No. 99-6080


In The

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT


Name.Space, Inc.,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

Network Solutions, Inc. and the

National Science Foundation,

Defendants-Appellees.


On Appeal for the United States District Court

for the Southern District of New York


Reply Brief for Appellant


Glenn B. Manishin

Stephanie A. Joyce

Blumenfeld & Cohen

1615 M Street, N.W., Suite 700

Washington, D.C. 20036

202.955.6300

202.955.6460 facsimile


August 11, 1999

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

TABLE OF AUTHORITIES iii

SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT 1

ARGUMENT 5

I. NSI’s THEORY OF IMPLIED ANTITRUST IMMUNITY IS

CONTRARY TO THIS COURT’S STROBL JURISPRUDENCE, IMPROPERLY EXTENDS THE SO-CALLED "FEDERAL INSTRUMENTALITY CASES, AND WOULD LEAD TO INCONGRUOUS LEGAL RESULTS 5

A. To Affirm the District Court’s Judgment, this Court Would Need to Overrule Its Own Precedent And Establish A New Legal Theory of Implied Antitrust Immunity 6

B. The Analytical Basis for NSI’s Proposed "Federal Instrumentality Doctrine" Conflicts With Settled Antitrust Law and Cannot Immunize a Private Party’s Actions Directed Against Third-Party Marketplace Competitors 10

C. As Adopted by the District Court, the Federal Instrumentality Doctrine Would Have No Limiting Principle and Conflicts With the Primacy of Congress Over Federal Antitrust Immunity 14

D. Even if NSI Were Correct, the District Court Erred in Applying the Federal Instrumentality Doctrine to Pre-Amendment No. 11" Liability and To Issues Other Than Preliminary Injunctive Relief 16

II. NSF’s FIRST AMENDMENT ANALYSIS CONTRADICTS THE DISTRICT COURT’S LIMITED ROLE ON SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND SUGGESTS PROCEDURAL BASES FOR AFFIRMANCE THAT ARE LEGALLY INAPPLICABLE 20

A. The District Court Violated Rule 56 in Rejecting the Uncontested Record Evidence Demonstrating that TLDs and Internet Domain Names Have Expressive Purposes 20

B. Amendment No. 11 is a Clear and Unjustified Prior Restraint on Constitutionally Protected Internet Expression 22

C. This Court Cannot Affirm the District Court’s Judgment on Any of the Alternative Theories Advanced by the Government 23

1. Name.Space Has Standing to Challenge NSF’s Restriction of Its Own Protected Internet Speech 24

3. The Government’s Elimination of Any New gTLDs is Not a "Time, Place or Manner" Restriction on Speech 27

4. NSF is Incorrect that Compelled Speech Applies Only to Political Speech 29

CONCLUSION 30

TABLE OF AUTHORITIES

 

Adickes v. A.H. Kress & Co., 398 U.S. 144 (1970) 4, 18

Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, 477 U.S. 242 (1986) 4. 20

Catanzaro v. Weden, 199 W.L. 54,7880, ___ F.3d ___ (2d Cir. 1999) 4

Celotex Corporation v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317 (1986) 4

Champaign-Urbana News Agency, Inc. v. J.L. Cummins News Co., 632 F.2d 680 (7th Cir. 1980) 13

City of Columbia v. Omni Outdoor Advertising. Inc., 499 U.S. 365 (1991).

 

Consumers Union v. Rogers, 352 F. Supp. 1319, 1323 (D.D.C. 1973) 10

Eugene Dietzgen Corp. v. FTC, 142 F.2d 321 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, 323 U.S. 230 (1944) 10 10

IT&E Overseas, Inc. v. RCA Global Communications, 747 F. Supp. 6

(D.D.C. 1990) 12

Joyce v. Curtis-Wright Corp., 171 F.3d 1390 (2d Cir. 1999) 4, 20

 

Metromedia v. City of San Diego, 453 U.S. 490 (1981) 24

Miami Herald Publishing Company v. Tornillo, 418 U.S. 241 (1974) 29

Perry Education Ass’n v. Perry Local Educators’ Ass’n,

460 U.S. 37, 44 (1983) 26

Planned Parenthood Fed. of Am. v. Bucci, No. 97 Civ. 0629,

1997 LEXIS 3338, *34 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 19, 1997),

aff’d, 1998 WL 336163 (2d Cir. Feb. 9, 1998) 21, 22

Otter Tail Power Co. v. United States, 410 U.S. 241 (1974) 15

Sakamoto v. Duty Free Shoppers, Ltd., 513 F. Supp. 381 (D. Guam 1983),

aff’d 764 F.2d 1285 (9th Cir 1985) 14

Sea Air Shuttle Corp. v. Virgin Islands Port Authority, 782 F. Supp. 1070

(D.V.I. 1991)

