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WIPO Arbitration and Mediation Center
ADMINISTRATIVE PANEL DECISION
Cegetel v. Mr. Alain Robert
Case No. D2003-0799
1. The Parties
The Complainant is Cegetel, Paris La Defense, France, represented by Cabinet Ores, France.
The Respondent is Mr. Alain Robert, Marseille France.
2. The Domain Name and Registrar
The disputed domain name is <7cegetel.com> and is registered with BookMyName SAS.
3. Procedural History
The Complaint was filed with the WIPO Arbitration and Mediation Center (the "Center") on October 9, 2003. On October 9, 2003, the Center transmitted by email to BookMyName SAS a request for registrar verification in connection with the domain name at issue. On October 13, 2003, BookMyName SAS transmitted by email to the Center its verification response confirming that the Respondent is listed as the registrant and providing the contact details for the administrative, billing, and technical contact. The Center verified that the Complaint satisfied the formal requirements of the Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (the "Policy"), the Rules for Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (the "Rules"), and the WIPO Supplemental Rules for Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (the "Supplemental Rules").
In accordance with the Rules, paragraphs 2(a) and 4(a), the Center formally notified the Respondent of the Complaint, and the proceedings commenced on October 14, 2003. In accordance with the Rules, paragraph 5(a), the due date for Response was November 3, 2003. The Respondent did not submit any response. Accordingly, the Center notified the Respondent’s default on November 7, 2003.
The Center appointed William Lobelson as the sole panelist in this matter on November 17, 2003. The Panel finds that it was properly constituted. The Panel has submitted the Statement of Acceptance and Declaration of Impartiality and Independence, as required by the Center to ensure compliance with the Rules, paragraph 7.
The language of proceedings is English.
4. Factual Background
The Complainant is well known in France as a major telecommunication operator, offering in particular under the brand "LE 7 DE CEGETEL" telephone services to individuals and companies.
It owns a number of French and Community registered trademarks for "CEGETEL" on the one hand and "LE 7" or "LE 7 AUTOMATIQUE" on the other hand.
The Complainant has found out the existence of the domain name <7cegetel.com>, registered on June 19, 2003, with the Registrar "BookMyName" by Mr. Alain Robert, the Respondent.
On July 7, 2003, the Complainant asked a bailiff to witness that the domain name was owned by the Respondent, and that it pointed towards an active web site dedicated to a direct marketing business. The said web site does not refer at any moment to the name "7Cegetel", but to brand "Declic-Marketing" that apparently is used in relation to a service of access to e-mails data base for the purpose of forwarding "spams".
On July 18, 2003, the Complainant sent a cease-and-desist letter to the Respondent via e-mail (as the Respondent failed to identify its postal address in the Registration Agreement of the domain name), seeking an amicable transfer of the disputed domain name.
In a response dated July 23, 2003, the Respondent declined to transfer the domain name for free, explaining that the registration of domain names is not regulated, that the principles applicable to general trademark law would be irrelevant, that many domain names corresponding to protected trademarks are not owned by the trademark owners (giving precise examples such as "www.france2.com") and that the jurisprudence would be favorable to him. The Respondent, after having declared that a Tribunal would not accept the Complainant’s claim, suggested to study a proposal from the Complainant for purchasing the domain name.
The Complainant then filed the Complaint with the Center on October 9, 2003.
After being notified the same, and even though the Center notified his default
on November 7, 2003, the Respondent sent an e-mail to the Complainant’s attorney
on November 24, 2003, in response to an e-mail notification from the Center
dated November 17, 2003, which was copied to him. The Respondent’s message was
copied to the Panelist. This message was forwarded by the Respondent's attorney
to the Center, along with short comments and the whole was transmitted by the
Center to the Panelist on the same date.
Paragraph 10(b) of the Rules provides that:
"In all cases, the Panel shall ensure that the parties are treated with equality
and that each party is given a fair opportunity to present its case"
Even though the Respondent’s response was issued belatedly and notwithstanding
the fact that this response would not comply with the formal requirements of
the Rules (drafted in French and not addressed to the Center), the Panel is
of the opinion that it should be taken into account in the present case.
Deciding otherwise would amount to treating the Respondent as being in default
and that would not be a fair trial.
The said response is written in French, but the parties in the proceedings
are French, as well as the Panel, and all of them can therefore read and understand
the Respondent’s communication. Accordingly, the Panel is satisfied that the
"principe du contradictoire" is respected.
The content of the Respondent’s message dated November 24, 2003 directed to
the Complainant’s attorney is as follows (as translated by the Panel).
"Hello,
All of this is bullshit !
Go and take a look at France2.com and France3.com and http://www.whitehouse.com.
Register your domain names in .fr or .tm.fr and change your web staff !
And what about filing cegetel7.com in China ???
