Could Apple-Samsung Make a Supreme Court Encore?
The Korean smartphone maker calls out Federal Circuit on obviousness, injunction standard, and its unusual handling of the proceedings.
April 24, 2017 at 03:34 PM
6 minute read
Samsung Electronics Co. is trying to score a second patent win over Apple Inc. at the U.S. Supreme Court.
Even as the $399 million design patent case decided last fall returns to San Jose, California, federal court, the Korean smartphone maker is asking the high court to review a second trial that resulted in a $120 million win for its Cupertino, California, competitor.
Besides the nine figures, Samsung and amicus supporters in the tech community argue that principles regarding the law of patent validity and injunctions are at stake. The decisions in the case have “encouraged a resurgence in patent injunctions no matter how minor the patent at issue,” Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan partner Kathleen Sullivan wrote in Samsung's cert petition. District judges from San Jose, San Diego, Detroit and Philadelphia have imposed such injunctions, citing Judge Kimberly Moore's 2015 opinion on Apple's injunction request.
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