UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
IN RE NAMENDA DIRECT PURCHASER
ANTITRUST LITIGATION
THIS DOCUMENT RELATES TO:
All Direct Purchaser Actions
Civil Action No.: 1:15-CV-07488-CM-
RWL
DIRECT PURCHASER CLASS PLAINTIFFS’ MEMORANDUM IN OPPOSITION TO
DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
SUBMITTED FOR FILING UNDER SEAL
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. INTRODUCTION .............................................................................................................1
A. The Mylan Patent Settlement Contained an Unlawful Reverse Payment............... 1
B. But-For the Unlawful Reverse Payment Agreement, Generic Versions of
Namenda Would Have Entered the Market Much Earlier...................................... 4
C. Forest’s Unlawful Product-Hop Caused Plaintiffs’ Antitrust Injury ...................... 6
II. STATEMENT OF FACTS ...............................................................................................8
A. The Patent Settlement Agreement and the Lexapro Amendment ...........................8
The Original Lexapro Agreement Between Mylan and Forest ....................8
The Lexapro Amendment .............................................................................9
Negotiations of the Patent Settlement and the Lexapro Amendment .......... 9
Forest Told Mylan That the Lexapro Amendment Offered “
” to Mylan, While There Was “ ” for
Mylan to Compete in the Namenda Market ...............................................10
The Lexapro Amendment and Mylan Patent Settlement Were Part of a
Single Transaction ......................................................................................11
Forest and Mylan Would Have Entered into the Lexapro Amendment, Even
Without Its Reverse Payment Terms ..........................................................12
Forest’s Claimed Medicaid Rebate Savings Were Illusory and Artificially
Inflated ........................................................................................................12
There Is No Contemporaneous Evidence That Forest Thought Mylan
Would Terminate the Original Lexapro Agreement After One Year ........13
B. But-For the Reverse Payment Agreement, Mylan and Other Generic Competitors
Would Have Entered the Market Earlier ..............................................................16
C. Forest’s Hard-Switch Product Hop .......................................................................17
III. ARGUMENT ...................................................................................................................19
A. The Court Should Deny Summary Judgment on the Reverse-Payment Claim ....19
Pertinent Law .............................................................................................19
a. Large Reverse Payment and Anticompetitive Effect ....................20
i. Large Reverse Payment ....................................................20
ii. Anticompetitive Effect ......................................................21
b. Procompetitive Explanations or Justifications ..............................22
i. Defendants Bear the Burdens of Production and Proof ....22
ii. Fact Questions About the Validity of Justifications
Preclude Summary Adjudication ......................................24
iii. Less Restrictive Means of Achieving a Procompetitive
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Benefit ...............................................................................25
c. Balancing ......................................................................................25
d. Linkage Between Agreements ......................................................26
Issues of Fact Remain on Plaintiffs’ Reverse Payment Claim ...................26
a. Forest Made a $ Million Reverse Payment to Mylan ............27
b. Forest’s Explanations for the Reverse Payment Are Disputed .....28
i. Forest’s “Second Year of Authorized Generic Lexapro”
Explanation is Pretextual and Disputed ............................29
ii. Forest’s “Medicaid Liability Reduction” Explanation is
Disputed and Pretextual ....................................................31
iii. The Diminished Medicaid Rebate Liability Does Not
Shrink the Reverse Payment .............................................34
iv. Forest’s “Payment for Mylan’s Antitrust Release”
Explanation Admits That It Made a Reverse Payment .....36
B. Causation Is Established, or There Remain Material Disputed Facts ...................37
1. Causation Is a Question for the Jury .................................................................37
2. Argument ....................................................................................................39
a. Forest and Mylan Would Have Entered into a Procompetitive
Settlement Absent the Anticompetitive Reverse Payment ...........39
i. Objective Evidence Establishes that Forest and Mylan
Would Have Agreed to a No-Payment Settlement with an
Earlier Entry Date .............................................................39
ii. Plaintiffs Have Sufficient Evidence to Prove That Mylan
Would Have Prevailed in the Patent Case ........................44
a. Mylan Was Likely to Prove That the ’703 Patent Is Invalid ........45
b. Mylan Was Likely to Prevail on Non-Infringement .....................47
c. Mylan Was Likely to Prevail on its PTE Validity Challenge .......49
d. Mylan’s Likelihood of Success in the Patent Litigation ...............50
e. The Pediatric Exclusivity Provision Was Anticompetitive ..........51
C. Forest’s Hard Switch Efforts Caused Plaintiffs to Sustain Antitrust Injury .........52
Standard for Proving Injury and Damages .................................................52
Plaintiffs Have Demonstrated that Forest’s Hard Switch Strategy was a
Substantial Factor in Causing Harm to Plaintiffs .......................................54
Plaintiffs’ Injury Model Is Consistent with This Court’s Prior Opinions ..58
Plaintiffs Do Not Need to Trace Switching at a Patient Level ...................59
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Plaintiffs Have Adequately Accounted for Various Post-February 14, 2014
Events; Neither Judge Sweet’s Injunction Nor Forest’s Tainted
Communications Campaign Undid the Effects of the Hard Switch ...........62
IV. CONCLUSION ...............................................................................................................64
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TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
Cases
ALZA Corp. v. Andrx Pharms., L.L.C.,
603 F.3d 935 (Fed. Cir. 2010) .................................................................................................47
Am. Sales Co. v. AstraZeneca LP,
842 F.3d 34 (1st Cir. 2016) ......................................................................................................40
Am. Soc’y of Composers v. Showtime/The Movie Channel, Inc.,
912 F.2d 563 (2d Cir. 1990) ....................................................................................................29
Andrx Pharms., Inc. v. Biovail Corp. Int’l,
256 F.3d 799 (D.C. Cir. 2001) .................................................................................................38
Apotex, Inc. v. Cephalon, Inc.,
321 F.R.D. 220 (E.D. Pa. 2017) ..............................................................................................39
Ark. Carpenters Health & Welfare Fund v. Bayer AG ,
604 F.3d 98 (2d Cir. 2010) ......................................................................................................22
Armstrong v. United States,
756 F.2d 1407 (9th Cir. 1985) .................................................................................................37
Ashley Creek Phosphate Co. v. Chevron USA, Inc.,
315 F.3d 1245 (10th Cir. 2003) ...............................................................................................58
Bigelow v. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.,
327 U.S. 251 (1946) ....................................................................................................38, 39, 42
Blades v. Monsanto Co.,
400 F.3d 562 (8th Cir. 2005) ...................................................................................................39
Castro v. Sanofi Pasteur Inc.,
134 F. Supp. 3d 820 (D.N.J. 2015) ..........................................................................................42
Clorox Co. v. Sterling Winthrop,
836 F. Supp. 983 (E.D.N.Y. 1993) ..........................................................................................22
Comcast Corp. v. Behrend,
133 S. Ct. 1426 (2013) .............................................................................................................53
Currency Conversion Fee Antitrust Litig. v. Am. Express Co.,
773 F. Supp. 2d 351 (S.D.N.Y. 2011) .....................................................................................38
Dolphin Tours, Inc. v. Pacifico Creative Serv., Inc.,
773 F.2d 1506 (9th Cir. 1985) .................................................................................................40
Case 1:15-cv-07488-CM-RWL Document 498 Filed 01/18/18 Page 5 of 77
v
Eastman Kodak Co. v. Image Tech. Servs.,
504 U.S. 451 (1992) ................................................................................................................24
Eisenberg v. Commissioner,
155 F.3d 50 (2d Cir. 1998) ......................................................................................................29
Exxon Co. v. Sofec,
517 U.S. 830 (1996) ................................................................................................................37
Fleischman v. Alb. Med. Ctr.,
728 F. Supp. 2d 130 (N.D.N.Y. 2010) .....................................................................................22
Fox v. Good Samaritan Hosp.,
2007 WL 2938175 (N.D. Cal. Oct. 9, 2007) ...........................................................................24
FTC v. Actavis, Inc.,
133 S. Ct. 2223 (2013) ..................................................................................................... passim
FTC v. Foster,
2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 47606 (D.N.M. May 29, 2007) ..........................................................41
Gatt Commc’ns, Inc. v. PMC Assocs., L.L.C.,
711 F.3d 68 (2d Cir. 2013) ......................................................................................................62
Geneva Pharms. Tech. Corp. v. Barr Labs., Inc.,
386 F.3d 485 (2d Cir. 2004) ....................................................................................................26
Gregory v. Fort Bridger Rendezvous Ass’n,
448 F.3d 1195 (10th Cir. 2006) ...............................................................................................24
In re Actos End Payor Antitrust Litig.,
2015 WL 5610752 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 22, 2015) ........................................................................27
In re Aggrenox Antitrust Litig.,
94 F. Supp. 3d 224 (D. Conn. 2015) ........................................................................................35
In re Cardizem CD Antitrust Litig.,
105 F. Supp. 2d 618 (E.D. Mich. 2000) ..................................................................................38
In re Dom. Drywall Antitrust Litig.,
2017 WL 3623466 (E.D. Pa. Aug. 23, 2017) ............................................................................6
In re K-Dur Antitrust Litig.,
2016 WL 755623 (D.N.J. Feb. 25, 2016) ................................................................................24
In re Lipitor Antitrust Litig.,
868 F.3d 231 (3d Cir. 2017) ....................................................................................................23
In re Lipitor Antitrust Litig.,
2013 WL 4780496 (D.N.J. Sept. 5, 2013) ...............................................................................38
Case 1:15-cv-07488-CM-RWL Document 498 Filed 01/18/18 Page 6 of 77
