Coalition for Icann v. Verisign, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 5, 2009
Docket07-16151
StatusPublished

This text of Coalition for Icann v. Verisign, Inc. (Coalition for Icann v. Verisign, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coalition for Icann v. Verisign, Inc., (9th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

COALITION FOR ICANN  TRANSPARENCY, INC., a Delaware corporation, No. 07-16151 Plaintiff-Appellant, v.  D.C. No. CV-05-04826-RMW VERISIGN, INC., a Delaware OPINION corporation, Defendant-Appellee.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of California Ronald M. Whyte, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted December 8, 2008—San Francisco, California

Filed June 5, 2009

Before: Mary M. Schroeder, A. Wallace Tashima and William A. Fletcher, Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge Schroeder

6741 CFIT v. VERISIGN, INC. 6745 COUNSEL

Bret A. Fausett, Los Angeles, California, for the plaintiff- appellant.

Ronald L. Johnston, Los Angeles, California, for defendant- appellee.

Dennis M. Hart, Washington, DC, for amicus curiae Internet Commerce Association.

OPINION

SCHROEDER, Circuit Judge:

This appeal is about whether the plaintiff, Coalition for ICANN Transparency, Inc., using antitrust statutes drafted in the late 19th century, has successfully stated claims in con- nection with the administration of the Internet domain name system, so essential to the operation of our sophisticated 21st century communications network. The district court ruled that the plaintiff failed. With the benefit of extensive briefing, col- legial discussions and amicus participation on appeal from other players in the domain name system, we hold that the plaintiff has stated claims under both Sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1-2. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.

I. Overview

Plaintiff Coalition for ICANN Transparency (“CFIT”) is an organization composed of participants in the Internet domain name system (“DNS”), including website owners. The heart of the IT industry is located in the Silicon Valley, which lies within the Northern District of California. CFIT filed its com- plaint in 2005 in the Northern District against defendant Veri- 6746 CFIT v. VERISIGN, INC. Sign, the corporation that acts as the sole operator of the “.com” and “.net” domain name registries.

VeriSign operates each registry pursuant to a contract with the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (“ICANN”), a non-profit oversight body that coordinates the DNS on behalf of the United States Department of Com- merce. Pursuant to these contracts, VeriSign receives a certain price for registering each domain name. It is not disputed that there can only be one operator for each domain name registry at any one time. Therefore, the only viable competition can take place in connection with obtaining a new contract after expiration of the old one. The .com agreement entered into by ICANN and VeriSign in 2006, after no competitive bidding, provides that the price of domain names can increase by seven percent over four of the six succeeding years. The .net agree- ment, which was entered into as a result of competitive bid- ding, contained price caps that were set to expire on December 31, 2006, leaving no limitation on the price that could be charged for .net names. Each contract has a pre- sumptive renewal provision.

CFIT’s complaint endeavored to state claims against Veri- Sign under Section 1 of the Sherman Act and under Califor- nia’s counterpart, the Cartwright Act, for conspiracy in restraint of trade in connection with the terms of the .com and .net contracts’ pricing and renewal provisions. In essence, CFIT sought to show that the prices were artificially high and that the renewal provisions wrongfully restrained competition for successor contracts.

The complaint also endeavored to state claims under Sec- tion 2 of the Sherman Act, alleging that VeriSign’s conduct in obtaining the anti-competitive provisions constituted monopolization or attempted monopolization of the .com and .net registration markets. In addition, the complaint sought an injunction against VeriSign’s proposed service for registration CFIT v. VERISIGN, INC. 6747 of expiring domain names, on the ground it constituted an attempted monopolization of that allegedly separate market.

The district court, after some discovery and several oppor- tunities for CFIT to amend the complaint, dismissed the action with prejudice for failure to state claims under state or federal law in connection with either the .com or the .net con- tract. It held that CFIT had not sufficiently alleged that either the terms of the contracts or VeriSign’s conduct in obtaining the contracts amounted to antitrust violations. The court also held that CFIT failed sufficiently to allege that a market for expiring domain names existed separate and apart from the market for newly registered domain names.

In this appeal, CFIT contends that the district court failed to appreciate the seriousness of the allegations of anti- competitive conduct and that, in rejecting the existence of a separate market for expiring domain names, the district court improperly relied on already outdated authority from earlier in this young century. We now agree with CFIT, at least with respect to the claims challenging the terms and award of the .com contract and asserting the existence of a separate market for expiring domain names. We therefore reverse.

II. The Players

Plaintiff CFIT is a non-profit corporation composed of DNS stakeholders, including domain name registrars and owners of domain names (registrants). CFIT alleges that its members, including both registrars and registrants, have an interest in ensuring that conditions in the domain name regis- tration market remain fair and competitive.

ICANN is a nonprofit corporation that was created in 1998, in response to a policy directive of the Department of Com- merce, to administer the domain name system on the Depart- ment’s behalf. ICANN is charged by the Department of Commerce with selecting and entering into agreements with 6748 CFIT v. VERISIGN, INC. registry operators such as VeriSign. ICANN was named as a defendant in CFIT’s original complaint and in its First Amended Complaint, but CFIT dropped ICANN as a defen- dant in the Second Amended Complaint, from which this appeal arises. It seeks to maintain claims only against Veri- Sign.

Defendant VeriSign is a corporation that, through its con- tractual relationship with ICANN, acts as the sole operator of the .com and .net domain name registries. This means that VeriSign manages the definitive databases of registered .com and .net domain names. VeriSign has held this position since 2001, prior to which its predecessor-in-interest, Network Solutions, Inc. (“NSI”), managed the databases.

III. Nature and Terms of the Agreements

VeriSign has been the sole operator of the .com and .net registries since 2001, when it entered into two separate agree- ments with ICANN (the “2001 .com Agreement” and the “2001 .net Agreement,” respectively). Those agreements supercede ICANN’s previous agreements with NSI. The 2001 Agreements imposed on VeriSign a price cap of $6 per year for registration, renewal, or extension of any domain name. Each of the 2001 Agreements contained a renewal provision that allowed ICANN to place the contract up for competitive bidding upon its expiration.

When the 2001 .net Agreement expired in 2005, there was a competitive bidding process that resulted in the selection of VeriSign’s bid. VeriSign entered into a new agreement with ICANN (the “2005 .net Agreement”). Before the 2001 .com Agreement was due to expire in 2007, however, VeriSign and ICANN agreed to extend it with a new contract (the “2006 .com Agreement”).

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