Following the Right Lead: Gutnick and the Dance of Internet Jurisdiction Mary Paterson nature of the tort. It is this approach that CanadianJurisdiction and the Internet courts should adopt.3 s improving methods of travel and communication Afacilitatedthe shift from an agrarian to an industrial society, the common law courts increasingly faced Current Canadian Lawinterjurisdictional disputes. Although British paternalism dominated early cases in which courts assumed jurisdic- ne factor in choosing an approach to jurisdiction tion over people, property, and actions in distant lands, Oandthe Internet is the existing jurisdictional law in these cases and the imperial attitudes informing them Canada. Canadian courts have jurisdiction if the parties were slowly replaced by more modest jurisdictional are served in the forum, if the parties submit to jurisdic- assertions based on a sense of comity.1 The shift from an tion, or if the suit falls under a service ex juris rule and industrial society to an information-based society and has a real and substantial connection with the jurisdic- the simultaneous growth of a global infrastructure based tion. Even when the court has jurisdiction through one on satellite, telephone, cable, and cellular technologies of these methods, the court can decline to hear the case have stretched jurisdictional doctrines in new ways, based on the court's power to control its own process calling into question traditional methods of balancing under the doctrine of forum non conveniens. This doc- the interests of nations in protecting and regulating their trine has been relaxed, making it easier for defendants to citizens. For example, the Internet allows people to convince courts not to assume jurisdiction to compen- broadcast defamatory statements to an international sate for the increasing breadth of service ex juris rules. audience without setting a physical or, as some would The substantial connection test also restrains courts from argue, an electronic foot outside of their home forum. In asserting jurisdiction under service ex juris rules. The test such a situation, is it just for a foreign court to assume derives from De Savoye v. Morguard Investments Ltd.,4 jurisdiction over the defendant who may have adhered in which the Supreme Court of Canada stated that pro- to local law and been unaware of foreign law? On the vincial courts should enforce the judgments of other other hand, is it just to refuse to exercise jurisdiction over provincial courts where those courts assumed jurisdic- a defendant who may have adhered to a local law that tion in an appropriately restrained manner consistent did not reflect the common attitude towards defama- with order and fairness. According to the Court, order tion, thereby leaving all reputations vulnerable to foreign and fairness necessitated a substantial connection attack? Canadian appeal courts have not yet addressed between the jurisdiction and some part of the suit. This this jurisdictional question in the context of the Internet, requirement now extends to foreign judgments.5 although courts of all levels have struggled with the The substantial connection test in Morguard does growth of interjurisdictional activity in contract and tort. not explain what the jurisdiction must be connected However, as the Internet grows and its uses multiply, the with. The Supreme Court refers to the subject matter of courts will increasingly face the difficult jurisdictional the action, damages suffered, the defendant, and the sub- issues raised by Internet activity. Thus, Canada must ject matter of the suit. The Ontario Court of Appeal choose the approach it will apply. articulated eight factors, including the connection The High Court of Australia addressed this choice between the forum and the plaintiff's claim, the connec- in Dow Jones v. Gutnick.2 Dow Jones published defama- tion between the forum and the defendant, unfairness to tory statements about Joseph Gutnick in Barron's Online the defendant, unfairness to the plaintiff, the involve- on its subscription Web site. Gutnick brought an action ment of other parties in the suit, the Court's willingness against Dow Jones in Victoria, Australia, for damage to to enforce foreign judgments rendered on the same juris- his reputation in Australia. Although Dow Jones urged dictional basis, whether the case is inter-provincial or the Court to adopt the single publication rule for finding international in nature, and global standards of comity jurisdiction over defamation on the Internet, a rule that and jurisdiction.6 Both Courts focus on broad connec- exists in the United States, the Court rejected that rule, tions that balance parties' interests; this focus differs from instead forging the different approach of focusing on the the American due process approach, which constitution- 49 50 Canadian Journal of Law and Technology ally requires that the jurisdiction have some minimal tory meaning, and thus had neither infringed the mark contacts with the defendant, regardless of the other fac- nor caused any damage. Although the Court does not tors. Despite this difference, Canadian courts seem to specifically reject the interactivity test, instead relying on look to American jurisprudence for assistance with juris- a narrow interpretation of the Trade-mark Act12 to find diction over Internet activities. for the defendant, in obiter, the Court suggests that ``it is much more sensible to apply tort principles to accom- The British Columbia courts are the first to have modate new technologies''.13 The Australian High Court applied the substantial connection test to Internet applied precisely this approach in Gutnick. activity. In Braintech Inc. v. Kostiuk,7 the Court of Appeal addressed whether or not to enforce a Texas default judgment obtained by a British Columbia company against a British Columbia resident in