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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> The Secretary of State for Health & Anor v Servier Laboratories Ltd & Ors [2017] EWHC 2006 (Ch) (02 August 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/2006.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2006 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Victoria House, London WC1A |
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B e f o r e :
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR HEALTH THE NHS BUSINESS SERVICES AUTHORITY |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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SERVIER LABORATORIES LIMITED SERVIER RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT LIMITED LES LABORATOIRES SERVIER SAS (4) SERVIER SAS |
Defendants |
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KELYN BACON QC & DANIEL PICCININ (instructed by Bristows LLP) appeared on behalf of the Defendants
Hearing dates: 18 & 19 July 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Roth:
Introduction
a) what has become effectively a follow-on claim as regards Art 101/sect 2, and also as regards Art 102/sect 18 insofar as concerns the infringement of Art 102 found by the EC Decision;b) a stand-alone claim as regards the additional grounds of abuse of dominance based on conduct before the EPO and the English court, but if the General Court (or on further appeal, the CJEU) should annul the EC Decision as regards the finding that Servier was dominant, that claim will very probably fall away since the national court cannot take a decision inconsistent with the decision of the European Courts; and
c) a free-standing claim for the tort of unlawful means.
The unlawful means claim
"contained express and implied representations that the alpha form was novel and implied representations that the alpha form was not obvious."
a) The 341 Patent led to the production of the alpha form as its inevitable result;b) The perindopril marketed by Servier in the UK both before and after 6 July 2000 was in the alpha form;
c) "Consequently, the alpha form was part of the state of the art … and/or would have been obvious to a person skilled in the art."
"In the premises, LLS and/or SLL obtained, defended and enforced statutory patent rights in the United Kingdom in relation to [the 947 Patent] by deceit: that is, by means of misrepresentations made dishonestly or recklessly to the EPO and/or to the English courts."
"9. … It is the sort of patent which can give the patent system a bad name. I am not sure that much could have been done about this at the examination stage. There are other sorts of case where the Patent Office examination is seen to be too lenient. But this is not one of them. For simply comparing the cited prior art ('341) with the patent would not reveal lack of novelty and probably not obviousness. You need the technical input of experts both in the kind of chemistry involved and in powder X-ray diffraction and some experimental evidence in order to see just how specious the application for the patent was. The only solution to this type of undesirable patent is a rapid and efficient method for obtaining its revocation. Then it can be got rid of before it does too much harm to the public interest.
10. It is right to observe that nothing Servier did was unlawful. It is the court's job to see that try-ons such as the present patent get nowhere. The only sanction (apart, perhaps, from competition law which thus far has had nothing or virtually nothing to say about unmeritorious patents) may, under the English litigation system, lie in an award of costs on the higher (indemnity) scale if the patent is defended unreasonably."
"X. INTERFERENCE WITH THE CLAIMANTS' AND FORMER CLAIMANTS' ECONOMIC INTERESTS BY UNLAWFUL MEANS
73. The application for, defence of and enforcement of patent EP 1 296 947 and the representations complained of as having been made and/or relied on by LLS and/or SLL in so doing were made and/or relied on with the intention (on the part of the servants and agents of LLS and/or SLL responsible for the drafting and filing of the application, and the defence and enforcement of patent EP 1 296 947) of:
73.1. securing the grant of a European patent enforceable inter alia in the United Kingdom;
73.2. deterring competition in relation to the supply of Perindopril to the United Kingdom market;
73.3. achieving prices and volumes in respect of the supply of Perindopril by the Servier Undertaking in the United Kingdom higher than those consistent with a more competitive market.
74. It is the Claimants' case, pending the completion of disclosure, that the existence of the state(s) of mind alleged in paragraph 73 above are legitimately to be inferred as the natural incidents of the making of the relevant application for, defence of and enforcement of patent EP 1 296 947.
75. It was the case, and it was reasonably foreseeable from the point of view of LLS and/or SLL, that the elevated prices referred to in paragraph 73.3 above would be and were necessarily achieved at the expense of the Claimants, PCTs and SHAs, by virtue of their bearing the financial burden of reimbursement payments to pharmacists and doctors for Perindopril dispensed and/or administered pursuant to the NHS. Accordingly, the expense caused to the Claimants, PCTs and SHAs constituted a means to an end, that end being elevated prices achieved by the Servier Undertaking.
76. Further, the application for, defence of and enforcement of patent EP 1 296 947 involved the adoption by LLS of unlawful means, in the form of the deceit practiced on the EPO and/or the English courts, referred to in paragraph 71 above.
77. The Claimants' case is that the application for, defence of and enforcement of patent EP 1 296 947 had among their effects delay to generic entry into the Perindopril market, to the prejudice of the Claimants', PCTs' and SHAs' economic interests, as set out in paragraph 96 below.
78. In the premises, LLS committed the tort of interference with the economic interests of the Claimants, PCTs and SHAs by unlawful means. The law applicable to the said tort is English law."
The present application
"Unlawful means therefore consists of acts intended to cause loss to the claimant by interfering with the freedom of a third party in a way which is unlawful as against that third party and which is intended to cause loss to the claimant. It does not in my opinion include acts which may be unlawful against a third party but which do not affect his freedom to deal with the claimant."
