A French court ordered
eBay Inc. to pay more than $61 million to a high-end fashion company Monday because counterfeit goods were sold on the auction site.
The fashion company, LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SA, is home to such prestigious brands as Louis Vuitton, Givenchy, Fendi, Emilio Pucci and Marc Jacobs, and had complained that it was hurt by the sale of knockoff bags and clothes on eBay.
Pierre Godet, an adviser to LVMH Chairman and CEO Bernard Arnault,
said the Paris court's decision was "an answer to a particularly
serious question, on whether the Internet is a free-for-all for the
most hateful, parasitic practices."
EBay countered that LVMH is trying to crack down on Internet
auctions merely because it is uncomfortable with the business model,
which tends to cut out the middleman.
"If counterfeits appear on our site, we take them down swiftly,"
eBay spokeswoman Sravanthi Agrawal said. "But today's ruling is not
about counterfeits. Today's ruling is about an attempt by LVMH to
protect uncompetitive commercial practices at the expense of consumer
choice and the livelihood of law-abiding sellers that eBay empowers
every day."
She said eBay hopes to appeal the ruling.
EBay has been sued repeatedly by luxury goods companies over its
users' attempts to sell counterfeit products. Other plaintiffs against
eBay have included jewelry company Tiffany & Co. in the U.S.,
watchmaker Montres Rolex S.A. in Germany, and cosmetics giant L'Oreal SA in Europe.
Some companies have demanded that eBay forbid sales of even their legitimate products on the site because of alleged trademark infringement, while others accuse the auctioneer of reacting too slowly to reports of violations.
The San Jose, Calif.-based company is a magnet for counterfeiters
because of the sheer volume of products sold through its auction system
and the difficulty of patrolling the fast-moving transactions. Like Google Inc.'s approach to removing copyright-infringing videos from its subsidiary YouTube, eBay relies heavily on intellectual-property owners to alert the company to suspicious postings on its site.
Even so, eBay has argued that it spends millions of dollars a year trying to clean up counterfeit goods.
The latest case in France pits two pillars of their industries — one
old, one new — in a country whose courts often hold Internet companies
responsible on matters protected elsewhere by freedom of speech. For
example, French courts have ordered U.S. auction sites to keep Nazi
paraphernalia away from French eyes.
This ruling came down against eBay on two fronts. The court faulted
the online company for "guilty negligence," for not doing enough to
prevent fake goods from being sold on its site. The court also ruled
that eBay was responsible for the "illicit sale" of perfumes from the
LVMH empire, which can be sold only through the brands' "selective
distribution networks."
High-end fashion companies like LVMH make their money by selling
exclusive products, and fight a never-ending battle against cheap
ripoffs and alleged affronts to their trademarks.
In an earlier instance of LVMH trying to protect its brands online, a Paris court in 2005 ordered Google to pay 200,000 euros (about $260,000 at the time) to Louis Vuitton
for breach of trademark. In that case, Google had to stop displaying
advertisements for Louis Vuitton's rivals when Web users typed
Vuitton's name into the search engine.