Boshears v. PeopleConnect Inc

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Washington
DecidedSeptember 5, 2024
Docket2:21-cv-01222
StatusUnknown

This text of Boshears v. PeopleConnect Inc (Boshears v. PeopleConnect Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boshears v. PeopleConnect Inc, (W.D. Wash. 2024).

Opinion

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5 6 7 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 8 WESTERN DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON AT SEATTLE 9 10 JOHN BOSHEARS, individually and on CASE NO. C21-1222 MJP behalf of all others similarly situated, 11 ORDER DENYING DEFENDANT’S Plaintiff, MOTION TO DISMISS AND 12 COMPEL ARBITRATION v. 13 PEOPLECONNECT, INC., 14 Defendant. 15 16 17 INTRODUCTION 18 This Matter comes before the Court on Defendant PeopleConnect, Inc.’s Motion to 19 Dismiss and Compel Arbitration. (Dkt. No. 85.) Having reviewed the Motion, Plaintiff John 20 Boshears’s Response (Dkt. No. 88), the Reply (Dkt. No. 93), the Parties’ presentations during 21 oral argument (Dkt. No. 95), and all supporting materials, the Court DENIES the Motion. 22 23 24 1 BACKGROUND 2 A. PeopleConnect and the Classmates.com Terms of Service 3 PeopleConnect owns and operates Classmates.com, a website marketing access to and 4 reprints of over 400,000 high school yearbooks (See First Amended Complaint (“FAC”) ¶ 19

5 (Dkt. No. 17).) Classmates.com customers access the services in three different ways: (1) as 6 individual “Visitors,” who browse the website without registering for an account; (2) as “Free 7 Members,” who create a Classmates.com account by submitting their information and agreeing 8 to the company’s Terms of Service; and (3) as “Paid Members,” or Free Members who have then 9 purchased a subscription to Classmates.com. (Declaration of Tara McGuane ¶ 5 (Dkt. No. 87).) 10 Each tier affords the customer differing levels of access to the Classmates.com services—for 11 example, Visitors are allowed to view “limited yearbook content,” while Free and Paid Members 12 may freely browse yearbooks from their own graduating high school, search for other Free and 13 Paid Members, and conduct text searches within yearbooks. (Id. ¶¶ 15–16.) 14 When registering as either a Free Member or a Paid Member, customers are presented

15 with a registration page that requires them to provide certain information, including their 16 graduating high school, year of graduation, first name, last name at time of graduation, and email 17 address. (McGuane Decl. ¶ 8.) They also must select a username and password for their 18 Classmates.com account. (Id.) Before selecting a large yellow button labeled “Submit,” 19 customers are warned that by doing so they “agree to the Classmates Terms of Service and 20 Privacy Policy,” and are provided a hyperlink to both documents. (Id.) 21 The version of PeopleConnect’s Terms of Service relevant to this dispute was made 22 effective on November 9, 2021. (McGuane Decl. Ex. 1 (the “TOS”) at 11.) The second 23 paragraph of the TOS warns users of the following:

24 1 By accessing and using the Websites and Services you are agreeing to the following Terms of Service. We encourage you to review these Terms of Service, 2 along with the Privacy Policy, which is incorporated herein by reference, as they form a binding agreement between us and you. If you object to anything in the 3 Terms of Service or the Privacy Policy, do not use the Websites and Services. Additionally, if you access and use the Websites and Services on behalf of or for 4 the benefit of another, you are also agreeing to these Terms of Service on their behalf, and further affirm that you have the authority to so agree. Any reference to 5 ‘you’ or ‘your’ shall also include any such person(s).

