Apple Pushes for Patent Damages Hearing, Samsung Stalls
Apple filed a motion on Monday in hopes of getting a case management
conference on April 3 to push forward the new trial in the patent
infringement case it won against Samsung last summer. The new trial is
intended to determine damages in the case, and Samsung is requesting a
stay to stall the court proceedings.
Samsung hopes to stall patent damages trial, Apple pushes to move forward
Judge Koh ordered the new trial after throwing out part of the US$1
billion in damages a Jury awarded Apple after ruling Samsung is
infringing on several of its mobile device patents. The order vacated
the damages on 14 of the products listed in the case because the Jury
improperly assigned dollar amounts.
"As a result, a new damages trial on those products must be held, and
it may very well result in hundreds of millions of dollars of additional
damages in Apple's favor," said Florian Mueller of Foss Patents.
Samsung wants to postpone that trial as long as possible, but Apple's
legal team argued that the law states the case needs to move forward. In
this case, it's Apple's appeal over the denial for a permanent
injunction blocking the import and sale of certain Samsung devices that
should compel the court to keep the case moving, and that any appeals to
the new damages order would cause additional unnecessary delays.
Apple said in its Monday filing,
Apple believes that until the damages retrial is held and supplemental
damages are decided, appellate review of the March 1 Order will not be
obtainable. No final judgment exists to ground an appeal because the
March 1 Order directs further proceedings in this Court.
Samsung followed up with its own motion to stay the new trial because
it plans to request a partial final ruling that it can appeal. The
electronics maker hopes to keep a stay in place until it finishes its
appeal process.
Apple and Samsung have been fighting in courts in several countries
since 2011 over claims they are infringing on each other's mobile device
patents. Apple's highest profile win came last August when a U.S.
Federal Court Jury ruled it wasn't infringing on any Samsung patents,
while Samsung was infringing on several of its patents. That's the case
where Judge Koh vacated part of the damages that Apple was awarded.
A hearing date hasn't been agreed to yet, and it's clear Apple will
continue to push on Judge Koh to keep the case moving forward while
Samsung will keep fighting to stop it from proceeding.
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