''Harris v. Blockbuster, Inc.'', 622
F. Supp. 2d
The ''Federal Supplement'' ( is a case law reporter published by West Publishing in the United States that includes select opinions of the United States district courts since 1932, and is part of the National Reporter System. Although the ...
396 (N.D. Tex. 2009), established precedent in the district that when a contract has a clause that authorizes one party to make changes to the "contract" without notification, that it is illusory and hence the entire "contract" is void.
Background
Blockbuster
Blockbuster or Block Buster may refer to:
*Blockbuster (entertainment) a term coined for an extremely successful movie, from which most other uses are derived.
Corporations
* Blockbuster (retailer), a defunct video and game rental chain
** Blo ...
operated a service called Blockbuster Online that allows customers to rent movies through the internet and entered a contract with Facebook to disseminate customers' movie choices through social media on
Facebook
Facebook is an online social media and social networking service owned by American company Meta Platforms. Founded in 2004 by Mark Zuckerberg with fellow Harvard College students and roommates Eduardo Saverin, Andrew McCollum, Dustin ...
, where Facebook broadcast a customer's movie rental choice to their Facebook friends when a video rental transaction is made. The plaintiffs claim that agreement with Facebook violates the
Video Privacy Protection Act, which prohibits video service providers from disclosing
personal identifiable information without consent.
Blockbuster attempted to invoke an arbitration provision that customers agreed to in the "Terms and Conditions" when joining Blockbuster Online. The provision waives the right of its users to commence any class action and allowed Blockbuster to reserves the right to modify the "Terms and Conditions" at its sole discretion and at any time. The plaintiffs argued that the arbitration provision was unenforceable because it was illusory and
unconscionable. Blockbuster issued a
motion to compel individual arbitration.
Judgment
On April 15, 2009, the District Court for the Northern District of Texas denied Blockbuster's motion to compel and ruled that Blockbuster Online's Terms and Conditions were unenforceable because they gave Blockbuster too much discretion in modifying the terms of the agreement. Following the reasoning in a Fifth Circuit case, ''
Morrison v. Amway Corp.'', and consistent with a Ninth Circuit case, ''
Douglas v. U.S. District Court ex rel Talk America
''Douglas v. U.S. Dist. Court ex rel Talk America'', 495 F.3d 1062 (2007), is a U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals case that examines whether a service provider may change the terms of its service contract by merely posting a revised contract on its web ...
''
the court found that Blockbuster's arbitration provision was illusory and unenforceable, because there was nothing in the Terms and Conditions that would prevent Blockbuster from "unilaterally changing any part of the contract", "at its sole discretion" and "at any time."
Significance
Some websites' "terms and conditions" may be deemed an illusory contract and unenforceable if the language can be changed at any time by the company without notifying users and giving them a chance to reject the new changes.
See also
*
Electronic Privacy Information Center
Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) is an independent nonprofit research center in Washington, D.C. EPIC's mission is to focus public attention on emerging privacy and related human rights issues. EPIC works to protect privacy, freedom ...
, which filed an ''amicus'' brief in the case
*
Illusory promise
Notes
External links
*
{{Blockbuster
2009 in United States case law
Licensing
United States arbitration case law
United States computer case law
United States contract case law
United States district court cases
Blockbuster LLC