A U.S. judge on Friday ruled that Apple Inc cannot pursue an injunction against Googleâs Motorola Mobility unit, effectively ending a key case for the iPhone maker in the smartphone patent wars
A U.S. judge on Friday ruled that Apple Inc cannot pursue an injunction against Googleâs Motorola Mobility unit, effectively ending a key case for the iPhone maker in the smartphone patent wars.
The ruling came from Judge Richard Posner in Chicago federal court. He dismissed the litigation between Apple and Motorola Mobility with prejudice, meaning it canât be refiled.
The ruling is a blow for Apple, which had hoped a decisive ruling against Motorola would help it gain an upper hand in the smartphone market against Android.
âApple is complaining that Motorolaâs phones as a whole ripped off the iPhone as a whole,â Posner wrote. âBut Motorolaâs desire to sell products that compete with the iPhone is a separate harm -â" and a perfectly legal one -â" from any harm caused by patent infringement.â
Apple spokeswoman Kristin Huguet declined to comment on the ruling. Motorola Mobility spokeswoman Jennifer Erickson said the company was pleased that Posner dismissed Appleâs case.
Both parties have the option to appeal Posnerâs ruling.
Motorola sued Apple in October 2010, a move that was widely seen as a pre-emptive strike against an imminent Apple lawsuit. Apple filed its own claims against Motorola the same month.
Posner issued a series of pre-trial rulings that eliminated nearly all of Motorolaâs patent claims against Apple from the prospective trial, while maintaining more of Appleâs claims against Motorola. That meant Apple had more to gain in the trial, which had been set to start last week.
However, Posner canceled the trial earlier this month.
Apple had sought an injunction barring the sale of Motorola products using Appleâs patented technology. But in Fridayâs ruling, Posner wrote that neither party is entitled to an injunction.
Since Motorola could design around the minor technological features covered by Appleâs patents, an injunction would be an inappropriate windfall for Apple, Posner wrote.
Posner also said that Apple had not clearly demonstrated that Motorola phones caused a loss of consumer goodwill significant enough for an injunction.
âTo suggest that it has suffered loss of market share, brand recognition, or customer goodwill as a result of Motorolaâs alleged infringement of the patent claims still in play in this case is wild conjecture,â Posner wrote.
In a bright spot for the iPhone maker, Posner also ruled that Motorola could not seek an injunction based on the one patent in the case that it was still asserting against Apple.
Motorola had pledged to license that patent â" which covers an aspect of wireless communication â" on fair and reasonable terms to other companies in exchange for having the technology adopted as an industry standard.
âHow could it be permitted to enjoin Apple from using an invention that it contends Apple must use if it wants to make a cell phone,â Posner wrote.
At a hearing earlier this week, Apple had argued that it would be satisfied with an injunction forcing Motorola to remove Appleâs patented features within three months. But Posner found that proposal unworkable, in part because of the hardship in administering such an order.
âBecause of the potential costs to Motorola and the federal judiciary I could not responsibly order injunctive relief in favor of Apple,â he wrote in his ruling.
The case is Apple Inc. and NeXT Software Inc. V. Motorola Inc. and Motorola Mobility Inc., in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, no. 11-08540.
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