Docket: A-422-14
Citation:
2016 FCA 161
CORAM:
|
STRATAS J.A.
RYER J.A.
GLEASON J.A.
|
BETWEEN:
|
PFIZER CANADA
INC.
|
Appellant
|
and
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TEVA CANADA
LIMITED
|
Respondent
|
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
STRATAS J.A.
A.
Introduction
[1]
Pfizer
appeals from the judgment dated June 30, 2014 of the Federal Court (per
Zinn J.). The judgment is based on reasons dated April 3, 2014 (2014 FC 248)
and subsequent reasons dated June 30, 2014 (2014 FC 634).
[2]
Following
fifteen days of trial, the Federal Court found Pfizer liable for damages under section
8 of the Patented Medicines (Notice of Compliance) Regulations, S.O.R.
93-133 in the amount of $92,228,000.00, pre-judgment
interest in the amount of $32,539,550.36, post-judgment interest at the rate of
3.0% on $124,766,550.36 (the sum of the damages and prejudgment interest) from
the date of judgment until payment, and costs.
[3]
Pfizer
appeals. It alleges that the Federal Court committed reversible error in a
number of ways.
[4]
I agree
with Pfizer on one of the issues it raises, namely the Federal Court’s
admission of and reliance upon hearsay evidence in the trial. While this Court
has the power to consider the matter without the hearsay evidence and make the
judgment the Federal Court should have made, I would not exercise that power in
this factually-complex circumstance where the result is unclear. Rather, I
would remit the matter to the Federal Court for redetermination.
[5]
Therefore,
for the reasons that follow, I would allow the appeal, set aside the judgment
of the Federal Court, and remit the matter to the Federal Court for
redetermination on this record, excluding the hearsay evidence. I would grant
Pfizer its costs of the appeal.
B.
Background facts
[6]
In the Federal
Court, Teva sued Pfizer for damages arising from Pfizer's conduct under the PMNOC
Regulations that improperly kept one of its corporate predecessors from
selling its drug on the market. This suit was founded upon the legislative cause
of action in section 8 of the PMNOC Regulations.
[7]
In this
summary of background facts, I shall describe the relevant drugs and the
relevant parties and then review the portions of the PMNOC Regulations
that relate to this appeal. Then I shall review what the parties did under
those portions of the PMNOC Regulations that gave rise to Teva’s action
for damages under section 8 of the PMNOC Regulations. Finally, I shall
review the Federal Court’s reasons.
[8]
Throughout
these reasons, when I refer to a paragraph number in the Federal Court’s
reasons, the relevant reasons are the first set of reasons dated April 3, 2014
(2014 FC 248).
(1)
The relevant drug and the relevant parties
[9]
The
innovative drug at issue in this matter is venlafaxine hydrochloride
(“venlafaxine”) marketed under the name Effexor XR.
[10]
The
appellant, Pfizer, is the corporate successor to Wyeth and Wyeth Canada. Wyeth
was the innovative manufacturer of venlafaxine. In these reasons, for the
purposes of describing Wyeth’s conduct before it became part of Pfizer, I shall
refer to Wyeth as “Wyeth (Pfizer).”
[11]
The
respondent, Teva, is the corporate successor to ratiopharm inc. During many of
the events giving rise to its claim for damages under section 8 of the PMNOC
Regulations, Ratiopharm sought to be a generic manufacturer of venlafaxine.
In these reasons, for the purposes of describing Ratiopharm’s conduct before it
became part of Teva, I shall refer to Ratiopharm as “Ratiopharm (Teva).”
[12]
As the
Federal Court noted in its reasons, Novopharm Limited and Pharmascience Inc.
played a role as generic entrants into the market for venlafaxine. I shall
refer to them as Novopharm and Pharmascience. Novopharm is now part of Teva.
But in the interests of clarity and due to their less significant role in these
reasons, it is not necessary to acknowledge their current status, as I have for
Ratiopharm (Teva) and Wyeth (Pfizer).
(2)
The PMNOC Regulations as they relate to
this appeal
[13]
In order to
market a new drug in Canada, an innovative drug manufacturer must, among other
things, file a new drug submission and receive approval in the form of a notice
of compliance from the Minister of Health. As part of that process, the PMNOC
Regulations permit the manufacturer to list in a patent register all of the
relevant patents pertaining to the submission.
[14]
Later, a
generic drug manufacturer wishing to make and market a generic version of the
innovator’s drug may submit an abbreviated new drug submission demonstrating,
among other things, that the generic formulation is bioequivalent to the
innovator’s drug by cross-referencing clinical trials regarding safety and
effectiveness undertaken by the innovator. This dispenses with the need for the
generic manufacturer to undertake its own clinical trials.
[15]
The generic
drug manufacturer must address any patent listed in the patent register
concerning the innovator drug: PMNOC Regulations, s. 5. It does so either
by stating that it is not seeking the issuance of a notice of compliance until
the patent expires or by alleging that the patent is not valid or will not be
infringed by the making, using or selling of the generic drug. In furtherance
of the allegation, it must serve a notice of allegation which contains a detailed
statement of the factual and legal bases for the allegation.
[16]
An
innovator who wishes to challenge the allegation of invalidity or
non-infringement in the notice of allegation must apply to the Federal Court
within 45 days for an order prohibiting the Minister of Health from issuing a
notice of compliance for the generic product before the expiry of the patent(s)
that are the subject of the notice of allegation. If the innovator does that,
the Minister of Health is precluded from issuing a notice of compliance to the
generic manufacturer in most cases for twenty-four months or until the
prohibition application has been dismissed: PMNOC Regulations, s. 7(1).
[17]
A generic
manufacturer may seek an order dismissing all or part of the prohibition
application concerning patents it says are not eligible for inclusion on the
patent register: PMNOC Regulations, para. 6(5)(a). If the motion
is successful, the prohibition application is dismissed as against any
improperly listed patents.
[18]
If a
prohibition application is ultimately unsuccessful either at first instance or
on appeal, or if it is discontinued or withdrawn, the innovator may be liable
for damages for “any loss
suffered during the period”: PMNOC Regulations, s. 8(1). In assessing damages, a
court is to take into account “all
matters that it considers relevant”: PMNOC Regulations, s. 8(5).
(3)
What happened under the PMNOC Regulations
in this case
[19]
In this
case, Wyeth (Pfizer) marketed an extended release version of venlafaxine
hydrochloride under the name Effexor XR. Related to it is Canadian Patent
1,248,540, a patent that was to expire on January 10, 2006. It was listed on
the Patent Register against Effexor XR.
[20]
In 2005,
Ratiopharm (Teva) wanted to market its generic version of venlafaxine
hydrochloride and filed an abbreviated new drug submission on February 24,
2005. On December 9, 2005, Health Canada informed Ratiopharm (Teva) that it had
completed its review of its abbreviated new drug submission but that it would
not issue a notice of compliance until the requirements under the PMNOC
Regulations were met.
[21]
On December
20, 2005, on the eve of the expiry of the ’540 Patent, Canadian Patent
2,199,778, covering the extended release formulation of venlafaxine was issued.
On December 23, 2005, Wyeth (Pfizer) listed it on the Patent Register against Effexor
XR.
[22]
In
response, on the same day, Ratiopharm (Teva) served a notice of allegation. In
its notice of allegation, Ratiopharm (Teva) accepted that its notice of
compliance for its version of venlafaxine would not issue until the expiry of
the ’540 Patent, namely January 10, 2006. Ratiopharm (Teva) also alleged that
the newly-listed ’778 Patent was invalid or would not be infringed by its
version of venlafaxine. On February 10, 2006, Wyeth (Pfizer) applied for
prohibition preventing the Minister from issuing a notice of compliance to
Ratiopharm (Teva). This triggered the automatic twenty-four month stay of the
Minister’s ability to grant a notice of compliance to Ratiopharm (Teva) for its
version of venlafaxine.
[23]
Some time
passed. Then, on December 18, 2006, Ratiopharm (Teva) filed a motion to dismiss
Pfizer’s prohibition application. It submitted that the ’778 Patent was not
eligible for listing on the Patent Register for Effexor XR.
[24]
Following
litigation of the motion in the Federal Court, the matter arrived in this
Court. This Court agreed that the ’778 Patent was not eligible for listing on
the patent register for Effexor XR. So it granted Ratiopharm (Teva)’s motion
and dismissed Wyeth (Pfizer)’s prohibition application: Ratiopharm Inc. v.
Wyeth, 2007 FCA 264, [2008] 1 F.C.R. 447, rev’g 2007 FC 340, 58 C.P.R.
(4th) 154. This Court released its judgment on August 1, 2007.
[25]
This
removed the obstacles that stood in the way of Ratiopharm (Teva) receiving a
notice of compliance to launch its version of venlafaxine. On August 2, 2007,
the Minister granted Ratiopharm (Teva) its notice of compliance for its version
of venlafaxine. Ratiopharm (Teva) launched its product into the Canadian market
on September 18, 2007.
[26]
Looking at
this history with the benefit of hindsight, it can be said Wyeth (Pfizer)
should not have listed its ’778 Patent on the patent register for Effexor XR
and should not have brought a prohibition application. Put another way, Wyeth
(Pfizer) improperly kept Ratiopharm (Teva)’s version of venlafaxine off the
market. Under section 8 of the PMNOC Regulations, Ratiopharm (Teva)
could seek damages for that.
[27]
So
Ratiopharm (Teva) did just that and started an action for damages in the
Federal Court. Wyeth (Pfizer) counterclaimed on the ground that Ratiopharm
(Teva)’s venlafaxine product infringed the ’778 Patent. Later, it discontinued
that counterclaim.
(4)
The Federal Court’s consideration of the damages
claim
[28]
The Federal
Court first considered the period of loss suffered that is compensable under section
8 of the PMNOC Regulations.
[29]
The parties
did not dispute the end date of that period of loss. Both agreed that under
paragraph 8(1)(b) of the PMNOC Regulations, the end date is the
date the prohibition application is withdrawn, discontinued, dismissed or
reversed. Here, that date was August 1, 2007, the date this Court dismissed
Wyeth (Pfizer)’s prohibition application.
