Date: 20081021
Docket: T-1144-05
Citation: 2008 FC 1185
Ottawa, Ontario, October 21, 2008
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Hughes
BETWEEN:
APOTEX
INC.
Plaintiff
and
MERCK & CO. INC., MERCK
FROSST CANADA LTD.
and MERCK FROSST CANADA & CO.
Defendants
REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This
is an action brought by the Plaintiff, Apotex Inc., under the provisions of
section 8 of the Patented Medicines (Notice of Compliance) Regulations,
SOR/93-133, as amended (PMNOC Regulations), claiming recovery against
the Defendants, Merck Frosst Canada Ltd. and Merck Frosst Canada & Co.
(collectively Merck). This is the first such action to proceed to trial on the
merits. The parties have raised a number of preliminary issues for
determination at this time, leaving the quantification of any award, if
required, to a later trial.
[2]
The
issues required to be determined at this time are twofold. The first deals
with the jurisdiction of this Court, enablement and constitutionality of
section 8. The second deals with the nature and extent of the remedies afforded
by section 8 of the PMNOC Regulations. For the reasons that follow, I
find that the Federal Court has jurisdiction to hear and determine actions
instituted under section 8 of the PMNOC Regulations, that section 8 is
properly enabled and that section 8 is intra vires the constitutional
authority of the federal Parliament. As to the second, I find that the Apotex
is not entitled to disgorgement of Merck’s profits, if any; that Apotex is
entitled to recover its damages or its lost profits, for the period from
February 3, 2004 to May 26, 2005; and, that Apotex may claim recovery of
damages that occurred during said period and extended beyond that period if
said damage could not have been or were not rectified in that period. No party
is awarded costs.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
[3]
Counsel
for the parties are to be commended for co-operating in providing an agreement
as to facts and documents (Exhibit 1). The Plaintiff, Apotex Inc., is what is
known colloquially as a generic drug company which manufactures and markets primarily
generic versions of pharmaceuticals in Canada. In the PMNOC
Regulations, Apotex is referred to as a “second party”. The two Merck
Canadian companies Merck Frosst Canada Ltd. and Merck Frosst Canada & Co.
(collectively referred to in these reasons as Merck) are the Canadian branch of
a multinational organization which manufactures and markets are what are
commonly referred to as “brand name” or “originator” or “innovator”
pharmaceuticals and are what is referred to as “first person” under the PMNOC
Regulations. Merck & Co. Inc., a United States company, was
named as a party defendant in this action but shortly before trial, an Order
was issued, on consent, discontinuing this action against that entity.
[4]
The
pharmaceutical of interest in this action is a drug commonly known as
alendronate which is used primarily in the treatment of osteoporosis. Merck
has an interest in a patent, Canadian Patent 2,294,595 (’595) which, among
other things, includes claims directed to a particular dosage regimen for the
use of that known drug, alendronate, in the treatment of osteoporosis, a known
use. Merck listed the ’595 patent with the Minister of Health under the
provisions of the PMNOC Regulations which meant that any generic seeking
approval to sell a generic version of alendronate in Canada for the patented
dosage regimen for the treatment of osteoporosis and wanting to take advantage
of simply referencing approvals already given to Merck for that drug could file
an Abbreviated New Drug Submission (ANDS). In so doing a generic is required to
send a notice to Merck alleging, among other things, that the ’595 patent would
not be infringed or was invalid, thereby permitting Merck to commence an
application in this Court to prohibit the generic from marketing its generic
version of alendronate in Canada in the dosage regimen claimed in the ’595
patent.
[5]
Merck
received an NOC approving for sale its version of alendronate in Canada on February
4, 2002. Apotex filed an ANDS for alendronate on February 7, 2003 and sent a
Notice of Allegation to Merck on April 14, 2003 alleging that the ’595 patent
was invalid for a number of reasons. On May 29, 2003, Merck & Co. Inc. and
Merck Frosst Canada & Co. commenced proceedings in this Court, T-884-03, to
prohibit the Minister of Health from issuing a Notice of Compliance to Apotex which
otherwise would permit Apotex to sell a generic version of the alendronate drug
in Canada. On February 3, 2004 the Minister send a letter to Apotex advising it
that its application was approved but would be held in abeyance subject to the
Court proceedings. On May 26, 2005, Mosley J. of this Court gave Reasons and
an Order in T-884-03, dismissing Merck’s application, finding that Apotex’s allegations
as to invalidity, on some but not all grounds, were justified. These Reasons
are cited as 2005 FC 755. No appeal was taken. On May 27, 2005, the Minister
issued a Notice of Compliance to Apotex permitting it to sell its generic
version of alendronate, Apo-alendronate, in Canada.
[6]
On
July 5, 2005, Apotex instituted this action T-1144-05 claiming recovery against
Merck under the provisions of section 8 of PMNOC Regulations for the period
from February 3, 2004 to May 27, 2005.
[7]
By
Orders of this Court dated January 24, 2006 and August 14, 2008, the
quantification of any amounts found to be properly recoverable in this action
is a matter to be determined at a subsequent trial. The two preliminary issues
previously referred to are the subject of the present trial.
ISSUES FOR DETERMINATION
1) Merck’s Issues
[8]
Merck
submits the following issues relating to jurisdiction of this Court, enablement
and, constitutionality of section 8:
a)
Does
the Federal Court lack jurisdiction to hear an action pursuant to section 8 of
the PMNOC Regulations;
b)
Is
section 8 of the PMNOC Regulations ultra vires section 55.2(4) of
the Patent Act, R.S.C. 1985 c. P-4 as amended;
c)
Is
section 8 outside the scope of Parliament’s power to make laws in relation to
patents of invention and discovery, and an unlawful intrusion into the
exclusive jurisdiction of the provinces pursuant to section 92(13) of the Constitution
Act, 1867, R.S.C. 1985, App. II, No. 5.
2) Apotex’s Issues
[9]
Apotex
raises issues as to the nature and extent of the remedy afforded by section 8
of the PMNOC Regulations, in particular:
- Is Apotex entitled
to an election as between the damages which it has suffered, if any, and
the profits made by Merck, if any?
- What is the period
of time in respect of which Apotex may claim recovery?
- Is Apotex entitled
to recover for damages that continue after the period expires?
[10]
A
number of other issues were raised in the pleadings of each of the parties but
have been resolved or dropped. Merck & Co. Inc. (Merck US) is a named
defendant and several issues were raised by Apotex as to the nature and degree
of its participation in the events under consideration. By consent Order, this
action as against Merck US was dismissed. The two remaining
defendants, Merck Frosst Canada Ltd. and Merck Frosst Canada & Co. are
Canadian entities only the first of which was in existence at the time that the
earlier NOC proceedings decided by Mosley J. were initiated. The second of
those two entities came into existence subsequent to the institution of the NOC
proceedings (T-884-03). It appears that there was a transfer of assets from
the first to the second of these entities. The pleadings take issue as to this
transfer and the effect thereof however, these matters are no longer of
concern.
[11]
In
its earlier Statement of Claim, Apotex made a claim for unjust enrichment which
claim was dropped at trial. By its counsel at trial, Apotex acknowledged that
while during discovery some other grounds of damages were suggested none of
such grounds are being pursued. Amended pleadings were filed at trial and are
contained in a Trial Record (Exhibit 5). Apotex’s counsel stated at trial that
Apotex does not seek any relief other than that specifically claimed in the
prayer for relief in its Further Amended Statement of Claim dated October 6,
2008.
Dr. Hollis
[12]
Only
one witness was called to appear at trial. He was Dr. Aidan Hollis called as
an expert witness by Apotex. He is an associate professor of economics at the University of Calgary.
Dr. Hollis’
credentials were not seriously challenged by Merck. He was accepted to be an
expert in economics with particular reference in pricing, competition and
incentives for entering pharmaceutical markets.
[13]
Merck,
however, strenuously objected to the introduction of Dr. Hollis’ evidence on
the basis of lack of relevance or necessity. After hearing the parties in
argument, I admitted Dr. Hollis’ report in the form of an affidavit sworn on
September 4, 2008 together with two exhibits AH-1, a curriculum vitae, and
AH-2, a published paper by Dr. Hollis and another, into evidence as Exhibit 3,
subject to weight. Dr. Hollis was then cross-examined.
[14]
I
find that Dr. Hollis’ evidence is to be given no weight. It was not referred
to in any written argument submitted by any party before trial, and scarcely
referred to in skeleton argument submitted at trial or in oral argument at
trial by any counsel. Dr. Hollis purports to address two questions from what
he describes as an “economic perspective”. The first is directed to whether,
under the PMNOC Regulations, Apotex’s remedy is limited to damages or
whether it could claim disgorgement of Merck’s profits. Dr. Hollis is not a
lawyer, and even if he were, a Canadian lawyer’s opinion as to Canadian law is
not admissible in evidence for the purpose of interpreting that law. Even less
admissible is the evidence of an economist. An exception may exist where a
statute uses wording that is meaningful to those practicing a particular
profession (Regina ex rel. Doughty v. Manuel (1982), 38 O.R.
(2d) 321 Ont. C.A. at 352-6). However the views of an economist as to the
economic incentives or otherwise that may be provided by a regulation is not
helpful in interpreting those regulations and will be given no weight.
[15]
The
second issue addressed by Dr. Hollis was whether Apotex’s claim for damages
should extend to a shortened period having regard to a delay if any, in serving
the Notice of Allegation. Again, the views of an economist on this issue are
not helpful. In any event, when Dr. Hollis took the stand, he made numerous
corrections to his affidavit on this point, changing the period of delay to one
year from two. His conclusions are summarized in paragraph 48 of his affidavit.
He admitted on cross-examination that those conclusions were “perhaps not very
well expressed”. He admitted that only in certain cases would his
conclusions be accurate while in other cases they would not be accurate.
[16]
I
have, therefore, given Dr. Hollis’ evidence no weight.
HISTORY OF THE PMNOC
REGULATIONS
[17]
The
historical background to what is now the PMNOC Regulations has been reviewed,
at least in part, in several decisions including AB Hassle et al. v. Canada
(Minister of National Health and Welfare) (2000), 7 C.P.R. (4th)
272 (FCA); Apotex Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General) (2000), 6 C.P.R. (4th)
165 (FCA); Bayer AG v. Canada (Minister of National Health and Welfare)
(1993), 51 C.P.R. (3d) 329 (FCA); and Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. v. Canada
(Attorney General) (2005), 39 C.P.R. (4th) 449 (SCC) (Biolyse).
[18]
Historically
a number of countries, Canada among them, have been averse to extending
patent monopolies to food or medicines. Canada gradually retreated from this
position, allowing patents directed to processes for making food or medicine,
then restricting the prohibition to only certain types of medicines and
finally, lifting the restrictions entirely. Most, but not all, countries have
also lifted such restrictions.
[19]
Nonetheless,
until 1993, Canada included a scheme in its Patent Act whereby an
interested person could apply to the Commissioner of Patents (not the patent
owner) and obtain a compulsory licence to sell a patented medicine in Canada. Almost
invariably such a licence was granted and at the rate of 4% of the net price of
a finished product or 15% for the bulk ingredient. This compulsory licence
system was objected to by patentees, claiming that it diminished the rights of
those holding patents claiming medicines as opposed to others who may have
patents for instance for bicycles.
[20]
In
the early 1990’s considerable efforts were made by the government, encouraged
by lobbyists for many of the interested parties, to abolish the compulsory
licence system for medicines, and to put in place a suitable system that would
encourage development in the area while making medicines available to Canadians
at affordable prices. The parties in this action, by agreement, filed six
volumes of material said to comprise selected portions of transcripts of
parliamentary committee debates, submissions by lobbyists and speeches in the
House of Commons (Exhibit 2). I have not found this material to be helpful.
In general, such material is not to be used in interpreting a statute or
regulation (e.g. Reference re: Validity of Regulations in Relation to
Chemicals, [1943] S.C.R. 1 per Duff CJ. at page 12). However, to get a
flavour of the debate in the House of Commons, I repeat part of what was said
by Hon. Pierre Blais (Minister of Consumer and Corporate Affairs and Minister
of State (Agriculture) - as he then was), on December 10, 1992 in introducing
Bill C-91 which Bill included amendments the Patent Act, including
section 55.2 at issue here. He said inter alia:
On several occasions since
June, I have had an opportunity to explain the main objectives of Bill C-91 and
I would like to come back to them a little.
First, Bill C-91 is meant to
continue the major undertaking of modernizing Canadian intellectual property
legislation, which began some years ago. In the present economic context where
knowledge and innovation are the watchwords, I think that everyone will agree
that it is an essential element of our competitiveness.
