Docket: T-1310-09
Citation: 2013 FC 1148
Toronto, Ontario, November 12, 2013
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Hughes
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BETWEEN:
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ABBVIE CORPORATION, ABBVIE DEUTSCHLAND GMBH & CO. KG AND
ABBVIE BIOTECHNOLOGY LTD.
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Plaintiffs
(Defendants by
Counterclaim)
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and
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JANSSEN INC.
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Defendant
(Plaintiff by
Counterclaim)
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REASONS FOR ORDER AND ORDER
[1]
The Defendant (Plaintiff by Counterclaim)
Janssen Inc. has brought a motion to amend Schedule A to its Defence and Counterclaim
so as to remove some and add other references to what is generally referred to
in patent litigation as “prior art”. I have reviewed the material filed,
including the Ethier affidavit sworn November 6, 2013, which I have admitted
for the limited purpose of establishing dates, and I have heard submissions of
Counsel by teleconference on Friday, November 8, 2013. Since senior Counsel for
each of the Plaintiffs and Defendant filed their own affidavits on this motion,
Counsel from other firms argued the matter on behalf of the parties.
[2]
At the end of the teleconference, I advised the
parties as to my determination of the matter because I was hearing this matter
in Vancouver on Friday, and the following Monday was a dies non for the
Court. I indicated that I would not allow the amendment and that reasons would
follow. These are those reasons.
[3]
The importance of pleadings should not be
overlooked. Pleadings serve to inform the other litigants in the case and the
Court as to issues that a party will raise, and the facts upon which a party
will rely in support of its position as to those issues and the relief sought.
In this case the Court has put in place a Case Management process where a
Prothonotary will guide the parties through the preliminary phases of a case,
including amendments to pleadings, production of documents and oral examination
for discovery. It is not unusual for pleadings to be amended during this phase
of a case. At some point, the trial judge assigned to the case will become
involved. The case should have assumed more or less its final shape by this
time.
[4]
In the present case, begun in 2009, the
Plaintiffs, Abbvie, have alleged that the Defendant Janssen has infringed a
Canadian Patent. Janssen has defended, denying infringement and counterclaiming
that the patent ought to be declared invalid for a number of reasons. One of
those reasons is obviousness, a pleading that is almost always raised when it
is alleged that a patent is invalid. Generally speaking, a party alleging
invalidity on the basis of obviousness must put the Court in the position of a
“person skilled in the art” as of the relevant date, and present to the Court
the “prior art” that such a person would have been expected to know about or
find as of that date. A series of questions are then considered by the Court,
such as those articulated by Rothstein J in Apotex Inc v Sanofi-Synthelabo
Canada Inc, [2008] 3 S.C.R. 265 to arrive at a determination as to whether the
invention as claimed was obvious or not.
[5]
The “prior art” as pleaded is a critical part of
the determination as to obviousness. It provides the shape of the landscape in
which the person skilled in the art is operating. Sometimes the identity, date,
and discoverability of that art may be at issue. These are matters to be
explored on discovery. The meaning and importance of that art are matters to be
considered by expert witnesses. The issues to be addressed by those experts are
matters to be determined by Counsel.
[6]
The purpose of Case Management by a
Prothonotary, and subsequently, by the Trial Judge, includes the setting of the
prior art landscape, against which the expert testimony is to be received and
the issues addressed. At some point in the process leading up to trial, this
landscape must be finalized.
[7]
The timetable relevant to the consideration of
this motion is as follows:
August 10, 2009
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Statement of
Claim filed
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December 8, 2009
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Statement of
Defence and Counterclaim filed
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May 4, 2010
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Reply to Defence
and Counterclaim filed
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June 18, 2010
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Action placed
under Case Management
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January 10, 2011
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Trial date fixed
for 35 days in Toronto, beginning 22 October, 2013
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August 9, 2013
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Amended Defence
and Counterclaim filed on consent
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September 29,
2012
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Bifurcation
Order deferring the issues as to damages, etc.
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June 27, 2013
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Fresh as Amended
Statement of Claim filed
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Mid June 2013
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Solicitors for
Defendant Janssen retain an expert, Dr. Sarfati. At this time, discoveries
are largely complete
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July 24, 2013
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Janssen files a
Fresh as Amended Defence and Counterclaim
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July 25, 2013
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Trial Management
Conference with me, the Trial Judge assigned to the case. No issue as to any
further amendment of the Defence and Counterclaim raised
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End of
July/early August 2013
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Dr. Sarfati
provides new prior art to Counsel for Janssen
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September 16,
2013
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Dr. Sarfati’s
Report, which references the new prior art sought to be added to the Defence
and Counterclaim, served on the solicitors for the Plaintiff
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September 26,
2013
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Plaintiff’s
solicitors serve Janssen’s soliciors with a Notice objecting to, among other
things, the new prior art referred to in Dr. Sarfati’s report
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October 25, 2013
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Solicitors for
Janssen file a letter with the Court seeking a date to discuss when a formal
motion to amend their pleadings can be heard
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October 31, 2013
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The Notice of
Motion respecting the matters now under consideration is filed
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November 5, 2013
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Teleconference
between the Court and Counsel fixing this motion to be heard November 7, 2013
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November 7, 2013
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This motion is
heard
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December 2, 2013
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Date fixed for trial
to begin
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[8]
As can be seen, Janssen’s solicitors did not
retain Dr. Sarfati until mid-June of this year. Dr. Sarfati supplied the new
prior art to those solicitors in late July and early August of this year. No
issue in respect of such prior art was raised with me at a management
conference in late July. Janssen did not reveal this new prior art to the
Plaintiffs’ solicitors until mid-September, when Dr. Sarfati’s Report was
served. The Plaintiffs’ solicitors objected to Dr. Sarfati’s reference to this new
art a few days later. It was not until a month later, about six weeks before
the trial is scheduled to begin, that Janssen has moved to amend its pleadings.
