Samsung Electronics Co, sanctioned by a US judge for failing to produce source code, said a ruling last week barring some evidence isn’t central to its defense against Apple Inc in a patent-infringement lawsuit
US Magistrate Judge Paul S. Grewal wrote in his May 4 ruling that Samsung “plainly violated” a court order requiring it to turn over code to Apple, and ruled that Samsung won’t be able to offer evidence in the case about its efforts to “design around” three patents at issue in the case.
In its lawsuit, Apple claims that Samsung’s 4G smartphone and Galaxy Tab 10.1 tablet computer infringe its patents.
In December, a US District Judge in California ruled against Apple’s request to block Samsung from selling that phone and tablet in the US. That order followed an Australian court ruling lifting an injunction on the tablet there.
Samsung and Apple have filed at least 30 lawsuits against each other on four continents since April 2011.
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In his ruling, Grewal said producing source code in patent litigation is “disruptive, expensive, and fraught with monumental opportunities to screw up.”
Still, under federal law there is no exception to the requirement, especially when a defendant in a patent suit challenges the opposition’s failure to analyse the accused product’s source code, the judge said.
“The court’s decision is on just one of the many motions made by both companies in the process of the lawsuit,” Samsung said on Sunday in an e-mailed response to a Bloomberg inquiry.
“It is not related to a final ruling on the patent-infringement case and Samsung Electronics will continue to actively seek to secure patent rights.”
Grewal said he focused on Samsung’s so-called design-around source code developed for products with the “specific intent” of avoiding Apple’s patent claims. The ruling targets that code because “by their very nature design-arounds impact key questions of liability, damages and injunctive relief.”
“They are inevitably designed with substantial input from counsel for the specific purpose of distinguishing other products at issue,” Grewal wrote. “In short, they matter. A lot.”
“It’s no coincidence that Samsung’s latest products look a lot like the iPhone and iPad, from the shape of the hardware to the user interface and even the packaging,” Apple said yesterday in an e-mailed statement.
“This kind of blatant copying is wrong, and we need to protect Apple’s intellectual property when companies steal our ideas.”