Apple Inc has
asked for a court order for a permanent U.S. sales ban on Samsung
Electronics products alleged to have violated its patents along with
additional damages of $707 million on top of the billion-dollar verdict
won by the iPhone maker last month.
Samsung has responded by asking for a new trial.
The
world's top two smartphone makers are locked in patent battles in 10
countries as they vie for top spot in the lucrative, fast-growing
market.
Apple (AAPL.O) scored a legal victory over Samsung (005930.KS)
in late August when a U.S. jury found that the Korean firm had copied
critical features of the iPhone and awarded the U.S. firm $1.05 billion
in damages.
In a motion filed late
Friday U.S. time, Apple sought a further $400 million damage award for
design infringement by Samsung; $135 million for willful infringement of
its utility patents; $121 million in supplemental damages based on
Samsung's product sales not covered in the jury's deliberation; and $50
million of prejudgment interest on damages
through December 31. The
requests together come to $707 million.
Apple
wants the injunction to cover "any of the infringing products or any
other product with a feature or features not more than colorably
different from any of the infringing feature or features in any of the
Infringing Products."
Such a
wide-ranging sales ban could result in the extension of the injunction
to cover Samsung's brand-new Galaxy S III smartphone.
'RECTANGLES WITH ROUNDED CORNERS'
Samsung, in a filing to the U.S. court, asked for a new trial to be held.
"The
Court's constraints on trial time, witnesses and exhibits were
unprecedented for a patent case of this complexity and magnitude, and
prevented Samsung from presenting a full and fair case in response to
Apple's many claims," Samsung said.
"Samsung
therefore respectfully requests that the Court grant a new trial
enabling adequate time and even-handed treatment of the parties."
In
a separate statement, Samsung lamented the fact that patent rulings
should cover issues such as the shape of the product in addition to
technological points.
"It is
unfortunate that patent law can be manipulated to give one company a
monopoly over rectangles with rounded corners, or technology that is
being improved every day by Samsung and other companies," it said.
The
Korean firm earlier this week said it plans to add Apple's new iPhone 5
to the existing U.S. patent lawsuits, stepping up its legal challenge
as the two companies seek to assert rights to key technologies.
Apple
said it wanted the court to award it damages that reflect "a rational
and fair effort to address Samsung's willful misconduct that has and
will impose lasting harm on Apple."
The
Korean firm was the world's top smartphone maker in the second quarter
of this year, shipping more than 50 million phones, nearly double
Apple's 26 million iPhone shipments.
Both companies are raising their marketing spending to promote their latest products ahead of the year-end shopping season.
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