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In re Loestrin 24 Fe Antitrust Litig.,
2017 WL 3600938 (D.R.I. Aug. 8, 2017)................................................................................37
In re Methyl Tertiary Butyl Ether Prods. Liab. Litig.,
2008 WL 1971538 (S.D.N.Y. May 7, 2008) .....................................................................40, 41
In re Mushroom Direct Purchaser Antitrust Litig.,
2015 WL 5767415 (E.D. Pa. July 29, 2015) ...........................................................................42
In re Namenda Direct Purchaser Antitrust Litig.,
2016 WL 4992690 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 13, 2016) .......................................................20, 27,58, 61
In re Namenda Direct Purchaser Antitrust Litig.,
No. 15 Civ. 7488 (CM), at 37 (May 23, 2017) ...................................... 5, 17, 19, 44, 53-55, 61
In re Neurontin Antitrust Litig., MDL No. 1479,
2009 WL 2751029 (D. N.J. Aug. 28, 2009) ..........................................................................38
In re Neurontin Antitrust Litig.,
2013 WL 4042460 (D.N.J. Aug. 8, 2013) ...............................................................................38
In re Niaspan Antitrust Litig.,
42 F. Supp. 3d 735 (E.D. Pa. 2014) ...................................................................................26, 41
In re Opana Er Antritrust Litig.,
162 F. Supp. 3d 704 (N.D. Ill. 2016) .................................................................................23, 26
In re Publ’n Paper Antitrust Litig.,
690 F.3d 51 (2d Cir. 2012) ..........................................................................................53, 54, 56
In re Warfarin Sodium Antitrust Litig.,
214 F.3d 395 (3d Cir. 2000) ....................................................................................................60
In re Warfarin Sodium Antitrust Litig.,
391 F.3d 516 (3d Cir. 2004) ....................................................................................................60
In re Wellbutrin XL Antitrust Litig.,
133 F. Supp. 3d 734 (E.D. Pa. 2015) ...........................................................................40, 42, 43
In re Wellbutrin XL Antitrust Litig.,
868 F.3d 132 (3d Cir. 2017) ..............................................................................................39, 51
Kamerman v. Steinberg,
744 F. Supp. 59 (S.D.N.Y. 1990) ............................................................................................41
King Drug Co. of Florence v. Cephalon, Inc.,
88 F. Supp. 3d 402 (E.D. Pa. 2015) .......................................................................20, 21, 23, 28
King Drug Co. of Florence, Inc. v. SmithKline Beecham Corp.,
791 F.3d 388 (3d Cir. 2015) ............................................................................................ passim
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Klickads, Inc. v. Real Estate Bd. of N.Y.,
2007 WL 2254721 (S.D.N.Y. Aug. 6, 2007) ...........................................................................24
La. Wholesale Drug Co. v. Sanofi-Aventis,
2008 WL 4580016 (S.D.N.Y. Oct. 14, 2008) ..........................................................................38
Laumann v. NHL,
56 F. Supp. 3d 280 (S.D.N.Y. 2014) .................................................................................21, 25
Laumann v. NHL,
117 F. Supp. 3d 299 (S.D.N.Y. 2015) ...............................................................................40, 41
LePage's, Inc. v. 3M,
324 F.3d 141 (3d Cir. 2003) ....................................................................................................53
MCI Commc’ns Corp. v. Am. Tel. & Tel. Co.,
708 F.2d 1081 (7th Cir. 1983) ...........................................................................................63, 64
Murphy Tugboat Co. v. Crowley,
658 F.2d 1256 (9th Cir. 1981) .................................................................................................40
N. Am. Soccer League v. Nat’l Football League,
670 F.2d 1249 (2d Cir. 1982) ............................................................................................25, 32
Nat’l Coll. Athletic Ass’n v. Bd. of Regents,
468 U.S. 85 (1984) ..................................................................................................................22
New York v. Actavis Pub. Ltd. Co.,
787 F.3d 638 (2d Cir. 2015) ....................................................................................................24
New York v. Actavis, Pub. Ltd. Co.,
2014 WL 7015198 (S.D.N.Y. Dec. 11, 2014) ....................................................................61,62
Nexium Esomeprazole Antitrust Litig.,
42 F. Supp. 3d 231 (D. Mass. 2014) ........................................................................................23
Ocean Walk, Ltd. v. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's,
2006 WL 2689626 (E.D.N.Y. Sept. 19, 2006) ..................................................................29, 30
Quad Envtl. Techs. Corp. v. Union Sanitary Dist.,
946 F.2d 870 (Fed. Cir. 1991) .................................................................................................45
Quantum Corp. v. Rodime, Pub. Ltd. Co.,
65 F.3d 1577 (Fed. Cir. 1995) ...........................................................................................48, 49
Rasmusson v. SmithKline Beecham Corp.,
413 F.3d 1318 (Fed. Cir. 2005) .........................................................................................46, 47
Rome Ambulatory Surgical Ctr. v. Rome Mem’l Hosp.,
349 F. Supp. 2d 389 (N.D.N.Y. 2004) .........................................................................22, 24, 25
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Roxane Labs., Inc. v. Smithkline Beecham Corp. (In re Flonase Antitrust Litig.),
798 F. Supp. 2d 619 (E.D. Pa. 2011) .......................................................................................38
Schwabenbauer v. Bd. of Educ.,
777 F.2d 837 (2d Cir. 1985) ....................................................................................................59
Story Parchment Co. v. Paterson Parchment Paper Co.,
282 U.S. 555 (1931) ................................................................................................................42
Teva Pharms. USA, Inc. v. Abbott Labs.,
252 F.R.D. 213 (D. Del. 2008) ................................................................................................61
TVT Records v. Island Def Jam Music Grp.,
412 F.3d 82 (2d Cir. 2005) ................................................................................................26, 27
U.S. Football League v. Nat’l Football League,
842 F.2d 1335 (2d Cir. 1988) ............................................................................................58, 63
United Food & Commer. Workers Local 1776 & Participating Emp'rs Health & Welfare Fund v.
Crosby Tugs, L.L.C. (In re Actos End-Payor Antitrust Litig. ),
848 F.3d 89 (2d Cir. 2017) ......................................................................................................53
United Food & Commer. Workers Local 1776 & Participating Emp'rs Health & Welfare Fund v.
Teikoku Pharm. USA, Inc. ,
74 F. Supp. 3d 1052 (N.D. Cal. 2014) .....................................................................................28
United Food & Commer. Workers Local 1776 v. Teikoku Pharm. USA ,
2017 WL 5068533 (N.D. Cal. Nov. 3, 2017) ...........................................................5, 40,41, 43
United States v. Visa U.S.A., Inc.,
344 F.3d 229 (2d Cir. 2003) ....................................................................................................26
Unitherm Food Sys. v. Swift-Eckrich, Inc.,
375 F.3d 1341 (Fed. Cir. 2004) ...............................................................................................58
Univac Dental Co. v. Dentsply Int’l, Inc.,
2010 WL 1816745, *3 (M.D. Pa. Apr. 27, 2010) ....................................................................38
Virgin Atl. Airways v. British Airways Pub. Ltd. Co.,
257 F.3d 256 (2d Cir. 2001) ....................................................................................................22
Wahpeton Canvas Co. v. Frontier, Inc.,
870 F.2d 1546 (Fed. Cir. 1989) ...............................................................................................47
Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Research,
395 U.S. 100 (1969) ................................................................................................................53
Statutes
35 U.S.C. § 1 .................................................................................................................................44
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35 U.S.C. § 4 .................................................................................................................................53
35 U.S.C. § 40 (2012) .............................................................................................................44, 45
35 U.S.C. § 156 (2012) ...........................................................................................................37, 50
35 U.S.C. § 282 (2012) .....................................................................................................49, 50, 51
Other
Aaron Edlin, Scott Hemphill, Herbert Hovenkamp & Carl Shapiro, Activating Actavis,
28 Antitrust 16, 18 (2013) .......................................................................................................24
Aaron Edlin, Scott Hemphill, Herbert Hovenkamp & Carl Shapiro, The Actavis Inference:
Theory and Practice,
67 Rutgers U. L. Rev. 585, 609 (2015) ...................................................................................40
ABA Section of Antitrust Law, Proving Antitrust Damages: Legal and Economic Issues,
(2d ed. 2010).............................................................................................................................40
Areeda & Hovenkamp,
IIA Antitrust Law ¶¶394 (3d ed. 2007).....................................................................................40
11 Williston on Contracts § 30:26 (4th ed.)...................................................................................26
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TABLE OF ABBREVIATIONS
ABBREVIATION DESCRIPTION
Forest Forest Laboratories, LLC, Forest Laboratories Holdings
Limited, and Forest Laboratories, Inc.
Mylan Mylan Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Alphapharm Alphapharm Pty, Limited
PASoF ¶__ Plaintiffs’ Affirmative Statement of Material Facts in
Opposition to Forest’s Motion for Summary Judgment
PRSoF ¶__ Plaintiffs’ Responses and Objections to Defendants’
Statement of Undisputed Facts
DSoF ¶__ Defendants’ Statement of [Alleged] Undisputed Facts
AG authorized generic
Def. Br. Defendants’ Memorandum in Support of Their Motion for
Summary Judgment
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I. INTRODUCTION
Forest’s summary judgment motion should be denied, as there is ample evidence for a jury
to find that (1) the Amendment to Distribution and Supply Agreement (Generic Lexapro) (the
“Lexapro Amendment”) contained a large and unjustified reverse payment from Forest to Mylan;
(2) but for the unlawful reverse payment, generic versions of Namenda would have entered the
market much earlier and therefore the reverse payment caused Plaintiffs antitrust injury; and (3)
Forest’s unlawful product hop was a substantial factor in causing Plaintiffs antitrust injury.1
A. The Mylan Patent Settlement Contained an Unlawful Reverse Payment
The following facts are undisputed. Twenty of Forest’s reverse
payment to Mylan was in cash, and took the form of reduced royalties that Mylan
would otherwise owe Forest on Mylan’s sales of another drug – Forest’s authorized generic
(“AG”) version of Lexapro. The evidence that the Lexapro Amendment and the Namenda patent
settlement agreement are interconnected is overwhelming.
