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T-462-84
The Procter & Gamble Company and Procter & Gamble Inc. (Plaintiffs)
v.
Nabisco Brands Ltd.—Nabisco Brands Ltée. (Defendant)
Trial Division, Collier J.—Toronto, May 17 and 18; Ottawa, May 29, 1984.
Judicial review — Equitable remedies — Injunctions — Interlocutory injunctions — American Cyanamid case expung ing rule that before court entitled to consider balance of convenience applicant must prove prima fade case — Court not prepared to go so far as procedure prior to grant of patent in England giving rise to obsolescence of rule different from Canadian procedure — Cyanamid case requiring consideration of balance of convenience unless plaintiff having no real pros pect of succeeding at trial — Plaintiffs' claim not frivolous or vexatious — On balance of convenience plaintiffs adequately compensated by monetary damages.
Patents — Motion for interlocutory injunction — Action for alleged infringement of patent and counterclaim for declara tion of invalidity — No difference as to general principles governing interlocutory injunctions between patent suit and other suits.
This is a motion for interlocutory injunction in an action for patent infringement and counterclaim for declaration of inva lidity. The plaintiffs obtained the Canadian patent for a new kind of cookie which they have not yet produced and sold in Canada. The defendant is producing and marketing a cookie in Alberta that allegedly infringes the patent, and proposes to market it nationally. The plaintiffs rely on the British case American Cyanamid Co. v. Ethicon Ltd. and Canadian cases adopting it. There, the rule that the Court is not entitled to take account of the balance of convenience unless the applicant first proves a prima facie case, was expunged. Instead it was held that the court must be satisfied that the claim is not frivolous or vexatious; there must be a serious question to be tried. The court should then go on to consider whether the balance of convenience favours granting or refusing relief. The plaintiffs submit that the Cyanamid case swept away the so-called rule of practice affirmed in the Ontario case Teledyne Industries Inc. et al. v. Lido Industrial Products Ltd. There it was said that in a patent infringement action that was not well established, an interlocutory injunction would not be granted if the defendant stated that the validity of the patent would be attacked. The defendant submits that the applicant must make out a fair prima facie case.
Held, the motion is dismissed. The reasons given in the Cyanamid case for the obsolescence of the "rule" were the existence of an elaborate procedure for the examination of patent specifications by expert examiners before a patent is granted, an opportunity for opposition at that stage and provi sions for appeal to a Patent Appeal Tribunal. In Canada there are only limited "opposition" proceedings. Cyanamid notwith standing, the Court would, in view of the differences in proce dure, not go so far as to sweep away the rule that the applicant must first make out a prima facie case.
The plaintiffs' claim raises a serious question to be tried. Since the patent was very new, this would be its first legal test; and its alleged infringement and its validity are seriously in issue. The principle governing the issue of the balance of convenience was stated in the Cyanamid case to be that the Court should first consider whether the plaintiff would be adequately compensated by an award of damages. Although the plaintiffs will suffer harm the plaintiffs' loss could be reasonably calculated on the basis of the defendant's sales. In the legal sense, monetary damages will be an adequate remedy.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Teledyne Industries Inc. et al. v. Lido Industrial Prod ucts Ltd. (1978), 19 O.R. (2d) 740 (Ont. C.A.).
DISTINGUISHED:
American Cyanamid Co. v. Ethicon Ltd., [1975] A.C. 396 (H.L.).
REFERRED TO:
Yule Inc. v. Atlantic Pizza Delight Franchise (1968) Ltd. et al. (1977), 17 O.R. (2d) 505 (Ont. Div. Ct.); The Bulman Group Ltd. v. Alpha One-Write Systems B.C. Ltd. et al. (1981), 54 C.P.R. (2d) 179 (F.C.A.); Cutter Ltd. v. Baxter Travenol Laboratories of Canada, Ltd. et al. (1980), 47 C.P.R. (2d) 53 (F.C.A.).
COUNSEL:
D. Sim, Q.C. and C. R. Spring for plaintiffs.
D. Wright, Q.C. and D. MacOdrum, Q.C. for defendant.
SOLICITORS:
Sim, Hughes, Toronto, for plaintiffs.
