Date: 20060426
Docket: T-2792-96
Citation: 2006 FC 524
Toronto, Ontario, April 26,
2006
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Hughes
BETWEEN:
MERCK & CO., INC., MERCK FROSST
CANADA & CO.,
MERCK FROSST CANADA LTD., SYNGENTA
LIMITED,
ASTRAZENECA UK LIMITED AND ASTRAZENECA
CANADA INC.
Plaintiffs
(Defendants by Counterclaim)
and
APOTEX INC.
Defendant
(Plaintiff by Counterclaim)
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
[1]
This
action concerns the infringement and validity of claims 1, 2 and 5 of Canadian
Patent 1,275,350 (‘350 patent). That patent is directed among other things, to
a class of chemical compounds stated to be useful in treating hypertension. One
such compound is known as lisinopril.
[2]
The
Plaintiffs include the owner of and licensees under the patent some of whom
sell drugs in Canada incorporating
lisinopril as an active ingredient. They commenced selling such drugs in the
early 1990’s developing a Canadian market estimated to be at least forty
million dollars annually by the late 1990’s. The Defendant Apotex Inc. is
commonly referred to as a generic drug company. It chose to produce and sell in
Canada and
elsewhere a generic version of some of the Plaintiffs’ lisinopril drugs. These
generic versions were first introduced in the mid 1990’s and by the end of that
decade had acquired a major portion of the market in Canada. As of the
time of the trial, Apotex’s market for such drugs was estimated to be fifty to sixty
million dollars annually.
[3]
This
action was commenced in 1996. The Plaintiffs alleged infringement, Apotex
counterclaimed alleging invalidity of the patent. By the time of trial, Apotex
admitted that, if the claims in issue of the patent were valid, then they had
infringed those claims subject to certain exemptions as to some quantities of
lisinopril obtained from an allegedly licensed source, and certain quantities
used for allegedly exempted purposes.
[4]
This
action is not the first in which these parties have been engaged. Another
action dealt with a related patent 1,275,349 pertaining to a compound known as
enalapril. After a lengthy trial, an appeal and several related proceedings, that
patent was held to be valid and infringed by Apotex. These former proceedings,
say the Plaintiffs, preclude Apotex from raising attacks as to the validity of
the patent at issue here.
[5]
For
the reasons that follow, I find that Apotex has infringed each of claims 1, 2
and 5 of the ‘350 patent, subject to certain exemptions, that Apotex is
precluded from challenging the validity of those claims and, in any event,
those challenges fail. Appropriate remedies are granted.
[6]
I
propose to deal with the matters considered in the following order:
1.
The
Parties
2.
The
Issues
3.
The
Witnesses
4.
Background
to the Biochemistry
5.
Development
of the Particular Compounds of Concern
6.
What
are Lisinopril, Enalapril and Enalaprilat
7.
Combination
with Diuretics
8.
Commercialization
of Lisinopril Products
9.
History
of the ‘350 Patent and Related Patents and Applications
10.
Construction
of the ‘340 Application
11.
Use
of Extrinsic Evidence
12.
Construction
of the ‘350 Patent Claims
13.
Infringement
a)
Admission
as to Infringement
b)
Exemptions
from Infringement
i)
Section
56
ii)
License
iii)
Section
55.2(1)
iv)
Common
Law
v)
Dedication
c)
Limitation
Respecting Exemptions
14.
Validity
a)
Effect
of the Presumption of Validity
b)
Estoppel
i)
Previous
Litigation
ii)
Delmar
License
c)
Divisional
Procedure
d)
Effective
Filing Date of the Divisional Application
e)
Double
Patenting
f)
Wilful
Delay
15.
Remedies
1. The Parties
[7]
The
status of the Plaintiffs is no longer in controversy, having been admitted by
Apotex. Merck & Co. Inc. is, and at all times has been, the owner of the ‘350
patent. It is the “patentee” as defined by the Patent Act R.S.C. 1985,
c.P.4, section 2 (the Act). The remainder of the Plaintiffs are licensees
under the ‘350 patent at issue and are “persons claiming under the patentee,”
as defined in section 55(1) of that Act.
[8]
A
pre-trial order of this Court permitted the Plaintiffs to be arranged into two
groups. One is the Merck group comprising Merck & Co. Inc, Merck Frosst
Canada & Co. and Merck Frosst Canada Ltd. The other is the Astra group
comprising Syngenta Limited, AstraZeneca UK Limited and AstraZeneca Canada Inc.
Each of Merck and Astra were permitted to be represented at trial by their own,
separate, firm of solicitors and counsel.
[9]
The
Defendant Apotex Inc., is a Canadian company based in the Toronto area. It
formulates and sells generic drugs that is, copies of drugs developed by others
and permitted to be made and sold in Canada and elsewhere if they
are bioequivalent to the satisfaction of the relevant government authorities.
Apotex was amalgamated with Torpharm Inc. on April 1, 2004, and continues as
Apotex Inc. The benefits and liabilities of each continue with Apotex Inc.
2. The Issues
[10]
The
parties were invited to submit a set of issues to the Court for determination. They
filed separate submissions. From those submissions, which were much in
agreement, the following issues emerge for determination:
1.
Construction
of the Patent and the Claims
2.
Infringement
a) Admission as
to infringement
b) Exemptions
from Infringement
i)
Section
56 – Are certain lots exempt?
ii)
License
– Does Delmar’s license exempt any lots?
iii)
Section
55.2 – Are certain lots exempt?
iv)
Common Law
– Are there common law exemptions and, if so, what is exempt.
v)
Dedication
– Does the Merck dedication of certain claims of the ‘559 patent exempt any
lots from infringement?
3.
Validity
a) Effect of the
presumption of validity
b)
Estoppel
i)
Delmar License
– Is Apotex estopped or otherwise precluded from challenging validity as a
result of the claim to the benefit of the Delmar License?
ii)
Prior
Litigation - Is Apotex estopped or otherwise precluded from challenging
validity of the ‘350 patent having regard to prior litigation, T-2408-91 and
A-724-94?
c)
Double
Patenting – Are the claims at issue of the ‘350 patent invalid having regard to
the ‘684 patent?
d)
Improper
Divisional – Is the ‘350 patent invalid as by improperly divided out of the
patent application 341,340 having regard to that application and the other
divided out applications?
e)
What is
the effective filing date of the application for the ‘350 patent? What is the
effect of the disclosures in US patent 4,374,829 and European
Patent Applicant?
f)
Wilful
Delay – Did Merck wilfully delay the prosecution of the application for the
‘350 patent and, if so, what is the effect.
4.
Remedies
If
a valid claim of the ‘350 has been infringed by non-exempt activity of Apotex
a)
To
what remedies are the Plaintiffs entitled?
b)
To
what remedies is the Defendant/Counterclaimant entitled?
3. The Witnesses
[11]
There
were thirteen fact witnesses and nine expert witnesses called by the parties.
Except for opinions of the experts as to whether the ‘350 patent comprised one
or several inventions, which is a question ultimately for the Court and not
witnesses to determine, there was little disagreement between the witnesses.
All witnesses were credible. Where it became necessary to choose among the
experts, I prefer the evidence of Drs. Marshall, Garvas, Nelson, Wolfenden and
Horovitz, who are not only recognized experts in their fields, but persons who
were actually involved in relevant events in the critical periods in the
1960’s, 70’s and 80’s. The other experts, while helpful in many respects, were
viewing some matters at issue more with the benefit of hindsight.
[12]
Called
as factual witnesses were:
1.
Mr.
Philippe Hébert, Vice-President of Marketing for Merck Frosst. He testified as to
the marketing of lisinopril products by Merck in Canada and the
effect of Apotex’s entry into that market.
2.
Ms.
Karen Feltmate, Vice-President of Marketing for AstraZeneca Canada. She testified
as to the marketing of Astra lisinopril products in Canada and the
effect of Apotex’s entry into that market.
3.
Dr.
Robert Dickinson, President of Delmar Chemicals, subpoenaed by Apotex. Delmar
manufactured lisinopril in Canada in the early 1990’s some of which found
its way into the hands of Apotex. Delmar was for a period of time licensed
under the patent in accordance with the compulsory license scheme provided
under the Patent Act until it was repealed. He testified as to the licensing
and the manufacturing of batches of lisinopril which ultimately found their way
to Apotex.
4.
Dr.
Bernard (Barry) Sherman, President of Apotex. He testified generally as to the
manufacture and sale of lisinopril products by Apotex. He also spoke about
lobbying efforts made by various pharmaceutical trade associations as well as Apotex
and Merck against and for proposed (and ultimately successful) revisions to the
Patent Act to get rid of compulsory licensing.
5.
Mr.
Jack Kay, Chief Operating Officer of Apotex. He also spoke as to lobbying by
Apotex, Merck and trade associations as to amendments to the Patent Act
to get rid of compulsory licensing.
6.
Mr.
James Keon, President of the Canadian Generic Pharmaceutical Association,
previously named the Canadian Drug Manufacturers Association. This is a trade
association representing generic pharmaceutical companies in Canada including
Apotex. He was previously a member of the policy branch of Industry Canada and involved
in revision of the Patent Act. He testified as to lobbying efforts made by
trade associations and companies such as Apotex and Merck in respect to
proposals to remove compulsory licensing from the Patent Act.
7.
Dr.
George Michaliszyn, Director of Life Sciences at the Federal Department of
Industry Canada. He appeared
under subpoena from Apotex and testified as to lobbying efforts by interested
parties, including Merck, as to amendments to the Patent Act respecting
compulsory licensing.
8.
Mr.
John Hems, Director of Regulatory Affairs for Apotex. He testified as to the
preparation by Apotex of substances including lisinopril for submission to United
States
and Canadian government regulatory bodies for approval to sell products containing
lisinopril in those countries.
9.
Ms.
Bernice Tao, Associate Director of U.S. Regulatory Affairs at
Apotex. She testified as to the preparation by Apotex of lisinopril containing
products for purposes of submissions to United States regulatory
officials for approval for sale in that country.
10.
Mr.
Lance Lovelock, Vice-President of Quality Assurance at Apotex. He testified as
to the sampling by Apotex of lisinopril materials received by it and of
lisinopril containing materials formulated by Apotex, and the testing and retention
of such samples.
11.
Mr.
Donald Barber, Formulation Development Manager at Apotex. He testified as to
the use of lisinopril by Apotex in the development and testing of various
formulations of drugs for research and for submission to regulatory
authorities.
12.
Mr.
Gordon Fahner, Vice-President of Finance at Apotex. He provided summaries of
the records kept at Apotex as to sales of lisinopril products and as to
lisinopril used in respect of submissions to regulatory authorities, for
quality assurance, and for research and development.
13.
Ms.
Patty De Luca, a Canadian process server. She testified that she delivered a
letter into the hands of a person in New Jersey who she believed to be
a United
States
patent attorney, Michael Sudal. That letter invited Sudal to contact Apotex’s
lawyers concerning issues in the trial. Sudal never appeared as a witness.
[13]
Expert
witnesses were called by each of Merck, Astra and Apotex. All of the experts
were qualified as such by the Court. All provided reports or affidavits however
the parties did not elect to tender the whole of such documents into evidence.
Only portions were deemed to have been read in evidence; certain other portions
were ruled inadmissible on grounds, for instance, that the witness lacked
expertise to address matters such as patent prosecution. Portions addressing
ultimate issues for the Court to determine were read in, but have been given no
weight. These witnesses, in order of appearance, were:
1.
Dr.
Paul Bartlett, called by Merck, an Emeritus Professor of Chemistry at the
University of California, Berkeley (Exhibits 34
and 35). He testified as to the processes used by Delmar to manufacture
lisinopril and the state of the materials during such process at dates critical
to provisions of the Patent Act relating to exemptions from
infringement. There was no rebuttal to his evidence although he was cross-examined.
2.
Dr.
Robert McClelland, called by Apotex, retired Professor of Chemistry at the University
of Toronto
(Exhibit 89). He gave evidence as to chemistry, organic, biological and
medicinal, particularly that relating to the compositions at issue. Dr.
McClelland’s general understanding of these matters was sound however, his
evidence was acquired through knowledge looking in hindsight and not as a
person involved at the relevant time.
3.
Dr.
Garland Marshall, called by Apotex, Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular
Biophysics at Washington School of Medicine in St. Louis (Exhibit 144). He is
an expert in medical chemistry, resin angiotensin system, cardiovascular
pharmacology, and hypertension including ACE inhibitors. He was closely
connected with developments in the area during the relevant period.
4.
Dr.
Alexander Klibanov, called by Apotex, Professor of Chemistry and Bioengineering
at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Exhibit 180). He was qualified as an
expert in medicinal and biological chemistry and gave evidence as to the
chemistry and biological features of the compounds of interest in these
proceedings. His evidence was based on a hindsight review as he was not
directly involved in this particular field at the time.
5.
Dr.
Robert Langer, called by Apotex, a Professor in the Chemical and Bioengineering
Department of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Exhibit 187). He was
qualified as an expert in chemical and biochemical engineering and gave the
opinion that the developmental pathway with respect to the conversion of
enalaprilat to the prodrug enalapril was clearly taught and thus, obvious to
persons skilled in the art as of 1978.
Dr. Langer
was not cross-examined and no rebuttal was offered as to his opinion.
6.
Dr.
Haralambos Gavras, called by Apotex, a Professor of Medicine at Boston
University School of Medicine (Exhibit 211). He was qualified as a medical
doctor with expertise in the treatment of cardiovascular conditions, including
hypertension and chronic heart failure, the use of ACE inhibitors and the
pharmacology of ACE inhibitors. He clearly stated that he was not an expert in
chemistry. Dr. Gavras was involved in clinical research involving drugs used to
treat hypertension, including ACE inhibitors, and treatment of patients with
such drugs at the relevant time. His evidence is important in this regard.
The
Plaintiffs put in evidence correspondence indicating that, at one time, they
had contacted Dr. Gavras with a view to having him present evidence on their
behalf. This correspondence indicated a view by one of the counsel for Merck
that Dr. Gavras was seeking a large sum of money for doing so. That counsel did
not give evidence as to what actually transpired. Dr. Gavras stated that he was
seeking funding for his laboratory and heard nothing further from Merck’s
counsel after such correspondence. Other evidence indicated that Dr. Gavras’
fees charged to Apotex’s solicitors are not extravagant. Apparently some fuss
was made during pre-trial motions as to whether Dr. Gavras should give
evidence. He did give evidence and I find that such evidence is in no way
compromised or tainted.
7.
Dr.
Wendel Nelson, called by Astra, Professor of Medicinal Chemistry at the University of
Washington, Seattle (Exhibit
239). He was qualified as an expert in the field of medicinal chemistry,
particularly as to ACE inhibitors in the late 1970’s and early 1980’s. His
involvement in the area was not as direct as that of others such as Wolfenden
and Horovitz. He gave evidence as to the evolution of the development of ACE
inhibitors in this period.