Mylan, the last of the 14 generic
ANDA filers to settle the Namenda patent litigation, was a potential “spoiler” of Forest’s delicate
set of settlements with other ANDA filers. They were delicate, because each generic agreed to
delay entry only for so long as the others did, and if one entered, then they all could. Thus, Mylan
was paid far more than any other generic.
In attempting to obtain summary judgment, Forest argues – as it must under the burden-
shifting rule of reason and Actavis – that the reverse payment was not for delay, but
1 Plaintiffs are not pursuing their inter-generic conspiracy claim (Count 4 of Plaintiffs’ First
Amended Class Action Complaint, ECF No. 26).
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is explained by the value of services and money Mylan allegedly promised to give back to Forest.
But Forest’s explanations are contrived, pretextual, and disputed, and no jury would be required
to believe them. Under the rule of reason, Forest bears the burdens of production and proof on its
explanations, and so summary judgment on this claim is doubly inappropriate.
Forest’s first explanation. Forest’s first explanation for its payment is that
Mylan was going to return to Forest nearly that same amount in royalties from a “second year” of
Mylan’s AG Lexapro sales under the Lexapro Amendment. This “explanation” is nothing but an
accounting artifice designed to make the “disappear.” For Forest’s argument to
convince a jury, Forest must show one thing and overcome another. Forest has to show that Mylan
was initially unwilling to continue selling AG Lexapro for that second year, and only became
willing to do so because of Forest’s reverse payments. If, however, Mylan was already willing to
sell AG Lexapro for a “second year,” then those services cannot explain the payments. Yet, Forest
has no evidence that Mylan was initially unwilling to continue to sell AG Lexapro for a second
year. Instead, the evidence shows that Mylan (a) had always agreed to a five-year term for selling
Forest’s AG Lexapro, (b) lacked FDA approval to sell generic Lexapro under its own ANDA until
2015, and so had no options for selling generic Lexapro other than through selling Forest’s AG,
and (c) never terminated the agreement. Forest’s argument is based on the post-hoc deposition
testimony of one of its executives that Forest allegedly had concerns that Mylan would terminate
the Distribution and Supply Agreement (Generic Lexapro) (“Original Lexapro Agreement”) after
one year. But there is no contemporaneous evidence that Mylan had plans to terminate, that Forest
ever discussed the issue internally, or that Forest and Mylan discussed the subject at all.
Forest also has to overcome the undisputed evidence that it was obvious in advance that
there would not be any “second year” AG Lexapro royalties to offset the reverse
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payment because twelve other Lexapro generics were going to drive prices and Mylan’s market
share down close to nil after six months. Indeed, that is what happened: six months after Mylan
started selling AG Lexapro, multiple generics entered, and Mylan’s royalty obligation dropped to
nothing. Forest relies on self-serving forecasts it created (over a three-day period after Forest had
already agreed to pay Mylan ), but even Forest’s negotiator, David Solomon,
dismissed the underlying assumptions as wrong when they were created. Moreover, Forest’s
projections are 180 degrees at odds with Mylan’s contemporaneous projections of
in the second year, that render Forest’s projections highly dubious.
Forest’s second explanation. Forest’s second explanation for its reverse
payment is a ploy to fabricate offsetting money in the form of in reduced Medicaid
rebates Forest would otherwise owe to the government on Forest’s sales of its own brand Lexapro,
by getting Mylan to agree to manufacture AG Lexapro. But there is no evidence that Forest paid
Mylan the to manufacture AG Lexapro, and Forest does not dispute that the fair
value of Mylan’s accepting that responsibility was just , far less than .
Second, the of purported avoided rebate liability came from the U.S.
Treasury, not from Mylan; from Mylan’s perspective, it does not reduce the value of the
payment at all. To say that the in avoided rebate liability offsets the
reverse payment ignores the disconnect between (1) payor and payee, and (2) the reasons
for the payment and the offset. An incidental offset from someone other than the payee is legally
irrelevant under F.T.C. v. Actavis, Inc., 133 S. Ct. 2223 (2013). Whether the payment was
sufficient to induce Mylan to quit the patent fight can only be assessed from Mylan’s perspective.
Third, the evidence is undisputed that Forest did not need to pay Mylan any money, much
less , for Mylan to accept a transfer of manufacturing services for AG Lexapro.
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Forest recognized that because they split profits on AG Lexapro, and Mylan could
manufacture AG Lexapro for less money than Forest, both would benefit from such a transfer.
Finally, even if Forest could convince a jury to offset the by ,
a large, unexplained reverse payment still remains. In other words, Forest’s sole fair valuation
expert, Mr. Green, has submitted to the Court a fundamentally flawed opinion: if the jury rejects
Mr. Green’s first explanation (the “second year” argument, discussed above) then it will be
required to find that Forest – which under controlling law bears the burden of proof in explaining
and justifying its payments to Mylan – made a large reverse payment to Mylan.
Forest’s other explanations. Forest has toyed with a potpourri of other explanations,
including that it paid
But Mylan leveled the same PTE theory in the
patent case.
B. But-For the Unlawful Reverse Payment Agreement, Generic Versions of
Namenda Would Have Entered the Market Much Earlier
As this Court previously held, “[w]hether the settlement agreements were anticompetitive
or procompetitive will depend on several factual questions that cannot be decided on summary
judgment.” ECF No. 252 at 40 (emphasis added). Indeed, Forest’s causation arguments are
inherently embedded with disputed issues of material facts. Forest nevertheless argues that there
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is insufficient evidence to support a verdict that generic entry would have occurred but-for Forest’s
anticompetitive conduct. Def. Br. at 39-50. Not so. First, Plaintiffs’ economics expert, Harvard
Professor Einer Elhauge, opines that absent an illegal reverse-payment settlement, it would have
been in Forest and Mylan’s economic interests to agree to a no-payment settlement with an earlier
generic entry date. Actavis endorses this approach. Actavis, 133 S. Ct. at 2237 (the parties “may,
as in other industries, settle in other ways, for example, by allowing the generic manufacturer to
enter the patentee’s market prior to the patent’s expiration, without the patentee paying the
challenger to stay out prior that point.”). Numerous courts have endorsed the premise that “in
constructi[ng] but-for world scenarios, there is a presumption of economical rationality.” United
Food & Commercial Workers Local 1776 v. Teikoku Pharma USA, No. 14-MD-02521-WHO,
2017 WL 5068533, at *24 n.42 (N.D. Cal. Nov. 3, 2017) (“Lidoderm”). Moreover, Prof. Elhauge’s
methodology of using a brand and generic’s own profit projections and their own profit-
maximizing behavior to model an alternative settlement, as Actavis describes – without a payment
but with an earlier entry date – was recently approved in another reverse payment case. Lidoderm,
2017 WL 5068533, at *11-13, *30-32. While Forest and its experts may disagree with Professor
Elhauge’s opinions, the ultimate question is for a jury.
Second, Plaintiffs possess a wealth of expert, documentary, and testimonial evidence from
which a reasonable jury could readily conclude that Mylan was likely to prevail on its invalidity
and/or non-infringement defenses. As this Court previously observed, if Forest had “lost the
litigation, the patent would have been declared invalid or not infringed and the Generic
Competitors could have entered the market immediately.” Litvin Decl. Ex. 355, In re Namenda
Direct Purchaser Antitrust Litig., No. 15 Civ. 7488 (CM), at 37 (May 23, 2017) (unredacted
version) (“Estoppel Op.”).
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C. Forest’s Unlawful Product-Hop Caused Plaintiffs’ Antitrust Injury
Plaintiffs’ proof of antitrust injury from Forest’s hard-switch strategy (which does not
require proof of earlier generic entry) rests in large part on Forest’s own contemporaneous
forecasts, communications and market analyses. Plaintiffs’ evidence also includes the testimony
of two accomplished economists, Dr. Russell Lamb and MIT Professor Dr. Ernst Berndt. Dr.
Berndt is a widely-recognized scholar and economist with decades of experience studying
pharmaceutical markets. Judge Sweet repeatedly credited him in enjoining Forest from
withdrawing Namenda IR. Dr. Lamb is a widely respected economist with substantial experience
in assessing injury to purchasers in antitrust cases, and who has been credited by multiple district
courts in assessing classwide damages. See, e.g., In re Domestic Drywall Antitrust Litig., No. 13-
MD-2437, 2017 WL 3623466, at *39-42 (E.D. Pa. Aug. 23, 2017). The evidence of injury here
involves questions of fact and expert opinion that cannot be resolved on summary judgment.
Forest incorrectly attacks Plaintiffs for allegedly failing to account for Forest’s “soft-
switch” factors. Plaintiffs’ evidence does account for “soft-switch” factors, and the analyses by
Drs. Lamb and Berndt comport with Judge Sweet’s findings – confirmed by Forest’s own forecasts
and documents – that (1) Forest expected its “soft-switch” efforts to yield only about
conversion from Namenda IR to XR, (2)
and (3) Forest achieved a conversion rate of over
. As this Court found in granting estoppel against Defendants (PRSoF ¶
464):
Both Judge Sweet and the Second Circuit concluded that the result of the hard
switch would be that a “significantly higher” number of patients would
convert from Namenda IR to Namenda XR than if Forest had not attempted
to pull Namenda IR from the market. . . . Forest’s own internal projections
estimated that, using only soft-switch tactics, only of Namenda IR patients
would voluntarily switch to Namenda XR. Under a hard-switch strategy, that
percentage
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***
Importantly, Judge Sweet found that Forest’s hard-switch tactics had already
resulted in more customers converting from Namenda IR to Namenda XR than
Forest had estimated would convert voluntarily. At the time the preliminary
injunction was entered, “about of existing patients [had] converted from
Namenda IR to Namenda XR in anticipation of the lack of availability of
Namenda IR.” . . . This is significantly more than the that Forest had
estimated would convert if only soft-switch tactics were employed.
