses and contrary to the Forum’s Supplemental Rules)
obtained from the Forum a twenty day extension of time (from October 30,
2002
to November 19, 2002) for submitting a response and Complainant was prejudiced
by that improperly obtained extension , and more
particularly
(a) this proceeding commenced on October 10,
2002 when the Forum served Respondent with the Complaint (and thereby a
deadline of October
30, 2002 for submitting a response was set by Rule 5 of the
Rules made under the Policy unless under that same Rule the Forum granted
an
extension prior to October 30, 2002),
(b) by an Order on October 28, 2002 the Forum
granted an extension to file a Response by November 19, 2002,
(c) said Order was granted based on
misrepresentations to the Forum by Respondent, and more particularly
(i)
contrary to the requirement s of the Forum’s Supplemental Rule 6(a)(i) (that
“Any request by the Respondent for an extension …
must … be submitted after the
parties have first conferred with each other to see if they could reach an
agreement concerning the
requested extension”) and 6(b) (that “No request for
an extension will be approved if any of the conditions set forth in Paragraph
6(a) have not been performed”), Respondent failed to confer, or even attempt to
confer, with Complainant’s attorney (who was Complainant’s
authorized
representative in this proceeding) before making any extension request and
therefore Respondent was not entitled to said
extension,
(ii) on October 25, 2002, prior to any
communication with Complainant’s attorney; Respondent e-mailed the Forum,
informally requesting
an extension of time to respond to the Complaint and
(iii) still prior to any communications with Complainant’s attorney, Respondent
filed a formal extension request (which Complainant refers to as “dated October
27, 2002”) with the Forum, which request
(A)
contains
and is premised on the following misrepresentation to the Forum: “In accordance
with NAF Supp. Rule 6(a)(i) Respondent has
conferred with Complainant
concerning this request and Complainant has not yet responded”,
(B)
was
followed, early in the morning on October 28, 2002, by a letter Respondent’s
principal faxed to Complainant’s attorney , which
letter stated that “the NAF Supplemental Rules
‘require that we contact you to request your concurrence before we submit the
[extension]
request to the NAF’“ and “If I do not receive any communication
from you by 4:00 PM today (October 28,
2002), I will assume that you do not concur with the request for the
extension”,
(C)
and faxed
letter were in turn followed on October 28, 2002 by an e-mail of 8:36 a.m. from
the Forum to the Complainant’s attorney
and to Respondent’s principal, which
e-mail was sent prior to Complainant’s attorney arriving at her office to see
the faxed letter
and had as an attachment the Order referred to in “(1)(b)” of
this list and
(D)
was not
received by Complainant’s attorney until the Forum faxed Complainant’s attorney
a copy on November 25, 2002,
(iv)
the Order has prejudiced Complainant by further delaying these proceedings
while Respondent’s <moscad.com>
web site continues to cause Complainant and its authorized MOSCAD distributors
irreparable harm daily and
(v) if the Rules and the Forum’s
Supplemental Rules are to mean anything, they should be enforced and not
disregarded and the parties allowed to
proceed despite failing to comply with such rules;
(2) as set out in Part II.B of Complainant’s
Additional Submission: even if the extension was not improperly obtained the
Response should
still be rejected because the Response
(a) was still untimely, in that the deadline
for both service and filing was November 19, 2002 and Respondent did not meet
it and instead
served Complainant’s attorney with the Response on November 20,
2002 and
(b) even if filed in a timely way (i.e. by
November 19, 2002) was, in view of the service referred to in “(2)(a)” of this
list, not served
in time and its Rule 5(b)(vii) statement is therefore a
willful misrepresentation about timely service;
(3) that evidence that is rationally
probative of contention
(a) “(1)(a)” of this list is in Exhibit A to the
affidavit of Complainant’s attorney, which affidavit is attached to the main
body of
Complainant’s Additional Submission,
(b) “(1)(b)” of this list is in a copy of the
Forum’s Order that is Exhibit E to said affidavit,
(c) “(1)(c)(i)” of this list is in paragraph
9 of said affidavit,
(d) “(1)(c)(ii)” of this list is in
paragraphs 3 and 9, and Exhibit B, of said affidavit,
(e) “(1)(c)(iii)” (preamble) of this list is
in paragraphs 8 and 9, and Exhibit H, of said affidavit,
(f) “(1)(c)(iii)(A)” of this list is in
Exhibit H of said affidavit,
(g) “(1)(c)(iii)(B)” of this list is in
paragraph 4, and Exhibit C, of said affidavit,
(h) “(1)(c)(iii)(C)” of this list is in
paragraph 5, and Exhibits D and E, of said affidavit,
(i) “(1)(c)(iii)(D)” of this list is in
paragraph 8, and Exhibit H, of said affidavit and
(j) “(2)” of this list is in paragraphs 6 and
7, and Exhibits F and G, of said affidavit.
