Date: 20080703
Docket: A-486-07
Citation: 2008 FCA 227
CORAM: LINDEN J.A.
NADON
J.A.
SEXTON
J.A.
BETWEEN:
NU-PHARM INC.
Appellant(s)
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN IN RIGHT OF CANADA,
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA, and THE DIRECTOR
GENERAL, THERAPEUTIC PRODUCTS DIRECTORATE
OFHEALTH CANADA
Respondents
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
NADON J.A.
[1]
This is an
appeal from a decision of Hugessen J. of the Federal Court in Nu-Pharm Inc.
v. Canada, 2007 FC 977, who, on a motion for summary judgment, dismissed
the appellant’s (the “appellant” or “Nu-Pharm”) action for damages on the
ground that the action did not raise a genuine issue for trial.
[2]
More
particularly, relying on this Court’s decision in Grenier v. Canada,
2005 FCA 348, [2006] 2 F.C. 287 (CA), Hugessen J. concluded that since the
relief sought by the appellant in its action was contingent upon a determination
by the Federal Court that decisions made by the Director General of the
Therapeutic Products Directorate of Health Canada (the “Director General”) were
unlawful and that such a determination could only be made if the decisions were
challenged by way of a judicial review application, it necessarily followed
that the appellant’s action could not possibly succeed without such a prior
determination. This led the learned Judge to make the following Order:
THIS COURT
ORDERS that
1.
The motion is allowed and the action is dismissed.
2.
Paragraph 1 of the present Order is stayed for a period of 30 days to allow the
plaintiff to seek an extension of time to file an application for judicial
review and if such extension is granted for a further period of time until such
application is finally determined in the plaintiff's favour at which time
either party may move to have the present judgment vacated. If the plaintiff
fails to move timely for an extension, or if such extension is denied, or if
the application is finally dismissed, the present stay shall end and the action
shall stand dismissed.
3.
The defendant is entitled to its costs which are hereby fixed and determined in
the amount of $5,000 payable forthwith and in any event of the cause.
[3]
As the
appellant did not move for an extension of time to commence a judicial review
application, its action was dismissed.
THE FACTS
[4]
A brief review
of the salient facts will be useful to a proper understanding of the appeal.
[5]
On
September 11, 1997, Nu-Pharm filed an Abbreviated New Drug Submission (“ANDS”)
with Health Canada seeking authorization to sell
the drug NU-ENALAPRIL. As part of its submission, Nu-Pharm relied on a
comparison with APO-ENALAPRIL, itself a generic version of a drug called
VASOTEC produced by Merck and Co. (“Merck”). Health Canada refused to review Nu-Pharm’s ANDS on the
basis that it did not make reference to a valid Canadian Reference Product.
This decision was overturned by Cullen J. of the Federal Court on November 19,
1998 (Nu-Pharm v. Canada, [1999] 1 F.C. 620).
[6]
As a
result of the Federal Court’s decision, Health Canada reviewed Nu-Pharm’s ANDS and, on
February 25, 1999, issued a Notice of Compliance (“NOC”) for NU-ENALAPRIL. This
prompted Merck to apply for an Order quashing the NOC. On November 23, 1999, McGillis
J. of the Federal Court concluded that the Minister of Health (the “Minister”)
had erred when he issued a NOC to Nu-Pharm for NU-ENALAPRIL. Accordingly, the
Judge allowed Merck’s application and prohibited the Minister from issuing a
NOC to Nu-Pharm (Merck v. Canada (1999), 176 F.T.R. 21).
[7]
Nu-Pharm
appealed McGillis J.’s decision to this Court which, on March 13, 2000,
dismissed the appeal (Merck & Co. v. Nu-Pharm, 2000 FCJ No 380
(CA)(QL)).
[8]
On March
22, 2000, Nu-Pharm wrote to the Director General to advise him that it would be
seeking a stay of this Court’s decision and would also be seeking leave to
appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada. On June 22, 2000, the Supreme Court
dismissed Nu-Pharm’s leave application ([2000] S.C.C.A. No. 185 (QL)).
