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EAuto, L.L.C. v. Net Me Up
[Indexed as: EAuto v. Net Me Up]
[Indexed as: EAUTOMOTIVE.COM]
WIPO Arbitration and Mediation Center
Administrative Panel Decision
Case No. WIPO D2000-0104
Commenced: February 25, 2000
Judgement: April 13, 2000
Presiding Panelist: David H. Bernstein
Domain name - U.S. Trademark - Confusingly similar - Incorporating
whole mark into domain name - Respondent requesting extension for filing
of response - Respondent having legitimate interest in domain name - Respondent
using site to host automotive related information - Generic names - Prefix.
The Complainant is the holder of a trademark registration for the
mark "EAUTO" and offers a full range of automotive information through
its website (eauto.com). The Respondent provides Internet hosting and design
services to small businesses and has registered many domain names to this
effect. The domain name eautomotive.com was registered for and is
used in connection with the automotive-related businesses it hosts.
The Respondent requested, and was granted, an extension in the filing of
a response due to its principal's travel schedule.
Held, Name Not Transferred
The domain name is confusingly similar to the mark of the Complainant.
However, the Respondent does have a legitimate business interest in the
domain name. The issue of bad faith registration was therefore not
considered. However, the use of a generic name with the prefix "e"
may indicate that the Respondent did not intend to target, harass, or profit
at the expense of the Complainant.
Policies referred to
ICANN Rules for Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy
Panel Decisions referred to
EAuto, L.L.C. v. EAuto Parts, Case No. D2000 - 0096 (WIPO Apr.
9, 2000)
EAuto, L.L.C. v. Triple S. Auto Parts d/b/a King Fu Yea Enterprises,
Inc., Case No. D2000 - 0047 (WIPO Mar. 24, 2000)
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Bernstein, Panelist -
1. Parties
The complainant is eAuto, L.L.C., a Texas corporation, having its principal
place of business at Dallas, Texas, United States. The respondent is Net
Me Up, a company based in Rancho Cordova, California, United States and
licensed to do business in Sacramento, California, United States.
2. Domain Name and Registrar
The domain name at issue is eautomotive.com. This domain name is registered
with Network Solutions, Inc.
3. Procedural History
Complainant initiated this proceeding by filing a complaint with the
World Intellectual Property Organization Arbitration and Mediation Center
(the "Center") on February 25, 2000. After confirming that the Complaint
satisfied the Rules for Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (the
"Rules"), the Center notified Respondent of the commencement of this proceeding
on March 3, 2000. Federal Express has confirmed that the Complaint was
delivered to a person at the address provided in Respondent's domain name
registration.
On March 21, 2000, Respondent's representative requested an extension
of time from the Center to respond to the Complaint on account of its principal's
travel schedule. On March 22, 2000, the Center granted Respondent an extension
until March 29, 2000 to submit a Response. On March 28, 2000, Respondent
submitted its Response to the Complaint. On March 31, 2000, the Center
appointed David H. Bernstein as the sole panelist in this matter. No further
communications have been received from the parties.
4. Factual Background
According to the Complaint, Complainant is in the business of offering
a full range of automotive information to companies and individuals through
its Internet site at www.eauto.com. Since January 15, 1996, Complainant's
Internet site has provided information and links to the Internet sites
of manufacturers, distributors, and retailers of auto parts and auto accessories,
auto makers, auto dealers, automotive services, automotive news and events,
automotive news groups and automotive e-mail lists. The domain name eauto.com
was registered to the founder of Complainant on July 15, 1995, and was
assigned to Complainant on August 29, 1997. Complainant also owns the domain
name eauto.net, which it registered on January 31, 2000.
Complainant owns a United States trademark registration for the mark
EAUTO (the "Mark"), Reg. No. 2,035,083, for "providing multiple-user access
to a global computer information network for the transfer and dissemination
of a wide range of information." This mark was registered to the founder
of Complainant on February 4, 1997, and was assigned to Complainant on
August 29, 1997.