Lang, Michener, Cranston, Farquharson & Wright, Toronto, for defendant.
The following are the reasons for order ren dered in English by
COLLIER J.: This is an action for alleged infringement of a patent. There is a counterclaim for a declaration of invalidity.
The plaintiffs have brought the present motion for an interlocutory injunction, restraining the defendant, until trial, from carrying on its alleged infringing activities.
The parties are business world giants. The dis pute here involves the development and marketing of a certain kind of cookie. A great amount of money has already been spent in respect of the rival products. A great amount more will likely be spent, in marketing and sales, in the near future. There are obviously large financial stakes riding on the outcome of this litigation.
All that said, there is no difference, as to general principles governing interlocutory injunctions, be tween a patent suit and other suits. There may be one small qualification to that statement which I shall later mention.
The first plaintiff is an American company. It is the owner of the patent. The second plaintiff is a subsidiary Canadian company. It is a licensee under the patent.
The defendant, and its U.S. parent, have had, for some time, the biggest share of the North American cookie market. The plaintiffs, in 1978 and 1979, began research and development into what is said to be a new kind of ready-made cookie. It employs two doughs, rather than the traditional one. The baked product, in the choco late chip variety, is crisp on the outside and chewy on the inside. This is in contrast to, for example, the defendant's very successful "Chips Ahoy" chocolate chip cookie: crisp throughout.
This was the plaintiffs' first venture into the cookie market. The U.S. plaintiff test-marketed its two-dough chocolate chip cookie in Kansas City, Mo. The results were very good indeed. The plain tiffs intend to market the cookies in Canada.
Plans, and plant construction, are underway. As yet, none of the cookies have been actually pro duced and sold in Canada.
The defendant, and its U.S. parent, became aware of the plaintiffs' cookies, and that of another competitor. They decided to compete with a line of their own. The defendant is already producing and marketing its cookies in Alberta. It proposes to market them nationally.
The American plaintiff filed a patent applica tion in the United States on December 29, 1980. That has not yet resulted in a patent issue. The patent in Canada issued on January 24, 1984.
On this motion, there were affidavits filed on both sides. There was extensive cross-examination. The result is conflicting evidence on several issues.
I go now to the principles to be applied on a motion of this kind.
The plaintiffs relied on the well-known, now almost classic, case of American Cyanamid Co. v. Ethicon Ltd., [1975] A.C. 396 (H.L.), and on decisions, in this country, which have adopted Cyanamid: for example, Yule Inc. v. Atlantic Pizza Delight Franchise (1968) Ltd. et al. (1977), 17 O.R. (2d) 505 (Ont. Div. Ct.). It was said, for the plaintiffs, the evidence showed their claim is not frivolous or vexatious; there is a serious ques tion to be tried.
The Cyanamid case marked, to some extent, a change in the law. The decision has been followed in many courts, at different levels, across Canada. The Yule case, in Ontario, has been frequently followed and applied at the trial level. Cyanamid has also been followed and applied in a number of decisions, reported, unreported, or unrecorded, in the Trial Division of this Court. It has been referred to, without criticism, in decisions of the
Federal Court of Appeal.'
The defendant, nevertheless, submitted to me the following:
The applicant must make out a fair prima facie case. If not, the application should be rejected.
The first requisite for an interlocutory injunction is that the applicant must make out a fair prima facie case, i.e. that, if the case went to trial on no other evidence than was before the Court at the hearing of the application, the plaintiff would be entitled to a permanent injunction in the same terms as the interlocutory injunction. If this is not established, the applica tion should be rejected.
Similar contentions were considered, in Cyana- mid, and expressly rejected.
