Post by
Lazaros on Oct 08, 2021 10:34pm
Fed. Circ. Groans At Idea Of 3rd Apple-WiLan Patent Trial
Fed. Circ. Groans At Idea Of 3rd Apple-WiLan Patent Trial JULY 21, 2020 Law360 (October 8, 2021, 8:39 PM EDT) -- No one on a Federal Circuit panel seemed excited about sending a patent dispute between Apple and licensing firm WiLan Inc. back down for a third damages trial, but that option remained on the table Friday during arguments over the tech behemoth's challenge to an $85 million verdict. U.S Circuit Judge Kimberly A. Moore "lament[ed] the notion of potentially sending this back for third trial" amid Apple's argument that the lower court incorrectly allowed vague expert testimony about the value of the patents that should have been excluded. "Can't you all just settle this?" Judge Moore asked. The parties have been through two damages trials already. The first wrapped up in 2018 and saw Apple smacked with a $145 million jury verdict for infringing two of WiLan's patents dealing with wireless communication technology. But the court later took issue with the way those damages had been calculated and gave the licensing firm the option of taking a dramatic cut down to $10 million or a retrial, with WiLan choosing the latter. That option appeared to be the best route when a second jury awarded WiLan $85 million in early 2020. But Apple argues that the calculation was still off, saying that the jury was exposed to an unacceptably vague expert opinion that two patents from Wi-Lan's 1,000-patent portfolio were worth about 75% of the whole. Judge Moore said that if the panel agreed with Apple, she saw no other relief than to "just go back for a new trial on damages" which was frustrating. The tech behemoth agreed that if the judges weren't convinced by its arguments about claim construction but did accept its views on the expert testimony, it would have to "go back and try again." U.S. Circuit Judge Sharon Prost, however, wondered whether there was a way to close the door on a third trial. "There's no case that says two tries and you're out," she said, eliciting laughter from her fellow panel members. "But is there a basis for saying that the other side has had several opportunities to make their case on damages?" The burden lies with the injured party to make the case for damages, she said. "I don't want to make a case argument for you, but I'm just following up on" what Judge Moore said, Judge Prost added, laughing when counsel for Apple said that they would accept that result. "Yeah, I know you would." Apple's other arguments centered around claim construction that WiLan's patent definitions "ignore[d] the context" of the invention and proposed an inflated theory of "direct" infringement. The instant dispute has been broiling since 2014, when Apple filed suit asking for the court to declare that it hadn't been infringing several of the Canadian patent licensing company's patents. WiLan followed with counterclaims and by the time the matter was before a jury, the licensing firm had focused just on claims from two patents. Those patents cover technology used in voice over LTE wireless communications technology, including that used in various iPhones, according to court filings. U.S. Circuit Judges Kimberly A. Moore, Sharon Prost and William Bryson sat on the panel for the Federal Circuit. The patents-in-suit are U.S. Patent Nos. 8,457,145 and 8,537,757. Apple was represented by Mark S. Davies of Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP. WiLAN was represented by Jeffrey A. Lamken of MoloLamken LLP. The case is Apple Inc. v. Wi-LAN Inc., case number 20-2011, in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. --Editing by Michael Watanabe.
Comment by
wilander on Oct 09, 2021 12:13am
The real problem here is that Apple isnt interesting in settling whether they are right or wrong. Delays, drawing it out, costing patent holders money is their goal and only goal. Would be nice to find a judge(s) who had the conviction to teach them that is not what the courts are for. I am sceptical these three have such conviction. Sadly.
Comment by
SixMileLake777 on Oct 09, 2021 10:05am
Hey V and Cabbie can you remind me. The case in Germany against Apple. Same patents? skid
Comment by
cabbieJBJ on Oct 09, 2021 11:00am
No Skid, they are different. I believe they are 3 German semiconductor patents from Polaris that relate to memory interface used in Apple’s application processors.
Comment by
redcoats on Oct 10, 2021 1:45am
The courts in Germany might not be quite as "patient" as they seem to be towards Apple in the U.S.
Comment by
wilander on Oct 10, 2021 8:07am
You do know that Wilan has been priced at zero and we have been screaming about it, to no avail, FOR YEARS. Right? Just sayin'.
Comment by
Capharnaum on Oct 10, 2021 4:34pm
I agree with Cabbie's assessment of Friday's events. When Quarterhill receives money from this, they will be able to do another ETC size acquisition!
Comment by
ChiChi3 on Oct 11, 2021 6:21pm
You may be right about the materiality of any Samsung clawback V-G. Thanks for your reply. chi
Comment by
onlygame on Oct 11, 2021 10:02pm
just to recall, ... but didn't Samsung get a preferrable rate because they were willing to be honest and negotiate in good faith. Apple can't seriously be be expecting similar terms after being so difficult and costing everyone so much time and money to deal with their bullying and dirty tactics.
Comment by
cabbieJBJ on Oct 12, 2021 7:19am
Wouldn't it be the case that if Wilan gets a court award that means they have not granted a license to Apple and therefore are not on the hook for undercutting the Samsung license rate? Is this possibly an impediment to settlement?
Comment by
wilander on Oct 12, 2021 9:54am
Not exactly getting the virnetx bounce we wanted. While I agree we should win, anyone really watching the orals sees this as 50-50 or less I guess .
Comment by
v_guerriero on Oct 12, 2021 1:51pm
Pull up the one month chart. The direction is up. People are (wisely) not selling. This is wound up. We've already taken a run at $3 a few times... and holding just below that level. We await the catalyst. Paul Hill - please provide the catalyst. This stock will rocket.
Comment by
v_guerriero on Oct 12, 2021 3:20pm
And a perfectly acceptable news release would be another major ITS acquisition funded by the Motorola settlement+ cash on hand. In addition, the announcement of the $200M in fixed rate loans to finance the balance of the acquisition and to refinance the HSBC floating rate loan. I think we would all like that very much. :)
Comment by
SixMileLake777 on Oct 11, 2021 4:30pm
I agree with EIJ who agreed mainly with Cabbie. V, I am sorry I couldn't jump with your excitement since we've been trying this to long. I have been a Debbie downer. Forgive me Cabbie i am waiting for our payday skid
Comment by
cabbieJBJ on Oct 09, 2021 11:03am
v_g, I can't agree with your phrasing, "The beauty of this situation is that the stock price already assumes a loss." I think it would be more appropriate to say that the stock price already does not factor in a win.
Comment by
whaler83 on Oct 09, 2021 11:06am
No doubt there will be an overreaction to a loss or a re trial
Comment by
cabbieJBJ on Oct 09, 2021 11:08am
I agree with you Whaler. If anything, buy the dip.
Comment by
valueist on Oct 12, 2021 11:45am
In house counsel at large corporations are project managers with a law degree. The litigation firm that Apple has hired is McKool Smith: McKool Smith Home Page and their principals are named in the reply brief from Jeffrey Lamken.
Comment by
cabbieJBJ on Oct 12, 2021 12:05pm
valueist, you should know that McCool Smith is Wilan's lawyer.
Comment by
valueist on Oct 12, 2021 2:20pm
Doh! You are right of course, cabbie; I was looking at the wrong doc. Here's the Apple representatives: Sean C. Cunningham Stanley J. Panikowski Erin P. Gibson DLA PIPER LLP (US) Mark S. Davies Thomas King-Sun Fu Benjamin P. Chagnon James Anglin Flynn Katherine M. Kopp ORRICK, HERRINGTON & SUTCLIFFE LLP
Comment by
redcoats on Oct 10, 2021 1:41am
When something's rotten, it's also slimy, in my experience.