The jury essentially split the difference between Apple's request for $1 billion and Samsun's argument for $28 mn
A
federal court jury on Friday ordered Samsung to pay Apple $533
million for copying iPhone design features in a patent
case
dating back seven years.
Jurors
tacked on an additional $5 million in damages for a pair of patented
functions. The award appeared to be a bit of a victory for Apple
,
which had argued in court that design was essential to the iPhone.
The
case was sent back to the district court following a Supreme Court
decision to revisit an earlier $400 million damage award. The jury
essentially split the difference between Apple's request for $1
billion and Samsung's argument for $28 million.
To
arrive at a damages award of more than a half-billion dollars, jurors
would likely have needed to buy into Apple's reasoning that design
was so integral to the iPhone that it was essentially the "article
of manufacture." The lower figure sought by the South Korean
consumer electronics titan would have involved treating the design
features as components.
The
jury had been asked to determine whether design features at issue in
the case are worth all profit made from Samsung smartphones that
copied them or whether those features are worth just a fraction
because they are components.
"Samsung
isn't saying it isn't required to pay profits," Samsung
attorney John Quinn said during closing arguments on Friday.
"It
is just saying it isn't required to pay profits on the whole phone."
Apple argued in court that the iPhone was a "bet-the-company"
project at Apple and that design is as much the "article of
manufacture" as the device itself. The three design patents in
the case apply to the shape of the iPhone's black screen with rounded
edges and a bezel, and the rows of colorful icons displayed. Samsung
no longer sells the smartphone models at issue in the case. Two
utility patents also involved apply to "bounce-back" and
"tap-to-zoom" functions.
The
case dates back seven years. An original trial finding that Samsung
violated Apple patents was followed by lengthy appellate dueling over
whether design features such as rounded edges are worth all the money
made from a phone.
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