Docket: T-2051-10
Citation:
2017 FC 350
Ottawa, Ontario, April 19, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Fothergill
BETWEEN:
|
THE DOW
CHEMICAL COMPANY,
DOW GLOBAL
TECHNOLOGIES INC. and DOW CHEMICAL CANADA ULC
|
Plaintiffs/Defendants by Counterclaim
|
and
|
NOVA CHEMICALS
CORPORATION
|
Defendant/Plaintiff by Counterclaim
|
PUBLIC
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
(Confidential Judgment and Reasons issued on April 7, 2017)
Table of Contents
I. Overview.. 3
II. Introduction to
Polyethylene. 4
III. Patent in Issue. 6
IV. Procedural History. 7
A. United States Proceedings. 7
B. Liability Phase. 8
C. Motion re Disputed Grades. 9
V. Evidence. 10
A. General Observations. 10
B. Preliminary Objections. 10
C. Fact and Expert Witnesses. 14
VI. Issues. 21
VII. Disputed Grades. 21
A. Res Judicata. 22
B. Abuse of Process. 28
C. Limitations and
Prescription. 29
VIII. Damages. 29
A. Reasonable Royalty. 29
B. Dow’s Minimum Willingness
to Accept 31
C. Nova’s Maximum
Willingness to Pay. 35
D. Nova’s Additional
Arguments. 37
E. Products Subject to
Reasonable Royalty. 40
F. Pre-judgment
Interest 41
IX. Profits. 43
A. General Principles. 43
B. Revenues from Sales. 44
C. Disputed Grades and
Infringing Off-grades. 44
D. Springboard Profits. 45
E. Deductible Costs. 52
(1) Cost of Ethylene. 53
(2) Fixed Costs and Capital
Depreciation. 55
F. Pre-judgment Interest and
“Profits on Profits”. 64
X. Currency Conversion. 67
XI. Conclusion. 72
XII. Postscript 73
[1]
In these reasons, I refer to the plaintiffs Dow
Chemical Company, Dow Global Technologies Inc and Dow Chemical Canada ULC
collectively as “Dow”. I refer to the defendant Nova Chemicals Corporation as
“Nova”.
[2]
On September 5, 2014, Justice O’Keefe found that
Dow’s Canadian Patent No. 2,160,705, “Fabricated
Products Made From Ethylene Polymer Blends” [the ’705 Patent], was valid
and infringed by Nova (Dow Chemical Company v Nova Chemicals Corporation,
2014 FC 844 [Dow v Nova]). These conclusions were affirmed by the
Federal Court of Appeal on September 6, 2016 (Nova Chemicals Corporation v
Dow Chemical Company, 2016 FCA 216 [Dow v Nova (FCA)]).
[3]
Justice O’Keefe heard only the liability phase
of the action. Pursuant to his judgment, Dow was entitled to damages under s
55(2) of the Patent Act, RSC 1985, c P-4, and to elect either an
accounting of Nova’s profits or all damages sustained by reason of Nova’s infringement
of the ’705 Patent under s 55(1) of the Patent Act. The quantum of the
award was to be assessed by reference preceded by discovery if requested.
[4]
This reference was commenced by requisition accompanied by Dow’s
Statement of Issues on October 20, 2014. Nova filed its Revised Response to
Statement of Issues on April 22, 2016. Particulars were exchanged by the
parties. Dow made its election in respect of the recovery of Nova’s
profits on June 24, 2016 pursuant to an Order of this Court dated June 10,
2016.
[5]
These proceedings also concern questions pertaining to disputed grades
pursuant to the Order of Justice Hughes dated March 30, 2016 (2016 FC 361).
[6]
By agreement of the parties, these reasons address only
the assumptions and other considerations that inform the calculations of
damages and profits. The parties’ accountants will calculate the sums owed by
Nova to Dow based on the conclusions reached by the Court in this stage of the
reference.
[7]
The assumptions and other considerations that are to inform
the calculations of damages and profits payable by Nova to Dow are those
included in the judgment that follows these reasons.
II.
Introduction to Polyethylene
[8]
Polyethylene is a common form of plastic. Its
commercial uses include grocery bags, food wraps and films, beverage bottles,
heavy-duty sacks, plastic pipes, pails and crates. Polyethylene is manufactured
using different processes, usually involving solution, gas phase or slurry
reactors. Solution reactors may be single reactor or dual reactor systems.
[9]
Some polyethylene products are made with
ethylene that has been copolymerized with other hydrocarbons, typically butene,
hexene, or octene. These are referred to as comonomers.
[10]
Catalysts play an important role in the
production of polyethylene, because they permit the formation of polymers under
milder conditions. Catalysts create reactive sites that facilitate the linking of
thousands of small ethylene molecules into long, large polyethylene molecules. A
“single-site catalyst”, which generates reactive
sites that are all the same, produces a molecular weight distribution of the
polymer that is approximately 2. A “multi-site
catalyst”, which generates reactive sites that perform differently from
one another, produces a molecular weight distribution of the polymer that is
approximately 3.5 or more.
[11]
Polymer blends with a narrow molecular weight
distribution exhibit desirable properties such as high impact strength and
toughness. However, they may be more difficult to process into films.
[12]
High-density polyethylene [HDPE] tends to be rigid
and is used to manufacture products such as plastic pipes, pails or crates.
Commodity HDPE products are referred to generally as “pail
and crate”. Commodity HDPE is characterised by its relatively low cost
and low profit margin.
[13]
HDPE may be contrasted with low-density
polyethylene [LDPE]. LDPE tends to be more flexible than HDPE, and is used to
make plastic films such as those used in bread bags.
[14]
Over time, LDPE has evolved into linear
low-density polyethylene [LLDPE]. The structure of LLDPE differs from LDPE,
resulting in improved properties. Examples of LLDPE products include DOWLEX,
made by Dow, and SCLAIR, made by Nova. Both products are made in a single
reactor using a “Ziegler Natta” [ZN] catalyst.
DOWLEX and SCLAIR may be described as “conventional”
LLDPE products,and have been on the
market for many years.
[15]
A more recent innovation is metallocene linear
low-density polyethylene [mLLDPE]. ELITE, manufactured by Dow, and SURPASS,
manufactured by Nova, are both mLLDPE products. They may be distinguished from
conventional LLDPE products such as DOWLEX and SCLAIR by their superior
performance characteristics, particularly in relation to their strength and
ease of processability.
[16]
Dow filed its application for the ’705 Patent on
April 19, 1994. The ’705 Patent was published on November 10, 1994, but was not
issued until August 22, 2006. The ’705 Patent expired on April 19, 2014, and
was in effect for approximately eight years.
[17]
In Nova v Dow (FCA), the Federal Court of Appeal described the ’705 Patent as follows:
[5] The patent is directed primarily to
polyethylene used to make “film” products, i.e. sheets of plastic, like plastic
garbage bags and food wrapping. Some film applications do not have demanding
strength requirements, but others do. One solution for these demanding
applications was to make thicker “films” so that they are stronger. That
requires the use of more plastic, however, leading to higher costs and more
waste when the plastic film is disposed of.
[6] The patent identifies the need to
develop polymers that can be formed into thinner films with improved strength
properties […]
[8] The claimed invention and Dow’s
commercial embodiment of it (ELITE) allows for source reduction to make thicker
films thinner, but just as strong. Whereas prior art efforts to create improved
polymers and polymer blends were largely trial and error, Dr. Lai (one of the
inventors) testified at trial that Dow’s researchers took a different approach
to identify the optimal blend based on polymer density, molecular weight, and
strain hardening (the latter being a property wherein a material becomes harder
as it is stretched). This work is disclosed in the ’705 Patent, including the
creation of the slope of strain hardening coefficient (SHC) to identify
polymers of interest. […]
[9] Each of the 46 claims of the ’705 Patent
is directed to a blend having at least these two components, with each
component having certain requirements, depending on the particular claim. […]
[18]
Prior to the litigation in Canada, Dow sued Nova
in respect of its sales of SURPASS in the United States under two U.S. patents that
correspond to the Canadian ’705 Patent. The U.S. litigation was commenced in
2005, and resulted in a jury verdict dated June 15, 2010. Dow was awarded US$76
million in damages and interest for lost sales and reasonable royalties resulting
from Nova’s sales of SURPASS in the U.S. up to December 31, 2009. That decision
was upheld by the U.S. Federal Circuit (Jury Verdict dated June 15, 2010, U.S.
Proceeding CA No 05-737 (JJF) (US Dist Ct, Del); Dow Chemical v Nova
Chemicals, 2010-1526 (CAFC); Dow v Nova, Civ No 05-737-LPS
(DI 760) (US Dist Ct, Del)).
[19]
Dow was denied an injunction in the U.S.
litigation. As a result, a “supplementary damages”
trial was conducted in April and May 2013 based on the jury’s finding of
infringement. This resulted in a further decision granting Dow US$30 million in
damages and interest for lost ELITE sales and reasonable royalties resulting
from Nova’s sales of SURPASS in the U.S. until the expiry of the U.S. patents
on October 15, 2011 (Dow v Nova, 2014-1431, 2014-1462 (CAFC); Dow v
Nova, CA No 05-737 (LPS), Order of Final Judgment (US Dist Ct, Del)).
[20]
The supplementary damages award was subsequently
overturned on appeal to the U.S. Federal Circuit due to a change in the U.S.
law of insufficiency. This particular insufficiency argument was not raised in
the Canadian litigation.
[21]
Dow does not seek damages or an accounting of
profits in respect of the U.S. sales of Nova’s SURPASS that were the subject of
the U.S. proceedings.
[22]
The liability phase of the current proceedings
was summarized by the Federal Court of Appeal in Nova v Dow (FCA) as
follows:
[10] Dow filed a Statement
of Claim on December 9, 2010, alleging that Nova was infringing the ’705
Patent. Nova counterclaimed on the grounds of invalidity and unjust enrichment,
but eventually dropped its unjust enrichment claims. In its opening statement
at trial, Dow restricted the litigation to only eight composition claims, being
claims 11, 29, 30, 33, 35, 36, 41 and 42; Nova similarly restricted its
invalidity counterclaim to these same claims. As a result, the Judge erred in
holding that Claim 15 was valid and infringed; Dow dropped its allegations in
relation to that claim, and reference to it in paragraph 1 of the Judgment
should be deleted.
[11] […] The Judge found that all the claims
at issue were valid, and that Nova infringed these claims by manufacturing in
Canada and distributing, offering for sale, selling or otherwise making
available film-grade polymers under the name SURPASS.
[23]
Subsequent to Justice O’Keefe’s judgment in the
liability phase, but prior to the Federal Court of Appeal’s decision in Nova
v Dow (FCA), Dow brought a motion before this Court for an order:
A. Declaring that: “The phrase
“film-grade polymers under the name SURPASS”, as found in paragraph 1 of the
trial judgment of Justice O’Keefe, dated May 7, 2014 includes within its scope
and meaning the film-grade SURPASS polymers: FPs016-A, EX-FPs016-A01,
EX-FPs225-A01 and FPs417-A”; and
B. Requiring Nova to disclose and produce all relevant
documents pertaining to these film-grade SURPASS polymers.
[24]
Justice Hughes agreed with Nova that Dow had
failed to amend its Statement of Claim to include the additional film-grade
SURPASS polymers [the disputed grades], despite Nova’s disclosure of three of
the disputed grades in the U.S. proceedings in February 2012. He also found
that Rule 399 of the Federal Courts Rules, SOR/98-106, did not apply
because Dow was aware of the disputed grades prior to trial. He disposed of
Dow’s motion as follows (2016 FC 361 at paras 31 to 34):
[31] At the
hearing, I asked Defendant’s Counsel whether there was any prohibition against
the Plaintiffs to prevent them from starting a new action in which the four
designated films sought to be included in the reference could be put in issue
in such a new action. Presumably, res judicata would apply to Justice O’Keefe’s
findings as to claim construction, validity and at least certain matters as to
infringement. Nova could raise defences as to non-infringement at least in
respect of FPs417-A film and defences as to res judicata, abuse of
process, limitation and prescription.
[32] A new action is a waste of the
resources of this Court. While I agree with the Defendant in respect of its
arguments as set out in paragraphs 1 and 2 above, I do not believe that a just,
most expeditious and least expensive determination of the issues between the
parties justifies forever precluding the Plaintiffs from putting before the
Court the four further films as designated. Nor should it preclude the
Defendant from raising defences that it believes to be proper.
[33] The parties have been through extensive
discoveries and a trial. There have been many facts adduced and many findings
of the Trial Judge. They should not be wasted.
[34] I will permit the Plaintiffs, effective
the day they filed this motion, January 20, 2016, to further Amend their
Statement of Claim to include, in Appendix A, films designated as FPs016,
FPs117, FPs225, and FPs317. The Defendant may amend its Defence in response
thereto. All previous discoveries and evidence adduced at trial may continue to
be used and evidence adduced on this motion before me, can be used by the
parties as if it had been given on discovery. In addition they may have such
further discovery as reasonably necessary.
