Date:
20070430
Docket: A-66-07
Citation: 2007 FCA 173
CORAM: NOËL
J.A.
SEXTON
J.A.
MALONE
J.A.
BETWEEN:
G.D. SEARLE & CO.
and PFIZER CANADA INC.
Appellants
and
NOVOPHARM LIMITED and
THE MINISTER OF HEALTH
Respondents
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
MALONE J.A.
I. Introduction
[1]
The
appellants, G.D. Searle and Co. and Pfizer Canada, Inc. (collectively Searle),
appeal from a judgment of the Federal Court of Canada, dated January 24, 2007
and reported at
2007 FC 81. The appellants had sought an order to prohibit the Minister of
Health (Minister) from issuing a Notice of Compliance to Novopharm Limited
(Novopharm). If the Notice of Compliance was issued, that order would have
permitted Novopharm to sell 100 mg and 200 mg capsules containing a medicine
known as celecoxib in Canada before the expiry of Searle’s Canadian Patent No.
22,177,576 (the ‘576 Patent).
[2]
The
‘576 Patent is entitled “Substituted Pyrazolyl Benzenesulfonamedes for the
Treatment of Inflammation” and names John J. Talley and certain other
individuals as inventors. It discloses and claims the compound celecoxib and
its uses, including the treatment of inflammation and inflammation related
disorders such as arthritis and pain. The objective of the patent is to
provide a means to treat inflammation while reducing undesirable gastric side
effects.
II. Time
Constraints on Release of Panels Reasons for Judgment and Judgment
[3]
The
record on appeal runs to over 10,300 pages in 34 Appeal Books. The judgment of
the learned Applications Judge is 56 pages in length encompassing his reasons arising
from a four day hearing.
[4]
During
the two-day hearing of this appeal on April 22 and 23, counsel for Searle
advised this panel of the possibility that the Office of Patented Medicines and
Liaison of Health Canada (OPML) could shortly decide to remove from the Patent
Register another patent relating to celecoxib. Further, if that patent was
delisted the Minister could then issue a Notice of Compliance to Novopharm to
make and sell the medicine celecoxib in Canada thereby rendering the relief sought by the
appellants moot. On April 24, 2007, counsel for the appellants advised the
Court that this delisting could take place as early as May 1, 2007.
[5]
These
reasons are being released now to meet this deadline and should be read with
these time constraints in mind.
III. Factual
Background
The Proceedings
[6]
On
May 3, 2005, Novopharm filed an Abbreviated New Drug Submission, seeking
approval to make and sell 100 mg and 200 mg capsules containing celecoxib. They
filed a Notice of Allegation (NOA) alleging that the ‘576 Patent was invalid on
the basis of abandonment, obviousness, lack of utility and sufficiency. In
response, the present proceedings were commenced by Searle by Notice of
Application under the provisions of the Patented Medicines (Notice of
Compliance) Regulations, SOR/93-133 (Regulations) for a prohibition
order.
[7]
The
issues before the Applications Judge were as follows:
1. Was
Novopharm’s allegation that Searle had abandoned its application for the ‘576
Patent justified? and
2. Could
Novopharm’s allegations that either or both of claims 4 and 8 of the ‘576 Patent
were invalid be justified on the basis of obviousness, lack of utility and
sufficiency?
[8]
In
order to be successful, Searle would have to convince the Applications Judge
that none of Novopharm’s allegations were justified.
Background to the ‘576 Patent
[9]
Commencing
in or before 1991, various teams of scientists were employed by Searle to
investigate the potential use of compounds to treat inflammation that would
selectively inhibit what became known as COX II; the theory being that such a
compound would minimize gastrointestinal side effects experienced with other
inflammation treating compounds. Dr. Seibert, employed by Searle, headed up
the biological team of those scientists working on this COX II project. Dr.
Peter Isakson, also employed by Searle, was the overall team leader for both
the biology and chemistry teams (collectively, the Searle Researchers).