Our purpose is also to align
our laws with those of most of our international competitors, so that Canada can provide the same benefits
and be as attractive as other countries in terms of international trade and
investment.
This bill will help us to
stimulate research and development in Canada, as well as growth in a leading-edge
sector.
With Bill C-91, we also wanted
to strengthen consumer protection, so that consumers can continue to obtain
patented medicine at reasonable prices. I think that all Canadians are
entitled to that.
[21]
Section
55.2 as passed R.S.C. 1993, c. 2, s. 4 provided that it would not be an
infringement of a patent to use the invention solely for purposes of developing
submissions for regulatory approval or for stockpiling. Section 55.2 was a
so-called “early working” exception which is similar to such an
exemption provided in United States legislation. However,
the Canadian exception is unrestricted as to subject matter of the patent, it
applies to medicines, bicycles and anything patented, and unrestricted as to
any country not just Canada or province in which regulatory approval may be
sought. The amendment also provided for “stockpiling” whereby, a person
could make and stockpile patented products but not put them into the stream of
commerce until the patent expired (sections 55.2(2) and (3)). These
stockpiling provisions were removed in 2001. Section 55.2(4) provided a
Regulation making authority. Section 55.2(5) provided that these provisions of
the Patent Act and any Regulations passed under them, would, in the case
of conflict with other provisions of the Patent Act or Regulation
or any other Act or Regulations, have priority.
[22]
Section
55.2(6) provided that any right to non-infringement in respect of private,
non-commercial activity remained. In this last regard the decision of the
Supreme Court of Canada in SmithKline & French Inter-American Corp. v.
Micro Chemicals Ltd., [1972] S.C.R. 506 is to be noted in which it was held
that experimental use without a licence in the course of bone fide
experiments directed to whether a person could make a patented product was not
an infringement of a patent.
[23]
Section
55.2 as passed in 1993 (omitting subsections (2) and (3)) remains in that form
to this day and says:
Exception
55.2
(1) It is not an infringement of a patent for any
person 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 a country other than Canada that
regulates the manufacture, construction, use or sale of any product.
Regulations
(4) The Governor in Council may make such regulations
as the Governor in Council considers necessary for preventing the
infringement of a patent by any person who makes, constructs, uses or sells a
patented invention in accordance with subsection (1), including, without
limiting the generality of the foregoing, regulations
(a) respecting the
conditions that must be fulfilled before a notice, certificate, permit or
other document concerning any product to which a patent may relate may be
issued to a patentee or other person under any Act of Parliament that
regulates the manufacture, construction, use or sale of that product, in
addition to any conditions provided for by or under that Act;
(b) respecting the
earliest date on which a notice, certificate, permit or other document
referred to in paragraph (a) that is issued or to be issued
to a person other than the patentee may take effect and respecting the manner
in which that date is to be determined;
(c) governing the
resolution of disputes between a patentee or former patentee and any person
who applies for a notice, certificate, permit or other document referred to
in paragraph (a) as to the date on which that notice, certificate,
permit or other document may be issued or take effect;
(d) conferring
rights of action in any court of competent jurisdiction with respect to any
disputes referred to in paragraph (c) and respecting the remedies
that may be sought in the court, the procedure of the court in the matter and
the decisions and orders it may make; and
(e) generally
governing the issue of a notice, certificate, permit or other document
referred to in paragraph (a) in circumstances where the
issue of that notice, certificate, permit or other document might result
directly or indirectly in the infringement of a patent.
Inconsistency or conflict
(5) In the event of any inconsistency or conflict
between
(a) this section
or any regulations made under this section, and
(b) any Act of
Parliament or any regulations made thereunder,
this section or the regulations made under this section
shall prevail to the extent of the inconsistency or conflict.
For greater certainty
(6) For greater certainty, subsection (1) does not
affect any exception to the exclusive property or privilege granted by a
patent that exists at law in respect of acts done privately and on a
non-commercial scale or for a non-commercial purpose or in respect of any
use, manufacture, construction or sale of the patented invention solely for
the purpose of experiments that relate to the subject-matter of the patent.
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Exception
55.2 (1) Il n’y a pas contrefaçon de brevet lorsque
l’utilisation, la fabrication, la construction ou la vente d’une invention
brevetée se justifie dans la seule mesure nécessaire à la préparation et à la
production du dossier d’information qu’oblige à fournir une loi fédérale,
provinciale ou étrangère réglementant la fabrication, la construction,
l’utilisation ou la vente d’un produit.
4) Afin d’empêcher la contrefaçon
d’un brevet d’invention par l’utilisateur, le fabricant, le constructeur ou
le vendeur d’une invention brevetée au sens du paragraphe (1), le gouverneur
en conseil peut prendre des règlements, notamment :
a)
fixant des conditions complémentaires nécessaires à la délivrance, en vertu
de lois fédérales régissant l’exploitation, la fabrication, la construction
ou la vente de produits sur lesquels porte un brevet, d’avis, de certificats,
de permis ou de tout autre titre à quiconque n’est pas le breveté;
b)
concernant la première date, et la manière de la fixer, à laquelle un titre
visé à l’alinéa a) peut être
délivré à quelqu’un qui n’est pas le breveté et à laquelle elle peut prendre
effet;
c)
concernant le règlement des litiges entre le breveté, ou l’ancien titulaire
du brevet, et le demandeur d’un titre visé à l’alinéa a),
quant à la date à laquelle le titre en question peut être délivré ou prendre
effet;
d)
conférant des droits d’action devant tout tribunal compétent concernant les
litiges visés à l’alinéa c), les
conclusions qui peuvent être recherchées, la procédure devant ce tribunal et
les décisions qui peuvent être rendues;
e) sur
toute autre mesure concernant la délivrance d’un titre visé à l’alinéa a)
lorsque celle-ci peut avoir pour effet la contrefaçon de brevet.
Divergences
(5) Une disposition réglementaire
prise sous le régime du présent article prévaut sur toute disposition
législative ou réglementaire fédérale divergente.
Interprétation
(6) Le paragraphe (1) n’a pas pour
effet de porter atteinte au régime légal des exceptions au droit de propriété
ou au privilège exclusif que confère un brevet en ce qui touche soit l’usage
privé et sur une échelle ou dans un but non commercial, soit l’utilisation,
la fabrication, la construction ou la vente d’une invention brevetée dans un
but d’expérimentation.
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[24]
The
legislation as passed in 1993 contained provisions for review of the amendments
by a Statutory Committee on Industry. That review was conducted. A Report was
tabled dated April, 1997. The Report indicates that many representations were
made on behalf of many interested parties. It recommended, among other things,
at page 40 of the Report, that in respect of proposed regulatory amendments a
rigorous process for drafting, publication, and receipt of submissions on
behalf of the public, be followed.
[25]
The
PMNOC Regulations first came into effect on March 12, 1993 (SOR/93-133).
They were amended effective March 12, 1998 (SOR/98-166), again amended
effective October 1, 1999 (SOR/99-379), against amended effective 5 October,
2006 (SOR/2006-242) and last amended effective June 12, 2008 (SOR/2008-211).
It is important to note, particularly with respect to SOR/2006-242, that
certain transitional provisions provide that certain amendments including some
as to Section 8 do not apply to actions commenced prior to the date of coming
into force of the amendments. Those amendments came into force October 5, 2006.
This action was commenced
July 5,
2005. As a result, certain amendments pertaining to section 8 of the PMNOC
Regulations made in October 2006 do not affect what is at issue in this
action.
Section
8 – History
[26]
In
this action, were are concerned with section 8 of the PMNOC Regulations
in the form in which that section stood as of the date this action was filed,
July 5, 2005. As of that date, section 8 read as follows:
8. (1) If an application made under subsection 6(1) is
withdrawn or discontinued by the first person or is dismissed by the court
hearing the application or if an order preventing the Minister from issuing a
notice of compliance, made pursuant to that subsection, is reversed on
appeal, the first person is liable to the second person for any loss suffered
during the period:
(a)
beginning on the date, as certified by the Minister, on which a notice of
compliance would have been issued in the absence of these Regulations, unless
the court is satisfied on the evidence that another date is more appropriate;
and
(b)
ending on the date of the withdrawl, the discontinuance, the dismissal or the
reversal.
(2) A second person may, by action
against a first person, apply to the court for an order requiring the first
person to compensate the second person for the loss referred to in subsection
(1).
(3) The court may make an order under
this section without regard to whether the first person has commenced an
action for the infringement of a patent that is the subject matter of the application.
(4) The court may make such order for
relief by way of damages or profits as the circumstances require in respect
of any loss referred to in subsection (1).
(5) In assessing the amount of
compensation the court shall take into account all matters that it considers
relevant to the assessment of the amount, including any conduct of the first
or second person which contributed to delay the disposition of the
application under subsection 6(1).
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8. (1) Si
la demande présentée aux termes du paragraphe 6(1) est retirée ou fait
l’objet d’un désistement par la première personne ou est rejetée par le
tribunal qui en est saisi, ou si l’ordonnance interdisant au ministre de
délivrer un avis de conformité, rendue aux termes de ce paragraphe, est
annulée lors d’un appel, la première personne est responsable envers la
seconde personne de toute perte subie au cours de la période :
a) débutant à la
date, attestée par le ministre, à laquelle un avis de conformité aurait été
délivré en l’absence du présent règlement, sauf si le tribunal estime d’après
la preuve qu’une autre date est plus appropriée;
(b) se terminant
à la date du retrait, du désistement ou du rejet de la demande ou de
l’annulation de l’ordonnance.
2) La seconde personne peut, par voie d’action contre la
première personne, demander au tribunal de rendre une ordonnance enjoignant à
cette dernière de lui verser une indemnité pour la perte visée au paragraphe
(1).
(3) Le tribunal peut rendre une ordonnance aux termes du
présent article sans tenir compte du fait que la première personne a institué
ou non une action pour contrefaçon du brevet visé par la demande.
(4) Le tribunal peut rendre l’ordonnance qu’il juge
indiquée pour accorder réparation par recouvrement de dommages-intérêts ou de
profits à l’égard de la perte visée au paragraphe (1).
(5) Pour déterminer le montant de l’indemnité à accorder,
le tribunal tient compte des facteurs qu’il juge pertinents à cette fin, y
compris, le cas échéant, la conduite de la première personne ou de la seconde
personne qui a contribué à retarder le règlement de la demande visée au
paragraphe 6(1).
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[27]
The
history of changes to section 8 since the inception of the PMNOC Regulations
in 1993 should be reviewed. Those changes were commented upon in the Regulatory
Impact Analyses Statement (RIAS) published together with the proposed
amendments in the relevant Canada Gazette. The RIAS do not form part of the
Regulations but have been used as an aid to interpreting the Regulations. I
refer, for instance to the reasons of the Supreme Court of Canada, Binnie J.
for the majority, in Biolyse, supra, at paragraphs 45 to 49, as
well as to the reasons of Bastarache J. for the dissenting minority at
paragraphs 155 to 159 in which the RIAS were accepted as an aid to
interpretation of the PMNOC Regulations.
[28]
In
the PMNOC Regulations as they appeared originally in 1993 (SOR/93-133)
section 8 read as follows:
Remedies
8. (1) The
first person is liable to the second person for all damage suffered by the
second person where, because of the application of paragraph 7(1)(e), the
Minister delays issuing a notice of compliance beyond the expiration of all
patents that are subject of an order pursuant to subsection 6(1).
(2) The
court may make such order for relief by way of damages or profits as the
circumstances require in respect of any damage referred to in subsection (1).
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Conclusions
8.
(1) La première personne est responsable envers la seconde personne de tout
préjudice subi par cette dernière lorsque, en application de l’alinéa 7(1)e),
le ministre report la délivrance de l’avis de conformité au-delà de la date
d’expiration de tous les brevets visés par une ordonnance rendue aux termes
du paragraphe 6(1).
(2) Le tribunal peut rendre toute ordonnance de redressement par voie de dommages-intérêts
ou de profits que les circonstances exigent à l’égard de tout préjudice subit
du fait de l’application du paragraphe (1).
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[29]
The
RIAS accompanying the publication of the 1993 Regulations said, inter
alia:
Alternatives
Considered
Under the
status quo patentees have the right to pursue patent infringement actions in
the courts to obtain interlocutory relief and to be compensated in damages if
an injunction is not granted and it turns out that there was infringement.
