Balsam v. Trancos, Inc.

203 Cal. App. 4th 1083, 138 Cal. Rptr. 3d 108
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 24, 2012
DocketNo. A128485; No. A129458
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 203 Cal. App. 4th 1083 (Balsam v. Trancos, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Balsam v. Trancos, Inc., 203 Cal. App. 4th 1083, 138 Cal. Rptr. 3d 108 (Cal. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Opinion

MARGULIES, J.

Defendant Trancos, Inc. (Trancos), appeals from a judgment awarding statutory damages and attorney fees to plaintiff Daniel L. Balsam under Business and Professions Code1 section 17529 et seq. (Anti-spam Law). Balsam cross-appeals from portions of the judgment denying him relief under the Consumers Legal Remedies Act, Civil Code section 1750 et seq. (CLRA), and finding Trancos’s chief executive officer (CEO), Brian Nelson, not personally liable for the judgment along with Trancos. We affirm the judgment in all respects.

I. BACKGROUND

Balsam filed suit against Trancos, Nelson, and other individuals and entities2 in April 2008, alleging causes of action for (1) violations of section 17529.5,3 (2) violations of the CLRA, and (3) declaratory relief as to the legality of defendants’ actions under these statutes.

A court trial commenced on October 14, 2009. At the outset of the trial, the court ruled Balsam lacked standing to sue under the CLRA because he was not a “consumer” of any goods or services as defined in Civil Code section 1761, subdivision (d) and he did not sustain any damages caused by defendants’ conduct as required by Civil Code section 1780. The court further held Balsam’s Anti-spam Law cause of action was not preempted by federal law, as asserted by defendants. Balsam agreed to the dismissal of his declaratory relief cause of action before trial.

[1089]*1089A. Trial Evidence

1. The Parties

Nelson is the CEO and founder of Trancos, which operates several Internet advertising businesses. In 2007, Trancos operated a division called Meridian E-mail (Meridian). Through Meridian, Trancos acquired the right to use e-mail address lists from nine entities, including Hi-Speed Media (Hi-Speed), which is owned by ValueClick. Under its agreement with Hi-Speed, Trancos found advertisers that would pay to have their offers and promotions sent out to Hi-Speed’s list, and Trancos would split the revenues with Hi-Speed.4 Trancos hired a consultant, Joe Costeli, to “manage” the list, which meant he would upload the content the advertiser provided for the subject line and body of the e-mail to Trancos’s e-mail servers, and send them out. Costeli would generate the domain name used in the “From” line.

Nelson testified he believed Hi-Speed obtained e-mail addresses by using promotions and Web sites in which the consumer gave his or her broad consent to receive future commercial e-mail messages from Hi-Speed or any of its “partners.” Nelson maintained such a consent extended to Trancos as well as to any advertiser whose messages Trancos sent out to Hi-Speed’s e-mail list, subject to the recipient’s right to unsubscribe or “opt out” of future messages, which was offered as an option in all of the commercial e-mail messages Trancos sent.

Balsam is a licensed California attorney with experience in consumer protection litigation. Balsam has been either a named plaintiff or has represented plaintiffs in dozens of lawsuits against companies for unsolicited e-mail advertising. He maintains a Web site and blog with information on spammers and spam litigation. He maintains over 100 e-mail addresses.

2. The E-mails

Balsam owns four computers, all of which are located in California. In the summer of 2007, Balsam received eight commercial e-mails sent by Trancos to one of his e-mail addresses using Hi-Speed’s e-mail list. According to each of the eight e-mails, Balsam allegedly gave consent for use of his e-mail address on “ ‘2007 July 11’ ” by responding to an offer on a Web site owned by Hi-Speed using a computer with the Internet protocol address or IP address 64.184.86.246. Balsam presented uncontradicted evidence he could not have accessed Hi-Speed’s Web site from that IP address on that date, and [1090]*1090did not otherwise provide his e-mail address to or consent to its use by Hi-Speed, Trancos, or any of the advertisers named in the eight e-mails.

The e-mails Balsam received had the following relevant content:

E-mail No. 1 stated on the “From” line that it was from “Paid Survey” with an e-mail address of survey@misstepoutcome.com. The subject line stated: “Get paid 5 dollars for 1 survey.” The content in the body of the e-mail was a commercial advertisement purportedly by “Survey Adventure.” Paid Survey was not the name of any existing company. There was no company named misstepoutcome and no Web site at www.misstepoutcome.com.5 The latter is a fanciful name Trancos gave to one of the 477 domain names it has privately registered.6,7 As in all eight of the e-mails, Trancos’s name does not appear anywhere in the e-mail.
In regard to opting out of future e-mails, e-mail No. 1 stated the recipient could do so by writing to “Strategic Financial Publishing, Inc.” at an address in Indiana or by clicking on a link to “http://misstepoutcome.com./ soi?m=79444&!=2.” There was a second opt-out link near the end of the e-mail stating in part “if you no longer wish to receive our emails please click here.” The name “USAProductsOnline.com” appeared at the end of the e-mail with a specified street address and suite number on Santa Monica Boulevard in Los Angeles. The domain name, USAProductsOnline.com, is privately registered to Trancos, but there is no actual company named USAProductsOnline.com, no such entity is registered as a fictitious business name of Trancos, and there is no Web site at www.USAProductsOnline.com. The street address given for it is the address of The UPS Store, where Trancos [1091]*1091rented a post office box in the name of USAProductsOnline.com. The suite number referenced in the e-mail was actually Trancos’s mailbox number at The UPS Store.8
E-mail No. 2 stated it was from “Your Business” with an e-mail address of franchisegator@modalworship.com. There was no actual business named Your Business, no actual entity named modalworship, and no Web site at modalworship.com. The subject line stated: “Be Your Own Boss! You could own a franchise!” The body of the e-mail consisted of a commercial advertisement purportedly by Franchise Gator. E-mail No. 2 advised recipients they may opt out by sending a copy of the e-mail to Franchise Gator at a Seattle address or by clicking on a link. Like all eight of the e-mails sent to Balsam, e-mail No. 2 provided a second opt-out link and the name and same Santa Monica Boulevard street address for USAProductsOnline.com.
E-mails Nos. 3 through 8 contained “From” lines stating the sender was, respectively, “Christian Dating,” “Your Promotion,” “Bank Wire Transfer Available,” “eHarmony,” “Dating Generic,” and “Join Elite.” Each purported to be from an e-mail address at a different one of the fancifully named domain names privately registered to Trancos (e.g., moussetogether.com, nationalukulelee.com). Only one of the e-mails, e-mail No. 6 purporting to be from eHarmony, contained the name of an actual, existing company on its “From” line, although the return e-mail address, eHarmony@minecyclic.com, referenced a domain name privately registered by Trancos, not one belonging to eHarmony.

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Bluebook (online)
203 Cal. App. 4th 1083, 138 Cal. Rptr. 3d 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/balsam-v-trancos-inc-calctapp-2012.