Sea-Land Service, Inc. v. Alaska Railroad, 659 F.2d 243 (D.C. Cir. 1981) 12

Strobl v. New York Mercantile Exchange, 768 F.2d 22 (2d Cir. 1985) passim

Thomas v. Network Solutions, Inc, 176 F.3d 500 (D.C. Cir. 1990) passim

United States v. Philadelphia National Bank, 374 U.S. 321 (1963) 6

United We Stand America v. United We Stand, America New York,

128 F.3d 86, 92 (2d Cir. 1997) 22

Ward v. Rock Against Racism, 491 U.S. 781 (1989) passim

Areeda & Hovenkamp, Antitrust Law, ¶¶ 201-203 (1997); 2 Antitrust Law Developments (4th) 1096-98 (1997) 11

A Lipsky, Essential Facilities, 51 Stan. L. Rev. 1187 (1999) 11

 

G. Lawson., Downsizing the Right to Petition, 93 Nw. U. L. Rev. 739 (1999) 11

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT

Both the government and appellee Network Solutions, Inc. ("NSI") seek to portray appellant Name.Space, Inc., formerly pgMedia, Inc. ("Name.Space"), as improperly pursuing "a unilateral effort to make fundamental changes to the Internet’s infrastructure … that the [government] has said should be made by the Internet community." Indeed, the National Science Foundation ("NSF") states flatly that "[t]his lawsuit was plaintiff’s effort to derail the carefully developed [Domain Name System] privatization process."

These characterizations are both incorrect and legally irrelevant. First, it is simply untrue that the litigation was instituted to end run the government’s policy deliberations. To the contrary, both NSF and NSI concede, as they must, that Name.Space’s request for access to the Internet "root zone," NSI’s subsequent denial of that request, and the March 1997 filing of the complaint in this action preceded by many months the initiation of the government’s DNS "policy" process.

Second, the lengthy discussions of DNS "privatization" in both the NSI and NSF briefs are immaterial to the legal questions presented on this summary judgment record. Antitrust law is well-settled that unless and until Congress acts by granting express immunity, or by authorizing an agency to extend immunity, private conduct is fully subject to the antitrust laws. No party asserts that the government’s new DNS "policy" is any basis for implied antitrust immunity, and that policy is equally not a ground for the district court’s finding that top-level domains ("TLDs") are not speech under the First Amendment. Hence, whatever DNS policy the government may now be pursuing is no answer to the antitrust and constitutional issues raised on this appeal.

More significantly, neither NSF nor NSI reveals to the Court that the government’s June 1998 "policy statement" on DNS privatization is not a legally binding decision. It is expressly not "a substantive regulatory regime for the domain name system . . . . [It] is not a substantive rule, does not contain mandatory provisions and does not itself have the force and effect of law." 63 Fed. Reg. at 31748 (J.A. A622.) Accordingly, the fact is that the government – which refused to take any legally binding action in the Commerce Department policy debate and which declined NSI’s request to clarify Internet jurisprudence by asserting governmental authority over the DNS – now wants this Court to find the very legal authority it declined to exercise in the "policy statement."

Despite the vast attention devoted by to DNS "policy," that entire governmental exercise is merely a sideshow. On the strictly legal merits, neither appellee succeeds in doing anything more than clouding the issues. NSI disingenuously argues that the so-called "federal instrumentality doctrine" shields its conduct from antitrust scrutiny, but fails to harmonize its position with the fact that the Second Circuit has never adopted the few cases on this subject and that doing so would require the Court to overrule its leading decision on implied antitrust immunity. Strobl v. New York Mercantile Exchange, 768 F.2d 22 (2d Cir. 1985). Nor does NSI square its position here either with (a) the D.C. Circuit’s recent rejection, in dicta in Thomas v. Network Solutions, Inc., 176 F.3d 500 (D.C. Cir. 1999), of the federal instrumentality doctrine itself, or (b) the fact that all of the reported federal instrumentality cases protect the governmental grant of a monopoly, but not the conduct of the monopolist vis-à-vis third-party competitors. The last of these is fatal to NSI’s defense, because Name.Space made clear below (including in the parties 1998 stipulation) that it challenges only NSI’s use of its monopoly power, not the formation of that monopoly in the first instance.

NSF’s defense of Judge Patterson’s summary judgment decision is equally unavailing, because the government cannot legitimately support the district court’s sole First Amendment holding that TLDs and domain names are not constitutionally protected speech. The district court’s conclusion that TLDs are simply Internet "area codes," with no expressive content, was not argued by the government below and directly contradicts the sole factual evidence on this question in the record. It is settled that, on summary judgment, the distrust court cannot rule against a non-moving party unless that party fails to adduce any evidence in support of its claim; the court’s role is to construe the evidence and all inferences in favor of the non-moving party. The district court’s sub silentio

rejection of the Mueller declaration – which established that TLDs and domain names, including many of those used by Name.Space itself, constitute expressive speech – was error as a matter of law. NSF’s arguments on third-party standing and time, place and manner restrictions are fundamentally incorrect, at variance with the factual summary judgment record, and a transparent effort to avoid an adverse appellate decision on the core issue of whether First Amendment analysis must, in the first instance, apply to the government’s self-asserted power to control Internet TLDs and domain names.

