Source: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-cand-3_10-cv-03561/USCOURTS-cand-3_10-cv-03561-437/pdf.json

Nature of Suit Code: 830
Nature of Suit: Patent
Cause of Action: 35:271 Patent Infringement

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United States District Court

For the Northern District of California

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IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA

ORACLE AMERICA, INC.,

Plaintiff,

 v.

GOOGLE INC.,

Defendant. /

No. C 10-03561 WHA

ORDER DENYING RENEWED

MOTION FOR JUDGMENT

AS A MATTER OF LAW AND

MOTION FOR A NEW TRIAL

INTRODUCTION

In this copyright infringement action, the jury found the accused infringement

constituted fair use. The copyright owner now renews its motion for judgment as a matter of

law and separately moves for a new trial. For the reasons stated below, both motions are

DENIED.

STATEMENT

The history of this case appears earlier (Dkt. No. 1988). In brief, Oracle America, Inc.,

formerly Sun Microsystems, Inc., has sued Google Inc. for copyright infringement with respect

to Google’s “reimplementation” of certain API packages in copyrighted Java 2 Standard Edition

Versions 1.4 and 5. Following remand from the Federal Circuit, this action proceeded to a

second jury trial on fair use, infringement otherwise having been established in the first trial as

to certain uses. A pretrial order divided the second trial into phases. Phase one addressed

defendant Google’s fair use defense. Had the jury found for Oracle during phase one, the same

jury would have determined willfulness and monetary remedies in phase two. A third phase,

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 Oracle’s argument that it is entitled to a new trial because the verdict was against the weight of the

evidence, which incorporates by reference its brief on the motion for judgment as a matter of law, fails for the

same reason.

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before the judge only, would have determined whether Oracle deserved equitable remedies,

including whether Google had equitable defenses. 

In phase one, the ten-person jury returned a unanimous verdict finding that Google had

carried its burden on the defense of fair use. A comprehensive order denied both sides’ motions

for judgment as a matter of law, so judgment was entered in Google’s favor (Dkt. No. 1988).

Oracle now repeats its motion for judgment, adding a further motion for a new trial

under Rule 59. This order follows full briefing, oral argument, and supplemental declarations

addressing discovery issues raised in support of a new trial request.

ANALYSIS

1. RENEWED MOTION FOR JUDGMENT AS A MATTER OF LAW.

Oracle’s new Rule 50 motion is denied for the same reasons as its old one (Dkt. No.

1988).1

2. MOTION FOR A NEW TRIAL.

Pursuant to Rule 59(a)(1)(A), a court may grant a new trial “for any reason for which a

new trial has heretofore been granted in an action at law.” Rule 61 provides that “no error in

admitting or excluding evidence” constitutes a ground for granting a new trial “unless justice so

requires.” A district court has broad discretion in deciding whether to admit or exclude

evidence. Ruvalcaba v. City of Los Angeles, 64 F.3d 1323, 1328 (9th Cir. 1995). A district

court also has broad discretion in deciding whether to bifurcate a trial. See Danjaq LLC v. Sony

Corp., 263 F.3d 942, 961–62 (9th Cir. 2001). To warrant a new trial on these grounds, the

movant must show that the Court’s rulings constituted an abuse of discretion plus caused it

substantial prejudice.

Oracle’s motion for a new trial challenges several discretionary decisions made at trial. 

Oracle’s primary argument, however, is that Google perpetrated discovery-concealment

misconduct. The charged misconduct, Oracle says, rates as a “game changer.” For important

context, however, this order first addresses Oracle’s related contention that the Court abused its

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discretion in limiting the trial to Android as used in smartphones and tablets, postponing all

other uses to later trials.

A. New Device Categories and Scope of Trial.

The original trial in 2010 covered Android versions called 1.0, 1.1, Cupcake, Donut,

Eclair, and Froyo, as used in smartphones and tablets. The original jury found those versions

infringed but deadlocked over fair use. On remand, the issue arose whether to retry that same

case taking the infringement verdict as a given and postponing later developments to a future

trial versus whether to expand the retrial to include post-2010 developments, a question that

came into focus as follows.

After the remand, Oracle sought leave to file a supplemental complaint. Oracle’s

eventual motion for leave to file a supplemental complaint drew no opposition, and the motion

was granted. The supplemental complaint identified six further versions of Android released

since the original complaint. It further alleged that Google had implemented Android in various

new device categories, including automobiles, wristwatches, televisions, and household

appliances (Dkt. No. 1292).

Disagreement surfaced when the parties served their new expert reports. Oracle’s

expert reports evaluated Google’s alleged use of new API packages from Java 2 Standard

Edition Versions 6 and 7. But those versions had never been asserted in any operative pleading,

including even the supplemental complaint. Only versions 1.4 and 5 had been asserted. Only

versions 1.4 and 5 had been presented to the original jury and found to have been infringed. 

Google moved to strike the overreaching passages of Oracle’s expert reports. This led to a

hearing that featured the peril of the retrial spinning out of control via a piling on of everexpanding “updating” issues. The Court expressed concern over the ever-mounting prolixity of

this case and the need for a cutoff of new device implementations to be tried (without prejudice

to trying the rest later). The Court observed (Dkt. No. 1470 at 9–10):

There’s a much cleaner way to deal with this. We can roll back the

clock to the moment that that [earlier] trial took place, and try it on

that set of facts and the circumstances then. And then all these

new products by [Oracle] and these new products by Google

would not be in play.

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And what that means is, over there on the Google side, that you’re

going to have to face another lawsuit downstream . . . .

In other words, the practical approach remained retrying the very trial revived by the Federal

Circuit, complicated as it already was, preserving the infringement verdict, and saving for a

later day all of the subsequent developments.

Nevertheless, the retrial expanded in two important ways. First, in light of Google’s

stipulation that the earlier jury’s finding of infringement should apply to all later versions of

Android up through Lollipop, a pretrial order eventually held that our retrial would cover those

versions. A later stipulation included Marshmallow as well, adding a total of seven new major

releases of Android to the original six. The second expansion was to include the post-2010 time

period covered by these versions. 

These expansions, by themselves, led to a vast inflation of Oracle’s claimed recovery. 

