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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Patel & Anor, R. v [2009] EWCA Crim 2311 (12 November 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2009/2311.html Cite as: [2009] CTLC 167, [2010] 1 WLR 1011, [2010] 1 CMLR 37, (2010) 112 BMLR 1, [2010] Eu LR 297, [2009] EWCA Crim 2311 |
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200806740D5; 200903185D5 |
COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT KINGSTON-UPON-THAMES
HHJ NICHOLAS PRICE QC
T20057421; T20057412
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE HON. MR JUSTICE TOMLINSON
and
THE HON. MRS JUSTICE SWIFT
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REGINA |
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- and - |
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(1) HITENDRA PATEL (2) SHAAN HUSSAIN |
____________________
for the Crown
MR ORLANDO POWNALL QC and MR MARTIN HOWE QC for Hitendra Patel
MR ROBIN GRIFFITHS for Shaan Hussain
Hearing dates : 29 and 30 October 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Tomlinson :
"OFFENCES, PENALTIES ETC.
Offences
1. Any person who, in breach of the relevant Community provisions or these Regulations, places a relevant medicinal product on the market without holding a Community or United Kingdom marketing authorization in respect of that product, or otherwise than in accordance with the terms of such an authorization, shall be guilty of an offence.
2. Any person who, in the course of a business carried on by him, sells, supplies, manufactures or assembles, or procures the sale, supply, manufacture or assembly of, a relevant medicinal product, or who has in his possession a relevant medicinal product, knowing or having reasonable cause to believe that the product was or is intended to be placed on the market contrary to paragraph 1 shall be guilty of an offence."
We reiterate that it was under paragraph 1 that the appellants were ultimately charged.
The facts
i) Hitendra Patel was at all material times a registered pharmacist and proprietor of Northcote Pharmacy and Smartway Pharmaceuticals, the latter being a pharmaceutical wholesale dealership and the holder of a wholesale dealer's licence.
ii) Shaan Hussain ran Vuka Pharmaceuticals, a private limited company. Neither Shaan Hussain nor Vuka Pharmaceuticals held a wholesale dealer's licence.
iii) Between February 2003 and September 2003 Hitendra Patel by his company Smartway Pharmaceuticals on six occasions purchased from RiteAid Drugs PVT Ltd, a company based in Karachi, Pakistan, quantities of a medicinal product marketed as Viagra.
iv) These products were imported into the UK by Hitendra Patel and came into his possession.
v) Viagra is not a generic drug. It is manufactured by Pfizer who hold all relevant manufacturing and marketing authorisations.
vi) The products bought by Hitendra Patel from RiteAid were counterfeit,[1] although he believed that they were genuine.
vii) Between 1 March 2003 and 31 May 2003 on 5 separate occasions Hitendra Patel by Smartway Pharmaceuticals sold to Rajendra Shah, the latter acting by and through his company Metro Pharmacy based in Borehamwood, Hertfordshire, quantities of the 'Viagra' imported from Pakistan. Five invoices produced at trial evidenced sales to a value in excess of £200,000.
viii) Metro Pharmacy holds a wholesale dealer's licence.
ix) The products supplied from Pakistan were in pots or bottles of 30x100mg tablets. That is the manner in which Viagra is sold in the United States. Viagra is not authorised to be sold in that manner in the European Economic Area, hereinafter the "EEA", which for the avoidance of doubt includes the UK. In the EEA Viagra is authorised to be sold only in blister packs.
x) There is by definition no marketing authorisation for the retail sale within the EEA of counterfeit medicinal products.
xi) Metro Pharmacy could not lawfully or consistently with their wholesale dealer's licence sell the 'Viagra' purchased from Hitendra Patel for consumption within the EEA. For the avoidance of doubt this would have been so even if the Viagra had been genuine rather than counterfeit, not least because it was not packaged in a manner authorised for retail sale within the EEA.
xii) When concluding his transactions with Metro Pharmacy Hitendra Patel believed that the products sold by him would be exported to the Bahamas. He did not intend that any of the drugs supplied by him to Metro Pharmacy should be sold on the retail market within the EEA.
xiii) The products supplied by Hitendra Patel to Metro Pharmacy were in fact sold by the latter to Global Medz Limited, a company based in the Bahamas, and were duly delivered to the Bahamas.
xiv) Metro Pharmacy paid Hitendra Patel for the products supplied and property in them together with any form of control over their disposition passed from Hitendra Patel to Metro Pharmacy whilst they remained physically within the EEA. The invoices raised by Metro Pharmacy and issued to Global Medz contained the rubric 'goods remain the property of Metro Pharmacy Limited until paid in full'.
