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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Teva Pharma - Produtos Farmaceuticos Lda & Anor v Astrazeneca-Produtos Farmaceuticos Lad & Anr [2017] EWCA Civ 2135 (14 December 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/2135.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 2135 |
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ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION, COMMERCIAL COURT
MR JUSTICE LEGGATT
CL-2017-000291
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SALES
and
LORD JUSTICE FLAUX
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TEVA PHARMA – PRODUTOS FARMACEUTICOS LDA & ANR |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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ASTRAZENECA-PRODUTOS FARMACEUTICOS LAD & ANR |
Respondent |
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Mr Ian Mill QC & Mr Andrew Scott QC (instructed by Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : Thursday 30 November 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE FLAUX :
Introduction
Relevant factual background leading up to the Settlement Agreement
The terms of the Settlement Agreement
"(vi) Given the existence of the Patent the Parties wish to avoid the costs, risks, expenses and time which would be associated with any disputes relating to the said Patent, including the Proceedings, and wish to enter into a negotiated and consensual agreement terminating and/or preventing such disputes.
(vii) Accordingly, the Parties have agreed to resolve/prevent such disputes between them on and subject to the terms set out below."
"2.1 Teva undertakes to:
(a) Withdraw Teva Product from the Portuguese market, namely from the wholesalers immediately after the Effective Date;
(b) As of 21st February 2013 cease any offer or sales of Teva Product to the distribution channels and pharmacies;
(c) As of the Effective Date immediately send a letter to wholesalers, with a copy to the Patentee, to communicate in writing the undertakings mentioned in a) and b);
(d) Pay a compensation to the Patentee on the amount of € 150,000 (one hundred and fifty thousand euros) in case of breach of clause 2.1 a) and b).
(e) Within 3 (three) days of the Effective Date to communicate in writing to Infarmed the undertakings mentioned in this clause, with a copy to the Patentee;
(f) Within 3 (three) days of the Effective Date to request Infarmed to change the status of the Generic Product from "marketed" to "out of stock" until the earliest date set out in clause 2.7;
(g) Within 5 (five) days of the Effective Date to publicly announce that it will not challenge the validity of EP 521471 and SPC 156 Portugal and sending a written evidence to the Patentee of that public announcement;
(h) For the breach of any Teva's above undertakings e) to g) to pay Shionogi and AstraZeneca a daily compensation for damages on the amount of € 99,700.00 (ninety nine thousand seven hundred euros).
2.2 Teva shall not be obliged to recall any Teva Product which is in pharmacies and/or with patients in Portugal."
"2.6. Subject to clause 2.1 (d) and (h), as of the Effective Date, Patentee irrevocably releases and forever discharges Teva and its customers in relation to any claims, rights, demands or damages arising from the use, importation, storage, offer for sale, sale, marketing, distribution of the Teva Product in or for Portugal other than in breach of this Agreement."
"2.7. As of the Effective Date, and subject to clause 2.1 above, Teva and/or any of its affiliates undertakes that it will not sell the Teva Product in Portugal prior to the earlier of:
(a) 3 July 2017;
(b) the date on which the Patents is invalidated by a final (res judicata) court decision;
(c) the date on which the Patentee launches a Generic Product or licenses a third party to launch a Generic Product in Portugal;
(d) ten (10) days after Teva notifies the Patentee that a third party launches a Generic Product and if the Patentee has not initiated preliminary injunction proceedings;
(e) ninety (90) days after a third party launches a Generic Product if the Patentee has not obtained an injunction prohibiting further sales of such Generic Product."
The current dispute
a) A Paediatric Investigation Plan ("PIP") is drawn up and approved by the European Medicines Agency;
b) The clinical trials in the PIP are carried out;
c) The Paediatric Committee carries out a compliance check to certify that the PIP has been completed; and
d) The results of the clinical trials are reflected in the product literature.
The judgment below
"I did not understand Mr. Maclean QC seriously to take issue with this point. It seems to me clearly to be correct applying ordinary principles of interpretation of contracts which require words to be read in the light of the purpose and subject matter of the Agreement. There is also a line of authorities concerned specifically with settlement agreements, of which the leading case is BCCI v Ali [2002] 1 AC 251, which emphasise that in construing a release the court should consider the type of claims which the parties may reasonably be taken to have had in contemplation and at which the release was directed."