At the first trial, Oracle’s claim for monetary remedies clocked in at much less than a billion

dollars, but now they rose to nine billion. The vast inflation flowed from the longer time period

of sales of smartphones and tablets as well as the longer list of implicated versions of Android. 

The vast inflation resulted even though the uses on trial for the fair use defense remained, as

before, smartphones and tablets. 

The trial was not, however, expanded to include certain other more recent uses like

Android TV, Android Auto, Android Wear, or Brillo. They presented a messier problem and

were excluded from the scope of the upcoming trial (without prejudice to a later trial to cover

them). Notably, the parties couldn’t agree on whether the original verdict of infringement

would have covered those uses (since they arose after the original verdict, and no evidence on

them was presented at the original trial). Had those uses been included in the retrial, Oracle

would have had the burden, Google urged, to prove that those uses infringed, rather than

relying, as Oracle wished to do, solely on the original verdict of infringement and imposing on

Google the burden to prove fair use. Oracle offered to move for summary judgment to establish

that the original finding of infringement should be extended to these new implementations, but

by the time of that offer, there wasn’t sufficient time for the Court to pursue that alternative

while sorting out the superabundancy of pretrial issues.

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To repeat, all agree that under the pretrial orders, Oracle remained (and remains) free to

pursue its claims for infringement arising from Google’s implementations of Android in devices

other than smartphones and tablets in a separate proceeding and trial.

The scope-of-trial issue surfaced in a second way. Oracle sought to introduce evidence

of the excluded device categories at trial as part of its evidence of market harm under the

fourth fair use factor. An order in limine, however, held that the only uses set for trial were

smartphones and tablets (again without prejudice to a separate future trial as to other uses)

(Dkt. No. 1781). 

In its new trial motion, Oracle now argues that it was error to limit the device uses in

play to smartphones and tablets. We should have had one mega-trial on all uses, it urges. This,

however, ignores the fact that Oracle’s earlier win on infringement in 2010 — the same win it

wished to take as a given without relitigation — concerned only smartphones and tablets. And,

it ignores the obvious — one use might be a fair use but another use might not, and the four

statutory factors are to be applied on a use-by-use basis. Significantly, the language of Section

107(4) of Title 17 of the United States Code directs us to consider “the effect of the use upon

the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work.” Oracle cites no authority

whatsoever for the proposition that all uses must stand or fall together under the fair use test of

Section 107.

True, the fourth fair use factor must consider “whether unrestricted and widespread

conduct of the sort engaged in by the defendant would result in a substantially adverse impact

on the potential market for the original.” Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc., 510 U.S. 569,

590 (1994). The concern with widespread use, however, is not whether uses distinct from the

accused uses — each of which must be subject to distinct transformativeness analyses — might

harm the market for the copyrighted works. Rather, the concern is whether a use of the same

sort, if multiplied via use by others, would cause market harm, even though the actual use by

the infringer caused only minimal harm. That is not our case. Again, our trial concerned two

very important uses — smartphones and tablets — uses that implicated many billions of dollars. 

All other uses remained open for litigation in further trials.

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Oracle relies on decisions from our court of appeals holding that supplementation of a

complaint “is favored.” E.g., Planned Parenthood of Southern Arizona v. Neely, 130 F.3d 400,

402 (9th Cir. 1997). It argues that postponing its claims relating to devices other than

smartphones and tablets contravened the purpose of “promot[ing] as complete an adjudication

of the dispute between the parties as is possible.” LaSalvia v. United Dairymen, 804 F.2d 1113,

1119 (9th Cir. 1986). Oracle provides a five-page description of the various markets such as

automobiles, healthcare devices, “Internet of Things,” appliances, and machine-to-machine

communication — all involving vastly different technology and functionality from smartphones

and tablets — in which Oracle has allegedly suffered harm due to Google’s Android-related

offerings. 

Allowing complaints to be supplemented is favored, but a district judge still has a

separate responsibility to manage complex cases, including to decide which issues should be

tried in which trial. Good reasons rooted in case and trial management favored the eventual

scope of our trial.

Oracle itself, it must be said, successfully excluded at least one post-2010 development

that would have helped Google. Specifically, a pretrial ruling obtained by Oracle excluded

evidence tendered by Google with respect to Android Nougat. Significantly, this evidence

would have shown that (back in 2008) all of the accused APIs could simply have been taken

from OpenJDK, Sun’s own open-source version of Java, apparently in full compliance with the

open-source license. Put differently, Sun itself had given away Java (including all of the lines

of code in suit) in 2008 via its open-source OpenJDK. In 2015, Google used OpenJDK to

reimplement the Java APIs for the latest release of Android, which it called Nougat. Google

wished to use this evidence under the fourth fair use factor to show that its infringement did no

more market harm than Sun itself had already invited via its own OpenJDK release. Despite its

importance, the Court excluded this development because it had not been presented by Google

in time for effective rebuttal by Oracle. This exclusion was a major win for Oracle in the weeks

leading up to trial.

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 After the verdict, the Court invited counsel to propose scheduling for exactly such a trial on the

alleged new and different uses, but both sides preferred to enter a final judgment and proceed to appeals with

the understanding that the alleged new and different uses were still open for future lawsuits (Dkt. Nos.

2049–50).

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Oracle also argues that the first trial was not expressly limited to smartphones and

tablets, so it was inappropriate to impose that limitation for the retrial. This isn’t correct. In

2012, at our first trial, Oracle presented no evidence of any uses beyond smartphones and

tablets. The other alleged uses lay in the future and were not considered by our first jury. 

Google simply had not yet implemented any aspect of Android on any of the new devices at that

time. 

After considerable deliberation, the Court exercised its discretion to limit the scope of

our trial to address the issue of whether the uses of the copyrighted materials considered at the

first trial — smartphones and tablets — including all thirteen versions of Android enabling

those uses were fair or not, saving for a future trial new and different uses. In this way, Oracle

was allowed to take unquestioned advantage of the infringement verdict in the first trial while

also taking full advantage of the subsequent revenue derived from those very device

implementations — smartphones and tablets. That limitation also protected our second jury

from needing to absorb ever greater complexity in technology and the business models of new

and different uses. Oracle remains free to pursue those new and later uses in a future lawsuit,

but it is not entitled to a new trial as to smartphones and tablets.2

B. The Charge of Discovery Misconduct and ARC++.

With the benefit of the foregoing history of the smartphones and tablets limitation, we

turn to Oracle’s charge of discovery misconduct. This charge is not anchored in any claimed

error by the judge but is anchored in claimed misconduct by Google and its counsel.