ARGUMENT

  1. NSI’s THEORY OF IMPLIED ANTITRUST IMMUNITY IS CONTRARY TO THIS COURT’S STROBL JURISPRUDENCE, IMPROPERLY EXTENDS THE SO-CALLED "FEDERAL INSTRUMENTALITY CASES, AND WOULD LEAD TO INCONGRUOUS LEGAL RESULTS

NSI argues it has "long been settled" that antitrust law "provides absolute immunity to private parties when they act under contract with a government agency to implement a government policy or program in a manner authorized or approved by that agency." NSI Br. at 36. This contention contradicts this Court’s own settled antitrust jurisprudence, equates a scattered handful of (mainly district court) cases with formal antitrust doctrine, and extends those few cases vastly beyond recognition. Even if it were to be adopted by this Court – a question of first impression in this appeal – the so-called "federal instrumentality doctrine" cannot do what NSI would have it do, not the least because its consequences would undermine the Congressional supremacy in authorizing agency grants of antitrust immunity and would protect private actors in their dealings not with the government, but as in this case with marketplace competitors.

    1. To Affirm the District Court’s Judgment, this Court Would Need to Overrule Its Own Precedent And Establish A New Legal Theory of Implied Antitrust Immunity
    2. As discussed in appellant’s opening brief, implied antitrust immunity is "strongly disfavored, and [has] only been found in cases of plain repugnancy between the antitrust and regulatory provisions." United States v. Philadelphia Nat’l Bank, 374 U.S. 321, 350-51 (1963). Under this Court’s precedent, implied antitrust immunity is found only where there is a "pervasive regulatory scheme," where an antitrust exemption is "necessary to make the [statute] work," and "even then only to the minimum extent necessary." Strobl v. New York Mercantile Exchange, 768 F.2d 22, 26 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 474 U.S. 1006 (1985).

      Despite NSI’s efforts to paint the "federal instrumentality" doctrine as an exception to Strobl, this Court has never adopted the view that implied antitrust immunity can arise merely from an agency’s unilateral contracting decisions. Strobl makes clear that the ground for an implied exception to antitrust obligations for private companies is some direct inconsistency between the operation of a congressional statutory scheme and application of the antitrust laws. Yet here, the government has disclaimed any regulatory role over the Internet’s DNS system and NSI does not contends that either NSF or the Commerce Department is authorized to extend antitrust immunity to private parties. Thus, the irreconcilable conflict with antitrust liability that forms the basis for Strobl immunity is plainly not present in this case.

      To accept NSI’s position and adopt the federal instrumentality doctrine, this Court would need to overrule Strobl and fashion an ad hoc, policy-driven theory of antitrust immunity. NSI argues, without citation, that Strobl is "an entirely different kind of antitrust immunity," NSI Br. at 52, but fails to recognize that under Strobl, it is Congress, not the courts, that is in charge of immunity issues. When Congress legislates in a way that makes application of the antitrust laws impossible or irrational, the courts assume that the legislature impliedly exempted the statutory scheme from the irreconcilable dictates of antitrust. In this odd way, NSI is right; Strobl is indeed "entirely different" from federal instrumentality

      immunity because the former is driven by classic judicial concerns and a reflection of the courts’ limited role in interpreting law, while the latter is based far more on perceived notions of what makes "good sense" from an antitrust policy perspective.

      There is nothing at all inconsistent with an agency entering into a contract with a private vendor and the imposition of antitrust obligations on that government contractor. General Motors is not immune from antitrust liability to its competitors merely because it sells tanks to the Department of Defense. There are numerous examples of congressionally enacted grants of authority to administrative agencies to immunize private conduct from antitrust scrutiny; had Congress wanted NSF (or the Commerce Department) to exercise such a role, it could easily have added such a provision to the agencies’ governing statutes. In the absence of any such authority, however, Strobl teaches that implied agency immunization should be found only in the narrowest of cases where Congress plainly foresaw a different mechanism than antitrust for regulation of the marketplace. That predicate is completely absent in this case.

      Even under NSI’s unprincipled view of antitrust immunity, however, there is no basis to distinguish the role of NSF (and nor Commerce) in DNS from that of any agency which lacks regulatory power over a market or statutory authority for granting antitrust immunity. NSI asserts, again without citation, that the federal instrumentality doctrine is sensible because the private parties "are acting for the government, not because they are caught in a conflict between a regulatory scheme and the antitrust laws." NSI Br. at 54 (emphasis in original). That is wrong for two simple reasons. First, as the D.C. Circuit explained in refusing to accept the doctrine as a ground for affirming an antitrust judgment for NSI, TLDs and domain name registration are not a "governmental function" because, while the National Science Foundation Act "may, or may not, permit NSF to register and renew domain names, . . .we are certain that it does not require NSF to do so." Thomas, 176 F.3d at 511. Second, despite its focus on the "Cooperative Agreement" with the government, NSI fails to tell the Court that although the Federal Grant and Cooperative Agreement Act permits such agreements for a "public purpose," 31 U.S.C. § 6306, neither that Act nor any other statute suggests that cooperative agreements can immunize private recipients. Appellant’s Br. at 21.

