Google makes its appeal to overturn jury verdict branding the Play Store
as illegal monopoly
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[February 04, 2025] By
MICHAEL LIEDTKE
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Google went to appeals court Monday in an attempt
to convince a three-judge panel to overturn a jury's verdict declaring
its app store for Android smartphones as an illegal monopoly and block
the penalties imposed by a federal judge to stop the misbehavior. Video
game maker Epic Games, which brought the case alleging Google's Play
Store has been abusing its stranglehold over the Android app market,
countered with arguments outlining why both the verdict and punishment
should be affirmed to foster more innovation and lower prices.
In a nearly hour-long presentation in San Francisco's Ninth Circuit
Court of Appeals, Google lawyer Jessica Ellsworth explained why the
company believes the judge overseeing a month-long trial in 2023
improperly allowed the market in its case to be defined differently than
it had in a similar antitrust trial revolving around Apple's antitrust
trial in 2021.
Ellsworth also asserted the trial shouldn't have been decided by a jury
in the first place because Google exercised its consent to that process
and demanded the case be decided by a judge instead, as had the trial by
Apple.
Epic, the maker of the popular Fortnite video game, filed separate
antitrust cases against Apple and Google on the same day in August 2020
and culminated in dramatically different outcomes. Unlike the jury in
Google's trial in San Francisco, U.S. District Judge Yvonne
Gonzalez-Rogers largely sided with Apple in an 185-decision that defined
the Play Store and Apple's iPhone app store as part of a broader
competitive market.
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Ellsworth told the appeals court that U.S. District Judge James Donato
improperly allowed Epic to turn the Google trial into a “do-over” that
excluded the Apple app store as a rival in the market definition that
led to the jury's verdict in its case.
"You can't just lose an issue that was fully litigated the first time
(in the Apple case) and then pretend it didn't happen," Ellsworth said.
She said the competition that Google and Apple engage in while making
the two operating systems that power virtually all of the world's
smartphones “sufficiently disciplines” their actions in the app market.
But the appeals judges indicated they believed the market definitions
could differ in the separate app store cases because Apple bundles all
its software and the iPhone together — creating what has become known as
a “walled garden” — while Google licenses the Android software that
includes its Play Store a wide variety of smartphone makers.
“There are clearly some factual differences between the Android world
and Apple world,” Judge Danielle J. Forrest told Ellsworth.
Judge Gabriel Sanchez also sounded skeptical about Google's claims about
being lumped with an improper market definition in its trial.
“Even if Google vigorously competes with Apple (in smartphone operating
systems), that doesn't mean it can't create a different ecosystem where
it's a monopolist,” Sanchez interjected during Ellsworth's presentation.
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Google logos are shown when searched on Google in New York, Sept.
11, 2023. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)
 Epic attorney Gary Bornstein painted
Google's arguments as a desperate and unfounded effort to preserve
the system that boosts Google's profits with price-gouging
commissions ranging from 15% to 30% on in-app purchases flowing from
software downloaded through the Play Store.
The penalties that Donato imposed in October and subsequently
postponed while Google pursues its appeal would impose a series of
sweeping changes that include making the Play Store's entire library
of 2 million apps available to potential competitors — a move
expected to result in lower commission rates.
The appeals court hasn't set a timeline for issuing a ruling in the
Play Store case, but it typically takes several months before a
decision is reached.
Google is also currently facing other potential penalties that could
include being forced to sell its Chrome web browser after a judge in
another antitrust trial ruled its ubiquitous search engine is an
illegal monopoly, too.
In Monday's two-hour hearing Bornstein contended that Google never
tried to define the Android app market during the trial the way it
presented it during its appeal and reminded the three-judge panel
that the bar should be set high before reversing a jury's verdict
and the ensuing punishment ordered by a lower court judge.
“The benefit of the doubt does not go to the wrongdoer,” Bornstein
said.
The judges seemed more troubled by Donato's decision to stick with a
jury trial after the case changed shortly before the Epic trial when
Google settled lawsuits brought by attorneys general across the U.S.
and another prominent app developer, Match Group. An agreement for a
jury trial had been reached when the attorneys general and Match
cases were going to be combined with Epic's, but Google wanted to
revert to having a judge decide the outcome after settling some of
the claims only to be rebuffed by Donato.
At one point during Bornstein's presentation, Forrest openly mused
about the possibility of declaring the verdict as a decision
rendered by the equivalent of an advisory jury and sending the case
back to Donato for a more lengthy ruling.
That is an approach favored by Ellsworth, who pointed out that the
judge's ruling in the Apple app store case spanned nearly 200 pages
while the jury in the Google trial “were asked eight questions and
they offered 14 words defining a relevant market.”
But Bornstein urged the appeals court to resort to giving Donato a
“homework assignment” that would give Google more time to profit
from its illegal conduct.
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