[25]
The witnesses who were called to testify in this
reference were generally credible. The expert witnesses presented impressive
qualifications, and all witnesses testified in a manner that was forthright and
responsive to the questions asked. My reasons for preferring some witnesses’
testimony over that of others are explained in the analysis that follows.
[26]
To their credit, the parties largely agreed on
the qualifications of the expert witnesses who were called to testify in this
reference. The one exception was Dr. Eric Kelusky. Dr. Kelusky testified
as a fact witness during the liability phase before Justice O’Keefe, and he
also testified as a fact witness in this reference. Dow did not object to his
testimony as a fact witness in either phase of the proceedings.
[27]
However, Dow took the position in this reference
that Dr. Kelusky lacked the necessary impartiality to be received by this Court
as an objective expert. Dr. Kelusky’s opinion evidence concerned the steps that
Nova would hypothetically have taken to bring its SURPASS line of products to
market if it had waited until the ’705 Patent expired in 2014. He was permitted
to provide his expert testimony subject to this Court’s ruling on the
objection, which the Court took under reserve.
[28]
Immediately following his retirement from Nova,
Dr. Kelusky was engaged as a consultant to assist Nova’s litigation counsel in
this matter. His contract began in 2010 and was still in effect when he
testified in this reference. He also assisted with the U.S. litigation in his
capacity as a Nova employee. His only involvement in the polyethylene industry
since his retirement was in his role as a consultant for this litigation. He
was not involved in Nova’s business decisions or product development after
2010.
[29]
Dr. Kelusky was deposed in the U.S. proceedings
as Nova’s corporate representative. He was involved in providing answers on
discovery in this litigation, and also in the experimental testing that was
done on behalf of Nova. He was present at the trial before Justice O’Keefe, and
he interacted regularly with Nova’s counsel, particularly with respect to
technical issues. Justice Hughes noted in his Order dated March 30, 2016 at
paragraph 15 that Dr. Kelusky gave “very careful
answers” to questions posed during the discovery process.
[30]
Nova maintains that Dr. Kelusky is almost
uniquely qualified to address how Nova would have prepared to launch its
SURPASS line of products if it had awaited the expiry of the ’705 Patent in
2014. He worked at Nova during the actual launch of SURPASS in 2002, and no
other witness called in these proceedings could offer a comparable perspective.
Nova complains that Dow did not object to Dr. Kelusky’s expert report until
five weeks after its receipt, despite the requirement in Rule 55(2) that
objections to proposed expert evidence be made as soon as possible. Dow
responds that it raised its objection to Dr. Kelusky’s report prior to the
deadline agreed by the parties.
[31]
Nova argues that it would be prejudiced if Dr.
Kelusky’s testimony were rejected. Nova says that any concerns regarding Dr.
Kelusky’s allegiance to Nova should affect only the weight accorded to his
testimony.
[32]
In White Burgess Langille Inman v Abbott and
Haliburton Co, 2015 SCC 23 [White Burgess], the Supreme Court of
Canada held at paragraph 10 that expert witnesses have a duty to the court to
give fair, objective and non-partisan opinion evidence. They must be aware of
this duty and able and willing to carry it out. If they do not meet this
threshold requirement, their evidence should not be admitted. Once this threshold
is met, however, concerns about an expert witness’ independence or impartiality
should be considered as part of the overall weighing of the costs and benefits
of admitting the evidence.
[33]
The Supreme Court provided the following
additional guidance in White Burgess at paragraph 49:
This threshold requirement [to give fair,
objective and non-partisan opinion evidence] is not particularly onerous and it
will likely be quite rare that a proposed expert’s evidence would be ruled
inadmissible for failing to meet it. The trial judge must determine, having
regard to both the particular circumstances of the proposed expert and the
substance of the proposed evidence, whether the expert is able and willing to
carry out his or her primary duty to the court. For example, it is the nature
and extent of the interest or connection with the litigation or a party thereto
which matters, not the mere fact of the interest or connection; the existence
of some interest or a relationship does not automatically render the evidence
of the proposed expert inadmissible. In most cases, a mere employment
relationship with the party calling the evidence will be insufficient to do so.
[…] Similarly, an expert who, in his or her proposed evidence or otherwise,
assumes the role of an advocate for a party is clearly unwilling and/or unable
to carry out the primary duty to the court. I emphasize that exclusion at the
threshold stage of the analysis should occur only in very clear cases in which
the proposed expert is unable or unwilling to provide the court with fair,
objective and non-partisan evidence. Anything less than clear unwillingness or
inability to do so should not lead to exclusion, but be taken into account in
the overall weighing of costs and benefits of receiving the evidence.
[34]
Having considered Dr. Kelusky’s testimony, I am
satisfied that he recognized and accepted his duty to give fair, objective and
non-partisan opinion evidence to the Court. His answers to questions were
forthright and responsive, both during examination in chief and in
cross-examination. I have no hesitation in qualifying him as an expert to
testify in these proceedings. The weight to be given to his testimony is
another matter, and this is discussed at the appropriate juncture below.
[35]
Both parties also objected to certain portions
of the expert reports filed on behalf of the opposing party. Many objections
were raised in the course of the witnesses’ testimony and were ruled on
accordingly. In these reasons, I have based my conclusions on evidence that I
found to be both admissible and probative. I have disregarded evidence that, in
my view, exceeded an expert witness’ qualifications, and I have placed no
weight on viewpoints that were unsupported by the evidence or unduly
speculative. My reasons for accepting some evidence and opinions, and rejecting
others, may be found in the analysis that follows.
[36]
This overview of the fact and expert witnesses
called by the parties is based on the helpful summary provided by Nova in its
closing submissions.
[37]
The following fact witnesses testified on behalf
of Dow:
•
Mr. Christopher (Kip) Thomson retired from Dow in 2013. Prior to his retirement, Mr. Thomson
held a number of positions in sales and marketing, including product manager
for food and specialty packaging applications. Mr. Thomson testified about the
qualification of Dow’s products with its customers, film manufacturing, film
properties, competition in the marketplace and licensing at Dow.
•
Mr. Gregory Bunker is Senior Global Marketing Director for Dow’s health and hygiene
business. He has held a number of technical and marketing roles at Dow, including
marketing director for Dow’s food and specialty packaging market segment. Mr. Bunker
testified about competition in the film marketplace, in particular with Exxon’s
EXCEED, and customer qualification.
[38]
The following expert witnesses testified on
behalf of Dow:
•
Mr. Ross Hamilton
was qualified as an expert in the quantification of damages and profits in
commercial and intellectual property disputes. Mr. Hamilton offered his opinion
on the quantification of Nova’s profits from the manufacture and sale of the
infringing SURPASS products.
•
Mr. Thomas Dunn
was qualified as an expert in the timing for the development of polyethylene
resins, the qualification of polyethylene resins for use in flexible packaging
products, processes and use by converters of polyethylene resins, and flexible
packaging products and processes. He has been inducted into the U.S. National
Packaging Hall of Fame. Mr. Dunn testified about the development and
qualification steps that Nova would need to complete before SURPASS products
could be sold, and the timing of those steps in the hypothetical “but-for” world.
•
Dr. Gregory Leonard was qualified as an expert economist specializing in applied
microeconomics, the study of the behaviour of consumers and firms and
econometrics. He offered his opinion on the quantification of damages,
including reasonable royalty rates in patent infringement matters. Dr. Leonard addressed
the reasonable royalty rate payable to Dow, the length of time it would have
taken Nova to “ramp up” sales of SURPASS
products after expiry of the ’705 Patent and the mechanism for measuring
pre-judgment interest. In his reply report and testimony, Dr. Leonard responded
to Dr. Heeb’s report, as well as certain aspects of Dr. Soriano’s and Dr.
Kelusky’s reports.
•
Dr. João Soares
was qualified as an expert in polymer science and polymer engineering, the
characterization of polymers, polymer compositions, including synthesis, analysis,
testing, production and mathematical modeling. Dr. Soares testified about the
scope of the claims in the application for the Patent as published in 1994 and
the processability characteristics of ELITE and SURPASS.
[39]
The following fact witnesses testified on behalf
of Nova:
•
Dr. Eric Kelusky joined
DuPont Canada in 1984, where he was responsible for DuPont’s polyethylene
research centre. After Nova acquired DuPont Canada in 1994, he was Director of
Polyethylene Research and responsible for Nova’s polyethylene research and
development programs. In 2002, he became Vice-President for Advanced SCLAIRTECH
[AST] Development, where he was responsible for the commercialization and
profitability of AST products, including SURPASS. From late 2006 until his
retirement in 2010, he was the Vice-President of Technology for Nova. Since
then he has been a consultant for Nova. Dr. Kelusky testified about Nova’s acquisition
of DuPont’s catalyst technology, the development and commercialization of the
SURPASS polymers at issue, the prior U.S. litigation, the product slate of the
PE2 plant in Joffre, Alberta, product nomenclature, PE2 capital costs, and
research and development costs associated with Nova’s SURPASS products.
•
Dr. Daryll Harrison has been employed at Nova since 1988, when he started as a polymer
research scientist. In 1996, he became leader of the New Polymers Catalyst
Group, a group of scientists who developed catalyst technology for the
polyethylene business. He has since held the positions of Director of Polyolefins
Research and Development and Vice-President of Technology. He is currently Vice-President
of the 1NOVA Program Management. He testified about the development and
commercialization of the Emerald catalyst and SURPASS, as well as Nova’s product
development capabilities since 2002.
•
Ms. Debra Van Holst is the Director of Logistics for Nova. She has worked for Nova and
its predecessor, DuPont Canada, for approximately 28 years, with 20 years in
Nova’s polyethylene business. She testified about the history of the SCLAIR
brand at Nova and DuPont, the capacity and product slate management of the PE2
plant, the identification of off-grades produced at the PE2 plant, as well as
overall demand in the polyethylene market.
•
Mr. Mark Kay
joined Nova as a market manager in 1999. He is the Market Group Leader for
Performance Films at Nova, a group which manages sales of applications such as
heavy-duty shipping sacks, food packaging, as well as specialty shrink wrap.
From 2005 to 2011, he was the Distribution Sales Leader at Nova and dealt with
distributors and brokers involved in reselling Nova’s polyethylene and
polystyrene products in North America. He testified about the PE2 plant’s product
slate, opportunities and demand for Nova’s SCLAIR performance film and pail and
crate grades, the marketing and sales of offgrade products produced at the PE2
plant, processability, and competition in the marketplace.
•
Mr. John Hotz is
Vice President, Corporate Strategy at Nova. He joined Nova in 2000 as
Vice-President of the polyethylene business, and was responsible for profits,
losses and product management. He testified about the early PE2 product slate,
PE2 sales, opportunities and relationships with Nova’s customers, competition
with Exxon and Dow, early pricing strategy for SURPASS grades, and the market
for pail and crate grades.
•
Mr. Larry MacDonald was Nova’s Chief Financial Officer from 2002 until he retired in
2009. He worked at Nova or its predecessors for 30 years. He testified about
the corporate and business history of Nova, the ethylene business and Nova’s
corporate structure.
•
Mr. Rocky Vermani
has worked at Nova or its predecessors for over 25 years. Since 1990, he has
held positions in Nova’s technology licensing business. He was the General
Manager of licensing from 2004 to 2011. Between 2006 and 2011, he was also
responsible for Nova’s polyethylene export business. From 2011 to 2014, he was
the director of Nova’s ethylene business. Since 2014, he has been Nova’s Vice-President
of Olefins Products, where he has overall responsibility for managing Nova’s
ethylene business.
[40]
The following expert witnesses testified on
behalf of Nova:
•
Dr. Eric Kelusky
was qualified as an expert in Nova’s capabilities to develop and commercialize
new polyethylene products and qualification at Nova’s customers, particularly
for SURPASS. Dr. Kelusky testified about the potential “but-for”
development and sales of SURPASS film products following expiry of the ’705
Patent, taking into account Nova’s historical capabilities for developing,
testing and introducing SURPASS products, and its practices in selling and
qualifying them with customers.
•
Dr. Randal Heeb was
qualified as an expert on the economic value of intellectual property rights,
including economic issues related to the assessment of damages and profits and
the calculation of reasonable royalties in intellectual property disputes. He
is an economist with the consulting firm of Bates White, LLC. He has been a
Senior Faculty Fellow at the Yale School of Management, where he taught MBA courses,
including the economics of licensing related to the use of intellectual
property and the efficiency and profitability of such licences.
