Supreme Court of Canada
Philco Products Ltd. et al. v. Thermionics Ltd. et
al., [1940] S.C.R. 501
Date: 1940-06-29
Philco Products,
Limited, and Cutten-Foster & Sons, Limited (Defendants) Appellants ;
and
Thermionics,
Limited, and others (Plaintiffs) Respondents.
1939: Nov. 21, 22; 1940: June 29.
Present: Duff C.J. and Crocket, Davis,
Kerwin and Hudson JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE EXCHEQUER COURT OF CANADA
Patents—Pleadings—In action for alleged
infringement of patents, defendants seeking to plead an illegal conspiracy or
combine—Question raised whether such defence could constitute a good defence in
such an action—Insufficiency of the pleading in question—Application of the
principle ex dolo malo non oritur actio.
In an action for alleged infringement of
patents of invention, defendants sought by amendment to plead "that the
plaintiffs, or some of them, together or with others, have entered into an
illegal conspiracy or combine contrary to the common and statute law of the
Dominion of Canada, and, in particular, contrary to The Combines Investigation
Act (R.S.C., 1927, c. 26) and The Criminal Code (R.S.C., 1927, c. 36) and are
disentitled to any relief in this action because: (a) The assignments,
transmissions, agreements or other means whatsoever, by which rights in the
patents in suit are claimed, were made in pursuance, or as a result, of the
said conspiracy or combine and were ineffective to convey such rights; or (b)
in the alternative, if any rights in the patents in suit were acquired, such
rights have been used, in this action and otherwise, in pursuance of the said
conspiracy or combine in such a way as to disentitle the plaintiffs to any
relief." The question whether, in an action for infringement of a patent,
such a defence could constitute a good defence was argued as a question of law
before trial, and was determined in the negative by Maclean J. in the Exchequer
Court of Canada. On appeal:
Held: The
proposed amendment, in the form in which it was put, was improper and was
rightly rejected; but it should be open to defendants to apply to amend by proper
and properly framed amendments.
The principle ex dolo malo non oritur
actio (stated in Gordon v. Chief Commissioner of Metropolitan
Police, [1910] 2 K.B. 1080, at 1098) is applicable to a case in which a plaintiff
must necessarily, in order to establish his cause of action, prove that he is a
party to an illegal conspiracy upon which his cause of action rests; and
applies to an action for infringement of a patent; if the plaintiff's title is
founded upon an agreement which amounts to a criminal conspiracy to which he is
a party, and which, he must establish in order to prove his
[Page 502]
title, then he cannot succeed. And it cannot
be said that in no circumstances can the existence of an illegal combine be an
answer to such an action.
If at the trial it appeared that the
plaintiff's case was founded upon an illegal transaction to which he was a
party, in the sense above indicated, it would be the duty of the trial judge to
take notice of it and dismiss the action. But here defendants are proposing to
set up their objection in their pleading and in doing so they must observe the
rules of pleading and allege the facts which constitute the illegality
complained of and the connection of the plaintiff's cause of action with that
illegality.
APPEAL by the defendants from the judgment of
Maclean J., President of the Exchequer Court of Canada, refusing certain
proposed amendments to the statement of defence.
The action was brought against the defendants
for alleged infringement of two patents of invention. The defendants moved for
an order permitting them to amend their statement of defence by inserting
therein the following:
4. The defendants deny the allegations in
paragraph 4 of the plaintiffs' amended statement of claim and put the
plaintiffs to the strict proof thereof, and the defendants allege that the
plaintiffs, or some of them, together or with others, have entered into an
illegal conspiracy or combine contrary to the common and statute law of the
Dominion of Canada, and, in particular, contrary to The Combines Investigation
Act (R.S.C., 1927, c. 26) and The Criminal Code (R.S.C., 1927, c. 36) and are
disentitled to any relief in this action because:
(a) The assignments, transmissions,
agreements or other means whatsoever, by which rights in the patents in suit
are claimed, were made in pursuance, or as a result, of the said conspiracy or
combine and were ineffective to convey such rights; or
(b) In the alternative, if any rights
in the patents in suit were acquired, such rights have been used, in this
action and otherwise, in pursuance of the said conspiracy or combine in such a
way as to disentitle the plaintiffs to any relief.
On consent of counsel for plaintiffs and
defendants given on the hearing of the motion, it was ordered that the question
whether in an action for the infringement of a patent a defence such as that
above set out could constitute a good defence should be treated as having been
directed to be set down for argument as a question of law for decision by the
Court in advance of the trial under the provisions of Rule 151 of the General
Rules and Orders of the Exchequer Court of Canada.
[Page 503]
Maclean J, determined said question of law in
the negative, holding that the proposed amendments could not be raised as
defences in an infringement action. The defendants appealed.
W. D. Herridge K.C. and E. G. Gowling for
the appellants.
O. M. Biggar K.C. and R. S. Smart K.C. for
the respondents.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
The Chief Justice—There is one principle upon which it is conceivable that the
defence discussed on the argument, if properly pleaded and proved, might be
available: ex dolo malo non oritur actio. This principle is stated in
the judgment of Buckley L.J. in Gordon v. Chief Commissioner of
Metropolitan Police
in these words:
It is certainly the law that the Court will
refuse to enforce an illegal contract or obligations arising out of an illegal
contract, and I agree that the doctrine is not confined to the case of contract.
