|
Creo
Products Inc & anor v. Website in Development
[Indexed as:
Creo Products Inc & anor v. Website in Development]
[Indexed as:
Creo-scitex.com]
WIPO Arbitration
and Mediation Center
Administrative
Panel Decision
Case No. WIPO
D2000-0160
Commenced:
March 27, 2000
Judgment:
May 1, 2000
Presiding Panelist:
Philip N. Argy
Second level
domain name - Domain name dispute resolution policy - Canadian corporation
- Israeli corporation - Name of Respondent - U.S. Trademark - U.S. Service
mark - Disparate multiple trademark owners - Combination of trademarks
- Response to Complaint - Identical - Confusingly similar -
closely similar - Rights or interests - Evidence of bad faith registration
and use - Practice.
Two organizations
purport to join together as the Complainant: Creo Products Inc, a Canadian
corporation and Scitex Corporation, an Israeli corporation. Complainant
Creo Products was registrant of United States trademark and service mark
CREO. Complainant, Scitex Corporation, was registrant of US trademark SCITEX.
Complainants
entered into agreements by which substantial assets and subsidiaries of
Scitex Corporation are to be transferred to Creo Products Inc. Complainants
anticipated using the trade name CREOSCITEX or CREO-SCITEX with the new
corporate entity.
Complainant
Creo Products Inc. adopted the mark, "CREOSCITEX" for the new division
and was licenced by Complainant Scitex Corp. to use the name and mark "SCITEX."
Also, Complainant filed three pending US trademarks applications for CREO,
CREOSCITEX and CREO-SCITEX. Respondent, Website in Development, registered
the domain name, CREO-SCITEX.COM.
Complainant
contended that "closely similar" second level domain names may be divided
into four categories, the first and fourth of which were applicable under
the present circumstances. The four categories were (1) names that involve
changes in punctuation; (2) names that involve minor changes; (3) names
comprising translations and transliterations of trademarks or service marks;
and (4) names that are clearly misleading.
Complainant
contended that under category (1), Respondent's second level domain name
and mark CREO-SCITEX was confusingly similar to Complainant Creo Products
Inc.'s mark CREOSCITEX in appearance, sound and commercial impression,
since they differed by a hyphen only. Complainant also alleged that Respondent's
domain name was also closely similar to Complainants' marks CREO and SCITEX
under category (4), because Respondent's domain name suggested an association
or relationship to Complainants, which did not exist and, if used by parties
other than Complainants, would cause confusion in the marketplace.
Complainant
alleged that Respondent appeared to have no rights or legitimate interests
in respect of the domain name at issue and appeared to have registered
the said domain name in bad faith to transfer their domain name to Complainant
for compensation.
Complainant
received an email from Bevans8576@aol.com, which was not signed and did
not identify the referenced WIPO proceeding but which did mention the domain
name at issue, creo-scitex.com. This email was received within the 20-day
time limit for responses to the Complainant and stated that, "this shall
act as my official response." Complainant's official representative sent
a copy of the email to the Centre.
Held,
Domain Name Not Transferred to Complainant.
The Jerusalem
Post report of the merger stated that the proposed name of the merged group
was to be "Scitex/Creo" whereas a later press release located on the Complainant's
creo.com website stated that the new business division was to be named
" Creo/Scitex. Complainant applied for the second and third of its new
trademark applications after the media, reported unconfirmed rumours about
the merger and after an official press conference. Completion of the merger
was not officially announced and commencement of business operations was
not initiated until after the Complaint had been filed. CREO-SCITEX is
not the mark in use on the merged group's website where the predominant
mark is a stylised form of "CreoScitex" together with a device mark.
Disparate
multiple trademark owners cannot combine to initiate an administrative
proceeding seeking the transfer to only one of them of a domain name comprising
what might be a combination of the marks of those multiple owners. In the
case of a complaint that seeks a transfer of a domain name (as distinct
from a cancellation), the ICANN Rules plainly envisage a Complainant to
whom the domain name might be transferred who must have rights in the mark
or marks to which the domain name in dispute is said to be identical or
confusingly similar.
Thus, the
domain name is not identical or confusingly similar to any mark in which
Complainant Scitex Corporation has rights. However, Complainant Creo Products
Inc has acquired common law rights in the mark CreoScitex and the domain
name in dispute is confusingly similar to this mark on the basis that the
hyphen between "creo" and "scitex" is not sufficient to differentiate creo-scitex
from creoscitex.