a defamation suit. Australian and AmericanThe defendant posted defamatory statements on an ApproachesInternet bulletin board. Because the plaintiff traded its stock over the Internet, it claimed that its reputation was n four concurring judgments, the Australian High harmed in Texas, where people could read the com- ICourt rendered a unanimous decision that the pro- ments and decline to purchase stock. The Court of posed single publication rule was inappropriate, Victoria Appeal refused to enforce the judgment, stating that had jurisdiction over the defamation suit, and Victorian Texas did not have a substantial connection with the law applied to the case. Dow Jones argued that the suit. However, it relied heavily on American Internet Internet is a novel medium necessitating a new way of cases, including Zippo Manufacturing Company v. locating the place of the tort. The place of the tort is Zippo Dot Com Inc.8 In Zippo, the District Court of important in Australia, and in Canada, because service ex Pennsylvania stated that a court could not assert jurisdic- juris rules allow courts to take jurisdiction over torts tion over a defendant where that defendant operated a committed in that jurisdiction, and because the place of passive Web site, because that defendant would not have the tort determines choice of law which affects a forum sufficient contacts with the jurisdiction to satisfy the con- non conveniens decision. Thus, the location of the tort stitutional due process clause. The British Columbia critically impacts whether or not the court has jurisdic- Court of Appeal characterized the bulletin board as a tion and whether or not that court will choose to exer- passive site on which Kostiuk did not engage in com- cise jurisdiction by rejecting a forum non conveniens mercial activity; as such, Texas did not have jurisdiction. argument. The adoption of the interactivity test is problematic Dow Jones argued that the Court should adopt the for two reasons. First, the Canadian substantial connec- single publication rule14 to assess the place of the tort in tion test does not assess whether or not the foreign defamation suits. The single publication rule states that forum has assumed jurisdiction correctly under its own plaintiffs can bring only one claim for damage in all laws; rather, the test focuses on whether there is a sub- jurisdictions caused by defamatory statements, and that stantial connection, as defined by Canadian jurispru- the place of publication is the place in which the mate- dence, between the suit and the foreign jurisdiction. rial is first comprehensible. Therefore, the place of the Therefore, American due process and minimal contacts tort in Internet defamation is the place at which the cases cannot assist a Canadian court's assessment of sub- information is uploaded onto a server. If the server is the stantial connection. Second, by relying on the interac- place of publication, then the law of that place governs tivity test, the Court of Appeal has imported a defendant- the publication. Dow Jones argued that such a result is oriented test based on the American Constitution into just, because the Internet is a passive medium such that the Canadian context, contrary to the more balanced the publisher has little control over the location of its Canadian approach outlined above. readership, and that a single governing law leads to cer- tainty and fairness. Under this rule, the defamatory state-Some cases contradict Braintech's adoption of ments in Gutnick were published on a New JerseyZippo; however, these cases also rely on American juris- server, New Jersey law would apply, and Victoria wouldprudence. In Easthaven Ltd. v. Nutrisystem.com Inc.,9 the not have jurisdiction under the service ex juris rules orOntario Superior Court of Justice specifically adopted under a forum non conveniens analysis. Although thePanavision International v. Toeppen,10 a case in which single publication rule has benefits,15 Dow Jones con-the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit used the ceded that where the location of the server was opportu-effects test instead of the interactivity test. The Easthaven nistic, the Court could apply a different analysis to findCourt made the same error that was made in Braintech, the place of the tort.using the American cases to refuse jurisdiction in Canada. However, in Pro-C Ltd. v. Computer City Inc.,11 The Court unanimously rejected this proposal. All the Ontario Court of Appeal overturned a trial judgment judges except for Justice Kirby rejected the idea that the relying on Zippo and Braintech in the trademark con- Internet is a novel medium. Justices Gleeson, McHugh, text. The Court of Appeal found that the American Gummow, and Hayne proceeded to reject the single defendant had not used the trademark within the statu- publication rule because the rule was unclear, particu- Following the Right Lead: Gutnick and the Dance of Internet Jurisdiction 51 larly given the ambiguity of the exceptions for opportu- tort reduces the number of jurisdictions in which liti- nistic or adventitious behaviour. Furthermore, these jus- gants can bring a suit. For example, Gutnick could only tices stated that the convenience of the poster of material claim damage in Victoria (the jurisdiction in which he must be balanced with the convenience of the plaintiff lived), Israel (the jurisdiction in which he completed and the differing balances struck between free speech charitable works), and the United States (the jurisdiction and protection of reputations in different nations. They in which he completed some business transactions). stated, ``Certainty does not necessarily mean singu- Only in these jurisdictions did Gutnick have a reputa- larity''.16 Finally, the Court pointed out that the develop- tion to injure. Thus, the spectre of liability in every juris- ment of the