[9]
On March
31, 2000, the Director General replied to Nu-Pharm’s letter advising it that,
in his view, the NOC for NU-ENALAPRIL was invalid from the date of the Judgment
of the Federal Court of Appeal and that
Continued
sale or advertisement of NU-ENALAPRIL by anyone is contrary to section
C.08.002 of the “Food and Drug Regulations”. This includes the distribution or
dispensing of existing stock of the drug purchased from Nu-Pharm prior to the
Judgment.
[10]
On March
31, 2000, the Director General also wrote to the provincial drug benefit managers
and Registers of Pharmacists, which letter was a follow-up to his letter to the
provincial drug benefit managers of March 22, 2000. These letters read as
follows:
1. Letter of
March 22, 2000:
A recent
judgment from the Federal Court of Appeal has affected the status of the Notice
of Compliance (NOC) for Nu-Enalapril 2.5, 5, 10 and 20 mg tablets, issued on
February 25, 1999.
On March 13th,
2000, in Court File No. A-804-99, a decision was delivered by the Court which
dismissed the appeal sought by Nu-Pharm of the trial division’s decision in
Court File No. T-398-99.
Pursuant to
the decision, the NOC for Nu-Enalapril is no longer valid. Consequently, the
Nu-Enalapril products may no longer be sold or advertised pursuant to the NOC
issued on February 25, 1999, subject to any further judicial consideration of
the decision.
2. Letter of
March 31, 2000:
…
Unless a
further judicial order is made to the contrary, the NOC for Nu-Enalapril is
invalid from the date of issuance of the Judgment of the Court of Appeal, March
13, 2000. Continued sale or advertisement of Nu-Enalapril by anyone is
contrary to section C.08.002 of the Food & Drug Regulations. This
includes the distributing or dispensing of existing stock of the drug purchased
from Nu-Pharm prior to the Judgment.
The TPP has
clarified the above interpretation with Nu-Pharm.
[Emphasis
added]
[11]
Nu-Pharm
again wrote to the Director General on April 3, 2000, to advise him that it was
in total disagreement with the position which he had taken in his letters of
March 22 and 31, 2000. More particularly, Nu-Pharm argued that since NU-ENALAPRIL
was not a new drug, as defined in section C.08.001 of the Food and Drug
Regulations, C.R.C c. 870 (the “Regulations”), a NOC was not required for
the lawful sale thereof. Accordingly, Nu-Pharm’s letter requested the Director
General to signify his agreement with Nu-Pharm’s position.
[12]
Nu-Pharm
further wrote to the Director General on April 10, 2000, pointing out that the
Therapeutic Products Directorate’s official Policy, enacted August 21, 1991, was
to the effect that following the lapse of seven years after the initial date of
marketing of a medicinal substance in Canada, a drug product containing that
substance would no longer be regarded as a new drug and that “manufacturers
were to determine for themselves what particular drug products were no longer
New Drugs in accordance with the Policy”. On that basis, Nu-Pharm submitted
that it had determined that NU-ENALAPRIL was no longer a new drug and,
accordingly, requested the Director General to confirm his agreement with
Nu-Pharm’s view of the matter and that he would no longer seek to prohibit the
sale of NU-ENALAPRIL.
[13]
The
Director General responded to Nu-Pharm’s letters of April 3 and 10, 2000, by way
of a letter dated April 14, 2000, in which he made it clear that he did not
subscribe to Nu-Pharm’s view with regard to the necessity of obtaining a NOC in
order to sell NU-ENALAPRIL.
[14]
By letter
dated May 1, 2000, Nu-Pharm responded to the Director General’s letter of April
14, 2000, outlining in some detail why, in its view, the position taken by him
was incorrect.
[15]
By letter
dated June 28, 2000, Nu-Pharm wrote directly to the Minister, indicating that
NU-ENALAPRIL was not a new drug and that if the Minister so treated it, such
treatment would be discriminatory and unfair in view of the Department’s prior
practice under the Policy and the Regulations.
[16]
On July
17, 2000, the Minister wrote to Nu-Pharm rejecting its view that NU-ENALAPRIL
was not a new drug. Notwithstanding further letters from Nu-Pharm to the
Minister, he refused to change his view regarding the treatment of NU-ENALAPRIL.