The email
from BEvans8576@aol.com asserted that "Creo is our founder's last name,
and the company is Scitex & Company". The email also asserted that
a company of that name has been receiving mail addressed to "Creo-Scitex"
for some six years. Despite this, and even assuming for the sake of argument
that the email was a timely formal Response to the Complaint, a Respondent
named "Website in Development", with no explained connection to Scitex
& Company, could not have any rights or legitimate interests in respect
of the domain name creo-scitex.com.
There appears
to exist circumstances potentially capable of satisfying paragraphs 4(c)
of the Policy such that the Respondent may be found to have rights or legitimate
interests in the domain name. The test proposed by the Complainant in relation
to another point, is that prior to the Respondent's receipt of notice of
the present dispute it was preparing to use the domain name in connection
with a bona fide offering of goods or services is less convincing, but
at least "conceivable." This could be inferred from the email assertion
that "we are in the process of trademarking this very name." Nevertheless,
there is insufficient evidence to prove that Respondent have rights or
legitimate interests in the domain name.
Complaint
submitted that since Israel, where Respondent is located, is approximately
10 hours ahead of Las Vegas, Nevada, therefore, Respondent conceivably
could have read the Jerusalem Post article or otherwise learned of the
announcement on the date when the Respondent registered the name CREO-SCITEX.COM."
However, since the article cited the name "Scitex/Creo," it seems unlikely
if the Respondent had seen that article, and wished to sell it back to
them, that the resultant registration would be for "creo-scitex", rather
than "scitex-creo". Scitex-creo.com remains available, so the Respondent
cannot therefore be said to have regarded creo-scitex as its second choice.
There is no evidence that the Respondent has made any approach whatsoever
to either of the Complainants, and there is certainly no evidence of any
amount being demanded for the domain name. On the contrary, if the email
already referred to is indeed a submission by Respondent, it contains an
assertion of entitlement to the domain name rather than evincing any intention
to sell it to either of the complainants.
If the Complainant
had been able to prove bad faith registration in accordance with paragraph
4(b)(i) of the Policy, it would also have had to prove bad faith use. However,
paragraph 4(b) of the Policy has been interpreted in previous decisions
under the Rules so as to make independent proof of bad faith registration
and bad faith use unnecessary if its provisions are satisfied.
Given the
circumstances that first Complainant owned the domain name www.creoscitex.com,
a domain name that is identical to the mark in use on its web site, and
identical to one of the marks the subject of its pending trade mark application,
the paragraph 4(b)(ii) circumstances were unproven.
Given that
there is no evidence of the nature of the Respondent's business, the circumstances
in paragraph 4(b)(iii) of the Policy have not been shown to exist, and
the Complainant has not alleged that the Respondent is a competitor in
business to either of the Complainants.
Since the
domain name in dispute does not appear to have been delegated, so that
a browser directed to the domain name receives only an error message, there
is no scope for the application of paragraph 4(b)(iv) of the Policy since,
without a web presence the Respondent cannot attract or divert Internet
users to its own website or other on-line location, nor create much likelihood
of confusion with the complainant's mark. Taking into account the entirety
of the evidence, the Panel is forced to conclude that the Complainant has
failed to prove that the domain name was registered or is being used in
bad faith by the Respondent.
Policies
referred to
Uniform
Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy, adopted August 26, 1999
Registration
Agreements referred to
--
Cases referred
to
--
Panel Decision
referred to
--
Argy, Panelist:
-
Result: In
this case the Panel:
(i) has not
found all of the necessary elements proven; and
(ii) dismisses
the Complaint.
1. The Parties
1.1 Two organisations
purport to join together as the Complainant: Creo Products Inc, a Canadian
corporation of 3700 Gilmore Way, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada; and
Scitex Corporation, an Israeli corporation of 3 Hamada Street, Herzlia,
Israel.
1.2 The Respondent
is Website in Development, organisational status unknown, but with an address
at 8635 W. Sahara, Las Vegas, Nevada, in the United States.
2. The Domain
Name and Registrar
2.1 The domain
name upon which this complaint is based is creo-scitex.com. The registrar
of the domain name as at the date of the Complaint is Network Solutions
Inc ("NSI").
