Legal Question in Business Law in Texas
Internet fraud
If a internet company advistises a service, to which you purchase the service and even after months, they have not provided that service is it a federal fraud case?
2 Answers from Attorneys
Re: Internet fraud
It may be, although most likely it is only a state matter.
Re: internet fraud
Your question utilizes an interesting phrase: "federal fraud" which could mean either
conduct defined by federal statute to be fraudulent, or conduct which is fraudulent under
state law but which is actionable in federal court under diversity or federal question rules.
I assume for this response that you intend to inquire about federal jurisdiction under
diversity rules as the federal government has not, generally, entered into the fray
of internet commerce by enacting specific statutes defining legality of commercial transactions.
Thus, I am assuming that the offending "internet company" is located in a state different
than your own. Further, I am assuming that "internet company" as used in your question
refers to a "company" doing business over the "internet" rather than to an internet service
provider.
In general, disputes regarding commercial transactions (not necessarily true for criminal
transactions, for which you are referred to the federal cybercrime site at
http://www.cybercrime.gov/ecommerce.html
for further information) conducted, either in whole or in part, over the internet are
analysed in the traditional fashion, the primary remainng issue being where suit may be brought.
That is, whether there is state or federal jurisdiction. As this response has assumed that
the "internet company" was in another state, the amount in controversy will determine
whether there is federal jurisdiction. If, as I believe, this is a consumer transaction,
the issue will become whether there are a sufficient number of like claims that may be
aggregated into a class action which may be brought in federal court.
In short then, while the conduct complained of may be part of a scam or "federal crime",
and may be the subject of aggregation into jurisdictional quantities that support federal
jurisdiction, in the context of a single business transaction for which the purchaser either
did not receive any of the paid for service or received inadequate quantity or quality of
service, the conduct may well be fraudulent but is not "federal fraud".
I recommend that victims of consumer fraud perpetrated at least in part over the internet
report such crimes as directed at the government website above-mentioned.
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