Supreme Court of Canada
Parke, Davis & Co. v. Fine Chemicals of Canada Ltd., [1959] S.C.R.
219
Date: 1959-01-27
Parke, Davis & Company Appellant;
and
Fine Chemicals of Canada, Limited Respondent.
1958: October 30, 31; 1959: January 27.
Present: Rand, Locke, Cartwright, Abbott and Martland JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE EXCHEQUER COURT OF CANADA .
Patents—Compulsory licence—Power of Commissioner of
Patents to grant licence—Patent covering both process and substance—Product
having therapeutic value—- Product to be sold in bulk by licensee—
Infringement—Market already served—Royalty—The Patent Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 203,
s. 41.
[Page 220]
The appellant holds a patent covering both the process for
manufacturing a chemical compound marketed under the trade name
"Benadryl", which was described as being new and having therapeutic
value, and also the product itself when produced by the patented process. The
respondent manufactures chemical products in bulk, and was granted, by the
Commissioner of Patents, a licence under s. 41(3) of the Patent Act to
manufacture the product for sale. A royalty of 10 per cent of its net selling
price was to be paid by the licensee, whose stated intention was to sell in
bulk form only. The order of the commissioner was affirmed by the Exchequer Court.
The patentee appealed to this Court and contended that (1) the commissioner had
no authority under s. 41(3) to grant the licence because the licensee would not
be producing a medicine and because the licence covered both the process and
the product, (2) the commissioner should have seen "good reason" not
to grant the licence because the licensee had infringed the patent and because
the market was already adequately served, and (3) the royalty was inadequate.
Held: The appeal should be allowed in respect of the
adequacy of the royalty, which question should be referred back to the
commissioner. In other respects, the appeal should be dismissed.
Per curiam: The evidence was quite inadequate to enable
the commissioner to arrive at a royalty which would give due weight to all
relevant considerations.
Per Rand and Abbott JJ.: Section 41(3) applied to a
case where the patent covered both the process and the substance produced. The
subsection was to be taken to include any new process for producing a new substance,
and since the product depended on the process and as its invention involved the
new process, a licence for the process necessarily involved the right to
produce the substance: the process necessarily produced the product.
Per Locke, Cartwright and Martland JJ.: The word
"medicine" as used in s. 41 should be interpreted broadly, and the
product was a medicine within the meaning of the section, even when it was in
bulk form.
Construing s. 41 as a whole, the commissioner had authority to
grant the licence for the use of the invention. In terms, subs. (3) applied to
"any patent" if such a patent is for "an invention intended for
or capable of being used for the preparation or production of food or
medicine".
The decision as to whether the commissioner should have seen
"good reason to the contrary" was his to make, and it could not be
said, on the evidence, that his decision was manifestly wrong.
APPEAL from a judgment of Thurlow J. of the Exchequer
Court of Canada, affirming an order of the Commissioner
of Patents granting a licence under s. 41(3) of the Patent Act. Appeal
allowed in part.
J. J. Robinette, Q.C., and J. Godfrey,
Q.C., for the appellant.
[Page 221]
G. H. Henderson, Q.C., and D. Watson, for
the respondent.
The judgment of Rand and Abbott JJ. was delivered by
Rand J. :—The
facts in this appeal are these. The appellant, to be called the
"Company", holds a patent on both a process for making and the
substance itself called Benadryl. The Company manufactures the chemical in the
United States and ships it in bulk to a subsidiary in Canada by which it is
prepared in dosage form with or without other ingredients for the treatment of
allergies, colds or motion sickness. The respondent manufactures chemical
products in bulk and applied for a license under s. 41(3) of the Patent Act,
R.S.C. 1952, c. 203, as amended, to manufacture Benadryl for sale to manufactureres of pharmaceutical substances. The Commissioner of
Patents granted the license and fixed the royalty at 10 per cent, of the net
wholesale price of the licensee.
Section 41 is as follows:
41.(1) In the case of inventions relating to substances
prepared or produced by chemical processes and intended for food or medicine,
the specification shall not include claims for the substance itself, except when
prepared or produced by the methods or processes of manufacture particularly
described and claimed or by their obvious chemical equivalents.
(2) In an action for infringement of a patent where the
invention relates to the production of a new substance, any substance of the
same chemical composition and constitution shall, in the absence of proof to
the contrary, be deemed to have been produced by the patented
process.
