Judge rejects Apple injunction bid vs. Samsung
Afrik Update
By Dan Levine
A U.S. judge on Monday denied Apple Inc's request for a permanent injunction against Samsung Electronics' smartphones, depriving the iPhone maker of key leverage in the mobile patent wars.
By Dan Levine
A U.S. judge on Monday denied Apple Inc's request for a permanent injunction against Samsung Electronics' smartphones, depriving the iPhone maker of key leverage in the mobile patent wars.
Apple
had been awarded $1.05 billion in damages in August after a U.S. jury found
Samsung had copied critical features of the iPhone and iPad.
The Samsung products run on the Android operating system, developed by Google.
Apple and Samsung are going toe-to-toe in a patents dispute that
mirrors the struggle for industry supremacy between the two companies, which
control more than half of worldwide smartphone sales.
For most of the year, Apple had been successful in its U.S. litigation
campaign against Samsung. Apple convinced U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh in San
Jose, California to impose two pretrial sales bans against Samsung -- one
against the Galaxy Tab 10.1, and the other against the Galaxy Nexus phone.
Apple then sought to keep up the pressure after its sweeping jury
win. It asked Koh to impose a permanent sales ban against 26 mostly older
Samsung phones, though any injunction could potentially have been extended to
Samsung's newer Galaxy products.
Yet the jury exonerated Samsung on the patent used to ban Galaxy
Tab 10.1 sales, and Koh rescinded that injunction. Then, in October, a federal
appeals court reversed Koh's ban against the Nexus phone.
In her order late on Monday, Koh cited that appellate ruling as
binding legal precedent, ruling that Apple had not presented enough evidence
that its patented features drove consumer demand for the entire iPhone.
"The phones at issue in this case contain a broad range of
features, only a small fraction of which are covered by Apple's patents,"
Koh wrote.
"Though Apple does have some interest in retaining certain
features as exclusive to Apple," she continued, "it does not follow
that entire products must be forever banned from the market because they
incorporate, among their myriad features, a few narrow protected
functions."
An Apple spokeswoman declined to comment on Koh's ruling, and a
Samsung representative could not immediately be reached.
In a separate order on Monday, Koh rejected a bid by Samsung for a
new trial based on an allegation that the jury foreman was improperly biased in
favor of Apple.
The case in U.S. District Court, Northern District of California
is Apple Inc. vs. Samsung Electronics Co Ltd et al, 11-1846.
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