[9]
Senior Counsel for both parties have filed
affidavits. Mr. Reddon, for the Plaintiffs, cites numerous reasons why his
client would be prejudiced at this late date were the amendments to be allowed.
Without detailing all those reasons, they include the fact that the Plaintiffs’
case would have to be reshaped, perhaps new experts would have to be retained,
issues that were dropped may have to be reviewed, and so forth. Janssen replies
that the Plaintiffs’ experts can easily address the new art, and that an
affidavit from Plaintiffs’ Counsel is inappropriate. I disagree. The question
is not simply whether an expert can address a particular piece of prior art.
The question is much larger than that. By this time, a few weeks before trial,
a party has shaped its case; it has selected the issues to be addressed, and
the experts to address them. The amendments sought here are not trivial or
merely formalistic; they go to the heart of one of the major invalidity issues
raised by the Defendant; that of obviousness, in respect of which the prior art
is critical.
[10]
Both parties, in argument, have referred to the
decision of the Chief Justice of the Tax Court, Bowman, in Continental Bank
Leasing Corp v R (1993), 93 DTC 298 at page 302, as cited by the Federal
Court of Appeal in Merck & co v Apotex Inc, 2003 FCA 488, per Decary
JA, for the majority, at paragraph 30:
[…] I prefer to
put the matter on a broader basis: whether it is more consonant with the
interests of justice that the withdrawal or amendment be permitted or that it
be denied. The tests mentioned in cases in other courts are of course helpful
but other factors should also be emphasized, including the timeliness of the
motion to amend or withdraw, the extent to which the proposed amendments would
delay the expeditious trial of the matter, the extent to which a position taken
originally by one party has led another party to follow a course of action in
the litigation which it would be difficult or impossible to alter and whether
the amendments sought will facilitate the court’s consideration of the true
substance of the dispute on its merits. No single factor predominates nor is
its presence or absence necessarily determinative. All must be assigned their
proper weight in the context of the particular case. Ultimately, it boils down
to a consideration of simple fairness, common sense and the interest that the
courts have that justice be done.
[11]
On all the factors considered by Bowman, TCJ -
timeliness, extent to which the amendments would delay a trial, the extent to
which a position taken by the party seeking the amendment would require the
other party to change its position - the Plaintiffs have, as I have set out
above, satisfied me that no amendment should be made. The prior art is not an
absolute truth; it is what one party or the other will urge the Court that a
person skilled in the art would have known or found. It is not a simple truth;
it is an assertion as to what might have been.
[12]
Janssen argues that the trial can be put off a
few weeks and the matter can be compensated in costs. That is not the way our
Court system works. There are scarce judicial resources and many persons
seeking trials, hearings, motions and other matters. If a trial is put off, it
could be months or years before it can be heard.
[13]
As to compensation in costs, given that the
parties are at the eve of trial, I echo the words of Hugessen J in Montana Band v R, 2002 CarswellNat 1138 at paragraph 7:
7. The law
is clear: amendments should be allowed unless they cause a prejudice which
cannot be compensated by an award of costs. The present is a classic example of
such non-compensable prejudice. Every amendment to pleadings will of course
cause some delay but some delays are far more consequential than others. Where
one is virtually on the eve of a lengthy major trial, whose date has been known
and anticipated for many months, the preparation for which has been the subject
of close and intensive cooperation between counsel and the Court extending over
a period of years and where the issues are many and complex and the proceedings
involve numerous parties, there is simply no way in which an order for costs
could possibly provide adequate compensation for the loss of the trial date.
Indeed, even the attempt to assess the costs that would have been thrown away
by the anticipated delay this trial would be well-nigh impossible. And costs,
even on the highest scale, can, as their name implies, only compensate for the
moneys spent in preparing for and conducting the trial; they cannot include the
substantial damages that an ultimately successful party suffers by being denied
what is due to it for a further period of months or years.
[14]
The motion to amend the Defence and Counterclaim
will be dismissed with costs to the Plaintiffs in any event of the cause.
[15]
As to a further matter I note that no formal
Order has been made amending the style of cause. That Order will be added to
this Order.