IN RE ACTOS END-PAYOR ANTITRUST LITIGATION
Docket No. 15-3364
United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit
February 8, 2017
AUGUST TERM 2016 (ARGUED: SEPTEMBER 16, 2016)
CROSBY TUGS, LLC, INTERNATIONAL UNION OF OPERATING ENGINEERS LOCAL 132 HEALTH AND WELFARE FUND, PAINTERS DISTRICT COUNCIL NO. 30 HEALTH AND WELFARE FUND, INDIVIDUALLY AND ON BEHALF OF ALL OTHERS SIMILARLY SITUATED, NECA-IBEW WELFARE TRUST FUND, INDIVIDUALLY AND ON BEHALF OF ALL OTHERS SIMILARLY SITUATED, CITY OF PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND INDIVIDUALLY AND ON BEHALF OF ALL OTHERS SIMILARLY SITUATED, MINNESOTA AND NORTH DAKOTA BRICKLAYERS AND ALLIED CRAFTWORKERS HEALTH FUND, ON BEHALF OF THEMSELVES AND ALL OTHERS SIMILARLY SITUATED, NEW ENGLAND ELECTRICAL WORKERS BENEFIT FUND, INDIVIDUALLY AND ON BEHALF OF ALL OTHERS SIMILARLY SITUATED, MAN-U SERVICE CONTRACT TRUST FUND, ON BEHALF OF THEMSELVES AND ALL OTHERS SIMILARLY SITUATED, Consolidated Plaintiffs-Appellants,
PLUMBERS & PIPEFITTERS LOCAL 178 HEALTH & WELFARE TRUST FUND, FRATERNAL ORDER OF POLICE, FORT LAUDERDALE LODGE 31, INSURANCE TRUST FUND, A.F. OF L. A.G.C. BUILDING TRADES WELFARE PLAN, INDIVIDUALLY AND ON BEHALF OF ALL OTHERS SIMILARLY SITUATED, GREATER METROPOLITAN HOTEL EMPLOYERS-EMPLOYEES HEALTH AND WELFARE FUND, ON BEHALF OF THEMSELVES AND ALL OTHER SIMILARLY SITUATED, LOCAL 17 HOSPITALITY BENEFIT FUND, ON BEHALF OF ITSELF AND ALL OTHERS SIMILARLY SITUATED, DENNIS KREISH, ON BEHALF OF HIMSELF AND ALL OTHERS SIMILARLY SITUATED, TEAMSTERS UNION LOCAL 115 HEALTH & WELFARE FUND, ON BEHALF OF THEMSELVES AND ALL OTHERS SIMILARLY SITUATED,
-v.-
TAKEDA AMERICA HOLDINGS, INC., TAKEDA PHARMACEUTICALS, U.S.A., INC., TAKEDA DEVELOPMENT CENTER AMERICAS, INC., TAKEDA PHARMACEUTICALS COMPANY LIMITED, Defendants-Appellees,
RANBAXY LABORATORIES, LTD., MYLAN, INC., MYLAN PHARMACEUTICALS INC., ACTAVIS PLC, F/K/A ACTAVIS, INC., WATSON LABORATORIES, INC., RANBAXY, INC., RANBAXY PHARMACEUTICALS, INC., TEVA PHARMACEUTICALS INDUSTRIES, LTD., TEVA PHARMACEUTICALS USA, INC., Defendants.
Before: JACOBS and LIVINGSTON, Circuit Judges, and RAKOFF, District Judge.1
Plaintiffs-appellants allege that defendants-appellees delayed competitors from marketing generic versions of a drug by falsely describing two patents to the Food and Drug Administration, thereby causing plaintiffs to pay monopoly prices for the drug in violation of state-law analogs of the Sherman Act. The district court (Abrams, J.) dismissed the complaint for failure to plausibly allege that the false descriptions caused the delay. The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, and REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
STEVE D. SHADOWEN (Jayne A. Goldstein, Pоmerantz LLP, Weston, FL; Kenneth A. Wexler, Wexler Wallace LLP, Chicago, IL, on the brief), Hilliard & Shadowen LLP, Austin, TX, for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
ROHIT K. SINGLA (Blanca F. Young, Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP, San Francisco, CA; Jeffrey I. Weinberger, Adam R. Lawton, Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP, Los Angeles, CA, on the brief), Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP, San Francisco, CA, for Defendants-Appellees.
