W. FLETCHER, Circuit Judge:
In June 2008, Plaintiff Donovan Lee purchased on the Internet a background check and report from Intelius. After Lee gave his credit card number and clicked to confirm his purchase, he was directed to a new webpage. Intelius was the only company name that appeared on that page. Lee clicked on a large orange button with the words "YES And show my report." Small print on the page indicated that he had thereby ostensibly obtained a seven-day free trial of a "Family Safety Report" and an obligation to pay $19.95 per month thereafter.
About a year later, Lee discovered that Adaptive Marketing ("Adaptive"), a separate company from Intelius, had been charging his credit card $19.95 per month for the "Family Safety Report." Lee and other named plaintiffs brought a state-law class action against Intelius. Intelius in turn filed a third-party complaint against Adaptive. Adaptive moved to compel arbitration of both Lee's and Intelius's claims. The district court denied the motion to compel. Adaptive appeals with respect to Lee, contending that Lee agreed to arbitration by clicking the orange button. We affirm.
Intelius is an internet-based company that performs background checks, people searches, and "reverse" telephone directory searches. Lee and his fiancée looked at Intelius's website together, and Lee purchased a background check using his credit card. After Lee made his purchase, he was directed to a new webpage. Intelius submitted to the district court a copy of a webpage that it asserts is identical to the page seen by Lee. We attach a copy of the webpage (unfortunately in black and white in the bound volume) as an appendix to our opinion.
At the top of the new webpage was a message in large black letters, "Thank You," and in smaller but still prominent black letters, "your order has been successfully completed." This was followed, also at the top of the page, by Intelius's colored logo; in large black letters, Intelius's name; and, in smaller black letters, Intelius's marketing slogan, "Live in the
Immediately below the "Thank You" was a dark blue banner on which was written in large white and orange letters, "Take our 2008 Community Safety Survey and claim $10.00 CASH BACK when you try Family Safety Report." The "survey" consisted of two questions: (1) "Does your neighborhood have a sex offender alert program?" (Possible answers: Yes, No, I don't know); (2) "What card type did you use for your Intelius purchase today?" (Possible answers: Credit Card, Debit Card). Below the survey, on the left-hand side of the page, was a box with an instruction in prominent white letters against a green background: "Please type your email address below." Below that, in small, light grey print, was written, "By typing your email address below, it will constitute your electronic signature and is your written authorization to charge/debit your account according to the Offer Details to the right." (Emphasis added.) There were two spaces in which to type, and then to confirm, an email address. Lee was not asked to resupply his credit card number.
Below the spaces for the email address was written, also in small, light grey print, "By clicking `Yes' I have read and agree to the Offer Details displayed to the right and authorize Intelius to securely transfer my name, address, and credit/debit card information to Family Safety Report, a service provider of Intelius." (Emphasis added.) Below this was a large orange button with the words, written in prominent white letters, "YES And show my report." Below the orange button was a smaller button with the words, written in smaller, underlined dark grey letters, "No, show my report." The "report" to which the buttons referred was the report that Lee had just purchased from Intelius.
To the right of the box was a beige-colored box containing two paragraphs, written in small, light grey print that did not stand out prominently from the beige background. The paragraphs were headed by the words, also in small, light grey print, "OFFER DETAILS." The first paragraph was quite long. Inter alia, the paragraph stated that there was a "7-day FREE trial period" of the Family Safety Report, followed by a "membership fee of $19.95 per month ... so long as you remain a member." The second paragraph, labeled "Disclaimers," was only three sentences long. The first two sentences stated, "Family Safety Report does not provide the Registered Sex offender Report. The report is administered and provided by Intelius and is subject to their Terms of Site Use and Terms & Conditions." (Emphasis added.)
Immediately below these two paragraphs were two hyperlinks labeled, in small, underlined black print, "Privacy Policy" and "Terms and Conditions." If Lee had clicked the "Terms and Conditions" hyperlink, he would have been sent to yet another webpage. This webpage contained a detailed agreement titled "TERMS OF MEMBERSHIP AND MEMBERSHIP AGREEMENT." The first sentence stated, "The following is the Membership Agreement between the Provider of this Membership Program (`We' and `Us') and the enrolled member of this Membership Program (`You')." The identity of the "Provider" was nowhere disclosed in the agreement; nor was the name Adaptive ever mentioned in the agreement. Paragraph 10 of the agreement was an arbitration clause.
Lee clicked on the orange "YES" button. In his deposition, he recalled that there had been a prominent "orange box, ... in larger font, which drew our eye very quickly." He recalled noticing some grey
The district court described the relationship between Intelius and Adaptive:
We need not go into all the procedural details of the litigation. For present purposes, it is sufficient to say that Plaintiffs sued Intelius, that Intelius impleaded Adaptive as a third-party defendant, and that Adaptive then filed a motion to compel arbitration of both Intelius's and Lee's claims. The district court denied Adaptive's motion to compel. With respect to Lee's claims, the court held that Lee did not agree to arbitrate. It wrote, "Lee was asked to agree only to the `Offer Details displayed to the right' and, given the language of those Details, would have no reason to go looking for other terms and conditions that might apply." Adaptive appeals the denial of its motion to compel arbitration of Lee's claims.
"We review the denial of a motion to compel arbitration de novo." Cox v. Ocean View Hotel Corp., 533 F.3d 1114, 1119 (9th Cir.2008). We review "underlying factual findings ... for clear error." Balen v. Holland Am. Line Inc., 583 F.3d 647, 652 (9th Cir.2009). We review de novo "[t]he interpretation and meaning of contract provisions." Milenbach v. Comm'r, 318 F.3d 924, 930 (9th Cir.2003).
