Prior to the start of the lawsuit, Defendant had sent two
letters to Plaintiff requesting that Plaintiff cease-and-desist its use of the
name "Bach to Rock" for its music schools. Additionally, both the Defendant and
the Plaintiff had applied to the United States Patent and Trademark Office for
federal registration of the trademark.
Prior to the start of the lawsuit, Defendant had sent two
letters to Plaintiff requesting that Plaintiff cease-and-desist its use of the
name "Bach to Rock" for its music schools. Additionally, both the Defendant and
the Plaintiff had applied to the United States Patent and Trademark Office for
federal registration of the trademark. Since the Defendant did not fit into any of the above
categories, Judge Titus concluded Maryland lacked jurisdiction over the
Defendant.
First, the Court ruled on an issue of first impression in
Maryland and in the Fourth Circuit. The circuit had never before considered
whether sending cease-and-desist letters was sufficient to invoke personal
jurisdiction in Maryland. Looking to case law, the Court held in accordance with
other circuits that merely sending cease-and-desist letters alone does not
establish personal jurisdiction in a trademark infringement case. That Defendant
sent such communications to the Plaintiff does not mean the Defendant conducted
business transactions in Maryland. The Court reasoned, consistent with outside
case law, that asserting personal jurisdiction in such an instance would "offend
traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice." Int'l Shoe Co. v.
Washington, 326 U.S. 310, 316 (1945).
Second, that Defendant received and responded to emails and
phone calls from Maryland residents who were trying to contact the Plaintiff
does not mean the Defendant purposefully availed herself of conducting
activities in Maryland. Rather, the Court noted that the correspondence revealed
that rather than soliciting Maryland business, Defendant's responses rebuffed
Maryland business. A handful of Maryland residents had emailed or called the
Defendant to inquire about the "Bach to Rock" school, and the Defendant told the
Maryland residents that they were probably confusing her New York summer music
camp with Maryland schools. No Maryland resident ever attended the Defendant's
New York camp. As a result, the Court concluded that Defendant's email and phone
correspondence with Maryland residents were isolated occurrences that would not
support personal jurisdiction.
Third, the Court held that Defendant's mere act of posting
information on her website (bactorock.com), which then became accessible to
Maryland residents via the internet, was also insufficient to support
jurisdiction because the website information did not reveal Defendant "acted
with the manifest intent of targeting Marylanders." Carefirst of Md., Inc. v.
Carefirst Pregnancy CTRS., Inc., 334 F.3d 390, 399 (4th Cir. 2003). In
determining that the Defendant's website was passive (rather than active enough
to support personal jurisdiction), the Court considered the following factors:
visitors to the website could not submit an online application to the music
school, make credit card payments, or participate in live chats. Thus, the Court
held Defendant's website did not support personal jurisdiction.
Noting that the Defendant did not expressly aim any conduct
at Marylanders, did not target Marylanders, rejected all telephone and email
inquiries from Marylanders, and never enrolled a Marylander at her New York
summer music camp, the Court dismissed all of the Plaintiff's claims for lack of
personal jurisdiction.