Attorneys for a Utah company that brought a $US1 billion
antitrust lawsuit against Microsoft say it will seek to retry
the case with a new jury after a federal jury failed to reach
a verdict.
Novell sued the software giant in 2004, claiming Microsoft
duped it into developing the once-popular WordPerfect writing
program for Windows 95 only to pull the plug so Microsoft
could gain market share with its own product. Novell says it
was later forced to sell WordPerfect for a $US1.2 billion
loss.
The trial began two months ago and included two days of
testimony from Bill Gates last month. Jurors got the case on
Wednesday (local time). After much confusion, and some
perplexing questions from the panel, they told US District
Judge J. Frederick Motz they were deadlocked by early Friday
evening.
Motz repeatedly asked them if they could keep trying.
"This has been a very long and expensive case," the judge
told the panel.
Novell attorneys pleaded with Motz to give the panel just one
more day. In the end, however, the 12 jurors told the judge
they were "hopelessly" deadlocked, and they later told
lawyers a single holdout refused to vote in Novell's favor.
"He had strongly held views about the technical evidence and
refused to budge," Novell attorney Jeffrey Johnson said.
Jurors offered no comment after the trial.
Novell was left with little to show for a decade of effort.
"Although it's a technically complicated case, we're hoping
to convince another jury that our claims have merit,"
Novell's corporate counsel Jim Lundberg said.
Microsoft said it would file a motion asking the judge to
dismiss Novell's complaint for good and avoid a second trial.
"We remain confident that Novell's claims don't have any
merit and look forward to the next steps in the process,"
said Steven Aeschbacher, Microsoft's associate general
counsel.
Novell waited until 10 years after Microsoft left WordPerfect
behind to file the lawsuit. The company said it was waiting
for the US government's antitrust enforcement against
Microsoft to wrap up. At first Novell's case was dismissed,
but it was later reinstated on appeal.
Microsoft lawyers have argued that Novell's loss of market
share was its own doing because the company didn't develop a
compatible WordPerfect program until long after the rollout
of Windows 95. WordPerfect once had nearly 50 percent of the
market for word processing, but its share quickly plummeted
to less than 10 percent as Microsoft's own Office programs
took hold.
Gates testified last month that he had no idea his decision
to drop a tool for outside developers would sidetrack Novell.
Gates said he was acting to protect Windows 95 and future
versions from crashing.
He said that the company's preferred Word software was
superior to WordPerfect, which was a "bulky, slow, buggy
product" that did not integrate well with Windows 95.
Novell could have worked around the problem but failed to
react quickly, he said.
Novell has argued that Gates ordered Microsoft engineers to
reject WordPerfect as a Windows 95 word processing
application because he feared it was too good.
Novell's lawsuit is the last major private antitrust case to
follow the settlement of a federal antitrust enforcement
action against Microsoft more than eight years ago.
Novell is now a wholly owned subsidiary of The Attachmate
Group, the result of a merger that was completed earlier this
year.
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