U.S. District Judge Denise Cote didn’t like the terms of the settlement Apple reached with 33 state attorneys general last summer. She didn’t like them one bit.
That tortuous e-book trial she presided over the year before had netted only $450 million — $50 million in court fees and an average of $17.39 to be split among as many as 23 million readers.
That’s if the appeals court accepts without reservation her ruling that what Apple did to carve out a piece of Amazon’s e-book market was against the law. See The view from the hard benches.
If the higher court sends the decision back to her — for any reason, large or small — the consumers get only $2.17 apiece. If the court reverses her decision, Apple pays nothing.
“It was the best deal we could get,” said a lawyer representing the consumers when it was proposed.
Cote sent the deal back for revision, but Apple didn’t budge. “We’ve done nothing wrong here,” Tim Cook insisted before the case went to trial. “We’re not going to sign something that says we did something we didn’t do.”
Cook, who must have signed off on the settlement, is betting on the appeals court.
On Thursday, four months after it was offered, Judge Cote took that bet.
And blamed the delay on Apple.
Follow Philip Elmer-DeWitt on Twitter at @philiped. Read his Apple AAPL 0.14% coverage at fortune.com/ped or subscribe via his RSS feed.
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