Defendants argue that Dr. Lamb’s methodology does not fit a test they fabricated using
out-of-context quotes from the Court’s motion to dismiss order, which identified one way that
Plaintiffs could prove injury. It did not mandate a sole method by which Plaintiffs must prove
injury. Nor would the Court have had occasion to, as evidence of the extent of Forest’s conduct
was not before the Court (indeed, no evidence was before the Court on a motion to dismiss).
Finally, Defendants ignore copious evidence that the effects of Forest’s repeated
announcements of Namenda IR withdrawal were not cured by Judge Sweet’s December 2014
injunction. First, Forest understood that once physicians began prescribing Namenda XR, they
would likely continue to do so. As Forest put it:
And Forest had stopped manufacturing Namenda IR (before the injunction)
Second, after the injunction, Forest began a
communications blitz announcing it was appealing, and stating it was “optimistic” the injunction
would be overturned, which sowed fear and doubt about the continued availability of Namenda
IR. Defendants incorrectly claim that Dr. Lamb calculates hop damages pre-dating Forest’s
February 2014 publicity campaign. But Dr. Lamb correctly observes that Forest both
and widely communicated about the withdrawal
before February 2014.
While Defendants criticize Plaintiffs for not analyzing “patient” switching behavior,
Plaintiffs and the proposed class are direct purchasers. Unlike patients or physicians, direct
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purchasers serve large swaths of the market, buy based on market demand, and do not purchase
based on particular physician preferences. Thus, as Forest converted prescriptions to Namenda
XR, direct purchasers were forced to buy the product to meet overall market demand. If, as Forest
concluded, its “soft switch” alone would result in just of patients switching to XR, then (1)
logically, the hard switch caused the additional post-hard switch demand; and (2) there is no need
to identify or trace individualized patient switching decisions because the hard switch’s impact is
reflected in wholesalers’ own increased Namenda XR purchases. Accordingly, Dr. Lamb analyzed
wholesaler level IMS National Sales Perspective and manufacturer data at the wholesaler level to
identify the effects of Forest’s hard switch on direct purchasers. Dr. Lamb thus observed the actual
rate of switching and compared it to Forest’s own soft-switch-only market share projections.
II. STATEMENT OF FACTS
A. The Patent Settlement Agreement and the Lexapro Amendment
The Original Lexapro Agreement Between Mylan and Forest
Forest’s reverse payment took the form of an amendment to a prior agreement covering
AG Lexapro. On October 3, 2005, Forest and Alphapharm (later acquired by Mylan), entered into
the Original Lexapro Agreement. DSoF ¶182. The patent on Lexapro, another billion-dollar
Forest drug, did not expire until 2012, but was being challenged in 2005 by an ANDA first-filer,
Ivax (later acquired by Teva). PASoF ¶217. Since Ivax was the first-filer, Alphapharm would
have to wait six months before it could launch its own ANDA generic Lexapro, and longer if it did
not get FDA approval of its ANDA, which was still pending as of 2005. PASoF ¶287.
The Original Lexapro Agreement thus appealed to Alphapharm because it permitted
Alphapharm to sell an AG version of Lexapro, manufactured by Forest, two weeks before Teva’s
entry, instead of (at least) six months later. PASoF ¶218(b). Alphapharm and Forest would share
Product Profit associated with Alphapharm’s sales of AG Lexapro. PASoF ¶218(c). Product
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Profit, essentially a royalty, was comprised of Alphapharm’s net sales less Forest’s manufacturing
costs, and would be split, with to Alphapharm and to Forest. PASoF ¶218(c)-(d).
The Original Lexapro Agreement had a five year term (starting with Lexapro patent
expiry), with a one-year minimum. PASoF ¶218(e).
PASoF ¶218(g). Mylan acquired Alphapharm in 2007. DSoF ¶218.
The Lexapro Amendment
As of 2010, AG Lexapro had not yet been launched. PRSoF ¶193. The July 21, 2010
Lexapro Amendment, inter alia, assigned the Original Lexapro Agreement from Alphapharm to
Mylan. PASoF ¶¶220-21. The Lexapro Amendment Mylan’s royalty obligation (upon
launch), from to on the first in Product Profit, and from to on
the next in Product profit. PASoF ¶221(b). Thus, compared to the Original Lexapro
Agreement, the Lexapro Amendment diminished the royalties Mylan owed Forest by
DSoF ¶243. Forest also agreed to pay Mylan of . PASoF ¶221(d). Mylan
agreed to take on the manufacturing of AG Lexapro. PASoF ¶221(e). Product Profit was
comprised of Mylan’s net sales less Mylan’s manufacturing costs. PASoF ¶221(f). The Lexapro
Amendment had a two-year minimum term. PASoF ¶221(g).
PASoF ¶221(i).
Negotiations of the Patent Settlement and the Lexapro Amendment
The Namenda patent settlement agreement and the Lexapro Amendment were both signed
on July 21, 2010. PASoF ¶239. This was no coincidence; the Lexapro Amendment was Mylan’s
payoff to quit the patent fight. Between the execution of the Original Lexapro Agreement in 2005
and the first discussions surrounding the settlement of the Namenda patent dispute between Mylan
and Forest (in August of 2009), the parties had not revised the Original Lexapro Agreement at all.
PASoF ¶225. It was not until after the August 2009 Namenda patent settlement discussions that
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Forest raised with Mylan a possible amendment. PASoF ¶¶222-26.
The Lexapro Amendment was linked to the Namenda patent settlement. Prior to a January
21, 2010 settlement meeting between Forest’s and Mylan’s CEOs, Forest executives and lawyers
gathered material, including documents entitled PASoF ¶¶227-28.
PASoF ¶229.
PASoF ¶¶230-31.
PASoF ¶232.
The evidence and Defendants’ own admissions demonstrate that Forest’s David Solomon
and Mylan’s each negotiated both the Lexapro Amendment and the Namenda patent
settlement. PASoF ¶234. Any suggestion that the two agreements were “separate” is fatuous.
Forest Told Mylan That the Lexapro Amendment Offered
to Mylan, While There Was
for Mylan to Compete in the Namenda Market
Forest told Mylan that the Lexapro Amendment had more financial value to Mylan than a
Mylan Namenda patent litigation victory and launch. In a February 11, 2010 Forest-Mylan
settlement presentation, Forest detailed the
PASoF
¶235.
PASoF ¶236. “Immediate genericization” would
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mean “No Financial Upside” because 13 prior settling Namenda generics had provisions in their
agreements that provided for immediate and simultaneous market entry if Mylan won the patent
dispute, lowering to nil Mylan’s potential generic Namenda profits. PASoF ¶237.
The last slide, entitled “Reasons to Settle” drove this point home. Forest explained that its
PASoF ¶238. In other words,
Forest’s reverse payment to Mylan was “a sum even larger than what [Mylan] would gain in profits
if it won the paragraph IV litigation and entered the market.” Actavis, 133 S. Ct. at 2235.
The Lexapro Amendment and Mylan Patent Settlement Were Part of
a Single Transaction
The documents and the
explicitly present the Lexapro Amendment and Namenda patent settlement as a
package. PASoF ¶240. Forest’s in-house and outside counsel repeatedly referred to the Lexapro
Amendment as a to the Namenda patent dispute. PASoF ¶243.
PASoF ¶242. Forest’s patent counsel confirmed that
the Lexapro Amendment was a component of the Namenda patent settlement. PASoF ¶244. And
Forest submitted to the Federal Trade Commission and the Department of Justice, a copy of the
Lexapro Amendment, pursuant to Section 1112(a) of the Medicare Prescription Drug,
Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003, which requires the submission of agreements that
are “contingent upon, provide a contingent condition for, or are otherwise related to” a Hatch-
Waxman patent settlement agreement.2 PASoF ¶245.
2 Forest says the FTC, “brought no enforcement action.” Def. Br. at 6. FTC states, “Any
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Forest and Mylan Would Have Entered into the Lexapro Amendment,
Even Without Its Reverse Payment Terms
Even without the payments proposed in the Mylan Deal Concept docments, and the
actually paid, the claimed manufacturing cost savings benefited both parties, since any
savings realized by shifting AG Lexapro manufacturing would result in, David Solomon testified,
of dollars of greater Lexapro Product Profit, which both parties would split. Therefore,
no additional payment for Mylan to manufacture AG Lexapro was required. PASoF ¶¶250-51.
Plaintiffs’ manufacturing expert, James Bruno, opines that active pharmaceutical
ingredient (“API”) for generic Lexapro was readily available and the manufacturing process was
straightforward, and that, accordingly, the payment Mylan received was far above what would
have been necessary to induce Mylan to take on manufacturing responsibilities. PASoF ¶253.
