Eli Lilly and Company v. Matt Brown
[Indexed as: Lilly v. Brown]
[Indexed as: PROZACPAGES.COM]
Case No. D2000-0350
Commenced: 12 May 2000
Judgment: 26 June 2000
Presiding Panelist: Ross Carson
Domain name - Domain name dispute resolution policy - No formal response
except for that by correspondence - Respondent claimed that others besides
himself were using the domain name at issue without impunity - Domain name
is generic - Respondent deliberately chose domain name with intent to attract
viewers to his web site - Panelist's discretion as to weight of evidence
- Famous and distinguishable trademark - Confusingly similar - Complainant
has substantial reputation in its famous trademark - Respondent tarnishing
Complainant's reputation - Creating injurious association between famous
trademark and distasteful contents of web site - Non-profit web site irrelevant
- Respondent not licensee of Complainant - Use of trademark as distinctive
part of domain name is misleading - Likelihood of confusion - Idea of pharmaceutical
preparation is suggested by domain name without Complainant's authorization
or consent.
Complainant is the registered owner of the Prozac trademark and has
used the trademark in connection with pharmaceutical preparations since
1984. Respondent registered the domain name prozacpages.com.
However, the Prozac trademark has acquired a substantial reputation and
has become well known to the public as a famous trademark, denoting the
products of the Complainant alone.
Held, Name Transferred to Complainant.
Respondent did not formally participate in the dispute resolution
process, except by way of correspondence. In his correspondence,
Respondent admitted that he deliberately chose to include the trademark
Prozac in his domain name. The domain name is identical to Complainant's
registered trademarks except for the descriptive addition "pages.com."
This domain name is confusingly similar to Complainant's Prozac trademark,
registered since 1984, in at least 70 countries.
Respondent is not associated with, affiliated with nor licensed by
Complainant to use its registered trademark for pharmaceutical preparations.
Furthermore, Respondent is not authorized by Complainant to use its trademark
in connection with a web site that contains information relating to severe
depression.
By Respondent's own admission, domain name prozacpages.com was registered
with the intent that the famous trademark would attract more visitors to
Respondent's web site than would a domain name without the famous trademark.
This is bad faith use and registration.
Policies referred to:
Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy, adopted August 26, 1999.
Panel Decision referred to
--
Carson, Panelist:
1. The Parties:
Complainant is Eli Lilly and Company, a corporation incorporated under
the laws of the State of Indiana, with a place of business at Lilly Corporate
Center, Indianapolis, Indiana 46285, U.S.A. Respondent is Matt Brown,
whose full post office address is Flat 1, 96 Palace Road, Tulse Hill, London,
SW2 3JZ, United Kingdom.
2. The Domain Name(s) and Registrar(s):
The domain name at issue is prozacpages.com. The disputed domain
name is registered with CORE Internet Council of Registrars, World Trade
Center II, 29 route de Pre-Bois, CH-1215 Geneva, Switzerland.
3. Procedural History:
Complaint was filed on April 28, 2000. The Center acknowledged
receipt of the complaint on May 3, 2000. A request for Registrar verification
was forwarded to CORE Internet Council of Registrars on May 3, 2000.
On May 9, 2000, CORE Internet Council of Registrars confirmed by e-mail
that Matt Brown, Flat 1, 96 Palace Road, (Palace Road), SW2 3JZ United
Kingdom is the current registrant of the domain name at issue.
On May 8, 2000, Respondent sent a letter by e-mail to the Center in
response to the complaint. On May 12, 2000, the Center forwarded
notification of complaint and commencement of administrative proceeding
to Respondent by e-mail and Post/Courier. The Center advised Respondent
that a response was due within twenty (20) calendar days from the day of
receipt of the notification. The Respondent was advised that the last day
for sending the response to the Complainant and the Center is May 31, 2000.
The Center also acknowledged Respondent's communication of May 8, 2000
and requested Respondent to indicate whether the letter of May 8th, should
be regarded as the response in the administrative proceeding.
On May 18, 2000, Respondent sent an e-mail to the Center advising that
the earlier letter (dated May 8, 2000) was his Response to the Complaint.
Respondent also raised one other point to its response, namely, that others
were using domain names including "prozac".
On May 19, 2000, the Center forwarded a Response Deficiency Notification
by e-mail to Respondent stating that Respondent's letter did not satisfy
the requirements set out in Paragraph 5 of the Rules for Uniform Domain
Name Resolution Policy and advising that Respondent is requested to remedy
the deficiencies by May 31, 2000. The Center also responded to Respondent's
e-mail dated May 18, 2000 and advised that the determination on the substantive
facts of the case will be in the sole discretion of the administrative
panel.
