Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Court orders automakers to compensate German company









The German designed Neoplan Starliner (left) and the Chinese made A9 coach (right) have a very similar overall look.





The German designed Neoplan Starliner

(left) and the Chinese made A9 coach (right) have a very similar overall

look. (Photo: China.org)
Photo Gallery



BEIJING, Feb. 3 -- The First Intermediate People's

Court of Beijing has ordered three Chinese automakers to pay 20 million yuan

(2.92 million U.S. dollars) compensation and 1.16 million yuan (169,000 dollars)

in legal costs to Germany auto company Neoplan which had successfully sued them

for patent infringement.

The court said the A9 coach produced by Zhongwei

Passenger Bus Company and Zhongda Industrial Group China has essentially the

same design as the Neoplan Starliner. The companies have been ordered to stop

producing the A9 and Beijing Zhongtong Xinghua Auto Sales Company has been

ordered to halt sales of the vehicles.

The Neoplan Starliner was developed in 2005 by well

known German coachmaker Neoplan Bus GmbH and was covered by patents. The company

discovered in 2006 that the A9 coach produced by the Zhongwei Passenger Bus

Company was almost identical with the Starliner.

Zhongwei Passenger Bus Company is a subsidiary

company of Zhongda Industrial Group China. The defendants claimed the A9 coaches

were developed independently, but the court ruled that apart from some slight

differences, the overall look of the A9 buses was the same as the Neoplan

Starliner.

Neoplan Starliner coaches are produced both in

Germany and in southeast China's Zhejiang Province by the Youngman Coach

Company. The selling price in China is around 2 million yuan (292,000 dollars).

Youngman said that the appearance of the A9 coach on the market had not affected

sales of the Starliner.

(Source: China.org.cn)

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