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Justia Weekly Opinion Summaries

Trademark
March 26, 2021

Table of Contents

France.com, Inc. v. The French Republic

International Law, Internet Law, Trademark

US Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit

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Trademark Opinions

France.com, Inc. v. The French Republic

Court: US Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit

Docket: 20-1016

Opinion Date: March 25, 2021

Judge: Diana Jane Gribbon Motz

Areas of Law: International Law, Internet Law, Trademark

In 1994, a California corporation purchased and registered the domain name and trademarks for “France.com.” Twenty years later, the corporation initiated a lawsuit in France, challenging a Dutch company’s use of the France.com trademark. The French Republic and its tourism office intervened, seeking to protect their country’s Internet identity and establish its right to the domain name. French trial and appellate courts declared the French Republic the rightful owner of the domain name. In the U.S., the corporation sued the French entities, which asserted sovereign immunity under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA), 28 U.S.C. 1604. The district court denied a motion to dismiss, concluding that immunity “would be best raised after discovery.” The Fourth Circuit reversed, directing the district court to dismiss the complaint with prejudice. The court concluded that it had jurisdiction over the appeal because the district court rested its order not on a failure to state a claim but on a denial of sovereign immunity, which constitutes an appealable collateral order. Neither FSIA’s “commercial activity” exception nor its “expropriation” exception applies. It is not clear that the French State’s actions in obtaining the website in judicial proceedings constitute “seizure” or an “expropriation” and they clearly do not constitute “commercial activity.” The corporation itself invoked the power of the French courts; only because it did so could the French State intervene in that action to obtain the challenged result.

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