Copyright Infringement: $1.3 Billion

 

Patent infringement damage awards often run into the billions. Not to be outdone, a copyright infringement case between Oracle and SAP resulted in a jury award in excess of $1 billion, based on a “hypothetical license.

In 2007, Oracle sued SAP for copying thousands of documents and programs from Oracle’s “Customer Connection” website. After years of litigation, the remaining issue for decision by the jury was the amount of the damages. In November, 2011, the jury returned a verdict in favour of Oracle for $1.3 billion. SAP challenged this award as “unduly speculative” and sought a new trial or a lower damage award. Oracle had the choice of accepting a lower damage award of $272 million or going into a new trial; it opted for a new trial which has now been set for June, 2012.

In Canada, the Copyright Act (under Section 35) allows for damages and part of the profits that the infringer made from the infringement or an election of “statutory damages” under Section 38.1. The concept of a reasonable royalty (a rate that the infringer would have paid to the owner in a hypothetical license negotiation) is a concept that has been considered in patent cases in Canada – for example, in Jay-Lor International Inc. v. Penta Farm Systems Ltd., 2007 FC 358 (CanLII), the court calculated damages after analysis of a “hypothetical negotiation”.  The court in Oracle vs. SAP has shown that such a calculation must be grounded in objective evidence, and where possible, actual benchmarks to prove market value. Subjective or speculative evidence should not be used for such calculations.

Calgary – 07:00 MST

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