I adopt the principles set out by Lord Diplock at page 405:
In the instant appeal, however, the question of the balance of convenience, although it had been considered by Graham J. and decided in Cyanamid's favour, was never reached by the Court of Appeal. They considered that there was a rule of practice so well established as to constitute a rule of law that precluded them from granting any interim injunction unless upon the evidence adduced by both parties on the hearing of the applica tion the applicant had satisfied the court that on the balance of probabilities the acts of the other party sought to be enjoined would, if committed, violate the applicant's legal rights. In the view of the Court of Appeal the case which the applicant had to prove before any question of balance of convenience arose was "prima facie" only in the sense that the conclusion of law reached by the court upon that evidence might need to be modified at some later date in the light of further evidence either detracting from the probative value of the evidence on which the court had acted or proving additional facts. It was in order to enable the existence of any such rule of law to be considered by your Lordships' House that leave to appeal was granted.
and at pages 407-408:
Nevertheless this authority was treated by Graham J. and the Court of Appeal in the instant appeal as leaving intact the supposed rule that the court is not entitled to take any account of the balance of convenience unless it has first been satisfied that if the case went to trial upon no other evidence than is before the court at the hearing of the application the plaintiff would be entitled to judgment for a permanent injunction in the same terms as the interlocutory injunction sought.
Your Lordships should in my view take this opportunity of declaring that there is no such rule. The use of such expressions
' See for example, The Bulman Group Ltd. v. Alpha One- Write Systems B.C. Ltd. et al. (1981), 54 C.P.R. (2d) 179 (F.C.A.) and Cutter Ltd. v. Baxter Travenol Laboratories of Canada, Ltd. et al. (1980), 47 C.P.R. (2d) 53 (F.C.A.).
as "a probability," "a prima facie case," or "a strong prima facie case" in the context of the exercise of a discretionary power to grant an interlocutory injunction leads to confusion as to the object sought to be achieved by this form of temporary relief. The court no doubt must be satisfied that the claim is not frivolous or vexatious; in other words, that there is a serious question to be tried.
It is no part of the court's function at this stage of the litigation to try to resolve conflicts of evidence on affidavit as to facts on which the claims of either party may ultimately depend nor to decide difficult questions of law which call for detailed argument and mature considerations. These are matters to be dealt with at the trial. One of the reasons for the introduction of the practice of requiring an undertaking as to damages upon the grant of an interlocutory injunction was that "it aided the court in doing that which was its great object, viz. abstaining from expressing any opinion upon the merits of the case until the hearing": Wakefield v. Duke of Buccleugh (1865) 12 L.T. 628, 629. So unless the material available to the court at the hearing of the application for an interlocutory injunction fails to disclose that the plaintiff has any real prospect of succeeding in his claim for a permanent injunction at the trial, the court should go on to consider whether the balance of convenience lies in favour of granting or refusing the interlocutory relief that is sought.
I have set out, at some length, excerpts from the Cyanamid case. I did so because of the position, earlier recounted, taken by the defendant. In fair ness, there was, during argument, some resiling. It was, however, never enthusiastic.
I indicated, at the conclusion of argument, I was satisfied the plaintiffs' claim here is not frivolous or vexatious; that there is a serious question to be tried. I now affirm that statement.
In arriving at my decision, I have not overlooked the so-called rule of practice, expunged by Lord Diplock in the United Kingdom, at pages 405-406:
The instant appeal arises in a patent case. Historically there was undoubtedly a time when in an action for infringement of a patent that was not already "well established", whatever that may have meant, an interlocutory injunction to restrain infringement would not be granted if counsel for the defendant stated that it was intended to attack the validity of the patent.
Relics of this reluctance to enforce a monopoly that was challenged, even though the alleged grounds of invalidity were weak, are to be found in the judgment of Scrutton L.J. as late as 1924 in Smith v. Grigg Ltd. [1924] 1 K.B. 655; but the elaborate procedure for the examination of patent specifica tions by expert examiners before a patent is granted, the opportunity for opposition at that stage and the provisions for appeal to the Patent Appeal Tribunal in the person of a patent
judge of the High Court, make the grant of a patent nowadays a good prima facie reason, in the true sense of that term, for supposing the patent to be valid, and have rendered obsolete the former rule of practice as respects interlocutory injunctions in infringement actions. In my view the grant of interlocutory injunctions in actions for infringement of patents is governed by the same principles as in other actions. I turn to consider what those principles are.
