[Indexed as: Easyjet v. Panjehshahi]
[Indexed as: easyjet.org]
WIPO Arbitration and Mediation Center
Administrative Panel Decision
Case No. D2000-0384
Commenced: 16 May 2000
Judgement: 28 June 2000
Presiding Panelist: David Perkins
Domain name Domain name dispute resolution policy Trademark Identical Confusingly similar Legitimate rights Bad faith Recognition.
Complainant is the registered owner of the mark EASYJET. Respondent registered the domain name easyjet.org. Complainant alleged that Respondents domain name is identical or confusingly similar to its registered mark. Respondent claimed that the goods and services offered on its website are different from the goods and services offered by Complainant thus eliminating any public confusion. However, Complainants registered mark includes the specification of rental of boats, vehicles, and aircraft. Complainant also alleged that Respondent had no rights to the name, and that the name was registered and used in bad faith.
Held, Name Transferred to Complainant.
Respondents domain name is for all intents and purposes identical
to Complainants registered mark.
Complainants mark is very well known. Because of the reputation
of the mark and its distinctive character, the mark deserves broader protection.
Thus, the offering of goods or services in reference to that mark through
a domain name is not bona fide.
Bad faith on the part of the Respondent can be inferred by its registering
the domain name which is identical to Complainants mark and earlier registered
domain name.
Both parties hail from the United Kingdom which allows the Panel
to use principles of English law that it deems appropriate.
Policies referred to
Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy
Cases referred to
Canon v. MGM (1999) RPC 117, para. 18.
GlaxoWellcome 1996 FSR 388
Lego Lemelstrich 1983 FSR 155
One in a Million 1999 FSR1 (C.A.).
Perkins, Panelist: -
1. The Parties
The Complainant is Easyjet Airline Company Limited, a private company
incorporated under the laws of England, having its principal place of business
at Easyland, Luton Airport, Luton, Bedfordshire LU2 9LY, England.
The Respondent is Mahmoud Panjehshahi of 3 More Close, Purley, Surrey
CR8 2JN, England.
2. The Domain Name and Registrar
The domain name at issue is
easyjet.org
and the Registrar is Melbourne IT Ltd doing business as Internet Names
Worldwide.
3. Procedural History
The WIPO Arbitration and Mediation Center [the Center] received the
Complaint on May 4, 2000, [electronic version] and May 8, 2000, [hard copy].
The Center verified that the Complaint satisfies the formal requirements
of the ICANN Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy [the Policy],
the Rules of Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy [the Rules]
and the Supplemental Rules for Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy
[the Supplemental Rules]. The Complainant made the required payment to
the Center.
The formal date of the commencement of this administrative proceeding
is May 16, 2000.
On May 15, 2000, the Center transmitted via email to Melbourne IT Ltd
a request for registration verification in connection with this case and
on May 16, 2000, Melbourne IT Ltd transmitted via email to the Center,
Melbourne IT's verification response confirming that the registrant and
administrative contact is Mahmoud Panjehshahi and the contact for technical
purposes is Evan Weatherup.
Having verified that the Complainant satisfied the formal requirements
of the Policy and the Rules, the Center transmitted on May 16, 2000, to
[email protected] and [email protected] the Notification of Complaint
and Commencement of the Administrative Proceeding. The Center advised that
the Response was due by June 4, 2000. On the same day the Center transmitted
by fax and by mail copies of the foregoing documents to:
Mahmoud Panjehshahi
3 More Close
Purley
Surrey CR8 2JN
England
The Response dated June 2, 2000, was received by the Center on June
6, 2000. On June 9, 2000, the Center received Supplementary Submissions
from the Complainant and on June 14, 2000, the Center received the Respondent's
Response to the Complainant's Supplementary Submissions. The Panel has
discretion to admit these Supplementary Submissions from the parties and
pursuant to paragraphs 10(a) and (b) of the Rules, the Panel in its discretion
rules that both submissions should be admitted. This provides equality
of treatment to the parties, it gives the parties a fair opportunity to
present their respective cases and, on the facts of this Case, it has not
led to any delay in this administrative proceeding.
Having received on June 19, 2000, Mr. David Perkins' Declaration of
Impartiality and Independence and his Statement of Acceptance, the Center
transmitted to the parties a Notification of Appointment of Administrative
Panel and Projected Decision Date, in which Mr. David Perkins was formally
appointed as the Sole Panellist. The Projected Decision Date was July 4,
2000. The Sole Panellist finds that the Administrative Panel was properly
constituted and appointed in accordance with the Rules and the Supplemental
Rules.
