INTEL CORP. V. HAMIDI
30 Cal.4th 1342 (2003)
NATURE OF THE CASE: This was a dispute over whether sending unauthorized emails over a
company intranet was a trespass to chattels. It was a review of a grant of summary judgment
for Intel (P) in finding that Hamidi (D) trespassed to chattels.
FACTS: Hamidi (D) formed an organization named Former and Current Employees of Intel
(FACE) to disseminate information and views critical of Intel's employment and personnel
policies and practices. FACE and D sent six mass e-mails to employee addresses on P's
electronic mail system. The messages criticized Intel's employment practices, warned
employees of the dangers those practices posed to their careers, suggested employees
consider moving to other companies, solicited employees' participation in FACE-Intel, and
urged employees to inform themselves further by visiting FACE-Intel's Web site. Recipients
who wished could, be removed from FACE-Intel's mailing list. D never sent messages to anyone
who requested removal. P attempted to block the messages but was unsuccessful. P demanded in
writing that D and FACE-Intel stop sending e-mails to P's computer system, P asserted the
organization had a right to communicate with willing P employees; he sent a new mass mailing
in September 1998. There is no evidence that D ever breached P's computer security in order
to obtain the recipient addresses for his messages. There was no evidence that the receipt
or internal distribution of D's electronic messages damaged P's computer system or slowed or
impaired its functioning. The messages did cause serious internal disruption and an
allocation of resources to stop the emails. P sued D and FACE-Intel, pleading causes of
action for trespass to chattels and nuisance, and seeking both actual damages and an
injunction against further e-mail messages. P later voluntarily dismissed its nuisance claim
and waived its demand for damages. The trial court entered default against FACE-Intel upon
that organization's failure to answer. The court then granted P's motion for summary
judgment, permanently enjoining D, FACE-Intel, and their agents 'from sending unsolicited
e-mail to addresses on Intel's computer systems.' P appealed; FACE-Intel did not. The Court
of Appeal, with one justice dissenting, affirmed the grant of injunctive relief. The
majority took the view that the use of or intermeddling with another's personal property is
actionable as a trespass to chattels without proof of any actual injury to the personal
property; even if P could not show any damages resulting from D's sending of messages, 'it
showed he was disrupting its business by using its property and therefore is entitled to
injunctive relief based on a theory of trespass to chattels.' The dissenting justice warned
that the majority's application of the trespass to chattels tort to 'unsolicited electronic
mail that causes no harm to the private computer system that receives it' would 'expand the
tort of trespass to chattel in untold ways and to unanticipated circumstances.'
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
Get
free access to the entire content for Mac, PC or Online
for 2-3 days and free samples
of all kinds of products.
for 2-3 days and free samples of all kinds of products.
https://bsmsphd.com
© 2007-2016 Abn Study Partner
No comments:
Post a Comment