And cegetelfrance.com, cegetel-france.com.
In brief, I am a fair player, I let you register the domain names hereafter
and I propose the purchase of the name :
7cegetel.com for only : 1500 EUR !
Wouldn’it be cheaper than a trial ?
I await your response.
Alain ROBERT"
5. Parties’ Contentions
A. Complainant
The Complainant sustains that the disputed domain name <7cegetel.com>
is confusingly similar to its registered trademarks "Cegetel" and
"Le 7", as well as its own domain names <cegetel.com>, <cegetel.fr>
and <le7.fr>; that the Respondent has no legitimate interest in the domain
name for he was not authorized to register or use it, nor does he otherwise
uses the name Cegetel in the course of business; that when the disputed domain
name was registered, the Complainant was already very well known in France under
the brand Cegetel which therefore can be considered as notorious; that the Respondent
being based in France, he could not ignore the existence and fame of the mark
Cegetel; that the domain name is used in relation with an active web site intended
to mislead the public and distract the Complainant’s goodwill; that the domain
has been filed and is used in bad faith because it can be deducted from the
correspondence of the Respondent that he acquired the disputed domain name with
the intent to speculate and offer it for sale to its legitimate proprietor;
also because it is used to point towards a web site intended to promote the
Respondent’s own business through an undue benefit from the Complainant’s goodwill,
reputation and fame; the Respondent’s business is related to sending spams,
which could affect the good reputation of the Complainant; that the registration
of the disputed domain name prevents the Complainant from legitimately using
it; and that the Respondent could not ignore the Complainant’s trademarks rights
when he registered the disputed domain name.
B. Respondent
The Respondent did not reply to the Complainant’s contentions in due time,
but as explained above, he has presented some arguments to justify its refusal
to comply with the Complainant’s requirements and also in response, although
indirectly, to the Complaint, through its e-mail communications of July 23 and
November 24, 2003.
Those arguments deserve to be taken into account.
The Respondent rejects the Complainant’s arguments on the ground that trademark
law would have nothing to do with the registration process of domain names and
that, according to him, a domain name can be registered by anybody even when
the registrant is not the owner of the corresponding trademark.
The Respondent offers to sell the disputed domain name to the Complainant for
a price of 1500 EUR.
6. Discussion and Findings
A. Identical or Confusingly Similar
The Complainant owns a number of trademarks registered in France and with the
OHIM for "CEGETEL", "LE 7" and "LE 7 AUTOMATIQUE".
The disputed domain name is <7cegetel.com>.
The disputed domain name is not therefore identical to any of the cited Complainant’s
trademarks.
But the said domain name does clearly appear confusingly similar to some of
the Complainant’s trademarks.
In particular, the trademark "CEGETEL", the distinctiveness of which
is not questionable, is entirely reproduced within the domain name <7cegetel.com>.
The addition of the digit "7" before the name "Cegetel"
and the suffix ".com" behind it must be regarded as irrelevant as
they do not create a wording having a meaning of its own and causing the earlier
mark "CEGETEL" to lose its individuality within the domain name. There
is no doubt that the predominant element within the disputed domain name is
"cegetel" which remains distinctive per se and clearly isolable
within the combination "7cegetel.com".
The public, when reading or listening to the domain name shall legitimately
be led to believe that this domain name is a derivation of the trademark "Cegetel",
both having a common origin and being owned by the same company.
The domain name <7cegetel.com> is therefore considered as confusingly
similar to the Complainant’s trademark Cegetel and the Panel is satisfied that
the requirement of Paragraph 4(a)(i) of the Policy is fulfilled.
The Panel does not therefore find it useful to examine whether the disputed
domain name is confusingly similar to the other trademarks invoked by the Complainant.
B. Rights or Legitimate Interests
The Respondent has not brought any element tending to justify his registration
of the domain name <7cegetel.com> or showing that he would have some rights
or any legitimate interest in it.
The Complainant has stressed that it never granted any authorization to the
Respondent to use its trademarks. This is not contested by the Respondent.
And the Panel, from the various factual elements submitted along with the Complaint,
including the communications of the Respondent, is convinced that the Respondent
has no legitimate interest in the domain name.
The Bailiff’s affidavit drawn up on July 7, 2003, revealed that the disputed
domain name was used by the Respondent to enable Internet users to access its
web site. But the Panel observes that the domain name <7cegetel.com> pointed
towards a web site within which there was absolutely no reference whatsoever
to a trademark, service mark or any other commercial message relating to "7Cegetel",
or even "7" or "Cegetel". The said web site refers to a
service identified as "Déclic-Marketing". It is therefore established
that the Respondent does not make any legitimate use of the brands "7cegetel",
"7" or "Cegetel" in the normal course of business.