The Ontario Court of Appeal has, however, affirmed the existence of the "rule": Teledyne Industries Inc. et al. v. Lido Industrial Products Ltd. (1978), 19 O.R. (2d) 740 at pages 741-743:
On January 13, 1977, leave to appeal to the Divisional Court was granted by Mr. Justice Labrosse. He doubted the correct ness of the order because of the judgment of Heald, J., in Aluma Building Systems Inc. v. J.C. Fitzpatrick Construction Ltd. (1974), 17 C.P.R. (2d) 275 at p. 278, where he said:
An interlocutory injunction will not be granted in patent cases when the validity or infringement of the patent is disputed, the patent is of recent origin, its validity has not been established by a Court decision and the defendant gives an undertaking to the Court to keep an account (see for example—Field v. Otter (1974), 14 C.P.R. (2d) 186; Aurele Marois Inc. v. International Fibreglass Ltd. (1971), 1 C.P.R. (2d) 148; Parke, Davis & Co. and Parke, Davis & Co. Ltd. v. Gilbert Surgical Supply Co. Ltd. (1959), 31 C.P.R. 1, 18 Fox Pat. C. 175). All of said circumstances are present in this case. Without detailing the evidence adduced by the defendant, suffice it to say that defendant has raised serious and substantial issues on the questions of both infringement and validity and has established that he has a fighting case thereon. I have therefore concluded that the plaintiff is not entitled to succeed on this branch of his motion.
Mr. Sim contended that the Divisional Court has elevated a rule of practice which I have quoted from the Aluma case to a rule of law providing a complete answer where the applicant for interim injunction is dependent upon a recently issued and untried patent. With the greatest deference, I do not agree with his submission. I think counsel reads much more into the words of Griffiths, J., than is justified. The learned Judge quite properly emphasized the necessity of giving consideration to the rule of practice and the concluding paragraph of his reasons in this respect makes this clear. It dispels any notion that the rule of practice should be treated as the determining principle, rather than as one principle to be considered, along with others, in deciding whether to exercise one's discretion to grant or refuse the applications. Griffiths, J., concluded by saying [at p. 116 O.R., p. 451 D.L.R., p. 275 C.P.R.]:
In this case the validity and infringement of the plaintiffs' patent has been disputed, the patent is of recent origin and its validity has never been established by a Court decision. The defendant offered an undertaking to keep an account. In our view the learned Judge erred in failing to take these
factors into consideration as strong grounds for refusing the injunction.
I think the practice is no more than this. A recently issued untried patent is deemed to be valid under s. 47 of the Patent Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-4. When, on a motion for interim injunction for infringement of such a patent, some evidence of infringement is offered and the other general principles appli cable to interim injunction are satisfied, if the motion is opposed, although no evidence to the contrary is filed, the rule of practice should be considered. However, in such circum stances I should think it unlikely that, alone, it would tip the scales against the plaintiffs. On the other hand, in cases such as Aluma, supra, the presumption of the validity of the patent disappears because of the introduction of evidence to the con trary: Circle Film Enterprises Inc. v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp., [1959] S.C.R. 602 at p. 606, 20 D.L.R. (2d) 211 at p. 214, 31 C.P.R. 57 at p. 60. There, the evidence was of such a nature as to raise serious and substantial issues on the question of both infringement and validity of the patent and showed that the defendant had an arguable case. In such circumstances, the rule of practice might well tip the scales of discretion against the issuing of the injunction. The rule of practice must be considered in all such applications but is not an absolute bar to an injunction.
The Teledyne case was heard before the Cyana- mid case was generally accepted. In both the Divisional Court and the Ontario Court of Appeal, the argument proceeded on the basis of the Ontario law which pre-existed Cyanamid: see page 742 of Teledyne.
Before me, the defendant relied on earlier deci sions in the Exchequer Court and the Trial Divi sion of this Court. Again, those cases were pre-Cyanamid.
Counsel for the plaintiffs submitted, to me, the so-called rule of practice is now swept away, in Canada, by reason of the Cyanamid decision.
I am not prepared to go that far.
The reasons given by Lord Diplock, for the obsolescence of the "rule" in England, do not have the same force in Canada. There is only very limited, so-called "opposition" proceedings, if any at all, in Canada, before a patent issues. I do not propose to set them out in any detail. Written "opposition" submissions can sometimes be made if someone learns a patent is pending. That, as I understand it, is as far as the matter goes.