At both trials, Google argued that Android’s use of the copyrighted lines of code

qualified as “transformative” (under the first fair use factor) because Java had been designed

for desktops and laptops whereas Android transformed the code at issue to work in the then

newly-emerging world of smartphones and tablets. Thus, Google drew a significant distinction

between desktops and laptops (Java) and smartphones and tablets (Android). Oracle now

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accuses Google of withholding evidence in discovery that allegedly would have shown that

Google was, by the close of our retrial, expecting soon to implement Android on desktops and

laptops too. This argument will now be set out in detail. 

Throughout the supplemental discovery period following the remand, Oracle

sought discovery into all Google products that incorporated the copyrighted lines at issue. 

In response, Google identified its App Runtime for Chrome (“ARC”), which enabled laptops

and desktops running Google’s computer operating system, Chrome OS, to run certain

Android applications. Chrome OS was and remains a different operating system from Android

(Lin Dep. at 14–19, 107–09). ARC operated on top of Chrome OS and offered all of the

Android APIs reimplemented from the Java code at issue. A related project, ARC Welder,

enabled Android app developers to repackage the code in their apps for use on Chrome OS

devices via ARC. 

One of Oracle’s own technical experts, Robert Zeidman, addressed ARC in detail in his

opening report (Zeidman Rep. ¶¶ 126–43). Oracle’s damages expert, James Malackowski,

opined in his opening report that Google’s release of ARC and ARC Welder and the

availability of some Android functionality on Chrome OS devices “means Google is now using

Android to occupy the original, traditional market of the Java Platform” (Malackowski Rep.

¶ 172). Oracle, however, never sought to introduce any of the evidence on which these

comments were based (or to introduce the expert testimony). Oracle does not accuse anyone of

misconduct as to ARC, but ARC supplies relevant background.

Now we come to the crux of the matter. In 2015, Google began a new project, which it

internally called “ARC++.” Among the goals of ARC++ was to “[p]rovide Chrome OS users

with Play Android apps on Chrome OS without developer action” (Anderson Decl., Exh. 7 at

*785). That is, Google intended for ARC++ to make the “entire Android app ecosystem”

available on Chrome OS devices, so that Android apps would “appear alongside Chrome apps”

in the Chrome OS program menu (id., Exh. 8 at *404, Exh. 10 at *396). With ARC++, Google

planned to run “Android in an isolated container inside Chrome OS,” and “[i]nside the

container should be effectively another Linux environment, similar to on an actual device”

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(id., Exh. 9 at *417). That is, ARC++ would run an isolated instance of Android (with all of

Android’s public APIs, including those reimplemented from Java) in order to allow users to

run all Android apps on Chrome OS devices. Google planned to include its “Play Store” —

Google’s app wherein users could purchase and download other Android apps — as part of

ARC++ to facilitate access to those apps.

In 2015, Google produced to Oracle at least nine documents relating to ARC++ setting

forth the information in the preceding paragraph (along with more extensive technical details)

and tracking the development of the project (Anderson Decl. ¶¶ 16–20, Exhs. 6–14). This is a

key fact in resolving the accusation at hand.

Our trial began on May 9, 2016. Our last day of evidence was May 19, which

happened also to be the second day of Google’s annual developer conference. On that day,

Google announced via a blog post that it would make all Android apps available for use on

Chrome OS devices via the Play Store (id., Exh. 15). Although the announcement did not refer

to this new feature as ARC++ (no name was given), it reflected the same goals and technical

details as the ARC++ project. The announcement stated the feature would first roll out on the

experimental developer channel, though over time it would become generally available. The

same day at the developer conference, Google demonstrated the use of the Play Store with

several Android apps on Chrome OS devices. The presenters acknowledged the technical

limitations of the earlier ARC, stating that Google was “building a whole new platform to run

Android apps on Chromebooks,” i.e., on laptops and desktops (Bush Decl., Exh. J at 3:30). 

One presenter explained that the new feature ran Android “directly on top of the Linux kernel

[of Chrome OS].” Users could “run all of Android Marshmallow within Chrome OS. This

includes the Google Play Store” (id. at 7:10).

In short, the announcement indicated that the full functionality of Android would soon

be working on desktops and laptops, not just on smartphones and tablets. 

Oracle now contends that Google’s failure to supplement several responses to

interrogatories, requests for admission, and requests for production of documents, as well as

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the deposition testimony of two witnesses to reflect developments in the ARC++ project

constituted discovery misconduct warranting a new trial. 

 “The test to be applied when discovery misconduct is alleged in a Rule 59 motion must

be borrowed from cases interpreting Rule 60(b)(3) . . . .” Jones v. Aero/Chem Corp., 921 F.2d

875 (9th Cir. 1990). Rule 60(b)(3) provides for relief from judgment for “fraud (whether

previously called intrinsic or extrinsic), misrepresentation, or misconduct by an opposing

party . . . .” To establish misconduct under Rule 60(b)(3), a moving party must:

(1) prove by clear and convincing evidence that the verdict was

obtained through fraud, misrepresentation, or other misconduct.

(2) establish that the conduct complained of prevented the losing

party from fully and fairly presenting his case or defense. 

Although when the case involves the withholding of information

called for by discovery, the party need not establish that the result

in the case would be altered.

Ibid. (quoting Bunch v. United States, 680 1271, 1283 (9th Cir. 1982)). A movant need not

show that there would have been a different outcome without the alleged misconduct but need

only demonstrate “‘substantial interference’ by showing ‘the material’s likely worth as trial

evidence or by elucidating its value as a tool for obtaining meaningful discovery.’” Ibid.

(quoting Anderson v. Cryovac, Inc., 862 F.2d 910 (1st Cir. 1988)). 

Our court of appeals has recognized a “presumption of substantial interference if [the

moving party] can demonstrate the misconduct was sufficiently knowing, deliberate or

intentional.” Ibid. Although Jones did not expressly lay out the framework for applying that

presumption, it stated that Anderson, a decision from the First Circuit, “summarized the

applicable standards and burdens of proof.” Ibid. Anderson, 862 F.2d at 925, held that the

presumption of substantial interference “may be refuted by clear and convincing evidence

demonstrating that the withheld material was in fact inconsequential.”