Having received the communication records in the case file, the Administrative
Panel finds that the Center has discharged its responsibility under paragraph
2(a) of the Rules "to employ reasonably available means calculated to achieve
actual notice to Respondent". Therefore, the Administrative Panel shall
issue its Decision based upon the Complaint, the Response, the Complainant's
Supplementary Submissions, the Respondent's Response to those Supplementary
Submissions, the Policy, the Rules and the Supplemental Rules.
4. Factual Background
The Complainant
4.1 The Complainant, Easyjet Airline Company Limited, was incorporated
under that name in March 1995 and began trading as a scheduled airline
business in October 1995. The Complainant is widely advertised and promoted
and is a well known low cost airline in the United Kingdom and Europe.
Its turnover for the year to September 30, 1999 was £77 million.
The Complainant states that it relies on its EASYJET domain names [see,
paragraph 4.4 below] to attract business to its website [exhibited as Annex
3 to the Complaint] through which some 60% of its ticket sales are made.
It operates some 1,000 flights per week across a network of 28 services
serving 18 popular business and leisure destinations in Europe.
The Respondent
The Respondent, Mahmoud Panjehshahi, is a businessman in London who
specialises in property investment and Internet ventures. The Respondent
claims to be a major backer of gochemist.com, an Internet company which
is in the process of raising £1.4M with the intention of making an
Initial Public Offering [IPO] of its shares in mid 2001.
4.2 The Respondent is the owner of all the shares in St. James's Property
Company (UK) Ltd. and 50% shareholder in Haymarket Properties Limited.
The Respondent states that he owns shares in 12 companies, four of which
are Internet companies. It appears that St. James's Properties (UK) Ltd.,
a company of which the Respondent is a director, was incorporated on February
8, 2000, [per Annex 8 of the Complaint, a report from .com investigations].
The Complainant's Trade Marks
4.3 The Complainant is the registered proprietor of the following trade
marks:
Country No. Mark Classes Date(s)
United States 2, 197, 131 EASYJET 16 & 39 Filed February 3, 1997Registered
October 20, 1998
Germany 395 39526 EASYJET 39 Filed September 27, 1995Registered May
7, 1996
France 95 590523 EASYJET 39 Filed October 2, 1995Registered October
2, 1995
Norway 183,874 EASYJET 39 Filed September 29, 1995Registered July 31,
1997
Switzerland 432,357 EASYJET 39 Filed September 29, 1995Registered December
9, 1996
Benelux 611,352 EASYJET 16:39: &42 Filed March 5, 1996Registered
March 5, 1996
Sweden 314,247 EASYJET 39 Filed October 3, 1995Registered June 14,
1996
UnitedKingdom 2,016,785 EASYJET 16:39 &42 Filed April 5, 1995Registered
October 4, 1996
4.4 The Complainant is also registrant of the domain names:
EASYJET.com
EASYJET.co.uk
EASYJETAIRLINES.com
EASYJETAIRLINES.net
EASYJETAIRLINES.org
EASYJETAIRLINES.co.uk
EASYJETAIR.com
EASYJETAIR.net
EASYJETAIR.org
EASYJETAIR.co.uk
EASYJET-AIRLINE.com
EASYJET-AIRLINE.net
EASYJET-AIRLINE.org
EASYJET-AIRLINE.co.uk
EASYJET.ch
EASY-JET.ch
4.5 As stated in paragraph 4.1 above, the Complainant states that some
60% of its ticket sales are sold through its website, which uses the domain
name easyjet.com.
Disputed Issues
4.6 Sale of the domain name in issue
The Complainant states that it sent an email to the Respondent in,
inter alia, the following terms:
"We own the web domains www.easyJet.com and www.easyJet.co.uk and have
had a few customers mistakenly accessing your site www.xxxxx.com, when
attempting to type in our web address.
We would therefore be interested in buying your web domain for £1000
sterling plus any transfer costs."
The Respondent denies ever having received that email [Response paragraph
9]. The Panel notes that the email at Annex 7 of the Complaint is not dated,
neither does it identify the domain name in issue. The Panel finds that
there is no evidence that the Respondent has ever offered to sell the domain
name in issue to the Complainant.
Use of the domain name in issue
4.7 The domain name in issue was registered on February 19, 2000. As
at May 4, 2000, the domain name was not in use in connection with an active
website. It resolved to a temporary holding page maintained by Virtual
Internet [Annex 6 to the Complaint].
An investigator's report of April 17, 2000, by .com investigations
[Annex 8 to the Complaint] reported:
· that the investigator spoke to the Respondent by telephone;
· that the Respondent told the investigator that he was involved
in legitimate Internet businesses, for example gochemist.com;
· that the Respondent was as yet undecided about what business
to set up under the domain name in issue; and
· that, if the investigator wished to purchase the domain, the
Respondent "
would not put anything in writing
until the last minute
in case there were any legal problems."
