Apple, Samsung spar over potential US ban on smartphone sales

Samsung argues request for a permanent sales ban is attempt to ‘instill fear’ among telecom carriers

Samsung no longer sells the older-model phones targeted by Apple’s injunction request. Photograph: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg
Samsung no longer sells the older-model phones targeted by Apple’s injunction request. Photograph: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg

Samsung has sought to defeat Apple's bid for a permanent sales ban against some Samsung smartphones, arguing in court yesterday that Apple's request was an attempt to instill fear among telecom carriers and retailers that carry Samsung's products.

At a hearing in federal court in San Jose, California, Samsung attorney Kathleen Sullivan told US districtjJudge Lucy Koh that the injunction would give the iPhone maker an opening to come back to court quickly and argue that newer Samsung products should also be banned.

“An injunction would create fear and uncertainty for the carriers and retailers with whom Samsung has very important customer relationships,” Sullivan said.

Apple attorney William Lee said that a jury has already found that nearly two dozen phones infringed Apple patents, and that Apple has lost sales to a direct competitor.

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“The natural, inexorable result is an injunction,” Mr Lee said.

Apple’s request for the permanent injunction stems from the companies’ legal fight over various smartphone features patented by Apple, such as the use of fingers to pinch and zoom on the screen and design elements such as the phone’s flat, black glass screen. Apple has won US jury verdicts against Samsung totalling about $930 million.

Judge Koh had previously rejected such a sales ban, but the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ordered her to reconsider in November.

Even though Samsung no longer sells the older-model phones targeted by the injunction request, Apple has argued in court documents that such an order is important to prevent Samsung from future copying with new products “not more colourably different” than the defunct models.

Ms Sullivan, the Samsung lawyer, argued that the injunction would allow Apple seek other bans on new products on a much faster timeline than through traditional patent litigation, which can take years.

Judge Koh did not say when she would rule on the request.

The chief executives for Apple and Samsung have agreed to a mediation session, which will take place by February 19th. The two companies are scheduled to begin another trial in San Jose in March over a separate batch of patents that involve Apple’s Siri search technology.

Samsung's phones use the Android operating system, developed by Google. Samsung and Google announced a global patent licensing deal this week. (Reuters)