The next phase begins.
Link to full articleAfter a three-judge panel from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled last month in favor of plaintiff i4i Inc., Microsoft on Friday petitioned (PDF) the same court to review the ruling en banc. That means Microsoft wants all 12 of the court's judges to review it, and hopefully grant a rehearing.
From what I have read in prior cases I've followed there is less than a 50-50 chance that they will get their hearing. The 3 appeals court judges who previously ruled against Microsoft aren't going to like being told by Microsoft that they "screwed up" and will argue against the en banc review.
After that is the Supreme court with even lower odds of being heard.
Microsoft questions the admissibility of an expert testimony, during the trial last summer, that determined the damages amount. The expert witness, Microsoft says, used hypothetical royalty rates for a hypothetical Microsoft-i4i partnership, then multiplied those figures out over several years.
i4i had to present their viewpoint of how much they "would have" made to justify any award.
During trial, the software giant, of course, objected to the final award of $200 million. But the judge said Microsoft couldn't object because the company's lawyers hadn't filed a relevant pre-verdict document. The legal specifics are extremely technical.
Microsoft had the opportunity to present their own viewpoint on how much they would have been willing to spend to license it - but didn't. Bad mistake as it can be read as agreement with what i4i proposed as reasonable.
Could be up to a few months before the appeals court rules on whether they will give the en banc review, could be days, more likely weeks.