Opinion
Asahi Kasei Pharma Corporation (Asahi) is a Japanese corporation which develops and markets pharmaceutical products and medical devices. One of its products is Fasudil, a drug which Asahi sought to market in the United States (U.S.) for treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). In order to obtain regulatory approvals for Fasudil, and to develop and commercialize it in North America and Europe, Asahi entered into a licensing and development agreement (the License Agreement) with CoTherix, Inc. (CoTherix), a California-based biopharmaceutical company focused on developing and commercializing products for the treatment of cardiovascular disease. Appellant Actelion Ltd. is a Swiss pharmaceutical company that markets a PAH treatment drug, bosentan (under the trade name Tracleer), and holds the dominant share of the relevant market. Actelion Ltd., through a subsidiary, acquired all of the stock of CoTherix, and concurrently notified Asahi that CoTherix would discontinue development of Fasudil for “business and commercial reasons.”
Asahi filed suit in the San Mateo County Superior Court against CoTherix, Actelion Ltd., Actelion Pharmaceuticals Ltd., Actelion Pharmaceuticals US, Inc., and Actelion U.S. Holding Company (collectively Actelion), as well as three Actelion executives. 1 The case went to trial on four of Asahi’s claims: intentional interference with the License Agreement; interference with Asahi’s prospective economic advantage; breach of a confidentiality agreement between Actelion and CoTherix (on a third party beneficiary theory); and breach of confidence. 2 The jury returned a unanimous liability verdict against Actelion and the Individual Defendants (collectively Defendants), awarding nearly $546.9 million in compensatory damages, and finding that all Defendants acted with malice, oppression or fraud. The jury awarded punitive damages against the Individual Defendants. Posttrial, the court offset the verdicts for the amounts previously awarded to Asahi in an International Chamber of Commerce arbitration proceeding (ICC Arbitration) against CoTherix. Defendants’ motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict *951 were denied. The trial court denied a motion for new trial on damages, conditioned on Asahi’s acceptance of a remittitur of certain damage categories.
Defendants contend, inter alia, that any actions taken to interfere with the License Agreement were privileged and not actionable, and that Asahi’s damage claims are speculative and unsupported. The Individual Defendants further challenge the award of punitive damages. Asahi cross-appeals from the conditional new trial order. In the published portion of this opinion we address the scope of liability for tortious interference with a contract by a nonparty to the contract, and we affirm the judgment in favor of Asahi. In the nonpublished portion of our decision we reject the challenges of Actelion and the Individual Defendants to the trial court’s evidentiary rulings and to the damage awards, and we deny Asahi’s cross-appeal.
I. Background and Procedural History
While many of the underlying facts were vigorously disputed at trial (and in the briefing on this appeal), we focus on the evidence and inferences supporting the judgment.
(Lewis
v.
Fletcher Jones Motor Cars, Inc.
(2012)
Fasudil was originally formulated in 1984 for intravenous use in treatment of cerebral vasospasm after subarachnoid hemorrhage, a type of stroke, and received regulatory approval in Japan for this use in 1995. Asahi later secured approval in China. Fasudil is protected by a “composition of matter” patent covering the molecule until 2016, and by a formulation patent until 2019.
In 1997, new research showed Fasudil could inhibit a human body protein known as Rho-kinase, which contributes to constriction of smooth muscle in arterial blood vessels. Studies found inhibition of Rho-kinase could slow or even reverse cellular changes associated with certain diseases. One such disease is PAH, a chronic, progressive and often fatal disease that is characterized by severe constriction and obstruction of the pulmonary arteries. Studies indicated that Fasudil had the potential to promote healing of blood vessel lesions and limit the scarring associated with PAH.
*952 Development of Fasudil for new medical uses was commercially attractive to Asahi if it could be done expeditiously. To recoup investment, a drug must be developed sufficiently early in its patent life to ensure an adequate period of market exclusivity after receipt of regulatory approval and before generic competition arrives.
In order to gain regulatory approvals necessary for new medical uses of Fasudil, Asahi entered into the License Agreement with CoTherix on June 23, 2006. CoTherix had previously obtained regulatory approval for its own inhaled PAH treatment drug, Ventavis. Under the terms of the License Agreement, CoTherix agreed to obtain U.S. and European regulatory approvals for Fasudil to treat certain diseases, and to develop and commercialize it in those markets. CoTherix was to develop oral and inhaled formulations of Fasudil for treatment of PAH, and an oral formulation of Fasudil for treatment of stable angina (SA). It was required to use commercially reasonable efforts to develop Fasudil, and to obtain U.S. regulatory approvals for Fasudil as soon as reasonably practicable.
(Asahi I, supra,
Actelion Ltd. has, since December 2001, marketed Tracleer, an endothelin receptor antagonist and oral PAH drug that has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in the U.S.
4
Tracleer is what is known in the pharmaceutical industry as a “blockbuster” drug, generating over $1 billion in revenue annually, and Actelion has held the dominant share of the relevant market. In 2006, 98 percent of Actelion’s U.S. revenues were dependent upon Tracleer sales.
(Asahi I, supra,
At trial, Asahi presented evidence that Actelion acquired CoTherix specifically because it saw Fasudil as a significant threat to its market dominance with Tracleer and that Defendants used unlawful means to stop the development of Fasudil, thereby interfering with the License Agreement. Specifically, Asahi argued that Defendants used extortion and fraud to “painstakingly kill[]” Fasudil as a competitive product.