(3) In the case of any patent for an invention intended for
or capable of being used for the preparation or production of food or medicine,
the Commissioner shall, unless he sees good reason to the contrary, grant to
any person applying for the same, a licence limited to the use of the invention
for the purposes of the preparation or production of food or medicine but not
otherwise; and, in settling the terms of such licence and fixing the amount of
royalty or other consideration payable the Commissioner shall- have regard to
the desirability of making the food or medicine available to the public at the
lowest possible price consistent with giving to the inventor due reward for the
research leading to the invention. …
Two questions are raised: first, does subs. (3) apply to a
case where the patent covers both the process and the substance produced, and
secondly, is the royalty allowed unreasonably small?
[Page 222]
The section is seen to deal with substances prepared or
produced by chemical processes and intended for food or medicine and its
provisions are exclusive in relation to their subject-matter. Their
interpretation has been considered in this Court in two cases, F.
Hoffmann-LaRoche & Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Patents and
Commissioner of Patents v. Winthrop Chemical
Company Incorporated. In the former the Exchequer
Court was confirmed in holding that subs. (1) permitted the issue of a patent
for a new substance only when it was associated with a new process at the same
time patented. In the latter a claim for a new substance produced by an old
process was held to be bad and the substance unpatentable. Mr. Robinette argues
that the language of subs. (3) limits its application to the case of a patented
process only and that where both the process and the product are within the
monopoly, a licence under the section is not authorized. He stresses the words
"for the purposes of the preparation or production of food or
medicine" as being referable only to the active agency or process.
The legislative policy underlying the subsection to be
gathered from its special terms and the section as a whole is obvious: all new
substances, apart and as distinguished from processes, are, in the public
interest, to be free from legalized monopoly, the conclusive evidence of which
is the fact that no new substance may alone be patented; all unpatented processes
are open to be used to produce the substance patented with its new process,
with only the new process protected. Admittedly a licence can issue at once for
the new process where the substance is old; but, on .the- argument made, where
the substance is also new and patented both are to continue under monopoly
unless, after three years, under s. 67, in case of an abuse of the exclusive
right, a licence is granted. If, for example, the Salk vaccine and its process
were patented, in the absence of another process the public would be denied the
benefit of immediate licence and until s. 67 might become available; whereas a
new, patented process for making the vaccine would be available for licence at
once. This means that a new proc-
[Page 223]
ess is to be held to be of more importance to the public
than a new substance, however vital the latter may be for health. In this
patent a number of new processes are included and the view advanced might
defeat completely the purposes of the subsection through the possible
exhaustion of efficient methods of production by the patent. Such a view
contradicts the most significant fact that a new substance, however original
and ingenious the idea behind it, cannot be patented alone. Subsection (3) is
to be taken to include any new process for producing a new substance, and since
the product is process dependent, and as its invention involves the new
process, a licence for the latter necessarily involves the right to produce the
former : the process necessarily produces the product. The case in which a
licence is to be issued is "of any patent for an invention intended for or
capable of being used for the preparation of production of food or
medicine" ; Benadryl is a substance of medicine and the patented process is
intended for its production: In re Glaxo. One consequence
and an important one in extending the patent to the substance would be its
pertinence to the ascertainment of a royalty.
The evidence before the commissioner on damages was quite
inadequate to enable him intelligently to arrive at a royalty which would give
due weight to all relevant considerations. Where the monopoly in such
inventions is so considerably restricted in scope, we should be free from doubt
that the royalty allowed is commensurate with the maintenance of research
incentive and the importance of both process and substance. That does not
appear to me to have been possible on the meagre evidence presented to the
commissioner. The case should be referred back to the commissioner to enable
further matter to be adduced. For that purpose it is not sufficient for the
patentee to sit back and, if they only are available, keep important facts
undisclosed as being private and confidential; once the commissioner decides
the case to be one for licence, it lies with the patentee, by whatever means
are open to him, to present substantial support for the royalty which he claims;
in the absence of that he will be in a weak position to complain of any holding
by the commissioner.
[Page 224]
I would, therefore, allow the appeal and refer back to the
commissioner the matter of royalty; in other respects the appeal should be
dismissed. In the circumstances there should be no costs to any party in this
or the Exchequer Court.
The judgment of Locke, Cartwright and Martland JJ. was
delivered by
Martland J.:—This
is an appeal from a judgment of Thurlow J. in the Exchequer Court,
which dismissed the appellant's appeal from an order made by the Commissioner
of Patents for the granting of a compulsory licence to the respondent with
respect to the use of Canadian Patent 466,573, pursuant to subs. (3) of s. 41
of the Patent Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 203, as amended.
