The first instalment in this series gave a brief history of Swiss claims in New Zealand. The second part looked at New Zealand law relevant to the infringement of Swiss claims and the commercial and economic circumstances that inform New Zealand’s policy approach to patent law. This final article in this series considers how this law might be applied in light of those policy considerations.
Issues for consideration
In any claim for infringement of a Swiss claim, a major issue likely to arise is how a court should determine the purposive aspect of the claim. That is, what does it mean for a medicament to be “for” a particular clinical purpose. In Pharmaceutical Management Agency Ltd v Commissioner of Patents (Pharmac)[1], when holding that Swiss claims were permissible under New Zealand law, the Court of Appeal rather lightly addressed potential difficulties with proving infringement. The joint judgment of all five judges[2] said:
In the field of pharmaceuticals the perceived “intractable problems for infringement” referred to by Jacob J[3] may be more apparent than real. Under the Medicines Act 1981[4] the manufacture and sale of medicines is closely regulated. The development, trialing, registration, manufacture and distribution of a medicine will be unlikely to give rise to difficulties in identifying the purpose for which it is intended.
This may be the case for a medicine being imported already packaged and labelled in a form approved by Medsafe for a treatment the subject of the Swiss claim. However, this view overlooks the possibilities of:
- off-label prescription of a medicine for the claimed infringing use;
- “skinny labelling” practices i.e. a generic medicine being approved for only a subset of the reference medicine’s approved uses;
- a medicine being manufactured in a form suitable for different uses, including the use the subject of a Swiss claim.
The bench in Pharmac may have been surprised had they known that in 2018, five judges of the UK Supreme Court would address infringement of Swiss claims[5] and issue four separate judgements, setting out three different tests for determining infringement of a Swiss claim[6]. Lord Sumption summarised the diverse opinions as follows (emphasis added)[7]:
- Sumption and Reed LL: “the intention of the alleged infringer is irrelevant and…the sole criterion of infringement is whether the product as it emerges from the manufacturing process, including any labelling or accompanying leaflet, is presented as suitable for the uses which enjoy patent protection.”
- Mance L: “agrees that the test depends on the objective appearance and characteristics of the product as it is prepared, presented and put on the market, but leaves open the possibility (i) that in rare cases the context may make it obvious that these are not to be taken at face value, and (ii) that there may be circumstances in which the generic manufacturer should positively exclude use for the patent-protected purpose.”
- Hodge and Briggs LL: “the test is whether the alleged infringer subjectively intended to target the patent-protected market.”
Under Australian law, in establishing infringement of a Swiss claim, the manufacturer’s objective or subjective intention in manufacturing the medicament is not determinative. Rather, the central question is whether the medicament is for the claimed purpose. Importantly, this involves considering the physical characteristics of the product, such as its formulation and dosage, packaging and labelling, and patient information. The reasonably foreseeable uses to which the medicament would be put after manufacture may also be taken into account. However, where a medicament would be used extensively for purposes that fall outside a Swiss claim, the fact that it is reasonably foreseeable, or likely, that a substantial portion of the manufactured medicament would also be used for the claimed therapeutic purpose will not be determinative of infringement[8].
A New Zealand court might apply any of the UK tests, or the Australian test, or find its own formulation. In doing so, it is likely to consider the specific and unique circumstances and policy considerations relevant to New Zealand. This may include:
- The difficulty of ascertaining the subjective intention of an overseas manufacturer in relation to a product for which New Zealand is likely to be only a minor market;
- The potential for co-infringers (such as a manufacturer and an importer) to have different subjective intentions;
- The prevalence of off-label prescriptions of the drug in question;
- The Pharmac funding arrangements (if any) for the alleged infringing product;
- The content of any advertising of the alleged infringing product.
Other forms of infringement defined in the Patents Act 2013 may be alleged, including selling or otherwise disposing of the product, offering to do so, or keeping the product for doing so. One of the policy considerations underlying the exclusion of methods of medical treatment from patentability is said to be protecting medical professionals from claims of infringement when treating patients. The allowing of Swiss claims is said to still provide a remedy but against the manufacturer[9]. However, a strict reading of the Patents Act 2013 does not limit liability for infringement of a Swiss claim to a manufacturer or importer. There is an argument that a medical professional administering a drug (e.g. by injection or IV infusion) is “disposing” of that drug. Dispensing by pharmacies will also be caught by the infringement provisions of the Act.
