U.S. court clears Samsung phone, hands Apple setback
October 12, 2012 10:30 am
A U.S. appeals court overturned a pretrial sales ban against
Samsung Electronics Co Ltd’s Galaxy Nexus smartphone, dealing a setback to
Apple Inc in its battle against Google Inc’s increasingly popular mobile
software.
Apple is waging war on several fronts against Google, whose
Android software powers many of Samsung’s devices.
The ruling on Thursday from the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Federal Circuit is not expected to have an outsized impact on the
smartphone market, as the Nexus is an aging product in Samsung’s lineup. Apple’s
stock closed down nearly 2 percent at $628.10.
However, the court’s reasoning could make it much harder for
companies that sue over patents get competitors’ products pulled from the
market, said Colleen Chien, a professor at Santa Clara Law school in Silicon
Valley.
Such sales injunctions have been a key for companies trying
to increase their leverage in courtroom patent fights.
“The Federal Circuit has said, ‘Wait a minute,’” Chien said.
Apple declined to comment, while Samsung did not immediately
respond to requests for comment.
Apple scored a sweeping legal victory over Samsung in August
when a U.S. jury found Samsung had copied critical features of the hugely
popular iPhone and iPad and awarded Apple $1.05 billion in damages.
The Nexus phone was not included in that trial, but is part
of a tandem case Apple filed against Samsung earlier this year.
District Judge Lucy Koh issued a pretrial injunction against
the Nexus in June, based on an Apple patent for unified search capability. The
appeals court then stayed that injunction until it could formally rule.
In its opinion on Thursday, the Federal Circuit reversed the
injunction entirely, saying that Koh abused her discretion.
Apple failed to prove that consumers purchased the Samsung
product because of the infringing technology, the appeals court ruled.
“It may very well be that the accused product would sell
almost as well without incorporating the patented feature,” the court wrote. “And
in that case, even if the competitive injury that results from selling the
accused device is substantial, the harm that flows from the alleged
infringement (the only harm that should count) is not.”
The court considered a single patent - one which allows the
smartphone to search multiple data storage locations at once. For example, the
smartphone could search the device’s memory as well as the Internet with a
single query.
The appeals court has sent the case back to Koh for
reconsideration. A separate pretrial sales ban Apple had managed to win against
Samsung - targeting the Galaxy Tab 10.1 - was dissolved earlier this month
after Samsung won at trial on that patent.
Beyond the Nexus, Samsung also has a collection of new
tablets and smartphones intended for launch before the holidays.
On Wednesday, Google executive chairman Eric Schmidt called
the intensifying struggle between Apple and his company a “defining fight” for
the future of the mobile industry.
The case in the Federal Circuit is Apple Inc vs. Samsung Electronics Co Ltd et al., 12-1507.
(Reuters)