Respondent’s
Additional Submission includes the following, basically in response to the
correspondingly numbered points of the immediately
preceding paragraph:
(1)
“In
response to Complainant’s allegations with respect to the question of whether
Complainant’s Counsel was consulted for consent
to the extension, we point out
that the facts do, in fact, indicate that a communication requesting consent
was sent to Complainant’s
Counsel.
Complainant’s Counsel could have consented or withheld consent. Complainant’s counsel did not consent. Accordingly, the decision of the NAF was
based on the premise that Counsel did not consent. The decision based on this premise was completely
appropriate. If, in the alternative,
Complainant’s Counsel had consented, the same result would have occurred. Furthermore, it is highly questionable
whether Complainant has been prejudiced by this occurrence. Prejudice has certainly not been proven.”;
and
(2)
“Complaint
alleges that a copy of the Response had not been sent to Complainant prior to
the delivery to the NAF. Complainant
fails to prove this allegation.
Complainant alleges that Respondent sent the copy to Complainant at
approximately 12:06 AM EASTERN time in the early morning of November
20. Complainant then alleges that it was
therefore impossible for the copy to be sent prior to the delivery to NAF by
midnight on November
19. However,
Complainant overlooks the fact that the deadline for the submission to NAF is
midnight CENTRAL time – which corresponds to
1:00 AM Eastern time. Accordingly, the copy was sent to
Complainant approximately one hour prior to the deadline. Accordingly, the Complainant has failed to
prove that the copy to Complainant was sent after the copy was delivered to
NAF.”
FINDINGS
In this proceeding it has not been proven
that “the domain name registered by the Respondent is identical or confusingly
similar to
a trademark or service mark in which the Complainant has rights”
within the meaning of that expression as it occurs in Policy paragraph
4(a)(i).
DISCUSSION
INTRODUCTION
Paragraph 15(a) of the Rules for Uniform Domain Name
Dispute Resolution Policy (the “Rules”) instructs this Panel to “decide a
complaint
on the basis of the statements and documents submitted and in
accordance with the Policy, these Rules and any rules and principles
of law
that it deems applicable.”
Paragraph
4(a) of the Policy requires that the Complainant must prove each of the
following three elements to obtain an order that
a domain name should be
cancelled or transferred:
(1)
the domain name registered by the Respondent is identical or confusingly
similar to a trademark or service mark in which the Complainant
has rights;
(2)
the Respondent has no rights or legitimate interests in respect of the domain
name; and
(3) the domain name has been registered and
is being used in bad faith.