[30]
However,
the parties disputed the start date of the period of loss. Teva submitted that
the start date was January 10, 2006, the date the ’540 Patent expired. Pfizer,
on the other hand, submitted that the start date could not be earlier than
February 13, 2006, the date the Minister would have issued a notice of
compliance to Ratiopharm (Teva) if it had served Pfizer with a notice of
allegation relating to the ’778 Patent and Pfizer had not started a prohibition
application.
[31]
The Federal
Court rejected Pfizer’s submission based on the wording of paragraph 8(1)(a)
of the PMNOC Regulations. In its view, that paragraph governed the start
date. Paragraph 8(1)(a) provides that the period starts “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 concludes that…a date other than the certified
date is more appropriate.” The Minister certified the date as December 7, 2005. That
date, in PMNOC Regulations parlance, is the patent hold date.
[32]
Paragraph
8(1)(a), quoted above, by default sets the start date as the date the
Minister certifies a notice of compliance would have been issued in the absence
of the Regulations “unless the
court concludes that…a date other than the certified date is more appropriate.” Here, the Federal Court found
that there was a more appropriate date, namely the date of expiry of the ’540
Patent, January 10, 2006. It will be recalled that in its notice of allegation,
Ratiopharm (Teva) accepted that its notice of compliance for its version of
venlafaxine would not issue until the expiry of the ’540 Patent.
[33]
On this
point, the Federal Court concluded as follows (at paras. 64-65):
[64] In short, based on the evidence, [Wyeth (Pfizer)] knew that
[Ratiopharm (Teva)] or another generic would be entering the market in January
2006 or very shortly thereafter and it chose to list the ’778 Patent in an
attempt to evergreen its drug and prevent generic competition. It knew or ought
to have known that a generic ready to enter the market in January 2006 would
very likely serve it with a [notice of allegation], rather than wait many more
years to gain entry into the venlafaxine market.
[65] In this
case, but for the improper listing of the ’778 Patent on the Patent Register,
all things being equal, [Ratiopharm (Teva)] would have received its [notice of
compliance] and been in a position to launch its product on January 10, 2006.
The earlier Patent Hold date [December 7, 2005] is an appropriate date to
commence the [period of loss]; however, because no loss is claimed by
[Ratiopharm (Teva)] prior to January 10, 2006, I accept [Ratiopharm (Teva)’s]
submission that January 10, 2006, is a more appropriate commencement for the
[period of loss] than the Patent Hold Date [December 7, 2005].
[34]
Having
determined the start date and the end date for the period of loss, the Federal
Court then determined a number of issues: the size of the overall market for
venlafaxine, the size of the generic venlafaxine market and Ratiopharm (Teva)’s
market share, the time when Ratiopharm (Teva) and its competitors’ generic
products would have been listed on the provincial formularies and the entry of
competitors into the generic market, the overall value of Ratiopharm (Teva)’s
lost sales in the relevant period, and whether any deductions should be made
under subsection 8(5) of the PMNOC Regulations. Below, in the context of
submissions made by Pfizer in this Court, I shall review in more detail the
Federal Court’s reasons on the entry of Ratiopharm (Teva)’s competitors into
the generic market.
[35]
The Federal
Court then considered the central issues in this appeal: the time when
Ratiopharm (Teva) would have launched its venlafaxine product and the existence
of any impediments to Ratiopharm (Teva) being able to supply the market. Teva
submitted that it would have launched its product as soon as it could, on
January 10, 2006, and there were no impediments to it obtaining the necessary
product and supplying the full generic market. Pfizer disagreed.
[36]
At the
outset of its reasons on this point, the Federal Court held (at para. 148) that
on the authorities Teva had to show “on a balance of probabilities that [Ratiopharm (Teva)] was able to
supply the market.” In this case, that meant that Teva had to identify a
supplier of the active pharmaceutical ingredient and show that that supplier
had the capacity to supply the market over the relevant period. It noted (at
paras. 149-152) that the only evidence offered on this point was that of Mr.
Major, a witness called by Teva. Mr. Major was a former executive of Ratiopharm
(Teva) and acted in that position at all material times.
[37]
Mr. Major
testified that Ratiopharm (Teva) relied upon a separate company, Alembic
Pharmaceuticals, to manufacture its venlafaxine product. He testified that on a
site visit over two weeks in 2004, he thoroughly inspected Alembic’s facility.
From that, he formed the view that Alembic had sufficient capacity to produce
Ratiopharm (Teva)’s venlafaxine product in the necessary quantities. Ratiopharm
(Teva) had worked with Alembic before and Alembic was an eager and enthusiastic
business partner of Ratiopharm (Teva) in such matters.
[38]
In support
of his testimony that Alembic had sufficient capacity to produce Ratiopharm
(Teva)’s venlafaxine product in sufficient quantities at the relevant time, Mr.
Major also relied on emails between Ratiopharm (Teva) personnel and Alembic
personnel, most of which he was not copied upon. He also relied on what some
colleagues at Ratiopharm (Teva) told him about Alembic’s ability to supply and on
documents prepared by others. During my analysis, below, I shall review Mr.
Major’s testimony in more detail.
[39]
During Mr.
Major’s testimony, Pfizer repeatedly objected on the ground that some of the
evidence offered was inadmissible hearsay. In response to the objections, the
Federal Court ruled that it would consider what weight to give to the evidence.
[40]
Ultimately,
the Federal Court released two reasons for judgment. In the first, on April 3,
2014 (reported at 2014 FC 248), the Federal Court found Pfizer liable and set
out certain principles for the calculation of damages. In the second, on June
30, 2014 (reported at 2014 FC 634), the Federal Court quantified the damages
award and calculated pre-judgment and post-judgment interest and costs. It then
released its formal judgment.
[41]
Overall, in
its first set of reasons (2014 FC 248), the Federal Court found that Alembic
would have been able to supply adequate quantities of Ratiopharm (Teva)’s
venlafaxine product at the relevant time. It took into account all of the
evidence offered by Mr. Major, holding (at para. 153) that “[a]lthough Mr. Major speaks as an observer
rather than as an employee of Alembic, I find that his evidence is reliable.” It found that Teva had
established loss under section 8 of the PMNOC Regulations and, thus, was
entitled to damages.
[42]
In its
second set of reasons (2014 FC 634), the Federal Court quantified Teva’s
damages and awarded pre-judgment and post-judgment interest and costs.
C.
Issues on appeal
[43]
Pfizer
appeals to this Court. In light of the submissions the parties have advanced, these
reasons address six issues:
(1)
Some
basic issues concerning section 8 damages claims. Before us, the parties disagree on what
must be proven and who bears the burden of proof in a claim under section 8 of
the PMNOC Regulations.
(2)
The
hearsay issue.
Pfizer submits that the Federal Court wrongly admitted and relied upon hearsay
evidence in determining whether Ratiopharm (Teva) could have supplied the
market with its venlafaxine product at the relevant time in sufficient
quantities.
(3)
The
issue whether there was palpable and overriding error on a factual finding. Pfizer attacks one of the key
factual findings the Federal Court made in support of its conclusion that
Ratiopharm (Teva) could have supplied the market with its venlafaxine product
at the relevant time in sufficient quantities.
(4)
Other
section 8 damages issues. Here Pfizer raises a number of issues. It submits that the
Federal Court chose the wrong starting date for the period of Ratiopharm
(Teva)’s loss and another generic drug manufacturer, Pharmascience, would have
entered the hypothetical market and competed with Ratiopharm (Teva). Also it
says that the Federal Court failed to attribute Novopharm’s rebates to
Ratiopharm (Teva).
(5)
Pre-judgment
interest.
Pfizer submits that the Federal Court calculated pre-judgment interest
improperly.
(6)
The
disposition of this appeal: what should happen now? Pfizer primarily submits that if the
Federal Court wrongly admitted and relied upon hearsay evidence, the remaining
admissible evidence is insufficient to support a finding that Ratiopharm (Teva)
could have supplied the market with venlafaxine. Thus, Ratiopharm (Teva)
suffered no loss and so this Court, making the judgment the Federal Court
should have made, should now allow the appeal and dismiss Teva’s action. Teva primarily
submits that Pfizer is just asking for a reweighing of the factually-suffused
findings of the Federal Court and so its appeal should be dismissed.
D.
Analysis
(1)
Some basic issues concerning section 8 damages
claims
(a)
General principles
[44]
A plaintiff
suing for damages under section 8 of the PMNOC Regulations must show
that it did in fact suffer a loss caused by the failed proceedings under the PMNOC
Regulations. Section 8 provides that compensation is available for “any loss suffered” during the relevant
period—usually starting from the date
on which a notice of compliance would have been issued in the absence of the
Regulations as certified by the Minister of Health and ending on the date of
the termination of the prohibition application.
[45]
If a
plaintiff cannot prove a loss caused by the failed proceedings under the PMNOC
Regulations during that period, it cannot recover section 8 damages.
Typically most of the plaintiff’s loss will be its inability to sell its
version of a drug during that period, in other words, the financial impact of lost
sales. To assess that, the court must examine what would have happened had the
defendant’s triggering conduct for section 8 damages not taken place.
[46]
In effect,
the court is examining a hypothetical world. What would have happened in that
hypothetical world must be proven by admissible evidence and any permissible
inferences from that evidence.
(b)
Determining lost sales in the hypothetical world
[47]
This Court
offered much guidance on how to go about assessing the hypothetical world in Apotex Inc. v. Merck & Co., Inc.,
2015 FCA 171, 387 D.L.R. (4th) 552 (Lovastatin). I acknowledge that Lovastatin
concerned a claim for compensatory damages for patent infringement, not a claim
for damages under section 8 of the PMNOC Regulations. But in both types
of claims the court’s task is the same: to assess a hypothetical world where
the defendant’s impugned conduct did not take place. And in both the overriding
principle is the same: a plaintiff is to be compensated, no more, no less: AstraZeneca
Canada Inc. v. Apotex Inc., 2013 FCA 77, 444 N.R. 254 at para. 7.
