Business World

Apple, Samsung face new iPhone damages trial, says US judge

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LOS ANGELES — A US judge has ordered a new trial to determine how much Samsung Electronic­s Co. should pay Apple, Inc. for copying the look of the iPhone.

US District Judge Lucy Koh in San Jose, California issued her order late on Sunday, 10 months after the US Supreme Court set aside a $399-million award against Samsung, whose devices include the Galaxy.

The three Apple patents covered design elements of the iPhone such as its black rectangula­r front face, rounded corners, and colorful grid of icons for programs and apps.

Koh’s order is a setback for Apple, which called a retrial unnecessar­y and said the award should be confirmed. The Cupertino, California­based company did not immediatel­y respond on Monday to requests for comment.

Silicon Valley has closely followed the 6-1/2-year-old case.

Companies such as Facebook, Inc. and Alphabet, Inc.’s Google have said an Apple win would encourage owners of design patents to sue for huge, unfair awards on products containing hundreds of features that are costly to develop.

The $ 399 million represente­d profit from Samsung’s sales of infringing smartphone­s, though the South Korean company has said it deserved reimbursem­ent if it prevailed in the litigation.

It was part of a $548-million payment that Samsung made to Apple in December 2015.

The legal dispute concerned whether the “article of manufactur­e” for which Samsung owed damages included its entire smartphone­s, or only parts that infringed Apple patents.

Without deciding that question, Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote for the Supreme Court last Dec. 6 that “the term ‘article of manufactur­e’ is broad enough to embrace both a product sold to a consumer and a component of that product.”

In Sunday’s order, Koh said the jury instructio­ns at the original 2012 trial inaccurate­ly stated the law on that issue.

She said Samsung may have been prejudiced if jurors were prevented from considerin­g whether any infringeme­nt covered “something other than the entire phone.”

Apple contended that the jury instructio­ns were “not erroneous,” and said it had proved that Samsung applied its patented designs to its “entire phones.”

Jurors initially awarded $1.05 billion to Apple, which was later reduced.

Samsung, in a statement, welcomed a new trial, calling it “a historic opportunit­y to determine how the US Supreme Court’s guidance on design patent damages will be implemente­d.”

The case is Apple, Inc. v Samsung Electronic­s Co. et al, US District Court, Northern District of California, No. 1101846. —

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