Date: 20101130
Docket: T-1357-09
Citation: 2010 FC 1209
Ottawa, Ontario, November 30,
2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Simpson
BETWEEN:
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APOTEX INC.
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Plaintiff
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and
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SANOFI-AVENTIS
SANOFI-AVENTIS DEUTSCHLAND
GmbH and SANOFI-AVENTIS CANADA INC.
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Defendants
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
In
this motion brought pursuant to Rule 51 of the Federal Courts Rules,
SOR/98-106, the Defendants appeal an Order of Madam Protohonotary Martha
Milczynski (the Prothonotary) dated February 22, 2010 (the Decision)
wherein she refused the Defendants’ motion to dismiss the action as against the
Defendants Sanofi-Aventis (Sanofi France) and Sanofi-Aventis Deutschland GmbH
(Sanofi Germany).
[2]
The
action is being specially managed by the Prothonotary.
[3]
Although
the cases have not been formally consolidated, this appeal was heard together
with two related appeals in action T-1161-07. Separate reasons have been issued
dealing with those appeals.
THE BACKGROUND
[4]
This
appeal concerns the regulatory scheme created by the Patented Medicines
(Notice of Compliance) Regulations, SOR/93-133 (the Regulations). At pages
4-5 of her Decision, the Prothonotary provides the following summary of this
scheme:
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].
[5]
The
Defendant Sanofi-Aventis Canada Inc. (Sanofi Canada) filed the
required new drug submission and patent lists, and obtained an NOC to market
and sell ramipril. It is an ACE inhibitor used to treat high blood pressure. In
2003, Apotex Inc. (Apotex), applied for its own NOC for ramipril and submitted
Notices of Allegation.
[6]
Sanofi
Canada responded to
those notices by bringing five separate prohibition proceedings against Apotex.
All were ultimately dismissed, and Apotex was issued its NOC on
December 12, 2006.
[7]
Sanofi
Canada then brought
an action against Apotex in Court File T-161-07 alleging infringement of one of
the relevant patents. The action was dismissed by Madam Justice Judith Snider
in a judgment dated June 29, 2009.
THE APOTEX CLAIM
[8]
On
August 14, 2009, Apotex commenced an action against Sanofi France, Sanofi
Germany, Sanofi Canada, and the Schering Corporation for damages
pursuant to section 8 of the Regulations. That section 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 Apotex is the “second person” and is entitled to bring
a claim against a “first person.”
[9]
“First
person” is defined in section 2 of the Regulations as “the person referred to
in subsection 4(1).” In turn, subsection 4(1) 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.
[10]
There
is no dispute that Sanofi Canada has filed a new drug submission and a patent
list in relation to ramipril, and is therefore a “first person.” Further there
is no dispute that Sanofi France and Sanofi Germany did not file
either new drug submissions or patent lists. However, Apotex submits that
Sanofi France and Sanofi Germany are liable as “first
persons” because of the control they exercised over Sanofi Canada. In this
respect, Apotex pleads as follows in its Amended Statement of Claim dated
October 15, 2009, which is the version that was before the Prothonotary
(the Apotex Claim):
(a)
Sanofi
France, Sanofi Germany and Sanofi Canada are
affiliates of one another within the Sanofi Group, of which Sanofi France is
the ultimate parent (para. 7);
(b)
Sanofi
France oversees and
directs operations of Sanofi Group subsidiaries, including research and
development activities, and provides financing (para. 11);
(c)
Sanofi
France exerts
control over the Sanofi Group (para. 12);
(d)
The
relevant prohibition proceedings were commenced with the agreement,
authorization, assistance and cooperation of Sanofi France, Sanofi Germany, Sanofi Canada and Schering
Corporation (para. 55);
(e)
All
Defendants are jointly and severally liable for payment of Apotex’ damages
(para. 73);
(f)
Sanofi
France, either itself or through subsidiaries including Sanofi Germany,
exercised complete control over Sanofi Canada’s decision-making with respect to
ramipril, including (para. 74):
(i)
Whether
Sanofi Canada would apply
for NOCs;
(ii)
Whether
Sanofi Canada would be
permitted to include ramipril patents on its patent lists;
(iii)
Whether
Sanofi Canada would seek
prohibition proceedings;
(iv)
How
Sanofi Canada would
prosecute prohibition proceedings;
(v)
How
Sanofi Canada would market
and distribute ramipril;
(vi)
How
Sanofi Canada would
acquire or manufacture ramipril for sale;
(vii)
At
what price Sanofi Canada would obtain ramipril.
THE MOTIONS
[11]
Motions
were brought before the Prothonotary by Sanofi Canada, Sanofi Germany and Sanofi
France (collectively Sanofi) on September 16, 2009 and by the Schering
Corporation on October 9, 2009 seeking, inter alia orders striking
the Apotex Claim and dismissing the action as against all defendants other than
Sonofi Canada. The moving
parties said that Sanofi Canada was the only “first person” since it was the
only Defendant to file a new drug submission or a patent list in relation to
ramipril. Because section 8 of the Regulations only creates a right of damages
against a “first person,” Sanofi and the Schering Corporation said that Apotex’
claim failed to disclose a reasonable cause of action against Sanofi Germany,
Sanofi France and the Schering
Corporation.
THE DECISION
[12]
The
Prothonotary dismissed the action against the Schering Corporation, and that aspect
of her Decision is not being challenged. However, the Prothonotary declined to
strike the claim or dismiss the action against Sanofi France or 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). In that case Mr. Justice
John Evans wrote for the Court and indicated that a parent corporation
which directs a subsidiary to file a new drug submission and a patent list
might be a “first person” jointly with its subsidiary. The Court did not decide
the issue but described it as a “difficult legal question” which required a
trial.