8.
Dr.
Richard Wolfenden, called by Astra, Professor of Biochemistry, University of
North Carolina, Chapel Hill (Exhibit 253). He was qualified as an expert in the
mechanism of enzyme action including the transition state and the development
and design of inhibitors. His evidence is of particular relevance since he was,
in the period of the 1960’s through 1980’s, involved directly in the fields
relevant to this action. He authored major papers influential in the
development of the Squibb inhibitor which was the first commercial oral
inhibitor on the market.
9.
Dr.
Zola Horovitz, called by Merck, retired, Doctorate in Pharmacology and Director
of Research at Squibb in the 1970’s (Exhibits 261 and 262). He was qualified as
a pharmacologist with particular experience in the areas of hypertension and
ACE inhibitors. He testified as to the development at Squibb of the first
commercially available oral ACE inhibitor, Captopril. He gave evidence as to the
effect of the Merck developments once they became known.
[14]
In
addition, Apotex read in portions of its examination for discovery of Merck’s
designated witness Dr. Wryvatt, one of the persons named as inventor in the
patent at issue. Astra agreed that it would be equally bound by the Merck
discovery. Apotex also put in evidence a request to admit and response from Merck’s
solicitors. Merck tendered no discovery or request to admit into evidence.
Astra tendered portions of discovery and related documents of Apotex into
evidence.
4. Background to the
Biochemistry
[15]
The
experts were in general agreement as to much of the biochemical background
useful in understanding the ‘350 patent.
[16]
Amino
acids are the basic building blocks from which living matter is constructed.
There are twenty amino acids commonly found in nature, these have names such as
proline, lysine, glutamine, etc. which names are often shortened to pro, lys
and glu, etc. By combining various numbers and groups of these acids in various
configurations, larger structures known as peptides are formed. The bonds
between these acids are known as peptide bonds. Still larger groups known as
proteins may be formed from such acids. Yet larger structures can result in
configurations such as deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and, ultimately, living
matter.
[17]
Materials
such as proteins and peptides occur in the body and serve various functions
beneficial or otherwise. Enzymes are organisms present in the body that
facilitate the conversion of such materials into other material usually by
cutting off (cleaving) a portion of the molecule. This process is said to be
reversible but usually only when rare conditions exist. The study of one such
enzyme, the angiotensin converting enzyme, is of interest in this proceeding.
[18]
Enzymes
attach themselves to proteins or peptides, usually smaller in size, and break
those proteins or peptides, often referred to as substrates, down into smaller
fragments. Substrates are attached to certain locations on the enzyme, a
surface or pocket, which is particularly adapted for that substrate. The terms
“lock and key” and “hand in glove” are sometimes used to describe such
attachment. The attachment may be due to one or more of the physical size and
shape, electro–chemical forces and, the presence of metallic ions such as zinc.
Activity during the process of attachment and cleaving of the substrate is called
the transition state.
[19]
Enzymes
can be prevented from performing their function by enzyme inhibitors, which can
be molecules having one or more of a particular size, structure and
electro-chemistry designed to mimic the target substrate and occupy much of the
pocket or site on the enzyme normally attracted to the substrate, so as to
prevent the enzyme from doing its work. It is the design of such molecules that
is the subject matter of the patent at issue.
5. Development of the
Particular Compounds of Concern
[20]
The
particular compounds of concern are generally known as ACE inhibitors, that is,
angiotensin converter enzymes inhibitors, useful in the treatment of
hypertension.
[21]
The
development of the particular compounds of concern has been well documented in
scientific publications authored by some of those named as inventors of the
patent in suit, for example Trial Exhibit 102 “Evolution of Angiotensin-Converting
Enzyme Inhibitors” by Wryvatt published in Clinical Physiology and
Biochemistry in 1988 and Trial Exhibit 109 “A New Class of
Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors” by Patchett et al. published in Nature
in 1989. These publications, however, are not direct proof of the facts recited
in them. Neither the inventors nor any of their colleagues appeared as
witnesses at trial although one, Wryvatt, was examined for discovery and some
portions of that examination were put in evidence at trial.
[22]
Three
expert witnesses presented at trial had direct experience with the development
of antihypertension drugs, one was Dr. Haralambos Gavras, a medical doctor who
was, at the relevant time, active in clinical trials and medical treatment of
patients with certain drugs used to treat hypertension. Another was Dr. Richard
Wolfenden, an expert enzymological chemist whose published scientific papers in
the enzyme field, including transition state reactions, provided the basis for
much development in this area. The third was Dr. Zola Horowitz an expert in
pharmacology, who participated in the development of a commercially successful
angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor at Squibb, sold under the name Captopril.
This Squibb product was the most immediate prior art relevant to the compounds
of the patent at issue. Dr. Garland Marshall was also active in the field at
the time although not as directly as these three.
[23]
Dr.
Gavras explained that, historically, there was until the middle 1960’s much
doubt as to whether hypertensive patients could be treated. He described how,
in the late 1960’s, certain hypertensive medications such as diuretics,
methyldopa, and beta blockers were available. If one did not do the job,
another was added in administration to a patient. In the 1970’s, a derivative
of the venom of a poisonous snake, teprotide, was introduced. It was an ACE
inhibitor administered intravenously. Teprotide was sometimes used in
combination with a diuretic such as hydrochlorochiozide (HCTZ) in patients who
did not respond to treatment with just one of them. When the Squibb product, Captopril,
became available, it likewise would sometimes be used in combination with a
diuretic where patients initially failed to respond.
[24]
Dr.
Wolfenden described scientific work directly related to ACE inhibitors. He
described that in the late 1970’s, work in this area, including work that
related to transition state analog inhibitors, was in its infancy. By the late
1970’s, it was known that the system whereby angiotensin, an eleven amino acid
substrate was reduced to angiotensin I, a ten amino acid substrate, by a
substance called renin, and further reduced to angiotensin II, an eight amino
acid substrate, by an angiotensin converting enzyme. It was known that this
system had an important role in the regulation of blood pressure in humans. Dr.
Ondetti and others at Squibb determined in the early 1970’s that teprotide, an
eight amino acid substance derived from snake venom was effective in lowering
blood pressure in hypertensive patients. Dr. Wolfenden attributed remarkable
insight to Dr. Ondetti and others, in applying principles that were hypothetical
at the time, to the development of the ACE inhibitor we now know as Captopril.
[25]
Dr.
Horowitz was part of the team, including Dr. Ondetti and others, responsible
for the Captopril development at Squibb. He explained that in the 1960’s,
researchers at Squibb were able to determine some of the characteristics of the
angiotensin converting enzyme that served to cut off (cleave) two terminal
amino acids of angiotensin I at a peptide bond, so as to leave angiotensin II.
At that time, the Squibb researchers came into contact with Dr. Ferreira, who
had isolated venom from a Brazilian snake that Squibb believed might inhibit
the angiotensin converting enzyme. Working with this venom, the Squibb
researchers identified what became known as teprotide. This substance needed to
be administered intravenously but proved to be an effective ACE inhibitor. Dr.
Gavras, among others did early clinical work with teprotide.
[26]
Squibb
recognized that intravenous administration was not very desirable and sought a
drug that could be administered orally. They come across a publication by Dr.
Wolfenden which discussed possible inhibitors for a different enzyme. Squibb
believed that sufficient similarities existed such that portions of the
structure proposed by Wolfenden could be used, together with other molecular
arrangements, to create an ACE inhibitor. Many compounds were tested, some of
which were reported in paper by Dr. Ondetti et al. in Science in 1977.
One of these compounds was, what is now known as Captopril. This compound could
be administered orally and was shown, at the laboratory level, to be effective.
Clinical testing went on through the 1970’s ultimately leading to government
approval and commercial distribution of that product for use as an ACE
inhibitor in the treatment of hypertension.
[27]
It
is not disputed that Captopril was a known ACE inhibitor useful in treating
hypertension at a time before Merck made its discoveries relating to the patent
at issue. In short, it is prior art.
[28]
Captopril,
as described by Dr. Horovitz, is not a standard peptide although it has certain
characteristics of a peptide. As a chemical formula it can be stated as (D-2-Methyl-3-mercaptopropanol-L-proline).
Diagrammatically it can be shown as:
[29]
It
is recognized by all parties that Captopril was a significant invention.
[30]
Direct
evidence as to the development of Merck’s compound is obtained only through the
portions of the discovery tendered into evidence at trial by Apotex. From that
evidence, it is clear that the persons named as inventors by Merck were aware
of the developments at Squibb, including what is now known as Captopril and
that they believed that the toxicity of the Squibb compound had yet to be tested.
It was acknowledged that the Merck work that led to the patent at issue was
done after Captopril was already known. These persons also knew of the
structure of the snake venom compounds that preceeded Captopril, such as teprotide.
[31]
The
first patent application directed to the class of compounds at issue filed by
Merck anywhere was United States application 968,249 filed December 11,
1978. The Canadian application 341,340 (‘340 application) which claimed
priority from this United States application was filed in Canada on December
6, 1979.
[32]
Merck
had made some compounds falling within the general description of Formula I of
the patents before filing the United States Patent application, but it is not
clear from the evidence as to which or how many or to what degree they were
tested. Lisinopril was first made by Merck in about May 1979. Enalapril had
been made and tested earlier, in about January 1979. In vivo testing of
lisinopril and enalapril maleate was reported in October 1979. It was not until
about April 1983 that a clinical operational plan was established. Merck
received approval to market lisinopril first in the United States later in the
1980’s.
6. What are Lisinopril,
Enalapril and Enalaprilat?
[33]
A
class of compounds of which lisinopril is one, is described in the ‘340
application and claimed in that patent by means of a general formula, Formula I
which contains seven locations R plus R1 through R6 at
which a choice of several chemicals or molecules may be placed. It is estimated
that easily billions of compounds could exist within this class. Sometimes such
a claim is referred to as a Markush claim after a United States decision of
that name where such a claim was first discussed (ex parte Markush
(1925), 240 US OG 835).
[34]
Although
the experts were in agreement that there is no commonly accepted scientific
definition of the terms, Formula I has been referred to as a “backbone” and the
resulting structures when various R through R6 components are
affixed have been referred to as “analogs”. In general, the ‘340 application and
all related patents and applications refer to the compounds generally as
carboxyalkyl dipeptides and derivatives thereof and all refer to the same
“backbone”, Formula I. Where they differ is in the selection of chemicals and
molecules which comprise each R through R6.
[35]
The
“backbone” Formula I may be depicted as:
Formula
I
[36]
Some
of the patents divided out of the ‘340 application restrict themselves to classes
that include compounds commonly known as lisinopril, enalapril and enalaprilat.
Each of lisinopril, enalapril and enalaprilat share the common backbone of
Formula I, they differ in some of the substituents found at some of the R
through R6 positions. They each can be depicted in various ways. The
written formula for each is:
Lisinopril: N-a-(1(S)-carboxy-3-phenylpropyl)-L-lysyl-L-proline
Enalapril: N-(1(S)-ethoxycarbonyl-3-phenylpropyl)-L-alanyl-L-proline
Enalaprilat: N-(1(S)-carboxy-3-phenylpropyl)-L-alanyl-L-proline
[37]
The
differences between the molecular structure of each of these compounds can be
depicted, using conventional stereochemistry illustration where a solid wedge
indicates a molecule rising out of the page toward the reader, and a dotted
wedge indicating a molecule directed away from the reader:
Lisinopril
Enalapril
Enalaprilat
[38]
Using
the jargon of some of the experts in this case, enalapril is the prodrug
version of enalaprilat and lisinopril differs from enalaprilat in the molecular
structure found in the R3 position.
[39]
The
concept of a prodrug, according to the evidence, was known to a person skilled
in the art as of 1978. Some medicines, if taken orally, will pass through the
intestinal wall reasonably well, so that they enter the bloodstream in the
desired form. Other medicines do not pass through the intestinal wall or do so
poorly. In order to facilitate the passage of such medicines through the
intestinal wall, additions to the molecular structure are made so as to change
the electrochemistry of the overall molecule. Once the molecule passes through
the wall, the added portion breaks off, leaving the desired molecule in the
bloodstream to do its work. It is the uncontradicted evidence of Dr. Langer
that, given the molecular structure of enalaprilat in 1978, a person skilled in
the art could readily convert it to the prodrug enalapril.
[40]
Enalaprilat
was found to be an effective antihypertensive but could only be administered
intravenously. The much more desirable route of oral administration was
achieved by creating a prodrug version, namely enalapril.
[41]
Lisinopril
fortunately has a molecular structure of such a nature that it passes through
the intestinal wall sufficiently readily such that a prodrug version is
unnecessary. It appears from data available at least until very recently that
it has characteristics that make it slightly less effective as an oral medication
than enalapril. More recent data suggests that it may be equally or more
effective in some respects. From a clinical point of view, according to Dr.
Gavras, enalapril and lisinopril are equally effective and they are as
effective as Captopril, except that Captopril must be taken several times a day
whereas the others are taken only once a day as their persistence in the body
is better.
[42]
Lisinopril,
as a molecule, differs from enalaprilat only in the R3 position,
although that difference enables it to be taken orally rather than the less
desirable intravenous route.
[43]
A
useful depiction is found at Figure 7 taken from an article entitled “Evolution
of Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors” by Wryvatt published in 1988 in Clinical
Physiological Biochemistry.
[44]
At
the top is depicted various pockets or sites designated as S1, S11
and S21 located on the enzyme, to which the molecules
enalaprilat, enalapril or lisinopril will attach themselves so as to inhibit
angiotensin conversion. Keeping in mind Formula I, the site depicted as S11
is the location at which that part of the molecular structure designated as R3
will fit.
[45]
It
is Dr. Marshall’s evidence that the S11 site is fairly
promiscuous, that it will accept R3 structures of a variety of types
without particular discrimination thus, it is not particularly important what R3
is relatively speaking. He says lisinopril is an obvious variant of
enalaprilat. Dr. McClelland is of a similar opinion.
[46]
On
the other hand Dr. Nelson states that, given that enalaprilat was known to be
useful only if given intravenously, it would not have been readily apparent
that changes in the R3 position could produce a molecule that could
be administered orally. Dr. Wolfenden states that even if the differences from
a molecular point of view between lisinopril and enalapril and enalaprilat
appear relatively small, the substantial changes that result would not have
been obvious to a person skilled in the art as of 1978 or 1979.
[47]
Given
the known prior art of Captopril, these are even greater differences in the
molecular structure in comparison with lisinopril, enalapril and enalaprilat.