6 (TOS at 1.) 7 The TOS also contain an arbitration provision. (See generally, TOS § 12.) The arbitration 8 provision requires arbitration of “any and all disputes” that may arise between the person using 9 Classmates.com and PeopleConnect. (Id.) By agreeing to the TOS, customers also 10 “independently waive any right to bring or participate in any class action for any Disputes,” 11 (TOS § 12(E)), and affirm that dispute resolution “BE CONDUCTED ONLY ON AN 12 INDIVIDUAL BASIS AND NOT IN A CLASS OR REPRESENTATIVE ACTION. NEITHER 13 PARTY SHALL BE A MEMBER IN A CLASS, CONSOLIDATED, OR REPRESENTATIVE 14 ACTION OR PROCEEDING. . .” (TOS § 12(C)). 15 However, the TOS also allow for customers and their agents to opt-out of arbitration by 16 notifying PeopleConnect via mail. (TOS § 12(D).) To be effective, an opt-out notice must be 17 signed and “must include your name, address, phone number and email address(es) used to 18 register with or use the Services, as well as the name, address, phone number and email 19 address(es) of any person for whom you are opting out as their agent.” (Id.) The TOS contains 20 the following two opt-out provisions: 21 (1) “If opting out for yourself, this [opt-out] notice must be sent within thirty (30) days of your first use of the Services . . .” 22 (2) “If opting out as an agent for another user, this [opt-out] notice must be sent within (30) [sic] days of that other user’s first use of the 23 Services.” 24 1 (TOS § 12(D).) 2 B. Boshears Engages Counsel to Investigate his Potential Claims 3 Plaintiff Josh Boshears is a citizen of Indiana, where he resides and attended high school 4 from 1995–98. (FAC ¶¶ 22, 37.) On or around October 11, 2021, Boshears received a mailed

5 solicitation from Attorney Samuel Strauss informing him that Classmates.com may “contain[] 6 information related to former students of Bedford North Lawrence High School who were in 7 attendance in the years 1995–98. (Declaration of Benjamin T. Halbig Ex. 1 (Dkt. No. 86).) The 8 solicitation includes language reading that “Turke & Strauss lawyers represent clients in class 9 action lawsuits across the country.” (Halbig Decl. Ex. 1 at 5.) Prior to then, Boshears was not 10 aware of Classmates.com, let alone a user of the website. (Halbig Decl. Ex. 2 (the “Boshears 11 Dep.”) at 44:12–18.) 12 On October 18, 2021, Boshears and Attorney Strauss exchanged emails and phone calls 13 regarding PeopleConnect’s business practices and Boshears’s “potential willingness to serve as a 14 class representative” in a legal claim against the company. (See Halbig Decl. Ex. 4; Boshears

15 Dep. at 53, 60.) Boshears assumed that prior to bringing a legal claim against PeopleConnect, 16 someone would need to “check the website to make sure [his] information actually appeared” on 17 Classmates.com. (Boshears Dep. at 56.) 18 That same day, Attorney Benjamin Osborn searched for Boshears’s information and 19 likeness on Classmates.com. (McGuane Decl. ¶ 23.) To do so, Attorney Osborn used a Free 20 Member Classmates.com account, which he had created on April 16, 2021, under the alias “Ben 21 Whipple.” (Id. ¶¶ 21, 23.) Attorney Osborn took four screenshots of the Classmates.com website, 22 including screenshots of pages containing Boshears’s information and photographs. (Halbig 23 Decl. Ex. 5.) Attorney Strauss sent these screenshots to Boshears via email and asked Boshears

24 1 to “confirm[], if in fact, these [were his] high school photos.” (Id.) Boshears confirmed that the 2 photos featured his likeness and told Attorney Strauss that he “could review the information 3 [from Classmates.com] with regards to pursuing a federal lawsuit,” and that he “could use those 4 images . . . in support of [a potential legal] claim” against PeopleConnect. (Boshears Dep. at 57–

5 58.) 6 Three days later, on October 21, 2021, Boshears signed an agreement to serve as a class 7 representative in this case. (Declaration of Benjamin R. Osborn Ex. 2 (Dkt. No. 89).) When he 8 signed the class representative agreement (“CRA”), Boshears understood that he was authorizing 9 his counsel “[t]o research the use of [his] personal information pursuant to a class action lawsuit 10 in federal court,” and that they would “do what was necessary in that investigation in order to 11 bring [his] claims.” (Boshears Dep. at 64–65.) The CRA would only remain effective if 12 Boshears’s claims proceeded as a class action lawsuit.

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