[17]
As a
result, Nu-Pharm commenced an application for judicial review on February 22,
2001, seeking the following orders:
(1) declaring that the
Minister of Health had no authority to state that the sale of NU-ENALAPRIL contravenes
the Regulations;
(2) declaring that the
Minister of Health acted unlawfully in treating NU-ENALAPRIL as a “new drug”;
and
(3) requiring the
Minister of Health to retract all statements made to the effect that the sale
of NU-ENALAPRIL was unlawful
[18]
This
application was followed, on February 12, 2002, by the filing of a Statement of
Claim (subsequently amended on July 17, 2002) against a number of defendants,
namely, Her Majesty the Queen, the Attorney-General of Canada and the Director
General, seeking the following relief:
(1) an Order enjoining
the Director-General… from publishing any statements which expressly or
impliedly advise that the sale of Nu-Enalapril tablets is unlawful;
(2) a mandatory
Order requiring the Director-General… to retract any and all statements made to
provincial regulatory authorities… which advise that the sale of NU-ENALAPRIL
tablets is unlawful; and
(3) damages from the
Defendant, Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada on behalf of the Government
of Canada, for:
i.
the
misfeasance, abuse of authority, and illegal interference with Nu-Pharm’s
economic interests in unlawfully advising provincial regulatory authorities,
third party pharmacists, distributors of pharmaceutical products, public and
private insurers and others persons that the sale of Nu-Enalapril tablets is
unlawful;
ii.
gross
negligence, or in the alternative, negligence, and blatant disregard for the Food
and Drug Regulations (“Regulations”) and the limits of the delegated
statutory authority the Director-General is permitted to exercise in (i)
purporting to make a legal determination regarding the marketability of
Nu-Pharm tablets that the Director-General had no authority to make, (ii)
unlawfully acting on that invalid “determination” by advising provincial regulatory
authorities, third party pharmacists, distributors of pharmaceutical products,
public and private insurers and other persons that the sale of Nu-Enalapril
tablets is unlawful; (iii) refusing to review or consider the objective
evidence which demonstrated that the sale of Nu-Enalapril tablets was and is not
unlawful, and (iv) assuming the Director-General had the legal authority to
determine the marketability of Nu-Enalapril tablets, arbitrarily purporting to
do so without giving any bona fide consideration to the evidence, and
discriminatorily denying natural justice and procedural fairness to Nu-Pharm by
purporting to make that determination, and advising provincial regulatory
authorities, third party pharmacists, distributors of pharmaceutical products,
public and private insurers and other persons that the sale of Nu-Enalapril
tablets is unlawful, without first affording Nu-Pharm the process and the
opportunity to present evidence demonstrating that the sale of Nu-Enalapril
tablets was and is not unlawful;
(see paragraph 1 of the
Amended Statement of Claim)
[19]
On June
24, 2002, Nu-Pharm filed a Notice of Discontinuance of its judicial review
application.
[20]
As appears
from the relief sought by Nu-Pharm in paragraph 1 of its Amended Statement of
Claim, the essence of its action is that the Minister, through his delegate,
the Director General, has acted unlawfully and without authority in declaring
the sale of NU-ENALAPRIL to be unlawful and in refusing to withdraw that
statement. Further, Nu-Pharm says that the Minister has refused to acknowledge
that NU-ENALAPRIL is not a new drug and that he has published statements
declaring that the sale of NU-ENALAPRIL tablets would contravene the
Regulations. At paragraphs 24 to 26 of its Amended Statement of Claim, Nu-Pharm
makes the following arguments::
24. These
statements [contained in the Director-General’s letters of March 22 and 31,
2000] were published wilfully and recklessly, knowing that the Minister had no
authority to issue them, and were made with the intention of causing
consequential damage to Nu-Pharm. The Director-General failed to even advert to
whether Nu-Enalapril was a New Drug before issuing these statements, and
afforded Nu-Pharm no opportunity to advise him that it was in fact an old drug.
Even if the Director-General had the authority to make a determination
regarding the status of Nu-Enalapril, which is denied, and to issue a public
declaration based on any such determination, which is denied, he was grossly
negligent in doing so in these circumstances, since he would not have purported
to make any such determination and would not have issued the statements had he
objectively and bona fide considered the status of Nu-Enalapril before
doing so.