single publication rule from a jurisdictional diction raised by Dow Jones, like most spectres, is ficti- doctrine to a doctrine governing choice of law occurred tious. in the United States to satisfy the Sixth Amendment, a Furthermore, the Court pointed out that issues of constitutional requirement that applied to criminal and jurisdiction and choice of law must be decided sepa- not to civil matters. Justice Gaudron concurred with this rately. Although the Victorian Court might rightly analysis, adding the contention that the single publica- assume jurisdiction over Gutnick's suit in its entirety, tion rule was developed to prevent a multiplicity of suits assuming that he claimed damage to his reputation in and that estoppel doctrines were sufficient to protect Israel and the United States as well, the Victorian Court parties from multiple suits. Justice Callinan concurred, could not correctly apply Victorian law to the entire suit. stating that the adoption of the single publication rule Rather, using the place of the tort as the place of damage would lead to ``an American legal hegemony in relation to the reputation, the Victorian Court would apply Vic- to Internet publications'',17 because most servers are torian, American, and Israeli law to assess the damage to located in the United States. Gutnick's reputation in the different nations. Thus, Justice Kirby concurred in the result but not in the Gutnick would have succeeded in his Victorian claim analysis. He alone concluded that the Internet was more and failed in his American claim. The inconsistent result than a mere extension of existing communications does not point to an ineffective rule; rather it reveals a media, and that a change in the rules was required. How- rule that is sensitive to the different values placed on free ever, he found that such a change was beyond judicial speech and protection of reputation in different coun- capacity. Not only did Justice Kirby rely on the long- tries. The inconsistent result is consistent with the princi- standing history of defamation law including the mul- ples of comity that inform jurisdictional principles in tiple publication rule, but he also pointed to Australian Australia and in Canada. legislation premised on the existence of the multiple Not only did the Australian Court approach thepublication rule. Furthermore, he stated that if a nation jurisdictional issue through the lens of established torts,takes legislative initiative to deal with a problem, as Aus- but it also failed to consider the jurisdictional tests devel-tralia was doing at the time of the decision, then the oped in the United States. This omission, particularlyjudiciary does not have the capacity to remedy that same given Dow Jones' discussion of the American due processproblem. Finally, Justice Kirby pointed to the flaws guarantee18 and the minimal contacts approach, at ainherent in Dow Jones' proposed rule, including the ease minimum suggests that the Court thought the Americanof manipulation, the ambiguity of the exceptions, the jurisdictional approach to be irrelevant in the Australiandifficulty that plaintiffs would have locating the server, context. Not only should Canadian courts follow thethe power imbalance in defamation actions that would Australians in adopting a tort-based jurisdictional anal-accrue to the United States, and the lack of technological ysis, but they should also find the American jurispru-neutrality in the rule. dence to be irrelevant to Canadian law. Before such a In adopting the multiple publication rule -- a rule proposition can be supported, however, I must explore which states that every new publication of a defamatory the effects and the interactivity tests. statement, such that another reader or listener under- stands the statement, gives rise to a new claim -- the Both tests fit within the American jurisdictional Australian Court made an important statement about framework found in the Fourteenth Amendment. Courts finding jurisdiction in Internet cases concerning torts can assert general or specific jurisdiction under the long- and, through its lack of discussion, about the value of arm statutes of each state. General jurisdiction exists American jurisdictional jurisprudence. All members of where the defendant has continuous activities in the the Court stated that when determining the place of the state, creating jurisdiction over all claims related to that tort, courts should examine the factors in the context of defendant. This situation rarely arises in the context of the tort in question because the nature of the tort alters the Internet. Specific jurisdiction exists where the defen- where that tort occurs. Therefore, in the case of defama- dant purposefully avails itself of the forum, where the tion, the Court found that the tort arose when damage claim arises as a result of the defendant's forum-related occurred or where the reputation was injured. In activities, and where the exercise of jurisdiction is reason- Gutnick, damage occurred in Victoria; therefore, the able. Many long-arm statutes allow jurisdictional asser- assertion of jurisdiction was appropriate. As both the tions to the extent that the Constitution permits such an majority and Justice Kirby pointed out, the nature of the assertion. Therefore, the due process analysis is critical. In 52 Canadian Journal of Law and Technology International Shoe Co. v. Washington,19 the United Finally, the active Web site also fails to serve as an appro- States Supreme Court established a two-part test for due priate proxy for jurisdiction. As Michael Geist points out, process, requiring that the defendant have minimum While the active Web site may want to sell into every juris- contacts with the forum state, such that maintenance of diction, the foreseeability of a legal action is confined prima- rily to those places where actual sales occur. The