      Even if NSI were correct that its conduct was "part of a government policy or program," NSI Br. at 41, it therefore does not necessarily follow that NSI should be absolutely immune from all antitrust liability. Such a holding would conflict with this Court’s settled antitrust jurisprudence by creating implied antitrust immunity arising from agency actions for which Congress has not either legislated inconsistent regulation or authorized agency grants of immunity. Particularly disingenuous is NSI’s claim that implied immunity should be found merely because it operated as "part of" the NSF program, when the Cooperative Agreement itself was executed pursuant to a congressional statute that does not permit, and has never been construed to authorize, a contracting agency to confer antitrust immunity. As the Seventh Circuit has explained (in a case cited by Name.Space but not discussed by NSI), antitrust defendants "cannot avoid liability for their actions because requested by some public official to do so. . . . Only Congress can lift the restrictions which find expression in the Sherman Act." Eugene Dietzgen Corp. v. FTC, 142 F.2d 321, 329 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, 323 U.S. 730 (1944); see Consumers Union v. Rogers, 352 F. Supp. 1319, 1323 (D.D.C. 1973)(President cannot grant antitrust immunity without statutory authority); Appellant’s Br. at 23.

    3. The Analytical Basis for NSI’s Proposed "Federal Instrumentality Doctrine" Conflicts With Settled Antitrust Law and Cannot Immunize a Private Party’s Actions Directed Against Third-Party Marketplace Competitors
    4. NSI seeks to elevate its federal instrumentality theory to the status of settled antitrust doctrine by analogizing to Noerr-Pennington immunity and Parker v. Brown "state action" immunity. NSI Br. at 40, 44, 46, 49 & n.31. Of course, while these recognized bases of antitrust immunity are so well-established that they have been affirmed by the Supreme Court, analyzed in law review articles and summarized in leading antitrust treatises, there are no citations to any similar authorities in NSI’s brief. That is because the so-called "doctrine" NSI asserts is merely a smattering of cases, only a few of which have even reached the appellate level, that cannot be reconciled with basic antitrust tenets.

      There are so many different verbal formulations of this so-called "doctrine" in NSI’s briefs and the cases it cites that specific rebuttal of each, which Name.Space discussed in detail in its opening brief, would be a waste of the Court’s limited time. It suffices to say that NSI uses a simple syllogism: because the federal government is not a "person" for antitrust purposes, and because a contract cannot be lawful for one party but not another, when the government contracts with a private party that contract cannot be challenged under the antitrust laws. NSI Br. at 42-43. If that were all NSI argued, Name.Space would have no disagreement. As we conceded in our opening brief, that is a "quite unremarkable proposition." Appellant’s Br. at 27-28.

      Stripped of the dicta paraded by NSI, the "doctrine" holds only that if a federal agency or federally-created entity (e.g., a federal territory or public corporation) contracts with a third-party private entity to exclusively perform a service (such as public telephone service), a resulting antitrust challenge to the exclusivity of the contract as an unlawful agreement or conspiracy to monopolize must fail. Appellant’s Br. at 27. To suggest, however, that those contractors should be absolutely immune for all activities is a gross misreading of these cases and a dramatic departure from the roots of the doctrine NSI proposes. Certainly, a government corporation or agency is just as absolutely immune from antitrust liability as the government itself. E.g., Sea-Land Service, Inc. v. Alaska Railroad, 659 F.2d 243, 244 (D.C. Cir. 1981)(Alaska Railroad was "an entity wholly owned and operated by the United States"); IT&E Overseas, Inc. v. RCA Global Communications, 747 F. Supp. 6, 7 (D.D.C. 1990) (Guam Telephone Authority was "created a not-for-profit public corporation"). That does not mean, however, that to the extent a "federal instrumentality" is involved, it can provide blanket antitrust immunity to any party with which it enters into a government contract. As the D.C. Circuit itself – which NSI admits decided the "leading case recognizing the ‘federal instrumentality’ doctrine" – has recently indicated, "[w]hether there is, or should be, any such ‘federal instrumentality doctrine’ in this context is not clearly settled." Thomas, 176 F.3d at 508.

      It is somewhat surprising that NSI almost completely disregards the Thomas decision, arguing in a single paragraph near the end of its brief that Thomas only relates to whether there should be immunity where the contractor has discretion to perform the contract in a number of ways. NSI Br. at 58. Contrary to NSI’s implication, the D.C. Circuit not only questioned the basic applicability of the doctrine to private parties, but expressly referenced this litigation in stating that "[i]t is not obvious to us . . . that a private party automatically shares the federal agency’s immunity simply because the contractor’s allegedly anticompetitive conduct occurred – as Network Solutions puts it and some courts suggest – ‘pursuant’ to a government contract." 176 F.3d at 509 & n.13 (citing district court decision in this case).