The oral argument on Oracle’s motion for a new trial, which lasted two hours, focused

almost exclusively on Oracle’s “game changer” allegation of discovery misconduct. Following

the hearing, counsel for both sides were ordered to file sworn declarations detailing Oracle’s

discovery requests on this point and Google’s responses. After reviewing the parties’

submissions, the Court called for sworn replies.

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 Oracle contends that Google should have produced source code for the ARC++ project in response to

a request for source code that “can be used to facilitate use of Android” on devices other than smartphones and

tablets or that it should have identified ARC++ in an interrogatory seeking identification of “any software based

on or derived from” Android that incorporated the 37 reimplemented Java API packages, among other similar

requests. Google objected to vague language in those requests, and it was not clear to Google whether ARC++,

which was in its early stages of development, would have been responsive to requests for information about

“products,” “software,” or versions that were “developed or released,” all of which are directed to completed

projects. Indeed, the parties met and conferred about discovery responses and discussed Google’s objections to

Oracle’s vague references to efforts to “port Android to desktop,” but Oracle did not follow up on Google’s

objections (Anderson Decl. ¶¶ 30–39). 

11

Throughout the briefing and argument on this motion, Oracle left the distinct

impression — more accurately distinct misimpression — that Google had stonewalled and had

completely concealed the ARC++ project. This was an unfair argument.

 In fact, Google timely produced at least nine documents discussing the goals and

technical details of ARC++ and did so back in 2015, at least five months before trial. Counsel

for Oracle now acknowledges their legal team never reviewed those documents until the

supplemental briefing on this motion (Hurst Reply Decl. ¶ 12). The Court is disappointed that

Oracle fostered this impression that no discovery had been timely provided on the ARC++

project eventually announced on May 19.3

Rule 26(e) requires a party to supplement discovery responses in a timely manner only

“if the additional or corrective information has not otherwise been made known to the other

parties during the discovery process or in writing” (or if otherwise ordered by the Court). This

creates a “‘duty to supplement,’ not a right.” Luke v. Fam. Care and Urgent Med. Clinics, 323

Fed. Appx. 496, 500 (9th Cir. 2009). Nevertheless, Google had no duty to supplement

responses with new information that had already been disclosed in the ARC++ documents

already produced.

Oracle should have known that items produced in response to its own document

requests potentially contained information that supplemented Google’s earlier written

discovery responses. Oracle’s failure to review the ARC++ documents is its own fault.

It’s important, most of all, to step back and remember the scope of our trial. 

Significantly, any evidence relating to implementations of Android on devices other than

smartphones and tablets fell outside the scope of our trial, which was limited to uses on

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smartphones and tablets. Within the scope of our trial, therefore, Google fairly argued that

Android was transformative because it took the declaring code in question, which had been

designed for desktops and laptops, and reimplemented it for use in a new context, smartphones

and tablets. It may well be true that the use of the copyrighted APIs in ARC++ (or any other

later use) will not qualify as a fair use, but that will not and does not mean that Google’s

argument on transformative use as to the original uses on trial (smartphones and tablets) was

improper. That Oracle failed to detect the ARC++ documents in its possession had no

consequence within the defined scope of our trial.

Google committed a “fraud on the court,” Oracle contends, by eliciting testimony that

Android had not caused any harm to the market for the copyrighted works because it was not

used on laptops and desktops. As stated, however, this remained a fair argument so long as the

trial was focused, as it was, on the original uses — smartphones and tablets — and it remained

a fair argument for the time period on trial (the blog announcement came later). The testimony

and argument in question fell within the defined scope of our trial. Had Oracle brought up

ARC or ARC++, the witnesses would plainly have clarified that their testimony related to the

accused uses on trial.

Oracle further notes that the order denying its motion for judgment as a matter of law

held that the jury could reasonably have found that “Android caused no harm to the market for

the copyrighted works, which were for desktop and laptop computers” (Dkt. No. 1988 at 17). 

Again, “Android” in that context plainly referred to the accused original implementations of

Android within the defined scope of our trial. 

Google’s launch of the full Android system on Chrome OS also remains, even now, in

preliminary stages, available only to developers and on a limited set of devices. Oracle

already had evidence of ARC++, but didn’t realize it. Thus, to the extent Google’s recent

announcement had any value at our trial (or in discovery), Oracle already had evidence of the

same project (and its predecessor), and it passed on any opportunity to introduce that evidence.

Nor would evidence of ARC++ have caused any interference relating to the Court’s

rulings limiting the scope of the trial. Indeed, in the briefing and argument on the scope of

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 Out of caution, this order makes clear that the test under Rule 59 is “substantial interference,” not

“game changer.” The phrase “game changer” is Oracle’s phrase, even if it expresses a less favorable test than

here applicable. This order applies the correct test, “substantial interference.”

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trial, Oracle never once mentioned ARC, ARC++, or any other use on laptop and desktop

computers (neither did Google) (Dkt. Nos. 1559, 1612-3, 1643, 1682). This was so even

though Oracle Expert Malackowski had already opined that the release of ARC “means Google

is now using Android to occupy the original, traditional market of the Java Platform”

(Malackowski Rep. ¶ 172). Instead, at oral argument, Attorney Lisa Simpson for Oracle

identified “Android Auto” (not ARC or ARC++) as the most important implementation (to

Oracle) that Oracle wished to add (Dkt. No. 1682, Tr. at 123). Oracle contends that the

technical differences between ARC and ARC++ meant the latter presented a more compelling

narrative both in pretrial motion practice and at trial, but both projects made the same 37

reimplemented Java API packages available for use on Chrome OS; any differences between

ARC and ARC++ remained peripheral to Oracle’s interest in the projects. 

Oracle’s purported “game changer” would not have changed anything at all, because

the scope of the “game” was smartphones and tablets, postponing new and later uses to a later

contest. ARC++ was not yet on trial. Thus, any failure to produce such evidence could not

have substantially interfered with Oracle’s preparation for our trial. On the contrary, it clearly

and convincingly would have been inconsequential.4

Oracle insists on taking depositions and document discovery into Google’s failure to

supplement all discovery responses to reflect the imminent release of a developer version of

ARC++ and to present its findings at an evidentiary hearing. Oracle cites Jones v. Aero/Chem

Corp., 921 F.2d 875 (9th Cir. 1990), for the proposition that failure to hold an evidentiary

hearing on this issue would be reversible error. This type of fishing expedition will not be

allowed, and Jones in no way requires such a course.