The patent is entitled "Process for the Manufacture of
Amino Ethers" and was issued on July 11, 1950, to the appellant as
assignee of the inventor. It covers both the process for manufacturing a
chemical known as diphenhydramine hydrochloride, also known as Benadryl, and
also that product itself when produced by the patented process. The first
sentence of the patent states: "The invention relates to a new class of
chemical compounds of therapeutic value." The appellant manufactures this
chemical in the United States of America and ships it in bulk to Parke, Davis
& Company Limited, a Canadian company, which prepares the bulk chemical in
dosage forms or combines it with other ingredients to produce preparations for
allergies, for colds and for motion sickness.
The respondent is a Canadian company which manufactures
pharmaceuticals and pharmaceutical chemicals. The licence granted to it by the
Commissioner of Patents authorized it to manufacture, in its own establishment
only, products according to the patented process with the consequent right to
sell the products, subject to certain stated terms and conditions, including
payment to the appellant of a royalty of 10 per cent, of its net selling price
to others of the product. The stated intention of the respondent is to sell the
product in bulk form only.
[Page 225]
The provisions of the Patent Act requiring
consideration in this appeal are subs. (1), (2) and (3) of s. 41, which provide
as follows:
41.(1) In the case of inventions relating to substances
prepared or produced by chemical processes and intended for food or medicine,
the specification shall not include claims for the substance itself, except
when prepared or produced by the methods or processes of manufacture
particularly described and claimed or by their obvious chemical equivalents.
(2) In an action for infringement of a patent where the
invention relates to the production of a new substance, any substance of the
same chemical composition and constitution shall, in the absence of proof to
the contrary, be deemed to have been produced by the patented process.
(3) In the case of any patent for an invention intended for
or capable of being used for the preparation or production of food or medicine,
the Commissioner shall, unless he sees good reason to the contrary, grant to
any person applying for the same, a licence limited to the use of the invention
for the purposes of the preparation or production of food or medicine but not
otherwise; and, in settling the terms of such licence and fixing the amount of
royalty or other consideration payable the Commissioner shall have regard to
the desirability of making the food or medicine available to the public at the
lowest possible price consistent with giving to the inventor due reward for the
research leading to the invention.
Three contentions were raised by the appellant:
1. That the Commissioner of Patents was not authorized
under subs. (3) to grant the licence because:
(a) the respondent would
not be producing a medicine within the meaning of that subsection;
(b) a licence can be
granted under that subsection only in respect of a patented process and not
where a patent covers both the process and the product created by that process.
2. Even if the Commissioner of Patents had authority to
issue a licence, he should have seen "good reason to the contrary" in
considering this application because:
(a) it was alleged that there had
been infringement of this patent by the respondent;
(b) the Canadian market
was already adequately served by Parke, Davis & Company Limited.
3. In any event the royalty fixed by the Commissioner
of Patents for the use of the invention was inadequate.
With respect to the first point, it was contended that the
respondent would only be producing Benadryl in bulk form, and not bottled or
labelled for sale for individual consumption, and that in bulk form it did not
constitute a medicine.
[Page 226]
Reference has already been made to the first sentence in
this patent, stating that it relates to a new class of chemical compounds of
therapeutic value. Furthermore, the specifications also state:
The compounds may be administered to humans as the
hydrochloride or other salts or the free bases. They may be given orally,
parenterally, rectally or as a vapour or mist. The more active compounds of the
invention, such as Compound 1, are indicated for therapeutic use in humans for
allergic conditions (asthma, urticaria, histamine cephalgia, anaphylactic
shock), smooth muscle spasm (biliary spasm, dysmenorrhea).
Compound 1 may be orally administered in dosage of 5 grains
and given intravenously in amount of 150 mg.
It is also noted that the product claims in this patent are
in the form specified in subs. (1) of s. 41 of the Act, which relates
exclusively to inventions of substances prepared or produced by chemical
processes and intended for food or medicine. From the evidence it appears that
the product in question has no uses other than therapeutic uses.
I agree with Thurlow J. that the word "medicine",
as used in s. 41 of the Act, should be interpreted broadly and I am of the
opinion that the product Benadryl is a medicine within the meaning of that
section, even when it is in bulk form.
