Qualcomm has announced that the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit granted a stay pending appeal that will allow third parties to import handsets into the United States originally banned by the International Trade Commission (ITC).
The stay applies to all third parties that filed motions seeking a stay of the limited exclusion order imposed by the ITC on June 7, 2007. Those parties were Kyocera Wireless Corporation, Motorola, Inc., Samsung Electronics Corporation, Ltd., Sanyo Fisher Co., T-Mobile USA, Inc., LG Electronics MobileComm U.S.A., Inc., and AT&T Mobility LLC. The ITC had imposed the importation ban as a remedy after finding that Qualcomm had infringed a patent held by Broadcom relating to a power-saving technique.
Broadcom had filed the complaint in the ITC against only Qualcomm, leading Qualcomm and the third parties that are "downstream users" to argue that the ITC lacked the authority to issue an order excluding products imported by persons other than Qualcomm. In granting the stay, the Federal Circuit agreed that the third parties demonstrated "a substantial case on the merits and that the harm factors weigh in their favor." The Federal Circuit declined to grant a stay with respect to Qualcomm's own imports. Qualcomm does not itself import the chips found to infringe Broadcom's patents.
"We are pleased that the Court of Appeals recognized the undeserved harm to parties who were not named in the lawsuit, and that our customers will continue to be able to introduce new products into the U.S. marketplace during the appeals process," said Alex H. Rogers, senior vice president and legal counsel, Qualcomm.
Qualcomm will continue to pursue the appeal of the ITC's order with the Federal Circuit and seek a reversal of the underlying infringement finding.
Source:Qualcomm press release
View Original Blog Post