Samsung Electronics Co Ltd asked a U.S. appeals court on Thursday to
toss out an order that it pay Apple $930 million (roughly Rs. 5,741 crores) for infringing on
iPhone patents to make its Galaxy line of smartphones and tablets.
The
hearing at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit was the
latest fight between the two smartphone makers, which have been
litigating around the world for three years, each accusing the other of
infringing patents in making smartphones and other mobile devices.
They
have essentially fought to a draw in about a dozen countries, but in
August announced that they had agreed to withdraw all patent lawsuits
against each other except in the United States.
In this case,
Samsung asked the court to throw out a decision from the U.S. District
Court for the Northern District of California which had found that
Samsung infringed Apple patents and ordered it to pay the iPhone and
iPad maker $930 million, a reduction from an earlier award of $1
billion (roughly Rs. 6,174 crores).
Kathleen Sullivan, a lawyer with Quinn Emanuel Urquhart
& Sullivan LLP who represents Samsung, argued that the lower court
erred in deciding that the design and trade dress patents were infringed
because the Samsung phones did not carry an Apple logo, did not have a
"home" button like an iPhone and had speaker slots in different places
than the Apple phones.
"Apple was awarded Samsung's total profits
on those (Samsung) phones, which was absurd," she said, arguing that it
was akin to awarding entire profits on a car because of an infringing
cup holder.
Arguing for Apple, William Lee of the law firm Wilmer Hale disagreed. "This is not the cup holder," he said.
He argued that the $930 million (roughly Rs. 5,741 crores) verdict was the right decision.
"What Samsung is actually asking you to do ... is to substitute yourself for Judge Koh and the jury," he said.
The three judges on the panel did not indicate which side they supported, and did not indicate when they would rule.
Apple
and companies that make phones using Google's Android software, such as
Samsung's top-selling Galaxy, have filed dozens of infringement
lawsuits against one another around the world to protect their
technology. Apple and Google Inc's Motorola Mobility unit, which has
since been purchased by Lenovo, agreed in May to settle all smartphone
patent litigation between them.
© Thomson Reuters 2014