Discussion
"45. The most important question concerning this tort is what should count as unlawful means. It will be recalled that in Allen v Flood [1898] AC 1, 96, Lord Watson described the tort thus—
"when the act induced is within the right of the immediate actor, and is therefore not wrongful in so far as he is concerned, it may yet be to the detriment of a third party; and in that case…the inducer may be held liable if he can be shewn to have procured his object by the use of illegal means directed against that third party."
46. The rationale of the tort was described by Lord Lindley in Quinn v Leathem [1901] AC 495, 534-535:
"a person's liberty or right to deal with others is nugatory, unless they are at liberty to deal with him if they choose to do so. Any interference with their liberty to deal with him affects him. If such interference is justifiable in point of law, he has no redress. Again, if such interference is wrongful, the only person who can sue in respect of it is, as a rule, the person immediately affected by it; another who suffers by it has usually no redress; the damage to him is too remote, and it would be obviously practically impossible and highly inconvenient to give legal redress to all who suffer from such wrongs. But if the interference is wrongful and is intended to damage a third person, and he is damaged in fact - in other words, if he is wrongfully and intentionally struck at through others, and is thereby damnified - the whole aspect of the case is changed: the wrong done to others reaches him, his rights are infringed although indirectly, and damage to him is not remote or unforeseen, but is the direct consequence of what has been done."
47. The essence of the tort therefore appears to be (a) a wrongful interference with the actions of a third party in which the claimant has an economic interest and (b) an intention thereby to cause loss to the claimant.
…
49. In my opinion, and subject to one qualification, acts against a third party count as unlawful means only if they are actionable by that third party. The qualification is that they will also be unlawful means if the only reason why they are not actionable is because the third party has suffered no loss. In the case of intimidation, for example, the threat will usually give rise to no cause of action by the third party because he will have suffered no loss. If he submits to the threat, then, as the defendant intended, the claimant will have suffered loss instead. It is nevertheless unlawful means. But the threat must be to do something which would have been actionable if the third party had suffered loss. Likewise, in National Phonograph Co Ltd v Edison-Bell Consolidated Phonograph Co Ltd [1908] 1 Ch 335 the defendant intentionally caused loss to the plaintiff by fraudulently inducing a third party to act to the plaintiff's detriment. The fraud was unlawful means because it would have been actionable if the third party had suffered any loss, even though in the event it was the plaintiff who suffered. In this respect, procuring the actions of a third party by fraud (dolus) is obviously very similar to procuring them by intimidation (metus).
50. Lonrho plc v Fayed [1990] 2 QB 479 was arguably within the same principle as the National Phonograph Co case. The plaintiff said that the defendant had intentionally caused it loss by making fraudulent statements to the directors of the company which owned Harrods, and to the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry, which induced the directors to accept his bid for Harrods and the Secretary of State not to refer the bid to the Monopolies Commission. The defendant was thereby able to gain control of Harrods to the detriment of the plaintiff, who wanted to buy it instead. In the Court of Appeal, Dillon LJ (at p 489) referred to the National Phonograph case as authority for rejecting an argument that the means used to cause loss to the plaintiff could not be unlawful because neither the directors nor the Secretary of State had suffered any loss. That seems to me correct. The allegations were of fraudulent representations made to third parties, which would have been actionable by them if they had suffered loss, but which were intended to induce the third parties to act in a way which caused loss to the plaintiff. The Court of Appeal therefore refused to strike out the claim as unarguable and their decision was upheld by the House of Lords: see [1992] 1 AC 448.
51. Unlawful means therefore consists of acts intended to cause loss to the claimant by interfering with the freedom of a third party in a way which is unlawful as against that third party and which is intended to cause loss to the claimant. It does not in my opinion include acts which may be unlawful against a third party but which do not affect his freedom to deal with the claimant."
"56. Your Lordships were not referred to any authority in which the tort of causing loss by unlawful means has been extended beyond the description given by Lord Watson in Allen v Flood [1898] AC 1, 96 and Lord Lindley in Quinn v Leathem [1901] AC 495, 535. Nor do I think it should be. The common law has traditionally been reluctant to become involved in devising rules of fair competition, as is vividly illustrated by Mogul Steamship Co Ltd v McGregor, Gow & Co [1892] AC 25. It has largely left such rules to be laid down by Parliament. In my opinion the courts should be similarly cautious in extending a tort which was designed only to enforce basic standards of civilised behaviour in economic competition, between traders or between employers and labour. Otherwise there is a danger that it will provide a cause of action based on acts which are wrongful only in the irrelevant sense that a third party has a right to complain if he chooses to do so. As Jacob J said in Isaac Oren v Red Box Toy Factory Ltd [1999] FSR 785, 800:
"the right to sue under intellectual property rights created and governed by statute [is] inherently governed by the statute concerned. Parliament in various intellectual property statutes has, in some cases, created a right to sue and in others not. In the case of the 1988 Act it expressly re-conferred the right on a copyright exclusive licensee, conferred the right on an exclusive licensee under the new form of property called an unregistered design right (see section 234) but did not create an independent right to sue on a registered design exclusive licensee. It is not for the courts to invent that which Parliament did not create." "
"One intends to cause loss even though it is the means by which one achieved the end of enriching oneself. On the other hand, one is not liable for loss which is neither a desired end nor a means of attaining it but merely a foreseeable consequence of one's actions."