25. The
Director-General intended these statements to damage Nu-Pharm because he knew
that, as a consequence of publishing the statements, the provincial regulatory
bodies responsible for administering their respective interchangeability
programs would proceed to de-list Nu-Enalapril tablets, and that, as a result,
pharmacists would no longer dispense Nu-Enalapril tablets in substitution for
any other drug product containing the active medicinal substance enalapril.
Similarly, as a consequence of these statements, public and private insurers would
no longer reimburse patients for any purchase of Nu-Enalapril.
26. The
Director-General knew and intended that, as a consequence of all of the
foregoing, not only would Nu-Pharm fail to receive any new orders for its
Nu-Enalapril tablets, but pharmaceutical distributors, wholesalers and
individual pharmacists would return any existing stock of the drug held in
their respective inventories. The Director-General knew that Nu-Pharm would
suffer severe consequential damage as a result of such lost sales and the
return of trade inventories and because much of its own inventory of
Nu-Enalapril tablets would soon become stale-dated and hence unsaleable.
[21]
Thus,
Nu-Pharm takes the position that the Director General did not have lawful
authority to decide that the marketing of NU-ENALAPRIL was unlawful in the
absence of a NOC and to make his view of the matter known to others, i.e. the
provincial drug benefit managers and registers of pharmacists. On that premise,
Nu-Pharm submits that it is entitled to damages as compensation for the profits
it would have otherwise made by marketing NU-ENALAPRIL.
[22]
On April
13, 2007, the respondents filed a Notice of Motion for summary judgment seeking
the dismissal of Nu-Pharm’s action on the ground that since the decisions of
the Director General, namely, by way of his letters dated March 22 and March
31, 2000, were decisions of “a federal board, commission or other tribunal”
(“federal board”), the orders sought by Nu-Pharm, i.e. enjoining the Director
General from making further statements regarding the sale of NU-ENALAPRIL and
requiring him to retract earlier statements regarding the sale of NU-ENALAPRIL,
were remedies which could only be obtained by way of an application for
judicial review under sections 18 and 18.1 of the Federal Courts Act.
[23]
Hence, in
the respondents’ view, Nu-Pharm was prevented from seeking damages in its
action without a prior order invalidating the Director General’s decisions.
Accordingly, since Nu-Pharm had not obtained such an order, the Federal Court
was without jurisdiction to grant the relief in damages sought by Nu-Pharm.
[24]
As I
indicated earlier, Hugessen J., on September 28, 2007, allowed the motion for
summary judgment and dismissed Nu-Pharm’s action. Of relevance to this appeal
is paragraph 16 of the learned Judge’s Reasons where, after reviewing both the
relief sought by Nu-Pharm in its Amended Statement of Claim and the relief
which it had sought in its judicial review proceedings, he opined that the
relief for damages sought by Nu-Pharm in its action was “entirely dependant
upon the plaintiff showing the unlawful character of the Director General’s
decisions”. For the sake of completeness, I reproduce paragraph 16 in its
entirety:
16. In my
view the obtaining of the damages claimed in paragraph 1(c) of the amended
statement of claim above is entirely dependant upon the plaintiff showing the
unlawful character of the Director-General's decisions which are the subject of
the reliefs claimed in the two preceding paragraphs. There is no difference
other than one of form in the claims for declaratory relief in the judicial
review application and the claim for injunctive relief in the action. The
addition of an allegation of negligence, gross or not, in the action cannot be
divorced from the allegation that the Director-General acted unlawfully. Unless
and until the Director-General's actions are found to be unlawful the plaintiff
has no claim in either proceeding. The holding in Grenier makes it plain
that the plaintiff must proceed by way of judicial review. It is simply not
open to this Court, as plaintiff seems to suggest, that the scope and reach of Grenier
should be restricted to a far narrower field than what was very clearly stated
by the Court of Appeal.
[Emphasis
added]
ISSUES
[25]
The appellant
submits that the appeal raises the following issues (see para. 34 of the Appellant’s
Memorandum):
(a)
Issue
One:
Does the Grenier decision stand for the proposition that all
civil causes of action against the Crown, regardless of the relief
sought, must be preceded by a predicate application of judicial review, to
determine the “unlawful” character of those government actions?
(b)
Issue
Two:
If the answer to the first question is “no”, does the reasoning in Grenier
warrant the dismissal of this proceeding?
(c)
Issue
Three:
If the answer to the first question is “yes”, was Grenier wrongly
decided?