3. Procedural
History
3.1 The Complaint
was made pursuant to the Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy
approved by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers ("ICANN")
on October 24, 1999 (the "Policy") in accordance with the Rules for Uniform
Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy, also approved by ICANN on October
24, 1999 (the "Rules") and the WIPO Supplemental Rules for Uniform
Domain Name
Dispute Resolution Policy in effect as of December 1, 1999 (the "Supplemental
Rules").
3.2 The Complaint
was received by the WIPO Arbitration and Mediation Center (the "Centre")
by email on March 15, 2000 and in hard copy by courier on March 16, 2000.
The hard copy of the Complaint was accompanied by the fees prescribed under
the Supplemental Rules.
3.3 The Centre
sent a Request for Registrar Verification to NSI on March 20, 2000 by email.
NSI responded to the Centre's request by email on March 21, verifying (1)
that NSI was the Registrar for the domain name in dispute, (2) that the
Respondent was the current registrant of the domain name in dispute, and
(3) that creo-scitex.com had an ‘active' status. The Panel notes that the
response from NSI also confirmed that NSI had received a copy of the Complaint
from the Complainant, as required by Supplemental Rules paragraph 4(b).
3.4 Compliance
with formal requirements having been satisfied on March 21, 2000, the Centre
sent a Notification of Complaint and Commencement of Administrative Proceeding
on March 23, 2000 to the email address of the Respondent as advised by
NSI in its Verification Response (ultradomains@aol.com) as well as to postmaster@creo-scitex.com.
Hard copy documents were also despatched to the Respondent in Las Vegas,
USA and to the Technical Contact shown in NSI's whois database, namely,
IC, Auto at a Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA address on the same day by
EMS Worldwide courier. The Centre also attempted on March 23 to notify
the Respondent's Technical contact by facsimile transmission. However,
it is clear from the ‘RAPPORT D'ERREUR TX' document furnished to the Panel
that the facsimile transmission was not successful. The emails to each
of ultradomains@aol.com and autoinc@store.yahoo.com were returned with
a 550 error (user unknown) whilst the email to postmaster@creo-scitex.com
was returned with a host name lookup failure. The Centre subsequently,
on April 3, 2000, successfully emailed the Notification to the Technical
Contact's correct email address of autonic@store.yahoo.com. The Panel has
been furnished with documentary evidence, in the form of a tracking record,
that the EMS couriers to the Respondent and to the Technical Contact were
in fact delivered on March 27 at 9.50 am and 10.05 am respectively in USA.
Although the Panel has not been provided with delivery documentation for
other messages, the Panel is thus satisfied that the Respondent had actual
notice of the Complaint as least by the time of delivery of the hardcopy
Notification.
3.5 Although
the Notification made specific reference to the 20 calendar day period
within which the Respondent was entitled to submit a response to the Complaint,
the Centre had received no response by April 13, 2000 and, accordingly,
sent a Notification of Respondent Default on that day to the Respondent
and the Complainant via the correct contact details referred to in paragraph
3.4 of this decision. The
Centre advised
the Complainant's representative that the Notification of Default had been
delivered by EMS courier (as shown in the relevant tracking record) to
both the Respondent and its Technical Contact on April 17, 2000.
3.6 On April
19, 2000, after the Administrative Panel had been appointed but before
it had commenced its deliberations or received the hard copy case file
from the Centre, the Panel received a copy of an email sent by the Complainant's
authorised representative to the Centre in the following terms:
"We also have been unable to reach the Respondent with the e-mail address
listed in his domain name registration, namely, "ultradomains@aol.com".
However, our client (Complainant) recently received an e-mail, presumably
from the Respondent, regarding this proceeding. That e-mail originated
from
"BEvans8576@aol.com". The e-mail was not signed and did not identify the
referenced WIPO proceeding, but it did mention the domain name at issue,
creo-scitex.com. The e-mail also stated that Respondent had "just sent
in
my response...." The e-mail did not include a copy of the response, but
was
sent on Tuesday, April 4, 2000 at 2:15 PM.
We have no further information about how to contact the Respondent."
3.7 The Panel,
noting that April 4, 2000 was within the 20 day period referred to in the
Rules, and being concerned to apply the requirement of paragraph 10 of
the Rules, that each Party be given a fair opportunity to present its case,
directed the Centre to attempt to communicate with the email address BEvans8576@aol.com
to see if any response might be elicited. On April 21, 2000 the Panel was
copied on an email in the following terms from BEvans8576@aol.com to the
Centre (which was also copied to the Complainant's authorised representative):
3.8 "This shall
act as my official response.
