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Apple, Samsung retrial concludes

By Reuters
San Francisco, 20 Nov 2013

Apple tried to persuade US jurors to keep intact a historic verdict it won against Samsung Electronics last year, while the Korean company argued that Apple has overstated its injuries from patent violations.

At closing arguments on Tuesday in a San Jose, California federal court, Apple attorney Harold McElhinny told jurors their verdict would be important for protecting American companies and maintaining Silicon Valley's innovation economy.

However, Samsung attorney William Price said Apple grossly overstated how integral the five patents at trial actually are to the iPhone's value.

Apple is engaged in global patent litigation against rivals like Samsung, a courtroom battle launched by Apple's iconic cofounder Steve Jobs before his death. The courtroom fight mirrors competition between leaders in the smartphone and tablet markets.

Last year, Apple was awarded over $1 billion after it convinced a jury that Samsung copied various iPhone features ? like using your fingers to pinch and zoom on the screen ? along with design touches like the phone's flat, black glass screen.

That verdict was a high point in Apple's legal war on Google's Android operating system, which Samsung uses on its phones. US district judge Lucy Koh subsequently rejected Apple's bid for a permanent sales ban against several Samsung products, but in a win for Apple, a US appeals court this week ordered Koh to reconsider that ruling.

When it came to damages, Koh upheld about $600 million of last year's verdict but ordered a retrial on the rest, ruling the previous jury had made some errors in its calculations.

During the retrial, which has been unfolding over the past week, Apple asked the jury to award $379.8 million, while Samsung argued that it should have to pay $52.7 million.

In court on Tuesday, Apple attorneys William Lee and McElhinny urged the six-woman, two-man jury to focus on internal Samsung documents, especially since no senior Samsung executives appeared on the witness stand.

"Witnesses forget, or in the case of Samsung here, witnesses don't appear," Lee said.

McElhinny added that Samsung was trying to pay a tiny fraction of the $3.5 billion in US revenue it made from infringing products. "That's unbelievable," he said.

Samsung's Price said Samsung is willing to pay what the law demands. But Samsung should not be forced to over-compensate Apple for design touches that any competitor should be allowed to incorporate, he said.

"Apple doesn't own beautiful and sexy," Price said, adding: "What they're saying is, in the market, justice is just us."

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