Date: 20101130
Docket: T-1161-07
Citation: 2010 FC 1210
Ottawa, Ontario, November 30,
2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Simpson
BETWEEN:
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SANOFI-AVENTIS CANADA INC., and
SANOFI-AVENTIS DEUTSCHLAND GMBH
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Plaintiffs
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and
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TEVA CANADA LIMITED
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Defendant
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AND BETWEEN
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TEVA CANADA LIMITED
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Plaintiff by Counterclaim
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SANOFI-AVENTIS CANADA INC., and
SANOFI-AVENTIS DEUTSCHLAND GmbH
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Defendants by Counterclaim
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
These
reasons concern two motions brought pursuant to Rule 51 of the Federal
Courts Rules, SOR/98-106, both appealing an Order of Madam Prothonotary
Martha Milczynski (the Prothonotary) dated February 12, 2010 (the
Decision).
[2]
In
the first appeal, the Plaintiff by Counterclaim, Teva Canada Inc. (Teva)
(formerly Novopharm Limited) appeals the Prothonotary’s decision to strike the
portions of its Third Amended Statement of Defence and Counterclaim dated
December 10, 2008 (the Teva Counterclaim) which involved a claim for damages
for permanent loss of market share.
[3]
In
the second appeal, Sanofi-Aventis Canada Inc. (Sanofi Canada) and
Sanofi-Aventis Deutschland GmbH (Sanofi Germany) appeal the Prothonotary’s
refusal to dismiss the Teva Counterclaim in its entirely as against Sanofi Germany.
[4]
The
action is being specially managed by the Prothonotary.
[5]
These
appeals were heard together with a related appeal in action T-1357-09. Since
the two files have not been formally consolidated, I have issued separate
reasons dealing with the appeal in the other action.
THE BACKGROUND
[6]
The
appeals in this case arise from the regulatory scheme created by the Patented
Medicines (Notice of Compliance) Regulations, SOR/93-133 (the Regulations).
In her decision of February 22, 2010 in the related file, T-1357-09, at
pages 4-5, the Prothonotary provides the following summary of this scheme. She
said:
Before selling a “new drug” in Canada, a manufacturer (be it an
“innovator” or generic drug manufacturer), must make application for and obtain
a Notice of Compliance (“NOC”) from the federal Minister of Health. The
issuance of a NOC constitutes marketing approval for a new drug and signifies
the Minister’s satisfaction that the new drug is safe and effective for human
use.
Under the [Regulations], an innovator
drug manufacturer may submit a patent list to the Minister of Health in
relation to any new drug product submissions for which the innovator has
received a NOC. Such patent list may include one or more patents containing
claims to the medicine contained in the drug product or its uses contained in
the approved submission.
Where a generic drug manufacturer seeks a
NOC and has compared its drug product containing a particular medicine to the
drug product of an innovator that contains the same medicine and in respect of
which a NOC has already been issued, the generic must either (a) accept that
the NOC will not be issued to it until the expiry of the patent(s); or (b)
deliver to the innovator, a Notice of Allegation with respect to each relevant
listed patent, stating that the patent has expired, that the patent is not
valid or that the manufacture, use and/or marketing of the drug by the generic
will not infringe any claim of the relevant patent(s).
Upon receiving a Notice of Allegation,
the innovator drug manufacturer may, within 45 days, commence a proceeding for
an order prohibiting the Minister of Health from issuing a NOC to the generic
until the expiration of the patent(s). Pending the disposition of the
prohibition proceeding or the expiration of 24 months following commencement of
the proceeding, whichever is earlier, the Minister cannot issue the NOC to the
generic. This period of time is referred to as the “automatic stay” that
prevents a generic from marketing its drug product, and to the extent an
innovator is unsuccessful in the prohibition proceeding and the generic
ultimately receives a NOC, a claim for damages may be commenced by the generic
by virtue of section 8 of the [Regulations].
[7]
In
this case, Sanofi Canada filed the required new drug submissions and
patent lists, and obtained an NOC to market and sell ramipril, an ACE inhibitor
used to treat high blood pressure. Teva applied for its own NOC for ramipril in
2001, and in 2005, submitted Notices of Allegation.
[8]
Sanofi
Canada responded by
bringing two prohibition proceedings against Teva. They were ultimately
dismissed by the Federal Court of Appeal, which held that each constituted an
abuse of process. Teva was issued its NOC on May 2, 2007.
