News/Rumors

Apple vs Samsung: judge cuts award by $450M

The judge in last year’s landmark Apple-Samsung patent case today cut damages on some Samsung products found to infringe Apple’s patents, carving $450.5 million off the original $1.05 billion judgment and calling for a new trial on the damages to recalculate them.

 

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“The Court has identified an impermissible legal theory on which the jury based its award, and cannot reasonably calculate the amount of excess while effectuating the intent of the jury,” Judge Lucy Koh, of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California, said in an afternoon ruling.
The products in question include the Galaxy Prevail, Gem, Indulge, Infuse 4G, Galaxy SII AT&T, Captivate, Continuum, Droid Charge, Epic 4G, Exhibit 4G, Galaxy Tab, Nexus S 4G, Replenish and Transform. The Prevail in particular racked up $57.9 million of the damages tally, which Koh said was a failure on the jury’s part, since the device was found to infringe only on utility patents, and not on design patents.
“We are pleased that the court decided to strike $450,514,650 from the jury’s award,” Samsung said in an e-mailed statement. “Samsung intends to seek further review as to the remaining award.”
As part of a verdict in August, a California jury said 26 of Samsung’s mobile devices infringed on a handful of Apple’s patents, leading to the $1.05 billion damages award in Apple’s favor. Following the decision, Apple filed for an injunction against a number of the infringing products, attempting to keep them off store shelves, though Koh rebuffed the effort, saying most of those devices were already no longer in stores.

News/Rumors

Apple Attorney Got on Judge Lucy Koh’s Nerves

Each day seems to be just a new day for the patents battle between Apple Inc. and Samsung Electronics. Even the Federal Judge Lucy Koh got a little irked by the lingering lawsuit between the two tech giants.

Judge Koh lost her temper a bit when Apple’s lawyer presented a document covering 22 potential witnesses that the company might want to call after Samsung’s case introduction. According to The Verge, she asked Apple lawyer when the jury was not in the courtroom, why a 57-page witnesses list was presented “when unless you’re smoking crack you know these witnesses aren’t going to be called!

Apple attorney William Lee retorted “First, your honor, I’m not smoking crack. I can promise you that.” Even though Apple’s lawyers decided to reduce the witnesses, Judge Koh continued to grow more frustrated as the discussion advanced.

Lucy Koh is a Judge with lot of sense of humor, but it is more than obvious that the length of the trial and the fact that the two parties are not willing to reach to a conclusion soon, is putting her patience to a test. The arrogance of the situation provoked also Judge Paul Grewal to affirm the following:

 ”At some point the accommodation must end, lest the hundreds of other parties in civil rights, Social Security, and other cases also presently before the undersigned and presiding judge might reasonably ask: what makes the parties in this patent case so special?

After all, the case between Apple and Samsung is just a fight of smartphones and interfaces patents.