US District Court Judge Lucy
Koh issued an order clearing the way for Samsung to restart sales of the Tab
10.1 tablets that were halted while it dueled with Apple in a high-stakes
trial.
A jury declared on August 24
that Samsung should pay Apple $1.049 billion in damages for illegally copying
iPhone and iPad features, in one of the biggest patent cases in decades -- a
verdict that could have huge market repercussions.
However, the jury agreed that
Samsung did not abuse design patents that were the grounds for a temporary ban
on Galaxy Tab 10.1 imports that Koh put in place at Apple's behest in June.
"The sole basis for the
June 26 preliminary injunction no longer exists," Koh wrote in her ruling.
"The court finds it proper to dissolve the injunction."
In a statement, Samsung
welcomed the ruling, saying it "vindicates our position that there was no
infringement of Apple's design patent and that an injunction was not called for."
However, Koh denied a
request by Samsung for $2.6 million that Apple had posted as a bond to
"pay the costs and damages sustained by any party found to have been
wrongfully enjoined or restrained."
The court will hold onto the
bond cash pending resolution of post-verdict legal motions that could bear on
whether the ban was a wrongful restraint.
Koh is on record noting that
the August jury verdict in her San Jose, California, courtroom did not
represent a "final ruling" in the case since it was being appealed.
Samsung reacted by saying the
verdict was "a loss" for consumers and that Apple had
"manipulated" the patent system.
Meanwhile, Samsung said Tuesday
that it had added Apple's new iPhone 5 to a list of products it believes
infringe its patents in a second case the two smartphone giants are fighting in
the same California court.
"We have always preferred
to compete in the marketplace with our innovative products, rather than in
courtrooms," Samsung said.
"However, Apple continues
to take aggressive legal measures that will limit market competition. Under
these circumstances, we have little choice but to take the steps necessary to
protect our innovations," it added.
The new iPhone went on sale
around the world last month and enjoyed a record launch weekend, with sales
topping five million.
Samsung and Apple --
respectively the world's number one and two smartphone makers -- have been at
loggerheads over dozens of patent lawsuits in 10 nations, accusing each other
of copying technologies and designs.
The August verdict in
California affected a range of Samsung products, including some of its popular
Galaxy smartphones.
Samsung has steadfastly denied
the patent infringement charges by Apple, claiming it developed its devices
independently. It unsuccessfully argued that Apple infringed on its wireless
patents.
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