Docket: T-944-15
Citation:
2017 FC 434
Montréal, Quebec, May 31, 2017
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Locke
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BETWEEN:
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TEVA CANADA
LIMITED
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Plaintiff
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and
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JANSSEN INC. and
MILLENNIUM PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.
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Defendants
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AND BETWEEN:
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MILLENNIUM
PHARMACEUTICALS, INC., JANSSEN INC., CILAG GMBH INTERNATIONAL, CILAG AG and
JANSSEN PHARMACEUTICA NV
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Plaintiffs
by Counterclaim
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and
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THE UNITED
STATES OF AMERICA REPRESENTED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
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Patentee Added Pursuant
to s. 55(3) of the Patent Act
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and
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TEVA CANADA
LIMITED
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Defendant
by Counterclaim
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PUBLIC ORDER AND REASONS
(Identical to the
Confidential Order and Reasons issued on May 2, 2017)
I.
Background
[1]
The plaintiffs by counterclaim, Millennium
Pharmaceuticals Inc., Janssen Inc., Cilag GmbH International, Cilag AG and
Janssen Pharmaceutica NV, seek leave to amend their defence and counterclaim.
The notice of motion was accompanied by a draft Second Amended Statement of
Defence and Counterclaim including the proposed amendments. The parties agree
on many of the proposed amendments. They disagree only on the proposed addition
of new paragraphs 9.1 to 9.12.
[2]
The paragraphs in dispute introduce an
allegation that the plaintiff, Teva Canada Limited (Teva), is not entitled to
the damages it seeks under section 8 of the Patent Medicines (Notice of
Compliance) Regulations, SOR/93-133 [the Regulations] because it is
not a “second person” as defined in the Regulations
(the Second Person Allegation). Section 8 of the Regulations provides
that a second person (usually a generic drug company) may pursue a first person
(generally a patent rights holder) for any loss suffered during a period that
it was kept off the market by the operation of the Regulations.
[3]
The term “second person”
is defined as “the person referred to in subsection
5(1) or (2) who files a submission or supplement referred to in those
subsections.” Subsections 5(1) and (2) describe the second person’s
obligation, before obtaining a notice of compliance (NOC) for its generic drug,
to address any patent on the patent list associated with first person’s
reference drug. Typically, this is done by means of a notice of allegation
(NOA) sent by a second person to a first person.
[4]
The factual basis for the Second Person Allegation
is a Teva Inter-Group License, Supply and Distribution Agreement dated January
1, 2014, between the plaintiff and a company called Teva Pharmaceutical Works
Private Limited Company (Teva Hungary). This agreement is referred to
hereinafter as the Inter-Group Agreement. The plaintiffs by counterclaim point
to the following paragraph, among others, of that agreement to support
arguments that Teva carries out the directions of Teva Hungary, that at the end
of the day Teva Hungary directs and owns everything, and that even if Teva’s
NOC was obtained in its own name, the agreement provides that Teva merely
obtained the NOC for Teva Hungary and the NOC will always be owned by Teva
Hungary:
3.7. To the extent permitted under the laws
applicable in the Territory, the Marketing Authorizations shall be applied for
and obtained in the name of the Supplier, unless otherwise agreed between the
Parties. All Marketing Authorizations – whether applied for and obtained in the
name of the Supplier or whether, due to the law applicable in the Territory, in
the name of the Distributor – shall be owned by the Supplier, and the
Distributor shall utilize such Marketing Authorizations in accordance with the
directions of the Supplier. On termination of this Agreement for any reason
whatsoever, the Distributor shall cooperate with the Supplier to the fullest
extent in connection with all activities which may be required by the Supplier
with regard to the Marketing Authorizations, including without limitation, the
cancellation thereof or the transfer thereof to such person or persons as the
Supplier may specify at such time.
[5]
It appears that the defendants in the main
action, Millennium Pharmaceuticals Inc. and Janssen Inc., wish to establish
that Teva Hungary is the beneficial owner of Teva’s assets.
II.
Applicable Legal Test
[6]
The parties do not disagree substantially on the
legal test to be applied in deciding a motion to amend a pleading. As a
threshold issue, Janssen must satisfy the Court that the proposed amendment has
a reasonable prospect of success: Bauer Hockey Corp v Sport Maska Inc
(Reebok-CCM Hockey), 2014 FCA 158 at para 13; Teva Canada Limited v
Gilead Sciences Inc, 2016 FCA 176 at paras 29-31. The idea is that it would
be a waste of resources to allow an amendment that is doomed to fail.
