Doe v. Great Expectations

10 Misc. 3d 618
CourtCivil Court of the City of New York
DecidedOctober 31, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 Misc. 3d 618 (Doe v. Great Expectations) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Civil Court of the City of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doe v. Great Expectations, 10 Misc. 3d 618 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Diane A. Lebedeff, J.

[619]*619Two claimants sue to recover, respectively, $1,000 and $3,790 paid under a contract for defendant’s services, which offer to expand a client’s social horizons primarily through posting a client’s video and profile on an Internet site on which other clients can review them and thereafter, as desired, approach a selected client for actual social interaction. Because of the similarities of these two cases, a consolidated decision is issued.1

Upon the basis of the contract and testimony, the court determines that the transactions were subject to the Dating Service Law, which regulates defined “social referral services” falling within the scope of General Business Law § 394 (General Business Law § 394-c [1] [a] [“ ‘social referral service’ shall include any service for a fee providing matching of members of the opposite sex, by use of computer or any other means, for the purpose of dating and general social contact”]). In relation to the application of the Dating Service Law, more than a decade ago, it was judicially determined that the law did cover services which match members by creating a location and mechanism for members to assess each other by reviewing another [620]*620member’s video, photograph and profile — a substantially similar service to the one defined by the written contract terms here 0Great Expectations Creative Mgt. v Attorney-General of State of N.Y., 162 Misc 2d 352, 357 [Sup Ct, NY County 1994, Greenfield, J.] [member profile, photos and video maintained at company’s center for perusal by other members, such services were covered by statute because “it does not matter whether defendant actually matches its members. It is sufficient if defendant made available the matching of members ... or supplied the means for matching the members”] [citations omitted]; accord, Chassman v People Resources, 151 Misc 2d 525, 528 [Civ Ct, NY County 1991, Diamond, J.] [member video and biography kept in a library for access by other members, “the distinction between a service that actually matches people for dating and one that provides the means for the match has no meaning in the context of the clear legislative intent to regulate this kind of activity no matter how it is accomplished or implemented”]).

The mere fact that the basic social introduction process was to be conducted on the Internet in this case does not place the dating service outside the scope of the law. The statute specifically includes services which utilize computers (General Business Law § 394-c [1] [a] [“ ‘social referral service’ shall include any service for a fee providing matching of members ... by use of computer ... for the purpose of dating and general social contact”]). Indeed, in Grossman v MatchNet plc (10 AD3d 577 [1st Dept 2004]), the Appellate Division applied the Dating Service Law to an Internet social referral service with far less expensive services and viewed any distinction regarding the use of the Internet as too insignificant to merit discussion.2 The use of the Internet creates no exception from the application of consumer protection laws, where there is a New York business and a transaction located in New York (People v Lipsitz, 174 Misc 2d 571, 579 [Sup Ct, NY County 1997, Lebedeff, J.] [for New York “consumer fraud claims, the Internet medium is essentially irrelevant, for the focus is primarily upon the location” of the relevant actor and whether statute violated]).

Because the Dating Service Law is found applicable, the court will review the contract and the service’s operation for compli[621]*621anee with the statute. Two types of departures are found. First, there was a massive overcharge by the dating service. Where, as here, the dating service does not assure it will furnish a client with a specified number of social referrals per month, the service may charge no more than $25 (General Business Law § 394-c [3] [“Every contract for social referral service which requires payment by the purchaser of such service of a total amount in excess of twenty-five dollars shall provide that the seller of such service must furnish to the purchaser a specified certain number of social referrals per month”]). The subject dating service contracts assured that there would be no referrals and, even as the oral assurances given to claimant Roe of 12 introductions to be provided over the course of 36 months, failed to commit to any number of introductions in any given month. Accordingly, $25 was the maximum lawful charge for each contract.3

Second, in both cases, the defendant’s form contract violated every mandate of the Dating Service Law, with the single exception that each contract did contain notice of a three-day “cooling off” right to cancel (General Business Law § 394-c [7] [a]-[d]). The required provisions omitted from the contracts establish a failure to comply with General Business Law § 394-c [622]*622(3) (contracts above $25 to state “specified certain number of social referrals per month”), subdivision (4) (contracts above $25 to set forth client has “option to cancel the contract and to receive a refund” if minimum referrals not made), subdivision (5) (undertaking service provider will not reveal “any information and material of a personal or private nature” without client’s written consent), subdivision (5-a) (granting client “unilateral right to place his or her membership on hold for a period of up to one year”), subdivision (6) (commitment of return to client of “all information and material of a personal or private nature acquired from a purchaser directly or indirectly including but not limited to answers to tests and questionnaires, photographs or background information ... by certified mail” after conclusion of contract), subdivision (8) (specification of the maximum distance for any face-to-face meeting), and subdivision (8-a) (requirement to set forth a policy to be applied if the client “moves to permanently reside at a location outside the service area”). The posture that defendant’s services were not governed by the law in any respect also is demonstrated by the failure to provide to the clients written notice of the mandatory “Dating Service Consumer Bill of Rights” (General Business Law § 394-c [7] [e] [“In every social referral service sale or renewal, the seller shall provide each purchaser with a clear and conspicuous, separate written notice, to be known as the ‘Dating Service Consumer Bill of Rights’, which shall contain . . . (specified) information,” including notice that if the fee exceeded $25, a minimum number of social referrals must be set out as required by General Business Law § 394-c (3)]).

Turning to the issue of damages, the Dating Service Law states that “[a]ny person who has been injured by reason of a violation of this section may bring ... an action to recover his or her actual damages or fifty dollars whichever is greater” (General Business Law § 394-c [9] [b]). The court is fully satisfied that “actual damages” include the difference between each contract price and the $25 fee which is the maximum fee permitted under the Dating Service Law for these contracts.

Both claimants seek a return of the full balance paid, which raises the question of whether they establish damages justifying a return of the additional $25 each. This court had its opportunity to “view the witnesses, hear the testimony and observe demeanor” (People v Bleakley, 69 NY2d 490, 495 [1987]; see also, Northern Westchester Professional Park Assoc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Misc. 3d 618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-v-great-expectations-nycivct-2005.