Date: 20070215
Docket: A-83-06
Citation: 2007 FCA 73
CORAM: LÉTOURNEAU
J.A.
SEXTON
J.A.
EVANS J.A.
BETWEEN:
ABBOTT LABORATORIES and
ABBOTT LABORATORIES LIMITED
Appellants
(Applicants)
and
THE MINISTER OF HEALTH and
PHARMASCIENCE INC.
Respondents
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT OF THE
COURT
(Delivered from the Bench at Toronto, Ontario, on February 15,
2007)
EVANS J.A.
[1]
This is an
appeal by Abbott Laboratories and Abbott Laboratories Ltd. (“Abbott”) from a
decision of a Judge of the Federal Court dismissing Abbott’s application for an
order of prohibition under the Patented Medicines (Notice of Compliance)
Regulations, SOR/93-133 (“Regulations”). The order restrained the Minister
of Health from issuing a Notice of Compliance (“NOC”) to Pharmascience Inc. in
respect of its drug containing crystalline form II of the molecule
clarithromycin.
[2]
Clarithromycin
is polymorphic, that is, it can be arranged in different crystal forms which
have different properties. Abbott holds Canadian Patent No. 2,277,274 (“’274
patent”) for the invention of form 0 clarithromycin. This patent is listed on
the register against Abbott’s drug, BIAXIN®, an antibiotic used to treat
infections, which contains form II clarithromycin. It is the product with which
Pharmascience compared its drug, which also contains form II clarithromycin,
when it made its Abbreviated New Drug Submission to the Minister for a NOC.
[3]
The
Applications Judge held that Pharmascience’s Notice of Allegations (“NOA”) was
justified when it stated that its clarithromycin product would not infringe
Abbott’s ’274 patent, because, in its finished state, Pharmascience’s product
contains only form II clarithromycin. The fact that form 0, claimed by the
patent, was produced at an intermediate stage in the manufacturing process of
the Pharmascience product did not bring it within paragraph 5(1)(b) of
the Regulations. The Judge’s decision, dated February 2, 2006, is
reported as Abbott Laboratories v. Canada (Minister of Health), 2006 FC 120, [2006] 4 F.C.R.
41.
[4]
On May 18,
2006, this Court released its decision in Abbott Laboratories v. Canada
(Minister of Health), 2006 FCA 782, 350 N.R. 242 (“Ratiopharm”),
which also involved the ’274 patent, an Abbott comparator drug called Biaxin
Bid and a “copycat” drug containing form II clarithromycin, produced by generic
drug manufacturer, Ratiopharm, Writing for the Court, Sharlow J.A. held that
the making of form 0 clarithromycin in the intermediate stage of the process was
within the scope of subparagraph 5(1)(b)(iv) of the Regulations, even
though only form II was present in Ratiopharm’s finished product.
[5]
Counsel for
Pharmascience in the present case argued that Ratiopharm was
distinguishable, because many of the claims in the ’274 patent, especially
claim 1, claimed “a crystalline antibiotic … form 0 solvate.” Properly
construed, she said, the patent was limited to claims for form II clarithromycin
when prepared for use as an antibiotic, and was not a “stand alone” claim for
form II clarithromycin in itself, regardless of use. Accordingly, counsel
submitted, Pharmascience’s product did not infringe the ’274 patent, because
its form 0 was only an intermediate and was not used, or intended for use, as
an antibiotic.
[6]
We do not
agree. This issue was considered by the Applications Judge who, assisted by
expert witnesses, concluded that a person skilled in the art would understand
“antibiotic” in the claims in the ’274 patent as claims for a substance with
antibacterial activity, independent of its intended use. Counsel for
Pharmascience conceded that form 0 could be ingested, and would be effective as
an antibiotic. We are not persuaded that the Judge improperly abdicated to
experts his responsibility to construe the patent, or that, on the basis of the
evidence before him, he made a palpable and overriding error in his conclusion.
[7]
Nor are we
persuaded that the Judge erred in finding that the ’274
patent was a claim “for the medicine itself” for the purpose of subsection 5(1)(b)(iv)
of the Regulations, as defined by subsection 2(1), prior to the recent
amendments to the Regulations by SOR/2006-242. There was ample evidence before
the Applications Judge to support his finding that clarithromycin, and
its forms, is “the medicine itself”.
[8]
Finally, we decided not to consider an argument
which counsel for Pharmascience made for the first time at the hearing of the
appeal. She argued that the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in AstraZeneca
Canada Inc. v. Canada
(Minister of Health), 2006 SCC 49, released on
November 3, 2006, implicitly reversed Ratiopharm.
[9]
This issue had not been raised in the NOA or before
the Applications Judge (AstraZeneca was decided after these events). Nor
was it mentioned in Pharmascience’s memorandum of fact and law, which could
have been supplemented. Indeed, although AstraZeneca was decided three
months before this appeal was heard, counsel gave no notice whatsoever to
counsel for Abbott of her intention to advance this argument at the hearing. In
these circumstances, it would be unfair to Abbott, and to the Court, if we had
to decide this issue on its merits. We would only note that, after the release
of AstraZeneca, the Supreme Court refused leave to appeal the Ratiopharm
decision (Court File No. 31578, February 8, 2007).
[10]
For these reasons, the appeal will be allowed,
with costs here and below, the decision of the Federal Court will be set aside,
and an order of prohibition will be granted restraining the Minister, until the
expiry of the ’274 patent, from issuing a Notice of Compliance to Pharmascience
for clarithromycin 250 mg tablets.
“John
M. Evans”
FEDERAL COURT OF APPEAL
NAMES OF COUNSEL AND SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: A-83-06
(APPEAL FROM
AN ORDER OF THE HONOURABLE MR. JUSTICE HARRINGTON, FEDERAL COURT, DATED
FEBRUARY 2, 2006, T-433-04 & T-835-04)
STYLE OF CAUSE: ABBOTT
LABORATORIES and ABBOTT
LABORATORIES
LIMITED v. THE MINISTER OF
HEALTH and PHARMASCIENCE
INC.
PLACE OF HEARING: Toronto, ON
DATE OF HEARING: February 15, 2007
REASONS FOR ORDER BY: Evans, J.A.
DATED: February 15, 2007
APPEARANCES:
Andrew J. Reddon
Steven G. Mason
|
For the
Appellants
|
Carol
Hitchman
Paula Bremner
|
For the Respondent, Pharmascience Inc.
|
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD:
McCARTHY TÉTRAULT LLP
Barristers & Solicitors
Toronto, ON
|
For the
Appellants
|
HITCHMAN &
SPRIGINGS
Barristers & Solicitors
Toronto, ON
John H. Sims,
Q.C.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada
|
For the Respondent, Pharmascience
For the Respondent, Minister of Health
|