•
Dr. Charles Speed was qualified as an expert in polymer science, polymerization
techniques, process development, the characterization and testing of polymers
and compositions, product application development including blending and film
blowing, and product analysis. He has over 40 years of experience in polymer technology
with ExxonMobil Chemical Company and as a consultant. He retired from
ExxonMobil as its Chief Scientist for Polyethylene Products. Dr. Speed
explained polymer technology and discussed the scope of the claims of the
patent application as published on November 10, 1994, whether the patent
teaches improved processability and which of Nova’s off-grade products were
made with only a ZN catalyst.
•
Mr. Errol Soriano
was qualified as an expert on the quantification of
financial damages and profits, the
evaluation of business interests and forensic accounting, including in the
context of intellectual property disputes. He is a Managing
Director at Duff & Phelps, a Chartered Professional Accountant, Chartered
Business Valuator, and Certified Fraud Examiner. He has testified in approximately
45 damages and accounting of profits cases in Canada. He has authored books and
educational materials for the Institute of Chartered Professional Accountants
and the University of Toronto. Mr. Soriano testified about the quantification
of Nova’s profits from the manufacture and sale of the infringing SURPASS
products.
[41]
The following issues are addressed in these
reasons for judgment:
A.
Whether the disputed grades and off-grades should
be included in the calculation of damages and the accounting of profits.
B.
The manner in which the damages payable to Dow
pursuant to s 55(2) of the Patent Act should be calculated.
C.
The manner in which the profits payable to Dow
pursuant to s 55(1) of the Patent Act should be calculated.
D.
The applicable rates of pre-judgment interest.
E.
The manner in which currency conversion should
be applied to the amounts payable to Dow as damages or profits.
[42]
The disputed grades comprise four grades
of SURPASS that Dow says are identical or nearly identical to those that were
specifically pleaded in its original Statement of Claim: FPs417-A,
FPs016-A, EX-FPs016-A01 and EX-FPs225-A01. Nova concedes that, based upon
Justice O’Keefe’s analysis in Dow v Nova, the disputed grades infringe
the ’705 Patent. Accordingly, the only matters to be resolved are Nova’s
defences of res judicata, abuse of process, limitations and
prescription.
[43]
Dow says that the only difference between the
disputed grades and the grades that have been found to infringe is their slightly
different product names. Dow argues that Nova can be neither surprised nor
prejudiced by the inclusion of the disputed grades in the calculation of
damages and profits: Nova knew or ought to have known that the disputed grades
infringed the ’705 Patent in the same manner as the grades that were specifically
pleaded in Dow’s original Statement of Claim. Nova would have presented its arguments
of non-infringement and invalidity in precisely the same way if the disputed
grades had been included from the beginning.
[44]
Nova responds that the disputed grades were added
to Dow’s Statement of Claim by an amendment effective as of January 20, 2016.
Nova argues that the disputed grades are barred by the doctrine of res
judicata, particularly cause of action estoppel. Nova also pleads abuse of
process and limitations. Section 55.01 of the Patent Act provides that
no remedy shall be awarded for an act of infringement committed more than six
years before commencement of the action. Nova maintains that all sales of the
disputed grade EX-FPs225-A01 occurred in 2008 and 2009, which was more than six
years before the effective date of January 20, 2016.
[45]
A plaintiff who asserts a cause of action is
ordinarily expected to claim all possible relief at once. Otherwise, there is a
danger that plaintiffs will conduct litigation in instalments (Grandview v
Doering, [1976] 2 S.C.R. 621 at 637-38 [Grandview]). Cause of action
estoppel applies not only to points upon which the court was actually required
to decide, but to every point which properly belonged to the subject of the litigation,
and which might have been brought forward at the time by exercising reasonable
diligence (see Grandview at 634-39, citing Henderson v Henderson
(1843), 3 Hare 100, 67 ER 313 at 319 (Ch)).
[46]
In Appendix A to its original Statement of Claim,
Dow identified 58 SURPASS grades that were alleged to infringe the ’705 Patent.
These grades were grouped into three general product categories: FPs016, FPs117
and FPs317. On February 22, 2012, Dow amended its claim to include a fourth
product category and a corresponding grade: FPs225-A. This brought the total
number of pleaded grades to 59.
[47]
Dow complains that in the liability phase of the
trial before Justice O’Keefe, Nova intentionally concealed information
regarding the disputed grades and their relationship to the SURPASS grades that
had been pleaded. Nova refused to answer any questions that did not relate to
one of the SURPASS grade names that had been specifically included in Appendix
A to the Statement of Claim, despite the fact that the broader product categories
had also been pleaded.
[48]
Justice Hughes made the following observation in
his Order dated March 30, 2016 (2016 FC 361 at para 15):
The attitude of the parties throughout this
litigation appears to be hostile, particularly on the part of the Defendant. Justice
O’Keefe dealt with this in his costs Order. A transcript of part of the
Plaintiffs’ Examination for Discovery of the Defendant held on October 31,
2011, has been put in the motion record before me […]. It shows that the
Defendant’s Counsel was resisting giving answers in respect of any film product
not listed in Appendix A to the Statement of Claim, and very careful answers
were given with respect to those that were listed such as saying that it did
not make a product called FPs317 but admitted that it did make a product called
FPs317-A.
[49]
Nova redacted all references to the disputed grades
from the documents it produced during the liability phase, including passages
comparing the disputed grades to the pleaded grades. Dow maintains that some
relevant documents were not produced at all.
[50]
During the supplemental damages phase of the
U.S. litigation, and after completion of Dow’s discovery of Nova in the
Canadian action, Nova produced updated sales information that referenced three
of the four disputed grades. Dow acknowledges that EX-FPs225-A01 was referenced
in the documents that were produced in the initial phase of the U.S.
litigation, but maintains that this grade was not in issue in those
proceedings.
[51]
There is good reason to conclude that the disputed
grades are already encompassed by Justice O’Keefe’s judgment in Dow v Nova:
(a)
FPs417-A was introduced by Nova in May 2010 as a
“higher melt index [MI] version of FPs317-A”, a
grade included in Appendix A to Dow’s original Statement of Claim. Nova’s internal
documents characterized FPs417-A as “a minor variant”
of FPs317-A, and described the two as “virtually
identical”.
(b)
Nova’s MI specifications for FPs317-A and
FPs417-A overlap. In the case of FPs317, the acceptable MI range is between
3.35 and 4.65. In the case of FPs417, the acceptable MI range is between 3.8
and 5.0. Aside from the change in the target MI for the two products, the
FPs317-A and FPs417-A specification sheets are identical, including in respect
of all of the reported tensile film properties.
(c)
According to Dr. Kelusky’s examination for
discovery, Nova did not test the film properties of FPs417-A for the purposes
of the data sheet, but assumed that they would be identical to FPs317-A. Dr.
Kelusky admitted that FPs317-A and FPs417-A could have been labelled with the
same grade designation (i.e., FPs417-A), based on Nova’s nomenclature
convention. Since July 28, 2011, Nova has re-graded material originally made as
FPs417-A with the FPs317-A designation. Nova has also re-designated lots of
FPs317-A as FPs417-A.
(d)
EX-FPs016-A01 and FPs016-A are identical. The “EX” prefix merely identifies a grade as experimental,
even though it may be sold commercially. Sales of EX-FPs016-A01 began in
October 2010. Between June and August 2011, Nova stopped using the “EX” designation and began using the name FPs016-A.
(e)
FPs016-A differs from grades that were included
in Appendix A of Dow’s original Statement of Claim (FPs016-C and FPs016-D) only
by virtue of the “additive package” which is
combined with the FPs016 base resin after production in the reactors. The
FPs016 base resin was specifically pleaded and found to infringe the ’705
Patent.
(f)
EX-FPs225-A01 is identical to, and the
experimental precursor of, FPs225-A, which was specifically included in
Appendix A to Dow’s original Statement of Claim.
[52]
It has previously been held in the patent context
that pleadings of infringement encompass variants that are not substantially
different from one another, and to require a separate infringement claim on
each variant would result in never-ending litigation (CSI Manufacturing
& Distribution Inc v Astroflex Inc (1993), 52 CPR (3d) 483 (FCTD) at para
31). Moreover, Justice O’Keefe found in Dow v Nova that “film-grade polymers under the name SURPASS” infringed
the ’705 Patent. It would be inconsistent with the intent and clear implication
of that judgment to exclude infringing grades of SURPASS solely on the ground
that were sold under slightly different names by the infringing party.
[53]
This Court was faced with a similar circumstance
in Xerox v IBM (1977), 43 CPR (2d) 60 (FCTD). The Statement of Claim in
that case identified the infringing device as an “IBM
Copier I”, and judgment in the liability phase was granted accordingly.
In the subsequent reference on damages, the Court considered whether the
defendant’s newer product, the Copier II, was sufficiently similar to the infringing
device to merit its inclusion in the damages phase. This Court held that the
trial judgement was not confined to a single type of machine, but applied to any
similarly-infringing IBM copier.
[54]
Nova characterises Dow’s argument that the
disputed grades are already encompassed in Justice O’Keefe’s judgment in Dow
v Nova as a collateral attack on Justice Hughes’ Order dated March 30,
2016. Nova notes that in paragraph 30, Justice Hughes accepted Nova’s argument
that:
[Nova] did disclose three additional films
in the context of the United States proceedings in February, 2012. Dow was
aware of this disclosure and had access to it in the context of the Canadian
proceeding but did nothing. The Order of Prothonotary Milczynski of March 11,
2011 made it quite clear that Appendix A of the Statement of Claim was to list
the specific products at issue, and if any other products come to light, the
Statement of Claim could be amended as the Plaintiffs did on February 22, 2012.
[55]
Justice Hughes also agreed with Nova’s
contention that the omission of the disputed grades from Justice O’Keefe’s
judgment in Dow v Nova could not be rectified pursuant to Rule 399.
However, he did not make any definitive findings on the merits of Nova’s
potential defences of non-infringement, res judicata, abuse of
process, limitation and prescription. He held only that Nova should be given an
opportunity to advance these defences (at para 31).
[56]
Nova also relies on Justice Russell’s Order
dated June 23, 2016 (2016 FC 706) at paragraphs 38 to 39 and 75 to 76.
However, these excerpts only describe aspects of Justice Hughes’ ruling. They
do not purport to expand or otherwise alter them.
[57]
Nova has conceded infringement. In my view,
Justice Hughes’ conclusion that Nova should be given an opportunity to advance
defences of res judicata, abuse of process, limitation and prescription
does not preclude a finding by this Court that they do not apply because the
disputed grades are already encompassed by Justice O’Keefe’s judgment in Dow
v Nova.
[58]
In the alternative, assuming without deciding
that cause of action estoppel is available to Nova as a defence, there are
aspects of Nova’s conduct that militate against accepting the equitable defence
in these circumstances. The Court retains a residual discretion not to apply res
judicata if this would produce an outcome that is not fair and just (Danyluk
v Ainsworth Technologies Inc, 2001 SCC 44 at para 80). Here, the evidence establishes
that Nova sought to conceal the disputed grades during the liability phase of
this action, by redacting all references to the disputed grades in relevant
documents and by offering “very careful answers”
on discovery. There is a danger that denying Dow a remedy for the admitted
infringement of the ’705 Patent on the ground of res judicata would have
the effect of sanctioning and rewarding Nova’s obfuscatory tactics.
[59]
Although Nova pleaded abuse of process in its Amended
Statement of Defence dated April 22, 2016, it made no submissions regarding
this defence in its closing submissions. Abuse of process may be established
where the proceedings are oppressive or vexatious, and violate the fundamental
principles of justice underlying the community’s sense of fair play and decency
(Toronto (City) v CUPE, Local 79, 2003 SCC 63 at para 35 [Toronto
(City)]).
[60]
Re-litigation, in and of itself, is not a
sufficient basis for a finding of abuse of process; an additional serious
element, such as unjust harassment, is required (Dhaliwal v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship & Immigration), [2001] FCJ No 1943 at para 6). It is a
remedy to be applied sparingly and only in the clearest and most obvious cases
(Glenko Enterprises Ltd v Keller, 2008 MBCA 24 at para 56). The
overriding concern is a balance of fairness and finality (British Columbia (Workers’
Compensation Board) v Figliola, 2011 SCC 52 at paras 25 and 34; Toronto
(City) at paras 37-38).
[61]
I find that the disputed grades are already
encompassed by Justice O’Keefe’s judgment in Dow v Nova. In the
alternative, I conclude that it would not be fair and just to give effect to
the equitable defence of res judicata, given Nova’s deliberate
concealment of information pertaining to the disputed grades in the course of
discovery. For similar reasons, I am satisfied that granting Dow remedies for
the disputed grades, which are admitted to infringe the ’705 Patent, would not
be oppressive or vexatious, and would not violate the community’s sense of fair
play and decency.
[62]
Nova raises a limitations defence only with
respect to EX-FPs225-A01. Dow acknowledges that Nova ended its sales of this
disputed grade prior to January 20, 2010, i.e., more than six years
before the effective date on which Dow added the disputed grades to its claim.