Only the structure as normally depicted at the right hand side (C terminus) is
similar to any of enalapril or enalaprilat or lisinopril. Dr. Horowitz, one of
the Squibb scientists responsible for the discovery of Captopril, expressed the
surprise and chagrin at Squibb when the Merck developments became known as they
were unable to make those discoveries. Dr. Marshall, one of Apotex’s experts,
described the Merck discovery in arriving at the backbone represented by
Formula I in terms of “eureka”. There is no doubt that, in respect of the prior
art known as of 1978 or 1979, the backbone of Formula I, enalapril, enalaprilat
and lisinopril were new and inventive. Apotex does not challenge the
inventiveness of the class or of lisinopril specifically.
[48]
I
find, on the evidence, favouring that of Drs. Nelson and Wolfenden that each of
lisinopril, enalapril and enalaprilat were, as of 1978 or 1979 inventively
different from each other. If separate patent applications had been filed, for
instance by third parties, for each of lisinopril, enalapril and enalaprilat,
they would have been allowed as separate, inventively different, patents.
7. Combination with
Diuretics
[49]
Diuretics,
such as hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ) were, for at least a decade prior to 1978,
known and used in the treatment of hypertension, according to Dr. Gavras. They
reduce the amount of fluid, hence pressure, in the circulatory system. Dr.
Gavras stated that for several years prior to 1978, a clinician treating
hypertensives would, if one medicine was seen not to be sufficiently effective,
add a second or even a third. Thus HCTZ could be added to, for instance, a beta
blocker. From a clinical point of view, the administration of a diuretic with
another antihypertensive was well known before 1978.
[50]
The
evidence shows that in practice, the commercial drugs produced by the
Plaintiffs indicate that the effect of adding a diuretic to lisinopril in
tablet form is simply cumulative, not synergistic, nor antagonistic. The effect
is just as Dr. Gavras and others had been practicing for years before.
[51]
Dr.
Horovitz stated that the combination of a diuretic with another antihypertensive
such as Captopril had to be approached with caution. One could not always
assume that it would work or, more importantly, be safe and effective. He
stressed the need for clinical trials.
[52]
From
a patent point of view, there is little difference between these opinions. Dr.
Gavras is saying that combinations with antihypertensives and diuretics have
worked well in the past and there is every reason to believe that these
combinations would work equally well in the future. Dr. Horowitz’s caution is
essentially on the regulatory side: will it pass muster from a regulatory point
of view? The government regulatory bodies always require testing. As stated by
Lederman J. in Bayer A/G v. Apotex Inc. (1995), 60 C.P.R. (3d) 58 (Ont
Gen. Div.) at page 89 (affirmed (1998) 82 C.P.R. (3d) 526 (Ont CA)), testing
for regulatory approval relates to commercial acceptability as opposed to
whether it is operable as promised by the patent. While I appreciate that
Lederman J. was addressing an argument of inutility, this applies equally to
obviousness.
[53]
While
it is unnecessary for me to make a finding as to obviousness in view of my
findings as to enalapril and lisinopril being different inventions, I find that
there is no inventiveness in the simple addition of a diuretic such as HCTZ to
these compounds.
8. Commercialization of
Lisinopril Products
[54]
The
first commercialization of lisinopril products in Canada was made by
Merck in the early 1990’s and closely followed by Astra. On October 26, 1990,
Merck received a Notice of Compliance from Health Canada giving it permission
to market lisinopril containing drugs in Canada in 5, 10, 20
and 40 milligram (mg) strength tablets for oral administration. Merck sold
these drugs under the name PRINIVIL. Commencing at the end of 1990, Merck began
to sell these drugs in Canada in tablets of 5, 10 and 20 milligram
strength. A 40 milligram strength was never sold in Canada. These sales
have continued uninterrupted through to the date of trial. At the end of 1999,
a further approval was obtained to sell such a drug in the 2.5 milligram
strength. Some sales at this strength were made but have stopped.
[55]
Merck
does not make lisinopril in Canada, it obtains it from elsewhere, however it
formulates lisinopril by adding to it other ingredients, expedients, and
produces tablets in the 5, 10 and 20 milligram strengths in Canada. The 2.5
milligram strength tablet was acquired from abroad and packaged in Canada for
distribution for a short period of time. In addition, Merck formulates in
Canada and exports to the United States 5, 10 and 20 milligram
versions of lisinopril tablets, and has done so since 1997.
[56]
On
October 29, 1992, Merck obtained another Notice of Compliance, this one
relating to a drug containing both lisinopril and a diuretic known as hydrochlorothiazide
(HCTZ) in strengths of 20/12.5 and 20/25 milligrams of lisinopril/HCTZ. Another
Notice of Compliance for such a combination in a 10/12.5 strength was received
in June of 1994. Since the dates of such Notices, Merck has been selling these
combination drugs in Canada under the name PRINZIDE.
[57]
Since
its entry into the Canadian market, Merck estimates that it has total sales in
excess of around two hundred and fifty million dollars for PRINVIL and thirty
million dollars for PRINZIDE.
[58]
Astra
entered into an arrangement with Merck, the details of which were not given,
whereby Astra was licensed in respect of lisinopril products in Canada. Astra and
its predecessors, ICI and Zeneca, have been selling lisinopril containing
tablets in 5, 10 and 20 milligram strengths in Canada since at
least as early as 1993, under the name ZESTRIL. It also sells a tablet
containing a combination of lisinopril and HCTZ in 10/12.5, 20/12.5 and 20/25
milligram strengths under the name ZESTORETIC. Astra does not make any of these
tablets in Canada, it imports
them in bulk from related corporations and packages them in Canada for
distribution. Peak sales for ZESTRIL occurred in 1996 at the forty million
dollar level.
[59]
Apotex
obtained approval for a generic version of lisinopril tablets in 1996 and
entered the market late that year with a 5 milligram strength tablet under the
name APO-LISINOPRIL. Late in 1999, Apotex expanded its range to include 10 and
20 milligram strengths. Apotex has made, at least at laboratory levels, but never
sold, a combination lisinopril and diuretic product in Canada. Apotex also
manufactures lisinopril tablets for export.
[60]
The
initial entry by Apotex into the Canadian marketplace in 1996 appears to have
had limited impact on the sales of Merck and Astra products, probably because
it was available in only one, low dosage strength. However, the entry in 1999
of additional dosage strengths of Apotex product essentially was the end of
significant sales by Merck and Astra except for the combination lisinopril/diuretic
products where Apotex did not compete. Mr. Hébert testified that since the year
2000, Merck has essentially stopped supporting its lisinopril products in
Canada although some sales continue, particularly in Quebec. Ms.
Feltmate testified that Astra also stopped supporting its lisinopril products
in Canada once Apotex
began marketing a full range of dosages in its tablets.
[61]
The
reason that Apotex was able to gain the level of the sales of lisinopril
product appears to be that its product is cheaper and, since it is available
only by prescription through hospitals and pharmacies, in many instances
provincial regulations require substitution of the cheapest available product.
There is no evidence that either Merck or Astra took any steps to meet this competition
by price reduction or any other means.
[62]
The
evidence of Mr. Gordon Fahner, Vice-President of Finance of Apotex is that
sales of the Apotex lisinopril products have been in the order of fifty to
sixty million dollars annually for the last three years and probably over the
two hundred and fifty million dollars in total. Dr. Sherman estimated that the
total Canadian market for lisinopril products, with Apotex in the market, is
about eighty million dollars a year.
9. History of the ‘350
Patent and Related Patents and Applications
[63]
On
December 11, 1978, the initial (priority) patent application was filed by Merck
in the United States Patent Office. It described a vast number of compounds
having a common backbone, Formula I. Within the compounds described as “most
favourable” were compounds, not specifically identified, but which included
lisinopril, enalapril and enalaprilat. Apotex does not contest that, as of that
date, the class of compounds described in this application was new and
inventive.
[64]
On
December 6, 1979, the Canadian patent application 341,340 (‘340 application) was
filed claiming the benefits of priority from the United States application.
The disclosure was essentially the same as the United States application however,
many more examples were added including examples specifically disclosing each
of lisinopril, enalapril and enalaprilat. There were claims specific to each of
lisinopril, enalapril and enalaprilat. Apotex argues that the ‘340 application
is “constrained” by its claim to priority from the United States application.
No authority for such proposition was given. All that a claim to priority does
is to enable an applicant to claim an earlier date of filing or a notional date
of invention if that became an issue. No such issue was raised in this action.
[65]
A
European Application was also filed with a claim of priority to the United
States
application and on June 25, 1980, European Patent Application EP 12401 was
published. On February 22, 1983, United States Patent 4,374,829 was issued,
tracing back to the original United States priority application.
The information contained in each is, for patent purposes, equal to that
contained in the Canadian parent application and each of the divisionals. If
the divisionals can claim the original filing date of the Canadian patent, as
provided in section 36(4) of the Patent Act, the United States Patent
and European Application are irrelevant, as they were published later. If the
divisional relating to the ‘350 patent is only entitled to its actual
divisional filing date, August 1, 1989, then the invention claimed in the ‘350
would have been fully disclosed some six or more years previous, by the
publication of the European Patent Application and issued United States Patent hence
not new, thus, invalid under the provisions of section 27(1)(b) of the old Patent
Act, infra.
[66]
At
issue is whether the application for the ‘350 patent was a proper divisional.
[67]
The
‘350 patent is but one of many patents that have originated from the parent ‘340
application filed with the Canadian Patent Office on December 6, 1979. The ‘350
patent is the result of an application “divided out” from the parent ‘340 application
on August 1, 1989, as number 607,198 and prosecuted as a separate application.
[68]
Since
both the parent ‘340 application and the “divided out” or divisional
application for the ‘350 patent were both filed before October 1, 1989, the
‘350 patent and all applications are to be dealt with under the provisions of
the “old” Patent Act R.S.C. 1985, c.P-4, that is, those provisions
applicable to patent applications filed in Canada before that date and patents
maturing from such applications.
[69]
The
parent ‘340 application originally contained seven claims, six directed to
various compounds, the seventh directed to a process for producing such
compounds. In the description, the classes of compounds were divided into
preferred, more preferred and most preferred. All compounds were stated to be
useful in treating hypertensive mammals, including humans, and were said to be
capable of being administered orally or parenterally (intravenously). Dosage
ranges of 5 to 500mg per dose or 5 to 2000mg per day were given. It was stated
that the compounds may be given in combination with other diuretics or
antihypertensives. One hundred and twenty seven examples were given.
[70]
It
was agreed by the experts that the broadest claim of the parent ‘340
application potentially could cover billions of compounds, among which would be
lisinopril as well as enalapril and enalaprilat. It was agreed that those three
compounds fall within the “most preferred” class of compounds as described in
the application. At least one example, Example 57B was directed specifically to
lisinopril. One claim, claim 5, was specific to lisinopril.
[71]
Section
36(1) of the “old” Patent Act provides that a patent shall be granted
for one invention only, with a saving provision that if granted for more than
one invention, it shall not be invalid for that reason. Section 36(2) provides
that the Commissioner shall direct an application to be divided when it appears
to the Commissioner to describe and claim more than one invention and also
provides that the applicant may do so on its own initiative. Section 36(4)
provides that a divisional (divided out) application carries on as separate and
distinct application but bears the filing date of the original (parent)
application.
[72]
In
the case of the ‘350 and related patents, all were divided out by the applicant
on its own initiative; the Commissioner did not request a dividing, nor did the
Commissioner object when the divisional applications were filed and prosecuted
by the Applicant. The Commissioner made no comment in this regard.
[73]
The
first dividing out took place on September 16, 1986 when three applications
were filed as divisionals. The parent ‘340 application remained but without
claims directed to the subject matter of the divisionals. One of those divisionals
was application 518,334 with claims to a class of compounds including
enalapril. This application ultimately matured on October 16, 1990, to patent
number 1,275,349 (‘349 patent) about which there has been much previous litigation
between the parties. The second was application 518,335 which included claims
directed to enalaprilat. This application ultimately matured on May 5, 1992 to
patent number 1,300,313. The third was application 518,336 which included
claims directed to lisinopril. The patent file history of this third
application suggests that in early October 1989, before the ‘350 patent was
granted, a patent agent working for Merck phoned the Patent Office and asked
that the claims of this application be cancelled. This application was
ultimately abandoned in 1991 for failure to respond to a patent office action
dated July 9, 1990.
[74]
A
second group of divisionals comprised two which were filed on September 7,
1988. The first was application 576,715 which included claims directed to
enalapril plus a diuretic. This application matured on November 7, 1989, to
patent number 1,262,684. This patent is involved in the “double patenting”
issue raised by Apotex. The second was application 576,716 which included
claims directed to lisinopril plus a diuretic and to uses of lisinopril alone.
This application matured on November 8, 1990, to patent number 1,276,559. The
claims directed to uses of lisinopril alone were dedicated to the public by
Merck & Co. Inc. without prejudice to any rights in other claims in that
patent or any other patent or application, by a document dated December 8, 2004,
and filed with the Patent Office shortly thereafter.
[75]
A
third, and final division was made on August 1, 1989, when application 607,198
was filed with claims including those directed to lisinopril. This application
matured on October 16, 1990, to patent number 1,275,350 which is the patent at
issue in this action. It is to be noted that October 16, 1990, is the same date
that the ‘349 patent with claims directed to enalapril was granted.
[76]
The
parent ‘340 application, with no claims overlapping those of the divisional
applications, matured to patent number 1,308,313 on May 5, 1992. Essentially,
this patent claimed whatever was left after dividing out the other
applications.
[77]
The
experts agree that, as between the various issued patents, there are no
precisely overlapping claims. Only the ‘350 patent includes claims directed to
lisinopril alone. The subsequently issued patent 1,276,559 has claims directed
to lisinopril plus a diuretic and also had claims directed to uses of
lisinopril alone which use claims were dedicated to the public as previously
discussed.
[78]
The
description contained in the ‘350 patent differs from that of the parent ‘340
application as originally filed in that the classes of “preferred, more
preferred and most preferred” compounds are much narrower in the ‘350 patent. Claim
1 claims this narrower class but, according to at least one expert, Dr.
Kilbonov, still may claim over a billion compounds. Claim 2 is directed
specifically to lisinopril. Claim 5 is directed to lisinopril or other of the
compounds of claim 1 in a formulation for treating hypertension. The examples in
the ‘350 patent have been reduced to 3 including an example specific to
lisinopril. The stated usages, manner of administration, dosages and possible
combination with diuretics and other antihypertensives remains the same. No
further description was added to the ‘350 patent. No further or specific data
is given in respect of lisinopril. Example 1 of the ‘350 patent closely
parallels Example 57 of the parent application in describing lisinopril.
[79]
In
brief, except for the narrowing of the range of compounds that could be created
using Formula I and selection among that range and restriction as to number of
examples, the description of the ‘350 patent is unchanged from that of the
parent ‘340 application as filed. The stated uses, dosages, combination with
other material is precisely the same as found in the parent ‘340 application as
it is in every other patent divided out from the parent ‘340 application and
the parent itself as issued to a patent.