The district court held that Lee entered into a contract with Adaptive to purchase the Family Safety Report but did not enter into a contract to arbitrate. The district court therefore denied Adaptive's motion to compel arbitration. Lee contends on appeal that he did not enter into a contract with Adaptive to purchase a "Family Safety Report." He contends, further, that even if he did enter into such
The parties agree that Washington law applies. For the reasons that follow, we hold that Lee did not enter into either a contract to purchase or a contract to arbitrate.
In holding that Lee entered into a contract to purchase the Family Safety Report, the district court wrote:
We disagree and hold that Lee did not enter into a contract to purchase the Family Safety Report. This conclusion also necessarily entails a holding that Lee did not enter into a contract to arbitrate.
The webpage to which Lee was directed after he completed his purchase of the Intelius background check was designed to deceive him and others like him. The district court found that a "not unreasonable" consumer in Lee's position could have "reasonably believe[d]" that he was not purchasing an additional product or service by merely providing his email address and clicking on the orange button with the words "YES And show me my report." The court wrote:
We are skeptical that Lee "objectively manifested assent" to the contract merely by providing and confirming his email address and by clicking on the prominent "YES" button. Under Washington law, a contract requires mutual assent to its essential terms in order to be binding. Although it is clear that an electronic "signature" can be legally sufficient under Washington state law, see Wash. Rev.Code § 19.34.010(2), Washington courts have not
When Lee entered his email address and clicked on the large orange "YES" button, he had completed his purchase of the background check from Intelius but had not yet received a copy of his promised report. He did not re-enter his credit card number on the new webpage. The language on the "YES" button told him that the effect of clicking on that button would allow him to see the report he had already purchased. The critical text on the new webpage was written in small, light-colored print. We are skeptical that, under such circumstances, Lee objectively manifested assent to a contract. Nevertheless, because of the lack of clarity in Washington law surrounding whether and under what circumstances a click may constitute an objective manifestation of assent, we do not rest our conclusion that Lee did not enter into a contract on the ground that he did not manifest assent.
We rest our conclusion on another ground. Washington law requires that the "essential elements" of the contract be set forth in writing. An essential element is identification of the parties to the contract. See Becker v. Wash. State Univ., 165 Wn.App. 235, 266 P.3d 893, 899 (2011) (citing DePhillips v. Zolt Constr. Co., 136 Wn.2d 26, 959 P.2d 1104, 1107 (1998) (en banc)). Adaptive admits that the contract must identify the contracting parties, though it contends that the parties need not be identified by name. See Bhd. State Bank v. Chapman, 145 Wn. 214, 259 P. 391, 392 (1927) (recognizing that a corporation or individual may contract or do business under an assumed name). There is nothing on the new webpage offering the Family Safety Report, to which Lee was directed, that identified either Adaptive or an Adaptive-related entity as the party with which Lee was contracting.
Even an exceptionally careful consumer, who understood that he or she was being asked to enter into a contract for an additional product, would likely have thought that the contracting party was Intelius. Adaptive's name appeared nowhere on the new webpage. In contrast, Intelius's name and logo were prominently displayed at the top of the page, and Intelius was mentioned several times by name in the text. Adaptive contends in its brief that the words "Family Safety Report" "sufficiently described" an Adaptive-related entity for purposes of identifying the party with whom Lee contracted. We disagree. Standing alone, the words "Family Safety Report" were more readily understood as referring to a report rather than to a company supplying a report. It is true that parts of the text indicated that "Family Safety Report" was not itself a report. For example, the first sentence under "Disclaimers" provided, "Family Safety Report does not provide the Registered Sex offender Report." But this sentence did not make clear that the entity, "Family Safety Report," was not part of Intelius. It is also true that the sentence just above the orange button said that the
Though it is not necessary to our holding, we note that the would-be contract that Adaptive is seeking to enforce is now illegal under federal law. Lee clicked on the orange button in June 2008. Two and a half years later, in December 2010, President Obama signed into law the Restore Online Shoppers' Confidence Act ("ROSCA"). ROSCA expressly prohibits the "data pass" method of sharing customers' credit card information with third-party sellers, as well as the practice of authorization of financial transactions by email address alone. See 15 U.S.C. § 8401 et seq.
Arbitration provisions in contracts are governed by the Federal Arbitration Act ("FAA"), 9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq. The Act provides:
Id. § 2. Our "role under the Act is ... limited to determining (1) whether a valid agreement to arbitrate exists and, if it does, (2) whether the agreement encompasses the dispute at issue." Chiron Corp. v. Ortho Diagnostic Sys., Inc., 207 F.3d 1126, 1130 (9th Cir.2000).
The district court held that, even on the assumption that Lee entered into a contract to purchase the Family Safety Report, Lee did not enter into a contract to arbitrate. It wrote:
We agree.
The arbitration clause was contained in the "Terms and Conditions" that Lee would have seen only if he clicked on the hyperlink below "OFFER DETAILS" on the right-hand side of the webpage. The text on the left-hand side of the page twice directed a purchaser of the Family Safety Report to the "Offer Details." It stated, "By typing your email address below, it will constitute your electronic signature and is your written authorization to charge/debit your account according to the Offer Details to the right" and "By clicking `YES' I have read and agree to the Offer Details displayed to the right." The three-sentence second paragraph of the "Offer Details," located just above the "Terms
Even an exceptionally careful consumer would not have understood that a purchaser of the Family Safety Report, by clicking the orange button, was agreeing to anything more than the "Offer Details." That careful consumer would reasonably have understood, in light of the second sentence of the second paragraph, that the hyperlink to "Terms and Conditions" was to Intelius's rather than Adaptive's terms and conditions.
We hold that Lee did not enter into a contract with Adaptive to purchase the Family Safety Report, and did not enter into a contract with Adaptive to arbitrate. We therefore affirm the district court. We remand to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.