Actelion had been following Ventavis since 2002 and had considered acquiring CoTherix to get rights to the drug, but as late as May 29, 2006, *953 considered the company a second-rate opportunity because of Ventavis’s shortcomings. Shortly after the June 28, 2006 public announcement of the License Agreement, Martine noted Fasudil’s promise and the company began to explore the option of acquiring CoTherix. In July 2006, a director of business development for Actelion Pharmaceuticals Ltd., Carina Spaans, referenced CoTherix, Fasudil and another company in her notes, with the following comment: “Buying both companies will leave the market for Tracleer free for Actelion.” Negotiation of an acquisition of CoTherix began in August. Martine personally conducted due diligence on Fasudil in early October. Ultimately, Martine recommended returning Fasudil to Asahi, after noting “potential pricing issues if [F]asudil was also working in PAH.” “[F]rom the beginning, Martine was of the opinion that [Actelion] would not go ahead with Fasudil.” Martine’s conclusions were shared with Jean-Paul. Meanwhile, in late October, the results of CoTherix’s phase I study were promising. The plan was to move ahead with the phase II clinical study in early 2007. CoTherix had ordered supplies of ER Fasudil for phase II clinical use. On November 19, 2006, Actelion U.S. Holding Company and CoTherix signed an agreement and plan of merger, which was publicly announced the following day.
Beginning November 20, 2006, Asahi repeatedly sought assurances from CoTherix and Actelion that Fasudil development would continue after the proposed merger. These requests for assurances were forwarded to Simon and Jean-Paul. By November 23, Jean-Paul had decided, with input from Martine and Simon, that Actelion was not interested in pursuing development of Fasudil. Actelion drafted a letter to Asahi as early as October 31, stating it would not develop Fasudil, but decided not to send the letter as “part of a strategy.” Instead, Actelion “decided to let any correspondence go through [CoTherix President] Don Santel—but to state that no decision has been made.” Despite Actelion’s knowledge that failure to provide assurances might constitute material breach of the License Agreement, no assurances were provided. In mid-December, Asahi requested a videoconference with Actelion. Although Simon was aware of the prior decision and believed the videoconference “may be a bit of a waste of time,” he and Martine participated on December 20, and did not disclose that a decision had already been made. Instead, Simon told Asahi “it was a very productive meeting for Actelion to [help] make their decision to pursue [F]asudil after the completion of [the] merger. . . . Actelion does not have an intention to make any delay of [F]asudil development.” On January 3, 2007, CoTherix, after conferring with Actelion, told Asahi: “[W]e continue to honor our agreement to move [Fjasudil forward. Please note that I have no power to compel Actelion to provide you with the response you desire.”
On January 4, 2007, Simon wrote to a colleague: “[P]lease follow up with Asahi later next week .... If things go according to plan we should have *954 90%+ of shares by Monday evening. [f] Since we will issue a press release the next day, I think you should probably call [Asahi] to explain our position. Then follow up with the letter that you drafted. I double-checked with [Jean-Paul] today and he definitely agrees we should give Fasudil back to them. We should use the ‘portfolio priorities’ reason .... If they get silly and want to discuss penalties, etc., we could discuss risk-benefit ratio and the need to discuss several issues with the FDA before proceeding!” The next day, Simon told Asahi: “If and when we can be more certain that the proposed transaction will close, we will contact you again regarding Fasudil. We expect that we will know more next week. Until then, CoTherix has assured us that the Fasudil programme is proceeding as planned.” On January 9, Actelion acquired all of the stock of CoTherix and concurrently notified Asahi that it was discontinuing development of Fasudil for “business and commercial reasons.”
Attempts to negotiate a termination agreement were unsuccessful. On March 6, 2007, Asahi notified CoTherix that, by failing to confirm and commit in writing 30 days prior to the change of control that Actelion v/ould not interfere with CoTherix’s obligations, it was in material breach of the License Agreement. Recognizing that Asahi was “resigned to the fact that it is probably all over for [Fasudil] ex-Japan,” Simon suggested that Jean-Paul might need to communicate directly with Asahi’s president.
Ultimately, on March 23, 2007, Jean-Paul wrote: “As you are aware, [b]usiness executives at Actelion (on behalf of CoTherix) and Asahi have discussed the termination conditions for the [License Agreement] several times over the last few months and we have reached a point of dispute regarding the payment for product supplies. . . . [|] . . . [][] . . . [W]e have serious concerns over the long-term safety (in particular renal safety) with chronic [Fasudil] dosing. Actelion feels that this risk/benefit ratio issue is sufficiently serious for us to consider the need to inactivate or even withdraw the U.S. IND 5 and inform the Japanese authorities. [][] In addition, for public disclosure reasons, since the amount you have requested is very high, in case we would really pay it, we would be obliged to announce this payment and the reasons why we decided to discontinue the development of [Fjasudil.” Asahi viewed these as threats. An Actelion witness testified that these were tactics discussed and “employed in the hopes that it would speed up negotiations.”
On April 3, 2007, Asahi sent notice of the termination of the License Agreement. Jean-Paul later wrote to Asahi’s president: “Since Asahi is now *955 ready to receive the DSHD, Actelion personnel will be appointed, on behalf of CoTherix, to supervise the transfer .... We shall inform the FDA of our decision to stop development . . . together with the reason for this decision. ...[f]... [][] Actelion is preparing an upcoming Press Release to disclose that [FJasudil will no longer form part of the Actelion pipeline and explain the rationale for our decision . . . .”
Thereafter, on April 18, 2007, Actelion filed a clinical study report with the FDA, for the phase I study of ER Fasudil. The report concluded: “[0]verall, [F]asudil ER was well tolerated, the changes in the clinical safety assessments were not clinically significant, and all subjects completed the study.” On April 19, 2007, Actelion issued a press release stating only: “After careful review, Actelion has decided not to pursue further development with [F]asudil. Accordingly, the related agreement with [Asahi] had been terminated.”