      That is precisely the point, which NSI cavalierly overlooks. If an agency cannot by statute immunize its contractor, on what basis should courts imply immunity to conduct taken by the contractor vis-à-vis third-party marketplace competitors? Here is where NSI’s syllogism breaks down. Even if the contractor is equally immune for the contract itself – if the grant of an exclusive monopoly

      cannot be challenged – that does not extend to the contractor’s use of the monopoly to harm rivals. NSI’s explanation of the cases is simply false. NSI Br. as 55-57. Champaign-Urbana News Agency, Inc. v. J.L. Cummins News Co., 632 F.2d 680, 681 (7th Cir. 1980), the plaintiff challenged defendant’s exclusive contract to provide books and magazines to Army and Air Force Exchange Services, but did not challenge use of that monopoly power against rivals. Likewise, in Sakamoto v. Duty Free Shoppers, Ltd., 764 F.2d 1285, 1286 (9th Cir 1985), the plaintiffs challenged the legality of exclusive concession agreement between defendant and Guam Airport Terminal, but did not claim that the duty-free concessionaire had denied it access to an essential facility for competition. And even if NSI were correct that some cases have allowed the conduct of a government contractor to escape antitrust scrutiny, such a conclusion makes no sense. As discussed in the next section, the district court’s holding below – even when constrained by NSI’s limiting conditions, added only after its Thomas set-back – has no limiting principle and would create serious consequences for administration of the antitrust laws.

    5. As Adopted by the District Court, the Federal Instrumentality Doctrine Would Have No Limiting Principle and Conflicts With the Primacy of Congress Over Federal Antitrust Immunity
    6. The district court held that that "private entities under contract with federal instrumentalities are immune from Sherman Act liability for their actions taken pursuant to that contract." (J.A. A853.) That is precisely the formulation advanced by NSI below and in the Thomas litigation. Indeed, under the district court’s rule, federal agencies could immunize conduct without any predicate requirements whatsoever except the existence of contracting authority. (J.A. A856.) ("NSF had the authority to enter into the Cooperative Agreement with NSI and to assign the registration tasks to NSI which could otherwise have been done by NSF itself."). Now, however, NSI would like to amend the district court’s holding to limit it to parties acting "in compliance with the specific direction" of a government agency. NSI Br. at 1, 41, 61. That is perhaps understandable, but nonetheless improper.

      The "specific direction" of a government agency is an insufficient basis on which to rest the untoward consequences of adopting a federal instrumentality doctrine as broad as that proposed by NSI. First, as the Supreme Court has made clear, "government contracting officers do not have the power to grant [antitrust] immunity." Otter Tail, 410 U.S. at 378-79. NSI’s argument that in Otter Tail the private actor sought "to advance its own private interest" is hardly distinguishable, as the same is manifestly true here. NSI Br. at 50. Moreover, in Otter Tail an electric power company with monopoly control over the facilities necessary to "wheel" electricity was required under the antitrust laws to provide wheeling access to potential competitors, 410 U.S. at 368, notwithstanding the fact that its contract with a federal agency included restrictions against the practice. Id. at 374-75. Thus, even express contractual directives for a monopolist not to deal with competitors – precisely what Amendment No. 11 finally established in this case in late 1998 – are no defense to the same type of "essential facility" Section 2 Sherman Act claim Name.Space raises in this litigation against NSI.

      Second, basic antitrust principles dictate that implied immunity is to be narrowly construed and rarely granted. In the context of "compliance with" federal contracts and the "specific direction" of government agencies, NSI’s approach would subvert Congressional supremacy over the scope of agency authority. Even where, as here, Congress had chosen not to empower agencies to grant antitrust immunity, they would still be permitted to do so merely by giving "specific direction" to a contractor. Thus, using the previous example, the Defense Department could immunize General Motors from price fixing charges by specifically directing it to exchange bidding information with other contractors. This is an absurd amount of power – essentially unreviewable by the courts – to bestow upon contracting agencies. At the very least, such a radical change in the scope of delegated immunization power should, if at all, come from Congress, not the courts. Simply put, NSI is asking this Court to act in a legislative, not judicial role by inventing a new form of agency power where none is needed; Congress can easily do so itself it so desires.

    7. Even if NSI Were Correct, the District Court Erred in Applying the Federal Instrumentality Doctrine to Pre-"Amendment No. 11" Liability and To Issues Other Than Preliminary Injunctive Relief

The district court found that until Amendment No. 11 in 1998, NSI had discretion to add new TLDs to the root server. (J.A. 859-60.) That finding is completely in accord with the uncontradicted evidence below, which the district court was required to credit on summary judgment. Contrary to NSI’s ad hominem attack, counsel for Name.Space has not "play[ed] fast and loose with the facts." NSI Br. at 61. To the contrary, appellant made this factual argument below, pointed out that the district court was required to accept it for purposes of NSI’s summary judgment motion, and forthrightly explained to this Court the interplay between the parties’ stipulation and the district court’s holding below. Appellant’s Br. at 32-33 & n.23 (indicating that under stipulation, from the effective date of Amendment No. 11 onward, appellant can only prevail on its request for injunctive relief if the NSF/NSI contract provides no implied antitrust immunity).