[9]
Sanofi
Canada then brought
an action against Teva alleging infringement of one of the relevant patents
(the Infringement Action). It was eventually dismissed by Madam Justice
Judith Snider in a judgment dated June 29, 2009.
THE TEVA COUNTERCLAIM
[10]
In
the meantime, on September 17, 2007, Teva had counterclaimed in the
Infringement Action and named Sanofi Canada, Sanofi Germany and the
Schering Corporation as Defendants by Counterclaim. Thereafter, on
August 14, 2008, the Teva Counterclaim was stayed by the Prothonotary
pending resolution of the Infringement Action. The stay is now lifted and the
Teva Counterclaim is proceeding.
[11]
The
Teva Counterclaim is for damages pursuant to section 8 of the Regulations. It
provides that if a “first person” applies for a prohibition order and the
application is withdrawn, discontinued or dismissed, the “first person” is
liable to the “second person” for any loss suffered during the period of the
automatic stay. There is no dispute that Teva is the “second person” and is
entitled to bring a claim against a “first person.”
[12]
“First
person” is defined in section 2 of the Regulations as “the person referred to
in subsection 4(1).” In turn, subsection 4(1) of the Regulations describes the
“first person” as a person who files a new drug submission and who is entitled
to submit a patent list in relation to that submission.
[13]
There
is no dispute that Sanofi Canada filed both a new drug submission and a patent
list for ramipril, and is therefore a “first person.” Further, there is no
dispute that Sanofi Germany did not file either document. However, Teva submits
that Sanofi Germany is liable as a “first person” because of the control it
exercised over Sanofi Canada. In this respect, Teva pleads as follows
at paragraph 143 A of the Teva Counterclaim:
[Teva] states that Sanofi Germany
exercises complete control over the actions of Sanofi Canada and states that
the aforementioned actions were all directed, required or otherwise controlled
by Sanofi Germany utilizing Sanofi Canada as its instrument. The
actions of Sanofi Canada and Sanofi Germany
were all part of a common enterprise carried out by Sanofi Canada pursuant to
the direction and on behalf of Sanofi Germany.
Accordingly, the actions of Sanofi Canada
must in law and in equity be treated as the acts of Sanofi Germany which, therefore, is also
liable to [Teva].
[14]
Teva
claims damages against Sanofi Canada and Sanofi Germany under
various heads. The one which is relevant to this appeal is a claim for damages
for Teva’s permanent loss of market share. In this respect, Teva pleads as
follows at paragraphs 135, 136 and 143 of the Teva Counterclaim:
The commencement of the NOC Proceedings
resulted in lost sales and a permanent loss of market share to [Teva] for
Novo-Ramipril capsules.
In addition, [Teva] was denied the
opportunity to significantly enhance its reputation for the introduction of new
products in advance of its competitors. As a result of this delay, Novopharm
was prevented from obtaining increased sales and market share for its
non-ramipril products.
[…]
Furthermore, during the periods in which
[Teva] was being delayed by the Defendants by Counterclaim, Apotex received an
NOC for its 1.25, 2.5, 5 and 10 mg ramipril capsules. If [Teva] had been
approved on the same day as Apotex and Ratiopharm, [Teva] would have had a greater
share in the marketplace than it currently has. Moreover, [Teva] will be unable
to capture a larger percentage of the market share over time due to its late
entry. Accordingly, [Teva] claims its damages for lost market share as well.
THE PROTHONOTARY’S
DECISION
[15]
Sanofi
Canada and Sanofi Germany (collectively Sanofi) and the Schering Corporation
moved seeking, inter alia, orders dismissing the Teva Counterclaim as
against all defendants other than Sanofi Canada, and an order striking the
portions of the Teva Counterclaim relating to Teva’s claim for loss of market
share.
[16]
The
Prothonotary dismissed the action against the Schering Corporation, and that
part of the Decision is not being challenged. However, the Prothonotary
declined to dismiss the counterclaim against Sanofi Germany, on the
basis of the Federal Court of Appeal’s decision in Apotex Inc. v. Eli Lilly
and Co., 2004 FCA 358 (Lilly 2004). Sanofi now appeals that aspect
of the Decision (the Sanofi Appeal).