However, Dow pleaded the same product under its commercial name FPs225-A before
the limitation period expired on February 22, 2012. Given that the two products
are identical, I cannot accept Nova’s argument that it should benefit from a
limitations defence merely because it sold the pleaded grade FPs225-A under a
slightly different name.
[63]
Subsection 55(2) of the Patent Act provides
as follows:
55(2) A person
is liable to pay reasonable compensation to a patentee and to all persons
claiming under the patentee for any damage sustained by the patentee or by
any of those persons by reason of any act on the part of that person, after
the application for the patent became open to public inspection under section
10 and before the grant of the patent, that would have constituted an
infringement of the patent if the patent had been granted on the day the
application became open to public inspection under that section.
|
55(2) Est
responsable envers le breveté et toute personne se réclamant de celui-ci, à
concurrence d’une indemnité raisonnable, quiconque accomplit un acte leur
faisant subir un dommage entre la date à laquelle la demande de brevet est
devenue accessible au public sous le régime de l’article 10 et l’octroi du
brevet, dans le cas où cet acte aurait constitué une contrefaçon si le brevet
avait été octroyé à la date où cette demande est ainsi devenue accessible.
|
[64]
Dow and Nova agree that the proper measure of damages
under s 55(2) of the Patent Act is a reasonable royalty for Nova’s use
of Dow’s patented technology from the time SURPASS was launched in 2002 until
the ’705 Patent was issued in 2006. Dow accepts that it may be barred by
limitations from claiming a reasonable royalty prior to 2004, and the relevant
period for which compensation is sought is therefore December 9, 2004 to August
21, 2006.
[65]
The reasonable royalty is to be determined using
a hypothetical negotiation between Dow and Nova for a licence authorizing
Nova’s use of the patented technology. The object of the exercise is to
identify the royalty rate that would result from a negotiation between a
willing licensor and a willing licensee (AlliedSignal
Inc v DuPont Canada Inc, [1998] FCJ No 190 (TD) at
para 199, aff’d [1999] FCJ No 38 (CA) [AlliedSignal (FC)]; Jay-Lor
International Inc v Penta Farm Systems Ltd, 2007 FC 358 at para 125 [Jay-Lor]).
[66]
The hypothetical negotiation occurs on the eve
of the first infringement on January 1, 2002. The negotiation encompasses
numerous factors, but is primarily focused on Nova’s anticipated profits from
the sale of products using Dow’s patented technology (Jay-Lor at paras
128 and 150).
[67]
Dr. Leonard and Dr. Heeb, the experts called on
behalf of Dow and Nova respectively, agreed on the framework to be applied to
the hypothetical royalty negotiation. The boundaries of the hypothetical
negotiation are Dow’s “minimum willingness to accept”
[MWTA], having regard to the anticipated impact of Nova’s sales of SURPASS on
Dow’s sales of ELITE, and Nova’s “maximum willingness
to pay” [MWTP], having regard to the profit that Nova would expect to gain
from sales of SURPASS. This is the bargaining range of the negotiation. The
difference between Dow’s MWTA and Nova’s MWTP is referred to as the “gains to trade” (i.e., the joint benefit of
the hypothetical licence), which must be divided between the parties in a
reasonable manner.
[68]
Dr. Leonard and Dr. Heeb agreed that Dow’s MWTA would
be the profits that Dow expected to lose from licensing its technology to Nova,
i.e., the proportion of Nova’s sales of SURPASS that would be diverted
from Dow’s sales of ELITE [diversion ratio]. Dow would seek to recoup its profits
on those lost sales.
[69]
Dr. Leonard conducted a review of the mLLDPE
market in 2002, and concluded that the diversion ratio should be conservatively
estimated at 50%. Dr. Heeb, using a logit simulation model, concluded that the
diversion ratio would be 22%.
[70]
SURPASS and ELITE are close substitutes for each
other, both in terms of their properties and their processability. They are
both mLLDPE products, and occupy a distinct segment of the polyethylene market.They are direct competitors. Conventional
LLDPE products, such as Dow’s DOWLEX and Nova’s SCLAIR, are in a different
market segment and compete primarily with other products in the same segment.
Nova and its customers both understood SURPASS to be a “drop-in”
for ELITE, which Justice O’Keefe observed in the liability phase was a driving
feature behind its design (Dow v Nova at para 252).
[71]
Exxon’s EXCEED also competes in the mLLDPE
category, and is considered a market leader. It is known for its strength, but
its processability has sometimes been perceived as a weakness. ELITE and
SURPASS are both promoted as products that offer a superior combination of
properties and processability compared to EXCEED.
[72]
Exxon’s EXCEED tends to be less expensive than
SURPASS and ELITE. Customers who value the improved processability of ELITE and
SURPASS are willing to pay a premium, while customers for whom processability is
less important are likely to remain loyal to EXCEED.
[73]
Based on these market dynamics, Dr. Leonard
concluded that if SURPASS had not been available in 2002, then most of its
customers would likely have purchased ELITE as the only other product offering
the same characteristics. Between 2002 and 2006, ELITE and SURPASS were sold in
the same limited market, with most of their customers in common.
[74]
Dow takes the position that during the period
for which a reasonable royalty is sought, nearly 100% of SURPASS sales would have
come at the expense of ELITE sales. This is confirmed by Nova’s internal
documents, which portrayed ELITE and SURPASS as the sole competitors in a
premium market segment, distinct from both conventional LLDPE and Exxon’s EXCEED.
Dow therefore maintains that the 50% diversion ratio proposed by Dr. Leonard is
a conservative estimate.
[75]
Dr. Heeb’s diversion ratio of 22% was derived
from a logit simulation model. Dr. Heeb postulated that if Nova’s SURPASS were
not available from 2002 to 2006, then those sales would have been diverted to a
range of different alternative products based on the prices and market shares
of selective market participants. Dr. Heeb admitted that he was forced to make
assumptions about the pricing of alternative products and the respective market
shares of other manufacturers, and to rely on questionable data provided by
industry consultants, because these data are closely-guarded trade secrets and
are often difficult to obtain.
[76]
In my view, Dr. Heeb’s logit simulation model suffers
from a more fundamental flaw. He assumed that all of the alternative products he
included in his simulation model were interchangeable and equally competitive. This
failed to account for the fact that ELITE and SURPASS are the closest
substitutes for each other, and many customers who purchase SURPASS would consider
replacing it only with ELITE. Dr. Heeb even included some conventional LLDPE products
in his simulation model, such as SCLAIR – which is made by Nova. But these are
not plausible substitutes for SURPASS in most applications.
[77]
Dr. Heeb’s logit simulation model assumed that the
price of Dow’s ELITE would increase in the absence of Nova’s SURPASS, while the
price of Nova’s SCLAIR would decrease. He concluded that approximately 45% of
SURPASS sales would be diverted to the conventional LLDPE product SCLAIR, while
only 22% would be diverted to Dow’s ELITE. These assumptions were inconsistent
with the evidence that mLLDPE products form one distinct market segment, while
conventional LLDPE products form another.
[78]
In closing argument, counsel for Nova candidly
admitted that Dr. Leonard “got the better of”
Dr. Heeb with respect to his logit simulation model. I agree. For the reasons
explained above, I prefer the analysis of Dr. Leonard. His estimate of a 50%
diversion ratio is conservative, and I have no hesitation in adopting it.
[79]
Dr. Leonard and Dr. Heeb also differed in their
opinions regarding the parties’ expectations of ELITE’s profitability in the
hypothetical negotiation. Both used Dow’s historical profit margins for ELITE
as a proxy for the parties’ expectations in 2002. However, Dr. Heeb included
profit margins for 2001, a recession year in which Dow realized the lowest profit
margins for ELITE in the product’s history (1.4%).
[80]
Dow launched ELITE in 1997, and at the time of
the hypothetical negotiation in 2002, historical profit margins would be available
for only a four year period: 1997 to 2001. Dr. Heeb’s decision to include the
unusually low profit margin for 2001 had the effect of reducing the average profit
margin for ELITE from 17.7% to 12.5%. This may be contrasted with the average
ELITE profit margin of 21.6% for the period 1997 to 2011, which included two
recession years. Dr. Leonard excluded 2001 from his calculation and arrived at
an average historical profit margin for ELITE of 17.7%. This accords more
closely with what actually happened in the years following the hypothetical
negotiation. Applying the 50% diversion ratio, Dr. Leonard estimated Dow’s MWTA
to be 8.8%.
[81]
Again, I prefer Dr. Leonard’s analysis to that
of Dr. Heeb. The inclusion of 2001, a recession year, in the assessment of the
parties’ expectations regarding ELITE’s profit margin at the time of the
hypothetical negotiation artificially deflates the average. Excluding 2001
produces an average profit margin for ELITE of 17.7%. This is roughly
consistent with, although somewhat lower than, 21.6%, i.e., the actual
profit margin for ELITE over the period 1997 to 2011, which included two
recession years. Dr. Leonard’s estimate of Dow’s MWTA of 8.8% is conservative,
and I have no hesitation in adopting it.
[82]
Both parties agree that Nova’s maximum
willingness to pay is the profit that Nova would expect to earn on SURPASS
compared to the next best non-infringing alternative [NIA]. The NIAs proposed
by Nova are primarily pail and crate grade products.
[83]
Dr. Heeb assumed that at the time of the
hypothetical negotiation, Nova would expect to be at full capacity at all
times, and all SURPASS sales would therefore be replaced, at a minimum, by sales
of pail and crate grades. He then used Nova’s actual profit margins from its
sales of the NIAs over the period 2002 to 2008 as a proxy for the expected
profitability of the NIAs in the hypothetical negotiation.
[84]
According to Dr. Leonard, if NIAs are taken into
account, one must consider the amount of time that Nova was actually at
capacity during the period 2002 to 2006. He calculated this to be only 37% of
the time. He also said that for the periods when Nova was at full capacity, it
would be necessary to determine the ratio of SURPASS profit margins to NIA
profit margins per reactor hour.
[85]
In his reply to Dr. Leonard’s report, Dr. Heeb accepted
this approach in principle. However, he disagreed with Dr. Leonard’s estimate
of how often Nova would expect its plant to be at full capacity, and his use of
the lowest margin product as a proxy for the profitability of Nova’s NIAs.
According to Dr. Heeb, if Dr. Leonard used data from 2002 to 2008 (a full
business cycle) and applied the correct margins per reactor hour, then the
ratio of the NIAs’ profit margins to those of SURPASS would more than double.
[86]
In my view, the evidence supports Dr. Heeb’s
assertion that in 2002, the parties would assume that Nova could use the PE2
plant flexibly to replace all infringing products with NIAs. I discuss Nova’s
operation of the PE2 plant and its business objective of maintaining full
capacity below in the context of profits. I am more persuaded by Dr. Heeb’s
margin ratio than I am by the one proposed by Dr. Leonard. Applying these
assumptions, Dr. Heeb concluded that Nova’s MWTP would be lower than Dow’s MWTA.
[87]
If Nova’s MWTP is lower than Dow’s MWTA of 8.8%,
then there is no bargaining range between the parties. As Dr. Heeb stated,
“[s]ince a bargain is compulsory in this hypothetical
negotiation, the reasonable royalty rate is simply Dow’s MW[T]A”. Dr.
Leonard did not dispute this approach. There is therefore no need to consider
the division of gains to trade.
[88]
Even if NIAs are not taken into account, then according to Dr.
Heeb, Nova’s MWTP is still lower than 8.8%. Accordingly, Nova’s proposed NIAs
have no bearing on the determination of the reasonable royalty.
[89]
I therefore conclude that the appropriate rate
for the reasonable royalty payable by Nova to Dow for the period 2004 to 2006, regardless
of whether or not the pail and crate NIAs are taken into account, is 8.8%.
[90]
Nova advanced numerous additional arguments that
the reasonable royalty payable to Dow should be reduced. None of these was
persuasive, and they may be dealt with briefly.
[91]
Nova asserted that Dow’s MWTA should be reduced
because “competition can expand a market by increasing
product availability and having an additional sales force from Nova would draw
in more customers than Dow could on its own. Dow would see that Nova could sell
more easily than Dow to Nova’s existing customers of other products. Dow might
realize it could still sell all it could make and, in addition, receive a
royalty from Nova for the expanded market.” This speculative assertion
was not discussed by any of the expert witnesses who testified in these
proceedings. It is therefore unsupported by evidence, and I do not accept it.