[10]
Prior
to October 1993, Dr. Seibert’s team was working on celecoxib and other
compounds including a compound known as compound SC-58125. They studied
different constituents on the structure of those compounds to understand the
structure-to-activity relationship. By June 1994, Dr. Seibert’s team had
determined that the SC-58125 compound treated inflammation while reducing
undesirable gastric side effects. That compound is one of the compounds that
comes within the scope of the U.S Patent 5,134,142 that is referenced at page 2
of the ‘576 Patent.
[11]
All
the inventors were employed by Searle as researchers and the assignment of
their rights in the ‘576 Patent to Searle are evidenced by individual
assignments executed between May and July 1996. The stated consideration is
$10.
[12]
At
an International Conference on Prostaglandins and Related Compounds in June
1994 (the June 1994 Conference), Dr. Seibert disclosed that the SC-58125
compound treated inflammation while not causing gastric toxicity. Further, in August
1994, Dr. Seibert submitted a paper respecting that compound to a peer review
scientific publication for publication (the Seibert Article). That paper
disclosed that the SC-58125 compound treated inflammation without exhibiting
gastric side effects. It was published in December 1994.
[13]
The
Commissioner has the authority to cause an application for a patent to be reviewed
by examiners employed in the Canadian Patent Office (Patent Office). In this
case, such an examiner was appointed during the prosecution stage to examine
the ‘576 Patent application. The examiner initially rejected Searle’s ‘576
application on the basis that the claimed invention was obvious on the claim
date as a result of prior art. Accordingly, on October 21, 1998, the examiner
requisitioned Searle to respond to a question it had regarding compliance with
subparagraph 28.3(a) of the Act. Searle replied to the requisition and stated that its
claimed compounds had the effect of being COX II selective and that such
selectivity was
not
derivable from nor suggested in prior art.
[14]
The ‘576 Patent was
applied for in Canada on November 14, 1994 and granted to
Searle on October 26, 1999. Unless otherwise held
to be invalid, the patent will expire on November 14, 2014. The ‘576 Patent
application claimed priority from two patent applications previously filed in
the United States on November 30, 1993 and April 6, 1994 (the Priority Applications).
IV. Decision
Below
[15]
The
Applications Judge found that Novopharm’s allegations relating to utility and
sufficiency were not justified. However, he further found that the allegation
of invalidity was justified on the basis of abandonment and obviousness. On
that basis, the application was dismissed.
[16]
On
the issue of obviousness, the Applications Judge held that the claim date, for
the purpose of assessing obviousness, was the Canadian filing date, November
14, 1994. He further found that the June 1994 Conference relating to the SC-58125
compound constituted a prior art disclosure. This disclosure, he stated,
rendered celecoxib obvious as of the Canadian filing date as an
anti-inflammatory compound with reduced side effects (see Reasons for Judgment
at para. 95). Moreover, he determined that the June 1994 Conference was not
information that fell within the grace period set out in paragraph 28.3(a) of
the Patent Act, R.S.C. 1985, c P-4 (Act), which provides that:
28.3 The
subject-matter defined by a claim in an application for a patent in Canada must be
subject-matter that would not have been obvious on the claim date to a person
skilled in the art or science to which it pertains, having regard to
(a) information disclosed more than one year before the
filing date by the applicant, or by a person who obtained knowledge,
directly or indirectly, from the applicant in such a manner that the
information became available to the public in Canada or
elsewhere [Emphasis added]
|
28.3 L’objet que définit la revendication d’une demande de
brevet ne doit pas, à la date de la revendication, être évident pour une
personne versée dans l’art ou la science dont relève l’objet, eu égard à
toute communication :
a) qui a été faite, plus d’un an avant la date
de dépôt de la demande, par le demandeur ou un tiers ayant obtenu de lui
l’information à cet égard de façon directe ou autrement, de manière telle
qu’elle est devenue accessible au public au Canada ou ailleurs
[Je souligne]
|
[17]
On
the basis that a person skilled in the art would be “sufficiently confident as
to the result,” the Applications Judge found that the test for obviousness was
met given the disclosure of information made by Dr. Seibert in June of 1994.