However, with the enactment of Bill C-91 the government has created an
exception to patent infringement allowing generic competitors to undertake
any activities necessary to work up a submission to obtain regulatory
approval of a product. This removes a patent right that may have otherwise
been available to patentees to prevent generic competitors from obtaining
such regulatory approval of their products.
These
Regulations are needed to ensure this new exception to patent infringement is
not abused by generic drug applicants seeking to sell their product in Canada
during the term of their competitor’s patent while nonetheless allowing
generic competitors to undertake the regulatory approval work necessary to
ensure they are in a position to market their products immediately after the
expiry of any relevant patents.
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Autres
mesures envisagées
À
l’heure actuelle, les titulaires d’un brevet ont le droit d’entamer des
poursuites en contrefaçon dans le but d’obtenir un redressement
interlocutoire ou des dommages-intérêts si aucune injonction n’est accordée
et qu’on découvre par la suite qu’il y avait contrefaçon. En règle générale,
les recours judiciaires suffisent pour régler les cas de contrefaçon.
Toutefois, avec l’adoption du projet de la loi C-91, le gouvernement fait une
exception dans ce domaine en permettant aux fabricants de médicaments
génériques d’entreprendre les démarches nécessaires pour obtenir
l’approbation réglementaire d’un produit. Par conséquent, le titulaire d’un
brevet perd un droit dont il aurait pu se prévaloir pour empêcher ses
concurrents de faire approuver leurs produits.
Le
présent règlement est nécessaire si on veut éviter que cette nouvelle
exception en matière de contrefaçon soit mal utilisée par les fabricants de
produits génériques désireux de vendre leurs produits au Canada pendant que
le brevet original est encore valide. En vertu du règlement, ces fabricants
peuvent toutefois entreprendre les démarches nécessaires pour obtenir
l’approbation réglementaire et ainsi commercialiser leurs produits dès que
les brevets pertinents arrivent à expiration.
|
[30]
Section
8 was amended in 1998 (SOR/98-166) to the wording that is relevant to this
action as is set out at the beginning of this portion of these Reasons. The
RIAS accompanying this amendment as published in the Canada Gazette in 1998
said, inter alia:
The
following improvements of the NOC Regulations are enacted:
…
Specifying
circumstances in which damages or costs can be awarded: A clearer indication
is given to the court as to circumstances in which damages could be awarded
to a generic manufacturer to compensate for loss suffered by reason of
delayed market entry of its drug, and the factors that may be taken into
account in calculating damages. The court may also award costs to either a
generic manufacturer or a patentee, including solicitor or client costs, as
appropriate, consistent with Federal Courts Rules.
The
amendments reinforce the balance between providing a mechanism for the
effective enforcement of patent rights and ensuring that generic drug
products enter the market as soon as possible.
…
Other
changes are designed to reduce unnecessary litigation and streamline the
litigation process: specifying the circumstances in which parties can be
awarded damages and factors that may be taken into account in calculating
damages;
|
Les
améliorations suivantes apportées au Règlement sur les médicaments brevetés
(avis de conformité) sont promulguées) :
…
Préciser
les circonstances ou des dommages-intérêts peuvent être accordés : De
plus grandes précisions sont données aux tribunaux en ce qui concerne les
circonstances où des dommages-intérêts pourront être accordés à un fabricant
afin de le dédommager des pertes subies à cause du report de la mise en
marché de son médicament générique, par ailleurs, des précisions sont aussi
données sur les facteurs dont on peut tenir compte pour calculer les
dommages-intérêts. Les tribunaux peuvent également accorder les dépens à
l’une ou l’autre des parties (fabricant de médicaments génériques ou
titulaire de brevet), y compris les honoraires professionnels, le cas
échéant, conformément aux Règles de la Cour fédérale.
Les
modifications envisagées renforceront l’équilibre entre l’assurance d’un
mécanisme qui permet de faire véritablement respecter les droits conférés par
les brevets et la garantie que les médicaments génériques soient
commercialisés aussitôt que possible.
…
D’autres
changements visent à réduite le nombre de….inutiles et à rationaliser le
processus judiciaire, en précisant les circonstances où les parties peuvent
obtenir des dommages-intérêts et les facteurs pouvant être pris en compte
dans le calcul de ces dommages;
|
[31]
The
last of the changes to affect section 8 came about in 2006 (SOR/2006-242).
Section 8 was amended as follows:
5. (1)
Paragraph 8(1)(a) of the Regulation is replaced by the following
(a)
beginning on the date, as certified by the Minister, on which a notice of
compliance would have been issued in the absence of the Regulations, unless
the court concludes that
(i) the
certified date was, by the operation of An Act to amend the Patent Act and
the Food and Drugs Act (The Jean Chrétien Pledge to Africa), chapter 23 of
the Statues of Canada, 2004, earlier than it would otherwise have been and
therefore a date later than the certified date is more appropriate, or
(ii) a
date other than the certified date is more appropriate and
(2)
Subsection 8(4) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:
(4) If a
court orders a first person to compensate a second person under subsection
(1), the court may, in respect of any loss referred to in that subsection,
make any order for relief by way of damages that the circumstances require.
(3)
Section 8 of the Regulations is amended by adding the following after
subsection (5):
(6) The
Minister is not liable for damages under this section.
|
5.
(1) L’alinéa 8(1)a) du même règlement est remplacé par ce qui suit:
(a)
débutant à la date attestée par le ministre, à laquelle un avis de conformité
aurait été délivré en l’absence du présent règlement, sauf si le tribunal
conclut :
(i) soit que la date attestée est
devancée en raison de l’application de la Loi modifiant la Loi sur les
brevets et la Loi sur les aliments et drogues (engagement de Jean Chrétien
envers l’Afrique), chapitre 23 des Lois du Canada (2004), et qu’en
conséquence une date postérieure à celle-ci est plus appropriée,
(ii) soit qu’une date autre que la date
attestée est plus appropriée;
(2) Le paragraphe 8(4) du même
règlement est remplacé par ce qui suit :
(4) Lorsque le tribunal enjoint à la
première personne de verser à la seconde personne une indemnité pour la perte
visée au paragraphe (1), il peut rendre l’ordonnance qu’il juge indiquée pour
accorder réparation par recouvrement de dommages-intérêts à l’égard de cette
perte.
(3) L’article 8 du même règlement est
modifié par adjonction, après le paragraphe (5), de ce qui suit :
(6) Le ministre ne peut être tenu pour
responsable des dommages-intérêts au titre du présent article.
|
[32]
The transitional
provisions respecting the 2006 amendments provided that these amendments do not
affect actions already commenced, such as the present action. The relevant
transitional provision says:
8.
Subsection 8(4) of the Patented Medicines (Notice of Compliance) Regulations,
as enacted by subsection 5(2) of these Regulations, does not apply to an
action commenced under section 8 of the Patented Medicines (Notice of
Compliance) Regulations prior to coming into force of these Regulations.
|
8.
Le paragraphe 8(4) du Règlement sur les médicaments brevets (avis de conformité),
édicté par le paragraphe 5(2) du présent règlement, ne s’applique pas à
l’action intentée en vertu de l’article 8 du Règlement sur les médicaments
brevetés (avis de conformité) avant la date d’entrée en vigueur du présent
règlement.
|
[33]
The
RIAS accompanying the 2006 amendments as published in the Canada Gazette said, inter
alia:
Last among
the substantive changes proposed by these amendments are refinements to the
section 8 damages provision. The first such change is to further specify the
matters the court may take into account when calculating the period of delay
for which an innovator may be held liable under that section. The second is
to confirm that the Minister cannot be held liable for any delay under that
section. The third is to remove the world “profits” from the provision
prescribing the remedies available to a generic manufacturer seeking
compensation for any loss arising from the delay.
On this
last point, the Government is aware of a number of ongoing section 8 cases in
which it is argued that in order for this provision to operate as a
disincentive to improper use of the PM(NOC) Regulations by innovative
companies, the term “profits” in this context must be understood to mean an
accounting of the innovator’s profits. While reserving comment on the proper
interpretation of the term in these cases, which have been shielded from this
change by transitional provisions, in light of the proposed tightening of
this listing requirements under amended section 4, and on the introduction of
the frozen register mechanism under amended section 5, the Government
believes that this line of argument should no longer be open to generic
companies that invoke section 8.
…
Reaction
from the innovative industry was more equivocal, with the majority of
companies supportive of the proposed increases in data protection but a
minority strongly opposed to the proposed tightening of the patent
eligibility requirements. As regards the “profits” issue, innovators were
pleased with its proposed deletion, noting that there is no equivalent remedy
under US law for a generic that has been
delayed due to the operation of the automatic stay. For its part,
BIOTECanada urged the Government to increase the proposed term of data
protection to 10 years for biologics, in light of the longer development time
required to bring these protects to market.
|
Figurant
en dernier parmi les changements de fond proposes par ces modifications sont
des améliorations de la disposition de l’article 8 concernant les
dommages-intérêts. Le premier de ces changements vise à préciser davantage
les éléments dont le tribunal peut tenir compte au moment de calculer la
période de retard dont l’innovateur peut être tenue responsable en vertu de
cet article. Le deuxième sert à confirmer que le ministre ne peut être tenu
responsable pour tout retard en vertu de cet article. Le troisième consiste
à supprimer le terme «profits» de la disposition relative aux mesures de
réparation que le tribunal peut ordonner pour dédommager le fabricant de produits
génériques pour les pertes encourues en raison de ce retard.
S’agissant
de ce dernier changement, le gouvernement a pris connaissance d’un nombre
d’affaires en cours relatives à l’article 8 dans lesquelles on avance qu’afin
que cette disposition serve à décourager l’utilisation abusive du règlement
de liaison par les fabricants innovateurs, le terme « profits »
dans ce contexte doit s’entendre par reddition de compte de bénéfices de
l’innovateur. Bien qu’il se réserve de commenter sur l’interprétation
appropriée du terme dans ces affaires, ces dernières ayant été épargnées de
ce changement en vertu des dispositions transitoires, à la lumière du
resserrement proposé concernant les exigences relatives à l’inscription des
brevets suivant l’article 4 modifié, et l’introduction du mécanisme de
« gel » du registre en vertu de l’article 5 modifié, le
gouvernement est d’avis que ce genre d’argument ne devrait plus être admis
pour les fabricants de médicaments génériques invoquant l’article 8.
…
La
réaction de l’industrie innovatrice a été plus équivoque, la majorité des
entreprises appuyant la prolongation de la période de protection des données,
mais une minorité étant fortement opposée au resserrement proposé des
exigences relatives à l’admissibilité des brevets. En ce qui a trait à la
question des « profits », les innovateurs se sont dits satisfaits
de la suppression proposée, notant qu’il n’y a aucun recours semblable aux
États-Unis pour un fabricant de médicaments génériques ayant été retardé en
raison du déclenchement de la suspension automatique. Pour sa part,
BIOTECanada exhorta le gouvernement d’entendre la durée de protection des
données proposées jusqu’à dix ans pour les produits biologiques, tenant
compte du fait que ces derniers font l’objet d’une période de développement
plus longue avant qu’ils puissent être commercialisés.
|
[34]
In
this regard, section 45(2) of the Interpretation Act, R.S.C. 1985, c.
I-21 is to be noted as it says that an amendment to a provision shall not be
deemed to be or involve a declaration that the new provision is different from
the previous version:
Amendment does not imply change in law
(2) The amendment of an enactment shall not be deemed to be or to
involve a declaration that the law under that enactment was or was considered
by Parliament or other body or person by whom the enactment was enacted to
have been different from the law as it is under the enactment as amended.
|
Absence
de présomption de droit nouveau
(2) La modification d’un texte ne constitue pas ni n’implique
une déclaration portant que les règles de droit du texte étaient différentes
de celles de sa version modifiée ou que le Parlement, ou toute autre autorité
qui l’a édicté, les considérait comme telles.
|
JUDICIAL COMMENTARY ON
SECTION 55.2 AND THE PMNOC REGULATIONS
[35]
One
of the early concerns as to the PMNOC Regulations was directed to
process. Section 6 provided that an innovative drug company that had listed a
patent under those Regulations could, under subsection (1), “apply to
the court”, the balance of section 6 refers to an “application”.
The Federal Court of Appeal, in 1993, in Bayer AG v. Canada (Minister of
National Health and Welfare) (1993), 51 C.P.R. (3d) 329 determined that the
most appropriate procedure to be followed was is that provided by section 18.1
of the Federal Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-7 and the Rules
governing applications. Mahoney JA. for the Court said at page 336:
What is authorized by s. 6(1) of the
Regulations is an application “to a court of an order prohibiting the Minister
from issuing” a NOC. That seems clearly to be an application within the
contemplation of s. 18(1)(b) of the Federal Courts Act. The application is
required by s. 18(3) to be made under s. 18.1 and the prescribed procedures are
to be found in Part V.1 of the rules. The learned trial judge did not err in
determining that the proceedings are governed by the Part V.1 rules.
