Lexpert US Guides

Litigation 2017

The Lexpert Guides to the Leading US/Canada Cross-Border Corporate and Litigation Lawyers in Canada profiles leading business lawyers and features articles for attorneys and in-house counsel in the US about business law issues in Canada.

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16 | LEXPERT • December 2017 | www.lexpert.ca/usguide-litigation/ be obvious if you have no idea what the result would be?" So while Bristol-Myers managed to stave off Teva's entry to market with its generic drug, its success was limited. "It's true that the court cut the baby in half by finding that the patent on the compound was valid but that the patent on the salt was not," says Donald Cameron, who heads Bereskin & Parr LLP's litigation group in Toronto. "But Teva still got to market about 20 months earlier than it could have had the salt patent not been ruled invalid. It's just another example of generics coming at innovators and trying to get in on the market for a remunerative drug as early as possible." — J.M. 8. R. v. Aitkens e proposed Financial CHOICE Act in the US would do many things — from defanging the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act to sending fewer securities cases to US Securities and Exchange Commission administrative tribu- nals and instead sending them into federal court, which oen means a jury trial. In Canada, jury trials are all but unheard of for securities fraud, a decision recently tested and reinforced by the country's highest court. In R. v. Aitkens, 2017 SCC 14, the Alberta Securities Commis- sion charged Ronald Aitkens with trading in securities without registration; distributing securities without a prospectus; making false or misleading statements in an offering memorandum; and perpetrating a fraud on investors. Under Alberta's Securities Act (and the Canadian provinces and territories have largely coordi- nated statutes), the maximum penalty for securities violations is five years less a day, plus fines of up to C$5 million. What difference does that day make? A world of difference, if you're the defendant. Canada's Charter of Rights and Freedoms stipulates that an accused only has the right to a jury trial in cases where the penalty is five years or more. Aitkens brought a Charter challenge, arguing that he faced a more severe punishment than five years of imprisonment because of the potential for a fine as well; therefore he was entitled to a jury trial. His lawyers argued that Alberta's Provincial Court lacks the jurisdiction to conduct a jury trial, and the question of whether the Court of Queen's Bench has jurisdiction to conduct a jury trial over a provincial offense is a question of law to be determined only by the Court of Queen's Bench, so they applied for an order that his case be transferred to the superior court. e Provincial Court of Alberta denied the application. Jury trials for securities cases in Canada are "almost non-existent," says Jeffrey Leon, a partner and co-head of litigation in the Toronto office of Bennett Jones LLP. Aitkens appealed, and his appeal was lumped in with R. v. Peers, 2015 ABCA 407, another securities case using the same legal argument. e difference is, Peers had another Alberta Provincial Court judge who had permitted the transfer to the Court of Queen's Bench, which promptly punted the case back. nonetheless agreed with Teva that the Salt Patent claims were obvious. e inventive concept in the patent, she concluded, was the anhydrous crystalline solid form of the drug, whose stabil- ity improved its bioavailability compared to the free-base version. But Justice Mactavish found that the improved bioavailability was obvious and that the other characteristics of the salt were inherent to it and not an invention. Bristol-Myers appealed. e company argued that, since Mactavish had decided that each of the elements of the inven- tive concept could not be predicted, she was bound to decide the "obvious to try" test in its favor. e Federal Court of Appeal agreed that the Salt Patent was obvious. But the court also found that Justice Mactavish erred in focusing on the salt's properties in articulating the inventive concept. Instead, the inventive concept was the solution taught by the patent, which was the creation of a product that was pharmaceutically acceptable because of its enhanced bioavailability. Still, the Salt Patent was obvious because its inventive concept was indistinguishable from the prior art. If there were any differ- ences, "the common general knowledge of the person skilled in the art" could discern them. Although it was unnecessary in this case to apply the "obvious to try" test, the inventive concept articulated by the appellate court would also have been obvious to try, as evidenced by the nature and extent of the meager effort required to formulate the salt. Steven Mason, a partner in McCarthy Tétrault LLP's Toronto office, who was part of the firm's team representing Bristol-Myers, says that the result was "disturbing" to his client. "is was an invention that was unknown and unpredictable, involving a particular salt with important pharmacological properties that could not have been foreseen, and that resulted in a drug that was very useful and very important for the treatment of a deadly condition," he says. "But the court said that the fact that the outcome couldn't be predicted and that the result was a surprise was not enough to establish patentability. But how can something Donald Cameron Bereskin & Parr LLP "It's true that the court cut the baby in half by finding [in Bristol- Myers Squibb v. Teva] that the patent on the compound was valid but that the patent on the salt was not. But Teva still got to market about 20 months earlier than it could have …" CROSS-BORDER SIGNIFICANCE

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