International Business Machines (IBM) Corp
said on 7 August it will appeal an Indiana judge's ruling that calls
for the technology company to pay more than $78 million in damages to
the state for failing to modernize the government's welfare system.
AFP
Marion Superior Court Judge Heather Welch
ruled on 4 August that Indiana was entitled to $128 million in damages
for the breach of contract by the company. Welch also said IBM was
entitled to nearly $50 million in damages for equipment fees and related
costs, according to court documents.
IBM and Indiana in 2006 signed a contract
under which the company would modernize the state's welfare system. But
the state terminated the contract three years later, claiming IBM fell
short of the stated goals.
"IBM will appeal this decision which is
contradicted by the facts and the law," IBM spokesman Clint Roswell said
in a statement on 8 August.
"IBM worked diligently and invested
significant resources ... to help turn around a welfare system described
at the time by Indiana's governor as one of the worst in the nation,"
he added.
State officials said on Monday that they
were pleased with the decision. "This is a very positive step forward to
vindicate the actions the state took in 2009 to terminate the contract
with IBM," Indiana Governor Eric Holcomb said in a statement. "We look
forward to the resolution of the lawsuit."
One of the state's attorneys, Peter
Rusthoven, said IBM "refused all along to take responsibility for its
poor performance." IBM and Indiana sued each other in 2010, alleging
breach of contract.
The two cases were consolidated and a
judge in 2012 found no breach of contract by IBM, which was awarded
$49.5 million in past-due fees after a six-week bench trial in Marion
Superior Court.
Both parties appealed and the state
Supreme Court found last year that IBM breached the contract and sent
the case to Welch's court to determine damages.

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