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NJ Ticket Lawsuit Tossed
The companies – Orbitz Worldwide and TicketNetwork Direct – were accused of violating the state’s Consumer Fraud Act by offering tickets before they were made available to the public, some of which they allegedly didn’t possess at the time or which didn’t correspond to actual seats in the stadium.
In a 19-page ruling filed Aug. 26 and mailed to the parties, state Superior Court Judge Patricia Costello wrote that a 1996 federal law pre-empts state law and protects the companies from liability for statements or claims made by third parties on their Web site.
Neither company possessed any tickets for sale, but instead provided an Internet marketplace for independent ticket sellers.
“This is a very important decision that has never been presented to courts in New Jersey before,” Peter Harvey, a former New Jersey attorney general who represented TicketNetwork, said Tuesday. “The question was, if a ticket seller makes a mistake in the description of the item being sold, does the provider have liability for that, and the answer is no.”
According to court documents, an investigator for the state Division of Consumer Affairs bought tickets May 26, six days before Ticketmaster began selling tickets to the general public.
On the website, TicketNetwork and Orbitz notified prospective customers that the companies did not guarantee the accuracy of ticket information listed on the site. TicketNetwork’s policy was to prohibit sellers from offering tickets they didn’t possess or have a legal right to sell.