Zippo testthe suit does not offend traditional notions of fair play does not distinguish between actual and potential sales.26 and substantial justice.20 The flexibility of this standard ``permits a court to respond to technical and social These failings in the Zippo test have caused some Amer- change and better protect the forum state's residents ican courts and scholars to return to traditional from novel issues that arise from new media such as the approaches to jurisdiction.27 One such approach is the internet (sic)''.21 Generally, the courts assess the minimal effects test, which was first articulated by the United contacts requirement through the lens of purposeful States Supreme Court in Calder v. Jones.28 In Calder, the availment by the defendant. It is only at the stage of Court found that California courts could assume juris- assessing reasonableness that the court considers factors diction over a defamation suit, despite the fact that the such as the plaintiff's interest in obtaining convenient defamatory newspaper was printed in Florida, because relief and the nation's interest in promoting a certain the defendant engaged in social policy. However, jurisdiction rarely founders on (1) intentional actions (2) expressly aimed at the forum statethe reasonableness assessment, because modes of travel (3) causing harm, the brunt of which is suffered -- and and communication, particularly within the United which the defendant knows is likely to be suffered -- in the States, are relatively cheap and easy to access.22 As a forum state.29 result, even where a plethora of factors support the The effects test is one example of the alternatives to theassumption of jurisdiction, unlike a Canadian court, the single publication rule found in the United States. How-American court will refuse such jurisdiction if the defen- ever, some courts focused too heavily on the effects por-dant does not have sufficient minimal contacts with the tion of the test, failing to strictly require the intent.state. Under this interpretation, the test ``can be difficult to contain''.30 Such loose readings were rejected by theIn an attempt to analyse minimal contacts on the Ninth Circuit in Panavision, where the Court foundInternet, the District Court of Pennsylvania developed jurisdiction to be proper under the effects test becausethe interactivity test in Zippo. Under this test, the court the defendant, ``as he knew [his conduct] likely would,analyses the activity level of a Web site and classifies it as had the effect of injuring Panavision in California wherea passive site, an active site, or an intermediate site. If the Panavision has its principal place of business''.31 Thesite is passive, such that the publisher merely places Ninth Circuit's use of the effects test in Panavision isinformation on that site, then the foreign court cannot interesting, because the same Court found the effects testassert jurisdiction. If the site is active, such that the pub- to be inapplicable in Cybersell less than one year earlier.lisher solicits business from the foreign jurisdiction, enters into contracts with and delivers goods to the In Cybersell, the Court considered both tests. The inhabitants of the forum, and generally conducts busi- Court refused to apply the effects test, because the defen- ness there, then jurisdiction is appropriate. However, dant in Cybersell did not purposefully avail itself of the where the Web site is in between these two extremes, forum. Instead, the Court used the interactivity test, char- the court must look for ``something more''23 than just a acterized the offending Web site as a passive site, and Web site to found jurisdiction. As the Court in Bensusan refused jurisdiction. However, given that the effects test Restaurant Corp. v. King24 points out, this requirement requires purposeful availment in the sense that actions for something more usually derives from the long-arm must be intentional and expressly aimed at the forum statute as well as the due process requirement. state, the Court's finding of a lack of jurisdiction is con- sistent with the application of the effects test. The Court The interactivity test, although still applied, has did not need to state that the effects test was inappli- been severely criticized. First, ``substantial technological cable, but rather that it was not met. improvements''25 have practically eliminated the passive Web site. Therefore, the non-technology-neutral nature The case that best reveals the confusion plaguing of the test renders it of little value in the long term. the effects and interactivity tests is Revell v. Lidov,32 a Furthermore, ``passive'' does not always equate to a lack case addressing a defamation claim. The Court of of purposeful availment. In the case of defamation, a Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in December 2002 rejected defendant could post defamatory material on a techno- the dichotomy between the effects test and interactivity logically passive site with the explicit intent of injuring test, stating, ``Nor is the Zippo scale, as has been sug- the defamed person's reputation in a specific jurisdiction. gested, in tension with the `effects' test of Calder v. Jones Under the Zippo test, the defendant would escape lia- for intentional torts''.33 The Court found that both tests bility. More problems arise in the intermediate category. are facets of the purposeful availment criteria, and that The ``something more'' requirement simply forces courts most cases conclude that a Web site does not constitute to return to traditional cases to assess purposeful avail- purposeful availment unless it targets a particular juris- ment, rendering the Zippo test of little analytical value. diction or a particular person. However, the Court Following the Right Lead: Gutnick and the Dance of Internet Jurisdiction 53 admitted the