Further considerations will arise where the claimed new use is for a known indication but extended to a new patient group, such as a drug previously only known to be safe and efficacious in adults being claimed for use in paediatric treatment.
Where a medicine with patent protection is manufactured without authority in New Zealand using an imported active ingredient, the supplier of that ingredient may be liable for secondary infringement. If the relevant patent claims are in Swiss form, then it may be a challenge to prove the supplier had the necessary actual or constructive knowledge for secondary infringement given the possibility of importation for a non-infringing use.
An eye to the future
In light of the above, any precedent-setting, first instance infringement judgment by the High Court of New Zealand may well be appealed to the Court of Appeal. Grounds are likely to exist for leave for a second (and final) appeal to the Supreme Court. Ideally, any general infringement test laid down by an appellate court, given the likely limited opportunity for further judicial refinement, will be clear and jointly stated by at least a majority of the sitting bench if not unanimously.
Any infringement judgement will surely refer to the Pharmac decision, being the only domestic authority touching on infringement of Swiss claims. It is likely that the court will discover the reality to not be as simple as the Pharmac bench predicted[10]. A judgment will also inevitably refer to foreign law, at least English and Australian, as has been the constant practice in the development of New Zealand patent law. The weight that may be given to those conflicting laws is uncertain. New Zealand’s legal and economic circumstances relating to pharmaceuticals differ markedly from both those jurisdictions, justifying a different policy approach. New Zealand’s appellate courts will forge their own path when appropriate, as can be seen in the development of indigenous torts relating to interference in privacy[11], and in the growing part of Tikanga Māori[12] in New Zealand common law[13]. This divergence within the common law has become more apparent since the key Wellcome[14], Pharmac and Pfizer[15] cases, including through the replacement of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom by the Supreme Court as New Zealand’s court of final appeal.
There may also be a degree of countervailing judicial conservatism, given that New Zealand does not have a specialist Patents Court (as in the UK) or specialist patent or intellectual property judges (as in Australia). Judges with little experience in patent matters may well prefer to follow a path already trodden elsewhere in the common law. They may also prefer to avoid a strict, one-size-fits-all test for infringement and allow some room to adapt a test for any specific circumstances, to avoid unintended injustice.
Speculation can be both hazardous and futile, however given New Zealand’s tight control of drug supply under the Pharmac funding system, its comparatively lower and slower rate of regulatory approvals, and rarity of infringement cases, the authors believe that the New Zealand courts are likely to favour a test similar to the Australian approach and that of Mance L in the United Kingdom. That is, that the conditions of any regulatory approval, including packaging and labelling, will be of great importance but not necessarily determinative. Subjective intent is likely to be less important. Where the alleged infringing use is “off-label”, the courts are likely to find that other objective matters can be taken into account to determine whether the manufacture of a product, or any dealing in that product, infringes a Swiss claim. These other matters may include frequency of “off-label” use of the product (in New Zealand and elsewhere), content of any marketing of the product to the public or health professionals, or whether the product was specifically manufactured in or for export to New Zealand.
Until these issues are fully litigated in New Zealand, those in the pharmaceutical business will need to take a risk-based approach to dealing with legal uncertainty.
If you have any questions about the use or infringement of Swiss-type claims in New Zealand, please contact our experts. We would be pleased to assist with any queries.
[1] Pharmaceutical Management Agency Ltd& Ors v Commissioner of Patents [1999] NZCA 330 at [61] to [63], see also [48]. This case was discussed in the first article in this series.
[2] The bench was eminent, including four of the five inaugural judges of the Supreme Court of New Zealand (instituted in 2005 to replace the Privy Council as the highest court in the New Zealand legal system) and Richardson P, who was appointed to the Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal in 2003.
[3] The reference is to Jacob J’s decision in Bristol-Myers Squibb Co v Baker Norton Pharmaceuticals Inc [1999] RPC 253.
