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AutoZone Granted Limited Stay in SCO Copyright Case

michael path writes "From Yahoo: Judge Robert C. Jones on Monday denied AutoZone's request to transfer its copyright case with The SCO Group from Nevada to a Tennessee court, but also granted a limited stay to the auto parts chain."

11 of 149 comments (clear)

  1. And on and on and on.. by TheShadowHawk · · Score: 5, Funny

    Man.. this is getting all so boring. It will just drags out for years. Wake me up just before SCO get crushed.

    --
    Friends don't let Friends use Internet Explorer.
  2. SCO's argument by iMaple · · Score: 5, Funny

    SCO's principal argument in opposition to AutoZone's motion is that it will suffer irreparable harm if the case is stayed.

    Well I thought they loved that .... From the track record they have of suing people. And isnt it impossible for an almost dead company to suffer more harm ? Oh..I get it .. The SCO executives when looking for new jobs say "We almost won, but the court stayed the case and we suffered irreparable harm"

  3. I wonder by AVryhof · · Score: 5, Funny

    You can SCO to hell, SCO to hell and die!

    Honestly, I think they are jumping the gun suing before the courts have ruled on their copyrights. I imagine AutoZone could countersue for extortion if SCO loses the copyright case. They should start the procedings now, maybe it would keep SCO in their place for awhile.

  4. tantrum? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    AutoZone had used SCO's OpenServer Unix until 2001, when it started to switch over to Red Hat Linux. AutoZone completed its migration to Linux in 2002.
    it kind of seems like this lawsuit is really just a way for SCO to punish AutoZone for no longer using SCO's product.
  5. Denied AutoZone's request to transfer? Not quite. by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 5, Informative
    From Yahoo: Judge Robert C. Jones on Monday denied AutoZone's request to transfer its copyright case with The SCO Group from Nevada to a Tennessee court

    According to Groklaw, this is not true. They say the issue of transfer is undecided. That is different than denied AutoZone's request to transfer.

    --
    "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
  6. Re:It's Thursday.... by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 5, Funny

    Dude, you come here for cutting-edge newsbreaking? That's the job of something like Google News, not Slashdot. I come here for the type of content, not how fast it gets posted.

    --
    Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
  7. Re:Yawn... must be a slow geek news day. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    This isn't exactly correct. SCO *only* gets to do discovery related to a preliminary injunction. The judge told them not to bother with the discovery if they're not going to try for a preliminary injuction - which sets a trap for them. If they pursue an injuction then they have to go forth and try to prove that the stay would cause them massive harm. The stay will continue unless SCO decides to admit to more than they have been prepared to.

  8. Re:Whew that was close by winkydink · · Score: 5, Informative
    "I can't believe Auto Zone wanted to drag them to Tennessee."

    Autozone drags SCO to Tennessee because:

    Autozone is headquartered there

    They don't spend a zillion dollars hiring a Nevada law firm or sending their attorneys there

    It's less distracting to the business

    --

    "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

  9. Re:SCO anti-gravity gun holding up stock price? by daniel23 · · Score: 5, Funny


    apparently some party is very dedicated to not let the share price drop below 5 USD. So much so that it borders to the comical: over the last week some days resulted in a flat line at 5$ with some minor moves.
    If this was an EKG the nurse would pull the plug and the doc go out have a smoke...

    The stock has a small volume and thusly is open to painting like its jump upwards just before the quarter closed, theories who does all this include sco, microsoft (fullfilling an assumed promise towards bastar) and some large scale investors fighting some internal trouble if their large position goes below the 5$ line.

    --
    605413? Yes, it's a prime.
  10. No, it's an indefinite stay, pending IBM vs. SCO by Animats · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The judge granted AutoZone an indefinite stay, with 90 day reports, pending the resolution of the copyright claims in the SCO vs. IBM case. Just like SCO has in the Red Hat case. All SCO gets to do is try to show that AutoZone should be temoorarily enjoined against something. (But what?) And the judge told SCO's lawyers not to try going on a fishing expedition with discovery.

    This is a big loss for SCO. Any case they bring against a Linux user is going to end up on hold like this. This totally derails their licensing strategy, because their threat to sue is now empty.

    SCO may try harassiing AutoZone with discovery, but it won't work.

    Of course, IBM might win its summary judgement on the copyright issue on August 8th. If that happens, the AutoZone and Red Hat cases will be unstayed. Those parties will presumably file for summary judgement and win..

  11. MP3 of the hearing by petrofsky · · Score: 5, Informative

    A recording of the hearing (30 minutes, 29 MB) is at sco.petrofsky.org/autozone-2004-07-12.mp3 and www.users.cloud9.net/~terrapn/Courtroom%207D%20-%2 012-07-2004.mp3

    I know the first URL won't survive much of a slashdotting, not sure about the second. Please mirror it somewhere better if you're so inclined. (No, this is not a bootleg recording. I obtained it from the clerk on Tuesday.)

    Below are the notes I wrote on Monday after attending the hearing. One correction: at the hearing, the judge did not actually make any order on either motion, but my understanding was that in the aftermath of the hearing he would issue orders denying the motion to transfer venue and granting the motion to stay (with, as an exception to the stay, an opportunity for SCO to move for a preliminary injunction, and to conduct one round of discovery to attempt to support such an injuction).

    No orders have yet been issued, so it's impossible to say *exactly* what they will be. The official minutes of the hearing were written on Wednesday, and are not yet available either, but the heavily abbreviated caption to the minutes is now showing on the court's (subscription-only) docket access site and reads like so:

    dtd 7/12/04: CT Recorder: Lilia Abarca De Carter: Re: Hrg on mtn for stay (#10) & mtn to transfer (#9), ORD case is stayed for 90 dys, Ptys will be allowed disc as to issue of prelim injunct. Cnsl directed to prepare ord for CT sign. cpys dist

    It appears that the court may be neither officially granting nor denying the venue change at this time. It appears that all the activity contemplated at the hearing (the preliminary injunction process and the submitting of letters every 90 days) will occur in the Nevada district, so my understanding is that the venue change has in effect been denied for now, but the court may revisit it when the stay is lifted, without the motion having to be made again.

    Here are my initial notes, posted Monday at finance.messages.yahoo.com

    Subject: Venue change denied, stay mostly granted

    AutoZone's motion for a change of venue (to Tennessee) was denied. The case will stay in Nevada.

    Judge Jones said he will follow Judge Robinson's lead and stay the case indefinitely, like the Red Hat case was, with the parties to send him updates on all the other actions every 90 days.

    However, he will give SCO a chance to file a motion for a preliminary injunction to be in effect during the stay, and he will allow one round of discovery to facilitate such a motion.

    That is, if SCO believes that it will be irreparably harmed during the stay, it may ask for an order that, during the stay, AutoZone is not to engage in whatever the harmful activity is. SCO will have thirty days to propound any discovery requests (interrogatories, document requests, or depositions) that are necessary for its preliminary injunction motion, and AutoZone will have thirty days to respond to them.

    The case will be stayed indefinitely, pending other cases, regardless of the outcome of SCO's request (should it decide to make one) for a preliminary injunction, which would just describe what things (if any) AutoZone needs to refrain from doing until the stay is ended.

    AutoZone asked the judge to reconsider the part about the preliminary injunction, pointing out that SCO has never sought a preliminary injunction (which has quite stringent requirements) against anyone, and that it's very difficult to imagine that SCO could show sufficient grounds for a preliminary injunction, because the only thing SCO wants with respect to the infringing conduct i