possibility that a Zippo passive Web site ties. Thus, the defamer targets the specific jurisdiction in could satisfy the effects test by intentionally availing itself which the reputation exists by targeting the reputation. of a forum.34 Perhaps to escape this conundrum, the Court characterized the Web site as Zippo-interactive and then used the effects test to analyse whether or not jurisdiction was appropriate. In this case, the Court A Change of Direction: Followingfound that jurisdiction was not appropriate, because the Gutnick's Leaddefamatory article did not mention that the plaintiff lived in Texas, did not discuss the plaintiff's activities in he second difference between the effects test and Texas, and was not directed at Texas readers. Thus, the Tthetort-focused test in Gutnick illuminates the first Court concluded that the article did not focus on Texas reason supporting the Canadian choice of the Gutnick enough to purposefully enter that jurisdiction, despite approach over the American effects or interactivity tests. the fact that the defamed person lived in Texas and had This difference is that, at a fundamental level, the effects a reputation there. test and the tort-focused test begin their analysis from a different context. Both tests have at their centre a con- This result is interesting in light of Gutnick, and in cern about jurisdiction. However, the effects test requires, light of several comments made by the Fifth Circuit rather arbitrarily, intentional action and damage, regard- about the nature of defamation and the Internet. First, less of the nature of the activity in question. In essence, the Court in Revell stated that defamation is similar to the effects test asks: Should we take jurisdiction over this other torts in response to the plaintiff's request that the defendant? The tort-focused approach places the jurisdic- Court reject Zippo on the basis of the unique nature of tional question in the context of the dispute, asking: defamation. The Court added, ``Defamation has its Should we take jurisdiction over this dispute between unique features, but shares relevant characteristics with the plaintiff and the defendant? The distinction may various business torts''.35 This conclusion is similar to seem trivial. The result is not. At a principled level, the that found in Gutnick and Pro-C, both of which suggest courts exist to resolve disputes; therefore, focusing on the that torts are similar enough to each other to provide a defendant rather than the dispute does not sit well with stable lens through which to analyse jurisdiction, while the fundamental purpose of courts. It is possible to argue permitting small variations to take into account the idio- that the defendant has the most at stake in the process; syncratic nature of each tort. perhaps this is true in the criminal setting. However, in the civil setting, the dispute concerns who should bearFurthermore, in some aspects, the effects test as it is the loss or the cost of the defendant's actions. Therefore,applied in Revell is similar to the tort-focused approach both parties have the same loss at stake. Jurisdictionaladopted in Gutnick. Instead of focusing on the medium rules recognize this difference between civil and criminalthrough which the tort is committed, the effects test actions. Given that a judgment in a civil case will have anlooks for intentional actions expressly aimed at a partic- economically detrimental effect on the losing party, beular forum causing harm in a jurisdiction that is reason- that party the plaintiff or the defendant, predicating juris-ably foreseeable. The Gutnick approach examines the diction on the defendant's contacts with the jurisdictiontort of defamation, and finds that the damage or effects is odd, particularly when a multiplicity of doctrines existof defamation are reasonably foreseeable in jurisdictions to address abuse of process by the plaintiff in his or herin which the plaintiff has a reputation. However, there choice of the original forum.are two differences between the effects test and the tort- focused approach. The effects test requires a high level of The difficulty of focusing on the defendant rather intent to meet the constitutionally entrenched defen- than on the tort becomes apparent when courts take dant-oriented approach in the United States. The tort- tests based on the defendant and developed in the con- focused approach allows more flexibility with respect to text of one tort, and transfer those tests to another tort. intent, so that jurisdiction is appropriate in a tort which For example, the interactivity test was developed in the does not require express aiming at a jurisdiction, but context of trademark infringement. In this context, given rather at a person, such as defamation. Thus, the tort- that trademark infringement does not require intent to focused approach would not lead to the absurd result in infringe, the passive/active dichotomy may act as a good Revell, where a plaintiff would have succeeded if the proxy for purposeful availment of another forum. How- article defaming him included the name of the jurisdic- ever, transferring this test into the defamation context, as tion in which he resided, but failed because that one occurred in Barrett v. Catacombs Press,36 leads to troub- word was lacking. Instead of requiring an express men- lesome results. In Barrett, the Court found that because tion or aim at the jurisdiction, the tort-focused approach the Internet activity in question was passive, the defen- recognizes that a reputation exists in the knowledge of dant had not purposefully availed himself of the jurisdic- other people, and that generally the people who hold tion.37 As discussed above, in defamation, such logic is that knowledge are also aware of the residence of the fallacious because targeting the reputation necessarily defamed person because