[48]
In Lovastatin, the plaintiff claimed that
the defendant, by making and selling infringing product, caused it to lose
sales it could have made. The defendant submitted, among other things, that in
the hypothetical world it would have been able to make the product in a non-infringing
way. The sales would still have happened, cutting into the defendant’s sales
just as actually happened.
[49]
This Court held that to make out that argument,
the defendant would have had to show, on the evidence, that in the hypothetical
world it would have and could have had access to sufficient quantities of
non-infringing product and would have and could have used it: Lovastatin,
at paras. 32, 53, 55, 70, 77 and 78.
[50]
Both “would have”
and “could have” are key. Compensatory damages
are to place plaintiffs in the position they would have been in had a wrong not
been committed. Proof of that first requires demonstration that nothing made it
impossible for them to be in that position—i.e., they could have
been in that position. And proof that plaintiffs would have been in a
particular position also requires demonstration that events would transpire in
such a way as to put them in that position—i.e., they would have
been in that position.
[51]
Both elements have to be present. “Could have” does not prove “would
have”; “would have” does not prove “could have”:
•
Evidence that a party would have done something
does not prove that it could have done something. I might swear up and down
that I would have run in a marathon in Toronto on April 1 aiming to complete it,
but that says nothing about whether I could have completed it. Maybe I am not
fit enough to complete it.
•
Evidence that a party could have done something
does not prove that it would have done something. A trainer might testify that
I was fit enough to complete a marathon race in Toronto on April 1, but that
says nothing about whether I would have completed it. Perhaps on April 1 I
would have skipped the marathon and gone to a baseball game instead.
[52]
There must be evidence that the parties “would have” and “could have”
ordered and supplied material at the relevant time. Evidence that a
manufacturing plant had capacity at some time other than the relevant time for
the assessment of loss under section 8 does not necessarily mean that the plant
could have and would have had capacity in the hypothetical world at the
relevant time. In the words of Lovastatin, without more it is an error
to “[jump] from a statement as to manufacturing
capacity to conclusions as to what [a generic] could and would do in the ‘but
for’ [hypothetical] world” (at para. 77).
(c)
The burden of proof concerning the hypothetical
world
[53]
In the case at bar, Teva submits that it did not
bear the burden of proof concerning what would and could have happened in the
hypothetical world had its venlafaxine product not been kept off the market. It
submits that Pfizer bore this burden of proof. It says that if evidence of what
Alembic would have and could have done in the hypothetical world were needed
from Alembic, Pfizer had to call that evidence.
[54]
I disagree. Here too, Lovastatin, above,
is instructive. In that case, this Court held that the plaintiffs bear the
burden of proving the hypothetical world on the balance of probabilities as
part of their damages claim (at para. 45).
[55]
This is no surprise: in suits for breach of
contract or for damages caused by a wrong, such as tort cases, the plaintiff usually
bears the burden to prove what would have transpired had the breach or wrong
not been committed, i.e., the persuasive burden to show what would have transpired
in the hypothetical world: Red Deer College v. Michaels, [1976] 2 S.C.R.
324 at p. 330, 57 D.L.R. (3d) 386; Janiak v. Ippolito, [1985] 1 S.C.R.
146, 16 D.L.R. (4th) 1 at para. 32. The task of constructing the hypothetical
world for the purposes of assessing compensatory damages is a factual inquiry
using “robust common sense”: Clements v.
Clements, 2012 SCC 32, [2012] 2 S.C.R. 181, at paras. 8 and 9.
[56]
The analytical exercise of constructing a
hypothetical world exists elsewhere in our law and the burden of proof remains
upon the plaintiff/complainant. For example, in some competition cases, the decision-maker
must examine the state of competition in a hypothetical world. There, the party
alleging anti-competitive conduct bears the burden of proving on the basis of
admissible evidence what would have transpired in the hypothetical world on the
balance of probabilities. Mere possibilities short of probabilities do not
suffice. See generally Tervita Corp. v. Canada (Commissioner of Competition),
2015 SCC 3, [2015] 1 S.C.R. 161 at paras. 49-51 and 66, citing F.H. v.
McDougall, 2008 SCC 53, [2008] 3 S.C.R. 41 at paras. 40 and 49.
[57]
There is nothing in section 8 of the PMNOC
Regulations that would suggest a different conclusion on the burden of
proof.
[58]
Teva also offers the Supreme Court’s decision in
Rainbow Industrial Caterers Ltd. v. Canadian National Railway Co.,
[1991] 3 S.C.R. 3, 84 D.L.R. (4th) 291 in support of its submission on the
burden of proof. Rainbow Industrial Caterers does not assist Teva.
[59]
The plaintiff, Rainbow, was a caterer bidding on
a catering contract for CN. The defendant, CN, advised Rainbow of the number of
meals it would have to prepare. Rainbow set its bid based on that estimate. CN
awarded Rainbow the contract. But CN’s estimate was way too high and Rainbow
lost money on the contract.
[60]
Rainbow sued for damages caused by the estimate.
Rainbow bore the burden of proving on the balance of probabilities what would
have and could have happened in the hypothetical world where CN gave a proper
estimate. See Rainbow Industrial Caterers at p. 14, citing D.W.
McLauchlan, “Assessment of Damages for
Misrepresentations Inducing Contracts” (1987), 6 Otago L.R. 370 at p.
388. In discharge of that burden, among other things, Rainbow presented
evidence concerning what bid it would have made had the estimate not been faulty.
[61]
In response, CN could have worked within the
hypothetical world proposed by Rainbow and defended on the basis that Rainbow
did not prove that certain events in that hypothetical world could have and
would have happened. For example, CN could have argued that Rainbow did not
adduce sufficient evidence of what would have transpired in the hypothetical
world to meet the balance of probabilities standard or to prove its quantum of
damages.
[62]
But CN did not do that. Rather, CN offered a different
hypothetical world, one where Rainbow still would have made a low bid to win
the contract and still would have lost money. In effect, CN’s submission was that
the real cause of Rainbow’s loss was not its faulty estimate but Rainbow’s strong
desire to get the contract, even if it meant proposing terms favourable to CN.
[63]
The Supreme Court held that Rainbow had proven
what would have happened in the hypothetical world and its quantum of loss in
that world. That discharged its burden. CN, by suggesting a different
hypothetical world—in effect a different view of who caused the loss—set up, in
the words of the Supreme Court, a “new issue” or
what others might perhaps call a positive defence. In the Supreme Court’s view,
a defendant that sets up a new issue bears the burden of proving it. The
plaintiff, having proved its version of the hypothetical world, does not have
to disprove other speculative hypotheses. The key passage in the Supreme
Court’s decision in Rainbow Industrial Caterers is at p. 15:
Once the loss
occasioned by the transaction is established, the plaintiff has discharged the
burden of proof with respect to damages. A defendant who alleges that a
plaintiff would have entered into a transaction on different terms sets up a
new issue. It is an issue that requires the court to speculate as to what would
have happened in a hypothetical situation. It is an area in which it is usually
impossible to adduce concrete evidence. In the absence of evidence to support a
finding on this issue, should the plaintiff or defendant bear the risk of
non-persuasion? Must the plaintiff negative all speculative hypotheses about
his position if the defendant had not committed a tort or must the tortfeasor
who sets up this hypothetical situation establish it?
…
… In my opinion, [the answer to these
questions is no]. [T]here is good reason for such reversal [of burden] in this
kind of case. The plaintiff is the innocent victim of a misrepresentation which
has induced a change of position. It is just that the plaintiff should be
entitled to say “but for the tortious conduct of the defendant, I would not
have changed my position”. A tortfeasor who says “Yes, but you would have
assumed a position other than the status quo ante”, and thereby asks a
court to find a transaction whose terms are hypothetical and speculative,
should bear the burden of displacing the plaintiff’s assertion of the status
quo ante.
[64]
In the case at bar, Teva’s position was that in
the hypothetical world, Ratiopharm (Teva) could have and would have obtained
venlafaxine in sufficient quantities from Alembic. As Rainbow Industrial
Caterers tells us, Teva bore the burden of proving that as part of its
general burden to prove its loss.
[65]
Suppose Pfizer took the position that Ratiopharm
(Teva) would not have tried to obtain venlafaxine from Alembic but instead
would have given up and pursued another business objective, such as getting
another generic drug to market. Rainbow Industrial Caterers instructs us
that Pfizer, setting up a different hypothetical, would have borne the burden
of proof on that point. Put a different way, Teva would not have borne the
burden of proving that it would not have pursued a different business
objective.
[66]
But Pfizer did not do that. Rather, it contested
the very hypothetical that Teva relied upon in support of its damages
claim—that Ratiopharm (Teva) would have and could have obtained venlafaxine in
sufficient quantities from Alembic—and it submitted that Teva failed to prove that
on the balance of probabilities. It is as if, in Rainbow Industrial Caterers,
CN took the position that Rainbow had failed to adduce enough evidence to prove
its version of what could have and would have happened in the hypothetical
world. Under the reasoning in Rainbow Industrial Caterers, the burden of
proof would have remained on the plaintiff, Rainbow.
(d)
Did the Federal Court err on these matters of
principle?
[67]
Pfizer
submits that the Federal Court was not mindful of the foregoing principles. It
suggests that the Federal Court only had regard to Alembic’s willingness and
potential capacity—not actual capacity—to manufacture Ratiopharm (Teva)’s
venlafaxine product at the relevant time. I disagree.
[68]
Faced with
an allegation that a first-instance court did not apply proper principles, an
appellate court must assess what the first-instance court did by reviewing in a
holistic, organic and fair way the reasons offered by the court against the
record it was considering. Often first-instance courts do not describe the principles
that bear upon a case in a perfectly precise or encyclopedic way. Yet, in many such
cases, a holistic, organic and fair review of their reasons against the record
shows they brought to bear all correct principles.