[18]
On
the issue of abandonment, the Applications Judge held that in responding to a
requisition from the Patent Office during the prosecution of the ‘576
Patent on October 21, 1998, Searle was obliged to advise the Patent Office of
the information presented by Dr. Seibert at the June 1994 conference – that
Searle had found the SC-58125 compound to have COX II selectivity and that it
had disclosed this fact to the public before the application for the ‘576 Patent
was filed in Canada. He found that Searle’s failure to advise the Patent
Office of this information constituted a lack of good faith (see Reasons for Judgment
at paras. 75 and 77).
[19]
In
finding that Searle’s application for the ‘576 Patent was abandoned and
ultimately, invalid, the Applications Judge relied on paragraph 73(1)(a) of the
Act. That paragraph provides that an application for a patent shall be
deemed to be abandoned if the applicant does not reply in good faith to any
requisition made by an examiner in connection with the prosecution of a patent.
[20]
Finally,
on the issues of lack of utility and sufficiency, the Applications Judge held
that Searle had successfully demonstrated that Novopharm’s allegations were not
justified.
V. Legislative Framework
[21]
For
ease of reference, the following legislative provisions are relevant to this
appeal and are set out below:
2. In this Act,
except as otherwise provided,
“applicant” includes an inventor and the legal
representatives of an applicant or inventor;
“legal representatives” includes heirs, executors,
administrators, guardians, curators, tutors, assigns and all other persons
claiming through or under applicants for patents and patentees of inventions;
28.1(1)
The date of a claim in an application for a patent in Canada
(the “pending application”) is the filing date of the application, unless,
(a) the pending
application is filed by
…
(ii) a person who is
entitled to protection under the terms of any treaty or convention relating
to patents to which Canada is a party and who has, or whose agent, legal
representative or predecessor in title has, previously regularly filed in or
for any other country that by treaty, convention or law affords similar
protection to citizens of Canada an application for a patent disclosing
the subject-matter defined by the claim [Emphasis added].
28.3(a) –
supra at para. 13.
73 (1) An
application for a patent in Canada shall be deemed
to be abandoned if the applicant does not
(a) reply in good faith to any requisition
made by an examiner in connection with an examination, within six months
after the requisition is made or within any shorter period established by the
Commissioner;
|
2. Sauf disposition contraire, les définitions
qui suivent s’appliquent à la présente loi.
« demandeur » Sont assimilés à un
demandeur un inventeur et les représentants légaux d’un demandeur ou d’un
inventeur.
« représentants légaux » Sont assimilés aux
représentants légaux les héritiers, exécuteurs testamentaires,
administrateurs, gardiens, curateurs, tuteurs, ayants droit, ainsi que toutes
autres personnes réclamant par l’intermédiaire ou à la faveur de demandeurs
et de titulaires de brevets.
28.1 (1) La date de la
revendication d’une demande de brevet est la date de dépôt de celle-ci, sauf
si :
a) la demande est déposée, selon le cas :
…
(ii) par une personne qui a antérieurement
déposé de façon régulière, dans un autre pays ou pour un autre pays, ou dont
l’agent, le représentant légal ou le prédécesseur en droit l’a fait, une
demande de brevet divulguant l’objet que définit la revendication, dans le
cas où ce pays protège les droits de cette personne par traité ou convention,
relatif aux brevets, auquel le Canada est partie, et accorde par traité,
convention ou loi une protection similaire aux citoyens du Canada
[Je souligne].
28.3(a) – supra au para.
13.
73. (1) La demande de brevet est considérée comme abandonnée si
le demandeur omet, selon le cas :
a) de répondre de bonne foi, dans le cadre
d’un examen, à toute demande de l’examinateur, dans les six mois suivant
cette demande ou dans le délai plus court déterminé par le commissaire;
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[22]
This
patent application and the ‘576 Patent are to be governed by the Act, incorporating both the post October 1,
1989 and post October 1, 1996 provisions.