those people have contact with targets the jurisdiction in which the reputation exists. the defamed person during that person's regular activi- The same difficulty arises with the effects test, which 54 Canadian Journal of Law and Technology [T]he Supreme Court of Victoria in Gutnick, supra, appliedrequires intentional actions expressly aimed at the forum a real and substantial connection test to conclude that it wasstate. This test more coherently addresses defamation, a the appropriate forum for deciding a defamation action in tort that contains some element of intent, than it does a respect of material uploaded onto the defendant's server in strict liability tort such as trademark infringement. If the New Jersey and downloaded by end users in Victoria. courts had in the first instance focused on the tort in Thus, a Canadian appellate court recognized thatquestion and not on the defendant's relationship with the Australian approach is concordant with Canadianthe forum, the courts would have recognized the weak- jurisprudence.nesses inherent in both the interactivity and the effects tests. The Ontario Court of Appeal signalled a similar recognition in Pro-C Ltd., and suggested a tort-basedFocusing on the tort instead of on the defendant's approach to jurisdiction on the Internet instead ofcontacts has several benefits. First, it results in tech- relying on the effects and interactivity tests. There arenology-neutral rules. Technology-neutral tests lead to cases adopting the interactivity test and the effects test ingreater certainty and more principled results because the Canada; these cases make the error of using Americancourt is not required to delve into the minutiae of tech- tests to decide whether or not the Canadian substantialnological developments to assess whether or not a test is connection test is met without adjusting the tests to takemet. For example, under the passive/active distinction, into account the defendant-oriented bias built into thethe court may be asked to assess whether or not and tests.40 However, the fact that the courts misapplied thehow the Web site used cookies, facts that are completely American case law does not lead to the conclusion thatirrelevant to a defamation action. Furthermore, in an era the tests could not be adjusted to take into accountwhere technology progresses as rapidly as it does today, a Canadian jurisdictional values. Such an adjustmenttest developed in a case based on facts that occurred would require rewriting the tests to conform to Cana-more than 18 months before the trial is already out of dian law and to eliminate the confusion between thedate. Secondly, focusing on the tort allows the court to effects and interactivity tests. If the courts are to rewritearticulate principles of jurisdiction more generally, the test, it makes more sense to start from a solid founda-because the analysis for each tort begins with the foun- tion than from a flawed and confused set of cases. Such adational principles of jurisdiction. A defendant-based foundation is provided in Pro-C Ltd. The Ontario Courtapproach assumes that the defendant must have contacts of Appeal refused to adopt the American cases becausewith the jurisdiction, without articulating why those they were irrelevant to the trademark legislation in ques-contacts must exist. Thus, it is difficult to predict which tion. In so doing, and in its statements in obiter, thecontacts are sufficient because the original spirit or the Court demonstrated sensitivity to the nature of the claimunderlying purpose of the test is lost or altered in the and the relationship between the claim and assertingsuccessive iterations of common law judgments. Not jurisdiction. This case is consistent with the sentimentsonly does the tort-focused approach require such basic expressed in Gutnick, and provides some persuasiveprinciples, but it also leads to greater clarity and predict- authority for adopting the Australian decision.ability as a result. The second reason for adopting Gutnick instead of The final reason supporting a Canadian adoption of an American approach is more pragmatic: The Austra- Gutnick is the similarity of Canadian and Australian tort lian approach to jurisdiction is similar to the Canadian law, particularly in the area of defamation. At the level of approach. In Australia, a plaintiff can serve a foreign party principle, both Australia and Canada emphasize the under service ex juris rules; before that party can proceed value of freedom of expression. Both also recognize that with the case, it must prove to a court that the service ``A democratic society . . . has an interest in ensuring that was properly effected and that the claim falls within the its members can enjoy and protect their good reputation service ex juris rules. At the same time, the defendant can so long as it is merited''.41 Furthermore, neither Canada present a forum non conveniens challenge to the pro- nor Australia has adopted a single publication rule.42 ceeding. Not only does the Australian court use a similar Therefore, an approach to jurisdiction in defamation forum non conveniens analysis based on the House of cases predicated upon at least similar law, such as that Lords decision in Spiliada,38 but the court also takes a used in Gutnick, better integrates with the Canadian more balanced approach to jurisdiction than American balance between free speech and the protection of repu- courts, which are forced into a defendant-oriented posi- tations than an American approach could do. At the level tion. Like Canadian courts, Australian courts assess the of doctrine, several pre-Internet cases in Canada plaintiff's contacts with the forum, the nature of the addressing the problem of jurisdiction in cross-border claim, hardships to the plaintiff, and hardships to the defamation claims used a similar reputation-oriented defendant. The