10. Construction of the
‘340 Application
[80]
The
issues in this action require a construction, not only of the claims of the
‘350 patent, but of the specification of that patent and the parent ‘340
application as originally filed in the Canadian Patent Office on December 6,
1979.
[81]
The
Supreme Court of Canada in Camco Inc. v. Whirlpool Corp., [2000] 2 S.C.R.
1067 and Free World Trust v. Électro Santé Inc., [2000] 2 S.C.R. 1024
was concerned with the construction of the claims of the patents in suit. That
Court told us that construction of the claims is a function to be performed by
the Court, reading the claim in an informed and purposive way through the eyes
of a person skilled in the art to which the patent pertains, as of the date of
its publication, or, in the case of an old Act patent, the date of its grant.
[82]
However,
where the occasion demands, the whole of the patent including the specification
as well as the claims, needs to be interpreted. The same rules apply. As Binnie
J. for the Court, said in Whirlpool at paragraphs 42 and 43:
42
The content of a patent specification is regulated by s. 34 of the Patent
Act. The first part is a "disclosure" in which the
patentee must describe the [page1089] invention "with sufficiently complete
and accurate details as will enable a workman, skilled in the art to which the
invention relates, to construct or use that invention when the period of the
monopoly has expired": Consolboard Inc. v. MacMillan Bloedel
(Sask.) Ltd., [1981]
1 S.C.R. 504, at p. 517. The disclosure is the quid provided by
the inventor in exchange for the quo of a 17-year (now 20-year) monopoly on the
exploitation of the invention. The monopoly is enforceable by an
array of statutory and equitable remedies and it is therefore important for the
public to know what is prohibited and where they may safely go while the patent
is still in existence. The public notice function is performed by
the claims that conclude the specification and must state "distinctly and
in explicit terms the things or combinations that the applicant regards as new
and in which he claims an exclusive property or privilege" (s.
34(2))". An inventor is not obliged to claim a monopoly on
everything new, ingenious and useful disclosed in the
specification. The usual rule is that what is not claimed is
considered disclaimed.
43
The first step in a patent suit is therefore to construe the
claims. Claims construction is antecedent to consideration of both
validity and infringement issues. The appellants' argument is that
these two inquiries -- validity and infringement -- are distinct, and that if
the principles of "purposive construction" derived from
Catnic are to be adopted at all, they should properly be confined to
infringement issues only. The principle
of "purposive construction", they say, has no role to play
in the determination of validity, and its misapplication is fatal to the
judgment under appeal.
[83]
While
this discussion relates more particularly to the claims, the construction of
the whole of the patent is also something to be considered by the Court as
stated by Pigeon J. of the Supreme Court in Burton Parsons Chemicals, Inc.
v. Hewlett-Packard (Canada) Ltd., [1976] 1 S.C.R. 555 at 563:
While the construction of a patent is for
the Court like that of any other legal document, it is however to be done on
the basis that the addressee is a man skilled in the art and the knowledge such
a man is expected to possess is to be taken into consideration. To such a man
it must be obvious that a cream for use with skin contact electrodes is not to
be made up with ingredients that are toxic or irritating, or are apt to stain
or discolour the skin.
[84]
The
Supreme Court said the same thing in Western Electric Co. v. Baldwin
International Radio of Canada, [1934] S.C.R. 570 at 572 where Duff CJ gave
the opinion of the Court: construction of the specification is a question of
law exclusively for the Court.
[85]
A
patent is an enactment within the meaning of the Interpretation Act, R.S.C.
1985 c.I-21 section 2(1) as stated by Binnie J. in Whirlpool at
paragraph 49(e) and is to be given an interpretation that best answers the attainment
of its objects.
[86]
Therefore,
turning first to the parent ‘340 application as filed on December 6, 1979, it
starts with a statement of the background of the invention at page 1:
Background of Invention
The invention in
its broad aspects relates to carboxyalkyl dipeptides and derivations thereof
which are useful as converting enzyme inhibitors and as antihypertensives. The
compounds of this invention can be shown by the following formula:
[87]
There
follows a listing of various elements and compounds that may be inserted at the
R through R6 positions.
[88]
At
page 5, the list of materials from which R through R6 may be
selected is narrowed:
“Preferred
are those compounds of Formula 1 wherein:”
[89]
And
the list is further narrowed at page 5:
“Still more preferred compounds are those
preferred compounds of Formula 1 wherein:”
[90]
And
further narrowed again, at the bottom of that page:
“Most
preferred are compounds of Formula 1 wherein:”
[91]
No
reason for these increasing preferences is given, no data of comparative
performance, for instance, is set out.
[92]
Page
6 tells us that these compounds can be provided in a salt form and methods for
preparation of the compounds are set out in several following pages:
The
preferred, more preferred and most preferred compounds also include
pharmaceutically acceptable salts thereof.
The products
of Formula (I) and the preferred subgroups can be produced by one or more of
the methods and subroutes in the following equations:
[93]
At
pages 12 and 13, the stereochemistry of the structure is described, again in
very general terms:
In products of general Formula
I, the carbon atoms to which R1, R3 and R5 are
attached may be asymmetric. The compounds accordingly exist in diasteresometric
forms or mixtures thereof. The above described syntheses can utilize racemates,
enantiomers or diastereomers as starting materials. When diastereomeric
products result from the synthetic procedures, the diastereomeric products can
be separated by conventional chromatographic or fractional crystallization methods.
In general, the aminoacid part-structures, …
[94]
At
page 13, we are told that the compounds form salts. A variety of salts are
named and a description given as to how to form them:
The compounds of this
invention form salts with various inorganic and organic acids and bases which
are also within the scope of the invention. Such salts include …
[95]
At
page 14, the utility of the compounds is set out:
The compounds of this
invention inhibit angiotensin converting enzyme and thus block conversion of
the decapeptide angiotensin I to angiotensin II.
***
The evaluation of converting
enzyme inhibitors is guided by in vitro enzyme inhibition assays. For example…
[96]
At
the bottom of page 14 and over to page 15, we are told that the compounds may
be administered in a variety of ways and broad dosage ranges are set out:
Thus, the compounds of this
invention are useful as antihypertensives in treating hypertensive mammals,
including humans and they can be utilized to achieve the reduction of blood
pressure by formulating in compositions such as tablets, capsules or elixirs
for oral administration or in sterile solutions or suspensions for parenteral
administration. The compounds of this invention can be administered to patients
(animals and human) in need of such treatment in a dosage range of 5 to 500 mg
per patient generally given several times, thus giving a total daily dose of
from 5 to 2000 mg per day. The dose will vary depending on severity of disease,
weight of patient and other factors which a person skilled in the art will
recognize.
[97]
At
page 15, we are told that the compounds may be combined with other diuretics or
antihypertensives and a number of such materials and dosage strengths are
identified:
Also the compounds of this
invention may be given in combination with other diuretics or
antihypertensives. Typically these are combinations whose individual per day
dosages range from one-fifth of the minimally recommended clinical dosages to
the maximum recommended levels for the entities when they are given singly. To
illustrate these combinations …
[98]
At
the bottom of page 15 over to page 17, illustrations as to formulation into
pharmaceutical compositions are given:
Typically the combinations
shown above are formulated into pharmaceutical compositions as discussed below.
***
[99]
At
page 17, an introduction to the Examples is given. The examples are said to be
illustrative of the invention and constitute preferred embodiments:
The following examples are
illustrative of the invention and constitute preferred embodiments. The
preferred diastereomers of those examples are isolated by column chromatography
or fractional crystallization.
[100] There follows
one hundred and twenty seven examples, many directed to specific compounds and
their preparation. Example 25 is specific to enalaprilat. Example 26 is
specific to enalapril. Example 57B is specific to lisinopril.
[101] The parent
application, as filed, contained seven claims. Claims 1, 2 and 3, all of them
quite broad, are directed to classes of compounds. Claim 4 was specific to enalapril,
claim 5 was specific to lisinopril. Claim 6 was directed to nine different
compounds, the first of which was enalaprilat. Claim 7 is directed to a process
for preparation of the compounds.
[102] It is quite
clear that the specification is directed to a class of compounds, divided,
without stating why, into three classes, preferred, more preferred and most
preferred. Specifically exemplified and claimed are compounds including lisinopril,
enalapril and enalaprilat. No data is given in respect of any compound, no
comparison is made as between any compounds. Lisinopril, save for being
individually exemplified (along with many other individually exemplified
compounds) and being individually claimed, is in no way separated from the
class of compounds said to be “most preferred”. No special mention is made of
lisinopril, no special attributes of lisinopril are given.
[103] When we turn
to the ‘350 patent, we find almost precisely the same description as was given
in the parent ‘340 application. The range of compounds given as preferred, more
preferred and most preferred, is narrowed but said still to be in the billions.
The examples are reduced to three, Example 1B being specific to lisinopril.
There are 6 claims, claim 1 being a broad claim which includes lisinopril.
Claim 2 is specific to lisinopril. Claim 5 is directed to a pharmaceutical
composition that could contain a variety of compounds, one being lisinopril.
[104] I pause here
in the construction of the specification, to comment that Apotex does not
contest that the class of compounds represented by Formula I even in its
broadest form, is proper subject matter for a valid patent. Inventiveness and
utility of such a broad class were, at one time, contested by Apotex but those
challenges as to validity were dropped. Similarly, with respect to lisinopril
alone, Apotex does not raise any challenge as to its inventiveness or to the
fact that it is adequately supported by the disclosure.
[105] The issue that
is raised by Apotex is whether the parent ‘340 application describes one
invention, namely a class of compounds represented by Formula I, of which there
could be many examples depending on what substances are used in the R through R6
position, for instance lisinopril, enalapril and enalaprilat. Or, is the
description directed to many separate inventions, one being the class and
others being those specifically stated such as lisinopril, enalapril and
enalaprilat?
[106] “Invention”
is a rather elastic word. The late Dr. Fox, in his text Canadian Patent Law
and Practice (4th) Edition, Carswell, Toronto at page 60,
said this as to invention:
The term “invention”, as it is
used in the law of patents, is one to which more than one meaning may be
attached. It may be used interchangeably with “subject-matter” in the sense
that it relates to the content of a patent, or in other words to the device or
process that is protected. It may thus be used as a substitute designation for
a given improvement whether patented or unpatented. In another sense it may
relate to the quality of the act that called an improvement into being. In this
sense its meaning is directed to the mental act of originating and devising
rather than to the product of the mental act.
[107] The Patent
Act, in s. 2 defines “invention” as:
“invention” means any new and
useful art, process, machine, manufacture or composition of matter, or any new
and useful improvement in any art, process, machine, manufacture or composition
of matter;
[108] A patent very
similar to the ‘350 patent in its wording was examined by the English Courts in
May & Baker Limited v. Boots Pure Drug Company Limited (1950), 67 R.P.C.
23, where Lord Normand, one of the majority, at page 37 said:
“Specifications like other
documents must be construed as they are and not as they might have been.”
[109] Lord
MacDermott, another of the majority, said at pages 51 and 52:
“… the inventive step
consists in the discovery of a scientific truth, to the effect that if certain
defined classes of materials are combined according to certain processes the
whole range of resulting products will have therapeutic value… this view does
not involve a plurality of inventions…”
[110] Lord Simonds,
the third of the majority, at page 32 said:
“For, if a specific drug falls
within the general terms of the invention whose nature is stated in the consistory
clause and is for that reason to be regarded as the same invention, it remains
the same invention whether or not it is specifically described by way of
example or illustration. The sameness or difference of the two inventions
cannot be determined by the fact that the patentee had elected to give the one
as an example of the other, though I do not doubt that, if he does so, the
probability is in favour of their sameness.”
[111] It is
compelling, having read the specification of the ‘340 application as a whole,
endeavouring to give a purposive construction to what is stated there, to be
driven to the same conclusion as the majority of the House of Lords in May
& Baker, namely that there is but one invention described, namely a
class of compounds having the structure of Formula I in common, useful in
treating hypertension, and that lisinopril, enalapril and enalaprilat are simply
illustrative members of that class.
[112] However, the Exchequer
Court,
in two decisions of Thurlow J., both of which were upheld by the Supreme Court
of Canada, has, in respect of patents having disclosures and claims strikingly
similar to that of the ‘340 application, held otherwise. The first of those was
C.H. Boehringer Sohn v. Bell-Craig Ltd. (1962), 39 C.P.R. 201 where
Thurlow J. considered May & Baker noting that the patent which he
was considering not only exemplified a particular substance, but claimed it as
well (just as in the ‘340 application here) whereas there was no such claim in May
& Baker. He said at page 217:
The problem of so reading the
specification is embarrassing for by its context the disclosure throughout
suggests one and only one invention. But, as a matter of
construction of the specification, this suggestion of the specification must, I
think, give way in order to give meaning to the specification as a whole which
includes claim 8 and thus indicates that besides the invention of the class an
invention of the single substance, 2- phenyl-3-methylmorpholine is involved in
the disclosure.
[113] The Supreme
Court of Canada affirmed Thurlow J. ((1963), 41 C.P.R. 1) but without
discussion as to this point.
[114] The second
decision is that of Hoechst Pharmaceuticals of Canada Ltd. v. Gilbert &
Co. (1965) 50 C.P.R. 26 where Thurlow J. was again faced with a similar
patent which again contained a claim to the particular substance. He found at
page 36:
The disclosure does not purport to be one
of an invention of tolbutamide alone or of it and a process or processes for
its preparation but on the contrary purports to relate to a class of sulphonyl
ureas of which tolbutamide is one member, and it proceeds to outline in general
terms methods by which ureas of the class may be produced and to assert utility
for the substances of the class. Tolbutamide is mentioned from time to time as
an example of the class but not until one reaches claim 10 (13 in the case of
the last patent) is there any indication that the invention is concerned with
anything but a whole class of substances and general methods of producing them.
In this respect the specifications resemble that considered in C.H. Boehringer
Sohn v. Bell Craig Ltd. ([1962]
Ex. C.R. 201.) and for the reasons there given at pages 209 to 215 I am of
the opinion that these specifications should be regarded as purporting to
disclose several different inventions, one or more pertaining to a class or
classes of substances, another to the single substance known as tolbutamide and
several others to the particular substances claimed in claims 11 to 19
inclusive (14 to 21 in the last).
[115] The Supreme
Court of Canada this time did comment on the point (reported in the same volume
beginning at page 54) but only in the context that, while it was conceeded that
the one compound alone could have been the subject of a valid patent, Thurlow
J. had found the patent invalid on the basis that the class was too broad. The
Supreme Court affirmed that decision.