Complainant alleges that the Mark has acquired and enjoys substantial
goodwill and a valuable reputation. Complainant also alleges that it has
expended and continues to expend a significant amount of time and money
to advertise, promote, and offer for sale its services under the Mark.
In its Response, Respondent states that it has been in the business
of providing Internet hosting and design services to small businesses,
including automotive-related businesses, since 1997. In connection with
this business, it has registered many domain names. On April 19,1997, Respondent
registered the domain name eautomotive.com for the purpose of providing
a recognizable second-level domain name to the automotive-related businesses
it hosts and assigns to sub-directories of the eautomotive.com site. At
present, customers of the eautomotive.com site include Limousine Club,
a limousine car service in California, (www.eautomotive.com/ limoclub.html)
and Dent Technologies, an auto body repair shop in California (www.eautomotive.com/denttech.html).
On October 1, 1997, Complainant's attorney sent Respondent a cease and
desist letter objecting to Respondent's use of the domain name eautomotive.com.
On October 8, 1997, Respondent replied by denying that its domain name
infringed any of Complainant's intellectual property rights, but also offered
to sell its domain name to Complainant for $15,000. Complainant wrote back
on November 11, 1997, rejecting Respondent's offer to sell its domain name
and challenging Respondent's claim that its domain name was not likely
to cause confusion with the Mark and the domain name eauto.com.
Respondent since has stated that it offered to sell the domain name
eautomotive.com before its Internet hosting business was fully developed
and that it now considers this offer to sell withdrawn. Respondent further
states that it regularly receives offers to buy its second-level domain
names, and that, since at least December 1998, it has turned down all such
offers. To substantiate this assertion, Respondent submitted copies of
more than three dozen emails in which it rejected offers to purchase such
domain names as e-tv.com, ewomen.com, ecount.com, e-ads.com, evoting.com,
edining.com, efilms.com, ebookings.com, epages.com, edirectory.com, ebuilders.com,
ejournal.com, emedical.com, enetwork.com, eideas.com, erealty.net and eplanet.net.
5. Parties' Allegations
Complainant alleges that Respondent's registration and use of the domain
name eautomotive.com violates its rights in its trademark EAUTO and its
domain name eauto.com. Specifically, Complainant alleges that the domain
name eautomotive.com is confusingly similar to the Mark and the domain
name eauto.com, and therefore Respondent's use of the domain name eautomotive.com
is likely to cause consumer confusion. Complainant further alleges that
Respondent has no legitimate interest in the domain name eautomotive.com
because (i) Respondent registered the domain name fifteen months after
Complainant's first use of the Mark, two months after Complainant's federal
registration of the Mark, and twenty-one months after Complainant registered
its domain name, and (ii) Respondent's domain name does not reflect the
name of its corporate identity. Finally, Complainant alleges that Respondent
acted in bad faith in registering and using the domain name eautomotive.com,
as proven by (i) Respondent's use of the domain name in connection with
a site that, on its home page, shows no automotive-related goods or services,
(ii) its registration of dozens of other domain names, many of which combine
the prefix "e" with the generic name of a good or service, (iii) its decision
to register the domain name eautomotive.com notwithstanding its likely
knowledge of Complainant's own registration and use of the EAUTO trademark
and the domain name eauto.com, (iv) its continued use of the domain name
eautomotive.com after receiving notice from Complainant of its rights in
the Mark and in the domain name eauto.com, and (v) its offer to sell the
domain name eautomotive.com to Complainant for an amount in excess of its
registration costs.
In its defense, Respondent alleges that its registration and use of
the domain name eauotomotive.com is not confusingly similar to the mark
EAUTO or the domain name eauto.com. Specifically, Respondent states that
(i) Complainant's U.S. registration of the Mark should not give it preclusive
rights against the domain name eautomotive.com because Complainant registered
the Mark in 1997 for a broader scope of services than now is permitted
under U.S. Patent and Trademark Office rules, and (ii) in the two years
that it has used the domain name eautomotive.com, it is aware of no instances
of actual confusion between this domain name and either the Mark or the
domain name eauto.com. Respondent also argues that it has a legitimate
interest in this domain name because it uses the name in connection with
its business of hosting and designing automotive-related Internet sites.