[36]
Section
18.1 is not entirely appropriate as it largely deals with reviews of decisions
of federal tribunals etc. and the PMNOC Regulations section 6
proceedings are not such a review. However, lacking a more appropriate
template, section 18.1 and the application Rules of the Federal Court
with adjustments such as those proposed by the December, 2007 Practice Direction
of the Federal Court, have been the course followed by the Court.
[37]
The
manner in which section 55.2(2) of the Patent Act fits with the PMNOC
Regulations as contemplated by section 55(2)(4) was considered by the
Federal Court of Appeal in Apotex Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General)
(2000), 6 C.P.R. (4th) 165. Evans JA. in his minority decision in
that case, canvassed the situation and determined that subsection 55.2(4)
should be construed broadly. He said at paragraphs 40 and 46:
40 Since the
words of the statutory text do not point ineluctably to one conclusion, does
the statutory context resolve the ambiguity? In my opinion, the nature and
subjective definition of the purpose for which the power may be exercised
supports a broad interpretation: ". . . such regulations as the Governor
in Council considers necessary for preventing the infringement of a patent . .
.".
…
46 For these
reasons, and in accordance with the general directive of section 12 of the
Interpretation Act , R.S.C. 1985 c. I-21, I have concluded that subsection
55.2(4) should be construed broadly, so that its application is not limited to
those who have availed themselves of the benefits conferred by subsection (1)
or (2) in connection with the particular medicine in dispute.
[38]
The
majority disagreed with Evans JA. but on another point, they did not comment on
this point.
[39]
The
Courts have spoken more generally as to the PMNOC Regulations commenting
upon the unhappy union created by dealing with both Food and Drug and Patent
legislation (Hugessen JA. in Merck Frosst Canada Inc. v. Canada (Minister of
National Health and Welfare) (1994), 55 C.P.R. (3d) 302 (FCA) at page 304),
and that it has created a minefield for litigants and counsel (my remarks in Pfizer
Canada Inc. v. Canada (Minister of Health), 2000 FC 500 at paragraph 19 and
GD Searle & Co. v. Novopharm Ltd. (2007), 56 C.P.R. (4th)
1 at paragraph 33).
[40]
The
Supreme Court of Canada has on more than one occasion, considered s. 55.2 and
the PMNOC Regulations. In Merck Frosst Canada Inc. v. Canada (Minister
of National Health and Welfare, [1998] 2 S.C.R. 193, Iacobucci J. for the
Court referred to as “draconian” the fact that, merely by filing a Notice of
Application with the Court, an innovator (first person) could put the
application by a generic for a Notice of Compliance (NOC) on hold for up to 30
(now 24) months. At paragraph 30, he said that the purpose of the Regulations
is simply to prevent patent infringement by delaying the issuance of an NOC to
a generic until such time as there would be no such infringement. At
paragraphs 32 and 33 he wrote:
32 Even if there were such
a requirement, however, I would not find that the date of assessment is
properly the 46th day following the issuance of the NOA. Considering the nature
of the pharmaceutical industry, this seems an unduly restrictive approach,
somewhat out of step with commercial reality. As Muldoon J. astutely observed
in Merck Frosst Canada Inc., supra, the notion that a NOC might be granted on
the 46th day after the issuance of a NOA is indeed, as Simpson J. described it,
little more than "theoretical". The Regulations provide for what is,
in effect, a statutory prohibition on, or injunction against, the granting of a
NOC, commencing immediately upon the filing by a "first person" of an
application for a court-imposed prohibition order and concluding only upon the
earlier of the judicial determination of the application or the passage of 30
months. This prohibition takes effect automatically, without any consideration
of the merits of the application; not even the ordinary requirements for an
interlocutory injunction must be complied with. Under these conditions, and
absent some prior indication to the contrary, I think it would be permissible
for a generic producer to predict that either the patentee, the holder of a
prior NOC, or both, is likely to attempt to protect or prolong their as-yet
exclusive rights for as long as possible by taking advantage of the procedure
set out in the Regulations.
33 There may be good
policy reasons for the operation of the regulatory scheme in this fashion.
However, it would be manifestly unjust to subject generic drug producers to
such a draconian regime without at least permitting them to protect themselves
and reduce the length of the presumptive injunction by initiating the NOC
process as early as possible. As I have already said, this is not inconsistent
with s. 6(2) of the Regulations, which provides only that the court shall make
an order of prohibition "if it finds that none of those allegations is
justified" a finding which can only be made, at the earliest, on the date
of hearing. Thus, an application could properly be rejected by the Federal
Court as premature if the allegation made in its support is not justified at
that time. This is sufficient, in my view, to discourage inappropriately
premature applications. On the other hand, to interpret the Regulations in the
manner urged by the respondents would effectively be to require generic drug
producers to satisfy all requirements in s. 5 and then to wait up to an
additional 30 months before marketing the desired product. This cannot be what
was intended by the Regulations.
[41]
In Biolyse,
supra, Binnie J. for the majority began his reasons by addressing the “balance”
struck by the Patent Act, between protection of intellectual property
and constraint on health care costs. He wrote at paragraphs 1 and 2:
1 Our Court has often
spoken of "the balance struck under the Patent Act" in which the
public gives an inventor the right to prevent anybody else from using his or
her invention for a period of 20 years in exchange for disclosure of what has
been invented. As a general rule, if the patent holder obtains a monopoly for
something which does not fulfill the statutory requirements of novelty, ingenuity
and utility, then the public is short-changed. See Whirlpool Corp. v. Camco
Inc., [2000] 2 S.C.R. 1067, 2000 SCC 67; and Free World Trust v. Électro Santé Inc., [2000] 2 S.C.R. 1024, 2000 SCC 66.
2 In the present appeal,
the Court is required to consider this "balance" in the
much-litigated field of patented medicines, where Parliament is concerned not
only with the balance between inventors and potential users, but between the
protection of intellectual property on the one hand and, on the other hand, the
desire to reduce health care costs while being fair to those whose ingenuity
brought the drugs into existence in the first place.
[42]
Later
in these reasons, Binnie J. spoke of the “deep freeze” into which a
generic’s application for a NOC is placed simply by the institution of a court
application by a first party. He echoed Iacobucci J.’s comment that such a
process was “draconian”. At paragraphs 23 and 24, Binnie J. wrote:
23 The innovator that
filed the patent list may, within 45 days after being served with a Notice of
Allegation, apply to the Federal Court for an order prohibiting the Minister
from issuing a NOC until all of the listed patents have expired. Commencement
of the application for prohibition automatically triggers a 24-month statutory
freeze that stops the Minister from issuing a NOC unless within that period the
prohibition application is finally disposed of by the court (see ss. 7(1)(e)
and 7(4) of the NOC Regulations). In practice the prohibition proceedings can
easily drag on beyond the initial 24-month period.
24 It is important to note
that under this procedure the court hearing the prohibition application has no
discretion to lift the stay even if it thinks the innovator's case for interim
relief is weak. Nor does the court have a discretion to leave the contending
parties to their remedies under the Patent Act. The "second person's"
application for a NOC simply goes into deep-freeze until the statutory
procedures have played themselves out. For these reasons, Iacobucci J.
described the regime as "draconian" in Merck Frosst Canada Inc. v.
Canada (Minister of National Health and Welfare), [1998] 2 S.C.R. 193, at para. 33.
[43]
The
Federal Court of Appeal has also considered section 55.2 of the Patent Act
and the PMNOC Regulations. In AB Hassle v. Canada (Minister of National
Health and Welfare)
(2000), 7 C.P.R. (4th) 272, Stone JA. for the Court at paragraphs 5,
18 and 19 commented upon section 8 as providing for compensation to a second
person for loss and the advantage provided by the Regulations in
imposing a 24 month stay, and the disadvantage in that section 8 provides for
liability for compensation:
5 Section 8 of the Regulations renders a
first person liable to compensate a second person for loss suffered by that
person in the circumstances described in that section.
…
18 From the point of view
of the patentee, the opportunity to initiate a section 6 proceeding presents
advantages and disadvantages. The main advantage is that by paragraph 7(1)(e)
the Minister of National Health and Welfare is not to issue the NOC for up to
24 months after receipt of proof of the making of the application for
prohibition pursuant to section 6 of the Regulations. The effect, as was
pointed out by Mahoney J.A. in Bayer AG, supra, at 337 "is tantamount to
an interlocutory injunction" for up to the now reduced period of 24
months. This advantage, while significant, is short term. The principal
disadvantage is that where the section 6 proceeding is withdrawn, discontinued
or dismissed the patentee is liable to compensate the second person for its
loss incurred during the period described in subsection 8(1) of the
Regulations. Hence the patentee would have less reason than formerly to be
tardy in prosecuting a section 6 proceeding. On the other hand, the assurance
that compensation must be paid to a second person at the end of an unsuccessful
section 6 proceeding is no guarantee that the second person will act with dispatch
in that proceeding.
19 The detailed statement
is not a pleading per se but represents a pivotal step in the process leading
up to the issuance of an NOC. By taking that step the second person puts the
patentee on notice of the grounds on which he or she considers that the making,
constructing, using or selling of the drug will not infringe the second
person's patent rights during the unexpired term of the patent. In theory, this
procedure ought to enable the patentee to confidently decide within the 45 day
time limit whether to resist the issuance of an NOC. It is to be noted that,
subject to business exigencies, the second person had no obligation to make its
allegation and provide its detailed statement by an imposed deadline. As much
time as the second person deems necessary is available under the scheme of the
Regulations.
[44]
Rothstein
JA. for the Court in Apotex Inc. v. Canada (Minister of National Health and
Welfare) (2000), 3 C.P.R. (4th) 1 (FCA) at paragraphs 22, 27 and
28 spoke of “relief” available to generics in the form of “costs,
loss and damage” in the event that ineligible patents were listed:
22 Our second reason for
not interfering with the discretion exercised by the Minister in this case
relates to the scheme of the Regulations themselves. The Regulations expressly
provide a process by which generic manufacturers may obtain relief in the event
they are prejudiced by reason of ineligible patents being included on the
Register. Subsection 6(1) and paragraph 6(5)(a) provide in relevant part:
6.(1) A
first person may, within 45 days after being served with a notice of an
allegation pursuant to paragraph 5(3)(b) or (c), apply to a court for an order
prohibiting the Minister from issuing a notice of compliance until after the
expiration of a patent that is the subject of the allegation.
...
(5)
In a proceeding in respect of an application under subsection (1), the court
may, on the motion of a second person, dismiss the application
(a)
if the court is satisfied that the patents at issue are not eligible for
inclusion on the register ...
…
27 Paragraph 8(1)(a)
specifically provides that a patent holder whose prohibition application is
dismissed is liable for the loss suffered by a generic manufacturer for the
delay incurred in the issuance of a Notice of Compliance to the generic by
reason of the prohibition application. Under subsection 8(4), the Court has
been given jurisdiction to make an award of damages or lost profits. Section 8
of the Regulations makes it apparent that the Governor in Council recognized
that generic manufacturers could be subject to unjustified prohibition
applications, including applications based upon ineligible patents on the
Register and provided a remedy in the form of an award of damages or lost
profits in such circumstances.
28 In sum, there is a
comprehensive scheme provided in the Regulations which specifically addresses
ineligible patents on the Register and the costs, loss and damage suffered by
generic manufacturers arising from such ineligible patents being included on
the Register. Having regard to the scheme and its recognition that ineligible
patents may be included on the Register, it follows that there is no unlawful
refusal to exercise discretion by the Minister in not deleting such patents
from the Register under subsection 3(1).
[45]
In Eli
Lilly Canada Inc. v. Canada (Minister of Health) (2003), 23 C.P.R. (4th)
289 (FCA). Sharlow JA. for the majority at paragraph 11 spoke of a claim for
damages a second person may make:
11 If prohibition proceedings are not
successful, the second person may claim damages against the first person to
compensate for the delay in the issuance of the notice of compliance.
[46]
Isaac
CJ., in dissent, presaged Binnie J.’s later comments in Biolyse in
referring at paragraph 74 to the balancing of the rights of patentees and
generics:
74 In my respectful
opinion, my colleague's decision ignores the dual purpose of the 1998
regulatory scheme which seeks to balance the right of patentees with the intent
of facilitating the entry of generic products into the market. My colleague's
decision also has the effect of extending the right of the appellant under the
969 patent.