The Litigation Below
Asahi first initiated the ICC Arbitration proceeding, against CoTherix only, claiming breach of contract. Among other damages, Asahi claimed the value of development work CoTherix failed to perform through June 2009 and development-based milestone payments. On December 15, 2009, the arbitrators awarded Asahi over $91 million. 6
Asahi filed the instant litigation on November 19, 2008, naming CoTherix and the Actelion entities. The Individual Defendants were added by Doe amendments to a first amended complaint in June 2009. The operative third amended complaint was filed on October 23, 2009. The complaint set forth eight claims: intentional interference with contract (Claim 1); interference with prospective economic advantage (Claim 2); breach of a confidentiality agreement 7 (Claim 3); in the alternative to Claims 1 and 2, breach of the License Agreement (Claim 4); conspiracy in restraint of trade pursuant to the Cartwright Act (Claim 5); false advertising pursuant to Business and Professions Code section 17500 et seq. (Claim 6); unfair competition pursuant to Business and Professions Code section 17200 et seq. (Claim 7); and breach of confidence 8 (Claim 8).
*956 Pretrial Motions
Asahi moved for summary adjudication of several of the affirmative defenses asserted by Actelion. The trial court also granted Asahi’s motion for summary adjudication of the “manager’s privilege” asserted by Actelion and by the Individual Defendants. Additionally, the court granted Asahi’s motion for summary adjudication of Actelion’s claim of limitation of damage liability under terms of the License Agreement precluding “special, exemplary, consequential or punitive damages,” finding those terms unenforceable under either Japanese or California law with respect to intentional or grossly negligent conduct.
Defendants moved to summarily adjudicate Claim 1. The motion was denied. 9
The Trial
In January 2011, the matter proceeded to jury trial against the Defendants on Claim 1 (intentional interference with the License Agreement), Claim 2 (wrongful interference with Asahi’s prospective economic advantage in the “continued development of Fasudil”), Claim 3 (breach of a confidentiality agreement between Actelion and CoTherix on a third party beneficiary theory), and Claim 8 (breach of confidence). On April 29, the jury returned a unanimous liability verdict against the Defendants, awarding $358.95 million for lost M&R (milestone and royalty) payments; $187.4 million for lost development costs; $450,000 for regulatory maintenance costs; and $75,000 for the cost of an investigator-sponsored study. The compensatory damage award on Claim 1 totaled $546,875,000. No damages were awarded on Claim 2, and only nominal damages were awarded on Claims 3 and 8. The jury also unanimously found the Defendants acted with “malice, oppression or fraud.”
In the punitive damage phase of trial, the jury awarded damages against the Individual Defendants only: Jean-Paul, $19.9 million; Martine, $8.9 million; and Simon, $1.2 million. Judgment was entered on the verdicts on Claims 1, 3, and 8 on August 18, 2011. 10
*957 Posttrial Motions
The court granted Defendants’ motion to offset the damages award by the amount Asahi recovered from CoTherix in the ICC Arbitration. The court reduced the $358.95 million in M&R damages by $1 million, and the $187.4 million damage verdict for development costs by $69.35 million. Actelion then filed a motion for new trial and/or remittitur and a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The Individual Defendants filed separate new trial and judgment notwithstanding the verdict motions that joined in the Actelion motions and also challenged the awards of punitive damages. Asahi moved for a new trial on punitive damages as to the Actelion entities.
The court conditionally granted the Defendants’ motions for new trial, limited to the issue of compensatory damages for Claim 1, on the basis that the damages were excessive because they included duplicative damages for both lost profits and development costs. The court alternatively denied the motions, conditioned on Asahi’s acceptance of a remittitur of development cost damages on Claim 1 to the amount of $18.85 million (plus prejudgment interest). The court otherwise found the amount of damages awarded for lost M&R payments to be “proper, fair, reasonable, appropriate, and supported by the weight of the evidence.” The court rejected the arguments based on alleged juror misconduct, striking juror declarations submitted by Defendants. In all other respects, the motions for new trial and judgment notwithstanding the verdict were denied, as was Asahi’s motion for new trial.
Asahi accepted the remittitur. The court consequently entered an order denying the motion for new trial. The combined effect of the earlier ordered offset and the remittitur resulted in a reduction of the compensatory damages on Claim 1 to the amount of $377,325,000. An amended final judgment reflecting the reductions and inclusive of costs was entered on November 18, 2011.
The Appeals
Defendants filed timely notices of appeal on December 2, 2011. Asahi filed its notice of cross-appeal on December 12, 2011. Actelion contends that, as a matter of law, it cannot be liable for interference with the License Agreement; that the damages awarded are inherently uncertain and speculative; and that multiple evidentiary and instructional errors mandate a new trial. The Individual Defendants join in Actelion’s argument that liability for interference with contract is precluded as a matter of law, and specifically argue it *958 was precluded as to them. They also argue that the punitive damages awarded are excessive, and that there is insufficient evidence to support imposition of punitive damages in any event. Asahi, on cross-appeal, argues that the trial court erred in remitting damages and that it is entitled to a new punitive damage trial against Actelion.
II. Discussion
A. Tortious Interference with the License Agreement
“To recover in tort for intentional interference with the performance of a contract, a plaintiff must prove: (1) a valid contract between plaintiff and another party; (2) defendant’s knowledge of the contract; (3) defendant’s intentional acts designed to induce a breach or disruption of the contractual relationship; (4) actual breach or disruption of the contractual relationship; and (5) resulting damage. [Citation.] In this way, the ‘expectation that the parties will honor the terms of the contract is protected against officious intermeddlers.’ [Citation.]”
