Satyam sued for US $1billion for Fraud, IP infringement

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coolpcguy

Resistance is Futile.
Just caught up this news:

Satyam gets sued for $1 billion for fraud and intellectual property infringement, by UPAID SYSTEMS, American based mobile and online payment specialist, regarding "development of the idea of converting any phone into a de facto pay phone through the use of a pre paid account associated with a caller identification number. To develop this idea considerable portions of core-project is outsourced to Satyam"

Detailed analysis:


*jumpup.wordpress.com/2008/05/18/satyam-softwares-sued/

Upaid system's Press release:
*www.upaid.net/press_release_det.asp?art_id=5565&sec_id=2625

Court proceedings:
*www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/487.html
 

unni

In the zone
Satyam has clarified about this in their press release
Satyam Clarifies its case with UPaid

HYDERABAD, India, May 14, 2008: Satyam Computer Services Ltd. (NYSE:SAY), a leading global business and information technology services provider, today announced that in response to the news item regarding the legal case against UPaid Systems Ltd, a British Virgin Islands Company engaged in mobile payments services, it would like to clarify the following:

During 1997-1998, one of the subsidiaries of Satyam Computer Services Limited was engaged by Intouch Technologies (currently UPaid Systems) for product development work. UPaid Systems wanted to patent this product and Satyam provided support as contractually required to UPaid for obtaining the patent. Some of the then Satyam employees were named as co-inventors to the Patents. In 2002, Satyam and UPaid concluded the business relationship and based on the settlement agreement signed then, any future disputes were to be tried under the UK laws. In 2006, UPaid filed certain claims of infringement against some companies in US and in the proceedings, Two former Satyam employees denied signing the patent assignment documents. Aggrieved, UPaid filed a case against Satyam in Texas, USA in 2007 to declare their patent valid and sought damages from Satyam for any possible losses arising out of impairment of their patent. Satyam in turn filed a petition in London since it contended the jurisdiction lay there in line with the terms of the agreement signed between the two parties earlier on. The Courts in London have decided that the case in Texas can continue and be heard based on an earlier Assignment agreement signed by Satyam’s then subsidiary and UPaid. Thus the current decision in the UK court has determined the jurisdiction lies in US and the underlying case is expected to be tried in US in 2009. The US case is in a very preliminary stage and has to undergo the due process of law and Satyam is confident that it has merits in this case and would contest the case. It is premature to make any judgment on the quantification of any potential damages and also the matter is sub-judice. Satyam is considering its legal options as regards the dismissed appeal in the London courts.

Safe Harbor

This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of section 27A of Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. The forward-looking statements contained herein are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those reflected in the forward-looking statements. Satyam undertakes no duty to update any forward-looking statements. For a discussion of the risks associated with our business, please see the discussions under the heading “Risk Factors” in our report on Form 6-K concerning the quarter ended December 31, 2007, furnished to the United States Securities Exchange Commission on January 28, 2008 and the other reports filed with the Securities Exchange Commission from time to time. These filings are available at *www.sec.gov.

This announcement is not an offer of securities for sale in the United States. Securities may not be offered or sold in the United States absent registration or an exemption from registration. Any public offering of securities to be made in the United States will be made by means of a prospectus that may be obtained from Satyam and that will contain detailed information about Satyam and its management, as well as financial statements.
Also this
Satyam evam Upaid: Who paid?

I came across this interesting piece in IPKat today, relating to IT giant Satyam and a dispute in the Commercial Court for England and Wales [Satyam Computer Services Ltd v Upaid Systems Ltd [2008] EWHC 31 (Comm)].

This is of relevance not only because it involves an Indian IT company, but also because of implications it might have for other companies in the IT-outsourcing sector generally. This was not an outright IP dispute, e.g. on the patentability of the product or the ownership of the patent, but more about the contractual agreements surrounding the transfer of IP. Nevertheless, this is an opportunity to revisit some issues brought up Shamnad on innovation in the Indian IT sector here and here.

Essentially, as Shamnad points out, Indian companies (like Satyam; Infosys) operate on a ‘services’ model - where products are created for and on behalf of other clients (like Upaid). As a result, it is the clients who own the IPRs. This services model is surviving as is because of the assurance of a continuous revenue stream; and of course, cheap labour! As a result, IT in India seems to have gotten entrenched in a risk-averse ethic, and has created for itself an environment that dis-incentivizes innovation.

So companies like Satyam continue to remain predominantly 'service' providers, with insignificant IPR of their own, even though most of the software is developed is done by their engineers. Given that, the company should at least ensure that the terms of reference are reasonably lucid and straightforward. The case at hand seems to have come about because of poor, or indeed absent, IPR Assignment- and general Service- Agreements between Satyam and Upaid, its client company. Arguably, this could have been entirely avoided if only there had been some foresight (but that is a moot point, eh?) in timing and drafting the agreements by both parties.

