
Domain
Names As Real Estate
Overview
Domain names are property - just like a house or valuable
jewels. They can be bought, sold, leased, and even borrowed
against.
A Virginia court recently found that names can even
be garnished to pay off a debt (1). The decision
came in a case involving James Tombas of Canada Incorporated,
who registered the domain name "umbro.com,"
and then allegedly asked Umbro International for a lifetime
supply of the soccer apparel company's products, as
well as $50,000 for himself and another $50,000 for
the Internet-focused charity of his choice. The clothing
manufacturer responded to Tombas's offer by suing him
for trademark infringement.
A federal court sided with Umbro on the trademark charge,
and now the U.S. Circuit Court in Fairfax County has
ordered that Tombas's other domain names be garnished
by Network Solutions (NSI) and then auctioned off in
order to pay Umbro's attorney fees. "Until Umbro's
effort, domain names apparently have not been subjected
to garnishment, but that is no reason to conclude that
this new form of intellectual property is therefore
immune," Judge Langhorne Keith stated in the ruling.
In a court filing, Network Solutions essentially argued
that it leases domain names on a "conditional"
basis, and therefore they can't really be owned by anyone
except NSI. "Like a telephone number, a domain
name cannot function on the Internet, and therefore
does not exist, in the absence of Internet services
performed by domain name registrars such as NSI",the
company wrote in a December 1998 court brief. "One
does not own a domain name any more than one 'owns'
a telephone number". This was an unfortunate analogy
for the NSI to use, as telephone numbers can in fact
be bought and sold.
The Virginia court disagreed, stating that domain names
are property that can be garnished. "The fact that
this form of intellectual property results from a service
that NSI provides does not preclude the property from
garnishment, any more than the service provided by the
Patent Office immunizes patents from garnishment,"
the ruling states.
Overall,
legal experts say the case was an easy call because
domain names are considered real estate on the Net,
so they can easily be considered property. "The
value of a domain name is that it's a storefront,"
said Rich Gray, an attorney with Bergeson, Eliopoulos,
Grady & Gray. "What the court is saying is
unremarkable: A party seeking to get its attorney fees
back can try to (tap) the assets of (the defendants)
and these domains names are just like a building or
property," he added.
According to Morrison & Foerster attorney Jonathan
Band, "It strikes me that it's an obvious ruling,
but one that would need to be made. "Network Solutions
has appealed the decision to the Virginia Supreme Court,
according to the National Journal. "Businesspeople
will see this as confirmation that when you buy and
sell domain names, you have an enforceable agreement,"
David Stewart, Umbro's attorney told the National Journal's
Technology Daily. "From a legal standpoint, this
gives much more leverage over a domain name pirate."
(1) http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-200-340454.html?tag=
|