State of Indiana v. TikTok Inc.

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 30, 2024
Docket23A-PL-03111
StatusPublished

This text of State of Indiana v. TikTok Inc. (State of Indiana v. TikTok Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Indiana v. TikTok Inc., (Ind. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

FILED Sep 30 2024, 9:02 am

CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court

IN THE

Court of Appeals of Indiana State of Indiana, Appellant-Plaintiff

v.

TikTok Inc., ByteDance Ltd., ByteDance Inc., and TikTok Pte. Ltd., Appellees-Defendants

September 30, 2024 Court of Appeals Case Nos. 23A-PL-3110 23A-PL-3111 Appeal from the Allen Superior Court The Honorable Jennifer L. DeGroote, Judge Trial Court Cause Nos. 02D02-2212-PL-400 02D03-2212-PL-401

Opinion by Judge Mathias

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinions 23A-PL-3110 and 23A-PL-3111| September 30, 2024 Page 1 of 28 Chief Judge Altice and Judge Bailey concur.

Mathias, Judge.

[1] The State filed two complaints against TikTok, Inc., a California corporation, 1

in which the State alleged that TikTok had engaged in deceptive acts under

Indiana’s Deceptive Consumer Sales Act (DCSA), Ind. Code §§ 24-5-0.5-0.1 to

12 (2024). The trial court dismissed both complaints on the grounds that the

court did not have specific personal jurisdiction over TikTok and, alternatively,

that the State’s complaints failed to state a claim under the DCSA. Although

we have not formally consolidated the State’s appeals from the trial court’s

orders, we nonetheless decide them together in this singular opinion as the

factual and legal issues between them substantially overlap.

[2] We hold as follows:

1. TikTok has purposefully invoked substantial contacts within Indiana, and the controversies at hand are related to those

1 The State’s complaints also named ByteDance, Ltd., ByteDance, Inc., and TikTok Pte., Ltd., all of which are foreign entities, as defendants. The trial court dismissed the State’s complaints against those additional defendants for lack of personal jurisdiction. And, on appeal, the State’s only contacts-specific arguments that the trial court’s judgments on personal jurisdiction were in error relate specifically to California-based TikTok, Inc. We conclude that the State’s arguments on appeal therefore fail to sufficiently challenge the dismissals of the three related businesses, we affirm the trial court’s dismissal of them, and we limit our review on appeal to the trial court’s judgments vis-à-vis TikTok, Inc. See Ind. Appellate Rule 46(A)(8)(a); see also LinkAmerica Corp. v. Cox, 857 N.E.2d 961, 968 (Ind. 2006) (noting “the presumption that a parent and a subsidiary are independent entities and a subsidiary’s contacts with the forum are not attributed to the parent corporation for jurisdictional purposes”).

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinions 23A-PL-3110 and 23A-PL-3111| September 30, 2024 Page 2 of 28 contacts. Thus, Indiana’s judiciary has specific personal jurisdiction over TikTok.

2. TikTok’s business model of exchanging access to its content library for end-user personal data is a “consumer transaction” under the DCSA.

3. The test used to dismiss the State’s complaint for failing to state a claim in Cause No. 02D02-2212-PL-400 (Cause PL-400), has been superseded by statutory amendment. Under the current statutory language, the State has stated a claim under the DCSA.

4. The State’s complaint in Cause No. 02D03-2212-PL-401 (Cause PL-401) also states a claim under the DCSA.

[3] We emphasize that the DCSA issues in these appeals test neither evidence nor

facts supported by evidence. Rather, the issues here turn only on the legal

sufficiency of the State’s complaints.

[4] We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings in both

causes.

Facts and Procedural History [5] In December 2022, the State filed its complaints in Cause PL-400 and Cause

PL-401, which complaints the State later amended. According to the State’s

amended complaints, TikTok is a for-profit California corporation that operates

a digital application (TikTok’s “app”). TikTok’s app is downloaded by end-

users onto their smartphones or tablets through Apple’s App Store, the Google

Play Store, or the Microsoft Store.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinions 23A-PL-3110 and 23A-PL-3111| September 30, 2024 Page 3 of 28 [6] TikTok’s app “was the most downloaded app globally in 2022.” Appellant’s

App. in 23A-PL-3110, Vol. 2, p. 129; Appellant’s App. in 23A-PL-3111, Vol. 2,

p. 102. The State’s amended complaints suggest that millions of end-users in

Indiana use TikTok’s app. And, for tax year 2021, TikTok filed an Indiana

income tax return that attributed more than $46 million in income to activities

within Indiana. Appellant’s App. in 23A-PL-3110, Vol. 2, p. 127; Appellant’s

App. in 23A-PL-3111, Vol. 2, pp. 100-01.

[7] TikTok’s app “allows users to create, upload, and share short videos and view

and interact with short videos posted by other users.” Appellant’s App. in 23A-

PL-3110, Vol. 2, p. 119; see also Appellant’s App. in 23A-PL-3111, Vol. 2, p.

102. In exchange for access to TikTok’s vast content library, the end-user must

agree to allow TikTok to access and collect the end-user’s personal data. See Tr.

Vol. 2, pp. 19, 36. 2 Those data include location and device-usage data. They

also include data regarding the end-user’s interactions with the app itself. And,

in initially registering to use the app, the end-user also must self-report his or

her age to TikTok.

[8] TikTok uses the collected personal data to generate a “For You” home page

that “is a never-ending, algorithmically-personalized stream of videos”

presented to the end-user upon logging into the app. Appellant’s App. in 23A-

PL-3110, Vol. 2, p. 129; see also Appellant’s App. in 23A-PL-3111, Vol. 2, pp.

2 The trial court held a consolidated hearing on TikTok’s motions to dismiss the two complaints. Thus, the transcript on appeal of that hearing is identical in both of our case numbers.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinions 23A-PL-3110 and 23A-PL-3111| September 30, 2024 Page 4 of 28 102-04. TikTok also sells the collected personal data to advertisers, which make

use of the end-user’s data—especially his or her location data—to target

solicitations within the app to those end-users. See Tr. Vol. 2, pp. 19, 36. And,

according to the State’s amended complaint in Cause PL-401, TikTok’s related

businesses—most notably, ByteDance, Ltd., a parent company of TikTok

headquartered in Beijing, in the People’s Republic of China—also have access

to TikTok’s collected personal data.

[9] In its amended complaint in Cause PL-400, the State alleged that, “[i]n order to

lure . . . children onto its platform or convince parents that it is appropriate for

their children to download” and engage with TikTok’s app, “TikTok makes a

variety of misleading representations and omissions,” which in turn enable

TikTok “to claim a 12+ rating on the Apple App Store and a ‘T’ for ‘Teen’

rating in the Google Play Store and the Microsoft Store.” Appellant’s App. in

23A-PL-3110, Vol. 2, pp. 118-19. In particular, the State alleged that:

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State of Indiana v. TikTok Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-indiana-v-tiktok-inc-indctapp-2024.