After a week of questioning and witnesses, lawyers in the Samsung vs Apple trial presented their closing arguments on Friday. On Monday, the jury will deliberate and ultimately decide how much, if anything, Samsung owes Apple for infringing on three design patents and two utility patents…
Friday’s day in the courtroom kicked off with some last-minute questioning of Samsung’s final witness, Michael Wagner – a management consultant. CNET’s Stephen Shankland recounted the day on Twitter.
Attempting to prove its point that Samsung should pay damages on the whole phone, rather than only the infringing components, Apple asked Wagner if Samsung individually tracked profits on things like front glass faces, displays, or bezels. Wagner, of course, answered no.
All in all, Samsung is said to have made $3.3 billion on the sale of 8.6 million smartphones infringing on Apple patents. That number, however, considers full-phone earnings, rather than part-by-part earnings. Samsung wants to pay a max of $28 million in damages, while Apple wants $1 billion.
Furthermore, Apple challenged Samsung’s belief that it shouldn’t have to pay damages for phones that were unprofitable:
Once final questioning was completed, it was time for closing statements.
Wagner: “Yes.”
Apple stood firm on its grounds that you can’t dissect a phone and base damages on only certain parts of the device – as the patents, in its view, cover a whole phone.
Apple lawyer Joe Mueller:
Apple lawyer Bill Lee argued:
We respectfully request you return a verdict in favor of Apple.”
Meanwhile, Samsung’s John Quinn argued that Apple’s design patents do not cover the inside of the phone, thus meaning Apple is not entitled to profits of the article of manufacturer where the design was not applied:
Ultimately, the jury will deliberate on Monday and try to come to a decision. We could hear the results as early as Tuesday.
More on Apple v Samsung in 2018:
- Greg Joswiak testifies in Samsung case, says Apple was ‘betting the company’ on iPhone
- Why it took a full day to find unbiased jurors in the latest Apple/Samsung trial …
- Apple versus Samsung patent battle which started in 2011 is back in court today
- Apple v Samsung opening statements reveal details of iPhone design process & more
- Apple versus Samsung patent trial comes down to the meaning of a three-word phrase