VI. Analysis
1. Claim Date
[23]
In
order to resolve this appeal, it is first necessary to inquire as to whether the
Applications Judge correctly decided that the claim date for the ‘576 Patent
was November 14, 1994, the date of filing. At paragraph 48 he stated:
There is a further complexity
since the application for the ‘576 patent was filed in Canada
under the provisions of the Patent Co-Operation Treaty (PCT). That treaty
provides that a single application can be filed in an appropriate “receiving
office” of one of the countries adhering to that Treaty and obtain a filing
date pertinent to all, or a selected group of other of such countries, provided
that the applicant enters the “national phase” of such other countries within
an appropriate time period. Here the original “international” application
was filed in the United States as a receiving office on November 14, 1994, and
entered the national phase in Canada on May 28, 1996, (Applicant’s Record, Vol.
3, pg. 613). However, in accordance with the Treaty, the application is
considered to have been filed in the Canadian Patent Office with an effective
date of November 14, 1994.
[24]
The
‘576 Patent application claimed priority from two U.S. patent applications
previously filed (supra at para.14). For the purpose of obviousness, the
Applications Judge held that Searle could only rely upon the Canadian filing
date of November 14, 1994 and that no earlier date could be relied upon since
the priority applications do not describe or disclose the same invention as
claims 4 or 8 of the ‘576 Patent.
[25]
On
this record, I am satisfied that the Applications Judge did not err in making
this determination.
2. Obviousness and Abandonment
[26]
Pursuant to paragraph
28.3(a), supra at para. 16, patent applicants are afforded a one-year
grace period within which they can publicly disclose information before filing
a patent application in Canada. One of the purposes of that provision
is to enable patent applicants to announce their success by disclosing their
inventions before they file. Searle attempted to take advantage of this grace
period provision by virtue of the conduct of certain of its employees in 1994 (supra
at para. 12).
[27]
The
Applications Judge made several findings with regard to whether Searle was the
applicant as of the claim date, November 14, 1994 (see Reasons for Judgment at
paras. 49, 57(4), 57(5), 57(6), 57(10) and 58(2)). In particular, paragraphs
49 and 58(2) read as follows:
… Searle is the Applicant
because it is the assignee of Talley et al., the named inventors and not
otherwise.
…
The knowledge obtained by Dr.
Seibert’s group as to the activity of SC-58125 namely as to inflammation and
non-gastric was information they developed, not Talley et al. Thus the
disclosure in June 1994 was not disclosure of information of the named
inventors Talley, et al. The fact that Searle is the “applicant” of the
‘576 patent does not mean that it can claim common ownership of Dr. Seibert’s
information since section 2 of the Patent Act limits an “applicant” to a
legal representative of the named inventors Talley et al.
[28]
It
is apparent that the Applications Judge found Searle to be the applicant solely
as a result of the assignments made in 1996. Based on this finding, he held
that Searle was not the applicant on the claim date (November 14, 1994) with
the result that it could not benefit from the one year grace period provided in
subparagraph 28.3(a) of the Act.
[29]
The
ramifications of this finding are critical as the remaining issues that the Applications
Judge proceeds to address hinge on his finding that Searle was not the
applicant as of November 14, 1994. Both his conclusion of obviousness and
abandonment are dependant on this finding as follows.
[30]
First,
Dr. Seibert’s disclosure at the June 1994 Conference and in the Seibert Article
made the invention obvious and as Searle was not the applicant, these
disclosures were not covered by the grace period.
[31]
Second,
by failing to reveal that this information had been disclosed in responding to
the examiner’s requisition relating to obviousness in October 1996, Searle
exhibited bad faith and misled the examiner contrary to paragraph 73(1)(a) of
the Act. As a result, he concluded that the ‘576 Patent was deemed
abandoned and thus, invalid.
[32]
One has
to ask how this issue as to whether Searle was the ‘applicant’ arose since it was
not raised in the NOA (see Appeal Book, Volume 9 at page 2451) nor was it
argued before the Applications Judge. Counsel for both sides admitted being
surprised by the finding of the Applications Judge on this crucial point.