[17]
As
well, relying on the Federal Court of Appeal’s decision in Merck Frosst
Canada Ltd. v. Apotex Inc., 2009 FCA 187, leave to appeal to the Supreme
Court of Canada ref’d [2009] S.C.C.A. No. 347 (Merck 2009), the
Prothonotary held that Teva’s claim for permanent loss of market share failed
to disclose a reasonable cause of action. Accordingly, she struck the following
portions of the Teva Counterclaim:
(a)
The
phrase “and a permanent loss of market share” in paragraph 135;
(b)
The
entirety of paragraph 136;
(c)
The
last two sentences of paragraph 143.
[18]
Teva
now appeals this aspect of the Decision (the Teva Appeal).
THE ISSUES
[19]
The
issues on the Sanofi Appeal are as follows:
(i)
What
is the standard of review?
(ii)
Should
the Teva Counterclaim proceed against Sanofi Germany?
[20]
The
issues on the Teva Appeal are as follows:
(i)
Should
Sanofi be allowed to attack Teva’s Counterclaim a second time?
(ii)
What
is the standard of review?
(iii)
Does
Teva’s claim for damages for permanent loss of market share disclose a
reasonable cause of action?
THE SANOFI APPEAL
Issue (i) The
Standard of Review
[21]
The
parties agree that the test to be applied on the review of a discretionary
decision of a prothonotary is the one reformulated by the Federal Court of
Appeal in Merck & Co. Inc. v. Apotex Inc., 2003 FCA 488 (Merck
2003) at paragraph 19. There, the Court said:
To avoid the confusion which we have seen from
time to time arising from the wording used by MacGuigan J.A., I think it is
appropriate to slightly reformulate the test for the standard of review. I will
use the occasion to reverse the sequence of the propositions as originally set
out, for the practical reason that a judge should logically determine first
whether the questions are vital to the final issue: it is only when they are
not that the judge effectively needs to engage in the process of determining
whether the orders are clearly wrong. The test would now read:
Discretionary orders of prothonotaries ought
not be disturbed on appeal to a judge unless:
a) the
questions raised in the motion are vital to the final issue of the case, or
b) the
orders are clearly wrong, in the sense that the exercise of discretion by the
prothonotary was based upon a wrong principle or upon a misapprehension
of the facts.
[22]
The
parties also acknowledge that the above passage referred to Mr. Justice
Mark MacGuigan’s decision in R. v. Aqua-Gem Investments Ltd.,
[1993] 2. F.C. 425 (Fed. C.A.) (Aqua-Gem). In that case he said:
I also agree with the Chief Justice in part as
to the standard of review to be applied by a motions judge to a discretionary
decision of a prothonotary. Following in particular Lord Wright in Evans v.
Bartlam, [1937] A.C. 473 (H.L.) at page 484, and Lacourciere J.A. in Stoicevski
v. Casement (1983), 43
O.R. (2d) 436 (Div. Ct.), discretionary
orders of prothonotaries ought not to be disturbed on appeal to a judge unless:
(a) they are clearly wrong,
in the sense that the exercise of discretion by the
prothonotary was based upon a wrong principle or
upon a misapprehension of the facts, or
(b) they raise questions
vital to the final issue of the case.
Where such discretionary orders are clearly
wrong in that the prothonotary has fallen into error of law (a concept in which
I include a discretion based upon a wrong principle or upon a misapprehension
of the facts), or where they raise questions vital to the final issue of the
case, a judge ought to exercise his own discretion de novo.
[23]
The
issue is whether “vitality” is to be assessed by looking at the question in the
motion before the Prothonotary or by considering the Decision. In Peter G.
White Management Ltd. v. Canada, 2007 FC 686, Mr. Justice James Hugessen
concluded that, in situations (similar to the case at bar) in which the appeal
is from a decision of a prothonotary dismissing a defendant’s motion to strike
a claim, it is not what was sought (i.e., the question before the Prothonotary)
but what was ordered by the Prothonotary (i.e., the answer) which is to be
analyzed to see whether it is vital to a final issue in the case.
Mr. Justice Hugessen based this conclusion on his reading of Aqua-Gem.
