Apple appeals denial of sales ban on Samsung phones

Trade

21 December 2012

Apple has appealed a judge’s decision not to ban from sale in the U.S. 26 Samsung cell phones that were found to infringe on its patents.

A jury trial in August found that the Samsung phones had infringed on six Apple patents covering cell phone design and technology. The jury awarded Apple just over US$1 billion in damages, and Apple subsequently demanded that Samsung should be prohibited from selling the phones.

Many of the handsets have already been superseded by newer models but thousands of units of some models, including the Galaxy S II, are still with US retailers.

After considering Apple’s demands and arguments for an injunction, Judge Lucy Koh of the US District Court for the Northern District of California decided the damage caused didn’t warrant a sales ban.

 

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"To the limited extent that Apple has been able to show that any of its harms were caused by Samsung’s illegal conduct (in this case, only trade dress dilution), Apple has not established that the equities support an injunction," she wrote in the conclusion of her 23-page examination of Apple’s demand.

That was on Monday.

Apple lodged its appeal on Thursday afternoon in a filing to Judge Koh’s court in San Jose, where the battle against Samsung has been going on for more than a year.

"Notice is given that plaintiff Apple Inc. appeals to the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit from the Order Denying Motion for Permanent Injunction entered in this action on 17 December, 2012 and from all other orders, rulings, findings, and conclusions underlying and related to that order," it said in the filing.

IDG News Service

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