Name.Space is concerned that the procedural posture of this case has been forgotten, both by NSI and the district court. Name.Space initially moved for a preliminary injunction, and Judge Paterson ruled that motion should be treated as a summary judgment motion for purposes of deciding the dispositive issues of antitrust immunity and First Amendment liability. (J.A. A370.) The parties’ stipulation that suggested Amendment No. 11 as a basis of decision was expressly limited to "the pending motions," and did not extend either to questions of damages liability or pre-October 1998 immunity. (J.A. A790.) Nonetheless, the district court adjudicated those issues as well – hence its findings on NSI’s discretion prior to October 1998 – and entered judgment for NSI on all counts of the complaint. (J.A. A867.)

This result cannot be squared either with NSI’s theory or the chronology of this case. It is uncontradicted that from March 1997 through June 1997, NSI was not operating under any "direction" that it refuse to deal with Name.Space. Although NSI would prefer it had not, the district court also found that from June 1997 through October 1998, NSI had discretion add new TLDs, discretion that was "taken away" by Amendment No. 11. (J.A. A859-860.) Accordingly, at the very least for the period until June 1997, and under the district court’s opinion through October 1998 as well, NSI was not subject to government control on the addition of new TLDs. See NSI Br. at 63 (NSI "was subject to direct government control beginning in June 1997). Therefore, even it affirms the district court on implied immunity under Amendment No. 11 (from October 1998 on), this Court must at the very least reverse in part for adjudication of appellant’s damages claim and NSI’s pre-October 1998 immunity.

  1. NSF’s FIRST AMENDMENT ANALYSIS CONTRADICTS THE DISTRICT COURT’S LIMITED ROLE ON SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND SUGGESTS PROCEDURAL BASES FOR AFFIRMANCE THAT ARE LEGALLY INAPPLICABLE

The district court’s holding that TLDs and domain names are not speech for First Amendment purposes cannot be squared with the evidence of record. In this summary judgment appeal, appellant’s uncontradicted evidence that TLDs serve expressive and political speech functions was sufficient to withstand summary judgment. NSF’s justiciability and procedural arguments do not offer this Court any valid basis for affirmance, as they are grounded on mischaracterizations of the law and the facts. Consequently, the district court’s judgment below in favor of NSF on the First Amendment claim should be reversed.

    1. The District Court Violated Rule 56 in Rejecting the Uncontested Record Evidence Demonstrating that TLDs and Internet Domain Names Have Expressive Purposes
    2. The only evidence in the record on the expressive purposes and functions of TLDs and Internet domain names was the declaration of Professor Milton Mueller, one of the country’s foremost experts on Internet domain names, submitted by appellant Name.Space. Reviewing the usage and treatment of domain names, Prof. Mueller opined that domain names constitute expressive speech as does any other form of Internet communication. E.g., Mueller Decl. ¶ 3. Under Rule 56, the district court is required to construe all evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. Anderson, 477 U.S. at 248; Joyce, 171 F.3d at 133. Since the government failed to introduce any evidence showing that domain names are not expressive or political speech, under Fed. R. Civ. P. 56 these factual issues should have been resolved, as a matter of law, in favor of plaintiff.

      The district court not only did not do so, but instead made a series of findings analogizing TLDs to area codes that not supported by any evidence in the record. This error requires reversal. NSF suggests in a footnote that the district court was "acting well within its discretion in rejecting Professor Mueller’s conclusions applying First Amendment doctrine." NSF Br. at 26 n.*. Yet Prof. Mueller’s declaration contained ample factual evidence in addition to his conclusions on applicability of the First Amendment. Even if, as NSF argues, the legal opinion evidence was inadmissible, the portions of the declaration that discussed TLD usage as expression, rather than "appl[ication] of First Amendment doctrine, were plainly admissible and relevant.

      NSF refuses to acknowledge, as did the district court, the clear precedent in this Circuit that states that domain names can have expressive function. Planned Parenthood Fed. of Am. v. Bucci, No. 97 Civ. 0629, 1997 LEXIS 3338, *34 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 19, 1997), aff’d, 1998 WL 336163 (2d Cir. Feb. 9, 1998). Name.Space’s domain names, including "for.mayor" and "microsoft.free.zone," undoubtedly evince the "expressive purpose" that the Second Circuit has required of a communicative message. United We Stand America v. United We Stand, America New York, 128 F.3d 86, 92 (2d Cir. 1997). Thus, appellant has satisfied its burden of showing that its speech warrants First Amendment protection. See Clark v. Community for Creative Non-Violence, 468 U.S. 288, 293 n.5 (1984).

