The case relates to one of the innovations at the heart of an earlier US case in which Samsung was defeated by the iPhone maker.
The dispute focused on the iOS system's bounce-back list feature which Motorola was found to have infringed.
Apple has to formally request a sales ban before it would come into effect.
Google has not issued a statement, but is expected to appeal.
The ruling was issued at a court in Munich on Thursday.
Google had challenged the validity of the patent which describes a way to make a list react as if it was on a rubberband when a user scrolls beyond its end.
The search giant has also filed a separate challenge against the intellectual property with the European Patent Office.
Tech consultant Florian Mueller - who advised another tech firm recently involved in a lawsuit against Google - said it would be relatively easy for the search giant to revise its software to mean it no longer risked a patent infringement.
The basic version of Google's Android operating system displays a glow effect when a user reaches the end of a list. So, the firm could revise an adapted version used on Motorola devices to abandon their use of an added bounce-back feature.
However, he added that if Apple posted a bond of 25m euro ($32.6m; £20.1m), it could now force the devices off shop shelves, and for an additional sum it could have them destroyed or recalled.
Motorola briefly forced Apple to stop selling some of its iPads and iPhones in Germany in February after a separate lawsuit.
While the ruling adds to Apple's patent victory tally, the firm's co-founder Steve Wozniak has voiced his discomfort at the fact it was engaged in such legal battles.
"I hate it," he said, when quizzed about the fact that a jury had awarded Apple $1.05bn (£648m) in damages from Samsung.
"I don't think the decision of California will hold. And I don't agree with it... I wish everybody would just agree to exchange all the patents and everybody can build the best forms they want to use everybody's technologies."
Mr Wozniak is the listed as an inventor of several patents himself, including a way to use a computer with a video display.
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