California Court Issues Order on TSMC Motion for Preliminary Injunction Against SMIC

Hsinchu, Taiwan, R.O.C., September 14, 2007

–The California State Superior Court of Alameda County issued an Order on TSMC’s pre-trial motion for a preliminary injunction against SMIC on September 7, and the Order was made public on September 13, Pacific Time. A summary of the Order follows.

1. The Court found “TSMC has demonstrated a significant likelihood that it will ultimately prevail on the merits of its claim for breach of paragraphs 15 and 29 of the (2005) Settlement Agreement” with SMIC.

2. The Court also found “TSMC has demonstrated a significant probability of establishing that SMIC retains and is using TSMC Information in SMIC’s 0.13um and smaller technologies that should have been returned under paragraphs 15 and 29 of the (Settlement) Agreement, and there is significant threat of serious irreparable harm to TSMC if SMIC were to disclose or transfer that information before final resolution of the case.” Therefore, the court ordered that, effective immediately, SMIC must provide advance notice and an opportunity for TSMC to object before disclosing items enumerated in the Court Order to SMIC’s third party partners.

3. The Court issued the Order instead of a full pre-trial injunction not due to lack of merit in TSMC’s case, but because of other considerations. Those considerations include:
a. The Court was “reluctant to issue a preliminary injunction that will almost certainly require ongoing discovery and repeated compliance hearings in the next 12-16 months.”
b. Breach of contract damages to TSMC for the period September 2007 through a trial in late 2008 do not constitute “irreparable harm” to TSMC as “injury from lost sales can be recovered after trial”.
c. The Court found there was no demonstration that SMIC is distributing its assets or in imminent danger of bankruptcy.
d. The Court also found “if an injunction is issued in error, the intangible injury to the significantly smaller SMIC would be severe in terms of loss of cash flow, customer relationships, and reputation”.

4. Finally, the Court stated that it expects to move promptly to full discovery and to a trial on the merits, which both parties have anticipated will take place in 2008.

The full text of the Court’s Order is available on the Court’s website , using case number RG06286111.

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