On June 5, 2000 the Center sent an e-mail to Respondent advising that
having failed to receive a communication from Respondent subsequent to
the Center's response deficiency notification by the deadline of May 31,
2000, the Center will proceed to appoint the administrative panel.
On June 5, 2000, Complainant's representatives sent an e-mail letter
to the Center commenting on the submissions made by Respondent. On June
5, 2000, the Center acknowledged receipt of Complainant's letter and advised
that the communication would be forwarded to the panel who would decide
whether to give weight to the communication.
On June 7, 2000, Respondent sent an e-mail enclosing a letter to the
Center commenting on Complainant's second submission dated June 5, 2000.
On June 9, 2000, the Center acknowledged receipt of Respondent's e-mail
and letter and advised that the communication will be transferred to the
panel and that it will be at the sole discretion of the panel to decide
whether to give weight to the communication.
On June 13, 2000, the Center forwarded a notification of appointment
of administrative panel to the parties and advised that the administrative
panel is required to forward its decision to the Centre by June 26, 2000.
4. Factual Background:
The complaint is based on the ownership of the trademark PROZAC registered
in over 70 countries around the world in respect of pharmaceutical preparations.
The trademark PROZAC has been used by Complainant in relation to pharmaceutical
preparations since at least as early as 1984. The trademark PROZAC has
acquired a substantial reputation and has become well known to the public
as a famous trademark, denoting the products of Complainant alone.
5. Parties' Contentions:
a) Complainant:
(i) Complainant submits that the domain name prozacpages.com is confusingly
similar to Complainant's registered trademark PROZAC.
(ii) Complainant submits that Respondent has no legitimate interest
in any domain name incorporating the PROZAC trademark.
(iii) Complainant further submits that Respondent being aware that PROZAC
is a registered trademark of Complainant has registered the trademark prozacpages.com
in bad faith. Complainant further submits that Respondent has made unfair
use of Complainant's trademark PROZAC to attract visitors to his web site.
(iv) Complainant also submits that after attracting visitors to his
web site, Respondent has attempted to tarnish the reputation of Complainant's
trademark by creating an injurious association between the PROZAC trademark
and the "distasteful contents" of the prozacpages.com web site.
With respect to the first element (i) of confusion between the domain
name and the registered trademark PROZAC, Complainant attaches as Annex
C copies of Complainant's registered trademarks for PROZAC registered in
Spain, Denmark, Finland, Benelux, Germany, Sweden, Italy, United Kingdom,
Greece and Community Trade Mark. The trademarks are registered in relation
to pharmaceutical preparations and substances.
The domain name prozacpages.com contains the whole of Complainant's
registered trademark PROZAC. The additional element pages.com is irrelevant
in trademark terms, since it is wholly descriptive and non-distinctive,
merely referring to the nature of the material, that is, web pages. The
additional element pages.com does nothing to distinguish Respondent's domain
name from Complainant's registered trademark.
Respondent's web site features pictures of Complainant's goods, namely
the distinctive green and cream trade dress of the PROZAC capsules. The
green and cream capsules are also the subject of trademark registrations
owned by Complainant. Each capsule bears the PROZAC trademark.
With respect to the second element (ii) whether Respondent has no rights
or legitimate interest in respect of the disputed domain names, Complainant`s
evidence is that Respondent has no rights in the trademark PROZAC and is
making commercial or unfair use of the trademark PROZAC.
Respondent is not associated with, affiliated with nor licensed by Complainant
to use the trademark PROZAC for the goods for which the trademark is registered.
With respect to the third element (iii), Complainant submits that Respondent
was aware that PROZAC is a registered trademark for pharmaceutical preparations
manufactured and sold by Complainant.
Complainant submits that use of the registered trademark PROZAC as the
distinctive part of the domain name prozacpages.com is misleading as it
suggests that there is some link or connection between the site and Complainant,
the owner of the registered trademark PROZAC. In his letter dated June
7, 2000, Respondent states "Yes, I have deliberately chosen to include
the word prozac in the title to attract more visitors".
With respect to element (iv), as Complainant has not provided the Center
with copies of text of Respondent's web site it is not possible to decide
whether the web site contains "distasteful" information.
b) Respondent:
No formal response with respect to the complaint was received by the
Center or by the panel. However, Respondent submitted a letter on May 8,
2000 raising several points in response to the matters raised in the complaint.
The first point made by Respondent is that prozacpages.com is a non-profit
site, the purpose of which is to highlight and attempt to help others to
understand the mental disruption that is the nature of severe depression.
The second point is that the name prozacpages.com was allegedly registered
in good faith, as a clear way to highlight the fact that this web site
relates to severe depression.
The third point made by Respondent is that the domain name prozacpages.com
itself was not at any time registered with any internet search engine.