Thomas M. Sobol, Davis S. Nalven, Gregory T. Arnold, Kristen A. Johnson, Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro LLP, Cambridge, MA; Linda P. Nussbaum, Bradley J. Demuth, Nussbaum Law Group, P.C., New York, NY, for amicus curiae Direct Purchasers in support of no party.
RAKOFF, District Judge:
Plaintiffs allege that the defendants-appellees (collectively “Takeda“) prevented competitors from timely marketing a generic version of Takeda‘s diabetes drug ACTOS by falsely describing two patents to the Food and Drug Administration. Plaintiffs claim that these false patent descriptions channeled Takeda‘s competitors into a generic drug approval process that granted the first-filing applicants a 180-day exclusivity period, which in turn acted as a 180-day “bottleneck” to all later-filing applicants. Of the ten generic applicants, nine took that route. However, one generic manufacturer, Teva Pharmaceutical Industries, Ltd. and Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, Inc. (collectively “Teva“), sought approval via another regulatory mechanism, but was thwarted when the FDA announced that all generic manufacturers would be required to take the bottlenecked route. The FDA‘s announcement was expressly based on Takeda‘s representаtions that it had correctly described its patents. Thereafter, Takeda settled pending patent infringement suits with the three first-filing generic manufacturers and Teva on terms that kept them out of the market until August 2012 (though Teva, unlike the three first-filing generics, could only enter the market as an authorized distributor at that time), and with the other six later-filing generic manufacturers on terms that kept them out of the market for another 180 days after that, i.e., until at least February 2013.
Plaintiffs and the class they seek to represent are drug purchasers who allege that they were wrongfully obliged to pay monopoly prices for ACTOS from January 2011, when Takeda‘s patent on the active ingredient in ACTOS expired, to at least February 2013, when the mass of generic market entry occurred.
The district court dismissed plaintiffs’ antitrust claims for failing to plausibly allege that
To the extent plaintiffs’ theory posits a delay in the marketing оf generic alternatives to ACTOS by all the generic applicants other than Teva, we affirm, because plaintiffs’ theory presupposes that these applicants were aware of Takeda‘s allegedly false patent descriptions when they filed their applications, which is not supported by well-pleaded allegations. However, because plaintiffs’ theory as to Teva does not require any knowledge of the false patent descriptions, we reach other issues as to Teva and find that plaintiffs plausibly alleged that Takeda delayed Teva‘s market entry. We therefore vacate the judgment of the district court to that limited extent.
Discussion
Although the violations of which plaintiffs ultimately complain are antitrust violations, they occur in the context of the pharmaceutical regulatory scheme governed by the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, as amended by the Drug Price Competition and Patent Term Restoration Act of 1984, Pub. L. No. 98-417, 98 Stat. 1585 (the “Hatch-Waxman Act“), and various rules promulgated thereunder. We focus in this appeal on two complementary aspects of that regulatory scheme: an initial applicant‘s duty to inform the FDA of patents covering a proposed new drug, and a subsequent applicant‘s duty to assure the FDA that a proposed generic version of the drug will not infringe those patents.
The FDA publishes the brand applicants’ patent submissions, including the patent descriptions, in a tome titled Approved Drug Products with Therapeutic Equivalence Evaluation, commonly known as the “Orange Book.” See Caraco Pharm. Labs., Ltd. v. Novo Nordisk A/S, 132 S. Ct. 1670, 1676 (2012);
After a new drug has been approved, an applicant seeking to market a generic version may file an Abbreviated New Drug Application (“ANDA“). See
One option is to certify that each of the brand‘s patents “is invalid or will not be infringed by the manufacture, use, or sale of the new drug for which the application is submitted.”
A second option is available when a brand‘s patent covers a method of using a drug. In that circumstance, an applicant seeking to market a generic version of the drug for a non-patented use сan submit a “Section viii statement” that “carves out” any patented uses from its proposed label.
In the instant case, three patents are principally at issue. In the 1980s, Takeda obtained U.S. Patent No. 4,687,777 (the “‘777 patent“), which claims the invention of pioglitazone hydrochloride (commonly known simply as pioglitazone), the active ingredient in ACTOS. Plaintiffs do not allege any invalidity connected to the filing of the ‘777 patent. Its relevance here is simply that its expiration date of January 17, 2011 marks the earliest point at which generic forms of ACTOS could have been marketed with appropriate label carve-outs or certifications.
