Garmin® Violates Navico Patents, Required
To Stop Import and Sale of DownVu™ Products
Commission Upholds Marine Electronics Leader’s Patents for
DownScan Imaging™
Navico, the world’s largest manufacturer of marine electronics and parent company to
the Lowrance®, Simrad®, B&G® and GoFree® brands – announced
today that the International Trade Commission (ITC) has ruled that Garmin Ltd.
DownVu™ scanning sonar products
violate Navico’s patents for DownScan Imaging™ technology. This ruling reverses an initial determination issued by an
Administrative Law Judge this past July, previously announced by Garmin Ltd. (NASDAQ:GRMN).
In addition, this is the second adverse ruling in two weeks by the ITC that
finds that Garmin is violating sonar patents.
The ITC DownVu ruling prohibits Garmin from importing, selling,
advertising, and aiding or assisting distributors or retailers in selling all
its infringing DownVu products, including the echo, echoMAP and GPSMAP products
with their respective transducers. Specifically, the Commission has issued a
Cease and Desist Order barring Garmin and its distributors from selling, or
aiding others in the sale of, these products and has also issued an Exclusion Order
directing U.S. Customs and Border Protection to reject their importation.
While all ITC orders have a 60-day period before taking full
effect, effective immediately resellers of Garmin DownVu products risk willfully
infringing Navico’s patents if they continue to sell Garmin DownVu products,
and they could be subject to an infringement suit. Therefore, Navico advises
against any distributor, dealer or retailer continuing marketing or selling
these products and recommends that resellers seek independent legal advice if
they have any questions in this matter. In addition, the ITC has ruled that
Garmin must post a bond equal to 100 percent of the value of infringing
products, when they sell from inventory or import any of these products into
the U.S. during the 60-day review period.
Further, any Garmin products claiming to feature a
“design around” solution are subject to ITC or U.S. Customs approval in order
to confirm that such an alternative solution does not likewise violate Navico’s
patents. As of this writing, Garmin has not initiated the process of submitting
alternative designs.
Garmin could file an appeal with a U.S. Federal Court in
an attempt to challenge the factual conclusions or show the law was incorrectly
applied by the ITC; however, in the meantime, the importation and sale of
Garmin products featuring DownVu technology are subject to the ITC ruling and violate
Navico’s patents, effective immediately.
“We are extremely pleased that the ITC has ruled in our favor,” said Leif Ottosson, CEO, Navico. “Our innovative DownScan
Imaging provides real benefits to fishermen, and we have invested considerable
time, effort and resources to develop and bring it to market. Our patents are designed to protect that investment.
“We offered our competitors the opportunity to license
our technology and incorporate it into their products for the benefit of their
customers – and many have. This offer was also made to Garmin, but they
declined – putting everyone who sells their products in a difficult position. The
situation is unfortunate for many dealers and distributors in the marine
electronics marketplace, but we will continue to
vigorously defend the intellectual property that protects our innovations and
our leading position in the marketplace.”
The International Trade Commission is an independent
governmental agency in Washington, DC responsible for addressing patent
infringement disputes relating to goods that are manufactured abroad and imported
into the United States. Garmin’s DownVu Products are manufactured and imported
from Taiwan.
For more information on the Navico brands, please visit www.lowrance.com, www.simrad-yachting.com,
pro.simrad-yachting.com, www.bandg.com and www.gofreemarine.com.
To find out more about the Navico Group of companies, visit www.navico.com.