Apple, Broadcom win new trial in $1.1 billion Caltech patent case
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[February 05, 2022] By
Blake Brittain and Jonathan Stempel
(Reuters) - A U.S. appeals court on Friday
threw out a jury verdict ordering Apple Inc and Broadcom Inc to pay $1.1
billion to the California Institute of Technology for infringing its
Wi-Fi technology patents, and ordered a new trial on damages.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit said the January 2020
award by the federal jury in Los Angeles, one of the largest ever in
patent cases, was "legally unsupportable."
It also upheld the jury's findings that Apple and Broadcom infringed two
Caltech patents, and ordered a new trial on whether they infringed a
third patent.
Caltech had sued Apple and Broadcom in May 2016, alleging that millions
of iPhones, iPads, Apple Watches and other devices using Broadcom chips
infringed its data-transmission patents.
The jury had ordered Apple to pay Caltech $837.8 million and Broadcom to
pay an additional $270.2 million.
Caltech spokeswoman Shayna Chabner said the Pasadena, California-based
school was confident that the value of its patents would be "fully
recognized" at a new damages trial.
Neither Apple nor Broadcom immediately responded to requests for
comment.
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Logo of an Apple store is seen as Apple Inc. reports fourth quarter
earnings in Washington, U.S., January 27, 2022. REUTERS/Joshua
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Apple is a major purchaser of Broadcom chips, and in January 2020 reached a $15
billion supply agreement that ends in 2023. Broadcom has estimated that 20% of
its revenue comes from Apple.
Caltech's damages model had been based on an argument that the school could have
simultaneously negotiated a license with Apple for devices containing Broadcom
chips, and a license with Broadcom for chips used elsewhere.
Writing for the appeals court, Circuit Judge Richard Linn rejected that theory.
"The mere fact that Broadcom and Apple are separate infringers alone does not
support treating the same chips differently at different stages in the supply
chain," Linn wrote. "Caltech's two-tier damages theory is legally unsupportable
on this record."
Caltech has also sued Microsoft Corp, Samsung Electronics Co, Dell Technologies
Inc and HP Inc for alleged infringement of the same patents. Those cases are
pending.
(Reporting by Blake Brittain in Washington and Jonathan Stempel in New York;
Editing by David Bario, Matthew Lewis and Richard Chang)
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