Facts
- E.J.B. (mother) and D.W.M. (father) appealed a judgment terminating their parental rights to their child, Z.R.M., due to neglect and substance abuse allegations [lines="4-14"].
- The Mesa County Department of Human Services filed the petition after both parents were arrested for criminal child abuse, leaving the child without a legal caregiver [lines="6-7"].
- The court initially granted temporary custody to the Department and subsequently moved the child to a foster care placement due to concerns regarding the paternal grandfather's care [lines="8-10"].
- The juvenile court adjudicated the child dependent and neglected, establishing treatment plans for both parents [lines="11-13"].
- After a contested hearing, the juvenile court terminated parental rights 21 months post-petition filing, citing the parents' failure to demonstrate fitness to parent [lines="13"].
Issues
- Did the juvenile court err in finding that the Department made reasonable efforts to rehabilitate the mother? [lines="15-16"]
- Was the father unlikely to become fit within a reasonable time as per the court's findings? [lines="27-28"]
- Did the juvenile court properly evaluate less drastic alternatives to termination of parental rights? [lines="37-38"]
Holdings
- The juvenile court did not err in concluding that the Department made reasonable efforts, as the mother did not request accommodations or demonstrate adherence to the treatment plan [lines="60-68"].
- The court's finding that the father was unlikely to become fit within a reasonable time was supported by evidence of his non-compliance with the treatment plan [lines="102-105"].
- The court's evaluation of less drastic alternatives to termination was justified, concluding that no alternative would adequately meet the child's needs for stability and permanence [lines="138-141"].
OPINION
Case Information
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA FACEBOOK, INC., et al., Case No. 19-cv-07071-SI Plaintiffs, ORDER GRANTING PLAINTIFFS’ v. MOTION FOR DEFAULT JUDGMENT
Re: Dkt. No. 379 ONLINENIC INC, et al., Defendants.
Now before the Court is plaintiffs’ motion for default judgment against all defendants. Dkt.
No. 379. At the parties’ request, the Court held an in-person hearing on May 3, 2024. BACKGROUND Many of the issues presented in the current motion have already been litigated and/or decided in some form during the lengthy history of this case. To recap, plaintiffs Facebook, Inc. and Instagram, LLC (collectively, “plaintiffs”) filed their original complaint in 2019 against the OnlineNIC defendants. Dkt. No. 1. The case was assigned to Magistrate Judge van Keulen.
On March 3, 2021, following numerous discovery disputes, Judge van Keulen appointed Thomas Howe as Special Discovery Master (“Special Master”) to determine: (1) whether the OnlineNIC defendants’ past productions were adequate and (2) whether the OnlineNIC defendants destroyed or withheld data. Dkt. No. 72.
On March 24, 2021, Judge van Keulen granted plaintiffs’ motion for leave to file a first amended complaint to add Xiamen 35.com Technology Co., Ltd. (“35.CN”) as a defendant. Dkt. No. 81. On March 31, 2021, plaintiffs filed the first amended complaint (“FAC”), adding 35.CN. Dkt. No. 84. On June 1, 2021, plaintiffs filed their second amended complaint (“SAC”), which is now the operative complaint. Dkt. No. 109.
The SAC alleges four causes of action against all three defendants for: (1) Cybersquatting Plaintiffs’ Trademarks, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(d) (the Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act (“ACPA”)); (2) Trademark and Service Mark Infringement, 15 U.S.C. §1114; (3) Trademark and Service Mark Infringement and False Designation of Origin, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a); and (4) Dilution of Trademarks, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(c). Id. ¶¶ 76-137. Both the FAC and SAC alleged that 35.CN and the OnlineNIC defendants were alter egos of each other. See, e.g., FAC ¶ 12; SAC ¶ 12. Further detail on the factual allegations can be found in Judge van Keulen’s Report and Recommendation, Dkt. No. 225. On July 12, 2021, the Special Master filed his report. Dkt. No. 115 (“Special Master’s Report” or “SMR”). On July 20, 2021, plaintiffs and the OnlineNIC defendants filed statements of non-opposition to the SMR. Dkt. Nos. 125, 126. To summarize, the Special Master found “ample evidence that Defendants [OnlineNIC and ID Shield] failed to preserve responsive ESI, deleted ESI, and withheld ESI.” SMR at 2. The Special Master found the OnlineNIC defendants did this on a massive scale, and that they failed to preserve ESI “pre-litigation, post complaint filing, during discovery, and even after the appointment of Special Master.” at 17. The Special Master also determined that the OnlineNIC defendants engaged in underhanded tactics to avoid producing responsive documents, such as data dumping, using inconsistent date ranges and search terms, and misleading the Special Master or failing to respond to his requests. Dkt. No. 276 at 6 (citing SMR at 19, 30-31, 35). The Special Master concluded: “Briefly put, Defendants did not do what they should have done (preserve and produce responsive ESI) yet did do what they should not have done (delete and obfuscate). Based on the sum of the evidence, Special Master concludes Defendants’ behavior was intentional.” SMR at 39. The Special Master also concluded that the OnlineNIC defendants “caused irreparable harm to Plaintiffs through permanently deleted responsive database records and attachment files, that they will never see or know the contents.” Id. at 40.