In
view especially of Rule 15(a), the Panel notes four rules and principles of law that it deems applicable to
ascertaining whether each of those three elements have been proven. First,
that
Both
[dispositive] and evidential facts must, under the law, be ascertained in some one or more of four possible modes: 1. By
judicial admission (what is not disputed); 2. By judicial notice, or knowledge
(what is known or easily knowable); 3. By judicial perception (what is
ascertained directly through the senses; cf. “real evidence”);
4. By judicial
inference (what is ascertained by reasoning from facts already ascertained by
one or more of the four methods here
outlined).[1]
Second, especially as to mode “3”, that Rule
10(d) provides that “The Panel shall determine the admissibility, relevance,
materiality and
weight of the evidence.” Third, as to construing and
applying Rule 10(d), especially as to whether mode “1” rather than mode “3”
applies: a complainant’s pleading
of fact that is not disputed (or, phrased
differently, not “put in issue”) by a respondent against whom it is contended,
is an admission
by that respondent, so evidence tendered as being rationally
probative of (i.e. as being “relevant to”) establishing that fact becomes
immaterial, and hence inadmissible, as to establishing that fact.[2]
Fourth, as to whether mode “2” rather than either of mode “1” or mode”3”
applies, a canvassing of Anglo-American law and commentary shows
that
It
was not desirable, nor indeed possible, to foreclose the trier’s use of background
information but should the matter noticed be
in the forefront of the
controversy, should the fact be determinative, the law protected the adversary
by insisting that the matter
be so commonly known, and hence indisputable, that
its notice could not prejudice the opponent.[3]
and
that “The party who has the burden of proof on the issue may have to call on
the trier to judicially notice the fact when it comes
time to analyze the
question.”[4]
PROCEDURAL
MATTERS
Timeliness
of Additional Submissions
Neither
Party appears to have put in issue the timeliness of the other Party’s
Additional Submission. The Panel finds each Party has
admitted that the other
Party’s Additional Submission is timely and in any event the Panel has used its
discretion to determine whether
to consider the Parties’ additional
submissions.
Content
of Additional Submissions
On
substantive matters, neither Party’s Additional Submission provides anything
(without attempting to respectively amend the Complaint
or the Response) that
was not already apparent to the Panel as being at issue as a result of the
Complaint and the Response. The
Panel has used its authority to determine the
admissibility of each Party’s Additional Submission and has as a result
considered
the procedural points set out above under the heading of “C.
Additional Submissions”.
Respondent’s
Additional Submission contention “(1)” puts in issue Complainant’s Additional
Submission contentions “(1)” and “(3)(a)”
to “(3)(i)”. As a result, the
affidavit paragraphs and Exhibits referred to in those Complainant contentions
are material evidence.
They also appear to be relevant, and admissible, and in
rejecting Complainat’s request that the Panel refuse the Response, the Panel
notes nine aspects of them and about corresponding aspects of each Party’s
Additional Submission. The Panel does so in a context
that includes Broadcom
Corp. v. Becker, FA0 98819 (Nat. Arb. Forum Oct. 22, 2001) wherein there
was conferral between the parties prior to a formal extension request to
the
Forum and there was no information that caused the panel to question the
propriety of the Forum’s decision to grant the extension
request. (In this
case, the Parties’ Additional Submissions put such conferral in issue.)
First,
the faxed letter to formally request the Forum for an extension shows by its
header that it was sent at or about 12:47 a.m.
(i.e. at a little less than one
o’clock in the morning) on October 28, 2002.
Second,
the faxed letter to formally confer with Complainant about an extension shows
by its header that it was sent at or about 12:54
a.m. (i.e. approximately seven
minutes later but still at a little less than one o’clock in the morning).
Third,
Complainant’s contentions emphasize the fax header information, and the
reference in the fax body to “today (October 28, 2002)”,
of the 12:54 a.m. fax
yet preference the “10-27-02” signature-block date of the12:47 a.m. fax (by
repeatedly referring to it as the
“October 27, 2002 Extension Request”) to the
complete exclusion of the 12:47 a.m. fax header information. (The Panel does
however
also note that the Forum’s “Response Extension Request Form” for
instances when a complainant does not consent (i) has as its last
paragraph “In
accordance with Forum Supp. Rule 6(a)(i) Respondent has conferred with
Complainant concerning this request and Complainant
does not consent.”, but
that in Respondent’s formal extension request the last three words of that
paragraph were replaced by “has
not yet responded”; and (ii) on the line below
the signature blank, has “Dated:” followed by a date blank, but that in
Respondent’s
formal extension request that text and blank were moved up to the
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