[92]
Nova criticized Dr. Leonard’s assessment of
Nova’s MWTP on the ground that he largely ignored Nova’s licence negotiations
for SCLAIRTECH. Mr. Vermani, who was responsible for Nova’s licensing
agreements, testified that Nova valued its AST (used to make the infringing
products) only moderately more than SCLAIRTECH. Mr. Vermani suggested that
Nova’s MWTP should therefore be in the range of 1% to 2%. However, the evidence
establishes that SURPASS and ELITE occupy a distinct market segment from
conventional LLDPE products such as Nova’s SCLAIR. Neither Dow nor Nova has
ever licensed ELITE or SURPASS technology, and I am unable to infer anything
regarding the value of a hypothetical licence for ELITE technology based on the
royalty obtained by Nova for licensing SCLAIRTECH. Furthermore, this is not the
basis upon which either Nova’s or Dow’s experts assessed the reasonable royalty
payable to Dow for Nova’s infringement of the ’705 Patent during the relevant
period.
[93]
Nova invoked the doctrine of comity to argue
that this Court should respect the decision of the U.S. jury to apply an
effective royalty rate of 1.755% to calculate Dow’s damages resulting from
Nova’s infringement of the equivalent U.S. patent over a similar period. It
provided no authorities to support its position. I am not persuaded that comity
applies to the U.S. jury award, which did not address the question of a
reasonable royalty per se (hence Nova’s use of the term “effective royalty”), and applied different law in a
different jurisdiction (see Morguard Investments Ltd v De Savoye, [1990]
3 SCR 1077 at para 29).
[94]
At the commencement of this reference, Nova
informed the Court that when Dow’s application for the ’705 Patent was
published in 1994,
[…] it did not have any claim that included
within its scope a homogeneously branched linear ethylene α-olefin
interpolymer with an SHC limitation. All of the claims Dow asserted were
directed to a linear homogeneously branched component A (as found in
SURPASS), with a specified SHC (which the trial judge found to be the inventive
concept). The only claim in the published application that referenced SHC is
Claim 4, but its Component A is substantially linear rather than linear.
[Emphasis original]
[95]
However, Dr. Speed, the expert witness called by
Nova to substantiate this assertion, acknowledged in cross-examination that he
had not been aware that Claim 4 of Dow’s application was amended on June 2,
1995 to include a homogeneously branched linear ethylene α-olefin
interpolymer with an SHC limitation. This was seven years before Nova began
infringing the ’705 Patent.
[96]
Nova maintained that Dow’s delay in prosecuting
its patent application from 1994 to 2006 should be a relevant factor in the
Court’s determination of what compensation is “reasonable”.
However, this was premised on Nova’s assertion that none of the published
claims of the ’705 Patent prior to its issuance were infringed by Nova. This
turned out not to be true.
[97]
Finally, in closing submissions, counsel for
Nova advanced an entirely new argument that the parties to the hypothetical
licence negotiation in 2002 would have anticipated that the term of the licence
would be just four years, i.e., from 2002 until 2006, when the ’705
Patent was issued. In this alternative “but for”
world, Nova would seek to licence Dow’s patented technology only until the ’705
Patent came into force, at which time Nova would cease its production of
SURPASS until the ’705 Patent expired in 2014. Nova did not adduce any evidence
to support this new theory. Nor was this the basis upon which either Nova’s or
Dow’s experts assessed the reasonable royalty payable to Dow for Nova’s
infringement of the ’705 Patent during the relevant period.
[98]
Dow and Nova agree that the adjusted net revenue
arising from Nova’s infringement of the ’705 Patent should be based on Nova’s
Comprehensive Sales Report (also referred to as the Detailed Sales Transaction
Listing), i.e., gross sales revenues plus billed surcharges less billed
price reductions, rebates and cash discounts. They also agree that reasonable
compensation should be calculated by multiplying Nova’s adjusted net revenues
by the royalty rate that this Court finds to be appropriate.
[99]
Nova accepts that infringing grades and
infringing off-grades should be included in the calculation of the reasonable
royalty. It is common ground between the parties that the disputed grades were
not sold during the royalty period. However, Nova maintains that what it
describes as the “non-infringing
ZN off-grades” should be excluded from the
calculation of the reasonable royalty payable to Dow.
[100] I am satisfied that the infringing off-grades are those included in
Justice O’Keefe’s judgment in Dow v Nova. On appeal, Nova did not
challenge the inclusion of the off-grades in Justice O’Keefe’s judgment. To
exclude the so-called “non-infringing
ZN off-grades” from the calculation of damages
and profits would amount to a collateral attack on the judgment of Justice
O’Keefe. The evidence offered by Nova in this reference to support its
assertion that certain off-grades cannot infringe the ’705
Patent because they involve a change in catalyst should have been presented to
Justice O’Keefe. That evidence is, in any event, unreliable. Purchasers of
Nova’s off-grades are not indifferent to their properties and processibility.
This is why they are given a specific designation by Nova. Off-grades are often
mixed with other grades, and their performance characteristics matter to Nova’s
customers. For all of these reasons, it is appropriate to include all of the
off-grades identified in Justice O’Keefe’s judgment in the calculation of the
reasonable royalty.
[101] In Dow v Nova, Justice O’Keefe made the following order with
respect to pre-judgment interest on the reasonable royalty payable by Nova to
Dow (at para 283):
The plaintiffs shall be entitled to
pre-judgment interest, not compounded, on the award of reasonable compensation
for the acts of the defendant under subsection 55(2) of the Patent Act
and damages (if elected), at a rate of interest to be calculated separately for
each year since infringing activity began at the average annual bank rate
established by the Bank of Canada as the minimum rate at which it makes short-term
advances to the banks listed in Schedule I of the Bank Act, SC 1991, c
46. However, such award is conditional upon the reference judge not awarding
interest under paragraph 36(4)(f) of the Federal Courts Act, RSC 1985, c
F-7.
[102] Dow seeks a higher rate of pre-judgment interest than the average
annual bank rate. Dow argues that pre-judgment interest for the reasonable
compensation period should be calculated using its annual cost of borrowing on
a simple basis.
[103] Nova says that Dow has been silent with regard to s 36(4)(f) of the Federal
Courts Act, RSC 1985, c F-7, and the applicable rate is therefore the bank
rate. In the alternative, Nova complains that Mr. Hamilton’s conclusions
regarding the appropriate rate of pre-judgment interest are unsupported by
evidence. Dow replies that its Statement of Issues refers to paragraph 4 of the
judgment of Justice O’Keefe and s 36(4)(b) of the Federal Courts Act. Dow
says that this is a typographical error, and was intended to be a reference to
s 36(4)(f). Dow also maintains that Nova has been aware of its position
regarding s 36(4)(f) of the Federal Courts Act, and its position that Dow’s
borrowing rate is the appropriate metric, since at least as early as the
initial expert report of Mr. Hamilton, which Nova received on July 15, 2016.
[104] Mr. Hamilton stated in his initial expert report that he “reviewed Dow’s publically available
financial statements for the years ended 2001 to 2015 and noted that Dow had
outstanding long term debt ranging from approximately US$9.5 billion to US$24.3
billion and the weighted average annual debt cost associated with these
borrowings ranged from 5.1% to 6.3%”. Mr. Soriano did not
address pre-judgment interest for the reasonable compensation period in his expert
reports, beyond noting that he had been instructed by counsel to apply the bank
rate.
[105] The evidence relied upon by Mr. Hamilton to support his conclusions consisted
of Dow’s
publically available financial statements. Nova did not challenge the accuracy
of his calculations or the legitimacy of his analysis in its expert reports or
in cross-examination. Adopting a conservative approach, I find that the appropriate rate of pre-judgment interest for damages payable
under s 55(2) of the Patent Act is 5%, not compounded.
[106] In Dow v Nova, Justice O’Keefe held at paragraph 283:
2.
The plaintiffs are entitled to elect after due inquiry and
full discovery, either an accounting of profits of the defendant or all damages
sustained by reason of infringement by the defendant of the above mentioned patent. Such damages or accounting of
profits will be assessed by reference preceded by discovery if requested.
[…]
5.
In the event that the plaintiffs elect an accounting of profits, pre-judgment interest
shall be determined by the reference judge.
[107] Dow has elected an accounting of Nova’s profits derived from the
infringing products.
[108] An
accounting of profits is an equitable remedy within the discretion of the trial
judge. Once an accounting is granted and elected, the Court’s role is to assess
the actual profits made by the defendant as a result of the infringement. A plaintiff is entitled only to that portion of the infringer’s profit
that is causally attributable to the invention (Teledyne Industries
Inc v Lido Industrial Products Ltd, [1982] FCJ No 1024 at 207-209
(TD) [Teledyne]; Monsanto Canada Inc v Schmeiser, 2004 SCC 34 at para 101 [Schmeiser]; Monsanto Canada Inc v Rivett, 2009 FC 317 at para 27 [Rivett]).
[109] The remedy of an accounting of profits is restitutionary in nature,
not punitive (Schmeiser at para 101; Lubrizol Corp v Imperial Oil Ltd,
[1997] 2 FC 3 at para 15 (CA) [Lubrizol]; AlliedSignal Inc v DuPont
Canada Inc, [1995] FCJ No 744 at para 81 (CA)). As Justice Zinn stated in Rivett
at paragraph 22, “it is the wrong-doer who is being
restored, through a disgorgement of profits, to the position that he would have
been in had he not done the illegal act.”
[110] The plaintiff bears the burden of proving the defendant’s sales or
revenues from the infringement. Mr. Hamilton and Mr. Soriano, the expert
witnesses called on behalf of Dow and Nova respectively, were in significant
agreement regarding the values of the revenues. Both stated that their
conclusions differed only because of the assumptions they were asked to make by
their instructing counsel.
[111] For the reasons explained above, the revenues attributable to Nova’s
infringement of the ’705 Patent extend to those earned from the disputed grades
and the infringing off-grades.
[112] If Nova had not infringed the ’705 Patent, then it would have taken
Nova some time following the patent’s expiry to attain the same level of sales
of the infringing products that Nova enjoyed in April 2014. Dow says that
Nova’s infringement of the ’705 Patent provided it with a “springboard” into the market and, as a result, Nova
continued to profit from its infringing activity after the expiry of the ’705
Patent. Dow says that it is entitled to receive these “springboard
profits” from April 20, 2014 to December 31, 2015.
[113] In AstraZeneca Canada Inc v Apotex Inc, 2015 FC 671 at
paragraph 7 [AstraZeneca], Justice Barnes acknowledged the potential for
springboard damages in a patent action:
In my view,
springboard damages are nothing more than a type of loss no different than any
other claim to damages. They must be proven or disproven with evidence. There
is accordingly no need to refer to springboard damages or to any other
particular form of damages at the liability stage.
[114] In Bayer Cropscience KK v Charles River Laboratories Preclinical
Services Edinburgh Ltd & Albaugh Inc, [2010] CSOH 158 [Bayer
Cropscience], the Scottish Court of Session held
that springboard relief should be available in an accounting of
profits as well as in damages. Lord Malcolm cited the earlier decision of the
Patents Court in Gerber Garment Technology Inc v Lectra Systems Limited and
Another, [1995] RPC 383, aff’d [1997] RPC 443, which spoke of an
infringer establishing a “bridgehead” or “springboard” for sales before the expiry of a patent.
He continued at paragraph 9:
Given that it is well understood that an
account of profits and an inquiry as to damages both proceed on a common
principle of legal causation […], I can identify no good reason why this conclusion
should not apply to both forms of remedy. […] [I]t would be very odd if
springboard claims were available for damages, but not for the alternative
remedy of an accounting of profits made by the wrongdoer.
[115] Nova argues that the possibility of springboard damages may be
recognized in Canadian jurisprudence, but no Canadian court has awarded springboard
profits following the expiration of a patent. Nova maintains that by accepting
the payment of a royalty as reasonable compensation, and by electing an accounting
of profits, Dow is deemed to have condoned Nova’s infringement of the ’705
Patent, and Nova is deemed to have carried on its infringing
business as Dow’s agent. According to Nova, when Dow’s patent expired in 2014,
the agency relationship ended and Nova’s activities no longer infringed. There
is therefore no need to account for any profits earned by Nova following expiry
of the ’705 Patent. Any benefit that Nova may have derived from having a
“springboard” into the
market following the patent’s expiry has been fairly purchased by the payment
of a reasonable royalty and/or an accounting of profits.
[116] Nova’s
contention that the payment of a royalty and disgorgement of profits amount to
condonation of an infringer’s activities finds some
support in Canadian jurisprudence. In Ductmate Industries Inc v Exanno Products
Ltd (1987), 16 CPR (3d) 15 at paragraph 15 (FCTD), Justice Reed held as
follows:
An accounting of profits proceeds on the
basis that the defendant is being treated as the plaintiff’s trustee. In the
text written by T. A. Blanco White entitled Patents for Inventions (4th
ed., 1974) at p. 430 it is explained as follows:
An account of
profits (under which the defendant's business, so far as it relates to
infringements of the patent concerned, is treated as having been carried on on
behalf of the patentee). ...