    3. Amendment No. 11 is a Clear and Unjustified Prior Restraint on Constitutionally Protected Internet Expression
    4. NSF incorrectly argues that "[p]laintiff has failed to demonstrate any infringement on the ability of plaintiff (or anyone else) to ‘speak’ through use of domain names." NSF Br. at 24. The law is to the contrary. Once Name.Space showed, as it did, that TLDs have a First Amendment function, the burden shifted to the government to justify the prior restraint imposed by Amendment No.11 – under which NSF/Commerce reserve the right to approve or disapprove all new TLDs, and as yet have not allowed any new TLDs to be used on the Internet.

      This is a classic prior restraint case. The purported fear that the addition of new TLDs to the root will endanger the "stable transition of the DNS," NSF Br. at 35, cannot compare to the rare situations in which the Supreme Court has upheld prior restraints of speech. Schenck v. United States, 249 U.S. 47, 52 (1919)(preventing publication of troop movements in time of war); Near v. Minnesota, 372 U.S. 58, 70 (1963)("We have tolerated such a system only where it operated under judicial superintendence and assured an almost immediate judicial determination of the validity of the restraint."). Because NSF lacks any equally weighty basis upon which to justify its suppression of pgMedia’s speech, it has committed (and is still committing) an unconstitutional prior restraint of speech on the Internet

    5. This Court Cannot Affirm the District Court’s Judgment on Any of the Alternative Theories Advanced by the Government

1. Name.Space Has Standing to Challenge NSF’s Restriction of Its Own Protected Internet Speech

Recognizing its weakness on the merits, NSF attempts to avoid judicial review of the First Amendment claim by arguing that Name.Space is improperly asserting third-party standing. NSF Br. at 20-23. NSF is incorrect for two reasons: (1) Name.Space’s own TLDs have been banned by NSF; (2) Name.Space as an editor of Internet content is asserting its own right to free speech and not that of third parties.

The Supreme Court defined the inquiry establishing standing in Warth v. Seldin as "whether the plaintiff has ‘alleged such a personal stake in the outcome of the controversy’ as to warrant his invocation of federal-court jurisdiction and to justify exercise of the court’s remedial powers on his behalf. 422 U.S. 490, 498-99 (1975). The injury suffered by Name.Space certainly passes this test.

The Supreme Court found in Metromedia v. City of San Diego, 453 U.S. 490 (1981), that it has "never held that one with a ‘commercial interest’ in speech also cannot challenge the facial validity of a statute on grounds of its substantial infringement of the First Amendment of others." 453 U.S . at 504 n.11. The Second Circuit has repeatedly followed this decision, giving standing to parties whose activities in the marketplace are curtailed by government censure. For example, in National Advertising Co. v. Town of Babylon, 900 F.2d 551, 555 (2d Cir. 1990), this Court granted standing to a billboard owner challenging a city ordinance restricting the erection of billboards. The court stated that "we have no doubt that the district court was correct in holding that, because of its commercial interest in the speech appellants seek to restrict, National has standing to challenge the ordinances, just as Metromedia had standing in its lawsuit against San Diego." Accord, National Advertising Co. v. Town of Niagara, 942 F.2d 145 (2d Cir. 1991). Thus, the Second Circuit has granted commercial entities First Amendment standing for their very commercial nature; were the opposite true, every newspaper, radio station and cable operator in the nation would be denied standing in First Amendment claims. Id.

NSF’s arguments notwithstanding, NSF Br. at 22-23, the commercial element of domain names does not eliminate Name.Space’s standing to assert its publishing rights in this Court. First, the fact that Name.Space is a commercial venture does not diminish its value to that of mere "commercial speech." NSF Br. at 23. The Supreme Court held in Bigelow v. Virginia, 421 U.S. 811 (1975), that a statute prohibiting publications that may encourage abortion abridged the rights of newspaper publishers and that "the injury of which appellant complain[ed] is one to him as an editor and publisher of a newspaper; he [was] not seeking to raise the hypothetical rights of others." 421 U.S. at 815. Name.Space, as publisher in a medium that the Supreme Court likens to a newspaper, therefore has standing in its own right to seek redress for NSF’s suppression of speech. Second, the Supreme Court has already afforded Internet entities like Name.Space the status of publisher, which guarantees Name.Space the most strict First Amendment protection. Reno v. ACLU, 117 S. Ct. 2329, 2344 (1997).

2. The Government’s Elimination of Any New gTLDs is Not a "Time, Place or Manner" Restriction on Speech

NSF asserts that forcing Name.Space to add content to its communicative domain names is merely a time, place, manner restriction. NSF Br. at 33-42. In a radical departure from its former litigation position, NSF now concedes by implication the fact that the Internet is a public forum, without which concession its "time, place and manner" analysis is improper.

NSF first quotes the Supreme Court for the proposition that "even protected speech is not equally permissible in all places at all times." NSF Br. at 33-34 (quoting Frisby v. Schultz, 487 U.S. 474, 479 (1988). This statement by the Court goes only to the issue of whether the speech would be heard in a public or non-public forum, however, rather than to the proper limits of the restriction itself. Frisby, 487 U.S. at 479-80. NSF goes on to discuss the relevant test for time, place and manner restrictions, fundamentally misapplying the facts of this case to the Supreme Court’s standards to shoe-horn its actions into a legally permissible restriction.