[69]
It must be
remembered that judges’ reasons—particularly after long complex trials
involving many issues—are often the product of synthesis and distillation. When it comes time to draft reasons in
a complex case, trial judges “are
not trying to draft an encyclopedia memorializing every last [relevant] morsel.” Rather, they are trying to “distill and synthesize masses of
information, separating the wheat from the chaff,” in the end “expressing only the most important…findings
and justifications for them”: Canada v. South Yukon Forest Corporation, 2012 FCA 165, 431 N.R. 286 at para. 50.
[70]
It is true
that the Federal Court did not offer a great deal on the proper principles to
be applied concerning the availability of s. 8 damages. However, it was mindful
of these principles.
[71]
It
proceeded on the basis that the hypothetical world that Teva had to prove was
one where Wyeth (Pfizer) did not improperly list its ’778 Patent and Ratiopharm
(Teva) received its notice of compliance on December 7, 2005. In part for
reasons set out later, the Federal Court committed neither legal error nor
palpable and overriding error in proceeding on that basis.
[72]
With that
hypothetical world in mind, the Federal Court held that Teva had to “show on the balance of probabilities that
[Ratiopharm (Teva)] was able to supply the market” (at para. 148). This is the “could have” portion of the analysis. And at a number
of portions in its reasons, it showed it was alive to the issue whether
Ratiopharm (Teva) wanted to supply the market and whether Alembic was willing
to produce venlafaxine. This is the “would have” portion of the analysis.
[73]
Overall,
the Federal Court was very much alive to the need for a firm causal link
between failed proceedings under the PMNOC Regulations and the claimed
loss. At paragraph 57, it identified the damages as “those that the plaintiff generic suffered
‘by reason of the delayed market entry of its drug’ as stated in the Regulatory
Impact Analysis Statement” for the PMNOC Regulations. And at paragraph 61, it
identified “[t]he question for
the Court”
as “whether there is a causal
connection between the failed PMNOC proceedings and the loss claimed as
damages,”
stressing again that the damages claimed must be “causally connected.”
[74]
Even if I
am wrong in my conclusion that the Federal Court was mindful of proper
principles, this is of no consequence. The redetermination I propose will take
place upon the proper principles set out in these reasons.
(2)
The hearsay issue
[75]
Pfizer
submits that even if the Federal Court appreciated that Teva had to prove it
could have supplied its version of venlafaxine in the hypothetical world, it
wrongly admitted hearsay evidence on this point.
[76]
Pfizer
submitted that the Federal Court wrongly adopted hearsay evidence from Mr.
Major. Putting aside the first-hand evidence Mr. Major offered from his two
week visit to Alembic’s manufacturing facility, some of the rest of his evidence
consisted of things told to him by Alembic’s personnel or information from
other Ratiopharm (Teva) employees who got that information from Alembic’s
personnel. The former is hearsay, the latter is double hearsay. Pfizer says
that the Federal Court erred in not excluding this evidence. Teva maintained
that none of this evidence was hearsay and so the Federal Court properly
admitted all of the evidence.
[77]
I agree with
Pfizer. The Federal Court improperly admitted hearsay evidence.
(a)
General evidentiary principles
[78]
In
considering evidentiary issues in complicated, high-stakes cases such as this,
certain high-level principles are best kept front of mind.
[79]
We start with a fundamental general principle:
facts must be proven by admissible evidence: see R. v. Schwartz, [1988]
2 S.C.R. 443 at pp. 476-77, 55 D.L.R. (4th) 1; Canadian Copyright Licensing
Agency (Access Copyright) v. Alberta, 2015 FCA 268, 392 D.L.R. (4th) 563 at
para. 20; Canada v. Kabul Farms Inc., 2016 FCA 143 at para. 38. Put
another way, a court can act only on the basis of facts proven by admissible
evidence or evidence whose admissibility has not been contested: Kahkewistahaw
First Nation v. Taypotat, 2015 SCC 30, [2015] 2 S.C.R. 548 at paras. 26-27.
[80]
There are rarely-occurring exceptions to this.
These include circumstances where facts are subject to judicial notice (see, e.g.,
R. v. Spence, 2005 SCC 71, [2005] 3 S.C.R. 458), facts are deemed or presumed
by legislation to exist, facts have been found in previous proceedings in
circumstances where they bind the court (see, e.g., Danyluk v.
Ainsworth Technologies Inc., 2001 SCC 44, [2001] 2 S.C.R. 460), and facts have
been stipulated or agreed to.
[81]
In a civil case, absent one of those exceptions,
admissibility must be the court’s first inquiry where an objection has been
made. If the evidence is not admissible, it is not before the court in any way
and, thus, the court cannot deal with it in any way.
[82]
Appellate courts may interfere with admissibility
decisions vitiated by errors of law: R. v. Fanjoy, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 233
at p. 238, 21 D.L.R. (4th) 321; R. v. Evans, [1993] 3 S.C.R. 653 at p.
664, 108 D.L.R. (4th) 32; Housen v. Nikolaisen, 2002 SCC 33, [2002] 2
S.C.R. 235; and in the case of hearsay evidence, see R. v. Saddleback,
2014 ABCA 166, 575 A.R. 203 at para. 8. Any factual findings that affect the
application of a law of evidence are entitled to deference: R. v. Youvarajah,
2013 SCC 41, [2013] 2 S.C.R. 720 at para. 31.
[83]
Recently, some rules of evidence have been
liberalized, allowing for more flexibility. Seduced by this trend towards
flexibility, some judges in various jurisdictions have been tempted to rule all
relevant evidence as admissible, subject to their later assessment of weight.
But according to our Supreme Court, this is heresy. The trend towards
flexibility has not undermined the need for judges to take a rigorous approach
to admissibility, separating that analytical step from others, such as determining
the weight to be given to evidence: R. v. Khelawon, 2006 SCC 57, [2006]
2 S.C.R. 787 at para. 59.
[84]
Sometimes courts—aiming to prevent trials from
bogging down—provisionally receive evidence whose admissibility is challenged,
reserving their rulings on admissibility until later. In some circumstances,
there may be much to commend that approach; in other circumstances, the trial
may be more orderly and fair if rulings are made immediately so the parties
know where they stand. It is a matter of discretion. But, in the end, before a court
can rely on the evidence and ascribe it any weight or draw any inferences from
it, it first must determine its admissibility.
[85]
Now to the
task of determining admissibility. The starting point is that evidence
logically tending to prove a point is admissible: The Queen v. Wray,
[1971] S.C.R. 272 at p. 297, 11 D.L.R. (3d) 673. If evidence does not logically tend to prove
a point, it is irrelevant and inadmissible at the outset.
[86]
But there
are exceptions to that general principle, stated in the form of exclusionary
rules. One such rule is that hearsay evidence shall not be admitted.
[87]
In courts—civil, criminal or military—the hearsay
rule remains in full force. Indeed, recently the Supreme Court has emphasized
that hearsay evidence is presumptively inadmissible in court proceedings: Khelawon,
above at paras. 3, 34, 42 and 59; Youvarajah, above at para. 18.
[88]
It is true that some administrative
decision-makers can ignore the hearsay rule: see, e.g., the Supreme
Court’s discussion in Quebec (Commission des droits de la personne et des
droits de la jeunesse) v. Bombardier Inc. (Bombardier Aerospace Training
Center), 2015 SCC 39, [2015] 2 S.C.R. 789 at para. 68. But that is only
because legislative provisions have explicitly or implicitly given them the
power to do that. Absent a specific legislative provision speaking to the
matter, all courts must apply the rules of evidence, including the hearsay
rule.
[89]
The status
of a particular piece of evidence as hearsay depends on its use. Hearsay is
an oral or written statement that was made by someone other than the person
testifying at the proceeding, out of court, that the witness repeats or
produces in court in an effort to prove that what was said or written is true:
see, e.g., Khelawon, above at paras. 35-36; R. v. Smith, [1992] 2 S.C.R. 915 at pp. 924-925, 94 D.L.R. (4th)
590; R. v. Starr, 2000
SCC 40, [2000] 2 S.C.R. 144 at para.
162.
[90]
This is to
be distinguished from a non-hearsay use, where a witness repeats or produces a
statement to prove merely that it was made. The classic expression of this
distinction is as follows:
Evidence of a
statement made to a witness by a person who is not himself called as a witness
may or may not be hearsay. It is hearsay and inadmissible when the object of
the evidence is to establish the truth of what is contained in the statement.
It is not hearsay and is admissible when it is proposed to establish by the
evidence not the truth of the statement but the fact that it was made.
(Subramanian v. Public Prosecutor, [1956]
1 W.L.R. 965 at p. 969 (P.C.).)
[91]
So if a
witness says that a supplier told her that it would be able to deliver supplies
on date X, and if the witness’ evidence is offered to prove that the supplier
would be able to deliver supplies at that time, the evidence is hearsay and
falls within the rule against admission of hearsay evidence.
[92]
In some
cases, the fact that the supplier told the witness it would supply by date X, regardless
of whether or not the supplier’s statement is true, might be relevant to an
issue in the proceeding and be admissible for that purpose. For example,
suppose that the witness, in reliance on what the supplier told her, set aside
time to work with the promised supplies. The witness may use the supplier’s
statement to explain why she set aside the time she did. In that case, the
statement is not being used to prove that the supplier would supply by date X—a
hearsay purpose—but is being used for a non-hearsay purpose—it was the
triggering event that caused the witness to do something.
[93]
The same is
true for documents, with an additional wrinkle, the requirement of
authentication. Suppose a witness produces a printout of an email from the
supplier to her stating that the supplier would supply. Absent the parties’
agreement or a specific legislative provision speaking to the matter, the document
must by authenticated by the witness or someone else: Schwartz, above at
p. 476; Evans, above at
pp. 664-65; R. v. Schertzer, 2011 ONSC 579 at para. 7; David M. Paciocco
and Lee Stuesser, The Law of Evidence, 4th ed. (Toronto: Irwin Law,
2005) at p. 419; and in the case of electronic documents, see Graham Underwood
and Jonathan Penner, Electronic Evidence in
Canada, loose-leaf (Toronto: Carswell, July 2015) at 13-18.2 to
13-18.4 and the Canada Evidence Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-5, s. 31.1. For example, to authenticate the
document, the witness could testify that she received the email and the
printout is an exact copy of what she received. But after the document is
authenticated, the communication is still hearsay if it is tendered to show
that the supplier would supply.