The name creo-scitex.com
is a domain name that is associated with our
company, which
has been for six years. Our post office box can confirm this
to be so by
phoning them at (702) 363-4433 who will confirm Creo-Scitex has
been our company,
and a company in existence for nearly 6 years that they
have been
collecting mail from us addressed to Creo-Scitex. Creo is our
founders last
name, and the company is Scitex & Company. Further, we are in
the process
of trademarking this very name.
The fact that
this company has decided to rename their company is purely
coincidental,
and we should not be the victims of their attempt to play David
& Goliath
simply because we intend to use our company name, the same they
have recently
decided to name their own.
I do hope this
response is adequate, as I am unaware of any other procedure
in making
my response known to you.
I did in fact
speak directly with this company a few weeks ago or a legal
representative
of theirs in Seattle, Washington, and they actually apologised
for this situation
to me after the lady I spoke with confirmed what I am
telling you.
Thank you for
your attention in this matter.
Regards,
B. Evans
cc: James R.
Creo
Scitex &
Company
3.9 All other
procedural requirements appear to have been satisfied.
4. Factual
Background
4.1 Activities
of the Complainant
The following
information was asserted as fact in the Complaint:
The complainants
have entered into agreements by which substantial assets and subsidiaries
of Scitex Corporation are to be transferred to Creo Products Inc. It is
anticipated that the acquired assets and subsidiaries will be operated
under the trade name CREOSCITEX or CREO-SCITEX. Complainant Creo Products
Inc. has adopted the mark CREOSCITEX for use in connection with the products
and services of the new division. The name and mark "SCITEX" will be used
by Complainant Creo Products Inc. under a license from Complainant Scitex
Corporation Ltd. Accordingly, in addition to Complainants' interests in
these proceedings resulting from the inclusion of their individual marks
in the offending domain name, Complainants have a common interest in the
domain name because it is identical to the name and mark selected by Complainants
for use with new corporate entities being formed by Complainant Creo Products
Inc.
4.2 The Complainants'
Trade Marks
Complainant
Creo Products Inc holds US trade mark and service mark registrations for
CREO in international trademark classes 9 and 42. The Complaint states
that the marks have been in use in commerce since August 1985. Complainant
Scitex Corporation holds a US trade mark registration for SCITEX in international
class 9. The Complaint states that the mark has been in use since "at least
as early as May 1972". Details of the two CREO and single SCITEX marks
(the "Marks") are contained in Annex C to the Complaint. The following
extract from the Complaint describes the goods and services for which the
Marks are registered:
Electro-optical
scanners for detecting flaws in plastics, electro-optical data tape readers,
and electro-optical non-contact film printers; Direct write heads for exposing
processless films using lasers; laser diode arrays; film recorders, image
recorders, computer programs for diagnosing, operating and interfacing
laser diode rays; film recorders image recorders, direct write heads, photo
plotters and parts therefor; direct write plotters, graphic arts recorders;
Electronic color image processing apparatus.
4.3 In addition
to the Marks, the Complaint then describes three pending applications for
US trademarks. These are for CREO (filed on February 18, 2000), CREOSCITEX
(filed on March 7, 2000) and CREO-SCITEX (filed on March 8, 2000). The
goods and services to which the applications relate are much more extensive
than those in respect of which the Marks are presently registered, but
cover at least the digital
imaging products
for which the Marks are registered.
5. The Complainant's
Contentions
5.1 The Complaint
asserts that each of the elements specified in paragraph 4(a) of the Policy
have been satisfied.
5.2 In reference
to the element described in paragraph 4(a)(i) of the Policy, the Complaint
asserts that the domain names in dispute are, on their face, identical
to the Marks or, in any event, confusingly similar to the Marks.
5.3 The Complaint
asserts:
"A second level
domain name is identical to a trademark or service mark if it is made up
of identical alphanumeric characters and punctuation marks, in the identical
order. The second level domain name CREO-SCITEX is identical to Complainant
Creo Products Inc.'s mark CREO-SCITEX. The alphanumeric strings and punctuation
are identical. Identical marks and domain names are unquestionably confusingly
similar.