In Jones, two days after a jury found there had been no defect in the defendants’

product, a third-party defendant produced a letter it received from one of the primary

defendants nearly a decade earlier indicating that the primary defendant had known of the

claimed defect and had explored remedial measures. The plaintiff moved for a new trial,

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claiming, inter alia, that the defendants had engaged in prejudicial discovery misconduct by

withholding the correspondence. “At the hearing on the motion [for a new trial], the district

court indicated it might later hold a hearing to determine whether [the] failure to produce the

documents involved misconduct.” Id. at 877.

Our court of appeals held that the district court improperly decided the motion based on

whether the withheld evidence would have resulted in a “different outcome,” rather than

whether it caused “substantial interference,” as required by decisions interpreting Rule

60(b)(3). The failure to hold a separate “hearing” — the court of appeals never referenced an

“evidentiary hearing,” contrary to Oracle — on the issue was a background circumstance. The

actual error was in the standard applied, not the procedure for applying that standard. Notably,

the court of appeals did not even require the district court to hold a subsequent hearing, but

rather directed it to hold “appropriate proceedings to determine” whether discovery misconduct

had occurred according to the proper standard.

In our case, the Court did hold “appropriate proceedings” and did hold a hearing at

which the proper standard — Rule 60(b)(3) — was considered, and it further required sworn

statements from counsel for both sides and then invited and considered sworn replies, all

detailing the discovery conduct at issue. After reviewing many pages and exhibits, the Court

finds that no misconduct has been shown (or would likely be shown even with the benefit of a

fishing expedition). Nor could any omission of evidence relating to ARC++ have interfered

with Oracle’s case at all, much less substantially. Contrary to Oracle, ARC++ documents were

in fact timely produced. They laid out the basic goals and technical details of the very product

referenced on May 19. Since Oracle had that information, there was no need to supplement the

written discovery to the extent evidence of ARC++ was responsive at all. Moreover, any

further disclosure of ARC++ would have been of no consequence in Oracle’s preparation for

our trial or its presentation at trial, which later became limited in scope to smartphones and

tablets. This ground for a new trial is rejected.

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C. Stefano Mazzocchi.

Oracle next contends that a new trial is warranted due to the exclusion of minor

evidence and testimony from Stefano Mazzocchi, a member of the board of directors of the

Apache Software Foundation in 2008. Back then, Mazzocchi volunteered as a mentor

overseeing the Apache Harmony Project and as a member of its Project Management

Committee, which sought to create and offer an open-source reimplementation of the Java API. 

Google eventually used portions of the Harmony project in its reimplementation of 37 Java

API packages in Android. Later on, Mazzocchi went to work for Google, but at the relevant

time, he worked for neither side.

At our trial, Google presented evidence first (having the burden of proof), but it did not

call Mazzocchi as a witness. Nevertheless, Google otherwise introduced evidence of Harmony

to support its position that reimplementation of APIs without licenses flowered in the industry. 

Oracle never properly designated Mazzocchi as a trial witness under Rule 26(a). 

Oracle wished to lay before the jury an email that Mazzocchi had sent in April 2008 during the

development of Apache Harmony. (In fact, the exhibit was an email from the vice president of

legal affairs at Apache and incorporated and responded to an email from Mazzocchi.) Despite

Oracle’s Rule 26 violation, the Court acquiesced in allowing Oracle to present almost

everything it wished to present, including Mazzocchi and the email, save and except for two

minor items.

Mazzocchi’s email went to a mailing list of members of Apache (TX 5046). It

expressed concern that Apache could not distribute Harmony without a license from Sun, even

with new implementing code, because “the copyright on the API is real and hard to ignore.” 

Mazzocchi added, “[s]o, we are, in fact, infringing on the spec lead copyright if we distribute

something that has not passed the TCK and *we know that*.” Our jury heard Mazzocchi’s

testimony regarding this email, and the entire email itself, including the quotations above, went

into evidence, subject to one redaction.

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That redaction is now the basis for Oracle’s first assignment of error. Its second is that

Oracle was precluded from eliciting testimony that Mazzocchi worked for Google at the time

of the trial, though he had worked elsewhere when he sent the email.

(i) Redaction.

The Court held that Mazzocchi could testify and that his emails would be admitted,

over Google’s objection, subject to redaction of the following sentence in the email (TX 5046):

This makes us *already* doing illegal things (in fact, Android

using Harmony is illegal as well).

An exchange regarding that redaction occurred (outside the presence of the jury) as follows

(Tr. at 1588):

THE COURT: However, the one sentence that I think is too

inflammatory and without foundation and should come out is the

one sentence that says “This makes us *already* doing illegal

things (in fact, Android using Harmony code is illegal as well).” 

That should not be used. But the two paragraphs that I think

you’re more interested in, they can be used. 

So that one sentence about “This makes us *already* doing illegal

things (in fact, Android using Harmony code is illegal as well)”

that should be deleted or at least redacted.

MS. HURST (for Oracle): We’ll redact that, Your Honor.

Although, as just shown, Oracle’s counsel readily accepted that redaction and the email,

as redacted, went before the jury, Oracle later — only after Mazzocchi had finished his

testimony and had been excused — requested that the Court remove the redaction (Dkt. No.

1925). This was denied, a denial that forms a basis for the new trial motion.

Oracle now argues that sufficient foundation existed because Mazzocchi had

“corresponded with the Apache Foundation’s VP of Legal Affairs regarding legal issues related

to use of copyrighted Java APIs in the Harmony Project” (Pl.’s Mtn. at 16) (citing Tr. at

1712–13). 

The so-called “correspondence” with the lawyer, it turns out, went into evidence as the

thread leading up to the “Mazzocchi email” (TX 5046; Tr. at 1715). So, whatever foundation

existed for the redacted sentence made its way to the jury anyway. (Perhaps this hearsay from

the lawyer shouldn’t have been admissible at all, but no objection on that ground was made.)