[94]
There can
be multiple layers of hearsay. If a witness has a printout of an email on which
she was not copied sent by the supplier to one of her colleagues assuring that
colleague that supplies would be delivered by date X, the document is double
hearsay if tendered to prove that the supplier would supply by date X. Someone
other than the witness is reporting to the witness that the supplier told him
that it would deliver by date X.
[95]
When faced with hearsay objections, courts must
not only appreciate the terms of the hearsay rule but should keep in mind the
rationales underlying it: the need for trials to be effective in discovering
the truth while ensuring procedural fairness to all parties.
[96]
On this, the right of parties in a civil action
to confront evidence presented against their positions is paramount. Their main
instrument is cross-examination—what Wigmore has called “beyond any doubt the greatest legal engine ever invented for
the discovery of truth” and what the Supreme Court has called “a vital element of the adversarial system applied and
followed in our legal system…since the earliest times,” of “essential importance in determining whether a witness is
credible”: Wigmore on Evidence (Chadbourne rev. 1974) vol. 5, p.
32, para. 1367; Innisfil Township v. Vespra Township, [1981] 2 S.C.R.
145 at p. 167, 123 D.L.R. (3d) 530; R. v. Osolin,
[1993] 4 S.C.R. 595 at p. 663, 109 D.L.R. (4th) 478. For this reason,
counsel are given the greatest latitude in cross-examination and restrictions
are rare: see, e.g., C.H.D v. C.R.H., 2007 NSCA 1, 250 N.S.R.
(2d) 138 at para. 41.
[97]
To be effective, cross-examination must be able
to test many aspects of witnesses’ testimony—their observation, perception,
memory and narration of events or facts, their accuracy in recounting or
perceiving them, and their sincerity and honesty as witnesses.
[98]
All of these vital objectives are lost when
witnesses testify second-hand about an event. When that happens, only their
sincerity and honesty about what they were told can be tested. The person who
actually knows first-hand about the event or fact is out of court, shielded
from any testing of their observation, memory, accuracy, sincerity or honesty.
[99]
The Supreme Court recently expressed this idea
as follows:
Our adversary
system puts a premium on the calling of witnesses, who testify under oath or
solemn affirmation, whose demeanour can be observed by the trier of fact, and
whose testimony can be tested by cross-examination. We regard this process as
the optimal way of testing testimonial evidence. Because hearsay evidence comes
in a different form, it raises particular concerns. The general exclusionary
rule is a recognition of the difficulty for a trier of fact to assess what
weight, if any, is to be given to a statement made by a person who has not been
seen or heard, and who has not been subject to the test of cross-examination.
The fear is that untested hearsay evidence may be afforded more weight than it
deserves.
(Khelawon,
above, at para. 35.)
[100]
Even more recently, the Supreme Court confirmed
that those who try to test hearsay evidence face “difficulties
inherent in testing the reliability of the declarant’s assertion”: R.
v. Baldree, 2013 SCC 35, [2013] 2 S.C.R. 520 at para. 31. An out of court
declarant may have supplied inaccurate information but, unless in court as a
witness, that possibility can never be tested:
First, the
declarant may have misperceived the facts to which the hearsay statement
relates; second, even if correctly perceived, the relevant facts may have been wrongly
remembered; third, the declarant may have narrated the relevant facts in an
unintentionally misleading manner; and finally, the declarant may
have knowingly made a false assertion. The opportunity to fully probe
these potential sources of error arises only if the declarant is present in
court and subject to cross-examination.
(Baldree, above at para. 32.
[emphasis in original])
[101]
The exclusionary rule against the admission of
hearsay, however, does not stand alone.
[102]
Over time, the law has recognized that, in
certain circumstances, it is safe for courts to rely on out-of-court statements
for the truth of their contents even though a party is unable to test the
evidence by way of cross-examination. So certain exceptions to the hearsay rule
have developed. For example, a witness could report another person’s statement
made against interest because of the unlikelihood of that person falsely saying
something against interest.
[103]
Aside from those exceptions, the Supreme Court
has recently developed a more general, principled exception to the exclusionary
hearsay rule. Under that broader exception, courts can admit hearsay evidence
if it is necessary and reliable. See, e.g., R. v. Khan, [1990] 2
S.C.R. 531, 59 C.C.C. (3d) 92;
Smith, above; R. v. B. (K.G.), [1993] 1 S.C.R. 740, 79
C.C.C. (3d) 257; R. v. U. (F.J.), [1995] 3 S.C.R. 764, 128 D.L.R. (4th)
121; R. v. Blackman, 2008 SCC 37, [2008] 2 S.C.R. 298.
(b)
Applying the evidentiary principles to this case
[104]
No current
or former Alembic employees testified at trial. Teva did not adduce any direct
evidence from Alembic. Instead, Teva relied upon the testimony of Mr. Major.
[105]
At all
material times, Mr. Major was the vice-president for development management and
regulatory affairs and a member of the executive management committee with
Ratiopharm (Teva). A fair reading of the Federal Court’s reasons is that the
Federal Court was satisfied that Mr. Major, acting in that capacity, would have
had first-hand knowledge of the corporate wishes and objectives of Ratiopharm
(Teva), the steps it took to achieve those objectives, commercial arrangements
Ratiopharm (Teva) had made, and the state of the market (i.e., evidence
of the sort described in the transcript at pages 475-478 of the Appeal Book). As
part of this, a venlafaxine supply agreement between Ratiopharm (Teva) and
Alembic and another related agreement were placed before the Court: see Appeal
Book at pp. 462-463. No objection was taken to this.
[106]
The Federal
Court took some of Mr. Major’s testimony as showing that Ratiopharm (Teva) had the
corporate objective of securing adequate supply of venlafaxine from Alembic, manifested
that objective by making inquiries and sending documents to Alembic regarding
the supply of venlafaxine should the need arise, and assured Alembic that it
would redirect equipment to Alembic should the need arise at a particular time.
The Federal Court considered that sort of evidence admissible on the issue of
Ratiopharm (Teva)’s general intentions in the hypothetical world and evidence
of the general steps it took to prepare itself for entry into the market. In
this respect, the Federal Court did not err. In the words of the Federal Court
during the hearing, “He does
have the expertise having been employed there for a number of years to say,
this is what we [Ratiopharm (Teva)] would have done [in the hypothetical world]
or this is what I believe we would have done”: see Appeal Book, p. 487.
[107]
Similarly,
by virtue of his position, Mr. Major had first-hand knowledge of the general
relationship between Ratiopharm (Teva) and Alembic. He testified that the
relationship was a warm, long-trusted one: see Appeal Book, p. 479.
[108]
The Federal
Court also properly admitted another category of evidence from Mr. Major. In
2004, over a year before the relevant supply times in the hypothetical world,
Mr. Major visited Alembic’s manufacturing facility in Gujarat, India for two
weeks. From this visit, he developed the view that Alembic was eager to please
Ratiopharm (Teva) and was keen to do what it could to satisfy Ratiopharm
(Teva)’s need for venlafaxine as it arose. Based on his visit, Mr. Major
testified at trial about the capacity of Alembic’s manufacturing facility and
Alembic’s desire to supply venlafaxine to Canada. It was open to the Federal
Court judge on this record to admit the evidence of what Mr. Major saw and the
conclusions he drew from his observations; however, any reports made to Mr.
Major by Alembic personnel during his visit could not be used as evidence of
the truth of those reports, as that would be a hearsay use.
[109]
In his
testimony, Mr. Major could not supply evidence based on direct, first-hand knowledge
or observation of at least the following: the operating capacity of Alembic’s
facility during the relevant time, Alembic’s actual ability and willingness to
redirect or add equipment at the relevant time, and how long production at
Alembic would have taken at the relevant time. Yet there is admissible evidence
or evidence that was not objected to in the record that might conceivably bear
on these matters, such as the venlafaxine supply agreement, Alembic’s production
of venlafaxine at other times, and Mr. Major’s impressions, observations and
conclusions he drew from his visit to Alembic’s manufacturing facility. The
inferences that could permissibly be drawn from the admissible evidence, in
conjunction with other admissible evidence about Alembic’s ability to supply
venlafaxine at the relevant time, is a question I shall return to later in
these reasons.
[110]
During the course of his testimony, Mr. Major
was presented with emails and documents, such as a spreadsheet setting out
Teva’s marketing forecast and associated documents, and was asked to comment on
them: see Appeal Book, pp. 466-467. Many
spoke to Alembic’s capacity to produce in the abstract. He neither authored nor
received many of the emails and documents. In fact, out of all of the emails,
he authored only one—a meeting request—that the Federal Court did not cite in
its reasons. The other emails contained particular statements made by various
employees of Alembic and Ratiopharm (Teva) and the documents were prepared by
others or by persons unknown. Mr. Major was not in a position to
authenticate emails or documents that he neither received nor sent.
[111]
At the outset, counsel for Pfizer raised an
objection stating that “[w]e haven’t admitted these
documents” and added, in the case of the first document, that “I haven’t heard my friend properly identify it through this
witness, other than through hearsay.” He warned that he would be “standing up for a few of these documents.” See Appeal
Book, p. 465. I construe the objection as a warning that if Teva sought to have
the documents admitted as evidence, it would have to authenticate them.
[112]
Teva submits that Mr. Major could use the emails
and documents to refresh his memory. I accept that if Mr. Major had some
first-hand memory of matters responsive to questions posed to him, he could use
unauthenticated emails and documents to refresh his memory, even if those
emails and documents were themselves inadmissible: R. v. Fliss, 2002 SCC
16, [2002] 1 S.C.R. 535 at paras. 60-68. For example, the spreadsheet setting
out Teva’s marketing forecast, prepared by persons other than Mr. Major and an
unauthenticated document, is not admissible through Mr. Major. But Mr. Major’s
knowledge of Ratiopharm (Teva)’s marketing expectations, if first-hand, is
something to which Mr. Major can testify given his role (see paras. 105-108,
above) and he was free to refresh his memory using this spreadsheet. But on the
issue of Alembic’s production capacity, his first-hand knowledge was limited to
what he saw on his visit to Alembic’s manufacturing facility in 2004.