Anyway, just to run you through the case (the judgement is in fact available here):

Upaid, a UK-based IT company, is a mobile payments specialist. In 1996, Upaid developed the idea of converting any telephone into a de facto pay-phone by using a pre-paid account and a caller personal identification number (PIN). Software development was outsourced to Satyam, and in 1997, they reached a "short and relatively informal memorandum of understanding".

In 1998, when Upaid went about applying for a US patent on this product, it had to demonstrate 'unity of ownership' of the IPR in its invention. (Now Satyam normally transfers IPRs of products it creates to its customers, but there was no formal agreement stating this. The MoU itself “dealt only briefly with the ownership of inventions and was silent as to any intellectual property rights”, the order says.) To meet USPTO requirements, the parties finalized an Assignment Agreement transferring Satyam's IP to Upaid for cash consideration. This agreement referred also to a Service Agreement, for which negotiations had begun contemporaneously, but were concluded only in 1999.

The 1999 Service Agreement, which related to a dedicated unit at Satyam working exclusively on Upaid products, retroactively dated the commencement of activities to September 1998 (around when the Assignment Agreement was concluded), suggesting that the two Agreements were to be read together. The Service Agreement also contained a clause that reverted rights to Satyam on non-payment for services rendered.

All was well for some time. Satyam even acquired a quarter of Upaid in a debt-equity swap. But by 2002, things got messy: Upaid complained about Satyam's quality of work; Satyam said it had not been paid, and that the IPRs reverted to it; there were issues about Satyam’s representation on the Upaid Board; and allegations of IP infringement all around.

Proverbial wisdom having dawned at last, by end 2002, Satyam and Upaid finalized a Settlement Agreement that superseded all previous agreements, and was under exclusive jurisdiction of English courts.

But all was not over: In 2005 Upaid began patent infringement proceedings in Texas against two other parties, and sought Satyam's assistance. After an interlude of allegations of forgery by the Texan defendants and Upaid on Satyam (which threatened the validity of its original patent), Upaid eventually had to settle that case, it says, on unfavourable terms.

There’s more yet: Presumably sore with its last case, Upaid then applied to the Texas courts for inter alia damages for Satyam's alleged fraud in the earlier proceedings, and for the consequent alleged breach of the Assignment Agreement in 1999.

In this English case brought by Satyam, it sought an injunction, counter-arguing that either:
1. Upaid's claims against it in Texas were in breach of the Settlement Agreement, which compromised all such claims, or
2. The exclusive jurisdiction clause in the Settlement Agreement meant the claims had to be brought before English courts.

The court eventually refused the injunction and held that the Settlement Agreement did not deprive Upaid of future rights to sue for breach of Assignment or for alleged fraud in relation to that Agreement. And after a lengthy discussion on the jurisdiction issue and conflict of laws generally, the court decided that the claims for damages did not concern the validity of the patent itself and there was no clause in the agreement that required these particular claims to be mandatorily litigated in England.

So the curtains fall in England. Presumably now Satyam has to return to Texas to deal with things. But hopefully it will have learnt from this not to enter into MoUs that are "short and relatively informal", without assessing the costs and risks of future litigation!

Endnote: One company’s poison is another company’s meat? Upaid hasn't exactly lost favour with the back-offices in Bangalore... I found the company in the list of Wipro’s telecom clients here. But at least, I hope they have their agreements sorted out!
Waiting to see what will happen
 
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dheeraj_kumar

Legen-wait for it-dary!
I read the court case summary fully, I couldnt understand most of it, but I'm familiar with it since I read Perry Mason when I was younger. :) Satyam's mistake was it forged the siggys and never told its employees it was transferring the IP rights to UPaid. The employees didnt know abt it, so they sold their invention happily to Qualcomm and Verizon.
 

Pathik

Google Bot
The purported damages asked is around ahem ahem, USD 1 billion, and yes, Satyam Software Services (from now onwards ‘Satyam’) is a $2.5 billion company.

Hard times ahead for Satyam!
 
OP
coolpcguy

coolpcguy

Resistance is Futile.
Satyam's mistake was it forged the siggys and never told its employees it was transferring the IP rights to UPaid. The employees didnt know abt it, so they sold their invention happily to Qualcomm and Verizon.
:eek::eek: How could the top brass do something like that.
 

NucleusKore

TheSaint
I read the court case summary fully, I couldnt understand most of it, but I'm familiar with it since I read Perry Mason when I was younger. :) Satyam's mistake was it forged the siggys and never told its employees it was transferring the IP rights to UPaid. The employees didnt know abt it, so they sold their invention happily to Qualcomm and Verizon.

Happens in many private companies :(
 

x3060

A LOTR fan
so much for the company i guess . . they are gonna loose every money they had made all these years
 
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