Milgram v. Orbitz
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| Milgram v. Orbitz | |
|---|---|
| Court | New Jersey Superior Court |
| Full case name | Milgram v. Orbitz Worldwide, LLC |
| Decided | August 26, 2010 |
| Citation | Milgram v. Orbitz Worldwide, LLC, ESX-C-142-09 (N.J. Super. Ct. Aug. 26, 2010) |
| Court membership | |
| Judge sitting | Hon. Patricia K. Costello |
| Case opinions | |
| CDA § 230(c)(1) precludes liability where the duty that the plaintiff alleges the defendant violated derives from the defendant's status or conduct as a publisher or speaker. The name or wording of the cause of action, and whether the defendant is a commercial actor, are not dispositive. Where objectionable content is not supplied, required, or requested by a defendant, the defendant is not an information content provider under the CDA, even if it performs traditional editorial functions such as selective deletion or alteration of user content. | |
| Keywords | |
In Milgram v. Orbitz Worldwide, LLC,[1] the New Jersey Superior Court held that online ticket resellers qualified for immunity under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act (CDA), and that such immunity preempted a state law consumer fraud statute. The opinion clarified the court's test for determining whether a defendant is acting as a publisher, the applicability of the CDA to e-commerce sites, and the extent of control that an online intermediary may exercise over user content without becoming an "information content provider" under the CDA. The opinion was hailed by one observer as a "rare defeat for a consumer protection agency"[2] and the "biggest defense win of the year"[3] in CDA § 230 litigation.
Factual background
TicketNetwork was a software company that operated TicketNetwork Exchange, an "online marketplace" for ticket resales.[4] Third-party sellers (ranging from individuals to professional ticket brokers) could list tickets for sale, and buyers could search for and purchase tickets directly from these sellers. At no point did TicketNetwork possess the actual tickets for sale. Orbitz Worldwide, LLC owned CheapTickets and operated CheapTickets Exchange, an online marketplace site similar to the TicketNetwork Exchange. Orbitz entered an agreement with TicketNetwork that made CheapTickets' listings available on the TicketNetwork Exchange.
Although neither network guaranteed the accuracy of ticket listings or the availability of tickets, TicketNetwork's "Broker Guidebook" required sellers to accurately list the seat location printed on the tickets for sale, and prohibited the sale of tickets the seller did not own at the time of listing. TicketNetwork also guaranteed buyers on its Exchange a row and seat equal or better to the one purchased, and offered a full reimbursement if the tickets did not arrive in time or were not valid.[1]
The New Jersey Division of Consumer Affairs[5] began investigating online ticket resellers following a newspaper report that online resellers were offering tickets to a Bruce Springsteen concert a week before the show's tickets were publicly available.[6] An investigator visited the CheapTickets site six days before the public on-sale date and purchased two tickets. When the tickets arrived, the issuing authority confirmed that they had been printed and sold several days after the investigator ordered them, on the public on-sale date.
Following the investigation, Attorney General Anne Milgram filed suit against five online ticket resellers for violations of New Jersey's Consumer Fraud Act[7] and the state's Advertising Regulations.[8] Milgram called the resellers' practices "plain fraud", arguing that "[y]ou can't tell consumers that you have a ticket to sell when in fact you do not have that ticket."[9] Two of the resellers settled out-of-court, but Orbitz and TicketNetwork moved to dismiss the state's complaint, claiming immunity under a provision of the Communications Decency Act of 1996.
Legal background
New Jersey's Consumer Fraud Act § 56:8-2 makes it unlawful to use "any unconscionable commercial practice, deception, fraud, false pretense... [or] misrepresentation" intending that others will rely upon such representations "in connection with the sale or advertisement of any merchandise or real estate."[7] The Advertising Regulations promulgated pursuant to the Consumer Fraud Act provide specific rules concerning many types of advertisement, including those involving the resale of tickets.[8]
After the New York Supreme Court found an online service provider liable for defamation because of anonymous bulletin board posts made by its customers in Stratton Oakmont, Inc. v. Prodigy Services Co.,[10] Congress added an immunity provision to the CDA to avoid such third party liability in the future. Section 230(c)(1) of the CDA reads: "No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider."[11] Section 230(e)(3) establishes that this immunity provision preempts any inconsistent causes of action established under state or local law.
Arguments
New Jersey alleged that Orbitz and TicketNetwork committed acts of deception, fraud, misrepresentation, and other violations of the Consumer Fraud Act by advertising tickets for sale that they could not have possessed at the time they were listed, some of which referred to seats that did not exist in the concert venue. The state also claimed that Orbitz and TicketNetwork violated applicable regulations by "falsely implying that they had possession and control over the advertised tickets" and by advertising tickets for sale prior to general public availability and tickets to seats that did not exist in the concert venue.[1]
As a defense, Orbitz and TicketNetwork argued that they were providers of an interactive computer service and their users were information content providers, so the § 230(c)(1) immunity provision preempted plaintiffs' state law claims. The state responded that Orbitz and TicketNetwork were ineligible for § 230(c)(1) immunity because the state law claims treated them as "commercial actors" rather than publishers or speakers, and because their active participation in the creation of the ticket listings qualified them as information content providers rather than merely interactive computer services.[1]