Blockowicz v. Williams: Online Publisher Not Subject to Injunction Against Original Author of Defamatory Posts
Communications Decency Act update: Plaintiffs seeking to get defamatory posts removed from an online website have often been stymied by the Communications Decency Act which protects the web host from suit for publishing third party posts. However, for some time, plaintiffs have been getting around this by seeking an injunction against the original author of the post and then asking the court to enforce this injunction against the website operator under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65. For more on this strategy, see Eric Goldman's blog post of November 10, 2009.
However in a December 21, 2009 ruling a federal judge in the Eastern District of Illinois ruled that this strategy violates federal law. See Blockowicz v. Williams, N.D. Ill., No. 1:09-cv-03955, Memorandum Opinion and Order.
The plaintiffs in this case brought a defamation against the defendants, Joseph Williams and Michelle Ramey, for statements published on various websites, including the Ripoff Report (www.ripoffreport.com). The defendants apparently never answered the complaint and the court entered a default judgment against them, requiring them to remove their defamatory postings from the websites. However, the plaintiffs were never able to contact the defendants, and the posts remained on-line.
The plaintiffs then filed a Motion for Third Party Enforcement of Injunction to force the operators of ripoffreport.com to remove the postings from their website. Ripoff Report refused to do so, claiming that the injunction order did not apply to it.
The Court agreed. Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65, an injunction binds "not only the parties to the injunction but also nonparties who act with the named party." SEC v. Homa, 514 F.3d 661, 674 (7th Cir. 2008). Other case law indicates that this means that an injunction may bind third parties who are under the control of or who are represented by the defendant. However, it does not bind third parties who act independently and who rights have not been adjudicated.
In this case, the Court found that www.ripoffreport.com acted independently of the defendants. While ripoffreport.com published the defendants' defamatory statements, submission of defamatory statements to its website was against www.ripoffreport.com's Terms of Service. There was no evidence in the record that ripoffreport.com "intends to protect defamers and aid them in circumventing court orders." There was also no evidence that www.ripofferport.com had any contact with the defendants since the injunction was entered. In short, the Court found that www.ripoffreport.com's connection to the defendants was tenuous and insufficient to force its compliance with the injunction.
In conclusion, the Court stated that it was sympathetic to the plaintiffs' plight: "they find themselves the subject of defamatory attacks on the internet yet seemingly have no recourse to have those statements removed from the public view." But given the plaintiffs' strategy of attempting to enforce a third party injunction against an unrelated party, it had no choice.
Of course, there are other options for the plaintiffs: They could refocus their efforts on locating the original defendants, and getting them to act. In addition, the Ripoff Report might be willing to voluntarily take down the posts in question, if provided the right information.
David Johnson's practice focuses on complex litigation and science, technology and health law. David can be contacted at (415) 399-6032 or DJohnson@ebglaw.com.