[26]
The
respondents submit that the appellant has not correctly stated the issues. With
respect to the first issue, the respondents say: “Stated as such, this issue is
far more broad than any issue raised here. This case obviously does not require
consideration of ‘all civil causes of action against the Crown,
regardless of the relief sought …’”. With respect to the second issue, they
make the following comment: “As noted, the ‘first question’ need not be
answered as formulated. In any event, the reasoning in Grenier does
warrant the dismissal of this proceeding”. Finally, with respect to the third
issue, they say: “As noted, the ‘first question’ need not be answered as formulated.
Further, as will be discussed below, this Court will not overrule a prior
decision of this Court merely because it considers it ‘wrongly decided’; more
must be shown” (see para. 20 of the Respondents’ Memorandum).
[27]
I agree
with the respondents that the first issue has been stated too broadly by the
appellant. In my view, the true issue which arises in this appeal is whether
the learned Motions Judge was correct in his determination that the remedy of
damages sought by the appellant in its action was contingent upon a
determination that the Director General’s “decisions” were unlawful and that
such determination could only be made by way of a judicial review. Underlying
that issue is whether the Director General’s letters of March 22 and 31, 2000
constitute decisions of a federal board and whether the Judge properly
understood and applied this Court’s decision in Grenier, supra.
ANALYSIS
[28]
Before addressing
these issues, I must point out that the appellant did not before us attempt to
persuade us that Grenier, supra, had been wrongly decided. Rather, the
appellant argued that the Motions Judge has misconstrued Grenier, supra,
“giving it a legal scope and impact that it does not have” (see the Appellant’s
Memorandum, para. 50).
[29]
I begin my
analysis with this Court’s decision in Grenier, supra. On June 13, 2008,
in The Minister of Citizenship & Immigration v. Alan Hinton and Irina
Hinton, 2008 FCA 215, this Court had occasion to take a close look at Grenier,
supra. At paragraphs 40 to 42 of his Reasons for the Court, Sexton J.A.,
under the heading “A Review of Grenier: What it Does and Does Not Stand
For”, wrote the following:
[40] The
case of Grenier concerned an action brought by an inmate seeking damages
for administrative and disciplinary segregations he faced while serving time in
a maximum security penitentiary. The inmate had not sought a judicial review of
the Institutional Head’s decision, even though he knew or ought to have known
of the effect of the decision upon him personally and knew or ought to have
known that judicial review was available to him if he wished to challenge the
decision. Following this Court’s decision in Tremblay v. Canada (2004)
244 D.L.R. (4th) 422 (F.C.A.), leave to appeal to S.C.C. refused (file: 30424),
Justice Létourneau concluded that a litigant who seeks to impugn a
federal agency’s decision is not free to choose between a judicial review
proceeding and an action in damages but must rather proceed by judicial review
in order to have the decision invalidated. According to Grenier, to assert such
a claim as an action as opposed to an application for judicial review would
constitute a collateral attack on the original decision in light of section 18
of the Federal Courts Act.
[41] Justice
Létourneau explained the rationales and importance of the exclusive
jurisdiction outlined in section 18 of the Federal Courts Act at paragraphs
24-6:
In creating
the Federal Court and in enacting section 18, Parliament sought to put an end
to the existing division in the review of the lawfulness of the decisions made
by federal agencies. At the time, this review was performed by the courts of
the provinces: see Patrice Garant, Droit administratif, 4th ed., vol. 2
(Les Éditions Yvon Blais Inc., 1996), at pages 11 to 15. Harmonization of disparities
in judicial decisions had to be achieved at the level of the Supreme Court of
Canada. In the interests of justice, equity and efficiency, subject to the
exceptions in section 28, Parliament assigned the exercise of reviewing the
lawfulness of the decisions of federal agencies to a single court, the Federal
Court. This review must be exercised under section 18, and only by filing an
application for judicial review. The Federal Court of Appeal is the court
assigned to ensure harmonization in the case of conflicting decisions, thereby
relieving the Supreme Court of Canada of a substantial volume of work, while
reserving it the option to intervene in those cases that it considers of
national interest.
