#151
©Copyright
2002, all rights reserved worldwide Gambling and the Law®
is a registered trademark of Professor I Nelson Rose, Whittier Law School, Costa
Mesa, CA
The
Name Game
The
major obstacle to any Internet gambling operation is not the law or even the
costs of doing business. It is
getting customers. Add to this the
limited number of “.com”
and “.net”
names available, and it is easy to see why there have been more lawsuits over
brand names than over any other issue connected with online
casinos.
The
most interesting recent case involved a suit by the company that owned the Rio
All Suite Casino Resort hotel-casino in Las Vegas (“RIO”)
against a company calling itself Rio International Interlink (“RII”).
The
suit drew worldwide attention in the legal and business communities, because the
trial judge, Las Vegas-based federal judge Phillip M. Pro, allowed the plaintiff
to serve the defendant with the summons and complaint by email. Judge Pro’s
ruling was recently upheld by the important Ninth Circuit Court of
Appeals.
RII
is based in Costa Rica. It is an
Internet sports gambling operation, doing business as Rio International
Sportsbook, Rio Online Sportsbook, and Rio International Sports. RII accepts bets online via a 1-800
telephone number and at sites with names like www.riosports.com and
www.betrio.com.
RIO
did not know that RII existed, until RII took out an advertisement in the
Football Betting Guide '98 Preview.
Soon, RIO was finding RII’s
ads in its own backyard, in the Nevada edition of the Daily Racing Form and on
Las Vegas radio stations.
RIO
filed suit against RII to stop infringing its registered trademark, “Rio.”
RII
grosses an estimated $3 million annually.
RIO was not only concerned that it was losing millions of dollars in bets
each year to RII. If RII did
something terrible, such as failing to pay off winners, it would hurt
RIO’s
reputation.
This
is not that far-fetched. RIO may
not be taking bets on the Internet, but it does have a website, www.playrio.com.
The
U.S. Constitution requires that state and federal court systems give all parties
“due
process.” In the case of a new lawsuit, this means
letting the defendant know that it has been sued and giving it an adequate
opportunity to get a lawyer, show up in court and make its
defenses.
The
problem for RIO was that RII could not be found. Even after putting an investigator on
the case, RIO could not find anyone to serve.
Way
back in July 1993, the New Yorker ran a copyrighted cartoon of a dog with his
paw on a computer keyboard, talking to another dog on the floor. The caption read, “On
the Internet, nobody knows you’re
a dog.”
For
all the RIO knew, RII could be run by canines in
Canada.
RIO
could not find RII in Costa Rica.
Just because someone says online that they are in Costa Rica does not
mean they are actually there.
Only
on the Internet could a company advertise extensively, accept millions of
dollars in bets and have no physical location.
RIO
was able to get papers to an agent, RII’s
international courier, IEC. IEC was
not authorized to accept service on RII's behalf, but it did forward the
papers. A copy eventually ended up
in the hands of John Carpenter, a lawyer in Los Angeles. Carpenter refused to accept service on
behalf of RII.
RIO
filed an emergency motion to be allowed “alternate
service of process.” Of course, due process required that RIO
first try to serve RII with notice of this motion. So it sent off more paper, which RII
ignored.
Judge
Pro granted RIO's motion and ordered service of process on RII through the mail
to Carpenter and IEC and via RII's email address,
email@betrio.com.
RII’s
lawyer made a motion to dismiss for insufficient service of process. The motion was heard by Judge Pro, who
had ordered the service by email.
Not surprisingly, Judge Pro found that the service by email did give EII
adequate notice and complied with federal law.
After
that, RIO tried to get the case going.
It sent out written questions, which RII was required to answer. RII cooperated half-heartedly at best,
putting “NA”
for many of its answers.
Judge
Pro finally got fed up and entered a default judgment against RII. Rii appealed.
The
Ninth Circuit agreed with Judge Pro.
It held that a defendant could be served via email, so long as that is
the only way to effect service.
Many
countries, including the U.S., have signed a treaty, the Hague Convention, to
make it easier for citizens of one country to serve legal papers on someone in
another country. Because the Hague
Convention was written before the Internet, it does not say anything about
service by email.
The
Ninth Circuit held that service by email would not have been good under the
Hague Convention. Ironically, the
treaty designed to make service easier would have prevented RIO from being able
to serve RII at all.
Fortunately
for RIO, Costa Rica never signed the Hague Convention.
END
Professor
I Nelson Rose is recognized as one of the world’s
leading authorities on gambling law.
His website is www.GamblingAndTheLaw.com