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England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions >> Hospira UK Ltd v Eli Lilly & Company [2008] EWHC 1862 (Pat) (21 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2008/1862.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 1862 (Pat) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
HOSPIRA UK LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ELI LILLY & COMPANY |
Defendant |
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12?14 New Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1AG.
Telephone No: 020 7936 6000. Fax No: 020 7427 0093
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MR. STEVEN GEE QC and MR. THOMAS HINCHLIFFE (instructed by Messrs. Lovells) appeared for the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE FLOYD :
"I think before turning to the subject matter of the application I should very briefly state my understanding of the effect of the declaration. The declaration merely tells the defendant that if the claimants can demonstrate that the manufacture is according to the process description which forms the subject matter of the declaration, then there is no infringement of the patent. It neither involves a warrant by the claimants that the product sold within the United Kingdom will be manufactured according to that process description, nor does it provide the claimants with an immunity based upon the claimants' own assertion of the manner in which the product is made. It is merely a manner of clearing out of the way issues of construction and substantive law relating to infringement so that the only issue in the future which should arise between the parties is the process used for the manufacture of the defendant's product.
"There is, in my view, no question of policing or of making efficacious such a declaration. The question, infringement or not, still has to be resolved according to the process used in relation to any particular batch of product supplied by the claimants to the market in the United Kingdom. Thus, if the patentee suspects infringement, an action for infringement can always be commenced. If the claimant in the action for the declaration of non-infringement succeeds in showing that the process used in manufacture is no different from that forming the subject matter of the declaration, then the action stops at that point."
"3A. The Claimant has applied to the authorities for marketing authorisation for the product it wished to market in the United Kingdom containing gemcitabine hydrochloride as the active pharmaceutical ingredient. This application includes a detailed description of the manufacturing process ('the Confidential DMF Process') which will be used for making the said products it wishes to market. The Confidential DMF Process contains full particulars of all stages of the said process and the Claimant avers that the marketing of the said products after 5 March 2009 would not constitute an infringement of any claims of any UK patents subsisting at that date and held by or licensed to the Defendant.
"3B. In support of the plea that the gemcitabine hydrochloride is to be manufactured in accordance with the process described in the Confidential Product Description and the Confidential DMF Process, the third party manufacturer has recently permitted a representative of the Claimant's solicitors and an independent expert to inspect the said process. The Claimant is preparing evidence reporting the same which will be provided to the Defendant's representatives as soon as it is ready.
"3C. It is extremely important commercially for the Claimant to be able to launch its gemcitabine product in March 2008 without fear of the Defendant seeking interim or permanent relief, and the Claimant seeks to 'clear the way' for launch completely in these proceedings. Without prejudice to the contention that the Defendant already has sufficient material to be able to conclude that the gemcitabine hydrochloride is to be manufactured in accordance with the process described in the Confidential Product Description and the Confidential DMF Process, the Claimant is willing to give the Defendant reasonable time to consider the evidence referred to in paragraph 3B above, and, if legitimate reasons can be provided for requiring it, to seek an inspection of the process used. Once the Defendant has had this opportunity, in order to provide the Claimant with the certainty it requires, the Defendant should be required to make its case or be prevented from bringing any proceedings at a late stage. In the premises in the Claimant is entitled to an anti-suit injunction in the form sought in the prayer for relief."
"2. An injunction to prevent the Defendant from bringing proceedings for infringement of the Patent against the Claimant, save that such injunction shall not prevent proceedings being issued and served which are based on material facts not known to the Defendant as at the date of this injunction."
"'The first is that the court has an inherent jurisdiction to step in and prevent its process being abused for the purpose of injustice, or in order to maintain its character as a Court of Justice. The second is that the court should be very slow to exercise this summary power (see also Metropolitan Bank Ltd v Pooley (1885) 10 App Cas 210, per Lord Blackburn at p 221: "it should not be lightly done"). The third is that the category of case in which the court should be willing to exercise this power is almost by definition never closed.'"
MR. GEE: Obviously those observations will be taken note of on our side. I hope I didn't say anything which would lead you to think that Lilly were not going to proceed in accordance with those observations.
My Lord, in those circumstances, I ask you to dismiss the application for leave to amend with costs. We have done a costs schedule. I can give copies to my learned friend. It was served this morning, but I think it is none the worse for that because it is up-to-date. The problem with serving it earlier is that you have to put further things in. You can see that the costs come to £76,000.
MR. JUSTICE FLOYD: Am I looking at three separate documents or three copies of the same thing?
MR. GEE: Three copies of the same, I think.
MR. JUSTICE FLOYD: £76,000.
MR. GEE: I don't know how you would approach this, but one way of doing it would be to send it for detailed assessment but to make an order for interim payment. Another would be to deal with it all now. I don't know what you would be minded to do.
MR. JUSTICE FLOYD: What are you inviting me to do? MR. GEE: Either.
MR. JUSTICE FLOYD: Good. Very well.