"the function of the tort is to provide a remedy where the claimant is harmed through the instrumentality of a third party."
That provides the basis for dismissing the hypothetical claim by its commercial rival against a pizza delivery company which gained an unfair advantage by offering a speedier service because its motorcyclists frequently exceeded the speed limit and ignored traffic lights:
"The couriers' criminal conduct is not an offence committed against the rival company in any realistic sense of that expression."
"269. Faced with these alternative views I am naturally hesitant. I would respectfully suggest that neither is likely to be the last word on this difficult and important area of the law. The test of instrumentality does not fit happily with cases like RCA Corpn v Pollard, since there is no doubt that the bootlegger's acts were the direct cause of the plaintiff's economic loss. The control mechanism must be found, it seems to me, in the nature of the disruption caused, as between the third party and the claimant, by the defendant's wrong (and not in the closeness of the causal connection between the defendant's wrong and the claimant's loss).
270. I do not, for my part, see Lord Hoffmann's proposed test as a narrow or rigid one. On the contrary, that test (set out in para 51 of his opinion) of whether the defendant's wrong interferes with the freedom of a third party to deal with the claimant, if taken out of context, might be regarded as so flexible as to be of limited utility. But in practice it does not lack context. The authorities demonstrate its application in relation to a wide variety of economic relationships. I would favour a fairly cautious incremental approach to its extension to any category not found in the existing authorities."
"Nevertheless, the common thread is striking through a third party who might otherwise be doing business with your target, whether by buying his goods, hiring his barges or working for him or whatever. The refinement proposed by my noble and learned friend, Lord Hoffmann, is entirely consistent with the underlying principles to be deduced from the decided cases. It is also consistent with legal policy to limit rather than to encourage the expansion of liability in this area. In the modern age, Parliament has shown itself more than ready to legislate to draw the line between fair and unfair trade competition or between fair and unfair trade union activity. This can involve major economic and social questions which are often politically sensitive and require more complicated answers than the courts can devise. Such things are better left to Parliament. The common law need do no more than draw the lines that it might be expected to draw: procuring an actionable wrong between the third party and the target or committing an actionable (in the sense explained by Lord Hoffmann at para 49 above) wrong against the third party inhibiting his freedom to trade with the target."
"… where the defendant, generally to advance his own purposes, intentionally injures the claimant's economic interests by unlawfully interfering with a third party's freedom to deal with him… the defendant's conduct must be such as would be actionable at the suit of the third party had he suffered loss. To define and circumscribe the tort in this way seems to be not only faithful to its origins as described by Lord Lindley in Quinn v Leatham [1901] AC 495, 535, and consistent with the great bulk of authority which considered the tort over the ensuing century, but also to confine it to manageable and readily comprehensible limits."
"Neither Mr Thorpe [the unauthorised photographer] nor "Hello!" did anything to interfere with the liberty of the Douglases to deal with "OK!" or perform their obligations under the contract. All they did was to make "OK!'s" contractual rights less profitable than they would otherwise have been." (at [129]).
"First, Lord Hoffmann emphasised that in order to constitute relevant unlawful means, the unlawful acts must affect the freedom of the third party to deal with the claimant. This reflects the rationale as explained by Lord Lindley in Quinn v Leatham [1901] AC 495. If the freedom remains, the tort is not committed even though the defendant acts unlawfully and thereby makes a profit at the expense of the claimant who thereby suffers damage."
"I apprehend that the ambit and ingredients of [the] torts of conspiracy and unlawful interference may hereafter require further analysis and reconsideration by the courts."
"This whole area of economic tort has been plagued by uncertainty for far too long. Your Lordships now have the opportunity to give it a coherent shape. This surely is an opportunity to be taken."
"at least on the part of the majority, a wish to confine the economic torts as narrowly as possible, on the grounds that they have little rational basis in social or economic policy and that such matters are best left to the legislature."
He proceeded to highlight several aspects of the decision which demonstrated this approach, including the following:
"the tort of causing loss by unlawful means was severely restricted to loss caused by acts which were tortious against third parties and caused loss to the plaintiff by restricting the ability of the third party to deal with him, so pruning the tort back to the original cases of deliberate violence or fraud against customers or suppliers for the purpose of taking away a rival's business."
"… at root we are concerned with a case where the allegations are made out, a drug company has secured by fraud extended patent protection causing loss, both to the ultimate customer and the public purse and also, it is true, to generic suppliers who are barred because of the extended patent."
Conclusion
Note 1 Metall und Rohstoff AG v Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Inc [1990] 1 QB 391. [Back] Note 2 Although Lord Walker indicated that Lord Hoffmann’s test, as set out at [51], was if anything too broad and flexible, he certainly did not suggest that it should extend further, beyond economic relationships: see at [270]. [Back]