The fourth point is that the trademark PROZAC registered for pharmaceutical
preparations has gone beyond merely being a trademark distinguishing a
pharmaceutical preparation manufactured and sold by Complainant.
Respondent further alleged improper trademark and copyright marking
by third parties and use of prozac as part of titles and domain names operated
by third parties. In Respondent's second letter, dated May 18, 2000,
Respondent referred again to working sites of third parties that
included the trademark PROZAC as part of their domain names.
By letter of June 5, 2000, Complainant denied that the trademark PROZAC
registered in relation to pharmaceutical substances had become a generic
term available for all to use and countered that PROZAC was a famous trademark
distinguishing pharmaceutical preparations manufactured and sold by Complainant.
Complainant also contested the point that the contested domain name
is not registered with any internet search engine. A printout of a search
on the ALTA VISTA search engine was attached.
Respondent e-mailed a third letter dated June 7, 2000 to the Center
contesting portions of Complainant's letter of June 5, 2000. Respondent
objected to the weight which should be given to the listing on ALTA VISTA
search engine and submitted that the disputed domain name was not listed
on YAHOO search engine. In the second last paragraph of his letter
dated June 7, 2000, Respondent states: "I want to reach as many people
who suffer from depression, and who are lonely and do not know who to turn
to or talk to as possible. Yes, I have deliberately chosen to include the
word prozac in the title to attract more visitors. But the audience is
specifically targeted through depression news groups and [the site] is
extremely unlikely to be viewed casually."
6. Discussion and Findings:
The first element which Complainant must prove is that the domain name
is identical or confusingly similar to Complainant's trademark. The domain
name is identical to Complainant's registered trademark except for the
descriptive addition pages.com. Complainant has proved that the disputed
domain name is confusingly similar to Complainant's trademark PROZAC registered
in association with pharmaceutical preparations since at least as early
as 1984 and currently registered in at least 70 countries.
The trademark PROZAC that is the subject of numerous registrations registered
in Complainant's name for pharmaceutical preparations is an inherently
distinctive word as applied to pharmaceutical preparations for which the
mark is registered.
The domain name in dispute prozacpages.com is comprised of the two words
PROZAC and pages.com. The idea suggested by the disputed domain name and
the registered trademark is the pharmaceutical PROZAC and a web site relating
to the pharmaceutical PROZAC. The domain name prozacpages.com registered
by Respondent is confusingly similar to Complainant's registered trademark
PROZAC.
The second element, which Complainant is required to prove, is that
Respondent has no rights or legitimate interest in respect of the domain
name in dispute. Respondent submits that the registered trademark is generic
and that others use the registered trademark as part of their domain names.
Respondent also submits that the domain name prozacpages.com was registered
in good faith as a clear way to highlight that the web site contains information
relating to severe depression. In a letter dated June 7, 2000, Respondent
stated: "Yes, I have deliberately chosen to including the word prozac in
the title to attract more visitors." The issue as to the validity
of Complainant's registered trademarks is not within the jurisdiction of
the panel.
Respondent is not associated with, affiliated with or licensed by Complainant
to use the registered trademark PROZAC for the wares for which the trademark
is registered. Complainant has established that Respondent has no right
or legitimate interest in respect of the domain name in dispute.
The third element, which Complainant is required to prove, is that the
disputed domain name prozacpages.com has been registered and is being used
in bad faith. The domain name prozacpages.com was registered by Respondent
because the famous trademark PROZAC for pharmaceutical preparations will
attract more visitors to Respondent's web site than would a domain name
not including the famous trademark. The domain name prozacpages.com is
being used in bad faith to continue to attract visitors to a site that
many visitors are likely to believe is designed and operated by Complainant
or has received approval of Complainant.
As part of the dispute relating to the third element, both Complainant
and Respondent made submissions concerning the content of the web site
and alleged injurious and distasteful contents of the prozacpages.com web
site. As a copy of the material on the web site was not submitted
as an annex to the submissions of either party I have not reached any conclusions
with respect to this allegation. As Complainant has established that the
domain name prozacpages.com was registered and is being used in bad faith
it is unnecessary to make any finding with respect to the contents of Respondent's
web site.
7. Decision:
In the complaint, Complainant requested that in accordance with paragraph
4(c)(i) of the Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy, the administrative
panel issue a decision that the disputed domain name be cancelled or transferred
to Complainant.
Complainant having proved each of the three elements set out in paragraphs
4(a)(i)(ii) and (iii) of the Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy
is entitled to a decision in favour of Complainant. The panel requires
that the domain name prozacpages.com be transferred to Complainant, Eli
Lilly and Company.
Dated: June 26, 2000
Domain
Name Transferred
|