MR. GEE: The Commercial Court, I venture to suggest, has a practice where it tries to assess costs if they come below £100,000. That is by no means universal and it is all a matter for the individual judge. You can see what the costs are. The charging rates your Lordship will be familiar with. You can see attendances on Eli Lilly, 3.9 hours for the partner, 2.6 hours for the assistant, and so on, work done on documents, attendances at hearing. The attendance at the hearing is slightly underestimated because of course we have gone over into this afternoon. I make no point on that. There is counsel's fees, which I hope are reasonable.
MR. JUSTICE FLOYD: There it is. Mr. Watson?
MR. WATSON: My Lord, in our submission there should be no order as to costs. We are very happy with what my Lord has said and done. I think I was quite frank in addressing my Lord, that that might be something that my Lord would do. We have achieved what we needed to do. We were not able to get that through correspondence. Yes, the actual application has failed. The commercial basis for making the application has succeeded. In the circumstances, to send us away having to pay whatever my Lord deems to be appropriate when we have actually achieved what we wanted, which was to get across to Lilly that they in fact have to move now or highly likely will not be able to seek any interim relief later, the warning that on the evidence that my Lord has seen, that they have "plain beyond per adventure no case for infringement", that is of enormous commercial benefit. Whether my Lord factors that in, we are going away very happy and there can be no joy on the other side. I would submit it was a necessary application and there should be no order as to costs.
As to the quantum, I cannot suggest it is outrageous. My learned friend is getting more than me.
MR. JUSTICE FLOYD: You don't have a schedule of your own?
MR. WATSON: I don't think we do. We have not shown the other side. All I am just moaning about is Mr. Gee is getting more than me; but there again he did look at the law.
The more important point is that this has been an important commercial outing. We have achieved what we needed to achieve. My friend's position has been exposed for what it is. We suggest no order as to costs.
MR. JUSTICE FLOYD: Mr. Gee?
MR. GEE: My Lord, if you turn to the White Book and go to page 1119 at 44.3, the rules say that the court has a discretion as to whether costs are payable by one party to another. If the court decides to make an order about costs, a general rule is that the unsuccessful party will be ordered to pay the costs but the court may make a different order.
Mr. Watson is asking for a different order.
At page 1120, at the foot, although the normal rule is that an unsuccessful party should be ordered to pay the successful party's costs, the court has a discretion to make a different order where it would be unjust to follow the normal rule. "Where a successful party has fought a case on a number of distinct bases on which he has lost, including an improper allegation of fraud", etc.
If we had consented to this amendment, the position is that we would have had a trial, and so on, and the whole thing would have had to be dealt with. The amendment has not been allowed in principle. If there is going to be some order on the basis that it is not just that we should have our costs, then it has to be on a rational proper basis, not on a basis of, "We have turned up for a chat and we have got what we wanted from the chat." That is not to be encouraged it. It would mean that you would have this chat in other patent actions where there was going to be a launch on the market, and so on, and that is highly undesirable.
Your Lordship's observations, if I might respectfully say so, I said nothing that was inconsistent with them this morning. What I had to say I said on instructions, and one has to bear in mind there are considerations for those instructions which the clients have to decide upon.
There are problems about confidentiality from foreign proceedings, and one should be aware of that. In my respectful submission, the position is that we have succeeded. We have had to come up here to resist the amendment. We have been successful. There is no reason why it would be unjust to give us our costs, which would be the normal order.
MR. JUSTICE FLOYD: I think the right order is that Hospira should pay the costs of this application. Whilst it is fair to say that some of the things that I have said in my judgment may be of some comfort to Hospira, the fact is that they have brought an application on which they have been unsuccessful. The court should not encourage such applications. Furthermore, to depart from the general rule that the unsuccessful party should pay the costs requires some rather more substantial basis than the fact that the judgment on the application has some crumbs of comfort for the unsuccessful party.
The sums of money which are the subject of this application are quite high for a half day contested application. Mr. Watson has not suggested that they are wholly extravagant, and I think therefore that I should, if I can, assess them.
Some of the times spent doing work on documents, for example, 28.2 hours and 20.7 hours of two very senior solicitors seem to me to be outside what one would expect, given the rather limited evidential basis for this application. I therefore propose to assess these costs in the sum of £50,000.
MR. WATSON: My Lord, I think they owe us 100, so that makes life quite easy; they just owe us 50.
MR. JUSTICE FLOYD: I am glad everybody is using round figures.
MR. WATSON: Could we have CPR 31.22? If my Lord is interested, we can do it. I don't think there is any dispute between the juniors that they are documents that are confidential. I don't want to sweep it over my Lord on that basis.
MR. JUSTICE FLOYD: All the documents that were marked confidential that were referred to should remain so, notwithstanding anything that has happened today.
MR. WATSON: My Lord, it means that the action is very nearly at an end. There is this residual DMF, so can we try and negotiate that? If necessary, we will have to come back and then we can have a final order on the action.
MR. JUSTICE FLOYD: Liberty to apply for a final order. Is there anything else?
MR. WATSON: No, my Lord.
MR. JUSTICE FLOYD: Very well. Thank you both very much.