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Significantly, nowhere in any passage written by any lawyer did anything come close to

what Mazzocchi said in the redacted sentence. So, the thread itself supplied inadequate

foundation. Even if Mazzocchi had consulted a lawyer beyond the thread itself (and no such

consultation was ever intimated), Mazzocchi himself was not a lawyer, so merely repeating

what some lawyer might have told him would have been hearsay (within hearsay).

Indeed, Mazzocchi’s testimony before the jury demonstrated that his legal conclusion

was utterly without qualification (Tr. at 1727–28):

[MR. KWUN (for Google)]. So thinking back to April of 2008,

what, if anything, did you know about fair use in copyright law?

A. I don’t recall knowing anything about that.

Q. Did you know what the legal standard is for fair use?

A. I don’t — didn’t and still don’t.

Q. After the email exchange with Mr. Ruby, did you resign as

a member from the Apache Software Foundation?

A. No.

Q. And what, if anything, do you conclude from the fact that

you did not resign your membership after that email?

A. I really cared about my involvement in Apache. I mean,

this was all volunteer work, and I really wanted the foundation to

do the right thing for protection of the membership and also for

protection of the users.

I would have left slamming the door if I thought that what the

foundation was doing was causing harm or doing any illegal

things.

So since I wrote these email [sic], I must have changed my mind,

something must have changed my mind whether that was the case. 

And I didn’t leave.

Notwithstanding Mazzocchi’s lack of training in the law, the Court allowed Oracle to make hay

with “the copyright on the API is real and hard to ignore” and that releasing Harmony’s

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 The Court similarly restricted Google from eliciting legal conclusions from former Sun CEO,

Jonathan Schwartz, about whether Sun had any legal claim against Google. After his testimony veered too close

to that conclusion, the Court issued a corrective instruction and allowed Oracle to question Schwartz about a

document that Oracle had improperly clawed back as privileged (Tr. at 508–10, 526). (Schwartz could not

recall the document, so it was not admitted into evidence.)

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reimplementation of the Java API code without passing the compatibility test would have

constituted “infringing on the spec lead.” 5

 

It is worth stressing that the email made no mention of “fair use.” It had nothing to do

with the fair use issue our jury had to decide. Mazzocchi admitted that he knew nothing about

fair use. The Court had already told the jury that Android infringed the copyright subject only

to the fair use defense, so a good case existed for excluding the entire email. Nevertheless,

virtually all of it came in.

Nor did Mazzocchi’s testimony, elicited by Google, that he “would have left slamming

the door [at Apache] if [he] thought that what the foundation was doing was causing harm or

doing any illegal things” open the door to using the redaction. Mazzocchi’s testimony already

responded to his understanding that Apache was infringing on Oracle’s copyright, and by noting

that something “changed [his] mind,” he acknowledged that his email reflected initial concern

about the legality of Apache’s work anyway. Admission of the redaction would have been

cumulative.

(ii) Mazzocchi’s Employment.

Oracle also contends that it should have been permitted to cross-examine Mazzocchi

based on his alleged bias as a current employee of Google. When the Court initially allowed

Oracle, despite its inadequate Rule 26 disclosure and over Google’s strenuous objection, to call

Mazzocchi as a witness, the Court did so to allow presentation of his views when he worked for

Apache in 2008 and ruled as follows (Tr. at 1589):

And don’t bring up that he works at Google now unless bias

becomes a problem. If it appears he’s been coached to say things

that may not be true, possibly then I would allow you to bring up

that he works for Google and that Google — he has met with the

lawyers and so forth. But for the time being, you should steer clear

of that. And you may treat him as an adverse witness.

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During direct examination before the jury, and without seeking leave to address the issue,

counsel for Oracle asked Mazzocchi (after he denied recollection of the email containing the

“illegal things statement”) whether he had met with Google’s trial lawyers, which he confirmed

he had (Tr. at 1724). The Court allowed the questions over Google’s objection. 

On cross-examination by Google, as stated, Mazzocchi testified that following the email

addressing the issue of Oracle’s copyright in the Java APIs with regard to Harmony “something

must have changed my mind whether that was the case” (Tr. at 1727). When Google passed the

witness back for redirect, Oracle requested a sidebar to be allowed to elicit the fact that

Mazzocchi became employed at Google the following year, in order to suggest it was his later

employment with Google that had “changed his mind” about the legal status of the Apache

Harmony project. 

At the sidebar, the Court reviewed Mazzocchi’s testimony and concluded that he testified

that he would have left Apache sooner than 2009 if he had believed it had been doing something

illegal, while he didn’t begin his employment with Google until 2010. Contrary to Oracle,

Mazzocchi’s testimony suggested that something changed his mind before he began working

at Google. 

Even so, Oracle was able to offer evidence of Mazzocchi’s purported bias by eliciting

testimony that Mazzocchi spoke with Google’s counsel before testifying (Tr. at 1724). Thus, the

probative value of evidence of Mazzocchi’s then-current employment was minimal, particularly

in light of the substantial risk that the jury would mistakenly ascribe Mazzocchi’s state of mind

while at Apache to Google. (Indeed, Oracle sought to ascribe Mazzocchi’s shift in his state of

mind to Google, although it predated his employment with Google.)

In the larger picture, the jury heard evidence, pro and con, from both Sun (Oracle) and

Google personnel concerning the extent to which reimplementation of APIs occurred in the

industry. In view of this sea of evidence, the Mazzocchi email was cumulative. Nevertheless,

virtually all of the email came into evidence, including his statement that reimplementing the

Java API in particular constituted infringement of the copyright. 

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Thus, Oracle’s contention that it is entitled to a new trial on the basis of the excluded

evidence relating to Mazzocchi is rejected.

D. European Commission Response.

Oracle next contends that the Court improperly excluded a document containing

responses to questions posed by the European Commission in connection with its 2009 review of

Oracle’s acquisition of Sun. The question called for an explanation of “the conflict between Sun

and Google with regard to Google’s Android” (TX 5295 at 39). Oracle sought to admit its

response, which read, “Sun believes that the Dalvic [sic] virtual machine plus class libraries,

which together constitute Android runtime environment, are an unauthorized derivative work of

Java SE” (ibid.). Oracle wished to lay this response before the jury to meet testimony by Sun’s

former CEO, Jonathan Schwartz, that Sun had welcomed Google’s then-recent announcement of

Android as part of the Java community, and that industry reimplementations of the Java API had

promoted rather than hindered Sun’s business plan.