(Applied Equipment Corp. v. Litton Saudi Arabia Ltd.
(1994)
Citing
Applied
Equipment, Actelion contends that it cannot be liable for tortious interference with the License Agreement because “[t]he tort duty not to interfere with [a] contract falls only on strangers—interlopers who have no legitimate interest in the scope or course of the contract’s performance.”
(Applied Equipment, supra,
Asahi counters that California law nevertheless recognizes that corporate owners, officers and directors may be liable for interfering with corporate contracts, and that claims of privilege or justification are defenses that must be pleaded and proved. And to prevail on such defenses, Defendants must
*959
show that they did not “use improper means.” (See
Woods v. Fox Broadcasting Sub., Inc.
(2005)
1. Jury Instructions on Wrongful Interference with the License Agreement
The jury was instructed on the elements of a cause of action for wrongful interference with contract. The court declined to give a special jury instruction, proposed by Actelion, that would have directed that the jury could not hold Actelion liable for inducing CoTherix to breach the License Agreement after the acquisition on January 9, 2007, because at that time Actelion had a direct interest in the contractual relationship between CoTherix and Asahi.
In refusing the proposed instruction, on Asahi’s objection, the trial court explained: “That’s what you’re going to argue. You want to argue that they became an affiliate, therefore, they became a party to the contract. That’s argument. And that’s argument specific as to the facts. [!]... [][] The issue of law that pertains is a party cannot be held liable for interfering with their own contract. That’s the law and that is something that I would be receptive [to] that is a neutral presentation.” Actelion’s counsel responded: “[T]he only thing that I would ask to add to that is the law also says that a party cannot be liable for interference with its own contract or a contract of one of its affiliates.” The court refused the request, stating: “[Y]ou have no case that says that.” 11
Accordingly, the jury was instructed: “A person cannot be liable for interference with that person’s own contract, if that person was a party to the contract at the time of the interference.” And the trial court instructed the jury on the justification defense: “In certain situations, a particular Defendant may be justified to interfere with or disrupt the contract between Asahi and CoTherix. In those situations, the law will not hold the particular Defendant liable for his/her/its actions even though Asahi suffered damages as a result of the particular Defendant’s interference. [(fl] It is not Asahi’s obligation in this case to prove that the particular Defendant’s conduct was unjustified. Instead, the particular Defendant has the burden of proving to you that his/her/its conduct was justified under the circumstances. [][]... [][] . . . [Y]ou must *960 decide whether a particular Defendant’s conduct was justified. If you find that a particular Defendant’s conduct was justified, then you cannot find that the particular Defendant intentionally interfered with the [License Agreement], [ft] In making this decision you must, as a general matter, balance the importance of the objective that the particular Defendant sought to achieve by the interference against the importance of Asahi’s interest with which the particular Defendant interfered. You must keep in mind both the nature of the particular Defendant’s conduct and the relationship of all the parties involved, [ft] The affirmative defense of justification does not apply if the particular Defendant used unlawful means to interfere with the [License Agreement]. ‘Unlawful means’ includes intentional misrepresentation, concealment, and extortion, [ft] . . . [ft] In evaluating whether a particular Defendant’s interference was justified, you should consider all of the circumstances, including but not limited to the following factors: [ft] 1. The nature of the particular Defendant’s conduct; [ft] 2. The particular Defendant’s motive; ['ll] 3. The interests of Asahi with which the particular Defendant’s conduct interfered; [ft] 4. The interests sought to be advanced by the particular Defendant; [ft] 5. The social interests in protecting the freedom of action of the particular Defendant and the contractual interests of Asahi; [ft] 6. The proximity or remoteness of the particular Defendant’s conduct to the interference; and [ft] 7. The relations among Asahi, CoTherix, and the particular Defendant.” (Italics added.)
Thus, the jury was instmcted that a defendant was not liable for intentional interference with contract if that defendant’s conduct was justified, but that “[t]he affirmative defense of justification does not apply if the particular Defendant used unlawful means to interfere with the [License Agreement] .... ‘Unlawful means’ includes intentional misrepresentation, concealment, and extortion.” 12 Having been so instructed, the jury nonetheless found that all Defendants intentionally interfered with the License Agreement.
2. Standard of Review
We independently review Defendants’ legal challenge to the scope of potential liability for the tort of intentional interference with contract.
(Ghirardo v. Antonioli
(1994)
3. Analysis
Defendants contend that, after January 9, 2007, they could not be liable for interfering with the License Agreement because “Actelion had a
*961
‘legitimate . . . economic interest in the contractual relationship.’ ” Similar language is found in
Applied Equipment, supra,
Defendants do not contend that they were parties to the License Agreement after January 9, 2007. In fact, Actelion admitted in its trial court pleadings that “no contract exist[ed]” between it and Asahi and that Actelion “did not assume the contract between [Asahi] and CoTherix.” Instead, Actelion contends that Applied Equipment should be read broadly so as to limit liability for intentional interference to complete “strangers” to the contract, not simply nonparties to the contract. Thus, it contends that the fact that there was never any contract between it and Asahi, and that it did not assume the contract between CoTherix and Asahi, is not determinative. It concedes that, after the acquisition, it was merely a parent who “directed its wholly-owned subsidiary [CoTherix] to stop performing a contract.” However, it contends that the only *962 remedy for such an act is breach of contract—a remedy which Asahi has been already afforded against CoTherix in the ICC Arbitration. 13
Defendants urge this court to take the
Applied Equipment
court’s language regarding “outsiders who have no legitimate social or economic interest in the contractual relationship” out of context and read it to mean a noncontracting party who also has no interest in the contract.
