MS Must Pay Bristol $3.7M in Legal Fees 

Bristol Technology, which was awarded $1 million in an unfair-practices
judgment, had sought an additional $6 million. 

Microsoft (MSFT) must pay software maker Bristol Technology $3.7 million
in legal fees in addition to the $1 million it was ordered to pay the
Danbury, Conn., company in September for unfair trade practices, a
federal judge ruled Monday.

Bristol Technology had sought $6 million in legal fees in the case,
which was filed in Aug. 1998 and alleged that Microsoft injured Bristol
and the rest of the software industry through predatory manipulation of
the access to Windows programming interfaces.

"We are very happy," said Keith Blackwell, Bristol's CEO. "We would have
liked the whole thing. It was up to her [the judge] to break things down
in a fair manner and that's what she did."
Microsoft spokesman Jim Cullinan said the Redmond, Wash., company was
reviewing its options in the case and stressed that it believed a jury's
earlier ruling in the case favoring Microsoft was the right one.

A jury in July 1999 found that Microsoft had not violated any antitrust
laws, but had violated Connecticut's Unfair Trade Practices Act. Bristol
Technology had sought $263 million in damages during its closing
statements of the trial, but the jury awarded damages totaling only $1.
In September, however, Federal District Judge Janet C. Hall, who also
delivered Monday's ruling, ended up ordering that Microsoft pay $1
million in punitive damages.

Bristol, during the trial, contended the expiration of its licensing
contract of Windows NT source code in Sept. 1997 drastically reduced
sales. Bristol sells cross-platform development products that enable
Windows applications to run on other operating systems. Its key product,
WIND/U, enables companies to port applications from Windows to Unix.

Bristol has contended that Microsoft let the contract lapse to
discourage use of the Unix operating system, which rivals Microsoft's
Window's NT. Microsoft, however, has stated that a contract dispute
occurred with Bristol over the license.

Blackwell said Bristol, a 90-employee software company, will now enter a
motion to throw out the jury's ruling from July 1999 and seek a new
trial on antitrust claims in the U.S. District Court in Bridgeport,
Conn.

"We are saying the jury erred, and given the evidence presented to the
jury, they could not have found as they did," Blackwell said.

--
Eko Sulistiono
MIKRODATA & AntiVirus Media
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