A plaintiff who cannot establish his cause of action without relying upon an
illegal transaction mus/?/ fail; and none the less is this true if the
defendant does not rely upon the illegality. If the Court learns of the
illegality, it will refuse to lend its aid. The rule is founded not upon any
ground that either party can take advantage of the illegality, as, for
instance, the defendant by setting it up as a defence. It is founded on public
policy. Lord Mansfield in Holman v. Johnson said " Ex dolo malo
non oritur actio. No Court will
lend its aid to a man who founds his cause of action upon an immoral or an
illegal act."
The passage was quoted with approval by Lord
Wright, M.R., in Berg v. Sadler.
I do not see any reason why this principle is
not applicable to a case in which a plaintiff must necessarily, in order to
establish his cause of action, prove that he is a party to an illegal
conspiracy upon which his cause of action rests; nor can I understand why the
principle does not apply to an action for infringement of a patent. If the
plaintiff's title is founded upon an agreement which amounts to a criminal
conspiracy to which he is a party, and which he must establish in order to
prove his title, then he cannot succeed. There is nothing, in my opinion,
[Page 504]
in the provisions of the Patent Act referred
to on the argument that affects the application of this fundamental principle.
I am not satisfied that in no circumstances can
the existence of an illegal combine be an answer to such an action; A reference
to a recent decision in the Supreme Court of the United States will illustrate
my point. The first two paragraphs in the head-note to Ethyl Gasoline Corp. v.
United States
are as follows:—
1. The regulation of prices and the
suppression of competition among purchasers of the patented article are not
within the scope of the monopoly conferred upon a patentee by the patent laws.
2. A system of licences employed by the
owner of patents for an improved motor fuel, whereby jobbers who do not conform
to the market policies and posted gasoline prices adopted by the major oil
companies may be cut off from the list of those to whom refineries licensed to
manufacture such fuel may sell it, and which has been used to coerce adherence
to those prices and policies, is not within the monopoly conferred by the
patents and operates as an unreasonable restraint of interstate commerce in
such fuel, in violation of the Federal Anti-trust Act.
Now, if the plaintiff in an action for
infringement must, in order to make out his title, prove such a combine, and
that he is a party to it, and if his alleged rights are founded upon it or
" directly result from it," I think he would find himself in great
difficulties.
I do not pursue the subject further. The
doctrine laid down by the learned President in his judgment is too sweeping if
it is inconsistent with this.
I do not, however, think that the proposed
amendment states that the respondents' cause of action is connected with the
alleged illegal conspiracy in such a manner as to bring this fundamental, and
indeed rudimentary, principle into play.
If B commits an indictable offence and the
direct consequence of that indictable offence is that A suffers some special
harm different from that of the rest of His Majesty's subjects, then, speaking
generally, A has a right of action against B. As at present advised, I think it
is not obvious that this well settled doctrine does not apply to indictable
offences under section 498 of the Criminal Code; and it is not necessary
to decide whether there are no circumstances in which the principle would not
operate to prevent the owners of patents and the
[Page 505]
licensees under patents enforcing their prima
facie rights against persons who are the objects and the intended victims
of their criminal activities. There is nothing, however, in the proposed
amendment to suggest the application of any such principle.
It ought to be remembered that the office of
pleadings is to state the facts which are the constitutive elements of the
cause of action or the defence. The proposed amendment does not profess to
state the nature of the illegal conspiracy alleged beyond the vague allegation
that it is contrary to the common and statute law of the Dominion. On this
ground the application to put this amendment on the record ought to have been
dismissed in limine. The learned President by consent treated this vague
allegation as raising a question of law within rule 151. If at the trial it
appeared that the plaintiff's case was founded upon an illegal transaction to
which he was a party, in the sense above indicated, it would be the duty of the
trial judge to take notice of it and dismiss the action; but the appellants are
proposing to set up their objection in their pleading and in doing so they must
observe the rules of pleading and allege the facts which constitute the
illegality complained of and the connection of the plaintiff's cause of action
with that illegality.
I do not think myself that the proposed pleading
raises any question of law which could usefully be considered. The function of
rule 151 is to enable questions of law to be decided which arise upon facts
alleged or admitted. Here, there are no such facts alleged in the pleading
sense. There is a bald allegation, I repeat, of an illegal conspiracy in
restraint of trade which is set up, an illegality because it is contrary to the
law of the Dominion of Canada. The facts constituting the illegality are not
set up. We are not told whether it is a conspiracy to enhance prices or to
restrict competition, or what the particular nature of it is, or what the
relation of it is to the respondents' cause of action. And the question seems
to have been treated as the question whether in any circumstances the existence
of an illegal conspiracy in restraint of trade, to enhance prices for example,
could be an answer to an action for the infringement of a patent. That
proposition includes the proposition that in such an action a
[Page 506]
plaintiff may succeed even though his title to
sue is directly founded upon a crime to which he is a party, and is, therefore,
too broad; but, for the reasons just given, the amendment was properly
rejected.
I think the proper course is to say that we do
not think fit to pronounce upon any question of law except to say that the
amendment is not a proper amendment and ought not to be allowed. It will be
open, of course, to the appellants to apply to amend their defence by proper
and properly framed amendments.
The costs of the appeal will be costs in the
cause.
Appeal dismissed without prejudice to
right of appellants to apply to amend their defence by properly framed
amendments. Costs of appeal to be costs in the cause.
Solicitors for the appellants: Herridge,
Gowling, MacTavish & Watt.
Solicitors for the respondents: Smart & Biggar.