DotConnectAfrica Trust v. Internet Corp. for Assigned Names & Nos.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 20, 2021
DocketB302739
StatusPublished

This text of DotConnectAfrica Trust v. Internet Corp. for Assigned Names & Nos. (DotConnectAfrica Trust v. Internet Corp. for Assigned Names & Nos.) 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
DotConnectAfrica Trust v. Internet Corp. for Assigned Names & Nos., (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 9/20/21 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

DOTCONNECTAFRICA TRUST, B302739

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BC607494) v.

INTERNET CORPORATION FOR ASSIGNED NAMES AND NUMBERS,

Defendant and Respondent;

ZA CENTRAL REGISTRY, NPC,

Intervener and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Robert B. Broadbelt, III, Judge. Affirmed. Dechert, Arif H. Ali, Anna Q. Do and Michael H. McGinley for Plaintiff and Appellant. Jones Day, Jeffrey A. LeVee, Erin L. Burke, Erica L. Reilley and Erna Mamikonyan for Defendant and Respondent. Kesselman Brantly Stockinger, David W. Kesselman, Amy T. Brantly and Kara D. McDonald for Intervener and Respondent. ____________________ We affirm the trial court’s application of judicial estoppel in this case about internet names. The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, widely known as ICANN, is in charge of internet website names. In this role, ICANN selects entities to handle selling internet names using particular suffixes. ICANN decided to expand the online universe by creating hundreds of new internet suffixes to supplement existing endings like .org (as in lacourt.org) and .gov (as in courts.ca.gov). One of ICANN’s proposed new suffixes was .africa. The chosen registrant would be able to sell internet names using this suffix. A fanciful name example would be example.africa. Two organizations applied for the .africa name rights. One was DotConnectAfrica Trust, which we shorten to DotConnect. The other was ZA Central Registry, NPC, which we call ZA. Representatives of more than 150 nations and international organizations advised ICANN against awarding the .africa rights to DotConnect. ICANN took this advice, rejected DotConnect, and selected ZA. DotConnect appealed to ICANN’s internal dispute resolution program, which resulted in a two-year arbitration. DotConnect told the arbitrators they should grant it seven procedural advantages during the arbitration—advantages like interim relief and an independent standard of review. DotConnect’s argument to the arbitrators was, when it applied to ICANN for .africa, DotConnect had waived its right to sue

2 ICANN in court, and this waiver meant it was only fair that DotConnect enjoy these procedural advantages during the arbitration. The arbitrators accepted DotConnect’s arguments and gave DotConnect the advantages it sought. The arbitrators did not award the .africa name to DotConnect. Rather the arbitrators ruled ICANN should put DotConnect back in the contest by resuming consideration of DotConnect’s application at the stage where ICANN had left off. ICANN complied with the arbitrators’ order and resumed considering DotConnect’s application. ZA, however, continued to have the backing of the African Union Commission and apparently of all 55 nations the African Union recognizes. The past support for DotConnect was no longer current. ICANN ultimately rejected DotConnect and awarded ZA the rights to .africa. DotConnect declined to seek arbitral review of this new ICANN decision. Rather it sued ICANN in Los Angeles Superior Court. The trial court held a bench trial and ruled against DotConnect on grounds of judicial estoppel. DotConnect appealed. The respondents are ICANN and ZA. We affirm. DotConnect has estopped itself from suing in court by convincing ICANN’s arbitrators DotConnect could not sue in court. I The facts span continents and decades. A We begin with the parties: DotConnect, ZA, and ICANN.

3 1 DotConnect is a nonprofit organization founded under the laws of Mauritius with a principal place of business in Kenya. Its founder and CEO is Sophia Bekele. Bekele maintains the website Sophia Bekele, which states, “Bekele travels globally for her work and shuttles regularly between her residences in Walnut Creek, California and Africa, where she has a firm based in business and family.” (Sophia Bekele, Biography [as of Sept. 15, 2021], archived at .) Bekele was born in Ethiopia and moved to the U.S. when she was 16. At the time of trial, Bekele had had a home in Northern California for about 20 years. At oral argument, the parties described Bekele as a person of achievement. 2 ZA is, according to DotConnect, a proxy applicant for the African Union Commission. ZA is a party to this case; the African Union Commission is not, but it is central to the controversy. ZA is a South African nonprofit company with its principal place of business in Midrand, South Africa. Its CEO is Mokgabudi Lucky Masilela. It was originally formed in 1988 under the name UniForum SA to promote open standards in software and hardware. ZA is the largest domain name registry in Africa. At the same time it applied for .africa, ZA applied for, and obtained, .capetown, .joburg, and .durban. ZA has launched these names to the internet public. ZA claims to have a well- known reputation of independence, neutrality, technical competence, and operational excellence.

4 The African Union Commission is, according to DotConnect, appointed officials who represent African heads of state. The Commission is the secretariat for the African Union, an intergovernmental organization comprised of the nations of the African continent. (See African Union, About the African Union [as of Sept. 15, 2021], archived at .) As of 2013, these member states included Algeria, Angola, Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cabo Verde, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Comoros, Congo, Cote d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Djibouti, Egypt, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Libya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sahrawi Republic, São Tomé and Príncipe, Senegal, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Africa, South Sudan, Sudan, Swaziland, Togo, Tunisia, Uganda, United Republic of Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. 3 ICANN helps govern the internet. Its website bears the slogan “One World, One Internet.” (ICANN [as of Sept. 15, 2021], archived at .) We sketch ICANN’s origin and nature. First we need some internet basics. A “domain name” is an internet name like lacourt.org or courts.ca.gov. The “.org” or “.gov” is the “top-level domain” name. ICANN is the entity that today establishes what top level domain names can exist and what other entities control the creation of new domain names.

5 The domain name system evolved as the internet grew from a recondite research curiosity to today’s worldwide information system. ARPANET, the forerunner of the internet, carried its first computer message in 1969. The message was “lo.” The message was supposed to be “login,” but the system crashed after o. (Wikipedia, ARPANET [as of Sept. 15, 2021], archived at (ARPANET).) “As UCLA computer scientist Leonard Kleinrock later put it, the internet had just uttered its first word, lo, ‘as in “lo and behold.” ’ ” (Jim Newton, Man of Tomorrow: The Relentless Life of Jerry Brown (2020) p. 124.) Elizabeth J. Feinler began a name directory in the 1970s when the ARPANET network was tiny. (Wikipedia, Elizabeth J. Feinler [as of Sept. 15, 2021], archived at .) In mid-1975, for instance, ARPANET connected only 57 computers. (ARPANET, supra.) As the internet grew, it became increasingly unwieldy to index this directory by hand, so creators invented new ways for assigning internet names.

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