Opponents complained Rambus deliberately misled the memory chip industry in the
1990s when new standards were being hammered out.SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Memory chip technology developer
Rambus Inc said on Wednesday a U.S. jury ruled it was not
anti-competitive and did
not violate antitrust laws or commit fraud in its attempt to protect
memory chip patents, sending Rambus shares higher 39 percent.
The verdict in the long-running case was that there was no
anti-competitive behavior by Rambus in its activities with a memory
chip industry standards body, Rambus General Counsel Tom Lavelle said
by telephone.
"This was an important one for us," Lavelle said, adding that it
marks a first step toward Los Altos, California-based Rambus collecting
royalties from other memory chip makers.
Opponent Micron Technology said it planned to appeal the verdict.
Rambus shares jumped $7.25, or 39 percent, to close at $25.86 in
Nasdaq trading. Options of the company were also actively traded
throughout the day as investors speculated that Rambus would prevail.
At issue is whether the developer of a speedy new memory technology
deserved to be paid for its inventions or whether the company misled
memory chip makers.
Opposing Rambus in the suit are three large memory-chip makers,
Hynix Semiconductor, Micron Technology and Nanya Technology. They
claimed Rambus deliberately misled the memory chip industry in the
1990s when new standards were being hammered out.
They claim Rambus failed to disclose it was seeking patents on the
technology that was then being worked into standards for chip
production.
"I think they (the jurors) misapprehended what the standards-setting
organizations are about and the absolute need for good faith," said
Jared Bobrow, an outside attorney for Micron.
Damages had yet to be determined. Wednesday's verdict comes after a
judgment against Hynix in 2006 that resulted in a $133 million award to
Rambus, Lavelle said.
"At this point, that figure will go up," Lavelle said, because he
said Hynix has continued to ship products that infringe Rambus patents.
Rambus has said that memory chip makers on the Joint Electron Device
Engineering Council standards body knew about Rambus' technology and
designed them into their chips.
"Their attempts to invalidate our patents and find us violative of
fraud laws and monopoly laws of the United States have failed," Lavelle
said on Wednesday.
Analysts have estimated that Rambus could eventually collect
royalties of hundreds of millions to billions of dollars over the next
decade.
Wednesday's verdict is but one phase in a number of pending cases between Rambus, Micron and others, Micron said.
(Reporting by Duncan Martell; Editing by Andre Grenon, Gary Hill)
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