Search Market Direct, Inc. v. Jubber (In Re Paige)

443 B.R. 878, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13486, 2011 WL 321006
CourtDistrict Court, D. Utah
DecidedFebruary 2, 2011
DocketBankruptcy No. 2:09-CV-988-DB. Adversary No. 06-02299
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 443 B.R. 878 (Search Market Direct, Inc. v. Jubber (In Re Paige)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Search Market Direct, Inc. v. Jubber (In Re Paige), 443 B.R. 878, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13486, 2011 WL 321006 (D. Utah 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

DEE BENSON, District Judge.

Before the coürt are three separate items for review including: 1) Defendants/Appellants’ appeal from a judgment entered by the Bankruptcy Court awarding the domain name Freecreditscore.com to Appellees; 2) Plaintiffs/Appellees’ cross-appeal of the denial of damages; and 3) Plaintiffs/Appellees’ Joint Suggestion of Mootness. Having both an appeal and a motion to render that appeal moot pending places this court in unique position. If the appeal is moot, there is no need to address the underlying merits of the appeal. However, the Joint Suggestion of Mootness and the cross-appeal arise out of the same operative facts as the appeal, and both require an exhaustive review of the record and subsequent material. For these reasons, and in the interest of judicial economy, this court will address all three items. This court’s decision concerning the appeal is meant to be an alternative theory for affirming the Bankruptcy Court’s conclusions in the event that this court’s finding of mootness is invalidated.

The appeal’s Introduction and Background sections and the terms defined therein have been incorporated and used in both the cross-appeal and suggestion of mootness.

1. APPEAL

INTRODUCTION

This is an appeal from a judgment (“Judgment”) entered in favor of Appellees by the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Utah (“Bankruptcy Court”) and a related detailed, sixty-four page memorandum decision (“Memorandum Decision”) issued by the Bankruptcy Court. The Judgment concerned the ownership of and right to use the internet domain name, freecreditscore.com (“Domain Name”).

This appeal centers on a hotly contested adversary proceeding (“Adversary Proceeding” or “AP”) that included 19 days of trial spanning a period of eight months. 1 The appellants in this matter, Search Market Direct, Inc. and Stephan May (collectively “Appellants”), were, in addition to others, the defendants in the underlying Adversary Proceeding. The appellees are Gary Jubber, the liquidating trustee (“Trustee”), and Consumerinfo.com (“CIC”) (collectively “Appellees”). Appel-lees, acting as plaintiffs in the Adversary Proceeding, commenced suit against Appellants seeking to recover, among other things, the Domain Name. 2

In the Memorandum Decision, the Bankruptcy Court stated that, aside from preliminary matters involving the parties’ standing and the applicable standard of proof, the central issue before the court is whether the Domain Name was owned by the Debtor Steve Paige (“Paige” or “Debt- or”) at the time of the relevant pre-petition *883 and post-petition transfers, or by Paige’s business Consumer Credit Services, LLC (“CCS, LLC”). 3 For the reasons stated herein, the decision of the Bankruptcy Court is AFFIRMED.

BACKGROUND

The Adversary Proceeding involved a number of complex factual and legal issues that required an extensive trial. Additionally, both parties were, and continue to be, represented by capable and committed counsel. The combination of complex issues and capable counsel has created a rather voluminous evidentiary and trial record. Additionally, this court indulged both parties by agreeing to the filing of over-length briefs. After carefully considering the factual findings put forth by the Bankruptcy Court and the subsequent interpretation of those facts by both parties, this court has concluded that, in large part, the Bankruptcy Court’s factual findings are accurate. Thus, the majority of this background section (and portions of the discussion section) adopts portions of the Memorandum Decision’s findings. To the extent that this court disagrees with the Bankruptcy Court, it will be noted in the Discussion section.

In May 2000, Paige acquired the Domain Name and registered it in his own personal name with Network Solutions, Inc. (“Network Solutions”), a domain registrar company. In addition to being listed as the registrant of the Domain Name by Network Solutions, Paige was also listed as the technical, administrative, and billing contact for the Domain Name. As part of the Domain Name’s initial registration, Paige paid $70 to Network Solutions with his personal credit card to cover the Domain Name registration fee for May 3, 2000 through May 3, 2003.

On August 19, 2002, Paige formed CCS, LLC, which was engaged in the business of providing services to consumers to improve their personal credit scores. The Articles of Organization for CCS, LLC show that Paige and the Liahona Trust were its only members. Prior to CCS, LLC’s formation, Paige owned a company called CCS Financial, Inc. (“CCS Financial”), which also provided credit repair services to consumers.

On May 2, 2003, Paige paid $75 to renew the Domain Name registration with Network Solutions for another three years. As with the initial registration fee, Paige paid the renewal fee with his personal credit card. Although CCS, LLC reimbursed Paige for the registration fee, the evidence shows that CCS, LLC paid the entire credit card bill that contained not only the registration fee but other personal and business expenses.

In or around September 2004, Paige entered into a joint venture with Citizens Credit Bureau, Inc. (“CCB”), which used the Domain Name to direct internet traffic to a web page entitled “FreeCreditS-core.com” in order to generate client leads for CCB and/or the CCS entities. The Domain Name was used by the joint venture until approximately mid-January 2005. Throughout this period, Paige was the registered owner and the administrative and billing contact for the Domain Name, but the technical contact had changed from Paige to Thomas Gazelle (“Gazelle”) of Real Tours, Inc. (“Real Tours”) in December 2003.

Sometime in January 2005, Paige began working on a different joint venture with Colt Investment Group, LLC (“Colt”). On January 13, 2005, a Term Sheet was executed between “Consumer Credit Services, LLC, AKA, CCS Financial” as “Seller” and Colt as “Buyer” (the “Term Sheet”). The Term Sheet was signed by Tali Ha- *884 leua (“Haleua”) on behalf of the Buyer “Colt Technologies, LLC,” and by Aliene Paige (“Aliene”), Steve Paige and Lee Price (“Price”) on behalf of the Seller. Upon the execution of the Term Sheet, the assets of the Seller were to be conveyed and transferred to the Buyer. The Term Sheet did not specify the assets to be transferred or whether they included the Domain Name.

Shortly after the Term Sheet was signed, Paige, CCS, LLC, Price, Aliene, and Liahona Foundation, as Sellers, and Colt, as Buyer, entered into an Agreement of Purchase and Sale of Assets (“Colt APA”). Under the Colt APA, executed on January 17, 2005> the Sellers agreed to sell all of the business assets of CCS, LLC (but not CCS, LLC itself). The Colt APA was signed by Paige individually and as “Managing Member of [CCS, LLC];” Aleñe individually and as “Manager of Liahona Foundation;” Price individually; Haleua as “Managing Member of Colt Investment Group, LLC;” and John Smart as “Trustee of Liahona Foundation.” CCS Financial was not mentioned anywhere in the Colt APA nor was it a signatory to the agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
443 B.R. 878, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13486, 2011 WL 321006, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/search-market-direct-inc-v-jubber-in-re-paige-utd-2011.