The alleged misconduct involves two other patents related to ACTOS: U.S. Patent Nos. 5,965,584 (the “‘584 patеnt“) and 6,329,404 (the “‘404 patent“), both of which expired on June 19, 2016. These patents claim pharmaceutical compositions consisting of pioglitazone with a biguanide (the ‘584 patent) and with an insulin secretion enhancer (the ‘404 patent); and both also claim methods of using ACTOS. Takeda also has eight other patents that cover only methods of using ACTOS.
On January 15, 1999, Takeda submitted its NDA for ACTOS to the FDA, which approved the application on July 15, 1999. In connection with the ACTOS NDA, Takeda submitted the ‘777 patent for listing in the Orange Book as a drug substance patent. Subsequently, however, Takeda represented to the FDA (on November 5, 1999 and January 3, 2002, respectively) that both the ‘584 and ‘404 patents were drug рroduct, as well as method-of-use, patents relating to ACTOS. Plaintiffs allege that Takeda‘s descriptions of the ‘584 and ‘404 patents as drug product patents were false, because neither one “claims” ACTOS (i.e., pioglitazone) by itself; they only claim combinations of ACTOS and other drugs, as well as
On July 15, 2003, Actavis plc f/k/a Watson Laboratories, Inc. (“Actavis“), Mylan Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (“Mylan“), and Ranbaxy Laboratories, Ltd. (“Ranbaxy“) bеcame the first manufacturers to file ACTOS ANDAs. These first-filers all submitted Paragraph IV certifications as to the drug product claims of the ‘584 and ‘404 patents, and Section viii statements as to Takeda‘s assorted method-of-use claims. Because they all filed their ANDAs on the same day, the FDA found that they were entitled to share the 180-day exclusivity period. Seven other generic manufacturers ultimately also filed ANDAs. Six of these generics, like the first-filers, made Paragraph IV certifications as to the ‘584 and ‘404 patents.
Teva, however, took a different course. On or around July 14, 2004, Teva filed an ANDA that made only Section viii statements as to the ‘584 and ‘404 patents. According to plaintiffs, this was bеcause Teva believed that Takeda had falsely described these patents as drug product patents.
The FDA tentatively approved the ANDAs filed by Mylan and Actavis in November 2004 and December 2005, respectively.3 In 2006, the FDA also tentatively approved Teva‘s ANDA.4
On October 17, 2003, Takeda filed suit against Mylan, Ranbaxy, and Actavis, alleging that their generic ACTOS products would infringe the drug product claims of the ‘584 and ‘404 patents, as well as induce infringement of the method-of-use claims of those patents and Takeda‘s other method-of-use patents. Takeda filed similar infringement suits against the six other generics whose later-filed ANDAs also made Paragraph IV certifications as to the ‘584 and ‘404 patents. In March 2010, Takeda settled its infringement suits with the first-filers under terms that allowed them to begin marketing generic ACTOS on August 17, 2012. Takeda settled its lawsuits with the six other generics under terms that allowed them to begin marketing generic ACTOS 180 days later, in February 2013.
In May 2009, Takeda also filed an infringement suit against Teva in the Southern District of New York.5 While the suit was pending, Sandoz, Inc. (“Sandoz“), one of the six later-filing generics that relied on Paragraph IV certifications, filed a “citizen petition”6 with the FDA in August 2009, arguing that a generic application for ACTOS without a Paragraph IV certification as to the ‘584 and ‘404 patents—i.e., Teva‘s Section viii application—should not be approved. See Sandoz Citizen Pet., Dkt. No. FDA-2009-P-0411-0001 (Aug. 25, 2009). In connection with
After the FDA granted the Sandoz citizen petition, Teva moved to amend its answer in the Takeda infringement litigation to assert a counterclaim challenging Takeda‘s patent descriptions. Before the court in the Southern District of New York could rule on that motion, however, Takeda and Teva settled under terms that allowed Teva to distribute Takeda-manufactured ACTOS product beginning in August 2012, and otherwise enter the market 180 days later. This was considerably later than Teva could have begun marketing the drug if its tentatively approved ANDA had not been derailed by the FDA‘s decision on the citizen petition based on Takeda‘s representations аbout the nature and scope of its ‘584 and ‘404 patents.