Forest’s Claimed Medicaid Rebate Savings Were Illusory and
Artificially Inflated
Forest claims it projected that the Lexapro Amendment would lower its Medicaid rebate
liability by by having Mylan manufacture AG Lexapro, which should be viewed to
offset the reverse payment. DSoF ¶¶215-235, 265. But Medicaid rebates are an obligation owed
to the government, not Mylan, so they should not be viewed as a concession by Mylan akin to
forgiveness of a debt or other obligation. PASoF ¶¶255-56. Instead, the Medicaid savings result
from Forest charging a higher price to Medicaid for brand Lexapro, a product not even subject to
the Original Lexapro Agreement or the Lexapro Amendment. PASoF ¶257.
It is undisputed that Forest was not required to make any reverse payment to Mylan to reap
suggestions by drug companies to courts . . . that FTC inaction indicates the agreement presents
no antitrust problem would be inaccurate and improper.” https://www.ftc.gov/system/
files/attachments/competition-policy-guidance/050210pharmrulesfaqsection.pdf, last accessed
Dec. 10, 2017.
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Medicaid rebate savings. It was in both parties’ interest to have Mylan manufacture AG Lexapro
without any reverse payment. Or, Forest could have had another firm manufacture it for Mylan,
and achieve Medicaid savings for far less than . PASoF ¶¶258-61.
Moreover, Forest ginned up its Medicaid rebate savings forecasts with numbers that were
inflated from about to roughly match the it agreed to pay Mylan the day
before. PASoF ¶267. Specifically James Finchen, Forest’s Medicaid analyst, circulated the
second-to-last Medicaid rebate savings forecast on March 15, 2010, the same day the parties
reached an agreement in principle on the Lexapro Amendment. PASoF ¶¶246-49, 265. The next
day, Mr. Finchen adjusted several assumptions, including by applying an incorrect royalty rate, to
generate a final analysis with savings equivalent to the reverse payment, and recirculated it in the
same email chain. Id. Mr. Finchen made these adjustments after blindly applying incorrect inputs
by members of primary negotiator David Solomon’s team. Mr. Finchen admitted at deposition
that correcting the royalty rates led to lesser rebate savings. PASoF ¶¶262-63. In other words,
Forest did not finalize its rebate savings forecasts until after it agreed to pay Mylan .
There Is No Contemporaneous Evidence That Forest Thought Mylan
Would Terminate the Original Lexapro Agreement After One Year
Forest claims that the Lexapro Amendment bound Mylan to a second year of AG Lexapro
royalties it would not have had to pay if it terminated the Original Lexapro Deal after one year.
DSoF ¶¶245-249. Forest recognizes that Mylan would have to pay a second-year royalty only if
Product Profit was positive. Id. Forest also recognizes that, for those additional royalties to be
attributable to the Lexapro Amendment, Mylan would have had to have intended to opt-out after
one year. But there is no evidence that Mylan had any intent or incentive to do so. Forest and
Mylan knew that there were twelve competitors waiting to launch generic Lexapro once Teva’s
180-day exclusivity expired. PASoF ¶274. Faced with so many additional competitors, Mylan
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would have no reason to opt out and start selling its own generic Lexapro; instead, it could satisfy
its customers simply by continuing to sell AG Lexapro. PASoF ¶¶270-83.
First, there is no evidence that Mylan desired to opt out after the first year, or that Forest
believed it would. All of Forest’s AG Lexapro sales forecasts contain a list of assumptions, none
of which is a one-year Mylan termination (instead they project market share and pricing from
various points “onward”). PASoF ¶283. Moreover, Mylan did not have FDA approval to sell its
ANDA version of Lexapro until 2015. PASoF ¶287. Even if Mylan received such approval, it
could not have entered the market under its own generic Lexapro ANDA until six months later
than if it sold Forest’s AG, because as everyone knew, Teva was the first filer and held the 180-
day exclusivity. PASoF ¶288. Selling Forest’s AG Lexapro on “day 1” (actually, two weeks
before “day 1”) conferred on Mylan a first-mover advantage that was not achievable by selling its
own non-authorized generic. Id. If Mylan changed from selling Forest’s AG to its own ANDA
generic, Mylan risked losing that first-mover advantage. Id.
Consistent with this evidence, Mylan in fact never terminated the agreement, and continued
to sell Lexapro AG well past the “minimum” term, even despite profits from Lexapro AG dropping
precipitously after multiple generics entered during halfway through the first year. Even if,
contrary to this evidence, Mylan wanted to stop buying and reselling Lexapro AG, it would not be
impeded by a “minimum term,” because Forest’s agreement did not obligate Mylan to buy or resell
any minimum amount of Lexapro AG; the Lexapro agreement only obligated Mylan to use best
efforts to resell any Lexapro AG that Mylan actually did buy. PASoF ¶¶ 218 (g); 221(h).
Second, Forest had no reasonable basis to assume that a product with 12 competitors would
be profitable and generate royalties in a second year. PASoF ¶275 (Bruno Reply ¶24 (“Based on
my decades of experience in the pharmaceutical industry…there is no basis to assume that a drug
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product with more than 10 competitors would continue to be profitable 12 months after generic
entry”). Yet, Forest has produced (and its expert Mr. Green has relied upon) forecasts showing
large royalties in a second year. These forecasts are not just implausible or mere innocent
mistakes; rather, a jury could find they were purposely contrived attempts to create “offsets” to
cover up the reverse payments. Id. (Berndt Reply ¶59 (“the forecasted benefits to Forest were so
grossly unreasonable and unreliable, and seriously biased. I can only conclude that Forest’s
forecasts were not designed to provide Forest’s executives with a rational expectation of how
Forest would profit under the Forest-Mylan agreement as amended.”)).
Even Forest’s primary negotiator, Mr. Solomon, initially rejected Forest’s implausible
assumptions for Mylan’s second-year AG Lexapro share, writing on January 13, 2010, that:
AFTER 6 MONTHS MANY OTHER GENERICS WILL ENTER – SO I WOULD
EXPECT MYLAN’S SHARE TO DECLINE TO A MUCH LOWER LEVEL –
PROBABLY DECLINING TO SOMETHING LIKE 10-20%
PASoF ¶276. Forest’s expert Mr. Green disregarded Mr. Solomon’s statement. PASoF ¶277.
The dates of the forecasts also show that they were pretextual and/or created to hide
Forest’s reverse payment. Of the roughly 43 forecasts or analyses that Forest cites regarding the
Lexapro Amendment (DSoF ¶¶215, 236), 34 were generated between January 7 and January 20,
2010 (the day before the January settlement meeting between Forest and Mylan) and only
projected profits from the first year of sales. PASoF ¶284. The remaining 7 that purported to
show expected profits in the second year (and beyond) were generated between March 15 and
March 16, 2010 (id.), the day of and the day after the parties agreed in principle to the Namenda
patent settlement and the Lexapro Amendment (i.e., after negotiations on the Lexapro Amendment
had concluded). PASoF ¶¶246-49. A jury could conclude that these 7 “second year” forecasts –
created after agreement on the Lexapro Amendment was reached – were not created as part of
Forest’s evaluation of settlement terms but for a nefarious purpose.
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By contrast, Mylan’s forecasts, generated of the Lexapro Amendment’s
execution, were realistic, showing a year-two profit of just $ million, versus the $31.7 year-two
profit for Forest alone in Forest’s post-settlement forecasts. PASoF ¶¶278-79. Unlike Plaintiffs’
expert, Forest’s Mr. Green
PASoF ¶280; PASoF ¶275.
In fact, akin to Mylan’s objectively reasonable prediction, and as Forest’s expert Mr. Green
was forced to recognize, in less than one year after launch, AG Lexapro began losing money, and
Mylan accrued a “royalty debit,” which “represents a claim against future profit share payments
to Forest.” PASoF ¶281. Mylan thus predictably owed no royalty to Forest in the second year of
AG Lexapro sales, and instead earned credits against future royalties – essentially a negative
royalty to Forest. Forest’s March 15-17, 2010 analyses and forecasts, purporting to show
otherwise, were simply post-hoc rationalizations. PASoF ¶¶275, 286.
B. But-For the Reverse Payment Agreement, Mylan and Other Generic
Competitors Would Have Entered the Market Earlier
Plaintiffs’ experts have concluded, based on the evidence, that absent the reverse payment,
Mylan would have launched generic Namenda IR far earlier. Prof. Elhauge concludes that Mylan
and Forest would have agreed to a no-payment settlement “with an entry date of November 2,
2012, about 26.3 months prior to the settlement entry date of January 11, 2015 agreed upon with
the reverse-payment settlement.” PRSoF ¶332. At least four additional generic Namenda IR
manufacturers would have then entered the market pursuant to the contingent launch clauses in
their Namenda patent settlement agreements. None of the five (
) had any supply, equipment, or manufacturing issues that would have prevented a
generic Namenda IR from being marketed any time after June 2012. PASoF § D.
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C. Forest’s Hard-Switch Product Hop
Forest launched Namenda XR in June 2013. PASoF ¶296; PRSoF ¶358. Forest had long
modeled both a “withdrawal” or “hard switch” scenario, and a “conventional” or “soft switch”
scenario. PASoF ¶302; PRSoF ¶¶312, 314. Forest modeled the expected conversion rate from a
soft switch for more than a year before launch. PASoF ¶314. Forest’s forecasts
. PASoF ¶¶302, 305-06, 318. Forest
. PASoF
¶296. Indeed, Forest employees learned from managed care representatives that it was critical to
launch XR at least eighteen months before entry of the IR generic. PASoF ¶296; PRSoF ¶371.
Thus, Forest’s analysts were able to rely upon a very thorough analysis of the market in preparing
their forecasts. As this Court has already found, Forest’s analysts routinely projected that Forest
would attain approximately 30% conversion to Namenda XR by employing soft switch strategies.
Litvin Decl. Ex. 355, Estoppel Op. at 24).
