SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korean phone maker Samsung won a home court ruling Friday in its global patent battle against Apple and its popular iPhone and iPad devices.
The ruling came hours before Apple prevailed in a similar case in the U.S.
Judges in Seoul said Samsung Electronics Co. didn't copy the look and feel of the iPhone and ruled that Apple infringed on Samsung's wireless technology.
However,
the judges also said Samsung violated Apple's technology behind a
feature that causes a screen to bounce back when a user scrolls to an
end image. Both sides were ordered to pay limited damages.
The
Seoul Central District Court ruling called for a partial ban on
products from both companies, though the verdict did not affect the
latest-generation phones — Apple's iPhone 4S or Samsung's Galaxy S III —
or the newest iPad. Both sides were also ordered to pay limited
damages.
The ban applies only to sales in South Korea, and the
ruling is part of a larger, epic struggle over patents and innovation
unfolding in nine countries.
The
biggest stakes are in the U.S., where Apple is seeking $2.5 billion
from Samsung over allegations it has created illegal knockoffs of
iPhones and iPads. Hours after the South Korean ruling, a federal jury
in San Jose, California, ruled that Samsung ripped off the innovative
technology used by Apple to create the iPhone and the iPad.
The
jury ordered Samsung to pay Apple $1.05 billion, though an appeal is
expected. A judge was expected to rule later on whether Samsung must
pull devices from the U.S. market.
The fact that both rulings came
Friday was coincidental. The judge overseeing the U.S. case had ordered
jurors there to refrain accessing any news regarding the two companies.
The
Seoul ruling was a rare victory for Samsung in its arguments that Apple
has infringed on its wireless technology patents. Those arguments
previously have been shot down by courts in Europe, where judges have
ruled that they are part of industry standards that must be licensed
under fair terms to competitors.
"This is basically Samsung's
victory on its home territory," said patent attorney Jeong Woo-sung.
"Out of nine countries, Samsung got the ruling that it wanted for the
first time in South Korea."
The
ruling ordered Apple to remove the iPhone 3GS, the iPhone 4, the
original iPad and the iPad 2 from store shelves in South Korea, saying
that the products infringed on two of Samsung's five disputed patents,
including those for telecommunications technology. South Korea is not a
big market for Apple.
The
court also denied Apple's claim that Samsung had illegally copied its
design, ruling that big rectangular screens in cases with rounded
corners had existed in products before the iPhone and iPad.
"It
is not possible to assert that these two designs are similar based only
on the similarity of those features," the court said in a ruling issued
in Korean and translated into English by The Associated Press. It also
said individual icons in the Samsung products do not appear similar to the icons Apple used in the iPhone.
But
the court ruled that Samsung had infringed on one of Apple's patents,
covering the bounce-back feature. The court banned sales of Samsung
products using the technology, including the older Galaxy S II, in South
Korea.
Court spokesman Kim Mun-sung said the court's ruling was
to take effect immediately, although companies often request that
sanctions be suspended while they evaluate their legal options, such as
an appeal.
Nam Ki-yung, a
spokesman for Samsung, said the ruling "affirmed our position that one
single company cannot monopolize generic design features."
Apple did not respond to multiple calls seeking comment.
The
court ordered each company to pay monetary compensation to its
competitor. Samsung must pay Apple 25 million won ($22,000) while Apple
must pay its rival 40 million won.
Some industry watchers
expressed concern over the South Korean ruling to protect industry
standard patents. They say the decision could invite a trade war by
giving Samsung and fellow South Korean company LG Electronics Inc. —
both industry standard patent holders — more room to block rivals'
entrance into South Korea if they don't agree to licensing terms.
"It
would mean that foreign companies would either have to bow to Samsung's
and LG's demands ... or stop selling in Korea," said Florian Mueller, a
patent expert in Munich, Germany, who has been closely following the
case.
Courts in Europe, including Netherlands, France, Italy and Germany, have rejected similar claims by Samsung that Apple
violated its wireless patents, with judges arguing that the patents
have become part of industry standards. Standard-essential patents are a
crucial technology for new players to make products compatible with the
rest of the market and must be licensed under fair and reasonable
terms.
Europe's antitrust
regulator launched an investigation earlier this year into whether
Samsung was failing to license those patents under fair and reasonable
terms.
In Friday's ruling, the South Korean court said Samsung did not abuse its market power as an industry standard patent holder.
Samsung, which is based in Suwon, South Korea, filed a complaint in South Korea against Apple shortly after Apple filed its lawsuit in the U.S.
Apple
claims some of Samsung's smartphones and tablet computers are illegal
knockoffs of Apple's iPhone and iPad. Samsung denies the allegations and
argues that all companies in the cutthroat phone industry mimic each
other's successes without crossing the legal line. Apple, which is based
in Cupertino, California, wants $2.5 billion and Samsung's most popular
products pulled from the U.S. market.
The battle is more complex
as Apple and Samsung are not only competitors in the fast-growing global
market for smartphones and tablet computers, but also have a close
business relationship.
Samsung,
the world's biggest manufacturer of memory chips and liquid crystal
displays, supplies some of the key components that go into Apple
products, including mobile chips that work as a brain of the iPhone and
the iPad.
The South Korean
firm overtook Apple in less than three years in smartphone markets. In
the second quarter of this year, Samsung sold 50.2 million units of
smartphones, nearly twice as many as Apple's 26 million units, according
to IDC.
Despite the ruling that is widely seen as Samsung's victory, Samsung's share fell 0.9 percent in Seoul.
Resource : Yahoo News
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