JYSK Bed'N Linen v. MONOSIJ DUTTA-ROY

810 F.3d 767, 2015 WL 8999502
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 16, 2015
Docket13-15309
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 810 F.3d 767 (JYSK Bed'N Linen v. MONOSIJ DUTTA-ROY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
JYSK Bed'N Linen v. MONOSIJ DUTTA-ROY, 810 F.3d 767, 2015 WL 8999502 (11th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge:

The Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act, § 43(d) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(d), provides: “A person shall be liable ... by the owner of a mark *771 ... if ... that person ... has a bad faith intent to profit from that mark ...; and ... registers, traffics in, or uses a domain name that ... is identical or confusingly similar to that mark.” Id. § 1125(d)(1)(A). In this case, the District Court granted Jysk Bed’N Linen an injunction requiring Monosij Dutta-Roy to transfer to Jysk four domain names he had registered in his own name. The court also granted Jysk’s motion for summary judgment on Dutta-Roy’s counterclaims. Dutta-Roy appeals these two decisions pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 as if, together, they constitute a final judgment in the case. 1 They do not because still pending resolution in the District Court are claims Jysk brought against Dutta-Roy under §§ 43(a) and (c) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1125(a) and (c), and state law. 2 Although we lack jurisdiction to entertain Dutta-Roy’s appeal under § 1291, we have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1) to review the District Court’s injunction. 3 Exercising that jurisdiction, we find no merit in Dut-ta-Roy’s challenges to the injunction and therefore affirm.

I.

A.

Jysk Bed’N Linen, Inc. 4 is a retail seller of furniture for the home, office, and patio operating stores in Georgia, New Jersey, and North Carolina. Since 1990, it has operated under the trade name and common-law trademark By Design, 5 In early 1999, Jysk contracted with Mónosij Dutta-Roy, Shashi Sonnad, Ashish Negandhi, and Dev Worah to create an online-shopping website. The website needed a domain name, so Dutta-Roy was instructed to register the name bydesignfumiture.com, list *772 ing Jysk as the owner. 6 Dutta-Roy registered that domain name, in April 1999, but he listed himself, not Jysk, as the owner.

In September 1999, Dutta-Roy, Sonnad, Negandhi, and Worah formed Bazaar-works, LLC, and began working on the website. At first, Dutta-Roy worked on designing the website. After the relationship between Jysk and Bazaarworks fell apart in 2003, Sonnad took over through her company, Dead Dog, Inc., and monitored the website’s performance through the filing of this lawsuit. 7

On April 9, 2012, Dutta-Roy’s registration of bydesignfurniture.com expired, which caused Jysk’s website to go down. Jysk immediately discovered that it did not own the registration because it was in Dutta-Roy’s name, and asked Dutta-Roy to re-register bydesignfumiture.com in its name. Dutta-Roy refused. On April 20, he re-registered bydesignfumiture.com and on April 26 he registered the domain names bydesignfumiture.org, bydesignfur-nitures.com, and bydesign-fumitures.com.

Dutta-Roy thereafter offered to transfer the domain names to Jysk “if [he was] adequately compensated solely for the over 4,000 hours work [he] ... performed for [Jysk] pursuant to the Partnership Agreement” between Bazaarworks, LLC and Jysk’s predecessor, Quick Ship Holding, Inc. The agreement never existed; therefore, Jysk rejected Dutta-Roy’s offer. It filed this lawsuit instead.

B.

Jysk brought this action against Dutta-Roy in the Northern District of Georgia on September 12, 2012. Its complaint contained five counts. Our discussion today deals with only one of the counts, Jysk’s claim under the Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act (“ACPA”). 8 The ACPA count recited the facts set out in part I.A above, with the exception of Dut-ta-Roy’s registration on April 26, 2012, of the domain names bydesignfumiture.org, bydesignfwmitures.com, and bydesign-fur-nitures.com, and alleged that Dutta-Roy intended in bad faith “to profit from the registration and use of the Internet domain name bydesignforniture.com by creating an association with [Jysk]’s famous bydesignfurniture.com trademark as to source or sponsorship and further by intending to dilute the distinctive quality of, [Jysk]’s famous bydesignfurniture.com trademark.” The ACPA count sought preliminary and permanent injunctive relief, including an order requiring Dutta-Roy “to relinquish all rights in the Internet domain name bydesignfurniture.com.”

Dutta-Roy’s answer denied that he was instructed to register the domain name bydesignfwmiture.com and designate Jysk as the owner, and that he intended to profit by maintaining the registration in his name. 9 After answering Jysk’s corn- *773 plaint, Dutta-Roy moved the District Court for leave to join Bazaarworks, LLC as a party. The court denied the motion. 10 At this point, Dutta-Roy’s attorneys moved the court for leave to withdraw. 11 The court granted the motion, and Dutta-Roy decided to proceed pro se. 12 Shortly thereafter, Jysk moved the District Court for a preliminary injunction. Jysk requested the court to enjoin Dutta-Roy from: The court granted the preliminary injunction as to requests I, II, and IV and denied it with respect to request III. 13

I. Doing anything with or to the registration of the bydesignfurniture.com domain that would cause the Plaintiffs website to be unable to be accessed by the public, or result in the removal of the domain from the internet;
II. Transferring ownership of the by-designfurniture.com domain to anyone, other than the Plaintiff;
III. Altering in any way the current contents of the bydesignfurni-ture.com domain and website; and
IV. Doing anything that would cause a change in the current status quo of the bydesignfurniture.com trademark.

At the close of discovery, Jysk moved the District Court for partial summary judgment. In effect^ the motion sought an expansion of the preliminary injunction previously issued with respect to Jysk’s ACPA claim so that the injunction would cover the domain names bydesignjumi-ture.org, bydesignfumitures.com, 'and

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
810 F.3d 767, 2015 WL 8999502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jysk-bedn-linen-v-monosij-dutta-roy-ca11-2015.