Forest launched Namenda XR with a massive promotional blitz and an aggressive
campaign to secure favorable formulary coverage. PASoF ¶308; PRSoF ¶363. But, cognizant of
the fact that there was no significant clinical advantage to Namenda XR over Namenda IR (PASoF
¶¶304, 309-10), Forest closely monitored its progress towards its target conversion rate. PASoF
¶¶308, 313. Forest executives discussed the hard switch option during quarterly investor calls
(PASoF ¶¶311, 343-44), and Forest determined internally that
. PASoF ¶312. By October 18, 2013, Forest
determined that the soft switch was not going as well as hoped and decided to implement the hard
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switch. PASoF ¶¶320-21, 325, 338.
Forest telegraphed the announcement before it was made, using it to convince its most
crucial pharmacy benefit manager, Optum, which controlled 21% of Medicare Part D (Namenda’s
most significant market), to accept its rebate agreement and give Namenda XR favorable
formulary status. PASoF ¶¶340-41; PRSoF ¶373. Forest knew that by broadcasting the
withdrawal announcement, it would “accelerate” conversion. Id. Moreover, Forest understood
that “over-communication” of the withdrawal announcement would change physician prescribing
habits from IR to XR, which would not be reversed, because “old habits die hard.” PASoF ¶347-
49, 350; PRSoF ¶¶359, 398, 412, 472.
On February 14, 2014, Forest formally announced that it would withdraw Namenda IR by
August 15, 2014. PASoF ¶342. Forest’s press release was followed by an intense promotional
campaign to induce physicians to immediately switch their patients from Namenda IR to XR.
PASoF ¶¶350-69; PRSoF ¶484. Forest sent out millions of communications, both directly and via
third parties (including over 2.6 million communications from just one third-party vendor). PRSoF
¶425. Forest also unleashed its army of detail representatives to drill into physicians, caregivers,
health care entities, and patients that they should switch to Namenda XR now to avoid disruption
upon IR’s withdrawal. PASoF ¶¶361-69; PRSoF ¶484. The message was clear: physicians should
immediately stop prescribing Namenda IR and prescribe Namenda XR. PASoF ¶368. Forest
reinforced this message over and over with written, electronic, and interpersonal communications
into the summer of 2014. PASoF ¶368. Even when Forest faced a supply disruption for Namenda
XR, it told the market that it would still discontinue Namenda IR in the Fall. PASoF ¶368. Forest
also stopped making Namenda IR so that (as Forest told the Second Circuit) “physicians would
transition patients to Namenda XR.” PRSoF ¶397.
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After a hearing, Judge Sweet enjoined Forest from actually discontinuing sales of Namenda
IR until after generics entered. PASoF ¶371. Forest was required to inform the market of the
injunction and the “continued availability of Namenda IR in the same or substantially similar
manner in which they informed [it] of Defendants’ plan to discontinue Namenda IR in February
2014.” Id.
Forest responded, however, by issuing press releases announcing it was appealing the
injunction and was “optimistic” the injunction would be overturned; and then by informing the
market it was appealing, i.e., challenging the injunction and asking a higher court to overturn it (as
Forest’s own expert concedes). PRSoF ¶¶397-98, 430, 484. Forest understood that the key to
conversion was to change physician prescribing habits (PRSoF ¶¶397, 412, 472, 487), and Forest’s
emphasis on its appeal continued to sow fear, uncertainty, and doubt about whether Namenda IR
would be available. Forest hardly rectified its prior six-month campaign of telling physicians,
caregivers, and health care providers about Forest’s intent to discontinue Namenda IR. Indeed,
Forest did not drop its public legal challenge to the injunction until November 2015, after generic
IR had belatedly entered. PRSoF ¶397.
As a result of the hard switch, the communications amplifying it, and Forest’s inadequate
corrective measures, Forest wrongfully inflated its conversion rate well over the 30% soft-switch
rate, as this Court found in its estoppel opinion. PRSoF ¶488 (quoting Estoppel Op. at 24).
III. ARGUMENT
A. The Court Should Deny Summary Judgment on the Reverse-Payment Claim
Pertinent Law
The Court previously set forth the three-part rule of reason burden shifting framework:
First, the plaintiff bears the initial burden of showing that the defendant’s conduct
had an actual adverse effect on competition as a whole in the relevant market. If
plaintiff satisfies this burden, the burden then shifts to defendant to offer evidence
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that its conduct had pro-competitive effects. If defendant is able to offer such proof,
the burden shifts back to plaintiff, who must prove that any legitimate competitive
effects could have been achieved through less restrictive alternatives.
Sergeants Benevolent Ass'n Health & Welfare Fund v. Actavis, PLC, No. 15-cv-6549 (CM), 2016
WL 4992690, *13 (S.D.N.Y. Sep. 13, 2016) (“MTD Op.”) (citation omitted). Under Actavis (133
S. Ct. at 2237), plaintiffs bear the burden on the first prong, by showing a large reverse payment.
See King Drug Co. of Florence, Inc. v. SmithKline Beecham Corp., 791 F.3d 388, 411, 412 (3d
Cir. 2015) (“Lamictal”) (“First, to prove anticompetitive effects, the plaintiff must prove payment
for delay[.] * * * Second, the burden then shifts to the defendant to show that legitimate
justifications are present, thereby explaining the presence of the challenged term[.] * * * Finally,
the plaintiff will have the opportunity to rebut the defendant’s explanation.”); King Drug Co. of
Florence v. Cephalon, Inc., 88 F. Supp. 3d 402, 422 (E.D. Pa. 2015) (under Actavis, “a plaintiff
… must demonstrate anticompetitive effects, including a large reverse payment, under the first
step of the rule of reason. The defendant then bears the burden of explaining or justifying the
payment as procompetitive. If the plaintiff presents evidence to raise a factual dispute as to
defendant’s proffered justifications, the fact-finder will weigh all relevant information and
determine whether the settlement was, on balance, unreasonable”).
a. Large Reverse Payment and Anticompetitive Effect
i. Large Reverse Payment
A large reverse payment under Actavis is one that exceeds the payor’s (here, Forest’s)
litigation costs avoided by the settlement. See Actavis, 133 S. Ct. at 2237 (payment is to be
measured “in relation to the payor’s anticipated future litigation costs”) (emphasis added); MTD
Op., 2017 WL 4992690, at *14-15 (The Supreme Court “instructed courts [] to compare a payment
to the payor’s future litigation costs as a measure of scale to determine if it was ‘large’”) (citing
Actavis, 133 S. Ct. at 2237).
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Contrary to Defendants’ argument on pages 36-37 of their brief, “large” is not defined with
reference to the brand’s profits. Actavis underscored – twice – that it is impermissible to judge the
payment size based on the revenues the brand company could earn for the patented product. First,
the Supreme Court said defendants could be liable even if the payment was small enough in
relation to branded drug revenues to be easily recouped by the brand company:
Solvay’s patent, if valid and infringed, might have permitted it to charge drug prices
sufficient to recoup the reverse settlement payments it agreed to make to its
potential generic competitors. And we are willing to take this fact as evidence that
the agreement’s anticompetitive effects fall within the scope of the exclusionary
potential of the patent. But we do not agree that that fact, or characterization,
can immunize the agreement from antitrust attack.
133 S. Ct. at 2230 (emphasis added; citation omitted). Second, the Supreme Court was clear that
the “earning potential” of the drug at issue (i.e., the brand drug’s monopoly profit stream) is not a
relevant comparator. Id. at 2231 (“earning potential” of patent is not what courts should measure
the restriction against).3 This makes sense: because a brand’s (monopoly) profits far exceed a
generic’s (competitive) profits, a brand need not pay a “large” portion of its patent-protected profits
to induce delay. See King Drug Co. of Florence, 88 F. Supp. 3d at 417 (Actavis “seems to
contradict the argument that the brand manufacturer’s expected monopoly profits constitutes the
appropriate benchmark” for a large reverse payment (citation omitted)).
ii. Anticompetitive Effect
The anticompetitive effect from a reverse-payment agreement is the “maint[enance of]
supracompetitive prices to be shared among the patentee and the challenger rather than face what
might have been a competitive market[.]” Actavis, 133 S. Ct. at 2236. If a plaintiff adduces proof
of higher prices due to the reverse payment, summary judgment should be denied. See Laumann
3 In addition, the payments made by the brand to the generics in Actavis came nowhere near the
brand revenues during the period of delay.
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v. NHL, 56 F. Supp. 3d 280, 297-98 (S.D.N.Y. 2014) (“Plaintiffs have carried their initial burden
of showing an actual impact on competition. The [defendants] have entered an express agreement
to limit competition. * * * There is also evidence of a negative impact on the output, price, and
perhaps even quality. . .”); Fleischman v. Albany Med. Ctr., 728 F. Supp. 2d 130, 164 (N.D.N.Y.
2010) (summary judgment denied in rule of reason case because “[p]laintiffs have provided
sufficient evidence of anticompetitive effect” and “harm to competition” from challenged
conspiracy); Rome Ambulatory Surgical Ctr. v. Rome Mem. Hosp., 349 F. Supp. 2d 389, 409
(N.D.N.Y 2004) (“Plaintiff may demonstrate actual adverse effects on the market by a showing
reduced output, increased prices, decreased quality, or the imposition of entry barriers.”); Clorox
Co. v. Sterling Winthrop, 836 F. Supp. 983, 989 (E.D.N.Y. 1993) (“to survive summary judgment
[in a rule of reason case], a plaintiff must raise a genuine issue of fact concerning the
anticompetitive effect of the challenged restraint”).
b. Procompetitive Explanations or Justifications
i. Defendants Bear the Burdens of Production and Proof
Once Plaintiffs have established that Forest’s conduct had an actual adverse effect on
competition, “the burden then shifts to [Forest] to offer evidence that its conduct had pro-
competitive effects.” Ark. Carpenters Health & Welfare Fund v. Bayer AG, 604 F.3d 98, 104 (2d
Cir. 2010), rev’d on other grounds, Actavis, 133 S Ct. 2223. See also Virgin Atl. Airways v. British
Airways PLC, 257 F.3d 256, 264 (2d Cir. 2001) (once an adverse effect on competition is shown,
“the burden shifts to [defendant] to establish the procompetitive value of its[] agreements”); Rome
Ambulatory Surgical Ctr., 349 F. Supp. 2d at 407 (same). Thus, a procompetitive justification is
an affirmative defense for which the defendant bears the burdens of production and persuasion.