(Applied Equipment, supra,
In
Woods, supra,
The
Woods
court noted that
Applied Equipment
involved a party to the contract and “the court’s analysis never considered the immunity of someone who was not a party to the contract.”
(Woods, supra,
The
Woods
court also explained, in a footnote, that although the defendant was not immune, it could assert a privilege against liability for interference with contract. It explained: “The existence of that privilege depends on whether the defendant used improper means and acted to protect the best interests of his own company. [Citation.] It is a qualified privilege that turns on the defendant’s state of mind, the circumstances of the case, and the defendant’s immediate purpose when inducing a breach of contract. [Citation.]”
(Woods, supra,
We agree with the
Woods
court that “[a] stranger,” as used in
Applied Equipment,
means one who is not a party to the contract or an agent of a
*964
party to the contract.
(Woods, supra,
Defendants misplace their reliance on
Mintz, supra,
Mintz
is distinguishable from this case in that the party charged with interference was specifically authorized to act as agent of a party to the contract.
(Mintz, supra,
Nor are we persuaded by Defendants’ reliance on
Kasparian
v.
County of Los Angeles
(1995)
We hold that the jury was properly instructed on the elements of wrongful interference with contract and properly charged with considering whether Defendants “used unlawful means to interfere with the [License Agreement].” So instructed, the jury found that each of the Defendants intentionally interfered with the License Agreement. The trial court did not err in refusing Defendants’ proposed special jury instruction or in denying Defendants’ motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. 15
*966 4. Liability of the Individual Defendants
The Individual Defendants argue that, even if Actelion is liable for tortious interference with contract, the judgment against them must nonetheless be reversed. They contend: “[Tjhere is no dispute that the [Individual [Defendants at all times were acting within the scope of their employment for the benefit of their employer. They are not alleged to have engaged in any ultra vires conduct .that interfered with Asahi’s contract with CoTherix. Accordingly, regardless of whether the intentional-interference judgment against Actelion is sustainable, the three [I]ndividual [Defendants cannot be personally liable ... for an economic tort.” (Italics omitted.)
It is true that “corporate directors cannot be held vicariously liable for the corporation’s torts
in which they do not participate. . . .
‘[A]n officer or director will not be liable for torts in which he does not personally participate, of which he has no knowledge, or to which he has not consented. . . . While the corporation itself may be liable for such acts, the individual officer or director will be immune unless he authorizes, directs, or in some meaningful sense actively participates in the wrongful conduct.’ [Citation.]”
(Frances T. v. Village Green Owners Assn.
(1986)
The Individual Defendants also appear to rely on the following statement from
Self-Insurers’ Security Fund v. ESIS, Inc.
(1988)
Additionally, the Individual Defendants rely on cases involving the so-called manager’s privilege. “[The manager’s] privilege has been described by one court this way: ‘The privilege to induce an otherwise apparently tortious breach of contract is extended by law to further certain social interests deemed of sufficient importance to merit protection from liability. Thus, a manager or agent may,
with impersonal or disinterested motive,
properly endeavor to protect the interests of his principal by counseling the breach of a contract with a third party which he reasonably believes to be harmful to his employer’s best interests.’ [Citations.]”
(Aalgaard v. Merchants Nat. Bank, Inc.
(1990)
These cases do not assist the Individual Defendants because Actelion admitted that “no contract exist[ed]” between it and Asahi and that Actelion “did not assume the contract between [Asahi] and CoTherix.” The trial court properly granted Asahi’s motion for summary adjudication, concluding that the manager’s privilege did not apply to the Individual Defendants because none were managers
of CoTherix
or authorized to act on
CoTherix’s
behalf, and none of the Actelion entities are parties to the License Agreement. The Individual Defendants assert that, in granting summary adjudication on the manager’s privilege defense, the trial court focused on the wrong question. They contend that, pursuant to their broad reading of
Applied Equipment,
“for purposes of liability for Actelion’s post-acquisition termination of CoTherix’s development of [F]asudil, the question is whether the individual defendants were managers of Actelion, not whether they were managers of CoTherix.” But we have already rejected that broad reading of
Applied Equipment.
And, under the manager’s privilege, a company’s manager may not be liable to a third party for inducing
his or her
company to breach
its
contract with the third party.
(Klein v. Oakland Raiders, Ltd.
(1989)
B. Instructional and Evidentiary Issues *
C. Compensatory Damages
The jury was instructed that to recover for lost M&R payments which Asahi claimed it would have received under the License Agreement (lost profits), “Asahi must prove it is reasonably certain it would have earned lost [M&R payments] but for the conduct of [Defendants].” The jury awarded Asahi $358.95 million in lost M&R payments. The jury also awarded Asahi $187.4 million in development costs and $75,000 in investigator-sponsored study costs that CoTherix would have incurred for Asahi’s benefit to bring Fasudil to market if it had continued to perform under the contract. Asahi accepted the trial court’s remittitur that reduced the development costs award to $18.85 million. 25
Actelion insists that damages are uncertain and speculative, and that the evidence does not support any damage award. Asahi challenges the remittitur on its cross-appeal. We find that the record supports both the jury’s verdicts and the trial court’s order, and we affirm the compensatory damages awards in their entirety.
1. Legal Standards
“ ‘[D]amages for the loss of prospective profits are recoverable where the evidence makes reasonably certain their occurrence and extent.’
