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Return to Virginia Business - September 2003

Around the Old Dominion

eBay gets outbid in Norfolk

by Virginia Business Staff
September 2003

Internet auction giant eBay’s recent loss in a patent dispute with a Great Falls inventor might seem like a David-and-Goliath clash, but it really wasn’t. Inventor Thomas Woolston — whose company, MercExchange LLC, won a $29.5 million judgment in a Norfolk federal court — got his legal help from Richmond-based Hunton & Williams, the state’s biggest firm.

Woolston’s lead attorney, Gregory N. Stillman, 55, is managing partner of the firm’s Norfolk office and a veteran of patent cases in federal court. Calling the two-year case the most hard-fought of his career, Stillman says eBay lawyers practiced “quintessential scorched-earth litigation. If there was a motion to be filed, they filed it.” Woolston filed suit two years ago claiming that he’d invented and patented the technology used in eBay’s sale of fixed-priced items.

The five-week trial ended in late May with a Norfolk federal jury ruling that San Jose, Calif.-based eBay willfully infringed on Woolston’s patents on an automatic payment system for fixed-price items. Woolston’s company was awarded $35 million, but last month U.S. District Judge Jerome B. Friedman reduced the award by $5.5 million. Despite the verdict, he declined to order eBay to stop using the technology.

Both sides are filing appeals so the case isn’t over yet. Stillman says Woolston “is gratified that his patent has been validated” but wants the judge to order eBay to stop using the technology so he can license it to other companies. Woolston also wants to reverse the judge’s dismissal of another patent-infringement claim over technology that enables eBay’s more lucrative online auction business.

Ebay said it sold $1.5 billion in fixed-price goods in the second quarter. A company spokesman told The Washington Post that the company might change how it sells fixed-price items.

Virginia Business - September 2003


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