[47]
There
have, of course, been numerous decisions of the Federal Court (Trial Division)
commenting upon the PMNOC Regulations and section 55.2. I will refer only
to one which deals with these Regulations and that section since those comments
by Teitlebaum J. which incorporate earlier comments by MacKay J. have not been
criticized or overturned. In Fournier Pharma Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General) (1998), 83 C.P.R. (3d)
72, Teitlebaum J. said at paragraphs 12 to 16:
12 The new patent scheme,
which comprises the Patent Act and the Regulations, has been considered by the
Federal Court, namely, in Apotex Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General) (1996), 71 C.P.R. (3d) 166, where the Court considered the
validity of the Regulations.
13 In Apotex, some of the
issues are virtually identical to the present case. The Court considered, inter
alia, whether the Regulations were ultra vires the authority of the Governor in
Council pursuant to subsection 55.2(4) of the Patent Act. Further, the Court
also considered Apotex's arguments that the regulations had been enacted
without necessity and for collateral or ulterior motive, and that it was discriminatory.
Mr. Justice MacKay found these arguments non persuasive and dismissed the
application.
14 In coming to this
conclusion, Mr. Justice MacKay considered the scope of the regulatory powers
conferred upon the Governor in Council by virtue of subsection 55.2(4) of the
Patent Act and found that subsection 55.2(4) of the Patent Act conferred upon
the Governor in Council ample discretion and authority to enact these
Regulations. I have also reviewed the regulatory powers conferred upon the
Governor in Council set out in subsection 55.2(4), in light of Fournier's
arguments to the effect that the strict time limits are conditions which are
not authorized by the enabling statute and are in effect unreasonable, unfair
and unnecessary. In my view, Justice MacKay addressed some of these issues in
Apotex. I quote and adopt the following passage from Justice MacKay's decision,
at page 188:
These
submissions, in my view, mistake the purport of the words "as the Governor
in Council considers necessary". Those words grant discretion to the
Governor in Council to which a Court defers, recognizing that Parliament has
left discretion to the Governor in Council. The exercise of that discretion
would only be upset if it were established, and there is no such evidence here,
that the Governor in Council did not consider the Regulations necessary. There
is no onus on the Governor in Council to demonstrate necessity or even that
necessity was considered. The mere act of adopting regulations establishes that
they were considered necessary by the Governor in Council, at least so far as
this Court's review is concerned. The words used relate to a matter for
determination by the Governor in Council, whose beliefs are not subject to
review. The words do not raise any question of an objective standard of
necessity to be met or even considered.
15 Mr. Justice MacKay went
on to review the decision in Reference re Validity of Regulations in Relation
to Chemicals, [1943] S.C.R. 1. In Chemicals (supra), the validity of the
regulations had been challenged on the basis that the Governor in Council was
not empowered by virtue of the enabling provision to adopt the Regulations in
relation to Chemicals. The Supreme Court of Canada reviewed
section 3 of the War Measures Act which conferred upon the Governor in Council
authority to pass the Regulations. Section 3 stipulated that "the Governor
in Council may do and authorize such acts and things, and make from time to
time such orders and regulations, as he may ... deem necessary or advisable for
the security, defense, peace, order and welfare of Canada".
Mr. Justice MacKay in Apotex (supra), at page 188, quoted a passage from the
Supreme Court of Canada's decision in Chemicals
(supra), where Chief Justice Duff said, at page 12:
...when
Regulations have been passed by the Governor General in Council in professed
fulfillment of his statutory duty, I cannot agree that it is competent to any
court to canvass the considerations which have, or may have, led him to deem
such Regulations necessary or advisable for the transcendant objects set forth.
16 In my view, the above
mentioned cases clearly show that a Court should hesitate to interfere with the
Governor in Council's broad discretionary powers and authority. In this
respect, counsel for Fournier argued at the hearing that the strict time limits
under the said subsections allow generic drug manufacturers to enter the market
despite a patent or license for the said drugs, and adduced evidence by way of
affidavit - Application Record, tab 3, Affidavit of Tom Brogan - to the effect
that the entry of generic drugs on the market can have substantial financial
and commercial repercussions, most specifically on Fournier because it only
manufactures the two mentioned drugs for which registration of a patent list
was refused.
JUDICIAL COMMENTARY AS TO SECTION 8
[48]
There
has been little in depth judicial commentary as to section 8 of the PMNOC
Regulations specifically. Rothstein JA, when he was sitting as a Judge of
the Federal Court of Appeal in Apotex Inc. v. Canada (Minister of National
Health and Welfare) (2000), 3 C.P.R. (4th) 1, delivered the decision
of the Court and, in discussing section 8 in the form that is at issue in the
present action, wrote at paragraph 27:
a.
Paragraph 8(1)(a) specifically
provides that a patent holder whose prohibition application is dismissed is
liable for the loss suffered by a generic manufacturer for the delay incurred
in the issuance of a Notice of Compliance to the generic by reason of the
prohibition application. Under subsection 8(4), the Court has been given
jurisdiction to make an award of damages or lost profits. Section 8 of the
Regulations makes it apparent that the Governor in Council recognized that
generic manufacturers could be subject to unjustified prohibition applications,
including applications based upon ineligible patents on the Register and
provided a remedy in the form of an award of damages or lost profits in such
circumstances.
[49]
It
is to be noted that Rothstein JA. used the words “lost profits” in
referring to section 8(4) even though those precise words do not appear in
sub-section 8(4). Only the word “profits” appears in that sub-section.
[50]
In AB
Hassle et al. v. Canada (Minister of National
Health and Welfare)
(2000), 7 C.P.R. (4th) 272 (FCA), Stone JA. for the Court mentioned
section 8 at paragraph 27 of his reasons stating that such provision served as
an incentive to the patentee not to delay proceedings:
a.
I would mention a few additional considerations. The fact
that the section 6 proceeding is generally to be completed within 24 months and
that an award of damages awaits an unsuccessful patentee at the end of that
process, should not be ignored. If a second person is always free to supplement
its detailed statement in a section 6 proceeding, the proceeding itself is bound
to be delayed, which could only redound to the detriment of the first person.
That a longer period than the period of 24 months specified in paragraph
7(1)(e) [reduced from 30 months] may be allowed in a particular case seems to
be contemplated in paragraph 7(5)(b). This Court has recognized, however, that
a section 6 proceeding should be dealt with under the Rules of the Court as
expeditiously as possible in order that both sides to the dispute will have
their rights determined sooner rather than later. Thus in Bayer AG, supra,
Mahoney J.A. stated, at 337:
The court
has a clear duty to deal with an application expeditiously. Given that, in the
scheme of the Regulations, it is the patentee who has both the carriage of the
proceeding and the interest in its dilatory prosecution, departures from the
schedule imposed by the Part V.1 rules [now Part 5 of the 1998 Rules] ought not
to be routine.
The
ability of the Court to order payment of damages for which an unsuccessful
patentee is rendered liable under section 8 of the Regulations suggests,
however, that the patentee no longer has an exclusive interest in delaying the
progress of a section 6 proceeding. Moreover, the relatively short time period
specified in paragraph 7(1)(e) of the Regulations and the language contained in
subsection 7(5) of the Regulations, has been rightly viewed as a further
indication that a section 6 proceeding should proceed expeditiously to final
determination by the Court. The point was made clear in Pharmacia Inc., supra,
at 215, where Strayer J.A. stated:
The
Patented Medicines (Notice of Compliance) Regulations further indicate an
intention that this particular kind of application for judicial review should
be disposed of expeditiously. Section 7(1) of the regulations provides that
normally a notice of compliance should not be issued until 30 months have
elapsed from the filing of the application for prohibition, unless the court
has in the meantime dismissed the application. Section 7(5), however,
authorizes the court to abbreviate or extend the 30-month period where it has
not yet reached a decision on the application but where it finds that a party
to the application "failed to reasonably cooperate in expediting the
application". Thus if, for example, the applicant unduly delays in
bringing the matter on for hearing on the merits, the respondent can move to
have the court shorten the time-limit for the issue of a notice of compliance.
It is be
noted as well that not only will an unsuccessful patentee in a section 6
proceeding be visited with a Court order to compensate the second person, but
the patentee may also be required to pay legal costs pursuant to subsection
6(9) of the Regulations including costs "on a solicitor-and-client
basis". Indeed, as provided in subsection 6(10), a factor which the Court
may consider in its order as to costs is "the diligence with which the
parties pursued the application". This again suggests that a section 6
proceeding was intended to be proceeded with as expeditiously as possible and
not be unduly delayed by a party.
[51]
I
acknowledge that these judicial comments may have been obiter. They are
however instructive as to how the matter would strike a Court as a matter of first
impression.
MERCK’S ISSUES :
JURISDICTION, ENABLEMENT, CONSTITUTIONALITY
a) General
[52]
Merck
has raised three issues: jurisdiction, enablement and constitutionality; all three
issues are directed only at section 8 of the PMNOC Regulations. The
result, should Merck prevail on any of these, is that at least this Court, and
perhaps any court, cannot entertain an action as contemplated by section 8 of
the Regulations. Apotex points out that, in directing its challenge
only to section 8, Merck is content to institute applications under section 6
in the Federal Court, enjoy the 24 month stay afforded simply by instituting
such application and, possibly gain an Order prohibiting the Minister from ever
issuing an NOC to a generic so long as the patent in question remains in place.
[53]
There
can be no doubt that the PMNOC Regulations are in their pith and
substance regulations dealing with patents. An innovator (first party) can
only come within the Regulations if it has filed a new drug submissions
(NDS) or supplement to that (SNDS) and lists a patent claiming a
medicinal ingredient, formulation, dosage or use (section 4(1) and (2) of the Regulations)
on a particular list supervised by the Minister of Health. A first person
makes a choice, it may list or not list a patent, it is not compelled to list a
patent. If a patent is listed and a generic seeks the shortcut of an
abbreviated new drug submissions (ANDS) by referencing the first party’s NDS or
SNDS then it must make allegations sent by a notice to the first party as to invalidity,
non-infringement of the patent and/or other matters as set out in section 5.
The generic must then wait since the innovator again has a choice, it may do
nothing in which case, after 45 days, the generic’s application for an NOC
proceeds or, the innovator may launch a court application to prohibit the Minister
from issuing an NOC to the generic, in which case the generic’s application for
an NOC is put on hold for up to 24 months until the disposition of the
application. One way of disposition is by Order of Prohibition directed to the
Minister in which case the generic must wait until the patent expires before
getting its NOC. Disposition by way of a dismissal or withdrawal is another
way, in which case the generic proceeds to get its NOC almost immediately.
Merck points out that if an innovator loses at the trial level, the Court of
Appeal rarely entertains an appeal since the Minister issues an NOC almost
immediately, making an appeal moot. Section 8 of the Regulations, the
provision now under scrutiny, provides that a generic may commence an action for
compensation for being kept off the market by the stay afforded by the filing
of the application by the innovator, if the innovator’s application is
dismissed, discontinued or withdrawn.
[54]
In
many respects, section 8 can be analogized to the undertaking usually required
by a party seeking an interlocutory injunction from a Court. This Court (Rule
372(2)) and most other courts in this country require, unless otherwise
ordered, that an undertaking as to damages be provided. An undertaking is a
serious matter and the damages afforded may be substantial, although as stated
by the Ontario Court of Appeal in Debrina Corporation v. Triolet Systems
Inc. (2002), 17 C.P.R. (4th) 289 at paragraph 87, they must be
reasonably foreseeable at the time of the granting of the interlocutory
injunction and must be caused by (“naturally flow from”) the injunction
and not something else.
[55]
Merck
characterizes section 8 as providing a civil remedy without a wrong having been
committed. Merck argues that the simple institution of a section 6 application
and being subsequently unsuccessful cannot be said to be a “wrong” for which
liability is created. This is a mischaracterization of the circumstances. Merck
and others in its position have choices, a patent may be listed or not, an
application may be instituted or not. Just like the institution of proceedings
and seeking an interlocutory injunction, choices are made. Section 8 is a
consequence of such choices. Merck and any other patentee has available to it
all the remedies afforded to any patentee under the Patent Act, it is
deprived of nothing in that regard. In seeking the advantage of section 6, it
must be presumed to have done so mindfully of section 8.
[56]
With
these general comments, I will proceed to consider Merck’s submissions as to
jurisdiction, enablement, and constitutionality.
