Judge Grills Oracle, DOJ Attorneys in Closing Remarks
Rather than simply listening to each side's closing argument, Judge Vaughan Walker questioned their stances and again expressed doubt about the Justice Department's definition of the "high-function" enterprise software market.
SAN FRANCISCOAfter a four-week trial, U.S. District Judge Vaughn Walker showed on Tuesday that he still had distinct doubts about the Department of Justices definition of the "high-function" enterprise software market. This definition is key to the governments effort to prove that Oracles $7.7 billion bid to buy out PeopleSoft would violate antitrust law. Both sides spent a total of 3 ½ hours presenting their closing arguments in the case that will determine whether Oracle Corp. will be allowed to follow through with its tender offer to purchase all outstanding shares of PeopleSoft Inc. With the trial and closing arguments complete, Oracle and DOJ lawyers estimated that it will be at least three or four weeks before Judge Walker issues his decision.The government called on Walker to block the merger on the grounds that only Oracle, PeopleSoft and SAP AG compete for sales of high-function enterprise software to enterprise customers.
Click here to read about Judge Walkers persistent efforts to obtain a clear definition of the "high-function" enterprise applications software market.
The merger would end the "fierce head-to-head competition" that enables customers to win hefty price discounts and frequent product upgrades, the DOJ argued. Furthermore, the government rejected Oracles claims that other competing companies, including Microsoft Corp. and Lawson Software Inc., would move upmarket to fill the niche that was occupied by PeopleSoft.
Oracle lead attorney Daniel Wall argued that the government failed to prove its "unilateral effects" theory that Oracles buyout of PeopleSoft alone would be anticompetitive and would give Oracle the market power to raise prices to the detriment of customers.
Next Page: PeopleSofts Conway makes an appearance. 

John Pallatto is eWEEK.com's Managing Editor News/West Coast. He directs eWEEK's news coverage in Silicon Valley and throughout the West Coast region. He has more than 35 years of experience as a professional journalist, which began as a report with the Hartford Courant daily newspaper in Connecticut. He was also a member of the founding staff of PC Week in March 1984. Pallatto was PC Week's West Coast bureau chief, a senior editor at Ziff Davis' Internet Computing magazine and the West Coast bureau chief at Internet World magazine.







