Last week, in
Federal Trade Commission v Actavis Inc. et Al., the
US Supreme Court turned its attention to a
fascinating crossroad of IP and competition law,
reverse payment settlements.
The phenomenon consists in an agreement between the alleged infringer and a patentee, under
which the former agrees not to produce the patented items, and the latter pays
a (usually large) sum of money. A reverse payment settlement raises an
interesting question: what is the patentee’s incentive to conclude this kind of settlement? Although there may be reasons that justify the reverse payment (e.g. if it is compensation for services that the other parties agree to provide, or if it is equivalent to the litigation costs that the party would have incurred if continuing the lawsuit), it usually suggests that the patentee is willing to trade in some of the profits gained through its
monopoly, in order to avoid the risks of litigation, and the possible invalidation of its patent. In this perspective, similar settlements may yield
unjustified anti-competitive effects, if they prevent a court from reviewing the validity of a patent and possibly dissolving the patentee's monopoly. In the pharmaceutical field, they could also delay the marketing of generic drugs, to the detriment of both competitors and consumers. In a split decision (5-3) issued last
Monday, the Supreme Court, rejecting the Court of Appeals' approach, held that reverse payment settlements are not immune from antitrust law, but clarified that they are not unlawful
per se, and should be evaluated through the
rule of reason.
This case originated in 2009, when the
Federal Trade Commission (FTC) filed a lawsuit, under
Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, against the four parties of a reverse payment settlement. Back in
1999, Solvay Pharmaceuticals had filed a
New Drug Application for a drug named
AndroGel. Soon after, two other companies, Actavis and Paddock (the latter in
agreement with a third company, Par Pharmaceutical) had filed
Abbreviated New Drug Applications for generic drugs modeled after AndroGel, declaring that Solvay’s
patent
6,503,894 was invalid, under
paragraph 4 of the Hatch-Waxman Act. Solvay sued the generic manufacturers, and the parties reached a reverse payment settlement in 2006: the alleged infringers agreed to
delay their entry to the market till 2015 (65 months before the expiry of
Solvay’s patent), and the brand manufacturer accepted to pay several million dollars in return.
In 2009, the FTC filed lawsuit against
all the parties, alleging that they unlawfully agreed ‘to share in Solvay’s
monopoly profits, abandon their patent challenges, and refrain from launching
their low-cost generic products to compete with AndroGel for nine years’. The
District Court for the Northern District of Georgia dismissed the FTC’s complaint for failure to state a claim, under
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). The Court of Appeals for the
Eleventh Circuit
affirmed, clarifying that ‘absent sham litigation or fraud in obtaining the patent, a reverse payment settlement is
immune from antitrust attach as long as its anticompetitive effects fall within
the scope of the exclusionary potential of the patent’. It added that public policy considerations favouring settlement of disputes suggested
that courts could not require the parties to continue litigation in order to
avoid antitrust liability. In light of the contrast between the decisions of different courts, the Supreme
Court granted the certiorari asked by the FTC.
The majority recognized that reverse payment settlements are
‘unusual’ (at least when the defendants do not have any claim for damages
against the plaintiff), and rejected the Court of Appeals' approach, centred
upon ‘whether [they] fall within the scope of the patent’s exclusionary
potential’. Reciting previous case law (
Line Material), the Supreme Court stated
that the privileges granted by patents should be balanced with competition law
rules, to the effect that ‘rather than measur[ing] the length or amount of a
restriction solely against the length of the patent’s term or its earning
potential, as the Court of Appeals apparently did here’, courts are expected to
also evaluate traditional antitrust factors (anticompetitive effects, market power,
etc.). The judges observed that the Hatch-Waxman Act appears to be very
sensitive to antitrust concerns, and cited several cases (
inter alia,
United States v Singer Mfg. Co. and
Standard Oil Co.), which sought ‘to
accommodate patent and antitrust policies, finding challenged terms and
conditions unlawful unless patent law policy offset the antitrust law policy
strongly favoring competition’.