JURISDICTION
[57]
Merck
launched several attacks on the validity of provisions of section 8 of the PMNOC
Regulations and the jurisdiction of the Federal Court to enforce those
provisions. Not all of these attacks were pleaded however. The issue of
jurisdiction is not found in Merck’s pleadings. Merck argues that a Court has
inherent jurisdiction to entertain issues as to its own jurisdiction.
[58]
While
not pleaded, the issue as to jurisdiction was fully set out in the argument of
both parties; nobody has been caught by surprise. I will deal with the issue.
[59]
One
must start with the proposition that, in Canada’s federal system, the superior
courts of provinces have plenary and inherent jurisdiction to hear and decide
all cases that come before them, regardless of whether the law applicable to a
particular case is provincial, federal or constitutional (Ordon Estate v.
Grail (1998), 166 D.L.R. (4th) 193 (SCC) per Iacobucci and Major
JJ. for the Court at paragraph 44). Jurisdiction of the Federal Court over a
matter cannot be presumed, it must be positively demonstrated (R.W. Blacktop
Ltd. v. Artec Equipment Co. (1991), 39 C.P.R. (3d) 432 (FCTD) per Rouleau
J. at 435).
[60]
The
essential requirements to support a finding of jurisdiction in the Federal
Court have been well established by the Supreme Court of Canada in several
cases such as ITO-International Terminal Operators Ltd., v. Miida (1986),
28 D.L.R. (4th) 641 per McIntyre J. for the majority at page 650:
1. There must be a statutory grant of
jurisdiction by the Federal parliament.
2. There must be an existing body a
federal law which is essential to the disposition of the case and which
nourishes the statutory grant of jurisdiction.
3. The law on which the case is based
must be a “law of Canada” as the phrase is used in s. 101 of the
Constitution Act, 1867.
[61]
It
is upon the first of these criteria, the “statutory grant” that Merck raises
much of its argument. Merck points out that jurisdiction of the Federal Court is
mentioned about twenty-six times in the Patent Act. Many of these
provisions conferring jurisdiction deal with appeals from federal tribunals and
persons such as the Commissioner of Patents. A frequently used provision is
section 54 which confers jurisdiction both on the Federal Court as well as the
appropriate superior court of the relevant province in matters of patent
infringement. Another frequently used provision is section 60 which confers
exclusive jurisdiction on the Federal Court to impeach a patent. Nowhere, says
Merck, in the Patent Act can one find a conferral of jurisdiction on the
Federal Court to hear and determine actions brought under the provisions of
section 8 of the PMNOC Regulations.
[62]
I
disagree.
[63]
Parliament
has, by statute; enacted section 55.2(4) of the Patent Act which in
subsection (d) gives the authority to the Governor-in-Council to make
regulations “conferring rights of action in any court of competent
jurisdiction” (emphasis added). Section 55.2(5) ensures that, with respect
to any such regulation, if there is a conflict with respect to any Act of
Parliament or regulations made thereunder, these regulations shall prevail. In
section 12(2) of the Patent Act Parliament has provided that any
regulation made under the provisions of the Patent Act have the same
effect as if they were in the Act itself.
[64]
Section
2 of the PMNOC Regulations defines “court” to mean “the
Federal Court of Canada or any other superior court of competent jurisdiction.”
This has the same effect as if it were in the Patent Act itself.
[65]
The
Supreme Court of Canada has dealt with similar provisions on at least two
occasions. In The King v. Singer, [1941] S.C.R. 111, Rinfret J. for the
majority at pages 115 and 116 reviewed provisions in several federal statutes
which gave the Regulations made under these statutes the effect of the statute
itself. He clearly appears to have approved of such a technique since he
criticized the Regulations that he was considering in that case for not
having such provision made in the enabling statute.
[66]
In Canadian
Pacific Ltd. v. Matsqui Indian Band (1995), 122 D.L.R. (4th)
129, the Supreme Court dealt with provisions in the Indian Act, R.S.C.
1985, c. I-5, section 83(3) which permitted an Indian Band to make by-laws
providing for an appeal procedure as to tax assessments on lands in an Indian
reserve. The by-law as passed by the Band provided for an appeal to the Federal
Court – Trial Division. Lamer CJ. and Cory J. concurring, held at paragraph 52
that the Indian Bands, having been authorized by statute to create by-laws, was
entitled to take advantage of jurisdiction already existing in the Federal
Court under section 24(1) of the Federal Court Act. Section 24(1) has
since been repealed however that is not material to the present case. Under
section 20(2) of the Federal Courts Act the Federal Court has
jurisdiction in respect of “all cases…in which a remedy is sought under
authority of an Act of Parliament…respecting any patent of invention…”
[67]
Thus,
under section 20(2) of the Federal Courts Act the Federal Court may
accept jurisdiction in a patent matter as being made “under authority”
of a federal statute. The Patent Act, section 55.2(4) authorizes
regulations to be made, such as the PMNOC Regulations, conferring
jurisdiction on “any court of competent jurisdiction” (emphasis
added). Section 2 of PMNOC Regulations names Federal Court as such a court.
Section 12(2) of the Patent Act gives the PMNOC Regulations the
same effect as a statute.
[68]
As
to the two other criteria for jurisdiction as set out in ITO, supra,
namely (2) an existing body of federal law, it is clear that both of the Patent
Act and Federal Courts Act are such bodies of federal law and (3)
that the law must be a law of Canada, it is clear that the Patent Act
and Federal Courts Act are existing laws and laws of Canada. Both
criteria are satisfied.
[69]
I
conclude that the Federal Court has jurisdiction to hear this action.
ENABLEMENT
[70]
As its
second argument, Merck argues that section 8 of the PMNOC Regulations is
not enabled by an express grant of power in subsection 55.2(4) of the Patent
Act. It argues that the opening words of subsection 55.2(4) “necessary
for the preventing of the infringement of a patent” are words of constraint
and that any regulation passed under that provision must be directed to such
prevention and not otherwise. Merck argues that section 8 creates a new cause
of action not directed to patent infringement but to punishment of an
unsuccessful innovator in an NOC application.
[71]
Again,
I disagree.
[72]
The Food
and Drugs Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-27, as amended and its Regulations
create a benefit for its generics; they can avoid costly testing by simply
referencing an innovator’s approved product. However, unless the innovator owns
or has rights in respect of a patent, there is no patent infringement.
[73]
The PMNOC
Regulations confer a benefit on a particular class of persons who own or
have rights in respect of patents pertaining to medicines, their formulation,
dosages and uses. Such a benefit is not available to anyone else. The
benefited innovator person may choose to list its patents under the Regulations
and, if notified by a generic that it is seeking an NOC possibly impacted by
such a patent, the innovator may choose to launch an application to prohibit
the grant of an NOC to the generic. In this way, the innovator having such a
patent and electing to make such choices has an advantage in being given the
right to commence a particular application, the mere commencement of which puts
the generic application in a 24 month “deep freeze”. If successful, an
innovator will preclude the generic from getting an NOC at all which of course
precludes the risk of patent infringement. Thus the regulations are directed
to “patent infringement”.
[74]
The PMNOC
Regulations must be considered as a whole. Section 8 provides, just as in
any ordinary court proceeding, a disincentive for seeking what is in effect an
interlocutory injunction. It is like an undertaking given by a person seeking
such injunction. It is part of a “balance” to use the words of the
Supreme Court of Canada in Biolyse, supra, of the Regulations.
It is a normal and expected balance having regard to undertakings given in
Court proceedings such as those for patent infringement when interlocutory
injunctions are sought. Subsection 55.2(4)(d) specifically provides for
regulations respecting remedies and procedures in respect of disputes under subsection
(c) as to when the NOC may issue. This includes the 24 month stay on any
issuance of the NOC provided by section 7(1)(e) of the PMNOC Regulations
and disincentives for seeking such a stay.
[75]
I
find that section 8 is properly enabled by section 55.2(4) of the Patent Act.
CONSTITUTIONALITY
[76]
Merck
argues that section 8 creates a civil cause of action between individuals for
recovery of damages and, as such, is in its pith and substance a matter
respecting property and civil rights thus a matter for exclusive jurisdiction
in the provinces under section 92(13) of the Constitution Act, 1967.
[77]
Again,
I disagree. Section 8 is an integral part of a scheme set out in the PMNOC
Regulations as enabled by the Patent Act which scheme is directed to
the enforcement of rights in certain types of medicinal patents including a
balanced procedure respecting such enforcement.
[78]
The
Supreme Court of Canada in General Motors of Canada Ltd. v. City National
Leasing
(1989), 34 C.P.R. (3d) 417 considered similar circumstances. There the
question was whether, under the Combines Investigation Act as it then was
the federal government could, under its powers respecting trade and commerce,
provide for a civil cause of action which could be taken by one individual
against another for breach of certain provisions of that Act. The
unanimous decision of the Court was delivered by Dickson J. At page 436, he
recognized that in a federal system it is inevitable that, in pursuing valid
objectives, the legislation of each level of government will impact
occasionally on the sphere of power of the other level of government; overlap
of legislation is to be expected and accommodated in a federal state. He
encouraged judicial restraint in proposing strict tests which would result in
striking down such legislation.
[79]
At
page 438, Dickson J. summarized a three step process of analysis:
(1) First, the court must determine
whether the impugned provision can be viewed as intruding on provincial powers
and, if so, to what extent;
(2)
Second, the court
must establish whether the Act, or severable part, is valid as forming part of a
regulatory scheme falling under federal competence; and
(3)
Third, is the
impugned provision sufficiently integrated into the regulatory scheme.
[80]
As
to the first of these criteria, Dickson J. at page 439 set out three further
criteria to be considered:
(1)
Is the provision
remedial and serving to enforce the substantive provisions of the Act;
(2)
Is the action created
of limited scope as opposed to a general cause of action; and
(3)
It is to be
recognized that the federal government is not constitutionally precluded from
creating rights of civil action where such measures can be shown to be
warranted.
[81]
The
right to take an action created by section 8 of the PMNOC Regulations is
of limited scope. It only arises if an innovator chooses to commence an action
under those Regulations in respect of a patent which it has chosen to
list under those Regulations and is ultimately unsuccessful. The action
is part of the overall scheme of the Regulations so as to create a balance,
similar to an undertaking given by one seeking an interlocutory injunction.
Section 8 is well integrated into the regulatory process.
[82]
Overall,
section 8 is nourished by the Patent Act and patents are clearly a
subject within the exclusive competence of the federal Parliament.
[83]
Section
8 of the PMNOC Regulations meets all the criteria required for valid
federal legislation.
APOTEX’S ISSUES: NATURE AND EXTENT OF
SECTION 8 REMEDIES
Loss-Damages or Profits
[84]
Apotex
argues that it is entitled, by way of relief in this action, to an election
that would include either Apotex’s damages or Merck’s profits during the
relevant period. It does so for a number of reasons:
- Section 8(4) of the PMNOC Regulations
provides for “relief by way of damages or profits” thus entitling
Apotex to claim Merck’s profits;
- An award of profits accords with the scheme
of the Patent Act and the PMNOC Regulations; and
- Section 20(2) of the Federal Court Act,
provides that this Court can give a remedy at law or in equity respecting
a patent.
1) Section8(4) of the Regulations
[85]
It has
been established by the Supreme Court of Canada on several occasions such as Biolyse,
supra, at paragraphs 470 and 473 and Bell ExpressVu Limited Partnership
v. Rex, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 559 at paragraphs 26 and 27 that the words of a
statute or regulation are to be read in their entire context and in their
grammatical and ordinary sense harmoniously with the scheme of the statute or
regulation, the object of the statute or regulation, and the intention of
Parliament.
[86]
The
object of the PMNOC Regulations has been reviewed earlier in these
reasons with reference to cases such as Biolyse and the expression of
intent of Parliament has been given in the words of Minister Blais, as he then
was, cited earlier. It is to create a kind of “balance” between the
rights of patentees and access by the Canadian public to affordable drugs. It
is not said that the balance is exact or perfectly even, but a sense of balance
must exist. A person having certain kinds of patents relating to medicines is
given a right to delay and possibly preclude a generic from getting rather easy
access to the market by copying and referencing a patentee’s innovations and
testing, the generic is given a right, section 8, to compensation if the delay
is unwarranted.
[87]
With
this background, the whole of the relevant subsections of section 8 of the PMNOC
Regulations can be examined:
i.
Section
8(1) provides that if a first person is unsuccessful or terminates its
application to provide an NOC to the generic, the first person:
“…is liable to the
second person (generic) for any loss suffered during the period”
ii.