xv) In late June 2003 a private investigator Christopher Long contacted Shaan Hussain who confirmed to him that he was able to offer Pfizer Viagra tablets. A proposed purchase was discussed. On 9 September 2003 Shaan Hussain asked Christopher Long to speak to 'my partner, Hitesh'. Hitesh is Hitendra Patel. Mr Long telephoned Hitendra Patel who confirmed that the Pfizer Viagra for sale was his and that Shaan Hussain would receive a 'broker fee' for arranging the deal. Mr Long and Hitendra Patel agreed to meet on 12 September 2003 in order to inspect the stock. [On 11 September 2003 Hitendra Patel sent an e-mail to Mr Long saying that it would be helpful if Mr Long could ask his customer to bring to the meeting a wholesale dealer's licence or similar documentation, together with company registration, bank and address details. This e-mail was not it seems before the learned Judge when he made his ruling and apparently no reference was made to it. The e-mail was shown to us on the appeal.] On 12 September 2003 Hitendra Patel met private investigators at the pre-arranged rendezvous. He offered to sell them boxes containing over 20,000 tablets, packaged as Viagra in bottles for the US market. Officers from the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency, hereinafter the "MHRA" arrived. The tablets were seized and found to be counterfeit.
The Judge's Ruling
"Placing on the market means … the holding, exposure, display for sale, offering for sale, selling, consigning, delivering or any other associated activities of marketing."
Those regulations were considered in R v Stone [1998] Env LR 618.
"14. It is urged upon me by Mr Pownall that I should look at whom and indeed where was the 'ultimate consumer'. I do not accept that it [is] either necessary or a proper interpretation of the legislation. As the primary purpose of any rules for the production and distribution of medicinal products must be the safeguarding of public health there is a strong public policy argument in favour of an extended rather than a restricted meaning to the phrase 'placed on the market'. I consider that direct parallels can be drawn from the Stone case which also must have at its heart the necessity to protect the health of the consumer.
15. In any event I have come to the conclusion that the pattern of dealing, referred to in paragraphs 4 and 6 above make it clear that this was not 'mere transhipment' without transfer of ownership but rather sales between separate legal entities with the necessary transfer of ownership. In those circumstances I consider that the prosecution have established, at this stage at least, that the tablets were 'placed on the market'."
As we have already pointed out, it is not clear that the learned Judge in fact embraced the extended meaning although it is plain that he inclined towards it.
The pleas of guilty
"The basis upon which pleas of guilty were entered by Hitendra Patel on Tuesday 27th November 2007 was as follows:
- The defendant believed that the tablets acquired from Rite Care/Rite Aid were genuine Pfizer products.
- He believed that they were to be exported to the Bahamas.
- He did not believe he was committing an offence nor did he have any reason for such a belief. He has pleaded guilty on the grounds that the court has ruled the agreed facts amount in law to 'placing on market' and he therefore has no defence.
- He has pleaded guilty at the earliest opportunity as the Crown had hitherto insisted on the defendant pleading guilty to the trademark offences."
The Crown's approach in the Court of Appeal
Discussion and Conclusions
"For the purposes of the application of Article 24(4) to (6) of Directive 2001/83/EC and Article 14(4) to (6) of Regulation (EC) No. 726/2004, a medicinal product is "placed on the market" at the date of release into the distribution chain. It is the date when the product comes out of the control of the marketing authorisation holder."
However perusal of the Article to which this comment is directed shows that it can give no guidance in the situation under discussion. Articles 24.4 and 24.5 provide:
"4. Any authorisation which within three years of its granting is not followed by the actual placing on the market of the authorised product in the authorising Member State shall cease to be valid.
5. When an authorised product previously placed on the market in the authorising Member State is no longer actually present on the market for a period of three consecutive years, the authorisation for that product shall cease to be valid."
Article 24.4 is what is colloquially known as an "use it or lose it" provision. If an actual placing on the market of an authorised product could be achieved in the manner in which the product was dealt with in this case, it is obvious that a marketing authorisation holder could very easily ensure the continued validity of his marketing authorisation without in fact making the product available to consumers within the authorising Member State. This would seem to run counter to the clear intention behind Article 24.4.
"The provisions of this Directive shall apply to industrially produced medicinal products for human use intended to be placed on the market in Member States."
"No medicinal product may be placed on the market of a Member State unless a marketing authorisation has been issued by the competent authorities of that Member State in accordance with this Directive or an authorisation has been granted in accordance with Regulation (EEC) No. 2309/93."
It seems to us an unlikely construction of the Regulations that they prohibit transactions which are neither intended to nor have the effect of releasing a medicinal product into a distribution system which leads to its sale to end users within the Community. There is always a risk in any transaction that it may for some reason or other have unintended consequences. A carrier to whom goods are entrusted may for example prove to be dishonest, or to employ dishonest persons in consequence of whose dishonesty goods reach an unintended market. We do not consider that this everyday consideration can justify placing upon the Regulations a construction which would, as we understand it, stultify legitimate trade in pharmaceutical products which the Community instruments do not purport to regulate.
Note 1 The two counts on the indictment with which we are concerned make no reference to the fact that the medicinal product allegedly placed on the market was counterfeit, purporting to be of Pfizer manufacture when it was not, and this is of no relevance to a proper analysis of the question whether the conduct alleged constitutes an offence under paragraph 1 of Schedule 3 to the 1994 Regulations. [Back]