Federal Court of Appeal recognized this approach to locate the tort of defamation. Instead of similarity in Society of Composers, Authors & Music relying on the place of broadcast, as Dow Jones urged in Publishers of Canada v. Canadian Assn. of Internet Prov- Gutnick, the Ontario Court in Jenner v. Sun Oil43 found iders39 by discussing the ratio of Gutnick in Canadian it startling to think that ``one may, while standing south jurisdictional language. Justice Evans stated: of the border . . . , through the medium of modern sound Following the Right Lead: Gutnick and the Dance of Internet Jurisdiction 55 amplification, utter defamatory matter which is heard in Other Works Consulted a Province in Canada north of the border, and not be said to have published a slander in the Province in which it is heard and understood''.44 Justice McRuer clearly Jurisprudence found that the tort was located where the reputation was 1. American Information Corporation v. American damaged because the ``tort consists in making a third Infometrics Inc. (2001), 139 F. Supp. 2d 696 (WL). person understand actionable defamatory matter''.45 This jurisprudence is consistent with the approach taken in 2. Compuserve Inc. v. Patterson, 89 F. 3d 1257 (6th Gutnick. Cir. 1996) (Lexis). 3. GTE New Media Services Inc. v. Bellsouth Corp. 199 F. 3rd 1343 (D.C. Cir. 2000) (Lexis). Areas for Further Research 4. S. Morantz Inc. v. Hang & Shine Ultrasonics, Inc., lthough the tort-based approach avoids the 79 F. Supp. 2d. 537 (E.D. Penn 1999) (WL). Aproblems of technological bias and lack of princi- pled analysis, it may create others, all of which must be 5. Young v. New Haven, 315 F. 3rd 256 (4th Cir. examined more closely. Dow Jones complained that a 2002) (Lexis). tort-based approach would lead to any person on the Internet being liable in every jurisdiction for a particular Secondary Materialsaction. First, the above discussion suggests that a torts- based approach is rigorous enough to eliminate over- 1. Beatty, Patrick, ``Litigation in Cyberspace: The broad jurisdiction. It is, perhaps, more rigorous than the Current and Future State of Internet Jurisdiction'' international community requires, given the plaintiff (1999), 7 U. Balt. Intell. Prop. L.J. 127 (Lexis). focus of the Brussels Convention.46 Coupled with 2. Celedonia, Baila H. & Joel Schmidt, ``Internetcommon law doctrines preventing abuse of process, Jurisdiction: The Global Issue of Liability forincluding those that prevent a multiplicity of actions, the Trademark Infringement on the Web'' (2002),torts-based analysis will lead to appropriate jurisdictional 703 PLI/Pat 1041 (WL).decisions. Furthermore, once a court assumes jurisdic- tion, there are many ways to express the comity that 3. Cizek, Adam, ``Traditional Personal Jurisdiction informs Canadian jurisdictional rules. For example, and the Internet: Does it Work?'' (1999), 7 U. choice of law allows multiple laws to be applied to con- Balt. Intell. Prop. L.J. 109 (Lexis). duct, including the law of the defendant's jurisdiction. 4. Dutta, Anindita, ``Zippo Manufacturing Co. v.Also, local enforcement mechanisms for foreign judg- Zippo Dot Com, Inc. Case Comment'' (1998), 13ments, particularly in Canada, require that the original Berkeley Tech. L.J. 289 (WL).court have assumed jurisdiction in a reasonable manner based upon a substantial connection with the case. Even 5. Exon, Susan Nauss, ``A New Shoe is Needed to if such jurisdiction is appropriately taken, Canadian Walk through Cyberspace Jurisdiction'' (2000), courts can refuse to enforce a judgment based on public 11 Alb. L.J. Sci. & Tech. 1 (Lexis). policy. Thus, laws that Canadians would view as deeply 6. Geist, Michael, ``New Net laws reach beyond bor-repugnant will not be enforced in Canada, and assets in ders'', The Globe and Mail (27 June 2002),Canada will be protected from unreasonable judgments. online: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/In the final analysis, Canada and Australia have decided servlet/ArticleNews/printarticle/gam/20020627/that a balanced approach to jurisdiction is appropriate in TWGEIS.non-Internet cases. In Gutnick, the Australian High Court applied that approach to the Internet with the 7. Gilman, Jeremey, ``Personal Jurisdiction and the knowledge that the multiplicity of safeguards protecting Internet: Traditional Jurisprudence for a New international respect for national sovereignty would also Medium'' (2000), 56 Bus. Law. 395 (WL). apply to judgments concerning torts on the Internet. Canadian courts, mindful of the same safeguards, the 8. Kaplan, Carl S., ``AOL Subscribers Can Be Sued similarities between Australian and Canadian jurisdic- in Virginia, Judge Rules'' Cyber Law Journal tional philosophies and defamation doctrines, should (11 June 1999), online: http://karws.gso.uri.edu/ choose the same approach. Marsh/Scans/11law.html. 9. Phan, Tu, ``Cybersell Inc. v. Cybersell Inc.'', Case Comment (1999), 14 Berkeley Tech. L.J. 267 (WL). 10. Vartanian, Thomas P., ``A U.S. Perspective on the Global Jurisdictional Checkpoints in Cyber- space'' (2000), 610 PLI/Pat 861 (WL). 56 Canadian Journal of Law and Technology Notes: 1 For example, the test for forum non conveniens shifted from showing that 23 Cybersell Inc. v. Cybersell Inc., 130 F. 3rd 414 (9th Cir. 1997) at 418 the plaintiff's choice of forum was ``oppressive, vexatious, and abuse of [Cybersell] (Lexis); adopted in ALS Scan Incorporated v. Digital Service process'' in Moreno v. Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society Ltd, [1970] Consultants Incorporated, 154 L. Ed. 2d 773 (2003) (Lexis) and in Toys 16 D.L.R. (3d) 247, to showing that another forum was substantially more ``R'' Us Inc. v. Step Two, [2003] U.S. App. LEXIS 1355 (Lexis). convenient and inexpensive in MacShannon v. Rockware Glass Ltd., 24 126 F. 3rd 25 (2d Cir. 1997) (Lexis). [1978] A.C. 795 (H.L.), to showing that another forum was clearly more 25 James P. Donohue, ``Personal Jurisdiction'' (2002), 1 Internet Law andefficient or convenient in Spiliada Maritime Corp. v. Cansulex Ltd., [1986] Practice §9:14 at 1 (WL).A.C. 460 (H.L.) [Spiliada]. 