[116] Counsel for
Apotex attempted to distinguish the patents considered by Thurlow J. from the
‘340 application and ‘350 patent at issue here. I find no substantive
distinction. This application and patent and those considered by Thurlow J. and
that of May & Baker are, for the purposes of construction considered
here, the same. Were I to approach the matter without jurisprudential
constraints, I would readily find that the ‘340 application is directed to but
one invention, a class of compounds, of which individual compounds such as lisinopril
are but illustrative. However, Boehringer and Hoechst, supra, oblige
me to find otherwise, on the slender basis that there was, in the ‘340
application not only examples but also specific claims to the individual
compounds enalapril, enalaprilat and lisinopril, each of which, on the theory
of those cases, is a different invention from the class. A higher court may be
persuaded otherwise however, for jurisprudential integrity in this Court, I
must find that the ‘340 application discloses separate inventions to each of the
class, to lisinopril, to enalapril and to enalaprilat.
11. Use of Extrinsic
Evidence
[117] Counsel for
Apotex urged me, in considering the issue of construction particularly of the
‘340 patent application, to consider extrinsic evidence, including
communications between Merck’s United States patent attorneys and the United
States Patent Office during the prosecution of the priority application filed there.
Those communications included an argument by Merck’s attorneys, ultimately
successful, to the effect that only one invention was disclosed in the parent
application. Apotex also urged that I consider internal memoranda written by
the persons named as inventors by Merck and certain published scientific papers
authored by some of these persons. Some statements in these memoranda and papers
suggested that these persons considered that a class of compounds had been
invented and no separate invention was made in respect of members of that
class, such as lisinopril.
[118] As I have
already concluded, were it not for the Canadian jurisprudence, the ‘340
application in my opinion discloses one invention, a class. This view is
consistent with the evidence urged upon me by Apotex.
[119] I have
resisted referring to this evidence, however. As to the communication with the
United States Patent Office, no evidence was led of any person having expertise
in United
States
patent law and prosecution practice. I am hesitant to make any conclusions in a
matter rife with technical issues such as this, without such assistance, or
even to draw any inference from such correspondence. The Courts, commencing
with Lovell Manufacturing Co. v. Beatty Bros. Ltd. (1962), 41 C.P.R. 18
at 38-39 through Free World, supra, paras. 62-67 have resisted
consideration of extrinsic evidence particularly foreign patent prosecution, in
interpreting a Canadian patent. While there are exceptions such as Laboratoire
Pentagone Ltée. v. Parke Davis & Co., [1968] S.C.R. 307 at 312, they
are rare instances best left in isolation. The reason for resisting such
extrinsic evidence is plain: a patent should stand on its own, to be read by a
person skilled in the art so as to be understood on its own. To encourage the
exhumation and use of extrinsic evidence such as domestic or foreign
prosecution history and writings of inventors and the like is to take patent
construction into the realm of expensive, possibly endless searches and
arguments. Patent construction is difficult enough as it is.
[120] Further, with
respect to writings of inventors whether internal memoranda or papers published
in scientific journals and the like, the Federal Court of Appeal in Nekoosa
Packaging Corp. v. AMCA International Ltd. (1994), 56 C.P.R. (3d) 470 per Robertson
J.A. at page 480 made it very clear that the general rule is that extrinsic
evidence is inadmissible for the purpose of construing a patent specification
and this must necessarily extend to the testimony of the inventor pertaining to
the proper construction of the specification. This applies even more so when
the evidence is essentially hearsay.
[121] Therefore, I
have not considered for the purpose of construction, the United States prosecution
history or the memoranda or papers by the inventors.
12. Construction of the
‘350 Patent Claims
[122] As instructed
by the Supreme Court of Canada in Whirlpool Corp. v. Camco Inc. [2000] 2
S.C.R.1067, the Court must construe the claims at issue. This construction is
to be made without regard to infringement or validity. Construction is to be
considered as of the date the patent was issued and granted, October 16, 1990.
The Court is to put itself in the position of the ordinary person skilled in
the art to which the patent pertains and read the claims in the context of the
description made in the patent as a whole thus, give a purposive construction to
the claims.
[123] At issue are
claims 1, 2 and 5 of the ‘350 patent which are as follows:
Claim 1 A compound of the formula:
wherein:
R and R6 can be the
same or different and
are hydroxy or loweralkoxy;
R1 is a substituted
lower alkyl wherein the
substituent is phenyl or halophenyl;
R2 and R7 are
hydrogen;
R3 is amino
lower alkyl;
R4 and R5 are
lower alkyl;
R4 and R5 may
be connected together to form an
alkylene bridge of from 2 to 4 carbon atoms;
and the pharmaceutically
acceptable salts thereof.
Claim 2 N-a-(1(S)-carboxy-3-phenylpropyl)-L-lysyl-L-proline
***
Claim
5 A pharmaceutical composition for reducing hypertension
comprising an effective amount of a compound of Claim 1, 2 or 4 and a
pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.
[124] Construction
of these claims, as stated by the Federal Court of Appeal in earlier
interlocutory proceedings in this case, Merck & Co. Inc. v. Apotex Inc.
(2003), 30 C.P.R. (4th) 40, 2003 FCA 488 at paragraph 2, has never
been an issue between the parties. It has been acknowledged, and the Court so
finds, that claim 1 includes many compounds, one of which is lisinopril. Claim
2 claims only the compound lisinopril. Claim 5 claims a pharmaceutical
composition for reducing hypertension comprising an effective amount of the
compounds of claims 1 or 2 including, lisinopril. These compounds are said to
be useful as converting enzyme inhibitors and as antihypertensives. Although
such use is not particularly included in claims 1 or 2, such use is inherent in
those claims. This same finding was made by the Federal Court of Appeal with
respect to the ‘349 patent directed to enalapril (Merck & Co. v. Apotex
Inc. (1995), 60 C.P.R. (3d) 356 at page 373).
[125] Therefore,
the claims 1, 2 and 5 can be construed as:
1. Compounds of
Formula I wherein R and R1 through R6 are selected from
the choices given. Lisinopril is among such choices. Inherent in this claim is
its utility in reducing hypertension.
2. Lisinopril.
Inherent is its utility in reducing hypertension.
5. A pharmaceutical
composition for reducing hypertension comprising an effective amount of a compound
of claim 1 including lisinopril and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.
13. Infringement
a) Admission as to Infringement
[126] Apotex’s
counsel made the following statement to the Court on January 19, 2006:
“Apotex will acknowledge that
its only defences to infringement of claims 1, 2 and to the extent that tablets
were made, 5, which is the formulation claims, of the ‘350 patent are
invalidity, section 56, license, experimental use and regulatory use.
That is the extent of the
defences for infringement.”
[127] This same
position was noted by the Federal Court of Appeal in hearing an earlier interlocutory
motion in this matter as reported at (2003) 30 C.P.R. (4th) 40, 2003
FCA 488 at paragraph 2.
[128] Thus, if any
of claims 1, 2 or 5 is valid, Apotex will have infringed such claims subject to
the exemptions put in issue. Claim 5 is directed to formulated drugs thus, only
Apotex’s tablets are at issue in respect of claim 5. All of Apotex’s commercial
products were in tablet form.
b) Exemptions from
Infringement
[129] Apotex asserts
that, if the claims of the ‘350 patent are found to be valid, then certain
quantities of lisinopril used by Apotex are exempt from infringement for a
variety of reasons:
-
Section 56
of the old Patent Act exempts material acquired before the ‘350 patent
was granted on October 16, 1990.
-
A
Compulsory License issued to Delmar under the ‘350 patent exempts certain
quantities of lisinopril manufactured by Delmar and ultimately acquired by
Apotex.
-
Section
55.2 of the Patent Act permits Apotex to use and retain certain
quantities of lisinopril for submissions as required by government authorities.
-
The common
law respecting patents permits non-infringing use to be made by Apotex of
certain quantities of lisinopril for experimental purposes.
[130] As to the
quantities used, when they were used and for what purposes, I accept without
reservation, the evidence of Apotex employees Fahner, Hems, Tao, Lovelock and
Barber. In any accounting to be made, their evidence as given at trial should
be accepted as credible and accurate.
(i) Section 56 – Are
certain lots exempt?
[131] The
Plaintiffs have agreed that certain lots of lisinopril acquired by Apotex are
exempt by reason of the provisions of section 56 of the Patent Act, as
set out in Exhibit 1. Remaining at issue, in respect of this asserted
exemption, are three lots of lisinopril manufactured in Canada by Delmar
and ultimately acquired by Apotex. They are identified as Delmar lot numbers
P65485, P65510 and P65557.
[132] Section 56 of
the old Patent Act states that every person who, before the issuing of a
patent, that is October 16, 1990, has purchased, constructed or acquired an
invention for which the patent is obtained, has the right to use and sell to
others the specific composition of matter patented and so acquired.
[133] The evidence
of Dr. Dickinson, President of Delmar was that two of the lots in question,
numbers P65485 and P65510 were, as of October 16, 1990, in the latter stages of
manufacture. Neither was a “produit fini”, to use Delmar’s words, as of that
date. The evidence of Dr. Dickinson and the expert, Dr. Bartlett who examined
the production records of Delmar, was that as of October 16, 1990, lisinopril
did exist as molecules in each of those batches, however, as for P65485 the
lisinopril had not been isolated, freed of residual solvents and released for
purposes of formulating into a drug until October 20, 1990. As for P65510, the
lisinopril was at a still earlier stage of production. That lisinopril had not
yet been isolated as a solid and still had to undergo purification steps
including tituration and recrystalization, followed by drying, before it could
be released as a finished product.
[134] Voluminous
records, in the French language, were produced by Delmar showing the
manufacture of lisinopril from raw materials. A large number of steps were
undergone before arriving at what Delmar records described as a “produit fini.”
While lisinopril as a molecule came into existence somewhere within each batch
before October 16, 1990, until those molecules had been sufficiently isolated
and purified so that Delmar could consider that it had arrived at a “produit
fini”, it cannot be said that Delmar had “purchased, constructed or acquired”
the invention within the meaning of section 56. That did not happen with
respect to either batch P65485 or P65510 until after the patent was granted.
[135] As to lot
P65557, we have no records. Dr. Dickinson said that they could not be found.
Inferring only from numerical sequence, that lot was probably even less
advanced that the other lots. The onus lies on Apotex to prove an exemption and
it has not done so with respect to lot P65557.
[136] Essentially
the same issue arose in earlier litigation between these parties as to
enalaprilat manufactured by Delmar. The Federal Court of Appeal in Merck
& Co. v. Apotex Inc. (1995), 60 C.P.R. (3d) 356, at page 373, held
that inherent in the claim, and the patent, is the purpose and utility of the compound
enalapril. That Court made that finding in the course of stating that bulk
enalapril made before the date of grant could be made into tablets. However,
also inherent is the fact that the bulk material as of the date of grant, must
be in a usable form such as to be formulated into tableted drugs. The Federal
Court of Appeal in Merck, supra at page 375, made it clear that section
56 could only apply to material that was in satisfactory condition so as to be
considered by the manufacturer as something that could be shipped to a
customer. In the present action, the two batches produced by Delmar contained
lisinopril only as one, unisolated, part of a vat of chemical material. It was
not usable for anything as of the critical date. The lisinopril in the vat
cannot be said to have been “purchased, constructed or acquired” as of the
critical date.
[137] This view is
consistent with that of the majority of the Federal Court of Appeal in Lido
Industrial Products Ltd. v. Teledyne Industries Inc. (1981), 57 C.P.R. (2nd)
29 as expressed by Urie JA at pages 54 and 55. In speaking of shower heads that
had been ordered from a supplier but not yet delivered as of the relevant date,
Urie JA stated that the critical feature was that the actual patented object
must be in existence as of that date.
[138] I find,
therefore, that the benefit of section 56 of the Patent Act cannot be
given to any of Delmar batches P65485, P65510 or P65557.
(ii) License – Does
Delmar’s license exempt any lots?
[139] On May 2,
1992, Delmar acquired from the Commissioner of Patents under the provisions of
the Patent Act then in force, a compulsory license in respect of the
‘350 patent. The Patent Act was amended by S.C. 1993, c.2, terminating
compulsory licenses granted after December 20, 1991. The relevant provision,
transitional section 12 reads:
12. Licenses ceasing to
have effect - (1) Every license granted under section 39 of the former Act
on or after December 20, 1991 shall cease to have effect on the expiration of
the day preceding the commencement day, and all rights or privileges acquired
or accrued under that license or under the former Act in relation to that license
shall thereupon be extinguished.
(2) Actions for infringement
barred – For greater certainty, no action for infringement of a patent lies
under the Patent Act in respect of any act that is done before the commencement
day under a license referred to in subsection (1) in accordance with the terms
of that license and sections 39 to 39.17 of the former Act.
[140] The
“commencement day” was February 14, 1993.
[141] The operative
terms of the license granted by the Commissioner to Delmar appear to be the
same as those considered by this Court and the Federal Court of Appeal in
earlier litigation between these parties reported at (1994), 59 C.P.R. (3d) 133
and (1995), 68 C.P.R. (3d) 356, in dealing with the enalapril ‘349 patent. The
operative terms of the ‘350 patent license granted to Delmar at issue here are:
NOW THEREFORE, be it known that pursuant to
the power vested in me by the Patent Act as amended, and, in particular by
Sections 4 and 39(4) thereof, I do grant to the Applicant, a non-exclusive license
under Canadian patent number 1,275,350 for the unexpired term thereof to do the
things specified in the application with respect to the medicine whose chemical
or proper name is Lisinopril, namely:
(1) with
respect to any patent named above that is for an invention that is other than a
process.
(a) under patent number 1,275,350
to make the invention for medicine;
(b) under patent number 1, 275,350
to make the invention for the preparation or production of medicine;
(c) under patent number 1,275,350
to use the invention for medicine;
(d) under patent number 1,275,350
to use the invention for the preparation or production of medicine;
(e) under patent number 1,275,350
to sell the invention for medicine; and
(f) under patent number 1,275,350
to sell the invention for the preparation or production of medicine;
the sale thereof not being
restricted to Canada only, under the following
terms and conditions.
[142] The
Commissioner particularly addressed a concern raised by the patentee Merck that
the Applicant Delmar may not be able to produce formulated tablets. In his
decision granting the license, he said:
The patentee has stated that,
since the Applicant has expressed the intention of preparing or having prepared
final dosage forms of the medicine for sale in Canada without indicating that
it has the necessary facilities for so doing., the only way in which the
veracity of these statements can be tested is for the Commissioner to grant a license
where the bulk manufacturer is prohibited from selling outside Canada until
such time as it can supply evidence that it is complying with the basic
fundamental policy underlying Section 39(4) of the Act of providing effective
competition in Canada by selling the medicine here; however I am not prepared
to so limit the license since there is no requirement in the Act and Rules that
an applicant possess all of the facilities to enable it to be able to carry out
all of the operations that have been requested by it at the time it makes its
application or indeed at the time of grant of the license.