To accept
that the lawfulness of the decisions of federal agencies can be reviewed
through an action in damages is to allow a remedy under section 17. Allowing,
for that purpose, a remedy under section 17 would, in the first place,
disregard or deny the intention clearly expressed by Parliament in subsection
18(3) that the remedy must be exercised only by way of an application for
judicial review. The English version of subsection 18(3) emphasizes on the
latter point by the use of the word "only" in the expression
"may be obtained only on an application for judicial review".
It would also
judicially reintroduce the division of jurisdictions between the Federal Court
and the provincial courts. It would revive in fact an old problem that
Parliament remedied through the enactment of section 18 and the granting of
exclusive jurisdiction to the Federal Court and, in the section 28 cases, the
Federal Court of Appeal. It is precisely this legislative intention that the
Quebec Court of Appeal recognized in the Capobianco case, supra,
in order to preclude the action in damages filed in the Superior Court of
Québec attacking the lawfulness of the decisions of federal boards, commissions
or other tribunals from leading, in fact and in law, to a dysfunctional
dismemberment of federal administrative law.
The
respondents emphasize – and I agree – that one of the primary concerns of this
Court in Grenier was also that an action should not be used as a way to
circumvent the procedural requirements and limitation periods outlined in
section 18 of the Federal Courts Act. Such concerns are of no
relevance in this proceeding as the respondents – after the Federal Court’s
decision of Momi – correctly commenced this proceeding by way of an
application for judicial review.
[42] Grenier
simply stands for the proposition that certain civil actions against
the Crown must be preceded by an application of judicial review where the basis
for the claim is a challenge to the lawfulness, vires or legality of the
federal board or tribunal’s decision.
[Emphasis
added]
[30]
Thus, Grenier,
supra, is to the effect that because decisions of a federal board can only
be challenged by way of a judicial review application commenced pursuant to
sections 18 and 18.1 of the Federal Courts Act, any action which seeks a
relief in damages on the premise that such decisions are unlawful will not be
allowed to proceed unless the decisions have been challenged by way of a
judicial review application. Conversely, if the action does not seek to
challenge the validity or lawfulness of a decision of a federal board, the
action will be allowed to proceed and to run its course.
[31]
That, in
my view, is what Grenier, supra, stands for and the question which must be
asked and answered in order to dispose of the appeal is whether the appellant,
by its action, seeks to challenge the lawfulness of a decision rendered by a
federal board. The determination of that question requires that we answer two
other questions, namely, whether the decisions of the Director General
constitute decisions of a federal board and whether Nu-Pharm’s action
constitutes a collateral attack on or an indirect challenge to the decisions of
a federal board.
[32]
I
therefore turn to the question of whether the Director General’s letters of
March 22 and 31, 2000 are decisions of a federal board. Section 2(1)(h)
of the Federal Courts Act defines the expression “federal board,
commission or other tribunal” as follows:
“federal board,
commission or other tribunal” means any body, person or persons having,
exercising or purporting to exercise jurisdiction or powers conferred by or
under an Act of Parliament or by or under an order made pursuant to a
prerogative of the Crown, other than the Tax Court of Canada or any of
its judges, any such body constituted or established by or under a law of a
province or any such person or persons appointed under or in accordance with
a law of a province or under section 96 of the Constitution Act, 1867.
[Emphasis
added]
|
« office
fédéral » - Conseil, bureau, commission ou autre organisme, ou personne
ou groupe de personnes, ayant, exerçant ou censé exercer une compétence ou
des pouvoirs prévus par une loi fédérale ou par une ordonnance prise en vertu
d'une prérogative royale, à l'exclusion de la Cour canadienne de l'impôt
et ses juges, d'un organisme constitué sous le régime d'une loi provinciale
ou d'une personne ou d'un groupe de personnes nommées aux termes d'une loi
provinciale ou de l'article 96 de la Loi constitutionnelle de 1867.
[Non
souligné dans l’original]
|
[33]
As the summary of the
facts and Nu-Pharm’s pleadings clearly reveal, Nu-Pharm argues that because the
Minister’s delegate, the Director General, did not have lawful authority to
determine that the marketing of NU-ENALAPRIL was unlawful in the absence of a
NOC, nor did he have lawful authority to make known his decision to others, it is
entitled to damages as compensation for the profits which it has been deprived
of due to its inability to market NU-ENALAPRIL.
