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Facebook, Inc. v. Connectu LLC

United States District Court, N.D. California, San Jose Division
Nov 30, 2007
Case No. C 07-01389 RS (N.D. Cal. Nov. 30, 2007)

Opinion

Case No. C 07-01389 RS.

November 30, 2007


ORDER GRANTING MOTION TO DISMISS CLAIMS AGAINST DEFENDANTS CAMERON WINKLEVOSS, TYLER WINKLEVOSS, AND DIVYA NARENDRA


I. INTRODUCTION

Defendants Cameron Winklevoss, Tyler Winklevoss, and Divya Narendra move to dismiss the claims against them on grounds that prior to removal of this action to this court, the Santa Clara Superior Court ruled that none of them was subject to personal jurisdiction in California. Defendants contend that ruling precludes plaintiffs relitigating personal jurisdiction here. Plaintiffs Facebook and Mark Zuckerberg (collectively "Facebook"), in turn contend that they have discovered and pleaded new facts that were not before the Superior Court that make reconsideration of jurisdiction appropriate and that support personal jurisdiction over the moving defendants. Although Facebook has discovered additional factual detail and have incorporated numerous allegations bearing on jurisdiction into the amended complaint, it has not shown that the basic facts on which it now relies are any different from those presented to the Superior Court. Accordingly, the Superior Court's decision remains conclusive here, and the motion to dismiss will be granted.

II. BACKGROUND

The general background of this action has been described in prior orders and will not be repeated here. Relevant to this motion is the following: When this action was initiated in Santa Clara Superior Court, the named defendants included Cameron Winklevoss, Tyler Winklevoss, and Divya Narendra. The Winklevosses and Narendra are three founders of defendant ConnectU. They promptly filed a motion to quash service of summons, arguing that they were not subject to personal jurisdiction in California. ConnectU itself did not contest jurisdiction.

There has been significant controversy regarding the role Narendra originally was expected to have and regarding how and when anyone became actual "members" of the ConnectU LLC. Those matters are discussed in a contemporaneously-filed order denying plaintiffs' sanction motion. Regardless of that controversy, the characterization of Narendra as a "founder" appears fair.

Facebook sought and was granted leave to take jurisdictional discovery before the motion to quash was heard. Even prior to the filing of this action, Facebook had been taking discovery from ConnectU in connection with litigation between them pending in the District of Massachusetts. By virtue of the Massachusetts discovery, Facebook was aware before this action was filed that Winston Williams of Pacific Northwest Software ("PNS") had assisted ConnectU in collecting email addresses from the Facebook website and that it had used those addresses with the "social butterfly" software. In the jurisdictional discovery, Facebook learned additional facts regarding PNS's development of an "automated" process for sending emails to addresses found on the Facebook site, as well as facts regarding the individual defendants' prior manual collection of addresses from the site.

In opposing the motion to quash, Facebook cited to and relied on evidence regarding both the manual collection of email addresses and the subsequent automatic processes. For reasons it did not explain, the Superior Court rejected Facebook's arguments and granted the motion to quash.

Howard Winklevoss, the father of Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, was also named as a defendant and was a party to the motion to quash. Facebook has not attempted to bring him back into this litigation.

Facebook subsequently filed an amended complaint in the Superior Court that added certain claims but that omitted the Winklevosses and Narendra as defendants. Based on claims that had been added under federal law, ConnectU then removed the action to this Court and brought a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The Court granted that motion in part, with leave to amend. Facebook then filed a second amended complaint that not only addressed the matters that had been raised by the motion to dismiss, but that also (1) added Mark Zuckerberg as a plaintiff, (2) added certain new individual defendants, and (3) renamed as defendants the Winklevoss brothers and Narendra.

Defendants objected to Facebook adding parties without leave of Court. By order issued June 14, 2007, the Court in effect granted Facebook post hoc leave to add the parties, but without prejudice to any substantive arguments as to why they should not be made parties. The present motion to dismiss followed.