[143] The evidence
of Dr. Dickinson and Dr. Sherman is that Delmar produced certain batches of
lisinopril between May 12, 1992, the date the license was granted, and the “commencement
date” of February 14, 1993. Some of those batches were sold to a Panamanian
company, Apothecary International Inc. The paperwork indicates that the
transfer of title took place before February 14, 1993. No evidence to the
contrary was led and nothing in evidence or the demeanour of the witnesses
leads me to conclude otherwise.
[144] However, the
lisinopril, in drums, remained physically in a warehouse under the custody of
Delmar, in the Montreal area. Ultimately, well after February 14, 1993,
title to these drums appears to have passed from Apothecary to Apotex, and
Delmar shipped the drums to facilities under Apotex’s control in the Toronto area. Apotex
used this lisinopril to formulate tablets.
[145] Thus,
lisinopril was made by Delmar during the license period and, during that
period, title but not possession passed to a third party. Apotex ultimately
acquired both title and possession to this lisinopril well after the license
period had expired. Can Apotex claim the benefit of Delmar’s license?
[146] The earlier
decisions of this Court and the Federal Court of Appeal in dealing with a very
similar license to Delmar for enalapril are somewhat confusing as there is, in
those decisions, consideration of the license mingled with consideration of section
56 which appears to be irrelevant to the license issue. I am speaking
particularly of the decision of this Court found at pages 164 and 165 of the
report at (1994), 59 C.P.R. (3d) 133 and of the Court of Appeal at page 376 of
the report at (1995), 60 C.P.R. (3d) 356. The Federal Court of Appeal at page
376 said:
The
trial judge held that there was no infringement in Apotex's producing the final
dosage form from bulk product it held only on consignment, during the time when
Delmar's license was in effect under the law. There was no cross- appeal by the
respondents on this holding...
Again, I am in agreement
with the conclusion of the learned trial judge, though I should prefer to rest
my conclusion on the extinguishment of Delmar's rights and so of any right in
the appellant, rather than on a return to s. 56, which I am not at all certain
is in play on this point.
[147] Subsequently,
the Supreme Court of Canada, in a case involving different parties, considered
the effect of a terminated compulsory license. In Eli Lilly and Co. v.
Novopharm Ltd. (1998), 80 C.P.R. (3d) 321 that Court considered the
situation in which a party had purchased product which, at the time of its
manufacture, was made under the provisions of a compulsory license. Iacobucci
J. for the Court at paragraphs 99 to 101 held that, in the absence of express
conditions to the contrary, the purchaser of such licensed product is free to
deal with the product without fear of infringing upon the patents in question.
[148] The Federal
Court of Appeal later considered the Eli Lilly case as well as its
decision in Apotex Inc. v. Merck & Co. (2002), 19 C.P.R. (4th)
163, on appeal from a motion for summary judgment where the Trial Judge allowed
an application by Merck to strike out Apotex’s action seeking approval to sell
enalapril made by Delmar during the course of its compulsory license and
subsequently acquired by Apotex. The Trial Judge dismissed the action on the
basis of the prior litigation between the parties. The Federal Court of Appeal
upheld the Trial Judge. It held that Eli Lilly did not represent a
change in the law and that any issue in that respect could have been raised by
Apotex in earlier litigation respecting the same patent. The same determination
was made in respect of another of Apotex’s argument as to interpretation of
section 12 of the Act amending the Patent Act which dealt with
extinguishment of compulsory licenses.
[149] Were it not
for the decision of the Federal Court of Appeal in Apotex Inc. v. Merck
& Co. (2002), 19 C.P.R. (4th) 163, supra, I would
have held that Apotex may properly assert that the grant of license by the
Commissioner includes the right to make and sell the invention (lisinopril) for
the preparation or production of medicine (see paragraphs 1(b) and (f) of the license).
There is no restriction that the person preparing or producing the medicine be
Delmar or an agent of or under contract with Delmar. Delmar is able to sell
lisinopril to others to prepare or produce medicine. That is what happened here.
Delmar made lisinopril during the term of the license and sold it to a third
party during the term of the license. The third party later sold it to Apotex,
who prepared or produced a medicine. Delmar paid a royalty to Merck for that
privilege and Merck kept the money. I would have concluded that the goods were licensed
and that the license runs with the goods.
[150] Since the
Federal Court of Appeal in Apotex Inc. v. Merck & Co. (2002)19
C.P.R. (4th) 163 supra in a decision involving the same
parties, Apotex and Merck, in respect of a compulsory license identical in
terms with that at issue here, involving a patent which arose from the same
parent application (‘340) as the ‘350 patent here, has decided that Apotex was
prevented from re-litigating the issue of the license, I am compelled to say
likewise. Apotex cannot, now, raise the ‘350 compulsory license as a defence to
infringement.
[151] Should a higher
Court wish to consider this issue afresh, my view is that the license, even if
extinguished, still runs with goods made before the license was extinguished. As
stated in Eli Lilly, supra, this affords a good defence to infringement.
The “extinguishment” argument in my view has to be considered in light of
section 12(2) of the transitional provisions of the Patent Amendment Act,
S.C. 1993, c.2 which provides that no action for infringement lies in respect
of any act done before the commencement date. Product made under license before
that date was lawfully made, it could be lawfully sold to and used by another
after that date.
[152] However, I
must find that Apotex cannot claim the benefit of Delmar’s license is respect
of lisinopril made by Delmar under license and ultimately acquired by Apotex.
(iii) Section 55.2(1) –
Are certain lots exempt?
[153] Section 55.2(1)
of the Patent Act provides that it is not an infringement of a patent
for any person, such as Apotex, to make, construct, use or sell the patented
invention solely for uses reasonably related to the development and submission
of information required under any law of Canada, a province,
or any other country that regulates the manufacture, construction, use or sale
of any product. This exception is clear and unequivocal.
[154] These
provisions have been derived from similar provisions found in the United
States Drug Pure Competition and Patent Term Restoration Act of
1994, see 202, 98 Stat. 1585 as amended 35 U.S.C. see 271(e)(1). That United
States
statute is more restrictive as it speaks only of requirements under United
States
law and is limited to drugs. The United States Supreme Court interpreted these
provisions in Merck KG v. Integra Lifesciences Ltd. 545 US 1 (2005).
Scalia J in giving the opinion of the Court said at page 8:
Though the contours of this
provision are not exact in every respect, the statutory text makes clear that
it provides a wide berth for the use of patented drugs in activities related to
the federal regulatory process.
As an initial matter, we think
it apparent from the statutory text that, sec 271(e)(1)’s exemption from
infringement extends to all uses of patented inventions that are reasonably
related to the development and submission of any information under the FDCA.
[155] At page 12,
Scalia J. made it clear that the exemption applied not only to research that
ultimately found its way to the FDA but also research and experiments that did
not ultimately find its way there. At page 13 he concluded:
Congress did not limit 271(e)
(1)’s safe harbour to the development of information for inclusion in a
submission to the FDA; not did it create an exemption applicable only to the
research relevant to filing an ANDA for approval of a generic drug. Rather, it
exempted from infringement all uses of patented compounds “reasonably related”
to the process of developing information for submission under any federal law
regulating the manufacture, use, or distribution of drugs.
[156] The evidence
of the Apotex employees clearly shows that Apotex prepared and used lisinopril and
materials incorporating lisinopril for the purposes of obtaining permission
necessary to sell lisinopril containing drugs in Canada and the United
States.
While not all such lisinopril and materials may have been ultimately referenced
in those submissions, all were directed in one way or another to that purpose. Such
use and such materials are exempt from infringement as provided by section 55.2(b).
[157] In addition,
further material was routinely taken by Apotex as samples from incoming raw
material and of the finished products. These samples are stored in the event
that they are required for future reference in accordance with regulatory
requirements. These samples never enter the stream of commerce and are
ultimately destroyed.
[158] Drug
manufacturers are required to retain samples on an ongoing basis by both Canadian
and United
States
federal regulatory authorities. Provisions for doing so are made under the Food
and Drug Regulations, C.R.C. c.870 in Canada and the Food
Drug and Cosmetic Act 21 U.S.C. in the United States. The samples
taken by Apotex and retained by it were done so in compliance with these
provisions. I find that section 55.2(1) is sufficiently broad so as to exempt
from infringement such samples taken pursuant to such regulations and needed
for submission of information to the relevant government authorities if and
when required. I add that, since such material is never sold and is ultimately
destroyed, it is difficult to imagine what damage was suffered by any of the
Plaintiffs.
(iv) Common Law – Are
there common law exemptions and, if so, what is exempt.
[159] The Supreme
Court of Canada in Smith Kline & French Inter-American Corp. v. Micro
Chemicals Ltd., [1972] S.C.R. 506, dealt with whether certain exemptions
existed at common law respecting patent infringement. It found that some
exemptions exist. That case has been followed by this Court in Cochlear
Corp. v. Cosem Neurostim Ltée (1995), 64 C.P.R. (3d) 10 at page 44.
[160] The Supreme
Court in Micro Chemicals, supra, at pages 518 to 520 affirmed a decision
of the English Court of Appeal in Frearson v. Loe (1878), 9 Ch. D.48
which states that there is a doctrine of “fair dealing” in respect of patent
infringement:
Patent rights were never
granted to prevent persons of ingenuity exercising their talents in a fair way.
But if there be neither using nor vending of the invention for profit, the mere
making for the purpose of experiment, and not for a fraudulent purpose, ought
not to be considered within the prohibition and, if it were, it is certainly
not the subject for an injunction.
[161] The Supreme
Court in Micro Chemicals held it to be significant that the Trial Judge
had found that small amounts of the patented compound had been produced, put in
bottles, kept by Micro and never entered into commerce and no damage was
suffered by the patentee and no profits made by Micro. They held that the Trial
Judge was in error in finding that such activity constituted infringement. They
found that an experimental user, without a license, in the course of bona
fide experiments with a patented article was not an infringment. The use of
the product, not for profit, but to establish the fact that a person could
manufacture a product in accordance with the patent, was not an infringement.
[162] In this case,
the evidence shows that there has been a use of lisinopril that should be
considered in the circumstance of “fair dealing”. That is the use of lisinopril
in ongoing research and development of alternate formulae, alternate techniques
for tablet making and the like.
[163] As to this
research and development material, I find that it clearly falls within the “fair
dealing” exemption provided by the Supreme Court of Canada in Micro
Chemicals.
(v) Dedication
[164] There is no
provision in the Canadian Patent Act or Rules for dedicating a
patent or claims, to the public. There is a provision for disclaiming a patent
or part of a patent however, that practice arises under section 48 of the Patent
Act which requires a disclaimer to be based upon some mistake, accident or
inadvertence. What happens if there was no mistake, accident or inadvertence
but the patentee no longer wishes to possess the monopoly granted to it by a
patent or certain of its claims?
[165] A patent is a
monopoly, and each claim is a separate definition of that monopoly, that arises
only if someone makes an application for that monopoly. The grant of a patent
comes from the federal government, but only when sought by an applicant. Once
the applicant receives the grant, it is free to exploit that monopoly by
practicing or licensing the invention, or to ignore it. To ignore what others
may be doing in infringing upon that monopoly may give rise to defences of laches,
acquiescence or the like if, at a later date, the patentee wishes to enforce
that monopoly. An unused monopoly may also give rise to compulsory licenses to
practice the invention.
[166] If the
patentee wishes not just to ignore its monopoly but to advise the public that
it has done so, it is entirely within the patentee’s right to make a public
statement to that effect. Just as a patentee may craft the monopoly by
appropriate draughtsmanship of the claims, it may tell the public, by
appropriate draughtsmanship, that which it chooses to ignore or no longer
enjoy.
[167] In this case,
the dedication of certain claims of patent 1,276,559 directed to particular
uses of lisinopril was specifically drafted to state that the dedication was
without prejudice to the patentee’s rights as expressed in other claims of the
same patent or in any other patent or patent application. The wording is clear,
if the monopoly defined in the dedicated claims overlaps the monopoly defined
in other claims of that patent or any other patent or application, whatever
rights subsist in those other claims is not dedicated. This form of notice is
that of the patentee’s own choosing and is amply clear, the rights of
undedicated claims have not been dedicated.
[168] Substantially
the same wording was before this Court in G.D. Searle & Co. v. Merck
& Co. (2002), 20 C.P.R. (4th) 103. While in the context of a
summary judgment, the Court came to the same conclusion at paragraphs 95 to 98,
namely that claims other than those dedicated, remain undisturbed.
[169] I find,
therefore, that the dedication of some of the claims of the ‘559 patent does
not affect the enforceability or validity of claims 1, 2 and 5 of the ‘350
patent. Even if the claims in the ‘559 patent are invalid, that does not make
the claims in the earlier ‘350 patent invalid nor does the dedication of claims
in the ‘559 patent impair, or permit infringement of the ‘350 patent.
c) Limitations Respecting
Exemptions
[170] I have found
that section 55.2(l) of the Patent Act and the common law as to “fair
dealing” afford exemptions as to certain Apotex activity that would otherwise
infringe the claims at issue. The onus is on Apotex to raise these exemptions
and to prove them. While Apotex says that the Plaintiffs were well aware of
Apotex’s claim to such exemptions for several years prior to trial, Apotex did
not plead the issue of such exemptions until it amended its Defence and
Counterclaim on January 26, 2006. Apotex had amended its pleadings on several
previous occasions but not so as to raise these issues.
[171] It is not
enough to hint at or suggest that such exemptions will be claimed, they must be
pleaded. A party opposite is entitled to know the case put against it in a
formal and proper way.
[172] The Patent
Act now contains specific provisions as to limitations. Section 55.01
provides that no remedy may be awarded for an act occurring more than six years
previous. The Federal Court Act R.S.C. 1985, s.39 provides that if no
other limitation period is provided, provincial limitation periods apply where
activity is confined to a single province, otherwise the period is six years.
While Apotex’s tablet manufacturing business is located in Ontario, it obtained
material from Quebec and from
abroad, it sells across Canada and exports product. No one province can
be said to be uniquely involved. The six year limitation period is appropriate.
[173] Morton, Limitation
of Civil Actions, 1988 Carswell, Toronto, in addressing limitations in
patent proceedings, having cited Collier J. of the Federal Court in Sandvik
A/B v. Windsor Machine Co. Ltd. (1986), 8 C.P.R. (3d) 433 at 442-443 makes
the simple statement that, unless specifically pleaded, a limitations defence is
of no use. I agree.
[174] Therefore, as
to the exemptions here found to be proper, such exemptions shall apply only to
activity which took place on and after January 26, 2000, that is, six years
before Apotex’s pleading was amended so as to include a plea as to such
exemptions.
14. Validity
a) Effect of the
presumption of validity
[175] The
Plaintiffs rely upon section 45 of the Patent Act, which provides that a
patent shall, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, be presumed to be valid.
[176] The effect of
this provision has been explained for instance by the Federal Court of Appeal
in Tye-Sil Corp. Ltd. v. Diversified Products Corp.et al (1991), 35 C.P.R.