Section
8(2) provides that a generic may institute an action (such as the present case)
against a first person:
“…for an order
requiring the first person to compensate the second person (generic) for the
loss referred to in subsection (1)”
iii.
Section
8(4) states, in its entirety:
“The court may make such
order for relief by way of damages or profits as the circumstances require in
respect of any loss referred to in subsection (1)”. (Emphasis added)
iv.
Section
8(5) provides a discretion in the Court:
“In assessing
the amount of compensation…”
[88]
It
is clear from the context of the whole of section 8 that what is provided for
is that the Court may make an Order compensating a generic for loss in
the prescribed circumstances. The Order may provide for “relief by way of
damages or profits” as set out in subsection 8(4). There is no mention
anywhere, except as is argued by Apotex, of any remedy in section 8 of
disgorgement of any profit made by the first party such as Merck. The entire
context of section 8 is focused on compensation for loss suffered by the
generic. A reasonable, if not perfect, “balance” has been achieved. Here, the
generic was, as it turns out, wrongfully delayed from entering the marketplace;
it is compensated for loss occasioned by that delay. It is a reasonable
balance.
[89]
Why
then are the words “or profits” appearing in subsection 8(4). Apotex
argues that they cannot be redundant with “damages” thus they must mean
something else and that something else is Merck’s profits. This requires an
examination as to how the word “profits” has been used in a patent
context.
[90]
The Patent
Act, section 55(1) provides that a person who infringes a patent is
liable to the patentee and others “for all damages”. Subsection 55(2) provides
for “reasonable compensation” before a patent was granted, a matter examined by
Snider J. of this Court in Jay-Lor International Inc. v. Penta Farm Systems
Ltd., 2007 FC 358; this a relatively new concept applicable to patents
granted from applications filed after October 1, 1989 and not relevant to the
present discussion.
[91]
Section
57 provides that the Court may, in an infringement action grant an
injunction and, in subsection (b) may grant an order “…for and respecting an
inspection or account”.
[92]
Nowhere
does the word “profits” appear in the Patent Act. There was
considerable scholarly debate as to whether the provision for an “account”
meant that a Court, in an infringement action, could, as an alternative to
awarding damages to a patentee, order disgorgement of an infringer’s profits.
That debate was laid to rest by the Federal Court of Appeal in Beloit Canada Ltée v. Valmet Dominion
Inc.
(1997), 73 C.P.R. (3d) 321. Stone JA. for the Court discussed the question at
pages 355 to 359 of the reported reasons and concluded that the remedy of
disgorgement of an infringer’s profits is expressly provided for in section
57(1)(b) of the Patent Act, supra, when read together with
section 20 of the Federal Court Act.
[93]
Lederman
J. of the Ontario Superior Court in Bayer AG v. Apotex Inc. (2001), 10
C.P.R. (4th) 151 (aff’d 16 C.P.R. (4th) 417 Ont. C.A.)
and as cited by Snider J. in Jay-Lor, supra, at paragraph 114,
said at paragraph 12 of Bayer:
12 The
remedy of an accounting of profits is equitable in origin and its goal is
compensatory. The purpose is not to punish the defendant for its wrongdoing:
Beloit Canada Ltd. v. Valmet Oy (1994), 55 C.P.R. (3d) 433 at 455 (F.C.T.D.), var'd on
other grounds (1995), 61 C.P.R. (3d) 271 (F.C.A.); Lubrizol Corp. v.
Imperial Oil Ltd. (1996), 71 C.P.R. (3d) 26 at 33 (F.C.A.). Like an award of
damages, an accounting of profits is designed to compensate the patentee for the
wrongful use of its property. While the goal of each remedy is the same, the
underlying principles are very different. An award of damages seeks to
compensate the plaintiff for any losses suffered by the plaintiff as a result
of the infringement. The amount of profits earned by the infringing party is
irrelevant. An accounting of profits, on the other hand, aims to disgorge any
profits improperly received by the defendant as a result of its wrongful use of
the plaintiff's property. Such profits, having been earned through the use of
the plaintiff's property, rightly belong to the plaintiff. The aim is to remedy
the unjust enrichment of the defendant by transferring these profits to their
rightful owner, the patentee: Beloit Canada Ltd. v. Valmet Oy (1994), supra, at
p. 455 (F.C.T.D.).
[94]
Heald
J., sitting as a Deputy Judge of the Federal Court, discussed the principles
governing the calculation of damages in a patent infringement claim in AlliedSignal
Inc. v. DuPont Canada Inc. (1998), 78 C.P.R. (3d) 129 (aff’d 86 C.P.R. (3d)
324 F.C.A.) at paragraphs 17 to 23:
17 During the eleven days
required to hear this Reference, counsel for the parties made extensive
submissions as to the proper approach for determination of the measure of
damages in the circumstances of this case. Before turning to a detailed
analysis, I think it instructive to set out the general principles governing
the calculation of damages in a patent infringement claim.
18 Subsection
55(1)(a) is the relevant provision of the Patent Act. It states:
55. (1) Any person who infringes a patent is
(a)
liable to the patentee and to all persons claiming under the patentee for all
damages sustained by the patentee or by any such person, after the grant of the
patent, by reason of the infringement;
19
In addition, the common law has developed a number of
principles in relation to the measure of damages. Firstly, due regard must be
given to the statement of Lord Wilberforce in General Tire & Rubber Co. v.
Firestone Tyre & Rubber Co.:
The
general rule at any rate in relation to "economic" torts is that the
measure of damages is to be, so far as possible, that sum of money which will
put the injured party in the same position as he would have been in if he had
not sustained the wrong (Livingstone v. Rawyards Coal Co., 5 A.C. 25, per Lord
Blackburn at 39.)
In the
case of infringement of a patent, an alternative remedy at the option of the
plaintiff exists by way of an account of profits made by the infringer.... The
respondents did not elect to claim an account of profits: their claim was only
for damages. There are two essential principles in valuing that claim: first,
that the plaintiffs have the burden of proving their loss; second, that the
defendants being wrongdoers, damages should be liberally assessed but that the
object is to compensate the plaintiffs and not punish the defendants (Pneumatic
Tyre Co. Ltd. v. Puncture Proof Pneumatic Tyre Co. (1899), 16 R.P.C. 209 at
215.)
20 In the words of Lord
Buckley in Meters Ltd. v. Metropolitan Gas Meters Ltd., the valuation of the
claim is "one that is not capable of being mathematically ascertained by
any exact figure." However, it is ultimately necessary to arrive at an
exact figure that fairly represents the compensation due to the plaintiff.
Accordingly, courts have developed a number of "practical working rules
which have seemed helpful to judges in arriving at a true estimate of the
compensation which ought to be awarded against an infringer to a
patentee."
21 Where the patentee does
not normally license use of its invention, it is entitled to the profits on the
sales it would have made but for the presence of the infringing product in the
market. For those sales made by the infringer that the patentee would not have
made, the patentee is entitled to a reasonable royalty: Colonial Fastener Co.
v. Lightning Fastener Co., Watson, Laidlaw & Co. v. Pott, Cassels &
Williamson.
22 It
should be noted that where the patentee has licensed its invention in the past,
it is "almost a rule of law" to assess damages in terms of a
reasonable royalty; i.e., according to what the infringer would have paid if it
had entered into a legitimate licensing agreement with the patentee: Meters
Ltd. v. Metropolitan Gas Meters Ltd.; Catnic Components Ltd. v. Hill &
Smith Ltd. This does not apply to the case at bar because the plaintiff has
consistently manufactured and sold its own film, and there is no evidence of a
license ever being issued for their patented technology.
23 In
addition to lost profits due to lost sales, the patentee may also claim lost
profits due to price suppression if it can establish that it necessarily
reduced its prices because of the competition of the infringer: Colonial
Fastener Co. v. Lighting Fastener Co., American Braided Wire Co. v.
Thomson.
[95]
In
considering “damage” suffered by a patentee because of an infringer’s
wrongful activity, one may speak in terms of “profits” lost where the patentee
is engaged in the manufacture or sale of the patented goods. Where the
patentee only licenses its rights, then losses are calculated in terms of lost
royalties. Where a patentee does neither, then a Court may assess a
“reasonable royalty”. I quote in part from Terrell on the Law of Patents
(16th ed.) London, Sweet & Maxwell,
2006 at paragraphs 13-32 to 13-35:
Principle on which damages assessed
The principle to be applied in assessing
damages is that the plaintiff should be restored by monetary compensation to
the position which he would have occupied but for the wrongful acts of the
defendant, provided always that such loss as he proves is (i) foreseeable, (ii)
caused by the wrong and (iii) not excluded from recovery by public or social
policy.
...
Where the patentee grants licences
Patentees derive their remuneration in
respect of their inventions either by utilizing their monopoly rights to enable
them to obtain increased profits as manufacturers, or by permitting others to
use their inventions under licence in consideration of royalty payments. In
the latter case, the determination of the damages accruing from infringements
is usually a relatively simple matter, it being generally assumed that the
damage is equal to the amount which the infringer would have had to pay had he
had a licence upon the terms normally granted by the patentee.
Reasonable royalty
Where the patentee does not grand
licences and cannot prove any loss as manufacturer, the court may assess the
damages upon a reasonable royalty basis.
Where the patentee manufactures
Where the patentee makes his profits as
manufacturer (whether or not he grants licences in addition) rather more
difficult questions arise, such as whether the infringement has deprived him of
manufacturer’s profits equivalent to those which he would have made had he had
the sale of the infringing goods, and what, if any, other damage may have been
occasioned to him by their unauthorized sale.
[96]
Thus,
where a patent has been infringed, a patentee is entitled to seek, by
way of remedy an account (meaning disgorgement of an infringer’s profit)
as an equitable remedy, or damages as a legal remedy. If damages are
selected, one way of measuring damages, if the patentee makes or sells the
patented product, is to determine the patentee’s lost profit.
[97]
Turning
to section 8(4) of the PMNOC Regulations it is immediately apparent that
the generic is not a patentee, in fact it escaped charges of infringement of
somebody else’s patent by demonstrating that the patent was invalid (as in the
present case) or not infringed. The generic cannot claim damages or an account
of profits for infringement. What the generic can claim is
“compensation” for “loss” having been kept off the market for a period of time.
That “compensation” takes the form of “damages or profits”. The reasonable
interpretation of those words “damages or profits” is that the generic can
seek, as a measure of its damages in the alternative, the profits that it would
have made if it had been able to market its product at an earlier time.
[98]
In
so reading, section 8(4), I appreciate that it may be said that I am reading
the word “lost” to modify the word “profits” just as Rothstein J.
and others have done before. In this regard, I refer to Professor’s Sullivan’s
5th edition of “Sullivan on the Construction of Statues”,
2008, LexisNexis Canada Inc., where, at pages 172 and 173, she refers to what
she characterizes as the “Presumption of Perfection”:
Presumption of perfection. Legislation is presumed to be accurate as well-drafted; it
is presumed that the legislature does not make slips of the pen. In
Commissioners for Special Purposes of the Income Tax v. Pemsel, Lord Halsbury
wrote:
…I do not think it is
competent to any Court to proceed upon the assumption that the legislature has
made a mistake. Whatever the real fact may be, I think a Court of Law is bound
to proceed upon the assumption that the legislature is an ideal person that
does not make mistakes”
In theory, this idealization of the
legislative drafter’s work can be justified.
…
Because mistakes inevitably occur, the
presumption of perfection should be readily rebutted. It is a normal part of
the judicial function to review the work of drafters and in appropriate cases
make necessary corrections.
[99]
At
pages 165 to 168, Professor Sullivan discusses how a Court may “read down” or
“read in” in respect of a statute. At page 165 she says:
Reading down vs. reading in. The terms “reading down” and “reading in” are used in both
statutory interpretation and Charter application. In statutory interpretation,
they refer to interpretative techniques designed to give effect to the intended
scope of legislation; in Charter application, they refer to remedies designed
to adjust the intended scope because the legislation as enacted violates
guaranteed rights or freedoms in a way that cannot be justified under s. 1. In
both contexts, however, reading down refers to narrowing the scope of the
legislative text, while reading in refers to expanding its scope.
The point to be made here is that reading
down and reading in both require the interpreter to add words to legislative
text. The different lies in the effect of the additional words: reading down
adds words of restriction or qualification, whereas reading in ads words that
expand the reach of the legislation.
[100] Later at pages 167 and
168, Professor Sullivan reviews the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in
the Biolyse, supra, approving of the majority decision. At page
168, she criticized the minority’s approach to the PMNOC Regulations and
concluded that “reading down” is a legitimate interpretive technique. She
said:
The dissent’s failure to distinguish
words of limitation from words of expansion invites confusion – as evidenced by
the following:
Contextual interpretation does not
justify departures from ordinary rules of statutory interpretation; in
particular, reading in words cannot be justified in the absence of a
demonstrable ambiguity.