On July 13, 2021, plaintiffs filed a motion to strike the OnlineNIC defendants’ answer and for default judgment. Dkt. No. 117. On or around August 17, 2021, plaintiffs served the SAC on 35.CN. Dkt. No. 165 at 1. 35.CN first appeared in this case in September 2021. Dkt. No. 384 (citing Dkt. No. 169).
On September 28, 2021, the action was reassigned to the undersigned. Dkt. No. 173. Plaintiffs re-noticed their motion to strike, and this Court referred the motion to Judge van Keulen. Dkt. Nos. 176, 193. 35.CN filed a motion to dismiss, which this Court denied in an order dated January 18, 2022. Dkt. Nos. 174, 207. Among other things, the Court found that the SAC raised “serious questions about how the defendants are related for purposes of surviving a motion to dismiss and the Court [found] plaintiffs [had] made a prima facie showing of alter ego and general jurisdiction.” Dkt. No. 207 at 7-8. The Court also found the cybersquatting and trademark claims were adequately pled. at 9-11. On March 28, 2022, Judge van Keulen issued her Report and Recommendation, recommending the undersigned grant the motion for terminating sanctions against the OnlineNIC defendants. Dkt. No. 225 (“Report and Recommendation”). Judge van Keulen set out, and adopted as her own, the key findings of the SMR in her Report and Recommendation. Id. at 4-9. All three defendants filed objections to the Report and Recommendation and requested de novo review of plaintiffs’ motion for sanctions/default judgment. Dkt. Nos. 228, 229.
In orders issued October 17 and December 16, 2022, the undersigned adopted the Report and Recommendation, with the exception of Section IV (“Relief”). Dkt. Nos. 276, 291. The Court concurred with Judge van Keulen’s finding of prejudice to plaintiffs: “OnlineNIC and ID Shield claim they have mountains of exculpatory evidence, yet for all Plaintiffs or the Court may ever know, those ‘mountains’ may be dwarfed by the mountains of damning evidence Defendants deleted.” Dkt. No. 276 at 11 (quoting Report and Recommendation at 19). The Court directed the Clerk to enter default against OnlineNIC and ID Shield but deferred entry of default judgment pending resolution of the case against 35.CN. Dkt. No. 291.
On March 3, 2023, plaintiffs filed a motion to strike 35.CN’s answer and for entry of default against 35.CN, arguing that 35.CN was the alter ego of the OnlineNIC defendants. Dkt. No. 299. At 35.CN’s request, the Court converted the motion to one for summary judgment. Dkt. No. 329. On November 7, 2023, the Court issued an order granting plaintiffs’ motion and striking 35.CN’s answer. Dkt. Nos. 351, 357. The Court found 35.CN to be the alter ego of the OnlineNIC defendants, under a single-enterprise theory. Id. at 20-21. Accordingly, the terminating sanctions that issued against the OnlineNIC defendants were extended to 35.CN. Id. at 21-22. The Court directed the Clerk to enter default against 35.CN.
Plaintiffs now move for default judgment against all defendants. Dkt. No. 379. 35.CN has filed an opposition brief, in which the OnlineNIC defendants join. Dkt. Nos. 384, 385. The Court held a hearing on May 3, 2024. LEGAL STANDARD Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 55(b)(2) provides that a court may enter default judgment and, if necessary to effectuate judgment, conduct an accounting, determine the amount of damages, establish the truth of any allegation by evidence, or investigate any other matter. Default judgment does not flow automatically from the Clerk’s entry of default but is a matter reserved to the district
court’s sound discretion.