[34]
Subsection
C.08.002(1) of the Regulations prohibits the sale or advertising of a new drug
unless the Minister has issued, in accordance with section C.08.004, a NOC to
the manufacturer thereof. Section C.08.002(1) reads as follows:
C.08.002. (1) No person shall sell or advertise
a new drug unless
(a) the manufacturer of the new drug has filed
with the Minister a new drug submission or an abbreviated new drug submission
relating to the new drug that is satisfactory to the Minister;
(b) the Minister has issued, pursuant to
section C.08.004, a notice of compliance to the manufacturer of the new drug
in respect of the new drug submission or abbreviated new drug submission;
(c) the notice of compliance in respect of the
submission has not been suspended pursuant to section C.08.006; and
(d) the manufacturer of the new drug has
submitted to the Minister specimens of the final version of any labels,
including package inserts, product brochures and file cards, intended for use
in connection with that new drug, and a statement setting out the proposed
date on which those labels will first be used.
[Emphasis added]
|
C.08.002. (1) Il est
interdit de vendre ou d'annoncer une drogue nouvelle, à moins que les
conditions suivantes ne soient réunies :
a) le
fabricant de la drogue nouvelle a, relativement à celle-ci, déposé auprès du
ministre une présentation de drogue nouvelle ou une présentation abrégée de
drogue nouvelle que celui-ci juge acceptable;
b) le
ministre a, aux termes de l'article C.08.004, délivré au fabricant de la
drogue nouvelle un avis de conformité relativement à la présentation de
drogue nouvelle ou à la présentation abrégée de drogue nouvelle;
c) l'avis de
conformité relatif à la présentation n'a pas été suspendu aux termes de
l'article C.08.006;
d) le
fabricant de la drogue nouvelle a présenté au ministre, sous leur forme
définitive, des échantillons des étiquettes—y compris toute notice jointe à
l'emballage, tout dépliant et toute fiche sur le produit—destinées à être
utilisées pour la drogue nouvelle, ainsi qu'une déclaration indiquant la date
à laquelle il est prévu de commencer à utiliser ces étiquettes.
[Non
souligné dans l’original]
|
[35]
Although Nu-Pharm has
indeed filed with the Minister an ANDS, it is without a valid NOC as a result
of this Court’s decision of March 13, 2000. By reason thereof, the Director
General has taken the position and has so advised Nu-Pharm and others that the
sale or advertising of NU-ENALAPRIL is contrary to section C.08.002 of the
Regulations.
[36]
In my view, the
decisions of the Director General which Nu-Pharm initially challenged in its
judicial review application and, subsequently, in its action for damages before
the Federal Court, clearly constitute decisions rendered by a federal board as
that expression is defined in subsection 2(1)(h) of the Federal
Courts Act. I am satisfied that in declaring that, in the absence of a valid
NOC, no one could sell or advertise NU-ENALAPRIL and in making his decision
known both to Nu-Pharm and to others, the Director General was “… exercising or
purporting to exercise jurisdiction or powers conferred by or under an Act of
Parliament or by or under an order made pursuant to a prerogative of the Crown,
…”.
[37]
I now turn to the
question of whether or not Nu-Pharm’s action constitutes a collateral attack on
or an indirect challenge to the decisions rendered by the Director General. In
my view, there can be no doubt whatsoever that that question must be answered
in the affirmative. In other words, I am of the opinion that the success of Nu-Pharm’s
action in damages, in the words of Hugessen J. found at paragraph 16 of his
Reasons, “… is entirely dependant upon the plaintiff [Nu-Pharm] showing the
unlawful character of the Director General’s decisions …”.
[38]
As a result, sections
18 and 18.1 of the Federal Courts Act come into play. The relevant portions
of these provisions read as follows:
18. (1) Subject to section 28, the Federal
Court has exclusive original jurisdiction
(a) to issue an injunction, writ of
certiorari, writ of prohibition, writ of mandamus or writ of quo
warranto, or grant declaratory relief, against any federal board,
commission or other tribunal; and
(b) to hear and determine any application or
other proceeding for relief in the nature of relief contemplated by paragraph
(a), including any proceeding brought against the Attorney General of Canada,
to obtain relief against a federal board, commission or other tribunal.
…
(3) The remedies provided for in
subsections (1) and (2) may be obtained only on an application for judicial
review made under section 18.1.