[113]
At one point, Mr. Major was asked whether Mr.
Woloschuk, Ratiopharm (Teva)’s Vice-President for Business Development,
reported to him about Alembic’s capacity to supply venlafaxine: see Appeal
Book, p. 495. Pfizer objected to the question on the basis Teva was seeking to
elicit hearsay evidence. If the evidence were offered as truth of Alembic’s
actual capacity to supply, it was. Pfizer registered similarly meritorious
hearsay objections to Tabs 12-15 and 21 in the book of documents put before Mr.
Major, some of which the Federal Court relied upon: Appeal Book, p. 496.
[114]
Teva
submits that it was not using some of the emails for the truth of their
contents. It said that at best they were just corroboration of Mr. Major’s
testimony as to his personal knowledge of the production capacity of Alembic.
But hearsay they were: whether being used as primary evidence or corroborative
evidence, these emails recounting the statements of others—sometimes recounting
the recounting of statements of others—were tendered for the purpose of proving
what Alembic would and could have done in the hypothetical world, not just to
prove the fact that they were made. And corroborative evidence must itself be
evidence that is admissible: Khelawon, above at para. 100. There is no “corroborative evidence” exception to hearsay.
[115]
Teva also
suggests that statements in emails written to and from personnel in Mr. Major’s
department or area could be admitted as truth of their contents through Mr.
Major. As discussed above, Mr. Major, by virtue of his position, could be
found—as the Federal Court found— to have first-hand knowledge of the corporate
wishes and objectives of Ratiopharm (Teva), how it went about achieving those
objectives, and Ratiopharm (Teva)’s willingness to redirect equipment to
Alembic. But he does not have first-hand knowledge of the truth of particular
statements made by employees in emails they write to each other. Tendering particular
statements in emails between employees in Ratiopharm (Teva) through a separate
witness, such as Mr. Major, to prove the truth of the statements is a hearsay
use. There is no “department
head”
exception to hearsay whereby specific statements in emails passing between
underlings in the department can be admitted through the department head for
the truth of their contents.
[116]
In this
case, the Federal Court explicitly relied upon some of these inadmissible
emails to support its conclusions about what would have transpired in the
hypothetical world: an email from Kavit Tyagi of
Alembic, to Jim Mihail, a product manager with Ratiopharm (Teva)’s marketing
group (at para. 154), an email exchange between Alembic and Bob Woloschuk,
Ratiopharm (Teva)’s Vice-President for Business Development that reported that
Alembic was only operating at 40 per cent capacity and that it was planning to
expand its manufacturing plant to “double its capacity
to handle at least 2 billion capsules” (at para. 156), and an email
exchange between Ratiopharm (Teva) representatives and Alembic that said that
had Ratiopharm (Teva) not called off production in October 2005, Alembic would
have produced 6.6 million capsules by December 2005 (at para. 157). In each case, the emails are unauthenticated
and are statements of others, not Mr. Major, reporting on statements made by
others at Alembic. They are at least double hearsay on the issue of what
Alembic could have or would have done. And depending on whether the people at
Alembic had first-hand knowledge of the matters they were describing, they might
be triple hearsay or even more.
[117]
Teva also invokes the state of mind exception to
hearsay in support of the admissibility of emails where Alembic employees expressed
a willingness or optimism about the supply of venlafaxine in the required
quantities when required. It is true that an out-of-court declarant’s statement
tendered to show the declarant’s state of mind or intention is admissible: Brisco
Estate v. Canadian Premier Life Insurance Company, 2012 ONCA 854, 113 OR
(3d) 161, citing Smith and Starr, both above. However, the emails
Mr. Major referred to in his testimony—communications from colleagues about
what Alembic employees said—are double hearsay: even if the state of mind exception
applies, the emails remain a hearsay report by an out-of-court declarant and
the emails remain unauthenticated. A further problem is that the state of mind
of an Alembic employee is not necessarily the state of mind of Alembic, the
corporate entity: Canadian Dredge & Dock Co. v. The Queen, [1985] 1
S.C.R. 662, 19 D.L.R. (4th) 314; Rhône (The) v. Peter A.B. Widener
(The), [1993] 1 S.C.R. 497, 101 D.L.R. (4th) 188. So proof of the
employee’s state of mind may be irrelevant to the issue of Alembic’s state of mind and inadmissible on that basis. Finally,
as Brisco Estate shows, the evidence goes no higher than what the
employee believed or wished at that time: an inference must be drawn to extend
that belief into a different time and that may not be possible. On this, again,
the issue of when inferences are permissible from evidence is discussed below.
[118]
In both
this Court and the Federal Court, Teva did not provide evidence or submissions
to the effect that the hearsay evidence nevertheless was admissible because it
was reliable or necessary. Nor could it:
•
Necessity. Many of the emails Mr. Major
testified about disclose the names of many Alembic employees who might have
been able to give direct testimony on Alembic’s ability to supply during the
relevant time. Those emails also disclose the names of personnel at Ratiopharm
(Teva) who also could have been called. Teva offered no evidence or submissions
as to why these individuals or others could not be called to testify. Instead,
Teva called Mr. Major, who had no direct, first-hand knowledge of Alembic or
its operations at the relevant time.
•
Reliability. The hearsay evidence tendered
by Mr. Major did not possess circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness. Quite
the contrary. Ratiopharm (Teva) was Alembic’s client and one may presume that
Alembic had an incentive to say whatever needed to be said to keep its customer
pleased and give it the impression that it could satisfy its customer’s needs
at any time it asked.
[119]
All of the
mischief associated with admitting hearsay evidence is present in this case.
Confronted with the hearsay evidence, all that Pfizer could do was test Mr.
Major’s sincerity and honesty about what he was reading
from documents he did not author, what he had heard from Alembic personnel, and
what colleagues were saying Alembic personnel were saying. In a high-stakes
case such as this, that was hardly any sort of meaningful or fair test.
[120]
Those who actually knew first-hand about whether
Alembic could supply the desired quantities of venlafaxine at the relevant
times in the hypothetical world—personnel at Alembic—were out of court,
shielded from any testing of their observation, memory, accuracy, sincerity or
honesty, but their say-so on that issue—recounted or recorded by others—was
admitted into these proceedings. This worked great unfairness to Pfizer.
[121]
Pfizer frequently
objected to the admissibility of hearsay evidence. It was largely right to do
so: in my view, every hearsay objection it made during Mr. Major’s testimony
was correct, except on the subject-matters discussed at paras. 105-108 and 112,
above. But on a number of occasions, the Federal Court said that it would
consider the weight of the evidence or it said that Pfizer’s objection was one
of weight, not admissibility. On one occasion, it said that because Mr. Major’s
name did not appear on a document, the document would “probably just go to weight.” The Federal Court admitted
this evidence when it should have been excluded. This was an error that might
have affected the outcome of the case. Therefore, the Federal Court’s judgment
must be set aside.
(3)
The issue whether there was palpable and
overriding error on a factual finding
[122]
Pfizer
attacks one of the bases upon which the Federal Court found that Ratiopharm
(Teva) could have supplied its product in the hypothetical world.
[123]
At one
point in its reasons, the Federal Court considered (at para. 152) whether any “bottleneck” in Alembic’s manufacture of Ratiopharm
(Teva)’s venlafaxine product in the hypothetical world would have come at the
stage of encapsulation. In finding that no bottleneck would have taken place at
that stage, the Federal Court relied in part on the fact that Alembic had many
fluid bed processors. But, as Pfizer notes, fluid bed processors are not used
for encapsulation. Teva does not disagree.
[124]
However,
Teva suggests that any error by the Federal Court here was inconsequential, not
overriding, and so it does not vitiate the Federal Court’s judgment. Based on
this Court’s decision in South Yukon, above at paragraph 46, I agree:
“Overriding” means
an error that goes to the very core of the outcome of the case. When arguing
palpable and overriding error, it is not enough to pull at leaves and branches
and leave the tree standing. The entire tree must fall.
[125]
In the
course of its reasons on this point (at para. 152), the Federal Court also
accepted and relied upon Mr. Major’s non-hearsay testimony that if necessary,
his then-employer, Ratiopharm (Teva), would have “bought equipment, put equipment in place” to avoid any bottleneck. Thus, to the extent the Federal Court
misunderstood the use of fluid bed processors, I am not persuaded that its
overall finding was vitiated by
palpable and overriding error.
(4)
Other section 8 damages issues
[126]
Pfizer
submits that the Federal Court erred in selecting January 10, 2006 as the start
of the period of loss, or, in other words, the time when Ratiopharm (Teva)
would have been legally able to start selling its venlafaxine product in the
market.
[127]
It submits
that in the hypothetical world, Ratiopharm (Teva) would not have received a
notice of compliance allowing it to sell its venlafaxine product before
February 13, 2006. It says that when the ’778 Patent was listed on the patent
register, Ratiopharm (Teva) would have had to serve a notice of allegation
addressing it and the Minister would then be prohibited from issuing a notice
of compliance until 45 days had passed: see PMNOC Regulations, para.
7(1)(d).
[128]
The Federal
Court selected January 10, 2006, the expiry of the ’540 Patent as the start
date. This was the soonest Ratiopharm (Teva) could have marketed its
venlafaxine product given that the Minister had certified that, but for the PMNOC
Regulations, it would have given Ratiopharm (Teva) its notice of compliance
on December 7, 2005.
[129]
In my view,
the Federal Court committed no error in principle in setting January 10, 2006
as the start date.
[130]
In essence,
Pfizer’s submission is that in the hypothetical world the PMNOC Regulations
should not be disregarded for the purpose of determining the start of
Ratiopharm (Teva)’s period of loss.