Several Federal Court Judges have since adopted his interpretation. A summary
of the case law on this point to date is to be found in Madam Justice Anne
Mactavish’s decision in Ridgeview Restaurant Limited v. The Attorney General
of Canada and Steve Gibson, 2010 FC 506 at paragraphs 20 to 24.
[24]
Using
Mr. Justice Hugessen’s approach, the focus would be on the answer or, in other
words, on the order made by the Prothonotary. In this case, because she
dismissed the motion to strike, no change was made in the case – it continues
to trial. In these circumstances, it cannot be said that her order was
determinative of vital issues. Accordingly, review de novo would not be
appropriate unless the Prothonotary clearly erred by exercising her discretion
on a wrong principal or by misapprehending the facts and no such submission was
made in this case.
[25]
However,
I have reviewed the Federal Court of Appeal’s decisions in Aqua-Gem and Merck
2003 and for the following reasons, have reached a conclusion which is
contrary to that reached by Mr. Justice Hugessen.
[26]
In
Aqua-Gem, the respondent had moved to have the case dismissed for want
of prosecution. The Prothonotary dismissed the motion so the action remained
extant. While the question before the Prothonotary was vital in the sense that
the action could be dismissed, the order was not determinative of the final
issues. The judge who heard the appeal from the Prothonotary’s order considered
it de novo and the Federal Court of Appeal upheld this approach. The
only possible rationale for this conclusion, in my view, is that the Court of
Appeal considered the issue of vitality based on the question before the
Prothonotary. This conclusion, again in my view, is borne out by a review of
the Decision.
[27]
On
the “vitality issue”, Mr. Justice MacGuigan said at paragraph 95 that
“…discretionary orders of prothonotaries ought not to be distributed on appeal
to a judge unless:
(a) […]
(b) they
raise questions vital to the final issue of the case.
[28]
The
word “they” refers back to the word “orders” and indicates that one looks at
the order made by the Prothonotary and only reviews it de novo if it
has, in fact, had an impact on the trial that could be categorized as vital.
[29]
The
difficulty I have is that when Mr. Justice MacGuigan considered the matter, he
did not actually apply the test he described. He did not look at the order.
Rather, he looked at the question before the Prothonotary. He said at paragraph
98, “Another way of putting the matter would be to say that for the test as to
relevance to the final issue of the case, the issue to be decided should be
looked to before the question is answered by the prothonotary, ...”
[30]
In
my view, the restatement of the Aqua-Gem test in Merck 2003 gives
effect to the approach Mr. Justice MacGuigan actually adopted.
[31]
Merck
2003
was a case in which Apotex sought to make fundamental amendments to its
Statement of Defence. The motions judge who reviewed the Prothonotary’s
decision to allow the amendment declined to treat the proposed amendments as
vital and did not conduct a de novo review. He upheld the Prothonotary’s
decision to allow the Apotex amendments.
[32]
The
Court of Appeal found that the proposed amendments were vital and conducted its
own de novo review. In the end, it declined to permit the amendments.
The importance of this decision for present purposed is that the restatement
and the Court’s subsequent analysis makes it clear that, as Sanofi submits, it
is the question before the Prothonotary that is the focus of the “vitality”
analysis.
[33]
In
2006, the Federal Court of Appeal again dealt with the question of vitality. In
Peter G. White Management Ltd. v. The Queen, 2006 FCA 190, the Court
considered, inter alia, an appeal from the decision of a Federal Court
motions judge on an appeal from a Prothonotary’s order. Before the
Prothonotary, the Crown had moved to strike the claim against the individual
defendants who were a Minister of the Crown and three public servants. The
Prothonotary allowed the motion. The motions judge dismissed the appeal
without considering the matter de novo.
[34]
At
paragraph 33 and following, the Court of Appeal considered the standard of
review and concluded that the motions judge had erred in concluding that the
motion to dismiss was not vital to the final issue in the case. The Court of
Appeal noted that the causes of action against the individual defendants were
separate and distinct from those asserted against the Crown and found that
removing the defendants put an end to the Plaintiff’s causes of action against
them in Federal Court.
[35]
In
conducting its analysis, the Court of Appeal looked at the question in the
motion before the Prothonotary and concluded that it was vital. It therefore
held that the motions judge ought to have determined the matter de novo.
[36]
In
view of these cases, I must next consider whether the questions before the
Prothonotary in this case can be said to be vital.