[33]
The
NOA defines the issues to be determined in proceedings under the Regulations.
Furthermore, deciding a case on a basis not raised by parties gives
rise to an issue of procedural fairness (see AB Hassle v. Canada (Minister of National
Health and Welfare)
(2000), 7 C.P.R. (4th) 272 (F.C.A.) at paras. 16-21; Regulations, ss.
5(1), 5(3)(a); Pfizer Canada Inc. v. Canada
(Minister of Health) (2006), 46 C.P.R. (4th) 281
(F.C.A.) at para. 32).
Counsel for Searle made the valid point that if it had been raised before the
Applications Judge, evidence could have been called and submissions made
accordingly.
[34]
In
my analysis, reviewed on a correctness standard, in proceeding as he did, the
Applications Judge did not afford procedural fairness to Searle, thereby
committing an error of law (see McConnell v. Canada (Human Rights
Commission), 2005 FCA 389 at para.7). Furthermore, the determination that Searle is not the
applicant under section 2 of the Act is not supported by the record. It is true that the assignment
agreements were only executed in May-July of 1996. However, this does
not establish that Searle was not the owner of the invention as of the time of discovery.
Obviously, a person who is the owner of the rights of the invention can be an
applicant. In my view, the Applications Judge erred when he limited the definition
of applicant in this case “to a legal representative of the named inventors Talley
et al.” (see the passage of the Reasons for Judgment quoted at para. 27 above).
[35]
At
the hearing, counsel for Searle pointed to numerous key documents, all of which
referred to Searle as the applicant from November 14, 1994 onwards. Among the
key documents are the following:
§
The
application for Canadian Patent ‘576 lists Searle as the applicant for all
designated world states who are signatories to the Patent Cooperation Treaty,
except the United
States.
The inventors, Talley et al., are also named as applicants, but conversely, only
for the United
States.
This application was filed on November 14, 1994.
§
A
Notification of Election was completed by the International Bureau and sent to
the Patent Office on July 10, 1995, and denotes Searle as the applicant.
§
The
International Preliminary Examination Report completed on January 30, 1996
lists Searle as the applicant.
§
A
notification concerning transmitted documents was completed by the
International Bureau and sent to the Patent Office on January 31, 1996, and
lists the applicant as Searle.
[36]
In
addition to this factual evidence, counsel for Searle relies on a decision of
Muldoon J. in Comstock Canada v. Elected Ltd. (1991), 45 F.T.R. 241
(F.C.). At issue in that case was whether a design that was created by an
employee during the course of his or her own separate business is the product
of his or her employer, where the employee was not hired to invent that
particular design. At paragraph 72, Muldoon J. held:
In relation to employees’ inventions the general
principle was established in Bloxam v. Elsee, (1825) 1 Car. & P. 558
at p.564, (1827) 6 B & C 169, where it was held by Lord Tenterdon that if a
servant, while in the employ of his master, makes an invention, that invention
belongs to the servant, not to the master; though if the master employs a
skilful person for the express purpose of inventing, the inventions made by him
will belong to the master so as to enable him to obtain the patent for them
[Emphasis added].
[37]
From
the present record, it is clear that Dr. Seibert and her team were employed by
Searle to determine the biological activity of a number of compounds, including
the SC-58125 compound and celecoxib. She was employed to perform research particularly
to investigate the potential use of compounds to treat inflammation that would
minimize gastrointestinal side effects. As a result, celecoxib and other
compounds were turned over from the named inventors to Dr. Seibert and her team
for biological testing.
[38]
During
her cross-examination, Dr. Seibert indicated that the Searle Researchers worked
in conjunction with the company and that it is all very much a corporate
process:
Q. Okay. But I guess I was trying to ask who or
how did you decide or who decided that, hey, this -- the results that you’ve
now obtained in this particular experiment or set of experiments leads to
something that may be worth looking at whether it was patentable or not. Was
that a team leader, Dr. Isakson, or --
A. Well, you know, I think that he probably
contributed to those discussions, but that was really in partnership with the
scientists, let’s say, chemists working to identify novel compounds --
Q. Uh-huh
A. -- with members of our legal department, our
patent department, --
Q. Right. Okay.
A. – who, in fact, would often even attend team
meetings and be well-versed in data.