It was also contended that the authority to grant a licence
under subs. (3) of s. 41 was limited to a licence for the use of a patented
process only and where there was no added claim for the product produced by
that process. Reference was made to two decisions of this Court in respect of
s. 41 of the Act; namely, The Commissioner of Patents v. Winthrop Chemical Company Incorporated and
F. Hoffman-LaRoche & Co. Ltd. Co. v. The Commissioner of Patents.
The earlier case decided that a claim cannot be entertained
for a substance falling within subs. (1) of s. 41 unless a claim is also made
in respect of the process by which it is produced. The latter case decided that
the inventor of a new process for the manufacture of a product which is
not new cannot obtain a patent for the product even on the basis of a process
dependent product claim.
[Page 227]
It was argued that, construing subs. (3) of s. 41 in the
light of these decisions, it could only have been intended to relate to an
invention of the process only and not to relate to a case where the product
produced by the process had also been claimed. Emphasis was placed on the
following words of the subsection: "a licence limited to the use of the
invention for the purposes of the preparation or production of food or medicine
but not otherwise". It was urged that such a licence could not permit the
sale of the product, but only the use of the process. If the invention relates
only to the process, then a sale of the product would not infringe the patent,
but, if the product also is patented, then the sale would involve an
infringement and the licence cannot, under the wording of the subsection,
authorize such a sale. Therefore it was contended that the subsection was not
intended to apply to such a patent.
In my opinion subs. (3) is not to be interpreted in this
narrow manner. In terms it applies to "any patent" if such patent is
for "an invention intended for or capable of being used for the
preparation or production of food or medicine". The words of limitation of
the licence appearing in the subsection, namely, "a licence limited to the
use of the invention for the purposes of the preparation or production of food
or medicine but not otherwise", are inserted because the subsection applies
not only to inventions intended for the preparation or production of food or
medicine, but also to inventions capable of being used for the
preparation or production of food or medicine. There may be inventions capable
of such use and also of other uses. The licence which may be granted under this
subsection is limited to the use of the invention for the preparation or
production of food or medicine.
It seems to me that s. 41 must be construed as a whole.
Subsection (1) applies to inventions relating to substances prepared or
produced by chemical processes and intended for food or medicine. Subsection
(3) goes somewhat further and also applies to any patent for an invention
capable of being used for the preparation or production of food or medicine. If
subs. (3) were to be construed in the manner suggested by the appellant, it
would eliminate from its
[Page 228]
operation inventions which fell within the operation of
subs. ( 1 ). I do not think that such a meaning was intended and the wording of
subs. (3) does not indicate that it must be so construed. The subsection
relates to the use of any invention intended for or capable of being used for
the preparation of food or medicine and the provisions as to royalty clearly
contemplate the sale of the product produced by such use, for they refer to the
making of the food or medicine available to the public at the lowest possible
price consistent with giving to the inventor due reward for his research.
I am, therefore, of the opinion that the Commissioner of
Patents had authority, under subs. (3) of s. 41 of the Patent Act, to
grant a licence for the use of the invention in question.
As to whether he should have seen "good reason to the
contrary" regarding the application for this licence, it would seem that
this is a matter for the judgment of the Commissioner of Patents. The wording
in question is "the Commissioner shall, unless he sees good reason to the
contrary, grant to any person applying for the same …" In this case the
commissioner did not see such good reason. The decision is his to make and it
cannot be said, on the evidence, that his decision was manifestly wrong,
bearing in mind that one of the main considerations before him is that of the
public interest.
With respect to the matter of the adequacy of the royalty provided
in the commissioner's order, I agree with my brother Rand that the evidence
before the commissioner was inadequate to enable him intelligently to arrive at
a royalty which would give due weight to all the relevant considerations. The
monopoly in such inventions is considerably restricted in scope and the royalty
allowed should be commensurate with the maintenance of research incentive and
the importance of both process and substance. In the present case the
respondent proposes to manufacture the product Benadryl in bulk form only. The
provision in the commissioner's order as to royalty fixes the 10 per cent
royalty upon the net selling price to others of the product.
[Page 229]
The royalty as fixed is, therefore, to be determined upon
the wholesale price and has no relationship to the ultimate selling price of
the medicines to the consumer.
I am, therefore, of the opinion that in respect of this
matter only the appeal should succeed.
I would, therefore, allow the appeal in respect of the
matter of the adequacy of the royalty and refer the matter back to the
commissioner. In other respects the appeal should be dismissed. There should be
no costs to either party in this or the Exchequer Court.
Appeal allowed in part.
Solicitors for the appellant: Arnoldi, Parry &
Campbell, Toronto.
Solicitors for the respondent: Gowling, MacTavish,
Osborne & Henderson, Ottawa.