Jury In Apple v. Samsung Case May Have to Agree on 700 Points
puddingebola writes "Jurors in the Apple v. Samsung case will receive a 100 page 'instructions to the jury' document. They will also receive a multi-page form with numerous questions to come to a verdict. From the article: 'The document, which both sides have yet to agree on, is still in its draft stage. In Samsung's case, it's 33 questions long, and stretched across 17 pages. For Apple, it's 23 questions spread over nine pages.' Perhaps this is standard in patent trials? Perhaps road sobriety tests will soon include hopping on one foot while juggling?"
As usual, Groklaw has the juicy details on the battle over writing the jury instructions.
Another interesting development is that Judge Koh "unexpectedly reversed a lower magistrate's finding and decided to change the jury instructions with regards to the destruction of evidence from Samsung, changing the wording to imply that both Apple and Samsung should be presumed to have destroyed email evidence that could be relevant to the case." and "Despite the fact that there is no evidence that Apple has withheld any such emails, Koh's decision opts to give similar notices about both companies to the jury rather than instruct them on Samsung's deletions only. Koh could have also opted to not mention the evidence spoilation entirely, but chose instead to infer that Apple must also have deleted emails potentially favorable to Samsung's case. Had the previous instructions stood, it would have painted Samsung as more untrustworthy -- a key point in Apple's barrage of evidence."
With Apple and Samsung CEOs holding last-minute talks, it will be interesting to see how this shakes out.
Juries are relatively unpaid or underpaid, and I can't imagine any of them devoting serious time to so many different points. Although, I guess it depends on one's integrity.
As a side note, and I realize I'll get modded down as off-topic, should jurors get paid minimum wage? Factor in how many hours are being stolen from their lives, and how little that should really cost given the expenseof everything else involved in the judicial process.
for all cases as mad as this very one.
Sent as ripples into the electromagnetic field. No single photon has been harmed in the process.
deleting it is one thing, but shouldn't they have backups of their email server?
From Groklaw: http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20120820111527257
" There was a lot of back and forth about email spoliation. This revolved around a few points:
First of all, when they established the date by which evidence needed preservation, it became a concern of having a double standard on when Samsung and Apple should have started preserving evidence and putting people on litigation hold. For example, they didn't put Steve Jobs on litigation hold until much later than other people. Judge Koh said something to the effect that surely the plaintiff, Apple, knows better than the defendant when litigation is about to commence. So why, then, didn't it put a litigation hold?
Apple seemed to present more evidence of spoliation on Samsung's part. Samsung however made the argument that they had similar evidence of the same on Apple's part. After arguments by Apple's lawyer, in the end, Judge Koh seemed focused particularly about why Steve Jobs wasn't on litigation hold and the company's policy of automatic notices when your email box gets full.
In the final analysis, Judge Koh said that she was going to make a similar adverse inference on both sides but offered not to do it on either. The Apple lawyer consented to that."
As long as Samsung is found guilty I'm happy.
Why?
As far as I'm concerned, it's no skin off my ass who "wins" or "loses".
Apple "wins" then maybe Samsung will just have to figure out how to be more "innovative" (whatever that means these days) with their products and something newer and maybe better comes out - wristwatch touch screen PDA? Eye glasses that do everything the tablet does only with eye movement?
Samsung "wins" then there isn't any of this IP black cloud and the industry is free to come out with less expensive competition.
Then what's Apple going to do if they do win? Go after Google next because of the Nexus 7?
Also if this were Samsung vs. Microsoft, I think folks would be rooting for Samsung.
So, I really don't get why we should care who "wins" or "loses" - unless you're a stockholder in Apple.
I can hop on one foot while juggling when I'm drunk. Just sayin'.
Part of the judicial process of a juror requires you to suspend your own personal knowledge of "case matters", such as things like "If you run FSCK on a mounted volume, you are an idiot!", if pertinent to a case involving lost or destroyed data.
In this case, your knowledge of silicon lithography techniques and practices would have to be suspended, in favor of what the court PRESENTS. Only matters presented as fact in the court can be deliberated by the jury. Naturally, this gets abused heavily by both the prosecutor and the defense.
The intent is that outside influences, like "That makes baby jesus cry!" would be prevented from influencing the impartiality of the jury, and helping to assure the fairness of the trial.
I bet the rendering is cropped.
In Samsung's case, it's 33 questions long, and stretched across 17 pages. For Apple, it's 23 questions spread over nine pages.
Well that's Apple for you. Going for ease of use.
Shai Schticks:"You don't make peace with friends, you make peace with enemies"
You must follow the law as I give it to you whether you agree with it or not.
And even without bringing any constitutional arguments about the role of the jury should be, isn't that sentence in logical contradiction with the following, just 2 lines earlier:
You must not infer from these instructions or from anything I may say or do as indicating that I have an opinion regarding the evidence or what your verdict should be.
I knew that in general judges don't want juries to know about jury nullification, but my understanding was that this was done more via omission (not talking about this particular right of a jury at all), rather than outright lies (spelling out explicitly that this should not be done).
Weird.
...one of the jurors will have read it.
What do I know, I'm just an idiot, right?
Clerk of the court: Your Honour, the jury wuold like to ask a question.
Judge: Very well, clerk of the court. What is the question?
Clerk of the court: It is - and I quote - "Say what?"
I am anarch of all I survey.
of just why a Jury is a Bad Idea®.
To restate the obvious: The jury verdict is meaningless here, the case will be decided on the appellate level. The sole effect of the trial is to transfer large sums from the bank accounts of Apple and Samsung to the accounts of the law firms.
the closing arguements would be given by Lionel Hutz and the Space Chicken lawyer.
I read some comments on Jury duty, It is almost impossible to find a Jury that can actually do what is asked of them. There is no doubt the Jurors will picks sides in a case, few people think for themselves to begin with in this country and now you want them to handle being a Juror? The 100 page instruction by the Judge is amusing, but your allowing both sides to come up with there own questions for the Jury to answer. With Samsung mentioning how Apple apparently stole others innovations, how much longer can Apple continue to go around suing other companies on insignificant patents, without some type of investigation on how they obtained or stole there ideas. Obviously it has been talked about endlessly by slashdot how horrible the Patent system is but someone needs to end this.
Juries can be nailed for a ton of things but are immune from being punished for their verdict. They can have any verdict they want including throwing out the laws in the case or saying the judge is an asshat. The judge can chuck their verdict but can't touch them. Appeals court gets a lot of this stuff so it doesn't matter a whole lot what the jury does.
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