Time, place and manner restrictions occur when a government authority seeks to alter the location, time, or volume at which speech is communicated. For example, in the case upon which NSF principally relies, Ward v. Rock Against Racism, 491 U.S. 781 (1989), the city of New York required that bands performing in Central Park use the city’s own sound equipment in order to decrease noise pollution. restriction, NSF’s extensive discussion of that doctrine notwithstanding.

NSF’s analysis of its outright preclusion of Name.Space’s speech under the test of Ward is misleading. First, NSF asserts that its actions evince a "significant governmental interest." NSF Br. at 35. This interest, as characterized by NSF, is "a clearly articulated policy of getting out of the way of the future and letting the consensus of the Internet community, as articulated through the new ICANN, govern this powerful yet fragile technology." Id. It is curious that NSF, in furtherance of "getting out of the way," has in fact erected a complete barrier to the future of Internet domain names. Further, NSF’s assertion that its goal of a "stable transition of the DNS to private-sector control" would be thwarted by Name.Space is nonsensical: to argue that the creation a competitive DNS market would impede investment in DNS is an impossible syllogism. NSF Br. at 38. NSF’s actions are thus not adequately based in a truly significant government interest as to satisfy the test for a time, place and manner restriction.

As to the last prong of NSF’s time, place and manner analysis, it is a plain misstatement of fact to claim that NSF has left Name.Space "‘ample alternatives’" for its Internet speech. NSF Br. at 41 (citation omitted). In this case, NSF has not merely designated an alternate location from which Name.Space may speak, it has banned Name.Space from the domain name system unless it fundamentally alters the content of its speech. Unlike Ward, in which the stage "was open, apparently, to all performers" and only their volume was regulated, with no change in the content of the songs performed, 491 U.S. at 790, NSF’s ban on Name.Space’s gTLDs has effectively excluded it from the domain name "stage" unless it fundamentally changes its content. NSF’s ban is simply not a time, place and manner Time, place and manner restrictions, as has been shown in the previous cases, do not involve the changing of the content of communication but only its means. NSF’s attempt to diminish the gravity of its suppression in the guise of this doctrine cannot obscure the fact that its action remains a bald restriction of protected speech.

Name.Space has thus shown that its domain names constitute protected speech, which must be protected with a heightened scrutiny of any attempt to ban it from publication. NSF has not presented any legal principle with which to exonerate itself but has only expounded its unfounded policy arguments and mischaracterization of Name.Space’s activity. Therefore, Name.Space has established that NSF is liable for its exclusion of Name.Space’s TLDs from the root.

3. NSF is Incorrect that Compelled Speech Applies Only to Political Speech

NSF answers Name.Space’s claim of unlawfully compelled speech by arguing that the First Amendment prohibits only the compulsion of political or ideological speech. This argument is, at the very least, a novel interpretation of Supreme Court precedent.

In the landmark case of Miami Herald Publishing Company v. Tornillo, 418 U.S. 241 (1974), the Supreme Court struck down the Florida right-of-reply statute foursquare on grounds that "the Florida statute fails to clear barriers of the First Amendment because of its intrusion into the function of editors." 418 U.S. at 258. The Court went on to state that "[t]he choice of material to go into a newspaper, and the decisions made as to limitations on the size and content of the paper, and treatment of public issues and public officials — whether fair or unfair — constitute the exercise of editorial control and judgment." Id. Indeed, NSI exercises this control and judgment every day in its self-proclaimed editorial role in domain name registration.

Nor do the additional cases cited by NSF hold that compelled speech is violative of the First Amendment only when the speech is political in nature. For example, the Supreme Court stated in Wooley v. Maynard (cited at NSF Br. at 29) simply that "[w]e begin with the proposition that the right of freedom of thought protected by the First Amendment against state action includes both the right to speak freely and the right to refrain from speaking at all." 430 U.S. 705, 714 (1977). In another case relied upon by NSF, the Supreme Court held that the First Amendment protects individuals from "requir[ing] [them] to repeat an objectionable message out of their own mouths." Glickman v. Wileman Bros. & Elliott, Inc., 521 U.S. 457, 466 (1997). Therefore, the district court erred in holding that forcing Name.Space to register its domain names according to NSI’s own prescriptions is "[f]ar from being compelled speech, the TLD is simply a routing instruction that helps computers find each other." (J.A. A865.)

CONCLUSION

For all these reasons, the judgment of the district court should be reversed.

Respectfully submitted,

By:___________________________

Glenn B. Manishin

Stephanie A. Joyce

Blumenfeld & Cohen

1615 M Street, N.W., Suite 700

Washington, D.C. 20036

202.955.6300

202.955.6460 fax

Attorneys for Appellant Name.Space, Inc.

Dated: August 11, 1999