{Grupe v. Glick
(1945)
In
Sargon,
the Supreme Court added a “cautionary note. The lost profit inquiry is always speculative to some degree. Inevitably, there will always be an element of uncertainty. Courts must not be too quick to exclude expert evidence as speculative merely because the expert cannot say with absolute certainty what the profits would have been. Courts must not eviscerate the possibility of recovering lost profits by too broadly defining what is too speculative. A reasonable certainty only is required, not absolute certainty.”
(Sargon, supra,
We review a lost profits award for substantial evidence.
(Greenwich S.F., LLC v. Wong
(2010)
2. Evidence of Lost Profits
Actelion launches two principal lines of attack on the lost profits award: first, it was speculative to assume that oral Fasudil ever would have obtained FDA and EMEA (European Medicines Agency) approval, much less on the timeline projected by CoTherix, and second, it argues it was speculative to determine the price and market share Fasudil would have commanded had it obtained regulatory approval and the timeline on which it would have achieved those results. We address these arguments in turn.
a. FDA and EMEA Approval
As a preliminary note, we observe that the trial evidence on whether oral Fasudil would have obtained FDA and EMEA approval was relevant to two distinct issues at trial. The first was whether it was commercially reasonable *970 for CoTherix or Actelion to discontinue development of Fasudil in January 2007. The second was whether Asahi could establish lost profits with reasonable certainty. As to the first issue, the only relevant evidence was facts known to Actelion as of January 2007, when it decided to discontinue development of Fasudil; as to the second, the relevant evidence includes all facts known at the time of trial that might prove lost profits damages with reasonable certainty to the jury. We consider here the broader scope of relevant evidence that would support a verdict.
By the time of trial, several reports of scientific studies were available to the jury. These reports included a substantial amount of preclinical data (basic science and animal studies) on three formulations of Fasudil (intravenous Fasudil, ER Fasudil, and immediate release oral Fasudil or IR Fasudil); a clinical study of intravenous Fasudil in Japan; phase I, phase Ha, phase lib and long-term open-label clinical (human) studies of IR Fasudil; phase I clinical studies of ER Fasudil; and data on two patient populations who had used intravenous Fasudil (15 years of use in Japan to treat subarachnoid hemorrhage patients; approximately one year of off-label use in China to treat 200 PAH patients).
Asahi presented the testimony of several experts who testified that data from the aforementioned studies established to a reasonable certainty that ER Fasudil would have been effective in treating both SA and PAH, would have had an acceptable safety profile, and consequently would have been approved by the FDA and EMEA on CoTherix’s projected timeline. 26 The witnesses included experts on SA (Robert Weiss, M.D.), PAH (Zhi-Cheng Jing M.D. & R. James White, M.D.), Rho-kinase (James K. Liao, M.D.), nephrotoxicity (Stuart Linas, M.D.), drug toxicity (Laura Plunkett, Ph.D.), and the FDA and EMEA approval processes (Jing, White, Plunkett, & Michael Tansey, M.D.).
The medical experts testified that Fasudil had been shown to have physical effects that were known to correlate with increased exercise time, an “endpoint” required by the FDA before the drug could be approved to treat SA or PAH. Scientific studies of the effects of Fasudil on lung circulation were positive, and treating physicians and leading physicians in the treatment of PAH had expressed enthusiasm about the drug’s potential for cardiovascular treatment. The toxicity shown in certain preclinical studies were not a concern because those studies were designed to identify toxicity at high *971 doses. Increases in creatinine levels shown in the IR Fasudil studies were not clinically significant except at high doses. Increases in creatinine levels in ER Fasudil studies were not clinically significant and were reversible. Indeed, CoTherix’s phase I study of ER Fasudil showed that therapeutically effective doses of Fasudil were well tolerated in healthy volunteers, the China experience showed intravenous Fasudil could successfully treat PAH with no undue side effects, and the long experience of short-term intravenous Fasudil use (up to two weeks) by subarachnoid hemorrhage patients in Japan provided a robust safety record. Particularly because of the severe effects of SA and PAH and the limited efficacy of the SA and PAH dmgs that had been approved, the safety concerns were not a likely obstacle to FDA approval and there were no other regulatory “show-stoppers.” Other SA and PAH drugs on the market had adverse safety profiles. Moreover, CoTherix’s projected time line for regulatory approval was reasonable because there were no significant obstacles to proceeding to a phase IH study, CoTherix had a track record in obtaining FDA approval for Ventavis in record time, and the timeline had been developed by two experienced pharmaceutical companies (CoTherix and Asahi).
On the question of regulatory approval, Actelion does not cite contrary testimony by independent experts, but rather relies on the acknowledgement by Asahi’s witnesses that FDA approval is unpredictable until a phase III study is done, and the negative opinions by Actelion personnel. It argues that CoTherix had nothing more than a “hope” of regulatory approval. Actelion emphasizes that no phase HI trial of ER Fasudil to treat SA or PAH had ever been conducted. It draws attention to numerous statements by CoTherix personnel or Asahi experts that a phase III study is necessary to prove efficacy and safety and there is no guarantee of FDA approval absent such a study. However, the standard of proof for lost profit damages is
reasonable
certainty, not absolute certainty.
(Sargon, supra,
There is no rule prohibiting recovery of lost profits damages simply because regulatory approval is a prerequisite to selling a product.
(SCEcorp
v.
Superior Court
(1992)
Actelion argues that Asahi’s inability to find a successor licensee for Fasudil demonstrates substantial uncertainty about the medical or commercial viability of the drug. Asahi experts, however, provided credible alternative explanations for that outcome: Actelion’s abandonment of the drug had a chilling effect on competitors because it implied that Actelion had undisclosed knowledge of flaws in the drug, and time lost in obtaining a new licensee reduced the value of the drug, which depended on commercial exploitation during the life of the underlying patents and a unique window of opportunity in 2006 and 2007.