(3d) 350 at 357-359, to mean that a patent, without any other evidence, enjoys
a presumption of validity. If evidence as to invalidity is led at trial, the
Court must weigh that evidence on the balance of probabilities and make a
finding as to validity. Unless held to be invalid, the ‘350 patent will endure for
seventeen years from the date of grant and issue that is, until October 16,
2007.
[177] In this
action, Apotex is challenging validity of the ‘350 patent and, individually,
claims 1, 2 and 5 of that patent on a number of grounds including delay, double
patenting and improper divisional. In earlier litigation in this Court
T-2408-91 and on appeal to the Federal Court of Appeal, A-724-94, claims in the
‘349 patent relating to enalapril were held to be valid and infringed by
Apotex. The parties or their privies in this present action and that earlier
action are essentially the same. The addition of the Astra Plaintiffs in this
action as licensees under the ‘350 patent is irrelevant.
[178] The evidence
and submissions of the parties must be examined and weighed in this context.
b) Estoppel
(i) Previous Litigation
– Is Apotex estopped or otherwise precluded from challenging validity of the
‘350 patent having regard to prior litigation T-2408-91 and A-724-94?
[179] The ‘349
patent and the ‘350 patent each issued the same day, they each were divided out
of the same parent ‘340 application. The ‘349 patent is essentially directed to
enalapril, the ‘350 patent is essentially directed to lisinopril.
[180] The Supreme
Court of Canada has provided clear guidance as to how to deal with subsequent
litigation between much the same parties dealing with much the same subject on
issues that were, or could have been raised in the earlier litigation. In Danyluk
v. Ainsworth Technologies Inc. [2001] 2 S.C.R. 460, Binnie J. at paragraph
18 said:
The
law rightly seeks a finality to litigation. To advance that objective, it
requires litigants to put their best foot forward to establish the truth of
their allegations when first called upon to do so. A litigant, to
use the vernacular, is only entitled to one bite at the cherry…
[181] In Maynard
v. Maynard, [1951] S.C.R. 346, the Supreme Court of Canada cited with
approval at pages 358 and 359, a passage from Green v. Weatherill,
[1929] 2 Ch. 213:
The
plea of res judicata is not a technical doctrine, but a fundamental doctrine
based on the view that there must be an end to litigation: see In re
May [28 Ch. D. 516, 518.]; Badar Bee v. Habib Merican Noordin [[1909] A.C.
615.]. In the latter case it may be observed that Lord Macnaghten in
delivering the judgment cites from the Digest and relies on the maxim
"Exceptio rei judicatae obstat quotiens eadem quaestio inter easdem personas
revocatur." In the leading case of Henderson v. Henderson [3
Hare, 100, 114.], there is to be found the following statement of the law by
Wigram V.C.: "I believe I state the rule of the Court correctly
when I say that where a given matter becomes the subject of litigation in and
of adjudication by a court of competent jurisdiction, the Court requires the
parties to that litigation to bring forward their whole case and will not
(except under special circumstances) permit the same parties to open the same
subject of litigation in respect of matter which might have been brought
forward as part of the subject in contest, but which was not brought forward
only because they have from negligence, inadvertence or even accident, omitted
part of their case. The plea of res judicata applies, except in
special cases, not only to points upon which the Court was actually required by
the parties to form an opinion and pronounce a judgment, but to every point
which properly belonged to the subject of litigation and which the parties,
exercising reasonable diligence, might have brought forward at the
time." This passage has recently been approved by the Privy
Council in the case of Hoystead v. Commissioner of Taxation [[1926] A.C. 155
170.].
[182] Justice
Layden-Stevenson of this Court in AB Hassle v. Apotex Inc. (2005), 38 C.P.R.
(4th) 216 gave an excellent review of the law on the subject of
finality in litigation. Her findings were approved by the Federal Court of
Appeal, 2006 FCA 51, [2006] F.C.J. No. 203 at paragraph 26. Justice
Layden-Stevenson said that in exercising discretion where there is no
suggestion of fraud or dishonesty in the earlier litigation and no new evidence
that was previously unavailable that would conclusively affect the earlier
result, respect must be given to the desire for finality in litigation.
[183] Apotex
endeavoured to isolate different forms of prior litigation preclusion, arguing
the limitations of each, such as to endeavour to avoid being engaged by any of
them. It does not advance matters to try to pigeonhole the basis in respect of
which re-litigation is to be precluded. The robust point is that, as Binnie J.
says, a second bite at the cherry is to be precluded where appropriate.
[184] The decision
of the Federal Court of Appeal in proceedings between these parties dealing
with an attempt by Apotex to re-litigate the enalapril patent in Apotex Inc.
v. Merck & Co. (2002), 19 C.P.R. (4th) 163, clearly states at
paragraphs 29 and 30 that finality in litigation is the paramount policy
concern. Only in “special circumstances” will a party be entitled, in the
discretion of the Court, to engage in further litigation.
[185] It is clear
from a review of these cases that where the parties, the subject matter and the
issues are the same, there can be no further litigation. Further, where an
issue is one that a party did not raise, but could have raised in the earlier
litigation, the Court will not permit the new issue to be litigated in the
absence of special circumstances. Are there “special circumstances” here? Does
the mere fact that there are “different” patents directed to what I have
determined to be “different inventions” make a difference?
[186] Attacks on
validity based on double patenting and improper divisional were not apparently
raised in the earlier proceedings or, if they were at some point, they were not
the subject of any judicial determination. There is no indication that Apotex
was precluded from or unable to raise these points in the earlier litigation.
It is not clear whether delay was or was not raised at trial, probably it was
not, but that doesn’t matter, it either was or could have been raised.
[187] To the extent
that I have determined that enalapril (‘349) is patentably different from
lisinopril (‘350), the subject matter of this action is different from the
earlier. However, the same questions as to delay, double patenting and improper
divisional could have been raised in the earlier litigation since the ‘349 also
arises from the same parent ‘340 application and issued on the same day as the
‘350 patent. The same issues as to double patenting, improper divisional and
delay are matters that could have been raised in the ‘349 patent litigation,
even though they apparently were not.
[188] I draw an
analogy. A person owns a large piece of land, some pieces are sub-divided out
of the large piece but still owned by the same person. An individual allegedly
trespasses upon one of the small pieces and the owner brings an action which is
defended. The individual, now defendant, argues non-trespass and raises certain
issues as to validity of title and ownership. The defendant loses. A second
action is brought by the person alleging that the same individual (defendant) has
trespassed upon a second piece of land divided out from the large piece. The individual,
again a defendant, now wishes to raise new defences such as improper division
of the land. Can he do so? Surely not. While the two divided out pieces of land
are separate properties, the parties are the same, the “parent” piece of land
is the same and the issues now sought to be raised apply equally to each. The
Court seeks finality in litigation as a paramount concern.
[189] Therefore, I
find that Apotex is precluded from raising attacks as to the validity of the
‘350 patent in this action based on delay, improper divisional or double
patenting. I will nonetheless deal with these arguments in the event that I am
found it be in error as to preclusion.
(ii) Delmar License – Is
Apotex estopped or otherwise precluded from challenging validity as a result of
the claim to the benefit of the Delmar License?
[190] Notwithstanding
my findings as to preclusion, I will deal with the issue of specific preclusion
arising out of the license to Delmar. Apotex is claiming that certain
quantities of lisinopril acquired by it directly or indirectly from Delmar are licensed
by reason of a compulsory license granted by the Commissioner of Patents to
Delmar. That license does not contain any express terms relating to the
validity of the patent.
[191] The Ontario Court
General Division in Apotex v. Tanabe Seiyaku & Nordic (1994), 59 C.P.R.
(3d) 38, dealt with a situation where the holder of a compulsory license under
a patent granted by the Commissioner of Patents, was challenging the validity
of that patent in an action brought for infringement. At page 49, Campbell J.
made it clear that any estoppel that a patentee may rely upon extended only in
respect of activities alleged to fall within the scope of the license, any activity
outside that scope would permit the party otherwise licensed to challenge
validity. That decision was followed by the same Court in Bayer A/G v.
Apotex Inc. (1995), 60 C.P.R. (3d) 58 at pages 72 to 75, affirmed 82 C.P.R.
(3d) 526 (Ont CA).
[192] Here, Apotex
is alleging that two batches of lisinopril made by Delmar under a compulsory license,
may be used by Apotex without infringing the patent. To the extent that such
argument applies to those batches, Apotex cannot challenge validity. However,
since I have found that Apotex is estopped from raising the issue of the Delmar
license here, Apotex cannot, by reason of licensee estoppel only, be said to be
estopped from challenging validity of the patent. It is estopped for other
reasons as I have already explained.
c) Divisional Procedure
[193] Section 36(1)
of the old Patent Act provides that a patent shall be granted for one
invention only, however, if it happens that a patent includes more than one
invention, it is not, for that reason, invalid. Section 36(2) requires the
Commissioner to divide applications where more than one invention is detected.
That subsection permits, but does not require, the applicant to do likewise.
Section 36(4) requires that separate fees be paid and a separate application be
made, but affords the divisional application the same filing date as the
parent.
[194] Apotex raises
two arguments as to improper division of the ‘350 patent. The first is that the
parent ‘340 application did not both describe and claim more than one
invention, it only described one invention, the class, of which lisinopril was
but an example. I have already held that, in accordance with the jurisprudence
of this Court, there were several inventions, not just one. Thus, this argument
fails.
[195] The second
argument is that the application that led to the ‘350 patent could not, as of
the date it was filed, August 1, 1989, be a proper divisional in respect of
lisinopril, since an earlier application, 518,336 was pending in the Patent
Office at that time and that application had already divided out, among other
things, lisinopril. This earlier application is the one where, apparently, just
a few days before the issuance of the ‘350 application, Merck’s patent agent
phoned the Patent Office to cancel the claims and the application was ultimately
abandoned a year or so after the ‘350 patent issued. Further, another
application, number 576,715 had also been previously filed but issued to a
patent, number 1,276,559 after the filing of the application for the ‘350
patent. This application was directed to a combination of lisinopril plus a
diuretic. In effect, Apotex argues, Merck had already exhausted its opportunity
to divide out a patent directed to lisinopril.
[196] Apotex’s
second argument ignores the fact that, while applications are pending before
the Patent Office they may be amended at any time, either at the request of the
patent examiner, or voluntarily by the applicant. An applicant may, in certain
circumstances, even amend the application after it has been allowed by the
examiner. Where the examiner, or the applicant, perceives that two or more
applications include overlapping claims, such claims can be removed from one or
other of these applications, at any time before a patent issues. Here only one
patent, the ‘350 patent, actually issued with claims specific to lisinopril.
The ‘559 patent with claims to lisinopril plus a diuretic issued after the ‘350
patent issued, and is thus irrelevant here. The 518,336 application never did issue
as a patent.
[197] During the pendenacy
of an application or several applications, the procedures to be followed are
the prerogative of the Patent Office. Amendments are routinely requested and
made. Whether at one time or another, two or more applications included the
same or similar claims is simply not relevant in considering a patent that
emerged from any such application. Thus, I find that neither basis for improper
divisional raised by Apotex has merit.
d) Effective Filing
Date of the Divisional Application
[198] Even if one
or other of Apotex’s arguments had merit, what is the consequence of an
improper divisional? Section 36(1) of the Patent Act addresses the
situation where a patent issues directed to multiple inventions, it says that
this does not invalidate the patent. Section 36(2) says that the Commissioner,
on perceiving multiple inventions, must require dividing out. Presumably if the
applicant fails to do so, the application will not be allowed. However, in a
situation where the applicant voluntarily divides its application and the
Commissioner does not object, there is no clear provision in the Patent Act.
[199] Section 40 of
the Patent Act provides that the Commissioner may refuse to grant a
patent. Section 41 provides for an appeal from that decision.
[200] Section 43
provides that a patent, once issued, is presumed to be valid, as discussed
earlier in these Reasons. Section 53 provides specifically that a patent is
invalid where an allegation in the petition is untrue or if the specification
and drawings are wilfully misleading. Section 59 provides that a defendant may
plead as a defence any fact or default which under the Act or in law
renders the patent void. The Courts routinely invalidate patents for failure to
show invention, or for reasons of prior art as provided in section 27, or for
improper description or drawing as required by section 34, none of which sections
specifically provide for invalidity.
[201] Apotex argues
that improper division of a patent application, like failure to comply with
sections 27 or 34, in law renders a patent void, or at best, the filing date of
the divisional application is the only date that can be claimed and not the
parent ‘340 application filing date. There is no basis in the Act for ascribing
the later date, section 36(4) provides that a divisional bears the original
filing date. The divisional is either proper or it is not, no default position
is provided.
[202] Merck argues
that the Commissioner, who has at best tacitly approved the divisional, is
simply acting procedurally and such actions are to be given deference. Merck
says that any improper result can be dealt with, for instance, by the application
of laws relating to double patenting. It relies on cases such as Fada Radio
Ltd. v. Canadian General Electric Co. Limited, [1927] S.C.R. 520, to state
that once a patent has issued, a Court should not invalidate that patent on the
basis of a procedural requirement if it appears that the Commissioner was
satisfied as to the procedure.
[203] I prefer
Merck’s position. Division of a patent application is essentially a procedural
matter. If several patents claiming the same invention have been granted, a
sufficient remedy as to validity exists in the application of the principles of
double patenting.
[204] Here, I find
that there has been no improper divisional, no basis for ascribing a filing
date other than that of the parent ‘340 application has been established and no
basis upon which to invalidate the ‘350 patent for that reason has been
established. Therefore, I must turn to the issue of double patenting.
e) Double Patenting
[205] Apotex
alleges that the ‘350 patent directed to lisinopril is invalid for double
patenting having regard to an earlier issued patent, divided out of the same
parent application, number 1,262,684. The ‘684 patent claims the combination of
enalapril plus a diuretic.
[206] Double
patenting is a judge - made concept. It does not appear in the Patent Act.
The Patent Act in this regard in section 27 states that a patent will be
invalid only if there has been a disclosure of the invention at least a certain
period of time in advance of the filing of the application for the patent under
consideration. No such period of time exists here.
[207] Double
patenting deals with a situation where there is insufficient time between prior
disclosure and filing or where several patents issue from the same application
(divisionals) and the same parties such as inventors or applicants are
involved. The theory is that a person should not enjoy an extended monopoly in
the same invention by having separate patents issued to it when there really is
only one invention involved.
[208] Where there
has been sufficient time between the issuance of a first patent and the filing
of an application for a second, for instance two years in the case of an “old” Act
filing, then validity of the second patent is determined on the classic
principles of anticipation or obviousness, where the date of invention is
critical.
