Samsung said its collaboration with Microsoft on Windows phones raised antitrust problems once Microsoft completed its acquisition of Nokia's handset business, according to a court filing.
The filing late on Thursday stems from Microsoft Corp's lawsuit accusing Samsung Electronics Co Ltd of breaching a business collaboration agreement. The lawsuit, filed earlier this year in a New York federal court, says South Korean smartphone company Samsung still owes $6.9 million in interest on more than $1 billion in patent royalties it delayed paying.
Samsung, meanwhile, said the April Nokia acquisition violated its 2011 deal with Microsoft.
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However, Samsung also agreed to develop Windows phones and share confidential business information with Microsoft as part of that collaboration. Microsoft would reduce the royalty payments if Samsung met certain sales goals for Windows devices, the filing said.
Microsoft's Windows phones have failed to take significant market share from iPhone maker Apple Inc and devices running on Android.
Once Microsoft acquired Nokia, it became a direct hardware competitor with Samsung, the filing said, and the South Korean company refused to continue sharing some sensitive information. Doing so could have created problems with US antitrust laws, Samsung said.
"The agreements, now between competitors, invite charges of collusion," Samsung said in the filing.
In a statement, Microsoft said it was "confident that our case is strong" and that it will succeed.
Antitrust regulators in the United States and other countries have approved Microsoft's Nokia acquisition.