"16. I agree with Mr. Scott's submission that it is important in interpreting the Agreement to distinguish between contractual rights and intellectual property rights. There is no doubt that after 3 July 2017 the defendants will not have the benefit of a contractual undertaking by the claimants not to sell the Teva Product in Portugal. By the same token, the claimants will be free from a contractual point to view to sell their product. The question is whether the Agreement is to be construed as granting the claimants a release which extends beyond that date so that in circumstance where there is no corresponding contractual undertaking the defendants have, nevertheless, relinquished the ability to assert their intellectual property rights. The effect, if the claimants' interpretation is correct, is that the claimants will not merely be in the same position as they would have been in if they had not launched the Teva Product in February 2013, but will be in a privileged position compared with other competitors in the market place. They will, in substance, if the claimants are right, have acquired a licence to market the product in Portugal alongside the defendants for the period of the paediatric extension.
17. That seems to me to be a wholly uncommercial intention to attribute to the parties to the Agreement. Reading it against the background of the proceedings in Portugal which prompted it, the aim was to put an end to those proceedings and any similar disputes on terms whereby the defendants had, so to speak, a clear run unimpeded by marketing of the Teva Product until 3 July 2017. It is one thing to say that the possibility of a paediatric extension was foreseeable, but quite another to suppose that part of the consideration for the claimants agreeing not to market the Teva Product before 3 July 2017 was intended to be that, should the defendants through their efforts succeed in obtaining a paediatric extension, the claimants should share in the benefit of it by obtaining rights of an extremely valuable nature.
18. It is important that the court should be cautious when invited to take a view about whether consequences of a particular interpretation are commercially unacceptable rather than merely indicating that one party may have made a bad bargain. But there comes a point at which a Commercial Court is entitled to say that the consequences are so commercially absurd that – in the absence of words which specifically say so, as opposed to general words which, on their face, would have such an effect – the consequences cannot reasonably have been intended. That, in my view, is the position here as the consequence of the claimants' interpretation of the Settlement Agreement would, as it seems to me, be to give them an uncovenanted windfall."
The parties' submissions
"…commercial common sense is not to be invoked retrospectively. The mere fact that a contractual arrangement, if interpreted according to its natural language, has worked out badly, or even disastrously, for one of the parties is not a reason for departing from the natural language. Commercial common sense is only relevant to the extent of how matters would or could have been perceived by the parties, or by reasonable people in the position of the parties, as at the date that the contract was made. Judicial observations such as those of Lord Reid in Wickman Machine Tools Sales Ltd v L Schuler AG [1974] AC 235, 251 and Lord Diplock in Antaios Cia Naviera SA v Salen Rederierna AB (The Antaios) [1985] AC 191, 201, quoted by Lord Carnwath at para 110, have to be read and applied bearing that important point in mind."
"…while commercial common sense is a very important factor to take into account when interpreting a contract, a court should be very slow to reject the natural meaning of a provision as correct simply because it appears to be a very imprudent term for one of the parties to have agreed, even ignoring the benefit of wisdom of hindsight. The purpose of interpretation is to identify what the parties have agreed, not what the court thinks that they should have agreed. Experience shows that it is by no means unknown for people to enter into arrangements which are ill-advised, even ignoring the benefit of wisdom of hindsight, and it is not the function of a court when interpreting an agreement to relieve a party from the consequences of his imprudence or poor advice. Accordingly, when interpreting a contract a judge should avoid re-writing it in an attempt to assist an unwise party or to penalise an astute party."
"But a long and in my view salutary line of authority shows that, in the absence of clear language, the court will be very slow to infer that a party intended to surrender rights and claims of which he was unaware and could not have been aware."
"Some of the cases, I think, contain statements more dogmatic and unqualified than would now be acceptable, and in some of them questions of construction and relief were treated almost indistinguishably. But I think these authorities justify the proposition advanced in paragraph 10 above and provide not a rule of law but a cautionary principle which should inform the approach of the court to the construction of an instrument such as this. I accept, as my noble and learned friend Lord Hoffmann forcefully points out, that authorities must be read in the context of their peculiar facts. But the judges I have quoted expressed themselves in terms more general than was necessary for decision of the instant case, and I share their reluctance to infer that a party intended to give up something which neither he, nor the other party, knew or could know that he had."