4.8 The Respondent states that before notice to him of the dispute
- here, the Center's Notification of Complaint etc. on May 16, 2000 - he
had made demonstrable preparations to use the domain name in issue in connection
with a bona fide offering of goods or services. In this connection, the
Respondent relies upon:
· An exchange of correspondence in January and February 2000
[before the domain name in issue was registered] with Risk Free (UK) Ltd
seeking an estimate for:
"the costs involved in designing the website for the Jet.com or a similar
name."
· An exchange of correspondence in February 2000 [again, before
the domain name in issue was registered] relating to plans
"to set up a website, which will give the customers the capability
of viewing different makes of Aircraft, Boats, Jet Skis and all related
parts and necessary leasing packages to go with it.
I am hoping that I will bring on board Nigel Cowen of Triton Capital,
who already has the necessary experience in Aircraft Leasing. I have also
asked Anthony to give me a quote on the Web Design and Timetable, for its
creation."
The reference to "Anthony" is to Risk Free (UK) Ltd.
4.9 The Respondent states that;
· the proposed web site for which the domain name in issue is
proposed to be used will carry disclaimers, indicating that it has no connection
with the Complainant;
· the Respondent has no intention of selling the domain name
in issue to any party; and that
· the goods and services proposed to be offered on the Respondent's
website - which include, aircraft - are completely different to the services
offered by the Complainant and there is no likelihood that the public would
confuse the Respondent's proposed services for those of the Complainant.
5. The Parties' Contentions
(A) The Complainant
The Complainant contends that the Respondent has registered as a domain
name a mark which is identical to or confusingly similar to the Complainant's
EASYJET mark, that the Respondent has no rights or legitimate interests
in respect of that domain name and that the Respondent has registered and
is using that domain name in bad faith.
(B) The Respondent
The Respondent admits that the domain name in issue is identical or
confusingly similar to the Complainant's EASYJET mark but asserts that
it has both rights and a legitimate interest in respect of the domain name
in issue and that such domain name was registered and will be used in good
faith. For those reasons, the Complaint should be rejected as not meeting
the requirements of paragraph 4(a) of the Policy.
6. Discussion and Findings
6.1 The Policy paragraph 4 provides that the Complainant must prove
each of the following:
· that the Respondent's domain name is identical or confusingly
similar to a trade mark or service mark in which the Complainant has rights;
and
· the Respondent has no right or legitimate interests in respect
of the domain name; and
· the domain name has been registered and is being used in good
faith.
Identical or Confusingly Similar
6.2 The Complainant's EASYJET registered trademarks and its EASYJET
and EASYJET prefixed domain names are to all intents and purposes identical
to the domain name in issue. This appears to be admitted by the Respondent
[Response, paragraph 6]. Whether it is or is not admitted, the Panel finds
that the Complaint satisfies the first limb of paragraph 4(a) of the Policy.
Rights or Legitimate Interests
6.3 Paragraph 4(c) of the Policy identifies circumstances which, in
particular, but without limitation, if found by the Panel to be proved
based on its evaluation of all the evidence presented, shall demonstrate
the Respondent's rights or legitimate interest for the purposes of paragraph
4(a)(iii). Those circumstances are that:
i) before any notice to the Respondent of the dispute, the Respondent's
use of, or demonstrable preparations to use the domain name or a domain
name corresponding to the domain name, in connection with a bona fide offering
of goods or services; or
ii) the Respondent (as an individual, business or other organisation)
has been commonly known by the domain name, even if it has acquired no
trade mark or service mark rights; or
iii) the Respondent is making a legitimate non-commercial or fair use
of the domain name without intent for commercial gain to misleadingly divert
customers or to tarnish the trade mark or service mark in issue.
6.4 Paragraph 4(c)(ii) and (iii) cannot apply since the Respondent
is not actually using the domain name in issue in relation to an active
website.
6.5 Can the Respondent bring himself within paragraph 4(c)(i)? Given
the well-known status of the Complainant's EASYJET mark in the United Kingdom
and its growing reputation in Europe generally, the offering of goods or
services under or by reference to that mark through the domain name in
issue cannot, in the Panel's view, be bona fide. This is the more so, since
the Respondent's projected use - headed "The Jet Leasing Business" and
"The Internet Venture in Jet related goods" - involves air related services,
namely aircraft leasing. Indeed, that would seem from the correspondence
exhibited at Annex 5 to the Response to be the primary intended business.
Although the Complainant's business is stated to be that of a commercial
airline, the specification of its Class 39 UK registered service mark includes
"rental and hire of vehicles, boats and aircraft".