To avoid the self-serving hearsay problem, Oracle attempted to lay foundation for the

response through the testimony of its CEO, Safra Catz, who oversaw the acquisition and testified

that Sun (not Oracle) had supplied the answer. Out of the presence of the jury, the Court stated it

would consider allowing Oracle to admit the response if it had originated with Sun rather than

Oracle (Tr. at 1314). 

The next morning, out of the presence of the jury, Oracle proffered several drafts of the

response to the European Commission. These drafts purportedly traced earlier versions of the

response. They originated from Sun’s in-house intellectual property counsel. Google protested

that these drafts had long been withheld from Google as privileged until the previous night, so

that it had had no opportunity to vet Oracle’s representations about the drafts. Counsel for

Oracle responded that Oracle would waive the privilege. This after-the-deadline waiver, Google

replied, failed to cure the prejudice. Temporizing, the Court warned Oracle that its disclosure of

privileged documents would constitute an extraordinary waiver (Tr. at 1328). 

Nevertheless, still out of the presence of the jury and using the privileged documents,

counsel for Oracle traced the internal development of the response to the European Commission. 

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 Counsel for Oracle contended they could offer an email from 2008 in which someone internal to Sun

stated Google’s conduct constituted copyright infringement, but no such document was ever shown to the Court

or offered into evidence.

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One draft stated, colorfully, “[a] recidivist bank robber should not complain, at least to the

authorities, that the bank’s new owner might increase security measures around the bank” (Tr. at

1330). A subsequent email from Sun’s in-house counsel noted that Oracle’s corporate counsel

had removed the colorful language and stated “Re Android, we liked our recidivist bank robber

analogy” (Tr. at 1331). In light of its document tracing, Oracle proposed that Catz be permitted

to testify that the response to the European Commission originated with Sun (how she would

have known that on her own was never explained). 

The Court rejected that proposal, a rejection that now serves as a ground for the Rule 59

motion.

It is true that Google presented evidence at trial that Sun had embraced a custom of

reimplementation of APIs and that Sun’s CEO had welcomed Android to the Java community. 

It is further true that Google argued to the jury that this welcoming attitude reversed only after

Oracle took over Sun and brought this suit. Oracle was free to present counterevidence (and did)

but the extraordinary after-the-deadline waiver of privilege was too timewise prejudicial to

Google, should not have been allowed, and was not.6

Oracle’s gamesmanship deprived Google of a fair opportunity to vet the privileged

documents and to verify the supposed chain of authorship. Anyway, the timing of the emails

(at a time when Sun’s employees had cause to curry favor with their new boss) suggested that

any response “from Sun” was really “from Oracle.” This ground for a new trial is rejected.

E. Self-Serving In-House Presentations.

Oracle was barred from placing in evidence certain self-serving in-house materials,

offered supposedly to show how Android had hurt Oracle’s markets for Java. Specifically, as

part of its evidence on market harm under the fourth fair use factor, Oracle sought to admit Trial

Exhibits 5961, 6431, and 6470, which were in-house slide show presentations at Oracle. They

were used “as [Oracle’s] way of planning for [the] next year. They’re also used to educate

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[Oracle’s executives] about what is going on in the business” (Tr. at 1356). The presentations

included slides that discussed the purported impact of Android on Oracle’s revenue.

Oracle invoked Rule 803(6) of the Federal Rules of Evidence, which provides an

exception to the rule excluding hearsay evidence for records of a regularly conducted activity, as

follows:

A record of an act, event, condition, opinion, or diagnosis if:

(A) the record was made at or near the time by — or from

information transmitted by — someone with knowledge;

(B) the record was kept in the course of a regularly conducted

activity of a business, organization, occupation, or calling, whether

or not for profit;

(C) making the record was a regular practice of that activity;

(D) all these conditions are shown by the testimony of the

custodian or another qualified witness, or by a certification that

complies with Rule 902(11) or (12) or with a statute permitting

certification; and

(E) the opponent does not show that the source of information or

the method or circumstances of preparation indicate a lack of

trustworthiness.

The Oracle-made documents contained slides with “highlights” and “lowlights” of

certain fiscal years, identified “priorities and key messages,” summarized revenue data,

forecasts, and budgets, identified market challenges, and mapped out product strategies (Bush

Decl., Exhs. 26, 27, 29). As to Trial Exhibit 5961, Oracle offered the testimony of its CEO,

Safra Catz, to lay the foundation that the presentation had been prepared as part of Oracle’s

annual budget review (Tr. at 1357). When Oracle moved to admit that exhibit into evidence,

Google objected, and the Court sustained the objection because it remained simply a slide show

of internal self-serving propositions (even worse, created pending this lawsuit). The Court

stated, “if it was just a financial statement, I would allow it, but there are too many slide shows

in that document to qualify it as a business record” (Tr. at 1357). Counsel for Oracle sought to

admit just page 21 of the exhibit, but that page, titled “FY11 Priorities and Key Messages —

Java” suffered from the same self-serving problems. Indeed, that page addressed “integrationCase 3:10-cv-03561-WHA Document 2070 Filed 09/27/16 Page 22 of 26
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 In its brief, Oracle describes this page as “a spreadsheet of revenue and expenses for the first two

quarters of fiscal year 2011 for Java embedded and forecasts for the third quarter” (Pl.’s Mtn. at 23). Page 21

does not meet that description. It is possible, it now appears, that counsel for Oracle intended to direct Catz and

the Court to page 23, but that error by Oracle then would not now be a reason to grant a new trial.

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specific concerns” regarding the integration of Sun into Oracle — hardly a regularly-conducted

activity.7

Oracle sought to admit similar presentations, Trial Exhibits 6431 and 6470, through the

testimony of its former vice president of worldwide original electronic manufacturer sales, Neal

Civjan, but those presentations were excluded on similar grounds.

Rule 803(6) is not an open window through which any self-serving in-house internal

hearsay sails into evidence at the author’s behest:

The element of unusual reliability of business records is said

variously to be supplied by systematic checking, by regularity and

continuity which produce habits of precision, by actual experience

of business in relying upon them, or by a duty to make an accurate

record as part of a continuing job or occupation.