"27…Courts are accustomed to deciding how an agreement should be interpreted and applied when unforeseen circumstances arise, for which the agreement has made no provision. That is not the problem which typically arises regarding a general release. The wording of a general release and the context in which it was given commonly make plain that the parties intended that the release should not be confined to known claims. On the contrary, part of the object was that the release should extend to any claims which might later come to light. The parties wanted to achieve finality. When, therefore, a claim whose existence was not appreciated does come to light, on the face of the general words of the release and consistently with the purpose for which the release was given the release is applicable. The mere fact that the parties were unaware of the particular claim is not a reason for excluding it from the scope of the release. The risk that further claims might later emerge was a risk the person giving the release took upon himself. It was against this very risk that the release was intended to protect the person in whose favour the release was made. For instance, a mutual general release on a settlement of final partnership accounts might well preclude an erstwhile partner from bringing a claim if it subsequently came to light that inadvertently his share of profits had been understated in the agreed accounts.
28. This approach, however, should not be pressed too far. It does not mean that once the possibility of further claims has been foreseen, a newly emergent claim will always be regarded as caught by a general release, whatever the circumstances in which it arises and whatever its subject matter may be. However widely drawn the language, the circumstances in which the release was given may suggest, and frequently they do suggest, that the parties intended or, more precisely, the parties are reasonably to be taken to have intended, that the release should apply only to claims, known or unknown, relating to a particular subject matter. The court has to consider, therefore, what was the type of claims at which the release was directed. For instance, depending on the circumstances, a mutual general release on a settlement of final partnership accounts might properly be interpreted as confined to claims arising in connection with the partnership business. It could not reasonably be taken to preclude a claim if it later came to light that encroaching tree roots from one partner's property had undermined the foundations of his neighbouring partner's house. Echoing judicial language used in the past, that would be regarded as outside the 'contemplation' of the parties at the time the release was entered into, not because it was an unknown claim, but because it related to a subject matter which was not 'under consideration'.
29. This approach, which is an orthodox application of the ordinary principles of interpretation, is now well established. Over the years different judges have used different language when referring to what is now commonly described as the context, or the matrix of facts, in which a contract was made. But, although expressed in different words, the constant theme is that the scope of general words of a release depends upon the context furnished by the surrounding circumstances in which the release was given. The generality of the wording has no greater reach than this context indicates."
"…It is easy to infer that although the parties used very wide language - "all claims" and so forth - they meant all claims arising out of the matters in dispute. It would go without saying that they were not intending to include claims of an altogether different character. A good example is the decision of the House of Lords in Directory of the London and South Western Railway Co v Blackmore, LR 4 HL 610. In 1861 the railway company used its statutory powers to buy some of Mr Blackmore's land for railway purposes. In 1864 they had a dispute over their boundary. This was settled by an agreement that he should build a wall to be maintained at their joint expense. The agreement included a release of claims in general terms. In 1866 the railway company decided that it did not need the land it had taken and proposed to sell it as surplus land. Mr Blackmore claimed that, as the person from whom it had been taken, he had a statutory right of pre-emption under the Land Clauses Consolidation Act 1845. The railway company argued (rather faintly, it would seem, by their second counsel) that it fell within the description of claims which he surrendered when settling the boundary dispute. Lord Hatherley LC, who gave the leading judgment, did not even bother to address this point. Lord Westbury picked it up. He said, at p 623:
"The general words in a release are limited always to that thing or those things which were specially in the contemplation of the parties at the time when the release was given."
42. This is rather a sweeping statement. It is almost always dangerous to say "always". But, in cases of a release given in connection with the settlement of a dispute, it is a fair generalisation."
"The agreement of a PIP is published in Europe and we would expect that Teva would have been aware that one had been agreed for Crestor® prior to the Settlement Agreement. In any case, Teva would have known that a PIP might be completed in time to allow AZ to obtain a Paediatric Extension. Equally, however, there was a risk that AZ would be unable to complete the PIP successfully in time to make its application for a Paediatric Extension. At the time the Settlement Agreement was entered into the position was uncertain."
Analysis and conclusions
"The aim is always to determine what the parties are reasonably to be taken to have meant to release by the words they chose and, as Lord Nicholls went on to explain at [28]-[29], the circumstances will often suggest that the parties are reasonably to be taken to have intended to release only those claims, known or unknown, which relate to the particular subject matter under consideration by them at the time…"
Conclusion
Lord Justice Sales
Lord Justice Rupert Jackson