[7]
If the threshold issue is satisfied, the Court
then considers other factors such as whether allowing the amendment would (i)
result in an injustice to the other party not capable of being compensated by
an award of costs, and (ii) serve the interests of justice: Canderel Ltd v
Canada, [1994] 1 FC 3 (CA) at p 10; Sanofi-Aventis Canada Inc v Teva
Canada Limited, 2014 FCA 65 at para 13. Ultimately, it boils down to a
consideration of simple fairness, common sense and the interest that the courts
have that justice be done: Merck & Co Inc v Apotex Inc, 2003 FCA 488
at para 30; Janssen Inc v Abbvie Corporation, 2014 FCA 242 at para 3.
[8]
In considering whether or not to grant leave to
amend, the Court must assume that the facts pleaded in the amendments are true:
VISX Inc v Nidek Co (1996), 72 CPR (3d) 19 (FCA) at para 16.
III.
Analysis
[9]
Teva’s opposition to the present motion focuses
on the threshold issue. Teva argues that the proposed amendment has no
reasonable prospect of success, and therefore should not be allowed, for two
reasons:
- Having commenced
proceedings against Teva, and having benefited from the stay period
provided for in the Regulations, Janssen Inc. and Millennium
Pharmaceuticals Inc. have accepted the liability provided for in section 8
of the Regulations and are estopped from denying liability now
(referred to below as the estoppel issue); and
- There is no
dispute that Teva is the party that filed a submission for an NOC, sent a
notice of allegation, was kept off the market for a time, and ultimately
obtained an NOC, all as contemplated in the Regulations, and
therefore Teva clearly satisfies the definition of “second person” therein.
A.
Estoppel Issue
[10]
Teva argues that the doctrines of election and
estoppel prevent a party from avoiding liability under section 8 of the Regulations
by arguing that the “second person” who was the
object of a prohibition application under section 6 of the Regulations
does not actually fit the definition of a “second
person”. The Federal Court of Appeal (FCA) addressed this issue in Apotex
Inc v Sanofi-Aventis, 2014 FCA 68. In that case, a ruling during the course
of a prohibition application against Apotex had the effect of removing its
status as a “second person”. However, the
prohibition application which kept Apotex from obtaining an NOC and from
entering the market was not terminated until later. Sanofi argued that its
liability for Apotex’s damages under section 8 of the Regulations should
end at the date that Apotex lost its status as a second person and not continue
until termination of the proceedings. The FCA addressed this argument at paras
94, 99 and 100:
[94] Though in this appeal Apotex
appears to agree with Sanofi that it is not technically a “second person” with
respect to the HOPE patents, it rightfully submits that in view of Sanofi’s
conduct throughout the litigation, it is precluded by the doctrines of election
and estoppel from asserting that Apotex was not a “second person” for the
purposes of section 8, at least until the NOC was issued to Apotex.
…
[99] In this case, Sanofi listed the
HOPE patents on the patent list maintained with respect to ramipril under
section 4 of the NOC Regulations with the clear objective of forcing
generic drug manufacturers (such as Apotex) which were seeking approval of copy-cat
versions of ramipril to deal as “second persons” with those patents under the
machinery of those Regulations. Sanofi moreover availed itself of subsection
6(1) of the NOC Regulations to initiate prohibition proceedings with
respect to Apotex’s notices of allegations concerning the HOPE patents, thus
obtaining the benefit of the statutory stay provided under those Regulations.
Had these prohibition proceedings not been initiated, Apotex would have
received its NOC much earlier than it did. As a result, these prohibition
proceedings in fact precluded Apotex from competing earlier with Sanofi in the
ramipril market. Sanofi thus obtained considerable benefits under the NOC
Regulations by treating Apotex as a “second person” through its prohibition
proceedings concerning the HOPE patents.
[100] The purpose of section 8 of the NOC
Regulations is precisely to ensure that when an innovator drug manufacturer
takes advantage of those Regulations by initiating unfounded prohibition
proceedings, the generic drug manufacturer can then seek appropriate
compensation for having been precluded from the market as a result. By
initiating prohibition proceedings with respect to the HOPE patents and thereby
precluding Apotex’s market entry until December 12, 2006, Sanofi was clearly
subject to section 8 compensation irrespective of whether the benefit it
derived under the NOC Regulations was unjustified as later found in AstraZeneca.