6.6 The Rules give the Panel discretion as to how it conducts administrative
proceedings in accordance with the Policy and the Rules [Rules, paragraph
10(a)] and enable the Panel to have regard to the principles of law that
it deems applicable [Rules, paragraph 15(a)]. Here, both parties are based
in the United Kingdom and the Panel considers it appropriate to have regard,
inter alia, to principles of English law. In this respect, the Panel has
in mind the decision of Lightman J. in the GlaxoWellcome case 1996 FSR
388 and the Court of Appeal in the One in a Million case 1999 FSR1 (C.A.).
It is not necessary that the goods and/or services be identical for passing
off to be found. [See, for example, the Lego Lemelstrich case 1983 FSR
155 and others].
6.7 Further, although this is not a case of trade mark infringement
either, it is material to have regard to the criteria prescribed by the
European Court of Justice in its recent decisions. See, for example, the
attitude taken by the Court of Justice to a well known mark in Canon .v.
MGM (1999) RPC 117 @ para. 18:
"Furthermore, according to the case-law of the Court, the more distinctive
the earlier mark the greater the risk of confusion [Sabel, para. 24]. Since
protection of a trade mark depends, in accordance with Art. 4(1)(b) of
the Directive, on there being a likelihood of confusion, marks with a highly
distinctive character, either per se or because of the reputation they
possess on the market enjoy broader protection than marks with less distinctive
character."
6.8 The Respondent's proposal to use the domain name in issue with
a disclaimer is not persuasive nor is the suggestion that a .org domain
name will not be associated with a .com domain name where the prefixes
are identical. The Complainant's EASYJET mark is well known at least in
the United Kingdom and the Respondent must have known of this when in February
2000, he registered the domain name in issue. This is confirmed by the
general tenor of the investigator's report of his conversation with the
Respondent [Annex 8 to the Complaint]. It is just not credible, in the
Panel's opinion, that by registering the domain name in issue the Respondent
did not intend to benefit from the reputation of the Complainant in its
EASYJET mark. That aircraft leasing should be one of the proposed businesses
for the Respondent's web site using the domain name in issue serves to
support that opinion.
6.9 The Complainant has not consented to the Respondent's use of the
domain name in issue. On the evidence before it and having regard to applicable
principles of law, the Panel rules that the Respondent has not demonstrated
any right to or legitimate interest in the domain in issue and that, consequently,
the Complaint satisfies the second limb of paragraph 4a of the Policy.
Bad Faith
6.10 Paragraph 4(a)(iii) of the Policy requires that the Respondent's
domain name must both have been registered and be being used in bad faith.
Both requirements must be met.
Paragraph 4(b) of the Policy sets out circumstances which, if found
by the Panel to be present, "
shall be evidence of the registration and
use of the domain name in bad faith." The Policy goes on to state that
those circumstances are not exhaustive of the circumstances indicating
registration and use in bad faith.
Registered in Bad Faith
6.11 The Respondent registered the domain name in February 2000 by
which time the Complainant had been trading under the EASYJET name and
mark for almost four and a half years and had established itself as a well-known
operator in the budget airline market. Had the Respondent attempted to
register either easyjet.com or easyjet.co.uk, he would have been blocked
by the existing domain names registered by the Complainant. Similarly,
if the Respondent applies to register EASYJET for airline/aircraft related
service in Class 39, he is likely, in the Panel's opinion, to be blocked
by the existing registrations held by the Complainant.
Bad faith on the part of the Respondent is to be inferred from registering
a domain name which is, in material respects, identical to the Complainant's
EASYJET service mark and earlier registered domain name. Paragraph 2 of
the Policy provides that by applying to register a domain name the applicant
is representing and warranting that to his knowledge the registration of
the domain name will not infringe upon or otherwise violate the rights
of any third party. In the light of the Panel's findings (above), it holds
the Respondent to be in breach of that representation and, consequently,
that the Complainant succeeds in establishing the first part of the requirement
of paragraph 4(a)(iii) of the Policy.
Used in Bad Faith
6.12 The domain name in issue is not being used in relation to an active
website. But, the concept of a domain name being used in bad faith is not
limited to positive action: inaction is within the concept [see, Decision
D2000-0003].
Although the Panel finds that the Respondent has not attempted to sell
the domain name in issue to the Complainant for consideration in excess
of its documented out-of-pocket costs directly related to that domain name
[see, paragraph 4.6 above] and although the Respondent proposes to use
a disclaimer, neither will avoid use of the domain name in violation of
applicable laws. In other words, violation of the Complainant's prior rights
in the name and mark EASYJET. The Panel finds that the Complainant also
succeeds in establishing the second part of the requirement of paragraph
4(a)(iii) of the Policy.
7. Decision
For the foregoing reasons, the Panel decides that the Complainant has
proved each of the three elements of paragraph 4(a) of the Policy. Accordingly,
the Panel requires that the registration of the domain name easyjet.org
be transferred to the Complainant. .
Domain Name Transferred