[131]
This submission
runs counter to the express wording of paragraph 8(1)(a) of the PMNOC
Regulations. That paragraph provides that the section 8 liability period
begins “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 concludes
[under subparagraph 8(1)(a)(ii)] that … a date other than the certified
date is more appropriate” [my emphasis]. Thus, it is only in circumstances where, under subparagraph
8(1)(a)(ii), the Court deems that another date is more appropriate that
this default date can be set aside.
[132]
Pfizer’s
submission is also precisely the opposite of what a majority of this Court held
in Apotex Inc. v. Sanofi-Aventis, 2014 FCA 68, 125 C.P.R. (4th) 403 at paragraph 170 (Apotex
Ramipril s. 8 FCA): “the [PMNOC Regulations]
are to be disregarded in determining the beginning of the section 8 liability
period.” On appeal, the Supreme Court of Canada affirmed those reasons: Sanofi-Aventis
v. Apotex Inc., 2015 SCC 20, [2015] 2 S.C.R. 136.
[133]
Pfizer’s
submission is also contrary to the holding of a majority of this Court in Teva Canada Limited v. Sanofi-Aventis Canada Inc., 2014 FCA 67, 126 C.P.R. (4th) 1 at paragraph 145 (Teva Ramipril
s. 8 FCA):
[145] My view, in
summary, is that in the hypothetical world constructed for the purposes of
determining section 8 damages, the NOC Regulations should not be
assumed away except to the extent required by paragraph 8(1)(a), that
is, for the purpose of determining the beginning of the section 8 liability
period. For all other purposes, the NOC Regulations should be
assumed to exist in the hypothetical world, and all steps that were actually
taken under the NOC Regulations should be assumed to have been taken in
the hypothetical world unless there is evidence upon which the trier of fact
may reasonably conclude that different steps would have been taken. [my
emphasis]
[134]
Pfizer also
takes issue with the Federal Court’s conclusions concerning
the entry and participation of Ratiopharm (Teva)’s generic competitors in the
venlafaxine market in the hypothetical world.
[135] In the Federal Court, Pfizer submitted that Teva’s damages claim
would be reduced because in the hypothetical world Novopharm and Pharmascience
would have entered into the market, cutting down Ratiopharm (Teva)’s market
share.
[136] In dealing with this submission, the Federal Court did not have the
benefit of Apotex Ramipril s. 8 FCA. In that case, this Court held that
the regulatory barriers to entry, including the PMNOC Regulations, which
all generic manufacturers face in the real world, also affect all generic
manufacturers in the hypothetical world. Thus, in order to assess whether and
when other generic manufacturers could have and would have entered the market
in the hypothetical world, the Federal Court had to assess, among other things,
whether regulatory barriers stood in their way.
[137] Although the Federal Court did not have the benefit of Apotex
Ramipril s. 8 FCA, it applied principles consistent with it and committed
no error in principle. It proceeded on the basis that other generic
manufacturers entering the market would have had to follow the PMNOC
Regulations. It considered all of the evidence, in part guided by real
world events and based on the evidence before it, to determine whether “any other generics would have entered the market during the
Relevant Period” and, if so, when (at para. 89).
[138] This was precisely in accordance with Apotex Ramipril s. 8 FCA.
At paragraph 159 of Apotex Ramipril s. 8 FCA, the majority of this Court
(whose reasons were adopted on appeal by the Supreme Court) agreed with the
methodology the Federal Court adopted in that case. It described the methodology
as follows (at para. 158):
[I]n the
hypothetical world, the competitors of a section 8 damages claimant are bound
by the [PMNOC] Regulations, and…[they must be taken to] act as
they did in the real world in relation to the [PMNOC] Regulations
except to the extent that there is evidence upon which the trier of fact can
reasonably conclude that they would have acted differently.
And a few
paragraphs later, the majority confirmed the state of the law on this point (at
para. 162):
It follows that in
the hypothetical market, the behaviour of competing generic drug manufacturers
must be determined on the basis that the [PMNOC] Regulations
exist, and each generic drug manufacturer will conduct itself accordingly.
[139] On the evidence, the Federal Court found (at para. 94) that in the
hypothetical world Novopharm would have received a notice of compliance shortly
after Ratiopharm (Teva). Novopharm had entered into an agreement with Wyeth
(Pfizer). Under this agreement, Novopharm could obtain a notice of compliance
and take steps to obtain listing on formularies soon after Ratiopharm (Teva)
could. But it noted (at para. 111) that Novopharm faced problems in
manufacturing venlafaxine. Considering the evidence before it, it found (at
para. 129) that “Novopharm would have entered the
market with Novo-Venlafaxine on December 1, 2006 in the [hypothetical] world,
as it did in the real world.”
[140] In the case of Pharmascience, the main question for the Federal
Court was whether it would have served a notice of allegation in the
hypothetical world. The Federal Court answered this in the negative (at para.
132). Pharmascience intended to time the launch of its product to coincide with
a decision on the ’778 Patent in favour of Ratiopharm (Teva). It was adverse to
litigation and would not act sooner (at para. 141). Therefore, the Federal
Court concluded that Pharmascience would not have been ready to launch earlier
than it did in the real world.
[141] Pfizer submits that in assessing what Pharmascience would have done
in the hypothetical world, the Federal Court failed to sufficiently take into
account real world events. In my view, this is a complaint about how the
Federal Court weighed the evidence. But appellate courts are not entitled to
interfere based on their own weighing of the evidence short of palpable and
overriding error: Housen, above. In my view, the record shows real world
evidence of an intention on the part of Pharmascience to delay or avoid
litigation concerning the ’778 Patent.
[142] Overall, in its analysis on this point, the Federal Court did not
err in principle. And, in applying the principles to the evidence before it, it
did not commit any palpable and overriding error.
[143]
Pfizer also says that the Federal Court erred during
its calculation of damages by attributing Novopharm’s market share to
Ratiopharm (Teva) without also attributing Novopharm’s rebates to Ratiopharm
(Teva). Pfizer also advanced this submission below. The Federal Court dealt
with it (at various places in paras. 209-227) by considering and weighing the evidence
of a number of witnesses and considering what weight should be given to
Novopharm’s sole-source and multi-source trade spend rates in determining
Ratiopharm (Teva)’s sole-source and multi-source trade spend rates in the
hypothetical world. On this issue it also preferred the testimony of Teva’s
expert and made an adverse credibility finding against Pfizer’s expert (at
para. 38). Pfizer has not persuaded me that there is any palpable and
overriding error in the Federal Court’s analysis on this point.
(5)
Pre-judgment interest
[144]
On the
issue of pre-judgment interest, the parties dispute the date the cause of
action arose. Pfizer submits that the cause of action arose on August 1, 2007
when this Court dismissed Wyeth (Pfizer)’s prohibition application. At that
point, the requirements for a claim under section 8 of the PMNOC Regulations
were met.
[145]
The Federal
Court disagreed with Pfizer. In its view, the cause of action arises on the
date that the damages that are the basis for the claim actually begin to be suffered.
Here that was January 10, 2006. It rejected Pfizer’s submission that the
dismissal of the prohibition application is the relevant start date. It offered
the following basis (at para. 258), with which I agree:
The disposition of a Prohibition Application does not ground liability,
it simply confirms that liability exists. The cause of action arises on the
date that damages that are the basis for the claim begin to be suffered.
Typically, this will coincide with when the Relevant Period begins, as it did
in Pantoprazole FC 2012 [Apotex Inc v. Takeda
Canada Inc., 2013 FC 1237, 123 C.P.R. (4th) 261] and as it does in this case. However, because the
Relevant Period may begin before damage is actually suffered, this need not
always be the case. For that reason, prejudgment interest must be tied to when
the loss actually begins to be suffered irrespective of whether that date is
the same as the start of the Relevant Period.
[146]
On two
occasions, the Federal Court has found that the cause of action under section 8
arises on the patent hold date because that is when the period of liability
commences: Apotex Inc. v. Takeda Canada Inc., 2013 FC 1237, 123 C.P.R. (4th) 261 at
paras. 173-174; Sanofi-Aventis Canada v. Teva Canada, 2012 FC 552, 410
F.T.R. 1 at paras. 297-299.
[147]
Section 8
damages—damages suffered during the period when a notice of compliance could
have been issued but was not by reason of the automatic stay—are analogous to
an undertaking to the court to pay damages in the event a successful applicant
for an interlocutory injunction should ultimately fail at trial: Apotex Inc.
v. AstraZeneca Canada Inc., 2012 FC 559, 410 F.T.R.
168 at para. 58, aff’d 2013 FCA 77, 444
N.R. 254; Apotex Inc. v. Merck
& Co. Inc., 2009 FCA 187, [2010] 2 F.C.R. 389 at para. 48. This Court
has held that pre-judgment interest on an undertaking in damages runs from the
date an interlocutory injunction is granted, not from the day it is set aside,
because that is when the damages start to arise: Algonquin Mercantile Corp.
v. Dart Industries Canada Ltd., [1988] 2 F.C. 305, 16 C.P.R. (3d)
193 at para. 27 (C.A.).
[148]
Pfizer also
challenges the Federal Court’s decision to calculate pre-judgment interest from
the beginning of each month on the entire amount of Teva’s lost profits in that
month, rather than at the end of each month.
[149]
In this
case, the Federal Court followed the calculation of pre-judgment interest in subsection
128(3) of the Courts of Justice Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. C.43 as it was
bound to do: Federal Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-7, ss. 36(1). It applied the principles set out by the Court of Appeal for Ontario
in Celanese Canada Inc. v. Canadian National Railway Co. (2005),
196 O.A.C. 60, 138 A.C.W.S. (3d) 23 at para. 17:
The purpose of s.
128(3) is to achieve fairness in the payment of the prejudgment interest on
pecuniary damages by ensuring that a plaintiff will not recover a windfall that
would otherwise result were s. 128(1) to be applied. It does so by providing a
formula for the accrual of interest on pecuniary damages as they are incurred,
in lieu of requiring the court to conduct a series of individual calculations.