Consequently, and being emphasized that the name "7Cegetel" is absolutely
not necessary for, nor descriptive of the services offered by the Respondent
on its web site, the Panel is satisfied that the Respondent has no rights nor
any legitimate interest in the domain name <7cegetel.com>.
C. Registered and Used in Bad Faith
Registration in bad faith
It shall be emphasized that, when registering the domain name, the Respondent
did not mention in the Registration Agreement his address, and it is suspected
that this was done on purpose in order to hinder his identification and the
possible notification of cease-and-desist letters or writs. This appears to
the Panel as first hint of bad faith.
The Complainant is very well known in France under the name "Cegetel",
and it has also widely promoted one of its services "Le 7 de Cegetel"
very actively in France for a number of years, from the date when the telecommunications
market was deregulated in France and the major public telephone operator lost
its monopoly. The Complainant then offered, and still offers, a competing telephone
service for individuals and companies, the particulars of which being that its
customers must dial the digit 7 instead of the usual 0 when dialling a phone
number.
Advertising campaigns for the mark "Le 7 de Cegetel" have been spread
all over press, TV, radio and Internet in France.
The Respondent being based in France, it is very unlikely that he was not aware
of the combined use of the trademarks "Le 7" and "Cegetel"
by the Complainant.
It also worth underlining that the Respondent in its communications does seem
to admit that he was aware of the trademark rights of the Complainant: in his
e-mail dated July 23, 2003, and again in his last e-mail of November 24,
2003, he invites the Complainant to register its trademarks as domain names
in ".fr" or ".tm.fr" and he also refers explicitly to other
very well known trademarks (the names of some French TV channels) to explain
that the corresponding domain names can be freely registered by anybody without
interfering with the principles of Trademark Law. In his first communication,
the Respondent indicates that the jurisprudence does not prevent such type of
behaviours, thus implying that he is aware that some Tribunals have already
decided on such cases. If so, and if the Respondent really examined the jurisprudence
relating to such matters, he then knew very well that "cybersquatting"
is always severely punished by French Courts.
Hence, the Panel is convinced that when he registered the domain name <7cegetel.com>,
the Respondent could not ignore the earlier Complainant’s rights vested in this
name and, in the very unlikely event that he would not have been aware that
his behaviour was regarded as unlawful by jurisprudence, made himself guilty
of reprehensible carelessness for having neglected to verify whether the registration
as a domain name of a third party’s mark was lawful or not.
The registration of the disputed domain name must therefore be regarded as
being tainted with bad faith.
Use in bad faith
As established by the Bailiff’s affidavit dated July 7, 2003, the Respondent
was, at this date, using the disputed domain name to point towards a web site
within which a brand or trade name "Declic Marketing" was promoted,
namely a service of offering e-mail addresses for the purpose of so-called "direct
marketing" or "spamming".
The web site of the Respondent does not contain any reference to the brands
"7cegetel", "7" or "Cegetel".
The Respondent does not at any moment justify the use of any of these marks
in the course of its business.
Taking into account the notoriousness in France of those marks, owned by the
Complainant, the Panel suspects the Respondent to have used in bad faith the
domain name <7cegetel.com> in order to unduly benefit at no cost from
the reputation and goodwill of the Complainant’s trademarks in order to attract
customers to his web site.
It is also clearly established from his e-mail of July 23, 2003, and even more
explicitly from his last e-mail dated November 24, 2003, that the Respondent
intends to speculate over the domain name, as he offers to transfer the same
to the Complainant in counterpart for the payment of a price that, evidently,
exceeds the effective cost of registration of a domain name (1500 EUR).
And the Panel observes that the Respondent’s web site is no longer accessible
through the disputed domain name and suspects that the Respondent deactivated
the link after being notified the Complaint, thus tacitly admitting his wrongdoings.
Anyway, use of a domain name does not necessarily imply that the domain
name points towards an active web site (see Telstra Corporation Limited v.
Nuclear Marshmallows,WIPO Case No. D2000-0003).
Even though the disputed domain name is not active at the present time, in
the sense that it does no longer points towards a web page, the Panel considers
that the Respondent keeps on using the disputed domain name fraudulently, as
it withholds the said domain name and only proposes to release it against payment
of money, thus interfering with the Complainant’s legitimate right to use the
domain name. Such a passive holding, furthermore coupled with blackmail, must
be regarded as a fraudulent use of the domain name.
The Panel is therefore convinced that the disputed domain was used by the Respondent
in bad faith when the Complaint was filed and is still used in bad faith at
the present time.
7. Decision
For all the foregoing reasons, in accordance with Paragraphs 4(i) of the Policy
and 15 of the Rules, the Panel orders that the domain name <7cegetel.com>
be transferred to the Complainant.
William Lobelson
Sole Panelist
Dated: December 1, 2003