<p>Seoul: A German court has ordered the recall and destruction of some products from lighting maker Signify that infringed on the patents of Seoul Semiconductor, the South Korean firm said on Thursday.</p>.<p>The court in Dusseldorf ordered distributor Conrad Electronic to take the actions and said there would be a fine of up to 250,000 euros ($259,925) for each violation of its order, Seoul Semiconductor said in a statement.</p>.New US tariffs could prompt Signify to move some production from China, CEO says.<p>Netherlands-based Signify - the world's biggest lighting maker which was spun off from Philips in 2016 - said the patents in question had expired.</p>.<p>The company told <em>Reuters</em> it had started legal action to show that the patents were now invalid, without going into further details on the case.</p>.<p>Seoul Semiconductor, which has sued multinational companies over patents, said it uses about 10% of its revenue in research and development and holds more than 18,000 patents in light-emitting diode technology. </p><p>($1 = 0.9618 euros)</p>
<p>Seoul: A German court has ordered the recall and destruction of some products from lighting maker Signify that infringed on the patents of Seoul Semiconductor, the South Korean firm said on Thursday.</p>.<p>The court in Dusseldorf ordered distributor Conrad Electronic to take the actions and said there would be a fine of up to 250,000 euros ($259,925) for each violation of its order, Seoul Semiconductor said in a statement.</p>.New US tariffs could prompt Signify to move some production from China, CEO says.<p>Netherlands-based Signify - the world's biggest lighting maker which was spun off from Philips in 2016 - said the patents in question had expired.</p>.<p>The company told <em>Reuters</em> it had started legal action to show that the patents were now invalid, without going into further details on the case.</p>.<p>Seoul Semiconductor, which has sued multinational companies over patents, said it uses about 10% of its revenue in research and development and holds more than 18,000 patents in light-emitting diode technology. </p><p>($1 = 0.9618 euros)</p>