Plaintiffs timely commenced this lawsuit on December 31, 2013. On August 22, 2014, plaintiffs filed a third amended complaint (the operative complaint here) alleging, inter alia, that Takeda falsely described the ‘584 and ‘404 patents to the FDA as claiming the ACTOS drug product, which ultimately delayed Takeda‘s competitors from selling generic ACTOS until after the expiration of the ‘777 patent and thereby caused plaintiffs to pay monopoly prices after January 2011. Specifically, because no generic entry took place until August 2012, and mass
Claims 1 and 2—the only claims at issue on this appeal—allege monopolization and attempted monopolization of the market for ACTOS under various state antitrust laws, to wit, state-law analogs to Section 2 of the Sherman Act, which imposes liability on “[e]very person who shall monopolize[] or attempt to monopolize . . . any part of the trade or commerce among the several States.”7 See
As noted, the district court dismissed the complaint for failing to adequately plead causation with respect to the alleged delay. The Court of Appeals reviews a district court‘s grant of a motion to dismiss de novo. Stratte-McClure v. Morgan Stanley, 776 F.3d 94, 99–100 (2d Cir. 2015). “To survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to ‘state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.‘” Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009) (quoting Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 570 (2007)). “A claim has facial plausibility when the plaintiff pleads factual content that allows the court to draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.” Id.
“Causation in fact is, of course, a necessаry element of any claim for relief . . . .” Argus Inc. v. Eastman Kodak Co., 801 F.2d 38, 41 (2d Cir. 1986). An antitrust plaintiff must show that a defendant‘s anticompetitive act was a “material” and “but-for” cause of plaintiff‘s injury, although not necessarily the sole cause. See In re Publ‘n Paper Antitrust Litig., 690 F.3d 51, 65–66 (2d Cir. 2012). Further, “a plaintiff need not exhaust all possible alternative sources of injury
Here, the plaintiffs offer two causal theories, one applying to the generic applicants who addressed the ‘584 and ‘404 patents with Paragraph IV certifications, and one applying just to Teva, which instead relied on Section viii statements. We find that plaintiffs’ former theory does not satisfy Iqbal and Twombly, but that the latter does.
For their first theory, plaintiffs argue that Takeda‘s allegedly false descriptions of its ‘584 and ‘404 patents forced the generics to file Paragraph IV certifications, which triggered a 180-day exclusivity period for first-filers and a corresponding 180-day delay (the “bottleneck“) for all subsequent filers. Under the law and regulations in place at that time, first-filers could not disclaim or lose their statutory exclusivity period, so when Takeda settled its infringement suits against the first-filers on terms that allowed them to begin selling ACTOS in August 2012, all subsequent filers were kept out of the market for at least another 180 days. Consistent with that exclusivity requirement, Takeda thereafter settled by granting licenses to the subsequent filers allowing them to begin selling ACTOS after the statutory exclusivity period ended. Plaintiffs claim that but for the false patent descriptions, applicants would not have been forced to make Paragraph IV certifications, no bottleneck would have arisen, and one or more generics would have entered the market as early as January 2011.
Although we agree with the district court that this causal theory does not satisfy Iqbal and Twombly, we do so on a somewhat different basis than the district court relied upon. We find that
In particular, because plaintiffs claim that the generic manufacturers filed their Paragraph IV certifications as to the ‘584 and ‘404 patents under duress, their theory presupposes that the generic manufacturers knew that Takeda had described them as drug product patents when they filed their ANDAs. If the generic manufacturers did not know this, then the causal chain would be broken at the first link, because the generic applicants would necessarily have filed their Paragraph IV certifications for some other reason, such as a belief that the Hatch-Waxman Act required them to do so. It was thus incumbent upon plaintiffs to allege that the generic applicants were aware of the descriptions when they filed their ANDAs in 2003 and 2004. The complaint is bereft of any such allegations.