18.1 (1) An application for judicial review may be
made by the Attorney General of Canada or by anyone directly affected by the
matter in respect of which relief is sought.
(2) An application for judicial review in
respect of a decision or an order of a federal board, commission or other
tribunal shall be made within 30 days after the time the decision or order
was first communicated by the federal board, commission or other tribunal
to the office of the Deputy Attorney General of Canada or to the party
directly affected by it, or within any further time that a judge of the Federal
Court may fix or allow before or after the end of those 30 days.
|
18. (1) Sous
réserve de l'article 28, la Cour fédérale a compétence exclusive, en
première instance, pour :
a) décerner une
injonction, un bref de certiorari, de mandamus, de prohibition
ou de quo warranto, ou pour rendre un jugement déclaratoire contre
tout office fédéral;
b) connaître de toute
demande de réparation de la nature visée par l’alinéa a), et notamment de
toute procédure engagée contre le procureur général du Canada afin d’obtenir
réparation de la part d’un office fédéral.
[…]
(3) Les recours
prévus aux paragraphes (1) ou (2) sont exercés par présentation d’une demande
de contrôle judiciaire.
18.1 (1) Une
demande de contrôle judiciaire peut être présentée par le procureur général
du Canada ou par quiconque est directement touché par l’objet de la demande.
(2) Les demandes de
contrôle judiciaire sont à présenter dans les trente jours qui suivent la
première communication, par l'office fédéral, de sa décision ou de son ordonnance
au bureau du sous-procureur général du Canada ou à la partie concernée, ou
dans le délai supplémentaire qu'un juge de la Cour fédérale peut, avant ou
après l'expiration de ces trente jours, fixer ou accorder.
|
[39]
Section 18 clearly
provides that the Federal Court has exclusive original jurisdiction with
respect to the granting of declaratory reliefs against any federal board and
that such remedies can only be obtained by way of an application for judicial
review made under section 18.1 which, in turn, provides that such an
application must be commenced within 30 days of the decision sought to be
challenged.
[40]
Consequently, I am
satisfied that this Court’s pronouncement in Grenier, supra, finds full
application in the present matter and that, as a result, Nu-Pharm cannot avoid sections
18 and 18.1 of the Federal Courts Act. In other words, Nu-Pharm cannot
bypass the requirement that if it seeks to challenge the decisions of the
Director General, it must do so by commencing an application for judicial review.
I again reproduce the remarks of Létourneau J.A. found at paragraphs 25 and 26 of
his Reasons in Grenier, supra:
[25] To accept
that the lawfulness of the decisions of federal agencies can be reviewed
through an action in damages is to allow a remedy under section 17. Allowing,
for that purpose, a remedy under section 17 would, in the first place,
disregard or deny the intention clearly expressed by Parliament in subsection
18(3) that the remedy must be exercised only by way of an application for
judicial review. The English version of subsection 18(3) emphasizes on the
latter point by the use of the word "only" in the expression
"may be obtained only on an application for judicial review".
[26] It would also
judicially reintroduce the division of jurisdictions between the Federal Court
and the provincial courts. It would revive in fact an old problem that
Parliament remedied through the enactment of section 18 and the granting of
exclusive jurisdiction to the Federal Court and, in the section 28 cases, the
Federal Court of Appeal. It is precisely this legislative intention that the
Quebec Court of Appeal recognized in the Capobianco case, supra, in
order to preclude the action in damages filed in the Superior Court of Québec
attacking the lawfulness of the decisions of federal boards, commissions or
other tribunals from leading, in fact and in law, to a dysfunctional
dismemberment of federal administrative law.
[41]
I therefore conclude
that in allowing the respondents’ motion for summary judgment, Hugessen J. made
no error of law nor did he misconstrue or mischaracterize the evidence before
him. More particularly, Hugessen J. correctly understood and applied this
Court’s decision in Grenier, supra. It is my view that the reasons given
by the learned Judge in reaching his conclusion are, in the circumstances of
this case, unassailable.
DISPOSITION
[42]
For these reasons, I
would dismiss the appeal with costs.
“M. Nadon”
“I
agree.
A.M.
Linden J.A.”
“I
agree.
J.
Edgar Sexton J.A.”