When Juries Get Patent Suits Wrong: Judge Voids $28M Judgment Against Comcast
It was a victory-from-the-jaws-of-defeat moment for lawyers from Davis Polk & Wardwell and Winston & Strawn when a federal judge in Delaware on Friday voided a $27.6 million jury verdict against their client Comcast IP Holdings. The case raises the question: Why try patent suits before juries in the first place?
August 09, 2015 at 05:28 PM
4 minute read
It was a victory-from-the-jaws-of-defeat moment for lawyers from Davis Polk & Wardwell and Winston & Strawn when a federal judge in Delaware on Friday voided a $27.6 million jury verdict against their client Comcast IP Holdings.
The cable giant subsidiary was sued by Sprint Communications Co. for patent infringement. After a four-day trial in February, a jury sided with Sprint all the way.
Except U.S. District Judge Richard Andrews of the District of Delaware ruled that the jury got it wrong. He issued a judgment as a matter of law for Comcast on Aug. 7, concluding that none of the asserted patent claims were infringed.
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