Section 128(3) accords with the underlying compensatory principle for awarding
prejudgment interest, which is to compensate a party for the loss of the use of
its money.
[150]
The Federal
Court also noted that an award of interest is meant to
compensate rather than punish: Bank of America Canada v. Mutual Trust Co,
2002 SCC 43, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 601.
[151]
It also
adopted the statement in Chandran v. National Bank, 2011 ONSC 4369, 95 C.C.E.L. (3d) 322 at
para. 8, aff’d 2012 ONCA 205, 99 C.C.E.L. (3d) 277 on a different point, that “[i]nterest is due for a month as soon as the payment is
owed, not after the payment has been outstanding for a month”: see also Lowndes v. Summit Ford
Sales Ltd. (2006), 206 O.A.C. 55, 47 C.C.E.L. (3d) 198.
[152]
In the
circumstances of this case, I see no legal error in the Federal Court’s
approach, nor any palpable and overriding error that would vitiate its
decision. The award of interest is a discretionary matter: Courts of Justice
Act, above, s. 130. There is no principle of law requiring that
pre-judgment interest be calculated at some other date in the month.
(6)
The disposition of this appeal: what should
happen now?
[153]
After this Court finds that a trial court erred
in admitting evidence, this Court may make the judgment the trial court should
have made on the basis of the remaining admissible evidence in the record: Federal
Courts Act, above, para. 52(b)(i). In other words, this Court itself
can redetermine the matter.
[154]
Both parties made submissions, albeit rather
brief, on the redetermination. Pfizer has asked this Court to exercise its
power under paragraph 52(b)(i) of the Federal Courts Act and
decide that the section 8 damages claim must fail on the basis of the
evidentiary record left after the hearsay evidence has been excluded. It says
the remaining evidence is insufficient to support a claim for damages under
section 8 of the PMNOC Regulations. Teva disagrees.
[155]
Complicating matters is the presence in the
record of some conflicting evidence that may not have been adjudicated upon
before but, if admissible in accordance with the principles set out in these
reasons, now may have to be adjudicated upon: see, e.g., the evidence
cited at Pfizer's memorandum of fact and law at para. 90.
[156]
I note that on occasion this Court has declined
to conduct the redetermination itself and instead has remitted it to the
Federal Court: see, e.g., Kelly v. Canada, 2013 FCA 171, 446 N.R.
339 at paras. 66-72; Janssen-Ortho Inc. v. Apotex Inc., 2009 FCA 212, 75
C.P.R. (4th) 411 at para. 80; Zero Spill Systems (Int’l) Inc. v. 614248
Alberta Ltd., 2015 FCA 115, 130 C.P.R. (4th) 291 at para. 107.
Redetermination by the Federal Court is a further “process”
that this Court may “award” within the meaning
of paragraph 52(b)(i) of the Federal Courts Act.
[157]
The Federal Court is more experienced and adept in
fact-finding than is this Court. Allowing it to redetermine the matter makes
sense where the case is factually complex and factually voluminous, the Federal
Court has seen the witnesses and has developed views on their credibility, and the
result is uncertain and factually suffused: Turberfield v. Canada, 2012
FCA 170, 433 N.R. 236; Canada v. Brokenhead First Nation, 2011 FCA 148,
419 N.R. 289; Kelly, above. This is often true for damages issues: Wells
v. Newfoundland, [1999] 3 S.C.R. 199, 177 D.L.R. (4th) 73 at para. 67. As Kelly
shows, this option has even more merit where the parties have not offered
substantial or meaningful submissions to the appellate court on the
redetermination.
[158]
In the case at bar, all of these factors are
present. In particular, to conduct the redetermination ourselves and to make
the judgment the Federal Court should have made, the parties would have had to
provide far more detailed submissions to us concerning the specific admissible evidence
remaining in the record after the hearsay evidence is disregarded, the
inferences we can permissibly draw from that evidence, and the facts that we
should find based on that evidence. Even then, we might still have deferred to
the Federal Court’s role as a fact-finder.
[159]
Thus, as a matter of discretion, in this case I
would remit the redetermination to the Federal Court.
[160]
Neither party has asked for the opportunity to
adduce further evidence in that redetermination, i.e., something akin to
a retrial under paragraph 52(b)(ii) of the Federal Courts Act. The
parties were right not to ask. As paragraph 52(b)(ii) suggests, that
remedy is granted as a matter of discretion only when required by the interests
of justice. One possible circumstance is where the trial court’s error has
undercut the integrity, viability or fairness of much if not all of the trial.
Another possible circumstance is where a legal test has been materially changed
since the trial, with the result that the parties did not have a chance at
trial to adduce evidence responsive to it: see, e.g., Kelly,
above.
[161]
Neither circumstance is here. In particular, the
issue whether Ratiopharm (Teva) could have had and would have had sufficient
quantities of its version of venlafaxine to supply the market at the relevant
time was a live issue in the Federal Court; indeed, as I have held, the Federal
Court understood that was the operative principle. The parties made legal, practical
and tactical choices regarding the evidence they should adduce or not adduce
concerning that point. The interests of justice do not support relieving them
of the choices they made. This Court has never done so in circumstances like
this.
[162]
Of course, before redetermining the matter, the
Federal Court will need to receive submissions from the parties.
[163]
I wish to offer some further comments to guide
the Federal Court in its redetermination.
[164]
The redetermination is to decide upon whether
and to what extent Ratiopharm (Teva) is entitled to section 8 damages and is to
be conducted by applying proper legal principles to the admissible evidence in
the record. Without limiting the foregoing, the key issue for redetermination
is whether in the hypothetical world Ratiopharm (Teva) would have had and could
have had access to sufficient quantities of venlafaxine at the relevant time.
[165]
In my view, it is not enough to establish this
on the balance of probabilities by pointing only to sufficient
manufacturing capacity a long time (here over a year) before the relevant time
and Alembic’s general willingness to keep its customer, Ratiopharm (Teva),
happy. Perhaps as part of the totality of the admissible evidence and
permissible inferences therefrom, Teva can establish its case on the balance of
probabilities. That will be for the Federal Court to determine.
[166]
The inadmissible hearsay evidence, identified
above, of course is to be excluded. These reasons have dealt with specific
pieces of evidence used by the trial judge. But it has described some other
evidence generically because, for the most part, the parties spoke of the
evidence in that way. As a result, disputes might arise during the
redetermination concerning the admissibility of specific pieces of evidence.
The Federal Court may rule on those disputes using the principles set out in
these reasons.
[167]
Further, viewing the remaining evidentiary
record, I note that there does not appear to be direct evidence from Alembic on
a number of matters, including whether it had other commitments that would have restricted or prevented its
ability to supply product, whether it could have acquired sufficient quantities
of raw material to manufacture the product, and whether the length of the
manufacturing process would have affected Alembic’s ability to supply product
at the relevant time. Despite these gaps, the redetermination should examine
whether other evidence in the record, taken together, along with any
permissible inferences, proves that in the hypothetical world Ratiopharm
(Teva) would have and could have had access to sufficient quantities of
venlafaxine at the relevant time. As mentioned above, Teva bears the persuasive
burden on this. And also as mentioned above, the standard of proof on this is
the balance of probabilities, not just mere possibilities: Tervita,
above at paras. 49-51 and 66; F.H. v. McDougall, above at paras. 40 and
49.
[168]
Excluding the inadmissible hearsay evidence from
the evidentiary record leaves a smaller body of admissible evidence for the
Federal Court to bring to bear in its redetermination. The Federal Court will
want to identify the admissible evidence that forms that body, and then assess
it in accordance with the principles set out in these reasons. In assessing it,
the Federal Court may consider, with the benefit of submissions, whether it can
and should draw any positive or negative inferences about what Alembic could
have and would have done at the relevant time. In doing so, it should ensure
that any inferences it draws are legally permissible, and offer clear reasons
for why it did or did not draw a positive or negative inference.
[169]
To assist the
redetermination, by way of non-exhaustive guidance concerning legal limits on
what inferences can be drawn from evidence, the parties and the Federal Court might
wish to consider R. v. Munoz (2006), 86 O.R. (3d) 134, 38 C.R. (6th) 376
at paragraphs 23-31 (and authorities cited therein)—an authority now applied
approvingly by several appellate courts (District of West Vancouver
(Corporation of) v. Liu, 2016 BCCA 96, 47 M.P.L.R. (5th) 1; United
States v. Viscomi, 2015 ONCA 484, 126 O.R. (3d) 427; R. v. G.S.,
2013 NUCA 5, 100 C.R. (6th) 397),
the Federal Court (K.K. v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2014 FC 78, 446 F.T.R. 209), and virtually every other Canadian trial court.
[170]
And by way of non-exhaustive guidance on when
the Court might draw adverse inferences, the parties might have regard to Lévesque v. Comeau, [1970] S.C.R. 1010, 16 D.L.R. (3d) 425; R.
v. Jolivet, 2000 SCC 29, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 751 at paragraphs 22-30; and, in
this Court, authorities that apply Lévesque
and Jolivet such
as Merck & Co., Inc. v. Apotex Inc., 2003 FCA 488, [2004] 2 F.C.R.
45.
E.
Proposed judgment
[171]
For the
foregoing reasons, I would set aside the judgment of the Federal Court and remit
to the Federal Court for redetermination the issue whether Teva is entitled to
damages and, if so, to what extent.
[172]
Pfizer has
been substantially successful on appeal. I would grant it its costs of the
appeal.
[173]
As I
propose to set aside the Federal Court’s judgment, the Federal Court’s award of
trial costs in favour of Teva would also fall away. But I would decline to make
any award of trial costs in its place. Rather, at the end of its
redetermination, after it has decided who has prevailed on the merits, the
Federal Court should make that award.
[174]
Therefore,
I would allow the appeal, set aside the judgment of the Federal Court, and
remit the matter to the Federal Court for redetermination in accordance with
these reasons. I would grant Pfizer its costs of the appeal.
“David Stratas”
“I agree
C. Michael Ryer J.A.”
“I agree
Mary J.L. Gleason J.A.”