NCAA v. Bd. of Regents, 468 U.S. 85, 113 (1984) (“the Rule of Reason … place[s] upon
[defendant] a heavy burden of establishing an affirmative defense which competitively justifies
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this apparent deviation from the operations of a free market.”)
Under Actavis, there are two possible justifications: a reverse payment is less than the
payor’s saved litigation costs or represents “fair value for services” performed by the generic
manufacturer. Actavis, referring specifically to the defense that “[t]hat [the] payment may reflect
compensation for other services that the generic has promised to perform,” clearly put the burden
on defendants to show the brand’s payment was “fair value for services.” 133 S. Ct. at 2236 (“An
antitrust defendant may show in the antitrust proceeding that legitimate justifications are present,
thereby explaining the presence of the challenged term and showing the lawfulness of that term
under the rule of reason.”) (emphasis added); id at 2237 (“one who makes such a payment may be
unable to explain and to justify it”). All courts recognize this. In In re Lipitor Antitrust Litig., 868
F.3d 231, 256-57 (3d Cir. 2017) (emphasis in original), the Third Circuit held that “[t]he
Supreme Court clearly placed the onus of explaining or justifying a large reverse payment
on antitrust defendants . . . An antitrust defendant may show in the antitrust proceeding that
legitimate justifications are present.” See also King Drug Co. of Florence, 88 F. Supp. 3d at 419-
20 (“Defendants, not Plaintiffs, bear the burden of explaining the payments …[E]vidence that these
payments exceed fair value for goods and services …are not a necessary element of plaintiffs’
claims.”); In re Opana ER Antitrust Litig., 162 F. Supp. 3d 704, 718 (N.D. Ill. 2016) (with respect
to whether a payment is “justified” because it reflects “fair value for services,” “[t]he burden is on
the defendant to ‘show in the antitrust proceeding that legitimate justifications are present . . .’”)
(quoting Actavis, 133 S. Ct. at 2236); In re Nexium (Esomeprazole) Antitrust Litig., 42 F. Supp.
3d 231, 263-64 (D. Mass. 2014) (“Nowhere in Actavis does the Supreme Court suggest that fair
market value is a silver bullet against antitrust scrutiny. Neither does the opinion place the initial
burden on the Plaintiffs to prove, in their prima facie case, that a transaction was for something
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other than fair market value.”). Leading commentators agree that the burden of justifying a reverse
payment remains with the defendants. See Aaron Edlin, Scott Hemphill, Herbert Hovenkamp &
Carl Shapiro, Activating Actavis, 28 Antitrust 16, 18 (2013) (“The defendants have the burden of
production [and of] proving that the payment was for valuable services, rather than delay.”).
ii. Fact Questions About the Validity of Justifications
Preclude Summary Adjudication
A plaintiff can defeat summary judgment by showing that a defendant’s proffered
justifications are pretextual,4 or questionable for other reasons. See Eastman Kodak Co. v. Image
Tech. Servs., 504 U.S. 451, 483 (1992) (“Factual questions exist, however, about the validity and
sufficiency of each claimed [procompetitive] justification, making summary judgment
inappropriate.”); In re K-Dur Antitrust Litig., No. 01-1652, 2016 WL 755623, at *12 (D.N.J. Feb.
25, 2016) (summary judgment denied due to dispute over whether license from generic back to
brand explained reverse payment or was pretextual); Gregory v. Fort Bridger Rendezvous Ass’n,
448 F.3d 1195, 1205 (10th Cir. 2006) (“Whether the conspirators’ justification for its conduct is
pretextual . . . is properly considered under the rule of reason analysis.”); Klickads, Inc. v. Real
Estate Bd. of N.Y., No. 04-cv-08042, 2007 WL 2254721, *8 (S.D.N.Y. Aug. 6, 2007) (summary
judgment “inappropriate” “[b]ecause substantial questions of fact exist with respect to…
procompetitive justifications”); Fox v. Good Samaritan Hosp., 2007 WL 2938175, *10 (N.D. Cal.
Oct. 9, 2007) (denying summary judgment where “there is evidence. . . from which one could infer
that . . . the reason given for the implementation of the rule was pretextual.”); Rome Ambulatory
4 To be cognizable, Forest’s asserted justifications must not be pretextual. See New York v. Actavis
PLC, 787 F.3d 638, 652 (2d Cir. 2015) (“the monopolist may proffer ‘nonpretextual’
procompetitive justifications for its conduct. The plaintiff may then either rebut those
justifications or demonstrate that the anticompetitive harm outweighs the procompetitive benefit.”)
(citation omitted).
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Surgical Ctr., 349 F. Supp. 2d at 411 (plaintiffs exposed “[a] logical disconnect in defendants’
argument” which “is sufficient to raise a question of fact as to its justification”); id. (“[m]aintaining
patient volume is certainly good for the Hospital, but defendants have not conclusively
demonstrated that it in any way benefitted competition.”) (emphasis added); Laumann, 56 F. Supp.
3d at 302 (summary judgment denied where “[m]ost of defendants’ claimed pro-competitive
effects are disputable, and the overall effect on the economy is even less conclusive.”).
iii. Less Restrictive Means of Achieving a Procompetitive
Benefit
For an asserted procompetitive justification to reach the jury, the challenged restriction on
competition must be the least restrictive means of achieving the procompetitive goal. See NASL
v. NFL, 670 F.2d 1249, 1261 (2d Cir. 1982) (defendant failed to prove the “market necessity” of
its ban on team owners also owning soccer teams, and “[m]oreover, the NFL was required to come
forward with proof that any legitimate purpose could not be achieved through less restrictive
means. This it has failed to do.”). A jury may not consider a defendant’s justification if the
challenged restraint – here, the reverse payment to Mylan and associated delay – was not the least
restrictive means to achieve the claimed procompetitive benefit. See Ch. 1, Instruction 3-C, ABA
Model Jury Instructions in Civil Antitrust Cases (2016) at Notes (“If plaintiff proves that the same
benefits could have been readily achieved by other, reasonably available alternative means that
create substantially less harm to competition, then they cannot be used to justify the restraint.”).
c. Balancing
The third step is balancing the anticompetitive harm against any proven, nonpretextual
procompetitive justifications. It is the jury that has the final say on whether, after weighing the
totality of circumstances, a challenged agreement violates the rule of reason. “The principal
question in a rule of reason case is often whether the anticompetitive effects of a restraint are
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outweighed by some procompetitive justification.” United States v. Visa U.S.A., Inc., 344 F.3d
229, 238 (2d Cir. 2003). “Such an issue of material fact should not be resolved at the summary
judgment stage because to do so requires weighing the evidence, which is a matter left for a jury.”
Geneva Pharm. Tech. Corp. v. Barr Labs. Inc., 386 F.3d 485, 501 (2d Cir. 2004) (reversing
summary judgment in antitrust case because “Plaintiffs have satisfied their burden of producing
evidence that the effects of Barr’s advantage were substantial and that competition overall was
impaired.”); Lamictal, 791 F.3d at 411 (“If genuine issues of material fact remain after discovery,
the rule-of-reason analysis is for the finder of fact, not the court as a matter of law.”).
d. Linkage Between Agreements
In addition to the direct linkage supplied by the “Mylan Deal Concept” documents the
Forest-Mylan settlement presentation, the statements of Forest’s and Mylan’s lawyers, the Forest-
Actavis merger agreement, and Forest’s FTC filings (see Parts II.A.3 & 5, supra), a reasonable
jury can find that agreements executed simultaneously among the same parties, like the Namenda
patent settlement and the Lexapro Amendment, comprise a single transaction. See TVT Records
v. Island Def Jam Music Grp., 412 F.3d 82, 89 (2d Cir. 2005) (it is “typically a question of fact for
the jury” whether writings are part of a single transaction or not); 11 Williston on Contracts §
30:26 (4th ed.) (“whether separate agreements are actually part of a single transaction is a question
of fact, dependent on the intent of the parties”). See also Opana, 162 F. Supp. 3d at 717 (“it is
improper to view the components of the Endo-Impax Settlement in isolation.”) (citation omitted);
In re Niaspan Antitrust Litig., 42 F. Supp. 3d 735, 752 (E.D. Pa. 2014) (“[T]he Licensing
Agreement must be read in conjunction with the Co-Promotion and Manufacturing Agreements
executed that same day.”).
Issues of Fact Remain on Plaintiffs’ Reverse Payment Claim
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a. Forest Made a $ Reverse Payment to Mylan
There is no dispute that the Lexapro Amendment conferred $ million to Mylan, and
PRSoF ¶¶243, 255,
260, 274; PASoF ¶¶221(b)-(d). See TVT Records, 412 F.3d at 89. Plaintiffs’ economic expert,
Professor Elhauge, testified that the $ million Forest conferred to Mylan under the Lexapro
Amendment made no economic sense unless it was linked with the Namenda patent settlement
agreement. PASoF ¶244. David Solomon (for Forest) and (for Mylan) negotiated both
deals contemporaneously. PASoF ¶234. Mylan’s lawyer explained that the two agreements not
only ,
. PASoF
¶290. Forest’s economic expert, Dr. Fowdur, cited this testimony in her report, conceding that
linkage. Id.
