Judge denies Apple's request to seal financial documents from Samsung trial

Posted:
in General Discussion edited January 2014
In an order handed down on Wednesday, Apple v. Samsung Judge Lucy Koh denied Apple's motion to keep its financial particulars sealed, however the jurist agreed to a temporary stay on that ruling as it pertains to certain earnings and profits numbers pending federal court appeal.

Judge Lucy Koh
Judge Lucy Koh. | Source: U.S. District Court


The order granted in part and denied in part Apple's motion to seal specific documents related to a declaration by an expert witness, and did the same for the company's request for a stay on the California court's decision to disclose confidential financial information.

Perhaps most relevant to Apple's ongoing post-trial motions is Judge Koh's decision to grant the request to stay, however, as Apple has gone to great lengths to keep its financial dealings private.

At issue is Apple's introduction of a currently redacted document containing a partial summary of damages calculations, which includes "product-specific unit sales and revenue information."

The judge originally denied the request to keep the Damages Motion sealed, saying that Apple needed to reveal the documents because it is seeking an enhancement of $535 million on top of the $1.05 billion awarded by the Apple v. Samsung jury in August. In that motion, Apple is looking to permanently enjoin the sale of 26 Samsung products already on the market.

"As Apple appears to have realized in introducing that exhibit, it cannot both use its financial data to seek multi-billion dollar damages and insist on keeping it secret," Judge Koh wrote in her order. "The public's interest in accessing Apple's financial information is now perhaps even greater than it was at trial."

She goes on to say that Apple has not furnished adequate arguments as to why the supposedly confidential information should be classified as "trade secrets," noting that her earlier order found "unit sales, revenue, profit, profit margin, and cost data do not meet the 'compelling reasons' standard."

Apple was granted a stay from the Federal Circuit, however, and while Judge Koh believes her former order to deny the sealing request was correct, she also notes that "the parties will be deprived of any remedy if this Court does not stay its Order."

The stay will be in effect pending the federal court's decision on appeal.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 3
    %u201C[P]rofound effect on the smartphone industry, consumers, and the public.%u201D
    That just about sums up the difficulties with the verdict in this case -- if not the difficulties with the present state of patent law.
    Maybe we needed a high profile case to wake us up.
  • Reply 2 of 3


    So compromise. That information that is specifically related to the motion and the items in question can't be sealed but any other data in said documents is. 


     


    So if you want to say that unit sales and even unit production costs is relevant fine, include that. But if the names of the suppliers of parts and the monies paid to them is not relevant than that stays secret. 

  • Reply 3 of 3


    Originally Posted by Kafantaris View Post

    That just about sums up the difficulties with the verdict in this case -- if not the difficulties with the present state of patent law.


     


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