In re Forchion

198 Cal. App. 4th 1284, 130 Cal. Rptr. 3d 690, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 1144
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 31, 2011
DocketNo. B227341
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 198 Cal. App. 4th 1284 (In re Forchion) 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
In re Forchion, 198 Cal. App. 4th 1284, 130 Cal. Rptr. 3d 690, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 1144 (Cal. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion

MALLANO, P. J.

This appeal presents the question of whether an individual may statutorily change his name to the name of his Web site, including the “.com.” (See Code Civ. Proc., §§ 1275-1279.6.) The answer is no.

Petitioner, Robert Edward Forchion, Jr. (Forchion), is a resident of New Jersey. Since 2009, he has managed a Rastafarian temple in Los Angeles and has operated a medical marijuana dispensary that he claims is lawful under the Compassionate Use Act of 1996 (Health & Saf. Code, § 11362.5). He has devoted his adult life to promoting the legalization of marijuana and, in 2000, was convicted in New Jersey of marijuana offenses. Forchion is currently facing trial in New Jersey on marijuana charges arising out of an arrest on April 1, 2010. He is free on bail.

Forchion has a national reputation as a marijuana advocate and is popularly known as NJweedman. He operates a Web site, “NJweedman.com,” which discusses his efforts to legalize the drug. In 2001, Forchion unsuccessfully petitioned the New Jersey state courts to change his name to “NJWeedman.com.”

[1287]*1287In April 2010, Forchion petitioned the court below to change his name to “NJweedman.com.” The trial court denied the petition. Forchion appealed.

We affirm. A statutory name change to NJweedman.com would last indefinitely. But Forchion might lose the use of his Web site by failing to make periodic registration payments or by breaching the registration agreement. In that event, the Web site name (NJweedman.com) could be registered to someone else and, at the same time, Forchion could keep his new personal name (NJweedman.com). If both parties used that name to conduct business, confusion might result. Further, even if Forchion were allowed to adopt NJweedman.com as his personal name, and he properly maintained it as the name of his Web site, the name might be so similar to another Web site name or trademark that the multiple usage would create confusion.

Alternatively, the name change would associate Forchion’s new personal name with the Web site’s advice that individuals violate the law in several respects. A name change should not have that consequence.

And, given Forchion’s strong ties to New Jersey and his failed attempt in 2001 to obtain the same name change there, we conclude that, as a matter of comity, California should not grant Forchion the relief his home state has already considered and denied.

I

BACKGROUND

The allegations and facts in this appeal are taken from the name change petition and the content of NJweedman.com (the Web site or the site). In that regard, we notified Forchion of our intention to take judicial notice of the content of his Web site and any other Web site to which it provides a link. (See Evid. Code, § 452, subd. (h).) He did not object, but expressed certain concerns, which we have taken into account. (See id., §§ 455, 459.)1

A. Biographical Information

“Robert Edward Forchion (bom July 23, 1964) ... is a cannabis activist and a perennial candidate for various New Jersey elected offices. Forchion identifies himself as a member of the Legalize Marijuana Party and campaigns primarily on the single issue of cannabis legalization. Forchion has [1288]*1288done various stunts to bring attention to cannabis legalization, including smoking cannabis in front of the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia ....

“Forchion is a resident of Browns Mills, New Jersey, a section of Pemberton Township, New Jersey. [][]... [][]

“At the age of 15, Forchion smoked his first marijuana cigarette and was ‘immediately impressed by its medical healing powers, in regard to his asthma.’ By age 18 he was a regular user of marijuana, and he dismissed the Surgeon General’s claims of its harms as ‘propaganda and Christian superstitions’.

“In 1982 upon graduation from Edgewood Regional High School in Ateo, New Jersey, he enlisted in the New Jersey National Guard and enrolled at Claflin College, Orangeburg, South Carolina. In 1986 he received an honorable discharge from the [New Jersey] National Guard and enlisted in the United States Marine Corps . . . [;] he had an asthma attack and was medically discharged. After being discharged from the Marine Corps, he changed his name to Edward and enlisted in the United States Army. While in the army he used cannabis despite the warnings from the government, to control his asthma. . . . [I]n 1990 he receive[d] an honorable discharge from the army. He became a coast-to-coast trucker using his own truck he purchased in 1994.

“In 1995 Forchion became a practicing Rastafarian.'

“He proudly admits he was a ‘marijuana smuggler’, driving hundreds of pounds of cannabis from Arizona border towns to east coast cities such as Cleveland, Ohio, Philadelphia, New York City and Camden, New Jersey. His Mexican/Cuban suppliers in Arizona were the first to dub him The New Jersey Weedman, because while other drugs were available for transport he only wanted to transport cannabis.

“On November 24, 1997 he was arrested by the Camden County Drug Task Force and members of the local [drug enforcement agency]—On December 1, 2000 after a very public trial, Forchion accepted a plea deal and was convicted and sentenced to 10 years .... He was released after 17 months on April 3, 2002 into the state’s ISP . . . (Intensive Supervision Program)----[][]... H] y

“Forchion constantly had run-ins with New Jersey state authorities for what he described as exercising his free speech and what authorities described as advocating criminal activity.

[1289]*1289“In 2008 Forchion fled to California seeking asylum, leaving the garden state for the pot friendly environs of Los Angeles. Forchion claimed he was living in political exile, having fled the official persecution of [New Jersey] State authorities for his political views on marijuana legalization.

“In 2009 he opened a Rastafarian Temple on Hollywood Blvd., named the Liberty Bell Temple H, after a series of protests] he held at the Liberty [B]ell in Philadelphia. At the Liberty Bell Temple he provided marijuana to hundreds of sick people every week, doing what he preached about in New Jersey. Being in Hollywood he quickly became a ‘[H] oily wood [persona]’, providing marijuana to patients and celebrities alike. [Forchion] opened a party promotions company called NJweedmanPromotions. He stopped calling himself a ‘marijuana activist’ and instead insisted] he was now a ‘marijuana capitalist’. He started hosting huge marijuana mansion parties in the Hollywood Hills where he openly provided marijuana to all the guests.

“He appeared in several documentaries, TV shows and music videos.

“In 2010 Forchion became [an] author, of his own biography titled[, Public Enemy #420,] NJweedman Super-hero[] of the Potheadsf,] . . . first published on Jan[.] 18th, 2010[,] ironically the same day New Jersey legalized marijuana for medical purposes making Forchion feel vindicated for his decade of activism.”2

At his Web site, an entire page is devoted to selling the book.3 In addition, a small ad prefaced with, “Buy the book,” appears on several pages of the site.4

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 Cal. App. 4th 1284, 130 Cal. Rptr. 3d 690, 2011 Cal. App. LEXIS 1144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-forchion-calctapp-2011.