[37]
On
this issue, I have concluded that questions dealing with the presence or
absence of a defendant will be vital if something essential is taken from a
plaintiff if a defendant is excluded. In this case, without Sanofi Germany, the
Plaintiffs cannot argue that there could be joint liability because Sanofi
Germany controlled Sanofi Canada. I therefore conclude that the removal of
the defendants is a vital matter. Accordingly, the decision not to dismiss the
Teva Counterclaim against Sanofi Germany will be reviewed de
novo.
Issue (ii) Should
the Teva Counterclaim proceed against Sanofi Germany?
[38]
A
pleading should not be struck unless it is “plain and obvious” that it
discloses no reasonable cause of action: Hunt v. Carey Canada Inc.,
[1990] 2 S.C.R. 959 at page 980.
[39]
Sanofi
takes the position that, on a plain reading of subsection 4(1) of the
Regulations, Sanofi Canada is the only “first person” since it was the only
Defendant to file a new drug submission or a patent list in relation to
ramipril. It said that, since section 8 of the Regulations only creates a right
of damages against a “first person”, the Teva Counterclaim fails to disclose a
reasonable cause of action against Sanofi Germany.
[40]
In
Lilly 2004, the Federal Court of Appeal considered a similar argument. A
generic drug manufacturer brought a section 8 claim against two innovator drug
manufacturers: a Canadian subsidiary which had filed a new drug submission and
patent list, and its American parent which had not done so. The parent sought
summary judgment on the basis that it was not a “first person”. As is the case
here, the generic’s claim against the foreign company was based on the degree
of control it exercised over the Canadian company.
[41]
The
Court of Appeal described the issue in Lilly 2004 as follows at
paragraph 9:
The question in dispute, therefore, is
whether [the parent] can be said to have submitted the patent list to the
Minister pursuant to subsection 4(1), even though the list was submitted in the
name of [the subsidiary].
In my view, this is precisely the issue
in the case at bar.
[42]
The
Court held, at paragraphs 11-13 of its decision, that common law concepts such
as agency might be relevant to statutory interpretation. The Court illustrated
this point saying that, if a parent exercised sufficient control over a
subsidiary such that the subsidiary could be said to be acting as an agent, the
subsidiary’s actions “might be regarded as actions taken by both [the
subsidiary and the parent]. Thus, [the parent] might be a “first person”, and
therefore a proper defendant […].”
[43]
It
is noteworthy that the Court added, at paragraph 14:
Whether, for the purpose of section 8, a
“first person” includes the corporation who directed the submission of the
patent list in the name of its subsidiary is a sufficiently difficult legal
question to require a trial.
[44]
Further,
at paragraph 15 the Court said:
Its resolution may depend, for example,
on whether the "profits" recoverable under section 8 are the profits
from the drug in question made by the "first person" during the
period of the delay or the profits not made during that period by the
"second person" from its version of the drug. If the intent of
section 8 is to enable the "second person" to elect to recover the
"first person's" profits, rather than merely its own lost profits,
that might support an interpretation of "first person" which includes
the corporation that controlled all relevant actions of the corporation in
whose name the application for an NOC was made, the patent list was submitted
and an NOC was issued. Otherwise, the second person may be unable to recover
the innovator's profits and, if the statutory purpose is to enable the recovery
of the profits of the directing mind of the person whose name appears on the
documents listed in subsection 4(1), that statutory purpose will have been
thwarted. This is because it is conceivable that intercorporate arrangements
may have ensured that profits from the sale of the drug in Canada show up on the books of
the parent company, not its Canadian subsidiary.
[My emphasis]
[45]
Sanofi’s
main submission, relying on paragraph 15 of Lilly 2004, is that the
Court of Appeal’s decision was based on the availability of a disgorgement of
profits as a remedy under section 8. The Court held that a cause of action for
disgorgement of profits is only meaningful if the plaintiff can implead all
parties who might have earned the profits. Thus, a broad interpretation of
“first person” was required. However, in Merck 2009, the Federal Court
of Appeal held that disgorgement of profits is not available as a remedy under
section 8. For this reason, Sanofi says that the rationale behind Lilly 2004
has been extinguished and there is no longer any reason to give a broad or
elastic interpretation to “first person.”