"Closely similar"
second level domain names may be divided into four categories, namely,
(1) names that involve changes in punctuation; (2) names that involve minor
changes; (3) names comprising translations and transliterations of trademarks
or service marks; and (4) names that are clearly misleading. Categories
(1) and (4) are applicable under the present circumstances
Under category
(1), a second level domain name is closely similar to a trademark or service
mark if it is made up of identical alphanumerical characters in identical
order, disregarding punctuation marks. Under this standard, Respondent's
second level domain name CREO-SCITEX is closely similar to Complainant
Creo Products Inc.'s mark CREOSCITEX in that it simply involves a change
in punctuation i.e., exclusion of the hyphen in Complainant's mark. Complainants'
submit that this distinction is not sufficient to distinguish the name
and mark in the minds of consumers and that the second level domain name
CREO-SCITEX is therefore confusingly similar to Complainant Creo Products
Inc.'s name and mark CREOSCITEX. The name and mark are confusingly similar
in appearance, sound and commercial impression, since they differ by a
hyphen only.
Respondent's
domain name CREO-SCITEX.COM is also closely similar to Complainants' marks
CREO and SCITEX under category (4), namely, the offending domain name is
clearly misleading. The name CREO-SCITEX.COM suggests an association or
relationship to Complainants which does not exist and, if used by parties
other than Complainants, will cause confusion in the marketplace.
Complainants'
marks are fanciful and have no specific meaning in the English language.
Accordingly, they are not commonly occurring in domain names or otherwise."
5.4 In reference
to the element in paragraph 4(a)(ii) of the Policy, the Complaint asserts
that the Respondent has no rights or legitimate interests in the domain
names. It submits that there is no relationship between the Complainant
and the Respondent that would give rise to any licence, permission or other
right by which the Respondent could own or use the domain names.
5.5 In reference
to the bad faith requirement of paragraph 4(a)(iii) of the Policy, the
Complainant asserts that the domain names have been registered to sell,
rent or otherwise transfer to the Complainant (as referred to in paragraph
4(b)(i) of the Policy).
6. Discussion
and Panel Findings
6.1 This section
is structured by reference to the elements required by paragraph 4(a) of
the Policy.
6.2 Domain
Names identical or confusingly similar to Complainant's Marks
It is apparent
from the Complaint that the first complainant's application for the second
and third of its new trademark applications follows the announcement of
the merger of certain business divisions of the two complainant corporations
which was the subject of some media reports of unconfirmed rumours on December
13 and 23, 1999 and an official press conference on January 19, 2000. Completion
of the
merger does
not appear to have been officially announced until April 4, 2000 (see http://www.creo.com/00Releases/000404a.html)
and the complainants' new web site makes clear that the new merged organisation
did not even commence its business operations until after the Complaint
had been filed (see http://www.creoscitex.com/).
The Panel particularly
notes from Annex E to the Complaint that, at the time of the January 19,
2000 official press conference, the name of the merged group according
to The Jerusalem Post was proposed to be "Scitex/Creo" and Scitex corporation
was to become the largest shareholder in Creo Products Inc. Although this
is the only ‘name' evidence submitted to the Panel by the Complainant,
the Panel has also
noted the
following sentence in a January 18, 2000 press release on the first complainant's
web site (see
http://www.creo.com/00Releases/000118a.html):
"The new graphic
arts group - tentatively named Creo/Scitex - will combine the prepress
operations of Scitex and Creo. It will operate as a division of Creo Products
Inc., which will continue to trade under the name Creo."
The Complaint
submits that Respondent's domain name CREO-SCITEX.COM is confusingly similar
to Complainants' marks CREO, CREOSCITEX and SCITEX, and identical to Complainant
Creo Products Inc.'s mark CREO-SCITEX. However, CREO-SCITEX is the mark
the subject of the application filed only on March 8, 2000. It is not the
mark in use on the merged group's website where the predominant mark
is a stylised
form of "CreoScitex" together with a device mark.
Whilst the
domain name in dispute comprises a mark of the first complainant and a
mark of the second complainant, separated only by a hyphen, the Panel is
required to be satisfied for the purposes of paragraph 4(a) of the Rules
that the domain name is identical or confusingly similar to a trade mark
or service mark in which the complainant has rights. The Panel does not
believe that disparate multiple trade mark owners can combine to initiate
an administrative proceeding seeking the transfer to only one of them of
a domain name comprising what might be a combination of the marks of those
multiple owners. In the case of a complaint that seeks a transfer of a
domain name (as distinct from a cancellation), the Rules plainly envisage
a Complainant to whom the domain name might be transferred who must have
rights in the mark or marks to which the domain name in dispute is said
to be identical or confusingly similar.