[13]
The
Prothonotary concluded, in light of that decision, that it was not “plain and
obvious” that Sanofi France and Sanofi Germany were not also first persons and
that, even though the decision in Lilly 2004 had been made in the
context of a claim for disgorgement of profits (which is no longer a valid
cause of action), it was broad enough to apply to the Apotex Claim.
[14]
The
Prothonotary also considered whether Apotex had pleaded sufficient material
facts to sustain a reasonable cause of action. She held that paragraph 74 of
the Apotex Claim was sufficient since it alleged that Sanofi France and Sanofi
Germany had complete control and direction over Sanofi Canada and that the
pleading could lead to the conclusion that Sanofi France and Sanofi Germany were
“first persons,” if Apotex’ interpretation of “first person” were to be
accepted at trial. On the other hand, the Prothonotary held that no material
facts had been pleaded which could make Schering a “first person” on any
possible interpretation. For these reasons, the Prothonotary struck the
portions of the Apotex Claim containing allegations against Schering, and
dismissed the claim against Schering, but maintained the claims against Sanofi
France and Sanofi Germany.
THE ISSUES
[15]
The
issues on this appeal are as follows:
(a)
What
is the standard of review?
(b)
Should
the Apotex Claim be dismissed against Sanofi France and Sanofi Germany?
Issue I The
Standard of Review
[16]
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.
[17]
The
reference in Merck 2003 to the wording used by MacGuigan J.A. related 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.
[18]
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, it is not what was sought (i.e., the question in the motion 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 this case law on this issue 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.
[19]
Using
Mr. Justice Hugessen’s approach, the focus would be on the answer or, in other
words, on the Decision made by the Prothonotary. In this case, because the
Prothonotary 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.
[20]
However,
I have reviewed the Federal Court of Appeal’s decisions in Aqua-Gem and Merck
2003 and have observed the following:
[21]
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.
[22]
Mr.
Justice MacGuigan said at paragraph 95 of Aqua-Gem that “…discretionary
orders of prothonotaries ought not to be distributed on appeal to a judge
unless they raise questions vital to the final issue of the case.”
[23]
The
word “they” appears to refer 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.
[24]
The
difficulty is that when Mr. Justice MacGuigan considered the matter, he did not
actually apply the test he stated. 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, ...”
[25]
I
have therefore concluded that the restatement of the Aqua-Gem test in Merck
2003 gives effect to the language in Mr. Justice MacGuigan’s analysis
and in his conclusion in Aqua-Gem.
[26]
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.
[27]
The
Court of Appeal held that the proposed amendments were vital and conducted its
own de novo review. In the end, it decided not 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.
[28]
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.
[29]
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.
[30]
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.
[31]
In
view of these cases, I must next consider whether the question before the
Prothonotary in this case can be said to be vital.
[32]
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 defendant is excluded. In this case, without Sanofi France and Sanofi Germany, the Plaintiff
cannot argue that there could be joint liability because those defendants controlled
Sanofi Canada. I therefore
conclude that the removal of the defendants is a vital matter. Accordingly, the
Decision not to dismiss the Apotex Claim against Sanofi France and Sanofi Germany will be
reviewed de novo.
Issue
II Should the Apotex Claim proceed against Sanofi France and Sanofi Germany?
[33]
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.
[34]
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 Apotex Claim fails to disclose a
reasonable cause of action against Sanofi France and Sanofi Germany.
[35]
In
Lilly 2004, the Federal Court of Appeal considered a similar argument. A
generic drug manufacturer had 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 in this
case, the generic’s claim against the foreign parent was based on the degree of
control it exercised over the Canadian subsidiary.
[36]
The
Court of Appeal described the issue in Lilly 2004 at paragraph 9. It
said:
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.
[37]
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 company exercised a degree of control over a
subsidiary such that the subsidiary could be said to be acting as its 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.
[38]
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.
[39]
Further,
at paragraph 15, the Court in Lilly 2004 stated:
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]
[40]
Sanofi’s
main submission, relying on paragraph 15 of Lilly 2004, is that the
Court of Appeal decision was based on the availability of a disgorgement of
profits as a remedy under section 8 of the Regulations. Lilly 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 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 Federal
Court of Appeal held that disgorgement of profits is not a remedy that is
available 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.”
[41]
However,
I am not persuaded that the Lilly 2004 decision 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.
[42]
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.
[43]
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).
[44]
However,
it is not my role to decide the meaning of “first person”. My role is to
determine whether it is plain and obvious that Apotex’ interpretation of “first
person” must fail. In light of Lilly 2004, I have concluded that such a
result is not plain and obvious.
[45]
For
all these reasons, I have reached the same conclusion as the Prothonotary. The
appeal will therefore be dismissed with costs to Apotex in any event of the
cause.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT
is that
the appeal is dismissed with costs payable to Apotex
by Sanofi Canada in any event
of the cause.
“Sandra
J. Simpson”
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: T-1357-09
STYLE OF CAUSE: Apotex
Inc. v. Sanofi-Aventis, Sanofi-Aventis Deutschland GmbH and Sanofi-Aventis
Canada Inc.
PLACE OF HEARING: TORONTO,
ONTARIO
DATE OF HEARING: JUNE 14, 2010
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT: SIMPSON
J.
DATED: NOVEMBER 30, 2010
APPEARANCES:
Jerry Topolski
Karen Murdock
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FOR THE PLAINTIFF
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Sheldon Hamilton
Andrew Mandlsohn
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FOR THE DEFENDANT
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SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
Goodmans LLP
Toronto, Ontario
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FOR THE PLAINTIFF
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Smart & Biggar
Toronto, Ontario
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FOR THE DEFENDANTS
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