An
Apple lawyer said the iPhoneand iPad maker may seek a legal order
stopping the launch of Samsung Electronics's Galaxy S III phone in
the United States later this month.
At
a hearing on Thursday in a San Jose,California federal court, Apple
attorney Josh Krevitt said the company could file for a temporary
restraining order against Samsung as early as Friday.
"Once sales are made, the harm is irreparable," Krevitt said.
However,
US District Judge Lucy Koh said she has many other cases. If Apple
decides to seek a restraining order, it would likely delay a July trial
date over different Samsung phones, as well as the Galaxy Tab 10.1.
"I cannot be an Apple v. Samsung judge," Koh said.
Apple
sued Samsung for patent infringement last year, accusing the South
Korean electronics maker of "slavishly" copying the iPhone and iPad.
Samsung denies the claims and countersued.
Apple's
comments on Thursday came a day after Samsung Electronics, the world's
largestsmartphone vendor, expanded its CEO's role to include oversight
of corporate strategy across the entire Samsung Group - a conglomerate
of more than 80 companies.
Choi
Gee-sung, 61, spearheaded Samsung's ascension to smartphone and TV
leadership and his elevation signals that the storied South Korean
conglomerate is grooming its next leader.
Apple
filed papers this week seeking to ban Samsung's new Galaxy S III, along
with the Galaxy Nexus. Samsung has already booked over 9 million
preorders of the Galaxy S III, which is set to be sold by carriers in
the United States on June 21, Apple said in its court filing.
Samsung, however, argued that Apple should not be allowed to seek such a fast injunction against the Galaxy S III.
Samsung
attorney William Price also said the technology covered by Apple's
patents - such as auto-correcting typed text - are not responsible for
sales of Galaxy phones.
"There is no advertising or marketing on these features at all" by Apple, Price said.
Samsung's
Galaxy products run on the Android operating system, developed by
Google. In addition to Samsung's legal team, several Google attorneys
attended the hearing before Koh on Thursday.
Apple
has also accused Google's Motorola Mobility unit of infringing its
iPhone patents. However, a Chicago-based federal judge on Thursday
tentatively scrapped a trial between those two that had been scheduled
to begin next week.
"Neither party can establish a right to relief," Judge Richard Posner wrote.
In California, Koh did not rule from the bench on Thursday on Apple's request for an injunction on the Nexus.
The Samsung case in US District Court, Northern District of California is A

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