Limelight Appeals Ruling: Will It Be Acquired Shortly? [View article]
Limelight Has Little Chance of Overturning Judgment In an appeal, an appellant (one who lost in lower court and now brings appeal to higher court) cannot dispute the facts found by the jury. The only element of the trial which the appellant can appeal is an error of law that was applied in his case or an error made by the judge in some material (significant) respect. Unless something grossly unfair transpired in the courtroom, Limelight does not have a good case for appeal. The legal team can still file an appellate brief and bluster to its client that they'll overturn the judgment handed down by the trial court. It makes the client feel better in the short run, but eventually he must swallow the bitter pill of losing. My feeling is the Akamai lawyers are well-trained in litigation (arguing a case in court) and probably did not leave any loopholes for the opposition to take advantage of. My general conclusion: it is likely that Akamai will prevail and the appellate court will affirm the trial court's decision. Just my 2 cents' worth.
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Limelight Has Little Chance of Overturning Judgment
Mar 03 18:16 pm
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All Comments by Mike Armstrong/Lafs »Limelight Appeals Ruling: Will It Be Acquired Shortly? [View article]
In an appeal, an appellant (one who lost in lower court and now brings appeal to higher court) cannot dispute the facts found by the jury. The only element of the trial which the appellant can appeal is an error of law that was applied in his case or an error made by the judge in some material (significant) respect. Unless something grossly unfair transpired in the courtroom, Limelight does not have a good case for appeal. The legal team can still file an appellate brief and bluster to its client that they'll overturn the judgment handed down by the trial court. It makes the client feel better in the short run, but eventually he must swallow the bitter pill of losing. My feeling is the Akamai lawyers are well-trained in litigation (arguing a case in court) and probably did not leave any loopholes for the opposition to take advantage of. My general conclusion: it is likely that Akamai will prevail and the appellate court will affirm the trial court's decision. Just my 2 cents' worth.