[46]
However,
I am not persuaded that the decision in Lilly 2004 was premised entirely
on the existence of a claim for profits. As noted above, the Court made several
general statements supporting the possibility of section 8 liability on the
part of a company which controlled and directed the person who actually
submitted the new drug submission and patent list. For example, the Court
stated that common law agency principles might apply in the section 8 context
and that actions of a subsidiary might be regarded as the actions of its
parent.
[47]
Paragraph
15 of Lilly 2004 simply presents disgorgement of profits as an example
of a situation in which a broad definition of “first person” may be
appropriate. In my view, the reference to profits was only an illustration and
was not intended to be exhaustive. In other words, I think it likely that the
Court in Lilly 2004 would have reached the same conclusion about the
need for a trial to decide the meaning of “first person” even if disgorgement
of profits had not been available as a remedy. Accordingly, the question of
whether a “first person” includes a controlling corporation in the context of a
section 8 claim for damages remains open.
[48]
During
the hearing, Sanofi made several arguments about how to resolve the statutory
interpretation question. For example, both paragraph 4(4)(d) and subsection
6(4) of the Regulations refer to the owners of relevant patents, but subsection
4(1) does not refer to any additional parties. This suggests that the drafter
of the Regulations intended to exclude the parties other than the one who filed
the new drug submission and patent list from the definition of “first person”
in subsection 4(1).
[49]
However,
it is not my role to decide the question. My role is only to determine whether
it is plain and obvious that Teva’s interpretation of “first person” must fail.
In light of Lilly 2004, I have concluded that such a result is not plain
and obvious.
[50]
For
these reasons, I have reached the same conclusion as the Prothonotary, and the
Sanofi Appeal will therefore be dismissed with costs to Teva in any event of
the cause.
THE TEVA APPEAL
Issue
(i) Should Sanofi be allowed to attack Teva’s Counterclaim a second time?
[51]
In
its written submissions, Teva alleged that the Prothonotary should not have
entertained Sanofi’s motion to strike its claim for permanent loss of market
share, because (i) Sanofi challenged the same pleading in 2007 and (ii) because
Sanofi filed a defence to the Teva Counterclaim.
[52]
Although
Teva did not pursue these submissions at any length in oral argument, I will
address them briefly. In my view, Sanofi was entitled to bring a second motion
to strike Teva’s Counterclaim because the Federal Court of Appeal’s decision in
Merck 2003 was released after Sanofi’s first motion to strike. This
constitutes a “special reason” or “relevant change of circumstances” justifying
a second motion to strike: see Pawar v. Canada (1997), 132 F.T.R. 44
(Proth.) aff’d 137 F.T.R. 231 (F.C.T.D.); Harris v. Canada, 2001 FCT 758
at para. 24. As well, filing a defence does not preclude a motion to a strike
pleading for failure to disclose a reasonable cause of action: see, for
example, Coca-Cola Ltd. v. Pardhan (1997), 139 F.T.R. 223 (F.C.T.D.),
affirmed (1999), 85 C.P.R. (3d) 489, leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of
Canada ref’d [1999] S.C.C.A. No. 338 (QL) at para. 8.
Issue (ii) The
Standard of Review
[53]
The
above discussion of this issue applies here (see paragraphs 21 to 32 above).
The question before the Prothonotary dealt with whether Teva could claim
damages for permanent loss of market share. This is a question which is vital
to the case and, accordingly, a de novo review will be undertaken.
Issue (iii) Do Teva’s claims for
damages for permanent loss of market share disclose
a reasonable cause of action?
[54]
Section
8 of the Regulations permits the second person, in this case Teva, to claim
damages from the first person “for any loss suffered during the period” defined
in the Regulations. The period at issue is the period of operation of the
automatic stay and the issue is whether permanent loss of market share can be
said to have been a loss suffered during the period.
[55]
In
the Federal Court decision which was reviewed by the Court of Appeal in Merck
2009, Mr. Justice Roger Hughes, dealing with a section 8 claim involving
loss of market share, held that losses are “suffered” at the time they are
caused. Hence, in his view, losses caused during the period were also suffered
during the period even if they were experienced at a later date. See Merck
Frosst Canada Ltd. v. Apotex Inc., 2008 FC 1185.
