Samsung REFUSES to Pay Compensation in Lost Lawsuit with Apple

Samsung again refuses to pay compensation in the lawsuit it lost again to Apple at the end of this month.

Samsung REFUSES to Pay Compensation in Lost Lawsuit with Apple

Samsung continues to refuse to pay the damages that were established in the most recent lawsuit that he lost in front of the Apple company, but nothing is new here. Samsung was forced to pay 533 million dollars for copying the design of the iPhone and that of iOS, but the Koreans are asking for a retrial of the process, hoping that they could win it.

Samsung lost for the first time in 2012 to Apple in exactly the same case, it managed to extend the legal battle for another 6 years, only to lose again, for the same reasons. However, even this defeat is not to the liking of the Koreans, they want a retrial, and at this rate the retrials could last forever, until a grandson of Tim Cook would end up managing Apple.

Samsung REFUSES to Pay Compensation in Lost Lawsuit with Apple

Samsung claims that the amount awarded again by an American jury would be excessive in relation to what it would have stolen, saying that it should not pay more than 28 million dollars. Samsung also makes it clear that the jury that came to the decision to compel it to pay 533 million dollars would have been in favor of the Apple company, but not only now, but also in 2012...

In Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd.'s 34-page post-trial motion, the Korean tech giant said the jury's verdict, which awarded Apple Inc. about half of what it requested, was not supported by the evidence and "no reasonable jury" could reach the jury's conclusion. The jury's verdict is excessive and against the weight of the evidence on each and every issue identified above, and ... the evidence supports a verdict of no more than $28.085 million."

Samsung has almost reached despair at this point, since it has already lost twice to those from Apple, and now it is trying any kind of tactic to escape from paying the money. Considering that Samsung managed to extend the payment of the money from the first trial for more than 6 years, it is expected that the same thing will be possible even now.