As a result, Sanofi cannot now claim that its own prohibition proceedings were
null ab initio so as to deny to Apotex the benefit of section 8
compensation for the period during which those proceedings precluded it from
entering the ramipril market.
[11]
Justice Roger Hughes has, on more than one
occasion, analogized liability under section 8 of the Regulations to an
undertaking that is typically given by a party to secure an interlocutory
injunction: that it will make good any losses suffered by the other party if it
should fail in the end: Apotex Inc v Merck & Co Inc, 2008 FC 1185 at
para 54; Apotex Inc v Astrazeneca Canada Inc, 2012 FC 559 at para 58.
[12]
The plaintiffs by counterclaim seek to
distinguish the foregoing jurisprudence on the basis that they do not seek to
escape liability entirely, but rather seek to ensure that the correct party is
claiming for the loss. They argue that the proposed new allegations lead to the
conclusion that the “second person” who is
entitled to compensation under section 8 of the Regulations is not Teva
but Teva Hungary. Another consideration is that the Inter-Group Agreement was
not revealed until the discovery phase of the present action. It was not known
to Janssen Inc. during the underlying prohibition proceedings that gave rise to
the present section 8 action. The plaintiffs by counterclaim also emphasize
that it is not appropriate for the Court to decide the Second Person Allegation
now. Rather, the Court should determine simply whether the Second Person
Allegation has any reasonable prospect of success.
[13]
In my view, the analogy to an undertaking given
to obtain an interlocutory injunction is helpful and decisive. Whether Janssen
Inc. was not in a position when it commenced the prohibition proceedings
against Teva to allege that Teva was not a “second
person” does not alter the fact that Janssen Inc. chose to employ the Regulations
to benefit from keeping a potential competitor off the market, all while
accepting the possibility of liability if it were unsuccessful. I see no
distinction between the facts here and those in the jurisprudence sufficient to
give rise to any reasonable prospect that the Second Person Allegation will be
successful.
B.
Definition of “Second Person”
[14]
Teva’s second principal argument against the
proposed amendment is that, even accepting all of the facts as alleged in the
Second Person Allegation, Teva remains a second person as defined in the Regulations,
and has standing in the present action.
[15]
It is not disputed that:
- Teva filed a
submission for an NOC in respect of a drug, which submission made
reference to another drug which was the subject of a patent list that had
to be addressed as contemplated in the Regulations before Teva
could obtain its NOC;
- Teva sent an NOA
as contemplated in the Regulations;
- Teva was the
respondent in two prohibition applications commenced under the Regulations
by Janssen Inc. in response to the NOA; and
- Teva obtained
the NOC once the prohibition applications had been dismissed.
[16]
Based on the definition of “second person” which refers to subsection 5(1) of the
Regulations, and based on Teva’s involvement in the steps contemplated
in the Regulations, and further considering the jurisprudence discussed
above, I conclude that Teva is clearly a second person for the purposes of
standing in the present action. Nothing to which my attention has been drawn in
the Inter-Group Agreement alters this conclusion. Neither Teva Hungary’s
alleged interest in (or beneficial ownership of) Teva’s assets nor its control
of Teva’s activities alters Teva’s status as a second person based on the undisputed
facts enumerated above.
[17]
The plaintiffs by counterclaim argue that the
Second Person Allegation is not only about Teva’s standing but also encompasses
the apportionment of damages to which Teva may be entitled. I am not convinced
by this argument. The proposed paragraphs of the Second Person Allegation
allege either that Teva lacks standing or that it is disentitled to any relief
or that it suffered no damages. I see nothing in these paragraphs that suggests
apportionment. Moreover, Teva notes that apportionment is already an issue in
the action, questions having been asked and answered on the issue during
discovery.
[18]
In my view, Teva’s clear status as a “second person” deprives the Second Person Allegation
of any reasonable prospect of success.
IV.
Conclusion
[19]
It follows from the reasoning above that the proposed
amendment to add the Second Person Allegation will not be permitted. That said,
the other proposed amendments in the draft Second Amended Statement of Defence
and Counterclaim that accompanied the notice of motion, which are agreed to between
the parties, will be permitted.