Court approves seizure of Mitsubishi assets
Published: 25 Mar. 2019, 19:52
Last Friday, the Daejeon District Court ordered the seizure of two trademark rights and six patents of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, according to the civic group dealing with colonial Japan’s recruitment of Koreans for forced labor.
As a result, the Japanese company will be barred from disposing of or transferring the concerned trademark and patent rights at will.
The ruling came after four Korean victims of Japan’s wartime forced labor, including 88-year-old Yang Geum-deok, filed a request with the Seoul Central District Court in January demanding the seizure of Mitsubishi assets, which are worth 804 million won ($709,000).
The petition was later transferred to the local court in Daejeon, where the Korean Intellectual Property Office is located.
The Supreme Court ruled last November that Mitsubishi must award up to 120 million won each to 12 forced labor victims and their family members in one of two landmark rulings on forced labor cases.
Yet Mitsubishi Heavy Industries has since failed to respond to requests by the lawyers of the forced labor victims for compensation negotiations.
“As long as Mitsubishi doesn’t show a faithful attitude toward the repeated court orders, we’ll continue to take our own measures in the future as planned,” a civic group official said.
The top court also upheld a similar appellate ruling last October against Nippon Steel & Sumitomo Metal, but the Japanese company has not accepted the ruling.
Korea was under Japan’s brutal colonial rule from 1910 to 45. Korea says Japanese leaders do not sincerely repent for the country’s past wrongdoings and refuse to take full legal responsibility. Japan claims all reparation issues were settled in the 1965 treaty that normalized their diplomatic ties.
Yonhap
with the Korea JoongAng Daily
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