Draper v. Coombs
,
DISCUSSION
I. Findings
A. Federal Question Jurisdiction
This Court has federal question jurisdiction over the subject matter of this case under 28 U.S.C. § 1331.
B. Personal Jurisdiction and Venue
The Court has personal jurisdiction over defendant OnlineNIC, and alter egos ID Shield and
35.CN, because OnlineNIC maintains and operates its business in California. SAC ¶ 9. In
Ranza
v. Nike, Inc.
,
Despite the holding in
Ranza
, 35.CN continues to argue that its contacts with California are
insufficient to subject it to personal jurisdiction. Dkt. No. 384 at 11-12. 35.CN argues, without
support, that the alter ego finding on discovery sanctions does not necessarily equate to an alter ego
finding for personal jurisdiction purposes. 35.CN also argues that notions of due process prevent
the Court from exercising jurisdiction over it. The Court is unpersuaded by 35.CN’s arguments,
which seem not to appreciate that, “under the federal law governing the exercise of personal
jurisdiction, if a corporation is the alter ego of an individual defendant, or one corporation the alter
ego of another, the Court may ‘pierce the corporate veil’ jurisdictionally and attribute ‘contacts’
accordingly.”
See Apple Inc. v. Allan & Assocs. Ltd.
,
Venue is proper with respect to each of the defendants pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1391(b)(2). C. Cybersquatting and Trademark
The SAC adequately alleges claims for cybersquatting and trademark violation. Dkt. No.
207 at 9-11. 35.CN previously challenged the sufficiency of the allegations in its motion to dismiss.
See id.
With default now entered against all defendants, the Court takes as true the well-pleaded
allegations of the SAC.
See Geddes v. United Financial Group
,
Recommendation at 18-19. As to the second and third factors, as already noted, the Court has found
the allegations of the SAC sufficient.
See
Dkt. No. 207;
Kloepping v. Fireman’s Fund
, No. C 94-
2684 TEH,
The Court finds it proper to enter default judgment against all defendants. II. Relief
Plaintiffs seek: (1) reimbursement of Special Master costs, in the amount of $88,937; (2) attorneys’ fees and costs pursuant to 15 U.S.C. § 1117(a); (3) statutory damages of $3,135,000 under the ACPA; (4) transfer of the infringing domain names; and (5) a permanent injunction.
A. Special Master Costs
The Court will order that defendants reimburse plaintiffs $88,937, which represents plaintiffs’ payments to the Special Master, for the reasons stated in the Report and Recommendation at 32-33.
B. Attorneys’ Fees and Costs The Court will award plaintiffs their attorneys’ fees and costs, in an amount to be determined,
for the reasons stated in the Report and Recommendation at 31-32. The Court agrees with Judge
van Keulen that this is an exceptional case warranting attorneys’ fees under the Lanham Act, 15
U.S.C. § 1117(a), because of defendants’ intentional misconduct in discovery.
See Rio Props. v.
Rio Int’l Interlink
,
Plaintiffs are hereby provisionally awarded their reasonable attorneys’ fees—related to the proceedings before the Special Master, the Motion for Sanctions, and the Motion for Default/Summary Judgment against 35.CN on the alter ego question—as well as costs. C. Statutory Damages
In assessing remedies, the Court takes the well-pleaded allegations of the SAC as true, except
those relating to the amount of damages.
TeleVideo
,
In sum, the Court agrees with the reasoning and analysis in the Report and Recommendation at 24-28 and ADOPTS IN FULL the report at Section IV(A). The Court will award plaintiffs $3,135,000 in statutory damages under the ACPA. D. Transfer of Defendants’ Domain Names The ACPA permits the Court to transfer offending domain names to the mark owner. 15
U.S.C. § 1125(d)(1)(C); see also Report and Recommendation at 29 n.11. Defendants do not dispute this. Accordingly, the Court will order that the thirty-five Infringing Domain Names identified in ¶ 56 of the SAC be transferred to plaintiffs. These are: 1. buyinstagramfans.com 19. hackingfacebook.net 2. face2bouk.com 20. hacksomeonesfacebook.com
3. facebook-alkalmazasok.net 21. iiinstagram.com 4.facebook-chat-emoticons.com 22. instaface.org 5. facebook-fans-buy.com 23. instagram01.com 6. facebook-login-signup.com 24. instakram.com 7. facebook-mails.com 25. lamsocialfacebook.net 8. facebook-pass.com 26. learntohackfacebook.com 9. facebookphysician.com 27. login-lnstargram.com 10. facebook-pw.com 28. m-facebook-login.com 11. facebookvideodownload.net 29. ofacebooklogin.com 12. facebux2.com 30. singin-lnstargram.com 13. facekhook.com 31. trollfacebook.com 14. facessbook.com 32. watch-facebook.com 15. faecb00k-page.com 33. www-facebook-login.com 16. faecbook-page.com 34. www-facebook-pages.com 17. findfacebookid.com 35. www-instagram.net 18. hackfacebook-now.com SAC ¶ 56.