It is for the jury to determine the probabilities as to whether damages are reasonably certain to occur in any particular case.
(Garcia v. Duro Dyne Corp.
(2007)
b. Price, Market Share, and the CoTherix Timeline
Having determined there was sufficient evidence of the
fact
of lost profit damages, we turn to the reliability of Asahi’s evidence regarding the projected price and market share of Fasudil, which set the
amount
of damages. “ ‘Where the
fact
of damages is certain, the amount of damages need not be calculated with absolute certainty. [Citations.] The law requires only that some reasonable basis of computation of damages be used, and the
*973
damages may be computed even if the result reached is an approximation. [Citation.] This is especially true where ... it is the wrongful acts of the defendant that have created the difficulty in proving the amount of loss of profits [citation] or where it is the wrongful acts of the defendant that have caused the other party to not realize a profit to which that party is entitled.’ [Citation.]’ ”
(Sargon, supra,
55 Cal.4th at pp. 774—775; see
Kids’ Universe
v.
In2Labs
(2002)
In September 2006, CoTherix prepared revenue projections for Fasudil through 2019 for the purpose of negotiating its sale price with Actelion. Actelion dismisses these projections as “guesswork” without foundation and contends that Rausser’s lost profits calculations are “fatally defective because Rausser essentially adopted rosy projections prepared by CoTherix employees who were not proven to be qualified to create reliable forecasts.” But the evidence presented showed that the projections were based in part on CoTherix’s findings during its internal due diligence process, which included consultation with experts, before it signed the License Agreement with Asahi, and on market surveys that were conducted before Actelion expressed interest in buying CoTherix. 28 The September 2006 projections estimated product launch dates (which were consistent with the projected regulatory approval timeline), an initial price for ER Fasudil, annual price increases, numbers of patients in target populations for both conditions with annual increases, initial market penetration into those populations with annual increases, and resulting net revenues. 29 On at least one measure (size of the targeted SA population), *974 the projections were more conservative than CoTherix’s commercial assessment of Fasudil before it entered into the License Agreement. Rausser testified that he reviewed academic literature on market dynamics, industry data on drug sales, and the discovery record of the instant action, and confirmed that each element of the CoTherix projections was reasonable if not too conservative. Asahi’s medical experts also generally corroborated the market penetration and price projections.
Actelion seeks to compare the CoTherix projections to those found to be too speculative in
Parlour Enterprises, Inc. v. Kirin Group, Inc.
(2007)
Actelion argues the “range” of lost profit estimates provided by Rausser itself indicates that the estimates were unreasonably speculative. However, Rausser provided two distinct estimates rather than a range and he specified the different assumptions on which they were based, described the facts he relied on to make the different assumptions, and explained precisely how the two figures were calculated. In these circumstances, the mere spread of the two numbers does not render his opinion speculative.
Actelion contends that Rausser’s projected price for Fasudil of $5,000 per patient per year is “utterly fanciful.” Actelion contends the price projection was unrealistic because Rausser conceded that Fasudil would sell for the same price in the SA and PAH markets and that competing SA drugs sell for as little as pennies a day. However, the specific SA population targeted by *975 CoTherix consisted of patients who had not responded to existing therapies or had other complications, so the price of other SA drugs would not necessarily keep Fasudil out of this particular niche of the SA market. Actelion does not contest the evidence that competing PAH drugs were selling for far more than $5,000 per patient per year, which supports the view that CoTherix could command such a price in the PAH market, where the penetration level was projected to be about quadruple that of the targeted SA market. Actelion also ignores the fact that its own PAH product, Tracleer, commanded a price almost seven times as high as the projected price of Fasudil (approximately $34,000/year in 2006 and over $43,000 in 2008).
Actelion characterizes this case as a “new business” case and argues there is insufficient evidence of prior performance by CoTherix selling Fasudil or by similar businesses selling a similar product to support the lost profit damages. But this case does not fit neatly into the established business versus new business paradigm. Unlike the company at issue in
Sargon,
CoTherix had a track record of obtaining FDA approval for and marketing a PAH drug (Ventavis) and had a sales and marketing team already in place. (Cf.
Sargon, supra,
55 Cal.4th at pp. 778-780.) Rausser verified the CoTherix projections by reviewing the pharmaceutical market specifically for SA and PAH drugs. Actelion’s suggestion that the only adequate comparison would be to a company already selling Fasudil is an overreach: the case law requires reasonable certainty, not absolute certainty, and once the occurrence of lost profits is established a plaintiff has greater leeway in establishing the extent of lost profits, particularly if the defendant was shown to have prevented the relevant data from being collected through its wrongful behavior. (See
Sargon, supra,
Actelion also attacks the reliability of Rausser’s expert opinion generally, including reference to instances in which a federal trial court has found his testimony flawed or unpersuasive.
30
Our concern, however, is with the testimony given by Rausser in this case. Actelion does not challenge Rausser’s extensive qualifications as an expert in economics. As in
Sargon,
the trial court “presided over a lengthy evidentiary hearing and provided a detailed ruling.”
(Sargon, supra,
.
3., 4. *
D„ E.*
III. Disposition
The judgments are affirmed. Asahi shall recover its costs on appeal.
Jones, P. J., and Needham, J., concurred.
Petitions for a rehearing were denied January 16, 2014, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. The petition of appellants Jean-Paul Clozel, Martine Clozel and Simon Buckingham for review by the Supreme Court was denied March 12, 2014, S216123.