N.L.R.B. v. First Termite Control Co., Inc., 646 F.2d 424, 427 (9th Cir. 1981), opinion amended

on reh’g sub nom. Natl. Lab. Rel. Bd. v. First Termite Control Co. Inc. (9th Cir. Aug. 5, 1981);

see also Advisory Committee Notes, 1972 Proposed Rules, Note to Paragraph (6).

The Oracle presentations sought to be admitted were not the kinds of records that could

be assured of their reliability due to systematic checking or habits of precision. On the contrary,

the documents contained narrative, analysis, and commentary — i.e., self-serving argument. The

only “regularity” of the self-serving presentations was that they arose as part of an annual budget

review, but the statements themselves had not derived from such a systematic habit of precision. 

They otherwise lacked the indicia of trustworthiness sought by Rule 803(6). They were properly

excluded as hearsay.

F. Bifurcation.

A pretrial order bifurcated the issues of fair use from willfulness and monetary remedies

(Dkt. No. 1321 at 13). This prejudiced Oracle, it asserts, because “important market harm

testimony never made it to the jury because it was relegated to the damages phase” and because

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 Google contended that the issue of disgorgement should not be presented to a jury. An order held

that the jury would rule on disgorgement, but the Court would resolve Google’s argument after the verdict,

possibly treating the jury’s verdict as advisory, if not conclusive (Dkt. No. 1769).

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“bifurcation provided a structural incentive for the jury to return a defense verdict” (Pl.’s Mtn. at 20).

Oracle’s argument that bifurcation precluded it from presenting its market harm evidence

is simply untrue. Nothing about the bifurcation precluded Oracle in phase one from presenting

evidence of Oracle’s lost revenue attributable to Android. Indeed, Oracle presented extensive

evidence in phase one directed at the issue of market harm to the copyrighted works, the fourth

fair use factor.

Although there was some overlap in the evidence relevant to market harm and Oracle’s

actual damages (and Oracle remained free to present it in phase one and did), the most complex

evidence on Oracle’s remedies — the disgorgement of Google’s profits — had virtually no

relevance to the market harm/fair use inquiry. Section 107(4) on fair use focuses on the “effect

of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work” (i.e., harm to Oracle). 

Section 504(b) on remedies allows a copyright owner to recover “the actual damages suffered

. . . as a result of the infringement” (again, harm to Oracle) as well as “any profits of the

infringer that are attributable to the infringement” (Google’s profits from infringement) — to the

extent the awards are not duplicative. Put differently, phase one focused on market harm to the

copyrighted work whereas phase two focused on Oracle’s damages from that market harm and

possible disgorgement of Google’s profits attributable to the infringement. Oracle’s claim for

disgorgement of Google’s profits totaled more than ten times Oracle’s claimed actual damages

and thus would have dominated Oracle’s case in phase two.8

The disgorgement issue presented extraordinary complexity — complexity unrelated to

market harm to the copyrighted works. For one, Google never directly sold Android. Instead,

Google offered it free to all comers as open source. Google benefited indirectly. It used

Android as a platform for its other services, which earned revenue from advertisements and sales

of apps and media. But these other services (like its popular search engine) had already been

operating and earning revenue well before Android. Oracle conceded this but contended that

Android had multiplied that revenue. Thus, to isolate profits attributable to use of Oracle’s

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 The Court instructed the jury as follows (Dkt. No. 1950 ¶ 46):

Once you render a verdict on the fair use question, we may proceed to the

shorter and final phase of the trial on damages issues, depending on your answer

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copyrighted code, the jury would have been required to apportion, first of all, the revenue

between the pre-existing technology already in place versus Android.

Next the jury would have had to further apportion between the accused lines of code

versus the unaccused lines of code within Android. The infringing part of Android constituted

only a small fraction of one percent of Android. Oracle conceded this but contended that this

sliver held the key to the success of Android. These apportionment difficulties were just two

examples of many posed by the disgorgement claim for our jury.

Thus, phase two was poised to present bone-crushing analytics on how to apportion any

Android profits attributable to the infringement versus profits attributable to non-infringement. 

To meet this challenge, the parties presented dueling economic models yielding massively

different answers. Again, unlike Oracle’s lost profits segment, the apportionment/disgorgement

problems had virtually no relevance to market harm and fair use. 

In the Court’s judgment and discretion, our trial was best managed by postponing that

mind-bender to phase two, so that the jury could give its undivided attention in phase one to the

critical issue of fair use. Dividing the trial further served the important purpose of saving the

resources of the Court and the jury (and the parties) in the event that the jury decided against

Oracle on fair use.

To repeat, Oracle was free to present its lost profits and other market harm evidence in

phase one — and it did so at length. (In phase two, all previously admitted evidence would still

have been deemed in evidence.)

Turning to Oracle’s structural incentive argument, the Court instructed the jury not to

allow any desire to conclude the trial sooner to influence its decision. We must presume the

jurors followed the instruction, and there is nothing to indicate otherwise. Richardson v. Marsh,

481 U.S. 200, 206 (1987). Oracle’s structural incentive argument, such as it is, would

undermine every bifurcation of damages from liability. Yet the law plainly allows bifurcation.9

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to the fair use question. This would still be within the June 10 end date stated

earlier. Please do not allow any desire to complete trial sooner to influence your

thinking. Once you render your verdict on the fair use issue, it will be final and

may not be re-visited or modified during the second phase.

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It deserves to be said, in favor of our jury, that the ten who served were as punctual,

attentive, and diligent in note-taking as any jury this district judge has seen in seventeen years of

service. They had all cleared their calendars. We were on target to meet or beat the time

estimate given to the jury. Those with hardships had already been excused during jury selection. 

It is impossible to even suspect that bifurcation somehow steered the jury to rule as it did. The

Court remains completely convinced that the verdict rested, after three days of deliberation,

solely on the jury’s sincere assessment of the evidence and the instructions of law.

CONCLUSION

For the reasons stated above, Oracle’s motion for a new trial and its motion for judgment

as a matter of law are DENIED.

IT IS SO ORDERED.

Dated: September 27, 2016. WILLIAM ALSUP

UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE

Case 3:10-cv-03561-WHA Document 2070 Filed 09/27/16 Page 26 of 26