26 Michael Geist, ``Internet Jurisdiction: The Shifting Adjudicatory2 [2002] 77 A.J.L.R. 255 (H.C.A.) [Gutnick]. Approach'', online: ISUMA http://www.isuma.net/v03n01/geist/3 Another choice that must be made is the choice of which law to apply geist_e.shtml. once jurisdiction is asserted. For example, once the Australian Court chose 27 For example, Zembeck states, ``Traditional legal notions do fit complexto assert jurisdiction, it also had to choose whether to apply Australian or cyberspace questions once one realizes that both the actors and activitiesAmerican law. In Australia, the assertion of jurisdiction depended on the are real'' (Zembeck, supra note 21 at 346). Ryan Yagura agrees, stating,place of tort, as it does in Canada pursuant to Tolofson v. Jensen, [1994] 3 ``The Internet is basically a technologically advanced communicationsS.C.R. 1022. The Gutnick Court found that enough factors supported the network and the courts should treat it similarly to other communicationsassertion of jurisdiction and the choice of Australian law. What would systems in their personal jurisdiction analyses''. Ryan Yagura, ``Doeshappen in Canada with respect to choice of law is a question separate Cyberspace Expand the Boundaries of Personal Jurisdiction?'' (1998) 38from, although just as complicated as, the question of jurisdiction, and is IDEA 301 at 302 (WL).beyond the scope of this paper. 4 [1990] 3 S.C.R. 1077. 28 465 U.S. 783 (1984) [Calder]. 5 Moses v. Shore Boat Builders, [1993] 106 D.L.R. (4th) 465 (B.C.C.A.) (B.C. 29 Panavision, supra note 10 at 1321. enforces judgment from Alaska) and USA v. Ivey, [1996] 139 D.L.R. (4th) 30 Denis T. Rice, ``2001: A Cyberspace Odyssey Through U.S. and E.U. 570 (Ont. C.A.) (applies Morguard to foreign judgment). Internet Jurisdiction over E-commerce'' (2001) 661 PLI/Pat 421 at 516 6 Muscutt v. Courcelles, [2002] 213 D.L.R. (4th) 577 (Ont. C.A.). (WL). 7 (1999), 171 D.L.R. (4th) 46 (B.C.C.A.) [Braintech]. 31 Panavision, supra note 10 at 1322. 8 952 F. Supp. 1119 (D.C. Penn. 1997) [Zippo]. 32 [2002] U.S. App. LEXIS 27200 [Revell] (Lexis). 9 (2001), 202 D.L.R. (4th) 460 (Ont. Sup. Ct.) [Easthaven]. 33 Ibid. at 11. 10 141 F. 3rd 1316 (9th Cir. 1998) [Panavision]. 34 The Court states, ``We need not decide today whether or not a `Zippo- 11 (2001), 204 D.L.R. (4th) 568 (Ont. C.A.) [Pro-C]. passive' site could still give rise to personal jurisdiction under Calder, and reserve this difficult question for another time''. (Ibid. at note 30).12 R.S.C. 1985, c. T-13. 35 Ibid.13 Pro-C, supra note 11 at para. 16. 36 [1999] WL 231356 (E.D. Pa. 1999) (WL).14 The single publication rule is contained in §577A of the Restatement (Second) of Torts (1977), and is adopted by legislation or judicial decision 37 The Court also discussed the effects test and found that the defamatory in 27 American states. statements addressed the plaintiff's national activities and not the activi- ties that occurred in the forum in question.15 Lori Wood, in an article supportive of the single publication rule, cites several benefits of the rule, including preventing a multiplicity of suits 38 Spiliada, supra note 1. and a multiplicity of claims, prevention of excessive damages through 39 [2002] 4 F.C. 3 at para. 188.multiple suits, conservation of judicial resources, and more convenience and certainty for the parties involved. However, the benefits received 40 See, for example, Braintech, supra note 7 and Easthaven, supra note 9. through a reduction of the multiplicity of suits, as stated by the Australian 41 George S. Takach, Computer Law (Toronto: Irwin Law, 1998) (QL). In High Court, can also be received through estoppel and res judicata. Canada, see Hill v. Church of Scientology of Toronto, [1995] 2 S.C.R. Furthermore, if the single publication rule as expressed by Dow Jones is 1130. Also see comments in Gutnick, supra note 2. adopted, the plaintiff would not be able to avail itself of the longest 42 Philip H. Osborne, The Law of Torts (Toronto: Irwin Law, 2000) (QL).limitation period because the governing law would be that of the place of Note that there is some support for a one-publication rule in Canada. Inthe server: Lori A. Wood, ``Cyber-Defamation and the Single Publication Canada, the issue of multiplicity of claims is addressed through statuteRule'' (2001), 81 B.U.L. Rev. 895 (WL). and common law by treating multiple parties publishing the same state-16 Gutnick, supra note 2 at para. 24. ment as joint tortfeasors. 17 Ibid. at para. 200. 43 [1952] 2 D.L.R. 526.18 Discussed in Gutnick, ibid. at para. 187. 44 Ibid. at 529.19 326 U.S. 310 (1945). 45 Ibid.20 Manton M. Grier, ``Jurisdiction in Cyberspace'' (2003) 14 S. Carolina 46 ``The Brussels Regulation provides, among other terms, that the courts ofLawyer 20 (Lexis); David Bender, ``Jurisdiction in Cyberspace'' (2000) 590 a consumer's domicile have jurisdiction over a foreign defendant if thePLI/Pat 27 (WL). latter `pursues commercial or professional activities in the Member State21 Richard S. Zembeck, ``Jurisdiction and the Internet: Fundamental Fair- of the consumer's domicile or, by any means, directs such activities to ness in the Networked World of Cyberspace'' (1996) 6 Alb. L.J. Sci. & that member state [. . .] and the contract falls within the scope of such Tech. 339 at 351 [Zembeck] (WL). activities.''': Carole Aciman & Diane Vo-Verde, ``Refining the Zippo Test: 22 Stephen J. Newman, ``Proof of Personal Jurisdiction in the Internet Age'' New Trends on Personal Jurisdiction for Internet Activities'' (2002), 19 (2002), 59 Am. Jur. Proof of Facts 3d 1 (WL). Computer & Internet Law. 16 at 20 (WL).