And, in Fisher and Smart on Patents
(1914) at p. 228:
... In electing to
take such profits the plaintiff condones the infringement, and adopts what was
done by the defendant, who may in the enquiry be regarded as the agent or
trustee of the plaintiff. (American Braided Wire Co. v. Thompson, [1890]
7 R.P.C. 138.).
[117] In Beloit Canada Ltd v Valmet-Dominion Inc, [1997] 3 FC 497
at para 100 (CA), the Federal Court of Appeal said the following:
The equitable remedy of an account was
granted against the infringer of a patent, copyright or trade mark, on the
premise that the infringer acted as the agent of the owner of the right and was
therefore obliged to account for the profits earned through the infringement.
Accordingly, the owner of a patent who claimed an account of profits was
considered to have condoned the infringement and could not claim damages in
addition to the account.
[118]
Dow objects that Nova did not plead condonation
in its Statement of Issues, and should not now be permitted to advance this
argument. Dow also asserts that notions of agency and condonation are a legal
fiction, and no approval of an infringer’s conduct is intended. Dow relies on Cala Homes (South) Ltd v
Alfred McAlpine Homes East Ltd, [1996] FSR 36 at 41-42, in
which Justice Laddie of the English High Court of Justice said the following:
By parity of reasoning, the plaintiffs say
that electing an account does not involve them in ratifying or condoning the
infringement. They have simply elected between two types of remedy available
under section 96(2) [of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988,
1988, c 48] for invasion of their rights. Whether or not they are entitled to
an account under section 96(2) and statutory additional damages under section
97(3) is to be determined by considering whether those two forms of relief are
mutually inconsistent, not by pretending that the plaintiffs approved of the
defendant’s activities and therefore cannot complain of their flagrancy. In my
view the plaintiffs are right.
[119] According to Dow, “the infringer of a patent
has to be treated as the plaintiff’s trustee and as a defalcating trustee who
committed a species of fraud” (citing Reading & Bates
Construction Co v Baker Energy Resources Corp, [1994] FCJ No 1514 at para
40 (CA) [Reading & Bates]).
[120] I am not persuaded that Nova’s failure to explicitly plead
condonation in its statement of issues precludes it from defending against
Dow’s claim of springboard profits on this basis. In the same way that Justice
Barnes found in AstraZeneca that springboard damages are potentially
available even if not specifically addressed at the liability phase, the notion
of condonation is implicit in any analysis of reasonable royalty or an
accounting of a defendant’s profits as the patent-holder’s agent. Condonation
in this context does not connote a form of approval of the infringer’s actions.
Rather, it is an acknowledgment that the “defalcating
trustee” must account fully for the infringement. The purpose of an accounting
for profits is simply to give to the plaintiff the profits made by the
defendant from the wrongful infringement (Diversified Products Corp v
Tye-Sil Corp, [1990] FCJ No 952 at para 6 (CA) [Tye-Sil]; Beloit
Canada Ltée/Ltd v Valmet Oy, [1992] FCJ No 825 at para 10 (CA) [Beloit
1992]).
[121] Nova must pay Dow a reasonable royalty resulting from Nova’s
infringement from December 9, 2004 to August 21, 2006. Dr. Leonard and Dr. Heeb
both testified that the term of the licence for the purposes of calculating the
reasonable royalty runs from the date of first infringement of the ’705 Patent until
its expiration.
[122] In closing argument, counsel for Nova argued that there is an implicit
assumption in the expert evidence of Dr. Leonard and Dr. Heeb that the royalty rate
contemplates the expiry of the patent and any resulting springboard period.
Counsel for Dow countered that the accounting of profits should be considered
in isolation from damages in the form of a reasonable royalty.
[123] Dow is entitled to awards under both ss 55(1) and 55(2) of the Patent
Act. Even if the royalty rates calculated by Dr. Heeb and Dr. Leonard can
be said to include the period following the expiration of the ’705 Patent, the
royalty compensates Dow only for Nova’s infringement during the period December
9, 2004 to August 21, 2006. The accounting of profits extends over a much
longer period.
[124] An accounting of profits is to be assessed in relation to a “but-for” world in which the defendant has not
infringed the plaintiff’s patent. The assumption is that at the time of the
patent’s expiry, the defendant had not yet produced the infringing product. I
agree with Justice Barnes that springboard damages are nothing more than a type
of loss to be proven with evidence, and I see no reason why this principle
should operate differently to a plaintiff’s gains in the context of an
accounting of profits.
[125] Mr. Dunn testified that in the “but-for”
world, Nova would have to complete two steps before it could offer the infringing
products for sale. First, Nova would have to develop the products, which would
include testing to generate data to demonstrate to customers that the products
could be used for specific applications. Second, the products would have to be
qualified for use in specific applications by each customer. Mr. Dunn
testified that in the “but-for” world following
expiry of the ’705 Patent, and depending upon the application – e.g.,
food packaging, diapers and hygiene, agricultural films, shrink films, heavy
duty sacks, stretch film, household bags and wrap, trash bags and industrial
liners – it would have taken Nova between 15 and 36 months to complete both
steps.
[126] Dr.
Leonard suggested that the time it took Nova to ramp up its sales of the
infringing products in 2002 provided some evidence of the time it would have
taken Nova to ramp up its sales in the “but-for” world following the expiry of the ’705
Patent. Dr. Leonard said that using the historical sales figures from 2002 was
a conservative approach because in 2014, the market was more mature and other
mLLDPE products, such as ELITE, would have captured most customers of interest by
that time.
[127] Mr. Hamilton calculated the revenues attributed to the springboard
period under three different scenarios: (i) a 12 month development period plus
the average qualification time for each application; (ii) a 12 month
development period together with an additional three month qualification
period, plus a ramp up period using the monthly ramp up percentages from Dr. Leonard’s
initial report; and (iii) a ramp up period using the monthly ramp up
percentages from Dr. Leonard’s reply report.
[128] Dr.
Kelusky testified about the manner in which Nova might have entered the mLLDPE
market following the expiry of the ’705 Patent. He did not
take serious issue with Mr. Dunn’s estimate of the time required to qualify
products for different applications. He nevertheless
offered the opinion that in 2014, Nova would have reached peak sales of SURPASS
more quickly than it did in 2001, when it began to sell SURPASS. The
implication of his testimony was that the ramp up period would have been
considerably shorter in the “but for”
world. Dr. Kelusky did not offer much in the way of evidence to support this
speculative assertion. He ceased to be involved in Nova’s business operations
in 2010. His report did not identify the basis for his conclusions regarding the
market for mLLDPE in 2014, including his analysis of price-matching for
FPs317-A, as well as the costs of raw materials, plant operations or waste
disposal. I therefore give his opinion little weight.
[129] Dr.
Heeb suggested that Nova’s ramp up rate following expiry of the ’705 Patent
should be based on the actual sales of Nova’s experimental and commercial grade
products during the 2014-2015 period. He posited that Nova would begin with the
aggressive pricing strategy it used for some products in 2006. He assumed that
once a product reached its peak monthly sales, it would sustain that level of
sales in each subsequent month – an assumption that was not supported by the
data. He then applied these rates to Nova’s actual sales of infringing products
in the real world after the expiration of the ’705 patent. In my view, Dr.
Heeb’s analysis is speculative and unsupported by the evidence. I do not accept
it.
[130] I
am satisfied that in the “but for”
world, where Nova was unable to enter the mLLDPE market until the expiry of the
’705 Patent, it would have taken Nova some time to overcome the
long-established presence of Dow’s ELITE products and ramp up its sales to the
levels it enjoyed in the real world. I am most persuaded by the third scenario
calculated by Mr. Hamilton, using the monthly ramp up
percentages found in Dr. Leonard’s reply report. This analysis is based on the
historical data of Nova’s actual ramp up periods, and is therefore grounded in
reality. It also takes into account Nova’s historical cumulative profit for the
first 11 months that it offered the infringing products for sale, and assumes an
effective ramp
up rate of zero during this initial period. This is a
fair and balanced approach.
[131] Once revenues are established, the defendant must prove, in general
terms, any costs that are to be deducted (Tye-Sil at para 11; Rivett
at para 67). Any doubt is to be resolved in favour of the plaintiff (Rivett at
para 67). The general principle applicable in cases of unjust enrichment that
substance should come before form applies (Lubrizol at para 8, quoting Dart
Industries Inc v Decor Corporation Pty Ltd, (1993) 179 CLR 101 at 111 (HCA)
[Dart Industries]).
[132] Both Mr. Soriano and Mr. Hamilton agreed on the approach to
deducting variable costs. Both experts relied on Nova’s Comprehensive Sales
Report to determine the variable cost of raw materials (excluding ethylene),
packaging, freight, duties and external commissions. Both experts used the same
methodology to determine the variable cost of “Utilities”
and “Other” Variable Costs on the income
statements. Both experts also treated “Inventory
Adjustments”, “Foreign Exchange”, and “Other” fixed costs recorded on the AST Income
Statements as variable. Each allocated these costs to the infringing products
based on their relative proportion of billed volumes.
[133] There are two central disputes between the parties: (1) the
appropriate measure of the cost of ethylene used to produce the infringing
products; and (2) the deductibility of proportionate capital depreciation and fixed
costs relating to the operation of the PE2 plant.
[134] Nova says that the true economic value of ethylene is its value in a
market transaction, regardless of whether the ethylene is produced by Nova or a
third party, used to make infringing or non-infringing products, sold to third
parties or used by the entity that produced it. Nova therefore argues that the
appropriate measure for determining the deductible cost of ethylene is the
average third party selling price (i.e., the market price). In the
alternative, Nova requests a full cost or absorption approach to its
manufacture of ethylene, including a proportion of variable, fixed and capital
costs.
[135] Dow says that Nova is entitled to deduct only the costs it actually incurred
to obtain the ethylene it used to manufacture the infringing products. Because
Nova produced its own ethylene at its E1, E2 and E3 plants located at its
facility in Joffre, Alberta, the appropriate measure for determining the
deductible cost of ethylene is Nova’s variable cost of manufacture. Dow says
that Nova’s position is premised on being able to sell ethylene to third
parties, or sell alternative non-infringing polyethylene products manufactured
at the PE2 plant, but Nova has failed to demonstrate that there was other demand
for both ethylene and the non-infringing polyethylene. Dow also says that Nova
has not established any aspect of the alleged market price it proposes, and
that Nova denied Dow meaningful discovery on the issue.
[136] In response to Nova’s alternative position, Dow says that Nova
should not be permitted to deduct a cost of ethylene that includes its fixed
costs for production (i.e., a full cost or absorption approach). According
to Dow, this was suggested for the first time in the second expert report of
Mr. Soriano, and the deduction of fixed costs associated with the manufacture
of infringing products is not supported by Canadian jurisprudence.
[137] There is no dispute that Nova benefited from an “Alberta Advantage” in the production of ethylene. It produced
ethylene at its own facility in Joffre, Alberta at a significant discount
compared to the market price of ethylene. That ethylene was then used to
produce polyethylene at the PE2 plant.
[138] In an accounting of profits, the aim is to provide the plaintiff
with all of the profits made by the defendant resulting from the infringement.
For this purpose, one must take the infringer as one finds them (Schmeizer
at paras 103-105; NV Siebrasse & AJ Stack, “Monetary
Relief – Quantum” in Dimock, Intellectual Property Disputes:
Resolutions and Remedies (Toronto: Thomson Reuters, 2016) at 19-73; see also
Tye-Sil at para 6; Athey v Leonati, [1996] 3 S.C.R. 458 at para 34).
[139] An accounting of profits should be based on actual revenues and
costs (Rivett at para 92). Here, Nova enjoyed an economic advantage with
respect to the cost of ethylene, the benefit of which must now be passed on to
Dow. Nova did not pay a market price for the ethylene it used to manufacture
the infringing products. While Nova kept separate business records indicating a
“transfer price” for ethylene for the Western
Olefins business segment, which produced ethylene at the Joffre site, Nova
concedes that the ethylene was produced by the same corporation that produced
the infringing products: Nova Chemicals Corporation. Nova does not suggest that
the “transfer price”, i.e., the price
recorded on several of Nova’s internal statements, is the appropriate measure
of the cost of ethylene. Put simply, Nova’s position that the market price
should be applied is based upon a theoretical cost that it did not incur.
[140] With a focus firmly on actual revenues and costs, I conclude that Nova
should be permitted a deduction for costs associated with the production of
ethylene using the full cost or absorption accounting approach. Accordingly,
the costs actually incurred by Nova to produce the ethylene that was used to
make the infringing products, whether variable or fixed, are appropriately
deducted as a variable cost of the infringing products. While Dow complains
that the deduction of fixed costs relating to ethylene was raised for the first
time by way of “improper sur-reply” in the
second report of Mr. Soriano, the appropriate costs to be deducted in an
accounting of profits are a question of law for the Court. I am satisfied that
any prejudicial effect of Mr. Soriano’s second report is outweighed by its
probative value.