The Panel is
not satisfied that the domain name is identical or confusingly similar
to any mark in which complainant Scitex Corporation has rights. However,
the Panel is satisfied that the complainant Creo Products Inc has, albeit
very recently, acquired common law rights in the mark CreoScitex and finds
that the domain name in dispute is confusingly similar to such mark on
the basis that the hyphen between "creo"
and "scitex"
is not sufficient to differentiate creo-scitex from creoscitex.
6.3 The Respondent
has no rights or legitimate interests in the Domain Names
The Complainant
denies, and there is no evidence to the contrary, that there is any relationship
between the Complainant and the Respondent that would give rise to any
licence, permission or other right by which the Respondent could own or
use the domain names. The email from BEvans8576@aol.com that is set out
in paragraph 3.8 above assets that "Creo is our founder's last name, and
the company is Scitex & Company". The email also asserts that a company
of that name has been receiving mail addressed to "Creo-Scitex" for some
six years. Despite this, and even assuming for the sake of argument that
the email was a timely formal Response to the Complaint, the Panel is unable
to conclude that a Respondent named "Website in Development", with no explained
connection to Scitex & Company, could have any rights or legitimate
interests in respect of the domain name creo-scitex.com, and the Panel
so finds.
6.4 The Domain
Names have been registered and are being used in bad faith
The Panel notes
that paragraph 4(a)(iii) of the Policy requires both registration in bad
faith AND use in bad faith before the Panel can grant the relief claimed.
The Complaint makes only an allegation of registration in bad faith. The
basis for this bare allegation is described as follows
"Respondent
registered the domain name presumably primarily for the purpose of selling
it to the Complainants or to a competitor of Complainants' for consideration
in excess of Respondent's out of pocket costs directly related to the domain
names." (emphasis added).
The Complainant
therefore seeks to rely on paragraph 4(b)(i) of the Policy, which provides:
"circumstances
indicating that you have registered or you have acquired the domain name
primarily for the purpose of selling, renting, or otherwise transferring
the domain name registration to the complainant who is the owner of the
trade mark or service mark or to a competitor of that complainant, for
valuable consideration in excess of your documented out-of-pocket costs
directly related to the domain name".
To justify
this assertion the Complaint then refers to the January 18, 2000 pre-merger
publicity already noted in this decision, and submits that:
"Israel is
approximately 10 hours ahead of Las Vegas, Nevada, where Respondent is
located. Therefore, Respondent conceivably could have read the article
or otherwise learned of the announcement on January 18, 2000. On Tuesday,
January 18, 2000, Respondent registered the name CREO-SCITEX.COM" (emphasis
added).
However, as
noted above, the Jerusalem Post article foreshadowed the name "Scitex/Creo"
for the new group. It therefore seems unlikely that if the Respondent had
seen that article, and wished to utilise that information for the purpose
asserted by the Complainant, ie to sell it back to them, that the resultant
registration would be for "creo-scitex", rather than "scitex-creo". The
Panel notes that scitex-creo.com remains available, so the Respondent cannot
therefore be said to have regarded creo-scitex as its second choice.
6.5 In this
case, despite Complainant's bald assertions to the contrary, the evidence
is quite inadequate to show that the Respondent registered the domain name
for the primary purpose of selling, renting or otherwise transferring it
to the Complainant or one of its competitors. There is circumstantial evidence
of a chronology of events which, if corroborated by other evidence, might
lead to the conclusion for which the complainant contends. However, no
such evidence has been presented to the Panel.
Paragraph 4(b)(i)
of the Policy also requires that the consideration demanded by the Respondent
for the domain name be in excess of the Respondent's documented out of
pocket costs directly related to the domain names. There is no evidence
that the Respondent has made any approach whatsoever to either of the Complainants,
and there is certainly no evidence of any amount being demanded for the
domain name. On the contrary, if the email already referred to is indeed
a submission by the Respondent, it contains an assertion of entitlement
to the domain name rather than evincing any intention to sell it to either
of the complainants.
Accordingly,
the Panel finds that the circumstances in paragraph 4(b)(i) of the Policy
do not exist.
