HP seeks up to $4 billion in damages.
Instead of a jury, Santa Clara Superior Court Judge James Kleinberg will decide the first phase of the trial -- namely, whether there is a contract between HP and Oracle, and its terms. If Kleinberg decides in HP's favor, then a jury will decide whether Oracle violated the contract, and damages.
In May, Kleinberg compared the case to a divorce, saying "this case appears to be the end of a marriage" between the technology giants.
HP's Thomas on Tuesday said emails from Oracle general counsel Dorian Daley support HP's view of the Hurd agreement.
"The negotiations are consistent with HP's interpretation and cannot be squared with Oracle's," Thomas said.
However, Wall said Oracle specifically rejected HP's effort to expand the Hurd settlement to include business commitments like porting.
"We have not one statement by one Oracle employee that yes, we promised to port our future software to HP," Wall said.
Kleinberg indicated he would not rule before mid-July.
The case in the Superior Court of the State of California, County of Santa Clara is Hewlett-Packard Company v. Oracle Corporation, No. 11-CV-203163.
(Reporting By Poornima Gupta; Writing by Dan Levine, editing by Bernard Orr)
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