[141] The second dispute between the parties is whether capital costs or
depreciation expenses should be applied against the relevant revenues.
[142] There are several recognized means of accounting for profits. These
include the “differential profit” approach; the “variable cost”, “incremental
cost” or “differential cost” approach;
and the “full cost” or “absorption”
approach. The choice of approach determines the allowable deductions, and
whether the Court will consider NIAs.
[143] Under the differential profit approach, the profits that must be
disgorged are those earned from the infringement less those profits that would
have been earned had the infringer produced an NIA (Rivett at para 29).
The Supreme Court of Canada has described this method as the “preferred approach” (Schmeizer at para 102;
see Apotex Inc v ADIR, 2017 FCA 23 at para 28 [ADIR]). The NIA
must be a true substitute or real alternative (Apotex Inc v Merck & Co,
Inc, 2015 FCA 171 at para 73 [Merck & Co]):
[144] Under the incremental cost approach, the profits to be disgorged are
the applicable revenue less any variable costs attributable to the invention,
and any increased fixed or capital costs attributable to the invention (Rivett
at para 30).
[145] Under the full cost or absorption approach, the profits to be
disgorged are the applicable revenue less applicable variable, fixed, and a
proportion of certain fixed and capital costs (Rivett at para 32).
Justice Zinn remarked in Rivett at paragraph 33 that “[i]f the full cost approach has ever been endorsed by this
Court, it has not been of late”.
[146] In this reference, Nova concedes that there were no “direct non-infringing alternatives” available for the
purpose of applying the “differential profits” approach. Furthermore, Nova
says its incremental costs are negligible and to apply the “incremental cost” approach would be “manifestly inequitable”. Nevertheless, Nova argues
that it should be permitted to deduct appropriate variable, fixed and capital costs
because in the “but for” world, it would have
produced what it calls “indirect non-infringing
alternatives”.
[147] Nova submits that the test for deduction of fixed costs should be
whether “an infringer would have manufactured or sold
non-infringing products had it not infringed and would have incurred overheads
in supporting that manufacture or sale”. In the alternative, Nova says
that the PE2 plant operated at full capacity during the relevant time periods,
always with a view to maximizing profit.
[148] Dow says that the full cost or absorption approach advocated by Nova
has been repeatedly rejected by Canadian courts because fixed costs, which
remain constant, are not causally attributable to the infringement. In the
alternative, Dow says that Nova must prove the following before fixed and
capital costs may be deducted: (i) Nova’s manufacturing assets were operating
at full capacity; (ii) there was sufficient demand to replace the production of
infringing products with alternative products; and (iii) the resulting profits
were sufficient to cover the fixed and capital costs in question. Dow says that
Nova has failed to prove these conditions.
[149] According
to Nova, if it had not made infringing SURPASS products, then it would have used
the same PE2 plant capacity to manufacture and sell other products including,
as a last resort, pail and crate grades. Nova also
claims that it could have manufactured and sold a small volume of non-infringing
SCLAIR products as substitutes for specific SURPASS grades used by certain
customers. However, these amount to only 4% of the proposed NIAs. Nova says that
the profits from all of these non-infringing sales would have been sufficient
to cover the non-incremental fixed costs and capital costs allocated to
infringing SURPASS products.
[150] Dow
complains that Nova objected on discovery to questions pertaining to the Nova’s
defence of indirect NIAs. Dow also says that the testimony adduced by Nova was
high-level and general, and lacked important details: for example, the size of
the market in different jurisdictions, competitors in the market, where Nova’s
products fit into the market, examples of customers with additional demand, or
any analysis of the potential impact of additional supply on price.
[151] Despite
Nova’s reticence to provide particulars on discovery, I am satisfied that Dow
was given a fair opportunity to challenge the evidence offered by Nova to support
the availability of indirect NIAs. Dow was able to establish that the market
for pail and crate grades is complex and may not always be profitable. Nova’s
former Vice President of Polyethylene, John Hotz, confirmed that in the North
American market “[s]ometimes […]
customers have enough inventory or there is not enough demand,”
that “[p]ricing is too fluid”,
and at times, “there could be
virtually no demand.” Nova’s Market Group Leader for Performance Films, Mark Kay, admitted
that there was an adverse effect on price in the North American pail and crate
market when Nova had to sell “50 or
100 cars … in a 30 [or 45] day period of time.” There
is no dispute that Nova would have had to sell more than 50 rail cars per month
of additional pail and crate in order to replace all its sales of SURPASS.
Mr. Kay also acknowledged that Nova sold pail and crate grades in to the Asian
market every year, even though this was Nova’s “last resort” once opportunities in North America were
exhausted.
[152] Nova’s
witnesses testified that all grades in the pail and crate market are largely
interchangeable, and characterized pail and crate as a “very, very large” “commodity” market. The product slate for the PE2 plant is diverse and includes “commodity” grades, in part, to ensure the plant is
sold out in all but exceptional market conditions. The PE2 plant was in fact
sold out from 2006 to 2014, except for a short period during the recession in
2008.
[153] According to Nova’s witnesses, the size of the “commodity” markets would have been sufficient to
replace its sales of infringing SURPASS (100-150 million pounds annually) with
non-infringing products: (a) the polyethylene market tends to grow with GDP
every year; (b) the North American market was about 24 billion pounds annually,
including about 1.5 to 2.0 billion pounds of pail and crate grades; (c) the
Chinese market was another 30 to 32 billion pounds, including about 15 to 16
billion pounds of crate grades; and (d) Nova was always able to sell all the
pail and crate volumes it wanted to sell.
[154] Ms. Van Holst, the Director of Logistics for Nova, testified that
the PE2 plant was sold out throughout the period during which she managed it
from 2009 to 2014. According to Ms. Van Holst: (a) the PE2 plant is
intended to run 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and every hour of reactor
uptime and downtime is tracked, and the causes for any downtime are recorded;
(b) the “nameplate” capacity of the plant is the
maximum sustainable rate that the plant can run; (c) events that cause a loss
of reactor time that are “external” to the
plant, such as market-driven events, raw material shortages, feedstock issues,
or hopper cars, are tracked in the downtime records; (d) there was no reactor
downtime at the PE2 plant during the period from late 2009 to 2014 that was
caused by market conditions; and (e) the only “commercial
losses” recorded at PE2 from 2002 to 2015 were in 2005 (551.6 hours),
2008 (288 hours) and 2009 (25.8 hours).
[155] Dr. Leonard attempted to refute Ms. Van Holst’s testimony by
adjusting the 2014 name-plate capacity of 1,000 million pounds for PE2 to the
production level of 1,057 million pounds reached in 2014, which he then applied
retroactively. In my view, this was an artificial exercise that did not take
into account the unchallenged description of “nameplate”
capacity as the maximum sustainable capacity of the plant.
[156] Dr. Leonard admitted that if his assumption regarding the adjusted
capacity utilization figures for the PE2 plant was not accepted or, if the PE2
plant was found to have been fully utilized when it had no commercial losses
(all years during the infringement period except 2008 and one day in 2009),
then the plant would have been sold out to a sufficient degree to cover all of
the fixed costs.
[157] Nova kept detailed records of the operation of the PE2 plant. These
records, coupled with the testimony of Ms. Van Holst, demonstrate that Nova
sought to keep the PE2 plant running at full capacity. Dow’s witness, Mr.
Thomson, confirmed that this is a standard practice in the polyethylene industry.
During the applicable time frame, Nova produced billions of pounds of
polyethylene at the PE2 plant. The evidence establishes that the vast majority
of plant downtime was caused by maintenance and external reasons. The downtime
due to a lack of commercial demand was negligible.
[158] I am satisfied that if Nova had not manufactured the infringing
products, it would have worked assiduously to fill out the PE2 plant with other
products: pail and crate or other resins that form part of Nova’s “product wheel”. I am further satisfied that Nova
would have sold these other products within North America or to Asian markets. It
is important to bear in mind Justice Reed’s observation in Tye-Sil that
this category of evidence need not be proved in minute detail (at para 11). I
have no doubt that the testimony offered by Nova’s witnesses was derived from their
direct knowledge and experience.
[159] Dow asks this Court to consider the performance of Nova’s B-line
plant in Sarnia, Ontario. However, the infringing products were produced only
at the PE2 plant in Joffre, Alberta. The PE2 plant offered ease of access to
ports on the west coast, and was therefore well-positioned to manufacture
products intended for the Asian market. In my view, the performance of the PE2
plant should be assessed based on the evidence of the operation of that
facility, not facilities elsewhere.
[160] Mr. Hamilton on behalf of Dow, and Mr. Soriano on behalf of Nova,
agreed that if the PE2 plant could be shown to operate at full capacity, then a
full cost or absorption approach would be the appropriate costing method from
an accountant’s perspective.
[161] The Federal Court of Appeal has described Dart Industries as
a “good overview of the nature, scope and principles
governing the remedy of an account of profits” (Lubrizol at para
8). In Dart Industries, the High Court of Australia outlined the
appropriate method to calculate profits equitably where overhead costs
attributed to infringing products would otherwise be allocated to the
manufacture or sale of other non-infringing products, and where the defendant
could not apply what is known in Canada as the “differential
profits” approach. The High Court stated that where a manufacturing
plant was at full production capacity, it could be inferred by the evidence
that if the defendant had not been manufacturing and marketing the infringing
products, then the capacity used to make the infringing products would have
been taken up with the manufacture and marketing of alternative products (Dart
Industries at 113-14; see also LED Builders Pty Ltd v Eagle Homes Pty
Ltd, [1999] FCA 584 at paras 157-65). The High Court articulated the
underlying rational for this approach as follows (Dart Industries at
114-15):
[T]here would be real inequity if a
defendant were denied a deduction for the opportunity cost as well as being
denied a deduction for the cost of the overheads which sustained the capacity
that would have been utilized by an alternative product and that was in fact
utilized by the infringing product. If both were denied, the defendant would be
in a worse position than if it had made no use of the patented invention. The
purpose of an account of profits is not to punish the defendant but to prevent
its unjust enrichment.
Where the defendant has forgone the
opportunity to manufacture and sell alternative products it will ordinarily be
appropriate to attribute to the infringing product a proportion of those
general overheads which would have sustained the opportunity. On the other
hand, if no opportunity was forgone, and the overheads involved were costs
which would have been incurred in any event, then it would not be appropriate
to attribute the overheads to the infringing product. Otherwise the defendant
would be in a better position than it would have been in if it had not infringed.
It is not relevant that the product could not have been manufactured and sold
without these overheads. Nor is it relevant that absorption method accounting
would attribute a proportion of the overheads to the infringing product. The
equitable principle of an account of profits is not to compensate the
plaintiff, nor to fix a fair price for the infringing product, but to prevent
the unjust enrichment of the defendant.
[162] In Hollister Incorporated v Medik Ostomy Supplies Limited,
[2012] EWCA Civ 1419, the Court of Appeal for England and Wales considered Dart
Industries, and agreed that a condition precedent to the application of the
full cost or absorption approach is that a business must run at full capacity (at
paras 80-86; see also Design & Display Ltd v OOO Abbot & Anor,
[2016] EWCA Civ 95 at paras 38-48).
[163] I do not read the Canadian jurisprudence as foreclosing the
availability of the full cost or absorption approach in appropriate
circumstances. The law governing the accounting of profits consistently warns
against punitive awards. Given the circumstances of this case, particularly the
distinct manufacturing model of the polyethylene business, it would be punitive
not to permit Nova to deduct a proportion of certain fixed and capital costs
from the revenues generated by sales of the infringing products.
[164] As the Supreme Court of Canada noted in Schmeiser, “[a] comparison is to be made between the defendant’s profit
attributable to the invention and his profit had he used the best
non-infringing option” (at para 102). The “best
non-infringing option” has generally been interpreted to mean a “true substitute” or “real
alternative” (Merck & Co at paragraph 73). But appellate
courts have frequently sought to reduce over-generous awards, including those
that neglected to take into account alternative profits (Schmeiser; Collette
v Lasnier (1886), 13 SCR 563 at 576; ADIR at para 30). The Federal
Court of Appeal recently emphasized that “at bottom is
the need to ensure that a patentee only receives that portion of the
infringer’s profit that is causally attributable to the invention” (ADIR
at para 28).
[165] I therefore conclude that Nova is permitted to deduct a proportional
amount of the following costs against the applicable revenues during the period
for which the accounting of profits applies: (i) annual capital depreciation
expenses for the PE2 plant; (ii) salaries for employees working at the PE2
plant; (iii) overhead costs for the PE2 plant; (iv) ongoing capital costs for
the PE2 plant; and (v) costs categorized by Nova as “Plant,
Distribution, Sales & Marketing, Technical, Administration and Research and
Development”, with the exception of costs related to Research and
Development. In my view, each of these costs is properly attributed to the
production and sale of the infringing products at the PE2 plant.