[209] One such case
is the Pfizer Canada Inc. v. Canada (Minister of Health) decision of
this Court, February 17, 2006, 2006 FC 220, [2006] F.C.J. No.273, where it was
determined that an allegation that a patent was invalid was justified. The
patent claimed a particular selection of salts of a medicine from a wide range
of such salts previously known without showing a novel or inventive basis for
doing so. This is an example of a case dealing with known prior art and the
failure to distinguish the claimed invention from the prior art in an inventive
sense.
[210] The decision
of this Court in Bayer Inc. v. Canada (Minister of Health and Welfare)
(1998), 82 C.P.R. (3d) 359 and the Supreme Court of Canada decision upon which
it relies Commissioner of Patents v. Farbwerke Hoechst A/G [1964] S.C.R.
49 are more important here. Both these cases dealt with the propriety of
divisional applications in respect of medicines filed at a time when section 41
of the Patent Act was in force which severely restricted claims to
medicines per se allowing only claims to medicine as made by particular
processes. Attempts to avoid section 41 were made by filing divisional patents
directed to the medicine in combination with other, known, medically inert substances
wherein the medicine was formulated into a drug. The decision in both cases
held that there could not be a separate invention in simply, as they put it,
diluting the medicine. While using terms such as inventive ingenuity and
obviousness, these Courts were dealing essentially with different obvious
combinations of the same medicine.
[211] The leading
case as to double patenting is the Supreme Court decision in Whirlpool Corp.
v. Camco Inc., [2000] 2 S.C.R. 1067, where the
Court identified two types of double patenting, one was where the claims were
“identical or coterminous”, the other was where the claims were not “patentably
distinct”. While using the word “obviousness” in relation to the second type,
the Court, as an example, referred to the Farbwerke Hoechst case, supra,
where a dilute form of the same medicine was held to be not “patentably
distinct” from the medicine itself.
[212] Here we must
consider whether a prior patent claiming enalapril plus a diuretic invalidates
the later ‘350 patent claiming lisinopril. Is the lisinopril patent “identical
or coterminous” with the enalapril plus diuretic patent? Is the lisinopril
patent “patentably distinct” or is it “obvious” having regard to the earlier enalapril
plus diuretic patent?
[213] I have
already found that lisinopril and enalapril are separate inventions. A fortiori
lisinopril and enalapril plus a diuretic are separate inventions, they are
“patentably distinct” they are not “identical or coterminous”. Being different
inventions, one is not “obvious” in view of the other in the sense of Bayer
or Hoechst, supra, where the same compound was simply diluted or
formulated.
[214] I find that
the ‘350 patent is not invalid for reason of double patenting over the ‘684
patent.
f) Wilful Delay – Did
Merck wilfully delay the prosecution for the ‘350 patent and, if so, what is
the effect?
[215] Merck &
Co. Inc. filed the first patent application for the class of compounds relevant
here in the United
States of America on December 11, 1978, as application number 968,249. This
application ultimately matured into United States Patent Number 4,374,829 which
issued February 22, 1983.
[216] In Canada, the parent ‘340
application was filed on December 6, 1979. This is within the twelve month
period provided by the Paris Convention. The result is that the application
could claim certain benefits of priority from the United States Application
Number 968,249 filed December 11, 1978. The application for what ultimately
became the ‘350 patent was filed, as a divisional, on August 1, 1989. The ‘350
patent was issued and granted on October 16, 1990. Thus, the ‘350 patent took
almost 12 years from the original priority filing, or almost 11 years from the
original Canadian filing, or just over one year from the divisional filing, to
mature into a granted patent. A review of the file history of the ‘340
application and the ‘350 patent shows that Merck provided timely responses to
the Patent Office where requested. The lengthiest delays were those within the
Patent Office itself. There is an unexplained statement on the wrapper of the
file stating “take as much time as necessary on this case.” There is no
evidence as to who wrote or said this or what it meant or in what context it
was said or written. It is meaningless as it stands.
[217] No evidence,
factual or expert, was led to demonstrate whether the length of time it took to
prosecute the Canadian application was unduly long or short. Any comparison
with the length of time it took to obtain a United States patent is
hampered by the lack of evidence as to whether the prosecution there was unduly
long or short. The Court was invited to look at the United States and Canadian
file histories and draw inferences from communications with the Patent Offices
and prosecuting agents and attorneys as to whether Merck had delayed prosecution
in Canada. Without
evidence as to what patent prosecution practice is and means in each country
this Court cannot draw meaningful inferences as to delay or wilfulness.
[218] No direct
evidence as to the “wilfulness” of Merck in prosecuting the Canadian
application was introduced. Apotex called the evidence of a number of factual
witnesses, its President, Sherman, its Chief Operating Officer, Kay, the
President of a generic pharmaceutical trade association to which it belongs,
Keon, a civil servant, Michaelyzn, all of whom testified that there was much
lobbying by Apotex, the generic trade association, Merck and the brand
pharmaceutical trade association, in the mid to late 1980’s and early 1990’s as
to what was known as Bill C-22. Provisions were enacted as a result of that
Bill, doing away with the compulsory licenses in the Canadian Patent Act.
I draw no inferences from this evidence.
[219] A process
server, De Luca, delivered a letter to a person who was probably a retired
Merck patent attorney, Sudal whose name appears in connection with the
prosecution of the United States patent application, inviting him to
contact Apotex’s counsel, probably with a view to having him appear as a
witness at trial. He never appeared. I infer nothing from this. No evidence was
led as to whether or not he contacted Apotex’s counsel or if so, what
transpired.
[220] In short,
there is no evidence that Merck wilfully delayed the issuance of the ‘350
patent.
[221] As to the law
on the subject, there is none in Canadian jurisprudence. Nothing in the Patent
Act addresses the consequences of delay in prosecuting a patent application
other than abandonment if timely responses and fee payments are not made. This
did not happen here. There is no case law in Canada addressing
consequences, if any, as to delay.
[222] While I
appreciate and endorse the proposition that the Court must be open to new
concepts as to the law respecting validity of patents or indeed any new
concepts as the occasion may demand, here I resist any invitation to consider
law outside Canada as indicating what the law in Canada should be on this point
simply because there is insufficient factual background in evidence in this
case against which to consider such a matter.
[223] This issue
simply has not been proven.
15. Remedies
[224] The ‘350
patent as well as claims 1, 2 and 5 of the ‘350 patent are found to be valid
and infringed by Apotex subject to certain exemptions afforded by section
55.2(1) of the Patent Act and “fair dealing” exemptions provided for by
common law. Section 55 of that Act provides that the patentee and all
persons claiming under the patentee are entitled to damages. Section 57 permits
the Court to award an injunction and an account of profits in appropriate
circumstances. Normally, an order for delivery up of infringing material would
follow the award of an injunction. The Court has power to award pre-judgment
interest; the Federal Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c.F-7 sections 36 and 37
directs the Court to look at the laws of an appropriate province if possible or
more generally, in that regard. The Court has inherent power to award exemplary
or punitive damages where appropriate, and to award costs.
[225] An Amended
Order of this Court dated July 24, 2000, has provided not only a bifurcation of
the trial of this action so as to leave the calculation as to quantum of damage
or profits to a later time, but has also provided that the determination as to
whether the Plaintiffs are entitled to elect profits shall be left to me as the
Trial Judge.
[226] At trial,
counsel for each of Merck and Astra asked that I treat the Plaintiffs
collectively and as to any monetary award, they will sort that out as between
themselves. I am content to do that. Thus, I will treat the Plaintiffs as a
single entity consisting the patentee and licensees who have been and are
selling product coming within the scope of the ‘350 patent in the Canadian
marketplace and, to a limited extent, exporting such product from Canada.
[227] The
Plaintiffs are clearly entitled to damages. Are they entitled to elect to take Apotex’s
profits instead? Apotex argues that an inquiry as to profits is complex and
normally should not be awarded. I do not find this argument to be persuasive.
If a party elects profits, it does so knowing that it may be complex, it makes
that choice. However, I believe that the time has come for the Court to examine
more critically than it has in the past, the remedies awarded for patent
infringement.
[228] I am aware
that, in many cases, the Court simply makes an award of damages or profits as
the Plaintiffs may elect. There have been exceptions where profits have been
denied such as J.M. Voith GmbH v. Beloit Corp. (1993), 47 C.P.R. (3d)
448 (FC) affirmed on this point (1997), 73 C.P.R. (3d) 321, where in the period
between when the trial division had declared a patent to be invalid and its
restoration to validity by the Court of Appeal, there had been sales of
infringing product. The Court held that it would be inequitable to award profits
for this period.
[229] An award of
profits is an equitable remedy subject to the discretion of the Courts (Dableh
v. Ontario Hydro (1993), 50 C.P.R. (3d) 290 at 356-367 (FC)). In this case,
a specific order providing for consideration of the remedy of election of
profits by the Trial Judge, Muldoon J., had been made. The evidence of the
representatives of Merck and Astra, Hébert and Feltmate, is clear that the
initial entry of Apotex into the market as a generic in 1996 was of limited
concern since Apotex offered only a 5mg tablet. This action was begun in 1996 but
proceeded rather slowly. In all, it has taken ten years to get to trial. When
Apotex came into the market with a broad range of tablet strengths in 1999,
Merck and Astra stopped promoting their product. There is no evidence that
either Merck or Astra took any steps to match Apotex as to price or in any
other way take competitive measures in the market. They simply stopped any
significant market activity and left the market to Apotex. The cost of
competing effectively could have been considered in the assessment of damages.
The ten year period leading to this trial has been commented upon by all
parties, each of whom blames the other for the delays. However, considering the
fact that the Plaintiffs essentially threw in the towel and left this action to
proceed in a leisurely fashion leads me to conclude that they should not be
entitled to elect an award of profits. There shall, however, be an award of
damages.
[230] The evidence
is clear that Apotex is in the continuing business of making, using and selling
lisinopril containing products, therefore that activity should be enjoined
until the expiry of the ‘350 patent. However, given the length of time that it
took to get this matter to trial, it is appropriate that Apotex have a grace
period in order to determine whether it wishes to appeal from this decision and
seek a stay of the injunction. Therefore Apotex shall have thirty days from the
date that these Reasons are issued before the injunction is effective, provided
however that Apotex shall account for all lisinopril acquired by it and all
uses of lisinopril, whenever acquired, during that thirty day period and that
all funds received in respect of all sales and other dispositions of lisinopril
and lisinopril containing products in that period shall be held by it in a
separate trust fund subject to further Order of the Court.
[231] With respect
to any lisinopril and any lisinopril containing product in the possession,
custody or control of Apotex at the time that the injunction becomes effective,
Apotex may elect to deliver such material up to the Plaintiffs. Alternatively,
Apotex may retain such product to be used or sold or otherwise disposed of
after the expiry of the ‘350 patent, given that the ‘350 patent will expire in
about a year and a half, provided that Apotex keeps an account of all such
material and that all monies received by Apotex in respect thereof shall be
held in the same separate trust fund subject to further Order of the Court.
[232] The
Plaintiffs ask for what they describe as elevated damages and/or costs. Such
request has not been particularly pleaded, it was only made in counsel’s
submissions in argument. This request is made on the basis that Apotex sought,
and ultimately after litigation, received, a Notice of Compliance to sell
lisinopril products in Canada on the basis that it would be using lisinopril
made before the issuance of the ‘350 patent. The evidence shows that such
material was soon used up and Apotex sought, and obtained other material from Delmar
and from abroad which it used to continue to make lisinopril products.
[233] In 1996, the
Federal Court of Appeal in Apotex Inc. v. Zeneca Pharma Inc.et al
69 C.P.R. (3d) 451, considered Apotex’s application for a Notice of Compliance
and stated that the Minister should not be prohibited from issuing such a
Notice simply because there was a “theoretical possibility” that Apotex may use
the Notice to sell infringing material in the future.
[234] In 2000, the
Court was asked to reconsider its earlier decision upon evidence that Apotex
had, by that time, commenced to use lisinopril made after the ‘350 patent was granted.
The Federal Court of Appeal in Apotex Inc. v. Zeneca Pharma Inc. (2001),
10 C.P.R. (4th) 146 held that there was no basis for reconsidering
its 1996 judgment.
[235] The
Plaintiffs seek “elevated” damages at what they describe as a “modest” thirty
percent (30%) premium on the basis of Apotex’s alleged misrepresentation and
misconduct. Apotex’s actual representations at the time it sought a Notice of
Compliance and in the Court proceedings were not put in evidence, there is only
what is set out in various Reasons of the Courts.
[236] The
Plaintiffs never provided a specific pleading as to such damage. They say they
do not have to and rely on Merck & Co. v. Brantford Chemicals
Inc., 2004
FCA 223, [2004] F.C.J. No. 1003, paragraph 3 for that proposition. I have been
provided with a copy of the Statement of Claim dated 26 September, 2003 in that
action T-1780-03 and there was, in fact a plea for, “Punitive and Exemplary
damages” in that claim.
[237] The Federal
Court of Appeal in Brantford Chemicals did not appear to have been
directed to the Supreme Court of Canada in Whiten v. Pilot Insurance Company,
(2002) 209 D.L.R. (4th) 257 at paragraph 86 where the Supreme Court
was referred to some law indicating that no specific plea as to punitive
damages needs to be made. The Supreme Court rejected that law and required a
specific plea and not simply one buried in a general reference to general
damage. The opposite party was entitled to sufficient advance notice so as to
consider the scope of its jeopardy.
[238] Here, there
is no specific plea even though since at least 2000 the Plaintiffs have been
aware of the circumstances. Both parties amended their pleadings on several
occasions, including during this trial. Yet no such plea was made.
[239] I decline to
award any damage beyond the normal damages already awarded. In particular, I
decline to award any “elevated” or punitive or exemplary damages because there
is no pleading respecting such damage.
[240] An award of
pre-judgement interest is appropriate. There has been no reason demonstrated why
such an award should be refused. Such interest should not be compounded. The
rate of such interest should be calculated separately for each year since
infringing activity began at the average annual bank rate established by the
Bank of Canada as the minimum rate at which the Bank of Canada makes short-term
advances to the banks listed in Schedule 1 of the Bank Act R.S.C. 1985,
c.B-1.
[241] Post-judgment
interest follows at the rate of five percent (5%) established by the Interest
Act R.S.C. 1985, c.I-15 s. 4.
[242] The parties
have asked that I reserve as to any order respecting costs until after they
have received and considered these Reasons and I do so. I ask that the parties
provide, within ten (10) days from the date of these Reasons, submissions as to
costs. These submissions should address those matters listed in Rule 400(3), as
well as experts, disbursements, number of counsel, any offer as to settlement
and any other matter considered relevant.
[243] The parties
have also asked that I reserve as to the form of the Judgment to be issued
until after they have received and considered these Reasons. I have drafted a
proposed Judgment and submit that draft for comment by the parties. Comments by
counsel for all parties should be provided within ten (10) days from the date
of these Reasons following which an appropriate Judgment will be issued.
"Roger
T. Hughes"