[56]
However,
in Merck 2009, the Federal Court of Appeal reversed Mr. Justice
Hughes. It held that losses are only “suffered during the period” if the losses
themselves are incurred during the period. Thus, losses caused during the
period, but incurred later, cannot be claimed under section 8. The Court of
Appeal concluded as follows at paragraphs 101-102:
In this case, we have the advantage of
knowing that in 1998 the Governor-in-Council focused on this very issue, and
chose to limit the measure of the losses which can be compensated by way of
damages to those suffered during the period. No issue of principle flows
from this. The Governor-in-Council could have extended the measure of the
losses to include those caused during the period, regardless of when
they are suffered. However, it did not do that.
The Governor-in-Council’s clearly
expressed intent must be given effect to. This excludes compensation for losses
occurring in future years since such losses cannot be said to have been
suffered during the period. It follows, for instance, that Apotex’s entitlement
to damages for lost sales resulting from the alleged decrease in its market
share must be confined to sales that can be shown to have been lost within the
period. In order to be compensated, the losses must be shown to have been
incurred during the period. I therefore conclude that the appeal should be
allowed on this limited point. [Emphasis in original].
[57]
In
my view, the Federal Court of Appeal’s reasons are clear. A second person may
claim damages resulting from a loss of market share, but only for losses actually
incurred within the period. Section 8 does not provide any entitlement to
damages in respect of losses incurred outside the period.
[58]
In
oral argument, counsel for Teva indicated that the paragraphs of the Teva
Counterclaim which the Prothonotary struck relate to damages incurred both
within and beyond the period. Sanofi acknowledges that Teva should be allowed
to claim damages incurred within the period. Consequently, on consent, an Order
will issue reinstating those paragraphs to the extent that they refer to
damages incurred within the period.
[59]
However,
Teva also seeks to reinstate its claim for damages incurred outside the period.
In my opinion, the Federal Court of Appeal’s decision in Merck 2009
makes it plain and obvious that this claim is hopeless and discloses no
reasonable cause of action.
[60]
Teva
attempted to distinguish Merck 2009 on the ground that the Court of
Appeal was considering an earlier version of the Regulations. However, there
are no material differences between the two versions. The provision of the
Regulations, subsection 8(1), which includes the requirement that damages be
“suffered during the period,” has not changed.
[61]
Teva
also criticized the Merck 2009 decision itself. It said that the Federal
Court of Appeal only provided one possible interpretation of “suffered during
the period,” and that this interpretation is inconsistent with the purpose of
the Regulations, with Teva’s ability to make itself whole, and with approaches
to the assessment of damages used in tort law. However, since the Supreme Court
of Canada refused to grant leave to appeal the Merck 2009 decision, the
Federal Court of Appeal’s interpretation must be considered settled law.
[62]
For
these reasons, I have reached the same conclusion as the Prothonotary and the
Teva Appeal will be dismissed with respect to Teva’s claims for damages
incurred outside the relevant period.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S
JUDGMENT is that:
1.
The
Sanofi Appeal is dismissed;
2.
On
consent, the Teva Appeal is allowed in part;
3.
The
portions of paragraphs 135, 136 and 143 of the Teva Counterclaim which were
struck in the Decision are hereby reinstated to the extent that they refer to
claims for damages incurred within the relevant period;
4.
Teva
shall, within twenty days of the date of this Judgment, serve and file an
amended counterclaim consistent with this Order, including language clarifying
that the claims for permanent loss of market share in paragraphs 135, 136 and
143 refer only to claims for damages incurred within the relevant period.
5.
Costs
of the Sanofi Appeal are payable by Sanofi Canada to Teva in
any event of the cause, and costs of the Teva Appeal are payable by Teva to
Sanofi Canada in any event
of the cause.
“Sandra
J. Simpson”
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: T-1161-07
STYLE OF CAUSE:
PLACE OF HEARING: TORONTO, ONTARIO
DATE OF HEARING: JUNE 14, 2010
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT: SIMPSON
J.
DATED: NOVEMBER 30, 2010
APPEARANCES:
Sheldon Hamilton
Andrew Mandlsohn
|
FOR THE PLAINTIFFS
|
Mark Edward Davis
Keya Dasgupta
|
FOR THE DEFENDANT
|
SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
Smart & Biggar
Toronto, Ontario
|
FOR THE PLAINTIFFS
|
Heenan Blaikie LLP
,
|
FOR THE DEFENDANT
|