[166] In the liability phase, Justice O’Keefe determined that if Dow were
to elect an accounting of Nova’s profits, then pre-judgment interest would be
determined by the reference judge (Dow v Nova at para 283).
[167] Nova says that the applicable rate of interest should be the prime
rate plus 1%, not compounded. Nova argues that interest should not be
compounded because Dow’s delay in bringing its claim for infringement against
Nova caused these profits to grow to a “huge amount”.
If the action had been brought earlier, Nova maintains that it could have
redirected its PE2 plant to other products sooner, and made profits that it
could have reinvested for its own benefit. Accordingly, an award of compound
interest may be considered punitive.
[168] Dow argues that the applicable rate of pre-judgment interest should
be the profits made by Nova as a result of reinvesting the profits it gained from
the infringement, which it describes as “profits on
profits”. According to Dow, because Nova did not track the profits made
by reinvesting the profits from the infringing products, the applicable rate
should be Nova’s weighted annual cost of borrowing. Dow says that this is a
reasonable proxy for Nova’s “profits on profits”.
Dow’s accounting expert, Mr. Hamilton, analysed Nova’s debt management to
determine how Nova might have reinvested the profits from the infringing
grades, and the financial rate of return earned by Nova on these investments. Mr.
Hamilton concluded that Nova’s weighted average annual cost of borrowing,
ranging from 5.1% to 8.4%, would be a reasonable mid-range approach to
estimating the profits that Nova earned on the reinvestment of its infringing
profits.
[169] Interest is recoverable in an accounting of profits (Beloit
Canada Ltée/Ltd v Valmet Oy, [1995] FCJ No 733 at para 37 (CA) [Beloit 1995]).
The Court must decide the rate of interest to be
applied and whether the interest should be compounded or not. The Court’s
jurisdiction in equity and s 55(1) of the Patent Act allow it to award
compound interest (Bank of America Canada v Mutual Trust Co, 2002 SCC 43
at para 41; Eli Lilly and Co v Apotex Inc, 2014 FC 1254 at paras
115-116 [Eli Lilly]).
[170] In this case, both experts agreed that Nova’s profits should be
calculated using annual compounding. This is consistent with the jurisprudence
(see Teledyne at para 20; Beloit 1995 at para 37).
[171] In the words of Justice Hugessen, a patentee should recover “all the profits, direct and
indirect, derived by the infringer from his wrongful infringement” [emphasis original] (Beloit 1992 at para 10; see Beloit
1995 at para 37). In Reading & Bates, Justice Letourneau held that
a defendant “has to account both for the profits and
their subsequent use as the plaintiff is entitled to both” (at
para 16). Dow emphasizes “and their
subsequent use” to advance its position that the
applicable rate of interest should be Nova’s weighted annual cost of borrowing.
Dow says where there is no clear evidence of the actual
profits on profits, the defendant will be deemed to have benefited from the profits
on the infringing sales.
[172] Dow also notes that Nova’s position in this reference is
inconsistent with the position it took when Nova was seeking a stay of the
costs award pending Nova’s appeal of Justice O’Keefe’s costs decision and judgment
on their merits. Nova asserted in an affidavit filed with the Federal Court of
Appeal that using the bank rate to calculate Nova’s pre-judgment interest would
not make Nova whole, but rather
that Nova’s cost of capital based on its long term debt should be considered by
the Court. The affidavit states that as of January 2016, Nova’s cost of its
long-term debt was between 5 and 5.25%.
[173] The evidence in this reference demonstrates that Nova’s profits from
the sales of the infringing products were used for a variety of purposes,
including the payment of dividends. However, given Nova’s previous submission
to the Federal Court of Appeal and the expert evidence of Mr. Hamilton, I am
satisfied that the applicable rate of interest for the period of the accounting
of profits should be 5%, compounded.
[174] Both Mr. Soriano and Mr. Hamilton agreed that if the award of
interest is compounded, it should take tax effects into account. However,
neither expert included these calculations in his report. Mr. Hamilton explained
that he did not include tax effects in his calculations because the resulting
amounts were not material. He said that in his experience, courts do not
consider the tax effects of compounded interest. In Eli Lilly, Justice
Zinn stated at paragraph 119: “[a]ny
discounting of compound interest by the court on this record would be nothing
more than mere speculation.” Given the lack of
guidance from the expert witnesses called by both parties, I reach the same
conclusion in this case.
[175] The Court’s judgment in this reference must be expressed in Canadian
dollars (Currency Act,
RSC 1985, c C-52, s 12). Dow maintains that the
exchange rate in effect on the date of the judgment should be used for the
conversion. Nova argues that the average annual exchange rate for each
year of infringement should be used.
[176] According to Dow, Nova retained the profits from its sale of
infringing SURPASS products in U.S. currency and did not convert them to
Canadian dollars. This Court should therefore convert Nova’s infringing profits
from U.S. dollars into Canadian dollars at the time of judgment to ensure that
Nova disgorges all of the direct and indirect profits it obtained from
the infringement. Otherwise, Nova may retain a windfall from its infringing
sales.
[177] Nova submits that the infringing profits, calculated in U.S. dollars,
should be converted to Canadian dollars at the applicable exchange rate when
they were earned, i.e., annually during the period of the infringement.
[178] In AlliedSignal (FC) at paragraph 273, the Federal Court held
that “the only practicable” date for currency
conversion was the date of judgment. Justice Heald drew a distinction between
patent infringement, where there is an ongoing breach, and contract or tort
cases, where the breach arises on a clear, single date. The Federal Court of
Appeal agreed that the successful party was entitled to compensation payable in
U.S. currency as of the date of the judgment, and observed that “the date of judgment is indeed the most logical date to be
used” (AlliedSignal Inc v DuPont Canada Inc, [1999] FCJ No 38 (CA) at paras 15-16 [AlliedSignal
(FCA)]).
[179] Nova argues that Justice Heald in AlliedSignal (FC) found the
breach-date rule not to be practicable only because there was no date
corresponding to the infringement of the patent, which occurred over a period
of six years. In that case, the defendant suggested that it would be
appropriate to take the mid-point of each year and convert the amount owing per
year at that point. However, Justice Heald found this method to be overly
cumbersome, particularly compared to the solution of converting the currency as
of the date of the judgment (at para 273). The Federal Court of Appeal affirmed
his choice as one within the referee’s discretion, noting “by the conversion, the plaintiff will be awarded the
Canadian money required to obtain the full compensation it was found entitled
to in U.S. currency” (AlliedSignal (FCA) at para 16).
[180] Nova relies on jurisprudence arising in the context of actions for
breach of contract or recovery of a foreign judgment for the proposition that
the breach-date rule is the approach to be followed in this Court (citing Kuehne
+ Nagel Ltd v Agrimax Ltd, 2010 FC 1303 at paras 19-20 and 22; NV
Bocimar SA v Century Insurance Co of Canada, [1984] FCJ No 510 at paras
50-51 (FCA), rev’d on other grounds, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 1247; Schweizerische
Metallwerke Selve & Co v Atlantic Container Line Ltd, [1985] FCJ No
1039 at para 8 (FCA)). Nova says that, in principle, there is no reason to
distinguish a single breach from a continuous breach. Each sale of the
infringing SURPASS products constituted a breach of the patent. Nova therefore
maintains that there was no continuous breach over the eight year term of the
patent, but rather many discrete breaches accruing day to day, each of which is
well documented.
[181] Nova therefore takes the position that converting its profits to
Canadian dollars on the date of the judgment is not the only practical
solution. While it might not be practical to calculate Nova’s profits in U.S.
dollars and convert them to Canadian dollars for each sale over an eight year
period, Nova says that it is practical to examine its profits on an annual
basis.
[182] An accounting of profits is an equitable remedy, and it is the
actual amount of profits realized which must be paid (Teledyne at 209).
In this case, I am not overly concerned with whether Nova’s infringement of the
’705 Patent should be characterized as a continuous breach over an eight year
period, or a series of discrete breaches to be examined annually. My primary
focus is the evidence of the manner in which Nova’s profits from its sales of
SURPASS were received, and the currency in which those profits were
subsequently used or retained.
[183] There is no dispute that the infringing
grades were primarily shipped to Nova’s customers in the United States, and the
majority of Nova’s revenues from the infringing grades, even in respect of
sales that were made in Canada, were realized in U.S. dollars. Mr.
MacDonald, Nova’s former Chief Financial Officer [CFO], confirmed that the vast
majority of Nova’s polyethylene invoicing is done in U.S. dollars.
[184] Nova notes that it has substantial operations in Canada. Nova’s
Western Olefins, Corunna Olefins and Polyethylene operations are all in Canada.
The Western Olefins business sells ethylene to third parties in Canadian
dollars, with the exception of one contract with a major oil company. Nova’s costs,
including ethane feedstock, utilities, fixed plant and distribution, research
and development and administration, are predominantly in Canadian dollars. The PE2
plant’s expenses are also predominantly in Canadian dollars, including ethylene
until 2008, utilities, fixed plant costs, some fixed distribution, technical,
research and development, administration and portions of the $825 million used
to build the PE2 plant. During Mr. MacDonald’s tenure as CFO, Nova converted
substantial amounts of U.S. dollars into Canadian dollars to satisfy its
Canadian dollar obligations, in the range of $800 million to $1 billion per
year.
[185] Nova says that it is not possible to trace which funds were
converted from U.S. dollars into Canadian dollars in order to pay Nova’s
ongoing Canadian dollar obligations. Nova combined the profits from the
infringing SURPASS grades with all of its other money. The money was used for a
variety of purposes, including building cash balances, paying down debt, paying
dividends, converting to Canadian dollars to satisfy its Canadian dollar obligations
and investing in capital expenditures. Nova argues that it is impossible to say
whether or how the money that was generated from selling SURPASS was retained
by Nova, and it therefore cannot be determined whether Nova retained the
profits it made from the infringement in U.S. dollars.
[186] Dow points to the following evidence that Nova’s profits on the
infringing grades were received in U.S. dollars and largely retained or
expended using that currency:
(a)
As of October 1, 2008, the functional currency
of Nova’s Canadian operations was confirmed to be U.S. dollars. The U.S. dollar
functional currency was chosen based on the assessment that the primary
economic environment in which the company and its principal subsidiaries
operate is the United States. The majority of sales of the infringing grades at
issue in this reference took place after this date.
(b)
As of 2009, Nova reviewed its significant
purchase and sale contracts and, where possible, negotiated payments to be made
in U.S. dollars in order to decrease the currency exposure for Nova’s working
capital balances. For example, in one agreement dated November 2009 between
Nova and a major chemical company, there was a requirement that payments be
made in U.S. dollars.
(c)
Since 2009, transfers of ethylene from Nova’s
Western Olefins Division to Nova’s Polyolefins Division have been in U.S.
dollars.
(d)
The majority of Nova’s debt is held in U.S.
dollars.
(e)
Nova’s parent company uses U.S. dollars as its
functional currency.
[187] Nova maintained significant cash balances between 2006 and 2015. The
cash balances increased from approximately $74 million in 2008 to $942 million
in 2015. Nova did not provide the Court with a breakdown between U.S. and
Canadian dollars, although it could easily have done so.
[188] The burden is on Nova to demonstrate that the profits it made from
the infringing grades were converted into Canadian dollars, at what times and
in what amounts. While I accept that some of the profits may have been used to
acquire goods or services payable in Canadian dollars, Nova has provided no
particulars. The preponderance of the evidence demonstrates that Nova retained
the profits from the infringing grades primarily in U.S. dollars. Nova presumably
used those profits to make investments in U.S dollars, pay down U.S. dollar debt,
pay dividends to its parent company in U.S. dollars, among other things.
[189] The evidence supports the conclusion that Nova’s profits from the
sale of the infringing grades were received and primarily retained in U.S.
dollars. Nova has presented little evidence to the contrary. I am therefore
satisfied that Nova’s profits should be converted to Canadian dollars as of the
date of the judgment.
[190] By agreement of the parties, these reasons address only the
assumptions and other considerations that inform the calculations of damages
and profits. The parties’ accountants will calculate the sums owed by Nova to
Dow based on conclusions reached by the Court in this stage of the reference.
[191] The parties are at liberty to apply to the Court for determination
of any matters that may arise in the course of calculating the damages and
profits that are owed by Nova to Dow.
[192] Costs will be determined at the conclusion of the reference.
[193] Following issuance of the Confidential Judgment and Reasons on April
7, 2017, the parties were directed to inform the Court whether the document
contained confidential information, and whether any portions should be redacted
or modified before the Judgment and Reasons were issued to the public. Nova
identified some information in paragraphs 84 to 87 and 92 as commercially
sensitive. The corresponding paragraphs in the Public Judgment and Reasons have
been modified to accommodate these concerns. In addition, an error in paragraph
88 has been corrected.