Lastly, Respondent states that it registered the domain name eautomotive.com
and the other domain names Complainant has identified in good faith in
connection with the Internet identity services it provides its clients,
and that it had no knowledge of Complainant's eauto.com Internet site at
the time it registered this domain name.
6. Discussion and Findings
Paragraph 4(a) of the Policy provides that, to justify transfer of a
domain name, a Complainant must prove each of the following:
(1) 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;
(2) that the Respondent has no rights or legitimate interests in respect
of the domain name; and
(3) that the Respondent has registered and has been using the domain
name in bad faith.
For reasons identical to those set forth in EAuto, L.L.C. v. Triple S.
Auto Parts d/b/a King Fu Yea Enterprises, Inc., Case No. D2000 - 0047 (WIPO
Mar. 24, 2000), and EAuto, L.L.C. v. EAuto Parts, Case No. D2000 - 0096
(WIPO Apr. 9, 2000), the Panel concludes that the domain name eautomotive.com
is confusingly similar to the trademark EAUTO. That is because, like eautolamps.com
and eautoparts.com, eautomotive.com incorporates in its entirety a mark
that has been registered by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, and which
thus is entitled to a rebuttable presumption of distinctiveness. However,
the Panel notes that EAUTO is on the weaker side of the range of distinctive
marks.
The Panel expressly rejects Respondent's claim that its domain name
is not confusingly similar to the mark EAUTO and the domain name eauto.com
because Complainant's U.S. trademark registration for the Mark is overbroad,
and therefore invalid. Even if the trademark registration were subject
to attack (an issue this Panel need not reach), it would be sufficient
for Complainant to rely on its common law rights in the eauto.com mark.
Ownership of a registration is not a prerequisite to filing an action for
abusive domain name registration.
The Panel also rejects Respondent's alternative argument that the absence
of actual confusion to date proves that its domain name is not confusingly
similar to the mark. The test under this first factor is not whether there
has been confusion, but rather, whether the domain name and the trademark
are sufficiently similar that confusion could occur. Although evidence
of actual confusion would be persuasive evidence of that the name and mark
are confusingly similar, the absence of actual confusion does not preclude
such a finding.
Respondent's arguments are more persuasive with respect to the second
prong of the domain name transfer analysis: Whether it has any rights or
legitimate interests in respect of the domain name. For reasons similar
to those set forth in EAuto, L.L.C. v. EAuto Parts, the domain name eautomotive.com
is descriptive of a business that offers, through the Internet, information
or sales related to automotive goods and services. Given that this is precisely
what Respondent does -- it uses the eautomotive.com domain name to offer
subdirectory web hosting services to automotive-industry businesses --
it appears that Respondent has a legitimate interest in this domain name.
Documentary proof that this is Respondent's legitimate business was submitted
with the Response.
In light of this finding, the Panel need not consider Complainant's
assertions of bad faith. Nevertheless, the Panel does expressly reject
Complainant's contention that Respondent's registration of dozens of other
e-something domain names is evidence of its bad faith. To the contrary,
Respondent's registration of these other domain names, all of which use
a generic word, provides strong evidence that Registrant registered and
used the domain name eautomotive.com in connection with its overall Internet
hosting operations, and not to target, harass, or profit at the expense
of Complainant. This is further evidence of Respondent's legitimate interest
in this domain name.
7. Decision
The Panel finds that Respondent has registered a domain name (eautomotive.com)
that is identical or confusingly similar to Complainant's trademark (EAUTO).
Respondent, however, has demonstrated that it has a legitimate interest
in respect of that domain name. Accordingly, the Panel concludes that the
domain name eautomotive.com should not be transferred to Complainant eAuto,
L.L.C.
David H. Bernstein
Presiding Panelist
Dated: April 13, 2000
Domain Name Not Transferred
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