III. DISCUSSION

Although the parties have characterized the legal precedents differently, there is no real conflict in their respective positions, or in the cases they cite, as to the circumstances under which a prior state court jurisdictional determination will be deemed conclusive in a subsequent federal proceeding. Put simply, if a plaintiff can show new and different facts supporting jurisdiction, then the prior determination may be revisited. See Kendall v. Overseas Dev. Corp., 700 F.2d 536, 539 (9th Cir. 1983) ("the dispositive question is whether [plaintiff] pleaded any new facts in the federal litigation that would support a different result on the issue of jurisdiction."). If, however, the facts are those that the prior court found insufficient to support jurisdiction, then "even if wrong, an earlier decision involving the same issue and the same parties, `is as conclusive as a correct' one." Gupta v. Thai Airways Intern. Ltd., 487 F.3d. 759, 767 (9th Cir. 2007) (quoting MIB, Inc. v. Superior Court, 106 Cal.App.3d 228, 235).

Here, Facebook insists it has discovered and pleaded significant new evidence bearing on personal jurisdiction over the Winklevoss brothers and Narendra. Certainly the second amended complaint appears to have been drafted with an eye to preempting the argument that personal jurisdiction is lacking; the complaint is replete with assertions that defendants acted with intent and knowledge that their activities would have effects in this forum. Nevertheless, Facebook has not shown that any of the evidence on which it now relies is materially different from that it previously presented to the Superior Court. At most, Facebook has now garnered additional details, but the basic conduct it contends is sufficient to give rise to jurisdiction is the same conduct it pointed to in the state court motion to quash proceedings.

As noted, the Superior Court did not explain the basis for its decision, leaving it uncertain as to precisely what evidence might or might not have been sufficient to cause it to reach a different result. Because Facebook is relying now on "contacts" that do not differ significantly in kind or in quantity than those it presented during the motion to quash, however, there is no particular reason to believe the "new" details would have changed the result.

Although Facebook attempts to argue that a different result is warranted in light of "new" evidence, it is apparent that Facebook actually believes the Superior Court simply got it wrong. Particularly given that this Court has demonstrated an unwillingness to accept the so-called "fiduciary shield" argument, Facebook appears to believe that it can obtain a different result by arguing the merits better or slightly differently. Rearguing the same basic facts, however, is not permissible. Even if the Superior Court reached an incorrect legal determination, the outcome is conclusive. Facebook "does not now get a do-over." Gupta, supra, 487 F.3d at 767.

In its motion for sanctions, Facebook candidly suggests that the Superior Court accepted defendants' legally untenable argument that actions they took on behalf of ConnectU did not count as personal contacts with the forum. Although the order regarding the sanctions motion filed contemporaneously with this decision rejects that conclusion as unduly speculative, it does show that in Facebook's view, the Superior Court simply erred.

At the hearing, defense counsel effectively conceded that if this Court were free to reconsider the issues, then under the reasoning this Court employed in denying the motion to dismiss brought by Winston Williams and PNS, personal jurisdiction would be proper over Cameron Winklevoss. Defendants contend that even in those circumstances personal jurisdiction would not be proper over Tyler Winklevoss or Narendra because there is no evidence they personally participated in any allegedly wrongful conduct at a time when Facebook was located in California.

IV. CONCLUSION

For the reasons set forth above the motion to dismiss is granted.

IT IS SO ORDERED.


Summaries of

Facebook, Inc. v. Connectu LLC

United States District Court, N.D. California, San Jose Division
Nov 30, 2007
Case No. C 07-01389 RS (N.D. Cal. Nov. 30, 2007)
Case details for

Facebook, Inc. v. Connectu LLC

Case Details

Full title:FACEBOOK, INC., et al Plaintiffs, v. CONNECTU LLC, et al. Defendants

Court:United States District Court, N.D. California, San Jose Division

Date published: Nov 30, 2007

Citations

Case No. C 07-01389 RS (N.D. Cal. Nov. 30, 2007)