…
Q. Okay. And deciding who the inventors would be
of a particular invention, because you may have more than one, --
A. Uh-huh.
Q. -- that was done with the patent attorneys as
well?
A. Yeah. … that’s my understanding that the
potential inventors and the patent attorneys … would take those decisions.
Q. Now, within Searle, back in the early ‘90s,
was there some incentive or some other way of encouraging people, I guess, not
only to do their work and do their research, but to be inventive, to try to be
-- come up with new inventions? Was there that kind of incentive within Searle?
A. Well, I don’t know what you mean by
incentive. I mean --
Q. Encouraged.
A. We were -- yeah, we were surely encouraged, you know, to think about how we
can apply our science, you know, to the identification in discovering
development of new medicines or new uses. I mean that’s the work we do
[Emphasis added] (See Appeal Book, Volume 8 at pages 2039 and 2040).
[39]
All
documentary evidence on this record shows Searle as the applicant. In addition,
it is evident from Dr. Seibert’s oral evidence that she was hired by Searle as
part of the biology team to perform research to investigate the potential use of
compounds to treat inflammation that would minimize gastrointestinal toxicity.
Accordingly, it is clear that the Searle Researchers were hired to invent, and
that any product they invented, belonged to Searle from the onset.
[40]
In
my analysis, the assignments by the employees in 1996 simply confirmed Searle’s
pre-existing right to the invention and were provided in accordance with the
Patent Office’s procedure to have evidence on record as to who owns the patent
prior to its grant. The fact that the assignments were made for a
nominal consideration supports that view.
[41]
In
sum, it was not open to the Applications Judge to hold that Searle was not the
applicant as of the claim date, both as a matter of procedural fairness and
based on the record before him.
[42]
It
follows, therefore, that as an applicant, Searle falls within the grace period
provided for in subparagraph 28.3(a) of the Act and that any disclosure
made by Dr. Seibert in June of 1994 or in her article, is exempt from any
consideration as to obviousness.
[43]
As a
consequence of my determination as to Searle’s status as an applicant, any
disclosure of information made within one year of the claim date is not prior
art capable of rendering the ‘576 Patent obvious. It follows that Dr. Seibert’s
revelations at the June 1994 Conference and in her Article did not have to be
disclosed to the examiner. As such there was no deemed abandonment.
3. Lack of Utility
[44]
As
an alternative argument, Novopharm argues that if this Court accepts that the
Applications Judge erred in determining that Novopharm’s allegations of
invalidity based on obviousness and abandonment were justified, the Court
should find that the Applications Judge also erred in finding that the
allegation of invalidity based on lack of utility was not justified.
[45]
Once
this Court accepts that the Applications Judge made no error in determining the
Canadian filing date to be the relevant date for assessing utility, Novopharm’s
lack of utility argument falls away. Since I have already accepted the
Applications Judge’s finding that the Canadian filing date is the relevant date
in all aspects, there is no need to address this lack of utility issue. The
Applications Judge made a finding of utility as of November 14, 1994, which is
a finding of fact that Novopharm does not contest nor allege in its NOA.
VII. Conclusion
[46]
The
appeal should be allowed, the judgment of the Applications Judge should be set
aside and giving the order that the Applications Judge should have given, an
order should be issued prohibiting the Minister from issuing a notice of
compliance to Novopharm respecting the making, use and/or selling of celecoxib
capsules until after the expiry of the ‘576 Patent.
[47]
The
appellants should have their costs on appeal. They should also have their
costs in the Federal Court but only insofar as they relate to ‘576 Patent.
“B. Malone”
“I agree,
Marc
Noël J.A.”
“I agree,
J.
Edgar Sexton J.A.”