6.6 If the
Complainant had been able to prove bad faith registration in accordance
with paragraph 4(b)(i) of the Policy, it would also have had to prove bad
faith use. None is alleged. However, paragraph 4(b) of the Policy provides:
" . . .the
following circumstances, in particular but without limitation, if found
by the Panel to be present, shall be evidence of the registration and use
of the domain name in bad faith: . ." (emphasis added).
Paragraph 4(b)
of the Policy has been interpreted in previous decisions under the Rules
so as to make independent proof of bad faith registration and bad faith
use unnecessary if its provisions are satisfied. For the purposes of this
decision, and in the interests of consistency of interpretation of the
Policy, the Panel proposes to accept the interpretation adopted in earlier
decisions. It is therefore necessary, despite the Panel's finding that
bad faith registration has not been shown and that bad faith use has not
been alleged, to consider the various provisions of paragraph 4(b), other
than 4(b)(i), to see whether bad faith registration and use might otherwise
be found.
6.7 It is apparent
to the Panel that the circumstances in paragraph 4(b)(ii) are not made
out, there being no relevant (or any) pattern of conduct on the part of
the Respondent proven by the Complainant. The Panel's own observation is
that the first complainant since March 24, 2000 has been the owner of the
domain name www.creoscitex.com, a domain name that is identical to the
mark in use on the first complainant's web site, and identical to one of
the marks the subject of a pending trade mark application by the first
complainant. In those circumstances the Panel is unable to find proven
the circumstances referred to in paragraph 4(b)(ii) of the Policy.
6.8 Given that
there is no evidence of the nature of the Respondent's business, the circumstances
in paragraph 4(b)(iii) of the Policy have not been shown to exist, and
the Complainant has not alleged that the Respondent is a competitor in
business to either of the Complainants.
6.9 Since the
domain name in dispute does not appear to have been delegated, so that
a browser directed to the domain name receives only an error message, there
is no scope for the application of paragraph 4(b)(iv) of the Policy since,
without a web presence the Respondent cannot attract or divert Internet
users to its own website or other on-line location, nor create much likelihood
of confusion with the complainant's mark. Indeed, it seems to the Panel
that a user entering www.creoscitex.com would successfully navigate to
the first complainant's site and a user entering creo-scitex.com would
receive an error message suggesting that an incorrect address had been
entered. The Panel is unable to find the existence of the circumstances
referred to in paragraph 4(b)(iv) of the Policy.
6.10 Having
regard to the foregoing, the Complainant has neither directly nor indirectly
shown the existence of facts or circumstances sufficient to demonstrate
either bad faith registration or bad faith use of the domain name by the
Respondent.
6.11 Paragraph
4(c) of the Policy prescribes circumstances which, if found by the Panel
to exist, demonstrate the Respondent's rights or legitimate interests to
the domain name for the purposes of paragraph 4(a)(ii). For good order
the Panel notes that, if the email is to be regarded as the Respondent's
response, and the Panel is prepared to so treat it purely for the purposes
of considering the application of paragraph 4(c) of the Policy, there appear
to exist the circumstances at least potentially capable of satisfying paragraphs
4(c)(i) or 4(c)(ii) of the Policy such that the Respondent may be found
to have rights or legitimate interests in the domain name. The email asserts
that Scitex & Company has, by virtue of its founder's name being Creo,
been commonly known as Creo-Scitex for some six years. That could, if proven
with some corroborative evidence, perhaps from the "post office box" referred
to in the email, satisfy the requirements of paragraph 4(c)(ii) of the
Policy. Less convincing, but at least "conceivable", to use the test proposed
by the Complainant in relation to another point, is that prior to the Respondent's
receipt of notice of the present dispute it was preparing to use the domain
name in connection with a bona fide offering of goods or services. This
could be inferred from the assertion that "we are in the process of trademarking
this very name".
6.12 Despite
the potential for paragraph 4(c) to have application to the Respondent,
the Panel nevertheless finds insufficient evidence to enable it to make
any positive findings in that regard, and therefore remains of the view,
as stated in paragraph 6.3 above, that the Respondent has no rights or
legitimate interest in the domain name..
6. 13 Taking
into account the entirety of the evidence, the Panel is forced to conclude
that the Complainant has failed to prove that the domain name was registered
or is being used in bad faith by the Respondent.
7.
Decision
The Complainant
having failed to prove all of the requirements of paragraph 4(a) of the
Policy, the Panel formally dismisses the Complaint.
Philip N. Argy
Presiding
Panelist
Dated: May
1, 2000
Name
Not Transferred.
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