Finally, to summarize on this point. I have, in deciding the plaintiffs' claim raises a serious ques-
tion to be tried, kept these matters in mind: the patent is very new; this will be its first legal test; its alleged infringement, and its validity, are seri ously in issue. I have further kept in mind, in considering the balance of convenience, the same rule of practice.
I turn now to that issue.
Once more, I go to Lord Diplock (page 408):
As to that, the governing principle is that the court should first consider whether, if the plaintiff were to succeed at the trial in establishing his right to a permanent injunction, he would be adequately compensated by an award of damages for the loss he would have sustained as a result of the defendant's continuing to do what was sought to be enjoined between the time of the application and the time of the trial. If damages in the measure recoverable at common law would be adequate remedy and the defendant would be in a financial position to pay them, no interlocutory injunction should normally be grant ed, however strong the plaintiffs claim appeared to be at that stage. If, on the other hand, damages would not provide an adequate remedy for the plaintiff in the event of his succeeding at the trial, the court should then consider whether, on the contrary hypothesis that the defendant were to succeed at the trial in establishing his right to do that which was sought to be enjoined, he would be adequately compensated under the plain tiffs undertaking as to damages for the loss he would have sustained by being prevented from doing so between the time of the application and the time of the trial. If damages in the measure recoverable under such an undertaking would be an adequate remedy and the plaintiff would be in a financial position to pay them, there would be no reason upon this ground to refuse an interlocutory injunction.
It is where there is doubt as to the adequacy of the respective remedies in damages available to either party or to both, that the question of balance of convenience arises. It would be unwise to attempt even to list all the various matters which may need to be taken into consideration in deciding where the balance lies, let alone to suggest the relative weight to be attached to them. These will vary from case to case.
Where other factors appear to be evenly balanced it is a counsel of prudence to take such measures as are calculated to preserve the status quo. If the defendant is enjoined temporari ly from doing something that he has not done before, the only effect of the interlocutory injunction in the event of his succeed ing at the trial is to postpone the date at which he is able to embark upon a course of action which he has not previously found it necessary to undertake; whereas to interrupt him in the conduct of an established enterprise would cause much greater inconvenience to him since he would have to start again to establish it in the event of his succeeding at the trial.
In this case, both parties take the position they will each suffer irreparable harm or injury, which cannot be adequately compensated in monetary damages. The plaintiffs, if the defendant is permit ted to continue, and expand, its first in the arena activities in Canada; the defendant, if its present and proposed activities are halted, yet some con siderable time later, those activities are held to have been proper all along.
The question before me was a difficult one. There was strongly conflicting evidence as to the advantageous effect, or otherwise, of being first in the market-place with a new product: in this case the Canadian cookie market-place.
The plaintiffs have an accepted reputation of successfully entering a market-place with innova tive products. Their advertising and marketing techniques are aggressive, expensive and effective. They assert they have, by the patent, the right to be first in the Canadian arena; the defendant's activities have, and will, effectively destroy all the advantages that brings; monetary compensation would be incapable of calculation, and inadequate.
The defendant's evidence, and argument, is that there is no advantage to being first in; the defend ant, if forced by injunction to withdraw at this stage, could not be adequately compensated, even if it later succeeded in its defence, and re-entered the market; the harm, in the interim, would be irreparable.
I have tried, in the limited time at hand, to give careful consideration to the conflicting opinions and views.
I am not satisfied the plaintiffs will suffer harm which cannot be adequately calculated in, and compensated by, money.
Difficulty in calculating damages is not a com pelling reason for injunctive relief. There never can be, in any case, perfect monetary compensation. The law does not, in tort, permit that.
On the facts before me, I am satisfied the plaintiffs will suffer injury and harm, from now to
trial, if the defendant is, in law, infringing. But on the balance of probabilities, on the evidence before me, I am satisfied the plaintiffs' loss can be rea sonably calculated on the basis of the defendant's sales; that, in the legal sense, monetary damages will be an adequate remedy.
The defendant has agreed to keep an account of sales and profits.
The motion is otherwise dismissed. Costs are in the cause.
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