Filetech S.A.R.L. v. France Telecom

978 F. Supp. 464, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14002, 1997 WL 583151
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 15, 1997
Docket95 Civ. 1848 (CSH)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 978 F. Supp. 464 (Filetech S.A.R.L. v. France Telecom) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Filetech S.A.R.L. v. France Telecom, 978 F. Supp. 464, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14002, 1997 WL 583151 (S.D.N.Y. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

HAIGHT, Senior District Judge.

This case presents the question whether a French corporation and its American subsidiary may invoke the antitrust laws of the United States in order to complain of the conduct of an entity of the Republic of France that occurred, and is occurring, almost entirely in France. The case is before the Court on defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint.

I

Plaintiff Filetech S.A.R.L. (“Filetech”) is a French corporation formed in 1988 by Guy Birenbaum, a resident of France and a citizen of France and Canada. In Filetech’s words, its business purpose is “to create a data base which would include virtually every resident person, entity, or business in France, from which innovative marketing services could be created for a worldwide clientele.” Complaint, ¶ 18.

Those “innovative marketing services” consist primarily of the direct mailing of unsolicited communications to French residents, businesses and entities, the mailers having purchased from Filetech that all-inclusive French data base that Filetech hopes to create.

Filetech formed its subsidiary, plaintiff Filetech U.S.A., Inc. (“Filetech U.S.A.”), a New York corporation, to locate and contract with American businesses interested in direct mail marketing to potential customers in France. I will on occasion refer to the plaintiffs collectively as “Filetech.”

Defendant France Telecom is an independent public legal entity created and wholly owned by the Republic of France. France Telecom owns and operates all fixed telephone services in France. Defendant France Telecom, Inc. (“Telecom Inc.”) is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Telecom, with its principal place of business in New York. I will on occasion refer to the defendants collectively as “France Telecom.”

A

France Telecom engages in other commercial activities in addition to its fixed telephonic services business. One of these is the sale of access to its data base of telephone subscribers for the purpose of developing marketing lists. France Telecom engages in that' business by means of two services known as “Marketis” and “Teladresses.” I will describe them more fully infra. But it is first necessary to describe the genesis and purpose of a compilation, known as the “Orange List,” that lies at the heart of this case.

The genesis and purpose of the Orange List may be traced to a series of French statutes and regulations. Article 7 of France Telecom’s charter provides that when marketing the data contained in its directories, France Telecom “must comply with any legislative or governmental regulations protecting human identity, individual and civil rights and privacy.” 1 There are a number of pertinent laws and regulations.

In 1978, the French legislature enacted the Data Processing and Individual Rights Law (“the Data Processing Act.”). That act created a governmental agency called (in translation) the “Data Processing and Individual Rights National Commission,”, and popularly known as the “CNIL,” reflecting its French acronym. The CNIL regulates public and private data processing activities in France. Before conducting such activities, public entities like France Telecom and private entities *467 like Filetech must apply to and receive from CNIL the requisite permission or acknowledgment. The Data Processing Act prohibits, inter alia, the gathering of data through fraudulent, unfair or illicit means, and empowers any individual to refuse, for legitimate reasons, the processing by computer of personal data about him. Persons processing personal data on a computer must ensure the security of the data and prevent it from being divulged to unauthorized third persons. Breach of the Act’s provisions is punishable under the French Penal Code.

France Telecom’s charter from the French government permits it, inter alia, to market its electronic telephone directory, accessible by computer, to third parties. In December 1990, the French legislature amended the Postal and Telecommunications Code (“the PTT Code”) to allow the publishing of telephone subscribers or users lists, subject to the filing by publishers of telephone directories of an undertaking to comply with Article R. 10 of the PTT Code.

France Telecom itself operates under comparable restrictions. Article 7 of its charter provides that “France Telecom, when marketing the data contained in its directories, must comply with any legislative or governmental regulations protecting human identity, individual and civil rights and property ...” That requirement implicates Article R. 10-1 of the PTT Code, which was amended in December 1990 to provide in pertinent part as follows:

“All persons subscribing pursuant to the conditions set forth in Articles D.317 and D.284, may ... request, without being liable to pay any fee, not to appear on the lists extracted from the telephone book and marketed by [France Telecom] ... The use by anyone, of information extracted from the telephone book concerning persons mentioned in the previous paragraph, for commercial purposes or for public diffusion, is prohibited.”

This law requires France Telecom to honor the wishes of subscribers who do not want their names to be revealed to anyone for marketing purposes. The record reveals that significant numbers of French residents hold that preference; a sentiment not unknown in the United States, where unsolicited direct marketing mailings frequently fill-mailboxes to overflowing.

Obedient to Article R. 10-1 of the PTT Code, France Telecom maintains a list of French telephone subscribers who, prompted by a desire for privacy, have directed an Article R. 10-1 request to France Telecom. For reasons not revealed by the record, this is known as the “Orange List.”'

There is another color-coded French regulatory act upon which France Telecom relies. On May 12, 1992, the CNIL adopted Resolution No. 92-049 approving the “Saffron List.” The Saffron List contains the names of France Telecom subscribers who do not wish to be bothered by advertisements sent by fax or telex. The CNIL stated in its resolution that:

communicating the Saffron List would amount to making public a behavioral database devoted to persons hostile to commercial canvassing'and could be detrimental to said persons. As such, the Saffron List can only be communicated indirectly, either via transmission of the entire list of telex/fax subscribers cleansed of the Saffron subscribers or by cleansing of those lists which will be communicated to France Telecom. (In translation; see Henrot Decl. at ¶ 17).

France Telecom says that this resolution of a French regulatory agency, although dealing with a different protected list, declares policy considerations that also resonate in the case at bar.

B

The effect of Article R. 10-1 as originally promulgated was to prohibit France Telecom from providing the names and addresses of subscribers included in the Orange List to any third party for any purpose. Another company, wishing to. publish its own telephone directories, brought an action in the French courts invoking the antitrust rules contained in the European Union treaty.

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In Re Vitamin C Antitrust Litigation
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Filetech S.A. v. France Telecom, S.A.
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Filetech v. France Telecom
157 F.3d 922 (Second Circuit, 1998)
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157 F.3d 922 (Second Circuit, 1998)

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Bluebook (online)
978 F. Supp. 464, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14002, 1997 WL 583151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/filetech-sarl-v-france-telecom-nysd-1997.