Judge Tosses Out $1.3B Judgment Against SAP in Oracle Copyright Case

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An eight-person jury, supervised by Oakland-based federal Judge Phyllis Hamilton in November 2010, had its wishes overturned Sept. 1 when, upon appeal, Hamilton threw out the jury’s $1.3 billion punishment determination against German software maker SAP for admitted copyright infringement against longtime rival Oracle.

Oracle would have banked the largest U.S. copyright infringement award on record if the $1.3 billion judgment had stood. The jury on Nov. 23, 2010, had concluded that amount was fair restitution in a 3-year-old copyright infringement lawsuit.

Oracle, in its lawsuit filed in 2007, charged that SAP — through a now-defunct U.S.-based affiliate division called TomorrowNow — illegally downloaded more than 8 million instances of its customer-support software and hundreds of thousands of pages of supporting documentation from one of Oracle’s Websites, then used those tools to lure some 350 customers away from Oracle and over to SAP.

Oracle claimed that the stolen documents enabled SAP to entice customers into buying similar services at lower prices from SAP. The German company argued that since TomorrowNow only lured a few hundred customers, it should have to pay only $40 million to cover those accounts.

The jury, in awarding Oracle massively more than $40 million after a three-week trial, illustrated how much they were willing to punish a corporation for intellectual-property theft. But Hamilton called the penalty "grossly excessive" and said the size of the penalty was "contrary to the weight of the evidence."

Award Now Could be $272 Million

Oracle can now choose whether to accept a lower award of $272 million or file for a new trial before a different jury. The $272 million amount emanated from an earlier estimate from an Oracle expert on what profit Oracle lost and SAP gained.

SAP took corporate responsibility for its affiliate’s actions in a court document filed Oct. 28, 2010, and officially apologized on Nov. 16.  The $1.3 billion judgment was announced a week later. SAP subsequently filed an appeal, with Hamilton’s resulting decision coming a full nine months later.

"We are very gratified with the court’s decision," SAP told the press through Global Communications Director James Dever. "We believed the jury’s verdict was wrong and are pleased at the significant reduction in damages. We hope the court’s action will help drive this matter to a final resolution. We are hopeful that this ruling will move the case toward an appropriate final resolution."

Oracle was not pleased by the news and said it will fight for the full amount it was originally awarded.

To read the original eWeek article, click here: Judge Throws Out $1.3B Award Against SAP in Oracle Copyright Case

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