In so far as this passage suggests that
adding qualifying words to a text is inappropriate save in cases of
demonstrable ambiguity, it is inconsistent with Driedger’s modern principle.
Contextual interpretation is the very tool required to determine whether
reading down is permissible, that is, to determine whether it can be justified
as interpretation or must be condemned as amendment. Furthermore, in so far as
the passage suggests that reading in (as defined here) is permissible given a
demonstrable ambiguity, it is seriously misleading.
To summarize, while reading in may on
occasion be justified as a constitutional remedy, it is not a legitimate interpretive
technique. It amounts to amendment rather than paraphrase. Reading down, on
the other hand, is a legitimate interpretive technique provided the reasons for
narrowing the scope of the legislation can be justified in terms of ordinary
interpretive techniques.
[101] Having regard to all of
the foregoing discussion, including but not limited to what Professor Sullivan
has said, I conclude that the proper interpretation of section 8(4) of the PMNOC
Regulations is to find that the words “damages or profits” are to be
interpreted to include only “compensation” for the “loss”, if any, suffered by
a generic, and that those words do not provide for a right of a generic to
elect for a disgorgement or account of a first person’s profits.
[102] Section 20(2) of the Federal
Courts Act does not expand upon the remedies afforded by section 8 of the PMNOC
Regulations. It enables the Regulations to include equitable remedies, but
such remedies must be found in the Regulation. As I have stated above, I
cannot find such a remedy in the PMNOC Regulations.
DELAY
[103] Merck argues that Apotex
“delayed” in serving its Notice of Allegation for 66 days, therefore it argues
that the period for which compensation to Apotex is to be calculated should be
reduced to 66 days.
[104] I disagree.
[105] Subsections 8(1)(a) and
(b) provide for the period over which compensation for loss may be provided:
8. (1) If an application made under subsection 6(1)
is withdrawn or discontinued by the first person or is dismissed by the court
hearing the application or if an order preventing the Minister from issuing a
notice of compliance, made pursuant to that subsection, is reversed on appeal,
the first person is liable to the second person for any loss suffered during
the period
(a) beginning on the date, as certified by the Minister, on
which a notice of compliance would have been issued in the absence of these
Regulations, unless the court is satisfied on the evidence that another date is
more appropriate; and
(b) ending on the date of the withdrawl, the discontinuance,
the dismissal or the reversal.
[106] With respect to
subsection 8(1)(a) there is no provision for “certification” as such by
the Minister or any definition in the PMNOC Regulations or elsewhere as
to what such “certification” may mean. The parties have agreed,
however, and I find that is reasonable to conclude that the date “as
certified by the Minister on which a notice of compliance would have been
issued”, is the date of the letter sent by the Minister to the generic
Apotex stating that the examination of its ANDS application has been completed
but an NOC will not be issued until the requirements of the PMNOC
Regulations are met, that is, until the then outstanding Court application
T-844-03 is determined or withdrawn. In this case, that letter (Exhibit 1, Tab
7) is dated February 3, 2004. Thus, according to subsection 8(1)(a), the
beginning date from which Apotex can claim compensation “unless the court is
satisfied on the evidence that another date is more appropriate” is
February 3, 2004.
[107] Subsection 8(1)(a)
provides that the period of compensation shall end, in this case, on the date
of dismissal. Here that date is May 26, 2005, the date that this Court in
T-844-03 dismissed Merck’s application. There was no appeal. No provision is
made in that subsection for any discretion in the Court to choose another date.
[108] Thus the presumptive
period over which compensation may be sought by Apotex is from February 3, 2004
to May 26, 2005.
[109] The discretion that I am
given in respect of that period is only with respect to the first date,
February 3, 2004, the date that, to use the vernacular, the Minister has
written to the generic to say that its application for an NOC is approved
subject to “patent hold”. I can only exercise my discretion under subsection
8(4)(a) if I am satisfied on the evidence that another date is more
appropriate.
[110] The evidence that Merck
refers to in argument is found in the agreed fact and documents, Exhibit 1.
Merck points out that Apotex’s ANDS was submitted to the Minister on February
7, 2003, that Apotex’s Notice of Allegation (Exhibit 1, Tab 5) is dated
February 25, 2003, but apparently was not received by Merck until April 14,
2003. No excerpts from the discovery of Apotex were put in evidence that deal
with these dates or the “delay”, if any, in serving the notice of allegation.
[111] Merck’s argument as to
the so-called delay refers to the period between February 7, 2003 the date Apotex
filed its ANDS (Exhibit 1, Tab 5) and the agreed date of service April 14, 2003
(Agreed Facts, paragraph 12, Exhibit 1, Tab A). Merck argues that, had the
Notice of Allegation been served on the date that Apotex filed its ANDS,
February 7, 2003 (Agreed Facts, paragraph 17) or very shortly thereafter, Merck
would have been obliged by the PMNOC Regulations to file its Application
with the Court within 45 days from the date of service and, had it done so, the
disposition of these proceedings by the Court would have occurred some 66 days
earlier than it did, therefore Merck’s exposure to liability, given that the
date of “certification”, February 4, 2004 remains the same, would have been
some 66 days less.
[112] I find all of this
improbable and, in any event, irrelevant to the considerations that I have to
take into account under subsection 8(1)(a).
[113] Subsection 8(1)(a)
requires that the Court look at the date that the Minister says that the
generic’s application is approved subject to any outstanding PMNOC
Regulations matters such as, in this case, application T-884-03. Here the
date of such a letter is February 3, 2004. I can consider some other date
where the evidence persuades me that I should. There is absolutely no evidence
before me that the Minister would have sent the letter of February 3, 2004 at
some earlier or later date having regard to some event or some conduct of some
person or otherwise.
[114] Here, the only evidence
is that possibly, but not probably, Apotex should have served its Notice of
Allegation some 66 days earlier. There is nothing to suggest that the Minister
knew about or even cared when the Notice of Allegation was served or that the
date of service would have in any way impacted upon the date of the letter of
February 3, 2004. The Minister’s letter of February 3, 2004 appears to reflect
considerations as to Apotex’s ANDS submission having regard only to the Federal
Drug Act and Regulations. The letter states:
“Please consider this letter as notice
that the examination of the above submission has been completed as of February
3, 2004. …”
[115] The “above submission”
is Submission # 082561 which was the ANDS filed by Apotex on February 7, 2003.
The “examination” was conducted under the Food and Drug Act and Regulations
and had nothing to do with the PMNOC Regulations or Apotex’s Notice of
Allegation.
[116] There is no relevant
evidence before this Court upon which any discretion afforded by section
8(1)(a) of the PMNOC Regulations can be exercised. The relevant
starting date for the period of compensation will remain as February 3, 2004.
The termination date is May 26, 2005.
FUTURE LOSSES
[117] Merck characterizes a
claim made by Apotex in respect of certain damages as a claim for “future
losses”. While perhaps not entirely accurate as catchwords, it is convenient
to refer to that claim as such.
[118] Apotex’s claim is set
out in paragraph 1. (a)(ii) of its Further Amended Statement of Claim as
follows:
1.
The Plaintiff,
Apotex Inc. (“Apotex”), claims:
(a)
damages
suffered by Apotex in respect of the drug alendronate by reason of the
commencement of a proceeding by the Defendants pursuant to the Patented
Medicines (Notice of Compliance) Regulations (the “Patent Regulations”), in
respect of:
…
(ii) lost sales and permanent market
share due to the fact that launch by Apotex of its alendronate product was
unjustly delayed with the result that two other generic manufacturers,
Novopharm Limited (“Novopharm”) and Cobalt Pharmaceuticals Inc. (“Cobalt”),
launched their alendronate products essentially simultaneously, thus denying
Apotex the opportunity to establish as permanent market share advantage in
advance of any generic competitor.
[119] Excerpts from the
discovery of Apotex were put in evidence at trial (Exhibit 4) in which there
was the following exchange between counsel (Tab 1, pages 21 & 22), Markwell
for Merck and Crowfoot for Apotex:
Mr. Markwell: Sorry, to clarify your last
statement. The damages that flow from those losses at law, what do you mean by
that?
Mr. Crowfoot: Well, the damages that flow
from that period because they were kept off the market during that period. The
damages may incorporate things like lost market share which is a present value
calculation.
Mr. Markwell: So it’s not correct, then
that your loss is restricted to the 16-month period, that it could be for the
longer period of time?
Mr. Crowfoot: No, the losses in respect
of the 16-month period being off the market. The calculation of that loss may
involve the present value calculation of a lesser market share than Apotex
otherwise would have had.
Mr. Markwell: During those 16 months or
beyond those 16 months?
Mr. Crowfoot: The loss of market share
occurs once they enter the market, and they only have an X percent market share
instead of a Y percent market share. That loss is incurred as of the date that
they entered the market because they cannot acquire the market share they
should have. So the losses still occurred within the period, but calculating
it may involve looking forward.
Mr. Markwell: So what would be the time
frame for those future losses?
Mr. Crowfoot: The loss of market share
would be perpetual, but it’s the present value calculation that are the further
out you get, the less financial impact it has. It’s all a matter of expert
evidence. I don’t know how long it would be.
Mr. Markwell: So it’s Apotex’s position
that there may, in fact, be a perpetual loss that would be calculated as of the
date of the Notice of Compliance taking into account factors that will be
subject of expert evidence?
Mr. Crowfoot: Yes.
[120] As I understand Apotex’s
claim, it is saying that during the period from February 3, 2004 to May 26,
2005, the marketplace for this particular product became distorted because two
other generics entered the marketplace in that period. Apotex claims that,
were it not for Merck’s NOC application against Apotex, Apotex could have been
first in the marketplace or at least entered the marketplace at about the same
time that the other generics did and that Apotex’s market share would, thereby,
have been larger that it now is. Apotex argues that such lesser market share
is a matter that permanently endures and is a matter of permanent loss. The
loss, says Apotex, may be quantified by experts at the later trial.
[121] I analogize the
situation to one of an injury that a person may have suffered by the tortious
activity of another person. For instance, a person may be injured in the leg
so that, for the rest of that person’s life, that person suffers a leg
disability. The leg may heal, the person perhaps ought to have sought, but did
not, medical attention or remedial therapy. These are matters of
quantification and not a matter of injury itself.
[122] Therefore, I find that
it is appropriate for Apotex to make the claim, provided that the marketplace
did not rectify itself or Apotex could not have remedied the marketplace
disadvantage before May 26, 2005. The matters of quantification are left to
the later trial.
COSTS
[123] The success, or lack
thereof, in respect of this portion of the trial is divided, each of the
parties having largely failed to succeed on the issues asserted by them. This
trial was greatly simplified by an agreement as facts and documents and the
conduct of counsel during trial. Their co-operation with each other and the
Court was exemplary. I find that it is most appropriate not to award any costs
to any party for this portion of the trial.
JUDGMENT
For the Reasons provided
herein:
THE COURT ADJUDGES that:
- Section 8 of the Patented
Medicines (Notice of Compliance) Regulations SOR/93-133 as amended
(SOR/98-166) effective until 2006 is:
- within the
competence of the Federal Court to hear and determine an action brought thereunder;
- enabled by the Patent
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. P-4 as amended S.C. 1993, c. 2, s. 4; and
- intra vires the constitutional
authority of the federal Parliament of Canada
- In this action
brought under the provisions of said section 8:
- Apotex Inc. is not
entitled to elect an account or the disgorgement of the profits of the
Respondent, Merck Frosst Canada Ltd. or Merck Frosst Canada & Co.;
- Apotex Inc. is
entitled to claim damages or its lost profits for the period from
February 3, 2004 to May 26, 2005; and
- Apotex Inc. is
entitled to claim damages for lost sales and lost permanent market share
as claimed in paragraphs 1 (a)(ii) of its Further Amended Statement of
Claim dated October 6, 2008 for a period beyond May 26, 2005 provided it
is shown in evidence that such loss was not rectified and could not have
been rectified before that date;
- The quantification
of the damages or lost profits referred to in paragraph 2 above shall be
the subject of the further trial as set out in the Order of this Court
dated August 14, 2008.
Any party is
entitled to seek case management by the Prothonotary assigned to this action
for directions as to the procedure to be followed in respect of said trial;
- No party is
entitled to costs of this present portion of the trial of this action.
"Roger T.
Hughes"