-
-
Selling Across State Lines
- Offering your product online
may subject your company to lawsuits in distant states.
-
- By Paul Vink
- Bose McKinney & Evans, LLP
-
Think selling
merchandise over the Internet is a virtual goldmine? It may be the
most comprehensive and least expensive means of marketing a product,
but it comes at a price some business owners may not appreciate.
Consider this hypothetical
example: X Corp. is a small, Indiana-based company that sells
sunglasses throughout Indiana and Ohio. To
increase public exposure to its product, X Corp. designs a Web site
that allows consumers to purchase sunglasses online.
A competitor in California notices
X Corp.’s logo and, believing it is confusingly similar to its own,
files suit in California for trademark infringement. Outside of
selling sunglasses to a few California residents over the Internet,
X Corp. has never conducted business in
California, never advertised there and never had a physical presence there.
Based on its lack of contact with
California, X Corp. seeks dismissal from the lawsuit on the theory
that the California court cannot constitutionally exercise personal
jurisdiction over X Corp. The result? Motion denied. X Corp. is
forced to hire counsel and defend itself in a court thousands of
miles from Indiana.
This example is not merely
theoretical. Businesses whose only contact with a particular state
is selling products over the Internet to residents of another state
can expect to be subject to suit in that state.
While the legal analysis can be
involved, the narrow legal question is whether operating a Web site
is sufficient “contact” with a state to subject the operator to
personal jurisdiction (i.e., capable of being sued) in a court
within that state. The answer from the courts is that it depends on
the type of Web site used.
1) Active Web sites — An active
Web site is defined by the courts as one that permits a consumer to
purchase a company’s products online. Companies that operate active
Web sites are held to be transacting business with consumers of the
state and will be subject to personal jurisdiction in that state.
2) Passive Web sites — A passive
Web site is one that is essentially informational only. The site may
offer product information, pricing, etc., but the consumer cannot
order products online or interact with the Web site by requesting
more information. Companies that operate passive Web sites are not
subject to personal jurisdiction because they are merely providing
information, not transacting business with consumers of a state.
3) Interactive Web sites — An
interactive Web site is a hybrid of an active and passive Web site.
Consumers cannot order products online, but they can interact with
the Web site and request additional information (for example, by
inputting their email or mailing address). Courts decide on a
case-by-case basis whether an interactive Web site is “active”
enough to warrant personal jurisdiction. The more interactive, the
more likely personal jurisdiction will be found.
Companies that wish to utilize the
Internet to boost sales but avoid being exposed to the risk of suit
in distant states have a couple of options. The simplest is to
create an interactive or a passive Web site rather than an active
Web site. However, this solution may make little business sense for
companies that derive a large portion of their revenue from online
sales.
A second option is to insert a
forum selection clause into the Web site that advises purchasers
they can only bring suit in a particular state. The drawbacks to a
forum selection clause are that it is largely untested in the courts
and may not apply to a plaintiff that did not purchase the company’s
products (such as in a trademark suit).
While the benefits of selling
products online may outweigh the risk of a suit in distant states,
business owners would be wise to consider the legal implications of
online sales.
Copyright
Ó2004
Smart Business Indianapolis. All rights reserved.
-----------------------------------
PAUL VINK is an attorney in the Litigation Group of Bose
McKinney & Evans, LLP.
http://www.boselaw.com He assists clients with a wide variety of
complex business and commercial litigation. He can be reached at
pvink@boselaw.com or 317-684-5422.
Back to Library
-
|