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Microsoft ordered to pay $1 million to US software firm
By Mike Ingram
6 September 2000
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A US federal judge has ordered Microsoft to pay $1 million
to a small Connecticut company, declaring that the software giant
had engaged in wanton, reckless and deceptive business
practices.
Though deemed to be completely separate from the anti-trust
action brought by the US government which resulted in Microsoft
being ordered to break its company into two, the wording of the
August 31 ruling bore a striking resemblance to that of Judge
Thomas Penfield Jackson in the government case.
Ordering Microsoft to pay the £1 million fine to Bristol
Technology, US District Judge Janet C Hall said, Microsoft's
deceptive acts constitute affirmative acts of misconduct which
were designed to injure those to whom they were directed, and
wantonly risked serious injury, albeit of a purely economic nature.
Bristol makes a product called Wind/U, which acts as a bridge
between computers running the Microsoft Windows operating system
and the traditional business network operating system Unix. The
company had a contract with Microsoft from 1994 to 1997, under
which it was given access to the source code for an early version
of Microsoft's own network operating system, NT.
The company filed suit against Microsoft in August 1998, after
they were unable to reach an agreement on a contract for the newest
versions of NT, claiming that Microsoft had violated US anti-trust
law. On July 16, 1999, an eight-member jury found that Microsoft
had not violated anti-trust law, but that it was liable for violating
Connecticut business law and awarded damages to Bristol of just
$1. The August 31 ruling was in response to a claim by Bristol
for punitive damages.
In its lawsuit, Bristol argued that Microsoft was trying to
crush competition by preventing access to the software blueprints
for Windows NT. The company claimed that Microsoft was trying
to gain a foothold in the server and workstation markets and then
kill off competition from the Unix operating system. In opposition
Microsoft said Bristol had taken a mere contract dispute and tried
to dress it up with claims of antitrust violations.
Microsoft will appeal the ruling. Spokesman Jim Cullen said,
We believe the jury decision was the right decision. We
think [the August 31] ruling is contradictory with what the jury
said. There are a number of issues we will raise on appeal, and
we look forward to raising them as soon as possible.
The 103-page ruling of Judge Hall went far further than simply
awarding punitive damages. Bristol's vice president of marketing
and company co-founder, Jean Blackwell, said, It seems to
me she is agreeing with Bristol's facts that we presented in the
case, and not just the unfair-practices facts but the anti-trust
facts as well.
The award falls far short of the $263 million Bristol asked
for at trial and amounts to less than $40 for each copy of Windows
sold by Microsoft in the state. More important than the financial
penalty, however, the judge gave no indication in the ruling that
she accepted the jury's verdict and scheduled a hearing for motions
on final judgement for September 15 and September 30. Some commentators
believe that the degree to which Hall agreed with Bristol in her
ruling could indicate that she may vacate the jury's verdict.
Legal experts warn that nothing is certain. Facts that constitute
an unfair competition claim may not necessarily constitute an
anti-trust violation.
The hearings for final judgement in the Bristol case could
well coincide with an announcement by the Supreme Court as to
whether it is prepared to hear the government case against Microsoft
directly, without the input of the appellate court. This was requested
by the US Department of Justice and 19 states, because of the
importance of the case to the economy. A decision could be made
as early as September 8.
Judge Hall's remarks will also be noted by the European Commission,
which is pursuing its own anti-trust case against Microsoft. The
Bristol case is very relevant to the EU's allegation that Microsoft
abused its dominant share in desktop computer operating systems
with the launch of its Windows 2000 software in the server market.
In addition, Microsoft faces some 140 private anti-trust cases.
See Also:
European Union widens anti-trust
case against Microsoft
[9 August 2000]
A glimpse behind the veil
of business secrets
Microsoft lawsuit reveals predatory corporate practices
[23 May 2000]
The Microsoft law suit, software
development and the capitalist market
[2 May 2000]
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