[4] Still in force, but under review and scheduled for replacement by 2028 https://www.health.govt.nz/regulation-legislation/medicines-legislation/regulating-medicines-medical-devices-and-natural-health-products/documents-on-the-medical-products-bill.
[5] Warner-Lambert Company LLC v Generics (UK) Ltd & Anor (rev 1) [2018] UKSC 56.
[6] The patent in suit was found to be invalid so the opinions on infringement are each non-binding obiter dicta even in the United Kingdom.
[7] At [15(3)].
[8] See the commentary and cases referred to at https://www.pearceip.law/2024/06/26/patenting-life-sciences-technologies/.
[9] See Pharmac at [17].
[10] Acknowledging that simple infringement cases of the type foreseen in Pharmac are likely to be resolved before getting to trial.
[11] See for example Hosking v Runting [2004] NZCA 34 and C v Holland [2012] 3 NZLR 672.
[12] Customary law, practices, attitudes and principles of the indigenous Māori culture and people of New Zealand.
[13] See Ellis v R [2022] NZSC 114; [2022] 1 NZLR 239 at [19].
[14] Wellcome Foundation Ltd v Commissioner of Patents [1983] NZLR 385, discussed in the first article in this series.
[15] Pfizer Inc v Commissioner of Patents [2004] NZCA 104, discussed in the first article in this series.
About Pearce IP
Pearce IP is a specialist firm offering intellectual property specialist lawyers and attorneys with a focus on the life sciences industries. Pearce IP and its leaders are ranked in every notable legal directory for legal, patent and trade mark excellence, including: Chambers & Partners, Legal 500, IAM Patent 1000, IAM Strategy 300, MIP IP Stars, Doyles Guide, WTR 1000, Best Lawyers, WIPR Leaders, 5 Star IP Lawyers, among others.
In 2025, Pearce IP was recognised by Australasian Lawyer and New Zealand Lawyer’s 5 Star Employer of Choice, and is the “Standout Winner” for inclusion and culture for firms with less than 100 employees. Pearce IP was awarded “IP Team of the Year” by Lawyers Weekly at the 2021 Australian Law Awards. Pearce IP is recognised by Managing IP as the only leading ANZ IP firm with a female founder, and is certified by WEConnect International as women owned.
Paul Johns
Executive, Lawyer (NZ, AU) & Trade Mark Attorney (NZ), (Head of Litigation – New Zealand)
Paul is Head of Pearce IP’s New Zealand litigation team and an IP dispute specialist with 24+ years’ experience in New Zealand and the UK. He is recognised in IAM Patent 1000, WTR1000, Chambers Asia-Pacific, and Best Lawyers. Paul serves on New Zealand’s Copyright Tribunal, is Vice Chair of the IBA’s Patent Law Subcommittee, and is a member of the Intellectual Property Society of Australia and New Zealand and NZ Intellectual Property Attorneys Inc.
Sally Paterson
Executive Lawyer (NZ), Patent & Trade Mark Attorney (AU, NZ)
Sally is a senior Trans-Tasman Patent and Trade Mark Attorney, and a New Zealand registered lawyer with over 20 years’ experience in IP. Sally’s particular expertise is in life sciences, drawing from her background in biological sciences.
Sally is well respected in the New Zealand IP community for her broad ranging skills in all aspects of intellectual property advice, protection and enforcement.
Sally has extensive experience securing registration for patents, designs and trade marks in New Zealand, Australia and internationally, providing strategic infringement, validity and enforceability opinions, acting in contentious disputes including matters before the courts of New Zealand and before IPONZ and IP Australia, and advising on copyright and consumer law matters.
Julie Ballance
Executive, Patent Attorney & Trade Mark Practitioner (AU, NZ), Lawyer & Notary (NZ)
Julie is a senior Trans-Tasman patent attorney, and a New Zealand registered lawyer and notary public with more than 30 years’ experience across a range of technology areas and a first class honours degree in chemistry. Julie is internationally renowned for her considerable patent/trade mark/designs/legal prowess, including being ranked in IAM Patent 1000.