E. Permanent Injunction
Finally, plaintiffs seek a permanent injunction to enjoin defendants and those working with them from cybersquatting on plaintiffs’ trademarks and ordering that defendants provide relevant information to plaintiffs to ensure compliance with the injunction. Judge van Keulen previously found that plaintiffs were entitled to injunctive relief under 15 U.S.C. § 1116(a). The Court agrees with and adopts the analysis regarding plaintiffs’ entitlement to permanent injunctive relief in the Report and Recommendation at 29-30. Judge van Keulen also found, however, that the relief plaintiffs requested in their motion for
terminating sanctions against the OnlineNIC defendants was not “narrowly tailored” and was in fact “unquestionably overbroad in that it seeks to enjoin Defendants not only from infringing Plaintiffs’ Marks, but also from Defendants’ business activities altogether.” Id. at 30. Judge van Keulen recommended the Court order the parties to meet and confer regarding the terms of the permanent injunction and to submit a joint proposal. at 31, 33. Following the ruling on alter ego, the Court ordered the parties to meet and confer regarding the relief issues raised in the Report and Recommendation, Dkt. No. 357 at 23, but the parties were unable to reach agreement. In its opposition brief, 35.CN takes issue with the scope of three paragraphs of the proposed injunction that plaintiffs filed. See Dkt. No. 379-4 ¶ 91(d), (e), (f); Dkt. No. 384 at 12-15. The morning of the hearing, the parties informed the Court that they successfully met and conferred to reach agreement on edits to the proposed injunction. Dkt. No. 390. The Court therefore intends to grant the permanent injunction, substituting the language at ¶ 91(d), (e), (f) with the new language to which the parties have agreed.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons and for good cause shown, the Court hereby GRANTS plaintiffs’ motion for default judgment against all defendants. A separate judgment, including permanent injunction, shall issue.
Plaintiffs are directed to submit within 14 days of the filing date of this Order a request for costs and attorneys’ fees in accordance with the procedures and deadlines set forth in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(d) and Local Rule 54. Unless the Court orders otherwise, the attorneys’ fees motion will be resolved on the papers.
IT IS SO ORDERED .
Dated: May 3, 2024
______________________________________ SUSAN ILLSTON United States District Judge
Notes
[1] The OnlineNIC defendants are comprised of defendants OnlineNIC, Inc. (“OnelineNIC”) and Domain ID Shield Service Co., Ltd. (“ID Shield”).
[2] 35.CN has since formally changed its name to Leascend Technology Co., Ltd. Dkt. No. 28 392.
[3] The Court notes that many of the
Eitel
factors are duplicative of the analysis Judge van
25
Keulen conducted on review of the original motion for terminating sanctions.
Dreith v. Nu
Image, Inc.
, No. CV 05-4146 SVW (MANx),
[4] The alter ego question resolved in plaintiffs’ favor. Dkt. No. 357. Among other things, 24 the Court found: 25 much of 35.CN’s “evidence” is actually inadmissible; 35.CN does not rebut much of the evidence that plaintiffs have presented; and 35.CN’s briefs make sweeping assertions that are unsupported by any evidence. 35.CN’s inability to be forthcoming 26 on basic questions, such as who purchased OnlineNIC from the companies’ shared 27 founder, have created a maze for the Court to navigate. 28 at 6.
[5] The Court notes that many of 35.CN’s objections are ones that 35.CN could have raised over two years ago, when filing its objection to the Report and Recommendation. 35.CN filed an objection to the report but did not object to Section IV (“Relief”) generally nor to the statutory damages recommendation in particular. Dkt. No. 228.
