The jury also found that Apple infringed one Samsung patent, awarding it $158,000 in damages. The verdict sets the stage for each company to seek a judge's order banning US sales of competing devices found to infringe its patents.
The world's top two smartphone makers have spent hundreds of millions of dollars in legal fees on battles across four continents to dominate a market that was valued at $338.2 billion last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Apple 'overshot'
One patent Samsung was found to infringe covers the ability for a user to make a call by clicking on a phone number within a Web page or e-mail instead of having to dial it separately. The other allows a user to unlock the device through gestures.
Most valuable
The jury rejected Apple's claim on the patent it counted as the most valuable of the group, one that enables updating of applications while other features of the phone are in use. Apple also lost its claim over a patent that allows a user to perform a universal search for information with a single click.
The jury agreed with Samsung's claim that Apple infringed a patent for functions related to retrieving, classifying and organizing digital images. Jurors rejected a claim that FaceTime, Apple's video-chatting service, infringes a Samsung patent for compressing video data so it can be sent over a cellular network.
Royalty rate
Apple wanted Samsung to pay as much as $40 for each phone sold that uses infringing technology, for a total of $2.19 billion. Samsung argued that the jury should award no more than $38.4 million for any infringement damages. The jury is scheduled to reconvene 5 May to reconsider damages on one product and one patent.
Apple might have considered the trial a win if the verdict amounted to more than $10 per phone, Rivette said.
Earlier trial
Apple was awarded $930 million in the first US trial between the two companies two years ago in the same court. In that case, which involved earlier models of smartphones and tablets, Apple failed to win an order barring sales of infringing Samsung phones, which the iPhone maker has said was more important than monetary damages.
During the trial, each side put on technical evidence about what its patents cover and how its technology was allegedly copied. The companies also called on expert witnesses to dispute the value of the other's patents, and presented the jury with internal e-mails and other documents to show the frustration executives faced as they competed for market share.
Google, Android
From the start, Samsung cast the iPhone maker's case as a bid to displace Google as the leading supplier of smartphone operating systems and limit consumer choice.
Samsung called several Google engineers as witnesses to bolster the point that it didn't need to copy Apple's technology for the software on its phones.
Apple tried to keep the jury's focus on its contention that Samsung, not Google, made the decision to use patent-infringing features to sell more than 37 million smartphones and tablets. Apple's lawyers reminded the jury several times that Google wasn't a defendant.
Samsung argued that the iPhone maker's multibillion-dollar damages demand is inflated, while Apple countered that the Galaxy maker chose to present low-value patents at trial — which were purchased, and not awarded to the company — to low- ball potential damages in the case.
Google deal
The biggest surprise of the trial came at the end, when Apple put on evidence showing that Google is paying for some of Samsung's legal defense, after revealing that the Galaxy maker in 2012 had denied seeking indemnification from anyone.
Apple argued that Samsung was being dishonest, while a Samsung lawyer told the jury Apple knew about the indemnification all along and chose not to ask witnesses about it.
The verdict is the eighth-largest jury award in the US this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It's the fourth-largest jury award in a patent case this year.
The case is Apple Inc. v. Samsung Electronics Co., 12- cv-00630, US District Court, Northern District of California (San Jose). BLOOMBERG
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