Notes
These executives are Jean-Paul Clozel (cofounder and chief executive officer), Martine Clozel (cofounder and chief scientific officer), and Simon Buckingham (worldwide director of corporate and business development). For clarity and consistency with their briefing on appeal, these parties are referenced by first name or collectively as the Individual Defendants.
In
Asahi Kasei Pharma Corp. v. CoTherix, Inc.
(2012)
Defendants do not directly argue that the jury’s determination of tortious interference is unsupported by substantial evidence. We would in any event agree with Asahi that such an argument would be forfeited due to Actelion’s failure to present a full and fair summary of the evidence supporting the judgment.
(Schmidlin v. City of Palo Alto
(2007)
Marline discovered bosentan (Tracleer) in 1990, while employed by the pharmaceutical company Hoffman-LaRoche.
An IND is an “Investigational New Drug Application” submitted to the FDA to obtain approval for human clinical testing. (21 C.F.R. § 312.1 et seq. (2013).) An IND for Fasudil had been approved by the FDA.
CoTherix paid the award in full shortly thereafter.
In connection with the acquisition of CoTherix, Actelion and CoTherix entered into an agreement to keep confidential the proprietary information of CoTherix and of any third party who provided the information to CoTherix under a confidentiality agreement.
Asahi alleged that Defendants obtained confidential/proprietary information about Fasudil during their CoTherix due diligence, and misused this information by disparaging Fasudil and extorting Asahi.
The trial court granted summary adjudication as to Claim 2, limiting its scope to exclude any claims for prospective economic relationships with third parties. Claims 5 and 7 were disposed of by summary adjudication, and Claim 6 was voluntarily dismissed. Claim 4, pled in the alternative to Claims 1 and 2, apparently was not pursued at trial. No claims against CoTherix remained by the time the case went to trial.
The court did not enter judgment on the claims on which no damages were awarded— Claim 2 and the punitive damage claim against Actelion. (See
Costerisan
v.
Melendy
(1967) 255
*957
Cal.App.2d 57, 59-61 [
After the verdict, Defendants continued to insist, by motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, that they were not liable as a matter of law for any interference occurring after the acquisition. During argument on the motions, Actelion’s trial counsel acknowledged: “I’m not saying we have a case in California that’s directly on point. What I’m saying is that the totality of [the case law] create[s] a premise, if you will, that this kind of liability can’t exist. . . . Applied Equipment cautions against expanding this tort too much.” The trial court denied the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.
The jury was also instructed on intentional misrepresentation, concealment, and extortion.
Defendants also rely on this court’s opinion in
Asahi I, supra,
The Individual Defendants point us to
PM Group, Inc. v. Stewart
(2007)
Given our resolution of Actelion’s postacquisition argument, we need not consider Actelion’s additional argument that, as a matter of law, it cannot be liable for interfering with the License Agreement before the acquisition closed. Actelion argues: “Asahi does not explain how Actelion’s alleged pre-[acquisition decision could amount to intentional interference with the [License] Agreement but for Actelion’s actual post-[a]cquisition termination of CoTherix’s development of [F]asudil, which, as just shown, cannot support liability. . . . [S]uch a decision could not cause any harm unless and until it was carried out.” (Boldface & italics omitted.)
See footnote, ante, page 945.
The jury award of $450,000 in IND/regulatory maintenance costs is not separately challenged here.
Defendants moved in limine to exclude all opinion that Fasudil would achieve necessary regulatory approvals. The trial court considered and denied the motions except as to Rausser.
Actelion argues Asahi’s experts were not qualified to testify regarding regulatory approval by the EMEA. Asahi’s counsel, however, specifically elicited testimony by these experts regarding the bases for their opinions on EMEA approval, and Actelion raised no objection. The argument is forfeited. (See
Ward v. Taggart
(1959)
At least one federal trial court, applying California law, has found lost profits were recoverable in a pharmaceutical case despite the noncertainty of EDA approval.
(Onyx Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Bayer Corp.
(N.D.Cal., May 10, 2011, No. C 09-2145 MHP)
We do not agree with Asahi’s argument on appeal, or the testimony of Asahi’s economic expert Rausser at trial, that substantial evidence shows Actelion adopted or relied on CoTherix’s September 2006 projections while negotiating its acquisition of the company. Although Actelion sent the CoTherix projections to its advisers, Lehman Brothers, and reviewed them at its board meeting on the proposed acquisition, Lehman Brothers disclaimed any independent verification of the figures and the board presentation itself demonstrates that, in contrast to CoTherix’s projections, Actelion projected zero revenue from Fasudil as a result of the acquisition. However, there was testimony that the 70 percent premium Actelion paid for CoTherix could be explained by the value of keeping Fasudil off the market, particularly in light of negative information about Ventavis that was disclosed during Actelion’s due diligence process.
CoTherix projected a price of $5,000 per patient per year for both SA and PAH in 2006 with 5 percent annual price increases; a targeted SA population (refractory SA patients) of 929,000 in 2011, rising to 986,000 in 2017; market penetration in this SA population of 2 percent in 2011, rising fairly steadily to 8 percent in 2015 and holding at 8 percent through 2017; a PAH population of 24,000 patients in 2011, rising to 32,000 in 2017; and PAH market *974 penetration of 4 percent in 2012, rising to 30 percent in 2017. These projections, which were the middle case of three projected scenarios, resulted in net revenue in the SA market of $86 million in 2011, rising to $695 million by 2017, and net revenue in the PAH market of $5 million in 2012 that rises to $78 million by 2017.
Asahi responds with citation to federal trial court cases reaching contrary conclusions.
See footnote, ante, page 945.