Given that generic applicants must themselves assure the FDA that they will not infringe brand patents, and given that this duty turns at least in part on how a brand describes its patents, see Caraco, 132 S. Ct. at 1677, one might expect that plaintiffs could easily allege how the generics learned of Takeda‘s patent descriptions. But it turns out that the Orange Book—the go-to source of brand patent information—had a significant flaw at the time: for patents submitted before August 2003, it could reflect only one description (i.e., drug substance, drug рroduct, or method of use) per patent. If a brand indicated that a patent claimed both a method of using a drug and the drug product itself, the Orange Book would only list it as a method-of-use patent. Indeed, there is no dispute that the Orange Book listed the ‘584 and ‘404 patents as only method-of-use patents. The Orange Book therefore cannot plug the gap in plaintiffs’ causal theory.8
In their papers, plaintiffs suggest that the generics could plausibly have learned of the allegedly false patent descriptions through an FDA-specific information disclosure provision or by consulting a supplemental Takeda filing on the FDA‘s website. Even if this had been alleged in their complaint, it would not have sufficed. For one thing, nothing in the plain terms of the disclosure provision suggests that a generic could obtain patent descriptions thereunder. See
Even more abstractly, plaintiffs argue that because the generic applicants were required to address Takeda‘s patents in their ANDAs, there must have been some way to learn how Takeda described them, and that it is therefore reasonable to infer that they did so. See, e.g., Chase Grp. Alliance LLC v. City of N.Y. Dep‘t of Fin., 620 F.3d 146, 150 (2d Cir. 2010) (“[W]e
However, plaintiffs propose a different causal mechanism for Teva, which addressed the ‘584 and ‘404 patents with Section viii statements rather than Paragraph IV certifications. Teva‘s application received preliminary approval from the FDA in 2006, see supra note 4, and if Teva had been granted final approval, then it would not have been subject to the first-filers’ 180-day exclusivity period, and could have begun marketing generic ACTOS for non-patented uses as soon as the ‘777 patent expired in January 2011. Teva‘s application stalled, however, when the FDA, on the express basis of Takeda‘s own patent descriptions, announced in response to a citizen petition that it would not finally approve an ACTOS ANDA that made only Section viii statements to the ‘584 and ‘404 patents. See FDA Resp. to Sandoz, Inc. Citizen Pet., No. FDA-2009-P-0411-0010 (Mar. 15, 2010). Plaintiffs claim that but for the false patent descriptions, the FDA would not have made this announcement, and Teva would have entered the market sooner than it did.
Unlike plaintiffs’ first theory of causation, this second theory does not depend on Teva‘s knowledge of Takеda‘s description of its patents as drug product patents, because the FDA‘s 2010 announcement was itself expressly based on Takeda‘s repeated and allegedly false patent descriptions. See
This theory of causation is highly plausible. As noted, the FDA first preliminarily approved Teva‘s application, then entertained a citizen petition seeking to force all applicants to make Paragraph IV certifications as to the ‘584 and ‘404 patents, and then publicly announced that certifications would indeed be requirеd. In so doing, the FDA expressly stated that certifications would be required precisely because Takeda had described these patents as drug product patents. In other words, the FDA made no attempt to evaluate whether the descriptions were true, but simply accepted them at face value—thus frustrating Teva‘s Section viii application. While Teva thereafter sought to challenge the truthfulness of these descriptions in its litigation with Takeda (but settled before the issue was resolved), the damage had been done. A plaintiff could hardly ask for a clearer causal connection.10
Takeda nonetheless argues (and the district court seemingly agreed) that this theory is implausible because it fails to rule out a litany of alternative possible causes of Teva‘s delayed
It is Takeda, however, that is here engaging in gross speculation. While it is possible that one or more of these factors may turn out to be barriers to plaintiffs’ causation theory at later stages of the litigation, they do not mandate dismissing the complaint now. See Zenith Radio Corp., 395 U.S. at 114 n.9; see also DDAVP, 585 F.3d at 695. Indeed, even at summary judgment, an antitrust plaintiff may be entitled to a presumption of causation where the anticompetitive conduct “is deemed wrongful because it is believed significantly to increase the risk of a particular injury” and that injury occurred. See Publ‘n Paper, 690 F.3d at 66. If plaintiffs reach the summary judgment stage and make that showing, then it would be Takeda‘s burden to show that some other factors, such as the ones identified above, are the “true” cause of the delay, and therefore the “true” cause of the artificially high drug prices plaintiffs paid. Dismissal at this early stage on the basis of speculation about possible and not inherently more plausible alternative causes would be premature.11
Finally, we note in passing that the parties have here raised on appeal several arguments not reached by the district court. Takeda argues, for example, that it in fact correctly described the ‘584 and ‘404 patents as drug product pаtents under
For the foregoing reasons, the district court‘s decision is affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this decision.