The Supreme Court finally examined arguments concerning the
legal policy favouring the settlement of disputes. In light of these considerations, the Court of Appeals had rejected the idea that antitrust law could require the
parties of a reverse payment settlement to litigate the validity of the patent
in order to demonstrate what would have happened to competition in the absence
of the settlement. The Supreme Court dismissed this reasoning and
held that the FTC complaint should have been heard, for five reasons:
(1) the
fact that a patentee agrees to pay a substantial amount of money ‘may provide
strong evidence that [it] seeks to induce the generic challenger to abandon its
claim with a share of its monopoly profits that would otherwise be lost in the
competitive market’. The judges noted that, although such settlements could
signal to competitors that the patents at issue are weak, in the pharmaceutical field the first filer has much
stronger incentives to dispute the validity of the patents, and other companies
may refrain from initiating a lawsuit, if the first filer settled;
(2) the
anticompetitive consequences may be unjustified and the parties have the
possibility to show, in an antitrust proceeding, the lawfulness/unlawfulness of the settlement under the rule of reason;
(3) a
reverse payment of a large sum usually signals that the patentee enjoys
substantial market power;
(4) ‘it
is normally not necessary to litigate patent validity to answer the antitrust
question’, as the size of a reverse payment settlement may provide a ‘workable
surrogate for a patent’s weakness’;
(5) the
parties remain free to settle their controversies on other terms, without negatively
affecting competition.
The majority of the Court concluded that:
In sum, a reverse payment, where large and unjustified, can
bring with it the risk of significant anticompetitive effects; one who makes
such a payment may be unable to explain and to justify it; such a firm or
individual may well possess market power derived from the patent; a court, by
examining the size of the payment, may well be able to assess its likely
anticompetitive effects along with its potential justifications without
litigating the validity of the patent; and parties may well find ways to settle
patent disputes without the use of reverse payments.
Dismissing the FTC’s arguments, which suggested applying a
‘quick-look approach’ to reverse payment settlements, the judges recognised that the rule of reason should be applied instead. ‘That is’, the Court explained, ‘because the likelihood of a
reverse payment bringing about anticompetitive effects depends upon its size,
its scale in relation to the payer’s anticipated future litigation costs, its
independence from other services for which it might represent payment, and the
lack of any other convincing justification’.
Chief Justice Roberts, joined by two other judges, filed a
dissenting opinion, which criticized the majority’s approach, stating that the
correct approach would have been to assess whether the settlement gave the
patentee a monopoly power beyond that awarded by its patent. In this perspective, he noted
that the majority departed from the rules set out in previous case law, which
established that antitrust law had 'no business prying into a patent settlement so
long as that settlement confer[red] to the patent holder no monopoly power beyond
what the patent itself conferred’. The minority held that the judgment would discourage generics from challenging
pharmaceutical patents and the parties from settling patent litigation.
Further, it suggested that the link between payment of a large sum and patent
weakness is unjustified, as the patentee’s approach may be determined by many
factors. Therefore, the minority concluded:
The majority today departs from the settled approach
separating patent and antitrust law, weakens the protections afforded to
innovators by patents, frustrates the public policy in favor of settling, and
likely undermines the very policy it seeks to promote by forcing generics who
step into the litigation ring to do so without the prospect of cash
settlements. I would keep things as they were and not subject basic questions
of patent law to an unbounded inquiry under antitrust law, with its treble
damages and famously burdensome discovery.
The fact that one of the parties is a patentee should not prevent questions being asked about possible collusion between the parties leading to anticompetitive practices. Clearly generics entering the market reduces prices, and therefore any agreement which prevents them entering the market is potentially anticompetitive. The US Supreme Court was correct to say that the fact that one party has a patent to the technology cannot lead to a blanket assumption that reverse payments are always allowable.
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