. Id. No jury would be required to believe Forest’s story that the Lexapro Amendment
and Namenda patent settlement were unrelated. The other evidence demonstrating the linkage is
overwhelming. PASoF ¶¶240-45, supra at Parts III.A.3 & 5.
Nor can there be any dispute that the reverse payment was large: it was times Forest’s
saved litigation costs of $ . PRSoF ¶280. As the cases cited in Part III.A.1.a.i, supra,
show, this satisfies Plaintiffs’ obligation to show a large payment. See MTD Op., 2016 WL
4992690, at *12-13; In re Actos End Payor Antitrust Litig., No. 13-cv-9244, 2015 WL 5610752,
*19 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 22, 2015), aff’d in part and rev’d in part, 848 F.3d 89, 97 (2d Cir. 2017).
Moreover, as Forest emphasized (see Part
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II.A.4, supra),
” PASoF ¶¶235-38. That admission dooms Forest’s
motion, as a reverse payment larger than what the generic manufacturer would earn from
competing is large as a matter of law. Actavis, 133 S. Ct. at 2235 (“Indeed, there are indications
that patentees sometimes pay a generic challenger a sum even larger than what the generic would
gain in profits if it won the paragraph IV litigation and entered the market.”); Lidoderm, 74 F.
Supp. 3d at 1071 (“a sum even larger than what the generic would gain in profits if it won the
paragraph IV litigation and entered the market” is “at one extreme”); King Drug Co. of Florence,
88 F. Supp. 3d at 418 (“A reasonable jury could find that a reverse payment to a generic
manufacturer that comes close to or exceeds the expected profits to be earned by prevailing in the
patent litigation could induce a generic manufacturer to forfeit its claim. * * * As Actavis explains,
the relevant inquiry is what would induce the generic to stay off of the market.”).
b. Forest’s Explanations for the Reverse Payment Are Disputed
Forest argues that there are explanations for its $ reverse payment other than a
payment for delay. Forest’s primary expert, Mr. Green, could not say, however, what Forest’s $
upfront payment to Mylan was for (PASoF ¶290). Yet, Forest now relies on Mr. Green,
an accountant, to argue that Mylan supposedly promised to give money and services back to Forest
that are valued at or around . Though each of Forest’s explanations is contrived (and
obviously disputed), Forest argues that a jury would be required to accept them. Not so. Nor can
Forest shift the burden of explaining a reverse payment to Plaintiffs. As shown in Part IIIA.1.b
above, Forest bears the burdens of production and proof on its explanations and “fair value”
defenses, and so summary judgment on this claim is doubly inappropriate. Even in other contexts,
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fair value for services is an issue of fact.5 A jury will have to evaluate Forest’s explanations.
i. Forest’s “Second Year of Authorized Generic Lexapro”
Explanation is Pretextual and Disputed
Forest’s first justification for its $ payment to Mylan is that it was paid to
convince a purportedly “unwilling” Mylan to continue selling AG Lexapro for a second year
instead of terminating after one year, cementing a second year of royalties for Forest. But there is
no credible evidence to support this excuse, and no jury would be required to believe it.
Forest claims, based on post-hoc 30(b)(6) deposition testimony by David Solomon in this
case, only that it was worried that Mylan would terminate after one year. DSoF ¶246
”). There is no evidence that Mylan ever considered doing so, much less that the reverse
payment prevented it. The contemporaneous evidence shows the opposite.
(see Part II.A.3, 5 & 6, supra),
. PASoF ¶250.
5 See Eisenberg v. CIR, 155 F.3d 50, 53 n.9 (2d Cir. 1998) (“A determination of fair market value,
being a question of fact, will depend upon the circumstances in each case.”) (quoting Revenue
Ruling 59-60, P3.01); ASCAP v. Showtime/Movie Channel, 912 F.2d 563, 569 (2d Cir. 1990) (“Fair
market value is a factual matter[.]”); Ocean Walk, Ltd. v. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s, No. 03-
cv-05271, 2006 WL 2689626, at *9 (E.D.N.Y. Sept. 19, 2006) (“Yet, it is a difficult task to
establish valuation as a matter of law; rather, the determination of [fair market] value is normally
one for the fact-finder.”).
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PASoF ¶270.
Plaintiffs have also demonstrated that it would have been economically irrational for Mylan
to terminate after year one, because it would make less money. O’Shaughnessy Decl. Ex. 122,
Elhauge Rebuttal Rpt. ¶18. In addition, Mylan did not have final FDA approval to sell its own
ANDA generic Lexapro until 2015, and Mylan did not launch even then. PASoF ¶287. And even
with FDA approval for its ANDA, Mylan could not have launched its own generic Lexapro until
six months later than if it sold Forest’s AG, because Teva was the first filer and held the 180-day
exclusivity. PASoF ¶288. Selling Forest’s AG Lexapro on “day 1” conferred on Mylan a first-
mover advantage. If Mylan changed from Forest’s AG to Mylan’s own generic, Mylan risked
losing that first-mover advantage. Id. Further, Plaintiffs have shown a “second year” promise by
Mylan was illusory (and so worth nothing extra to Forest),
. PASoF ¶¶218(g), 221(h).
In addition, with up to 14 generic drug companies lined up to compete in the generic
Lexapro market six months after Teva’s launch, no reasonable drug company could have expected
Mylan’s AG sales to maintain the share and pricing needed to generate royalties for Forest in year
two. See Part II.A.8, supra. Indeed, just six months after Mylan started selling AG Lexapro in
February 2012, multiple generics entered, Mylan’s price and share dropped, and Mylan’s royalty
obligation to Forest . PASoF ¶281. Mylan knew this would happen, projecting second
year AG profits at just $ million. PASoF ¶279. Forest’s expert, Mr. Green, simply ignored
Mylan’s contemporaneous projections. PASoF ¶280.
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PASoF ¶276 (capitalization in original). Mr. Green simply disregarded Mr. Solomon’s words in
favor of other documents. PASoF ¶277. Forest’s other expert, Dr. Fowdur, relies entirely on Mr.
Green’s analysis. O’Shaughnessy Decl. Ex. 54, Fowdur Report ¶52. Plaintiffs’ experts have
shown that these forecasts are utterly implausible. PASoF ¶275 (Plaintiffs’ expert Mr. Bruno:
“Based upon my decades experience in the pharmaceutical industry, including in profit sharing
contracts, there is no basis to assume that a drug product with more than 10 competitors would
continue to be profitable 12 months after generic entry); id. (Plaintiffs’ expert Dr. Berndt: “The
assumptions reflected in the Forest documents that Mr. Green uncritically relied upon were
completely at odds with the contemporaneous literature that would underlie any reasonable
analysis of expected market share, generic pricing, and anticipated profit from the AG.”).
The so-called “second year” forecasts which Forest now relies on were generated
(PASoF ¶¶246-49), so they could not have served as
a basis to evaluate a proposed second year. PASoF ¶¶284-87. A reasonable jury could find that
the Forest forecasts were a fig-leaf designed to hide the $ reverse payment.
ii. Forest’s “Medicaid Liability Reduction” Explanation is
Disputed and Pretextual
Forest’s second explanation for the $ reverse payment is that it compensated
Mylan for accepting manufacturing responsibility for AG Lexapro, which avoided $
in Medicaid rebate liability on Forest’s sales of branded Lexapro, which was not the subject of
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either the Lexapro Amendment or the Original Lexapro Agreement. See PASoF ¶¶254-69. There
are several serious problems with this explanation.
First, there is no evidence that the $ was intended to compensate Mylan for
accepting manufacturing responsibility for AG Lexapro, and Forest does not dispute that the fair
value of the transfer of manufacturing services was just $ , a small fraction of the $
payment. See PASoF ¶253.
Second, the $ of avoided rebate liability that Forest touts came from the U.S.
Treasury, not Mylan. See PASoF ¶¶255-56. The avoided rebate liability is merely an incidental
benefit to Forest that does not affect the value Mylan received. To say that the $ million in
avoided rebate liability offsets the $ reverse payment is a non sequitur, because of the
disconnect between payor and payee, and between the reason for the payment and the reason for
the offset. It is also legally irrelevant. See Part III.A.2.b.iii, infra.
Third, the evidence is undisputed that Forest did not need to pay Mylan any money, much
less $ , to accept a transfer of manufacturing services for AG Lexapro to obtain the
Medicaid rebate savings. As explained in Part III.A.1.b.iii. above, for a procompetitive
justification to be considered, the reverse payment must be the least restrictive means of achieving
the asserted procompetitive benefit. See NASL, 670 F.2d at 1261. Yet, the evidence is entirely in
Plaintiffs’ favor that Mylan would have accepted manufacturing of AG Lexapro without any
additional compensation. PASoF ¶¶250-53. Forest claims this is indisputable: “Mylan would
achieve manufacturing cost savings, and those cost savings would make Generic Lexapro more
profitable overall, increasing the profit share income for both parties.” DSoF ¶253. Thus, by
Forest’s own admission there was no need for it to pay Mylan $ to assume
manufacturing responsibilities, when it was in Mylan’s economic interest to do so for no payment.
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Fourth, there is substantial evidence that the claimed Medicaid reduction was inflated and
is thus also a pretextual attempt to paper over the $ million reverse payment.
– DSoF ¶¶202-03),
. PASoF ¶¶225-38, 284, 286. And Forest
employees manipulated the rebate liability analyses to inflate the forecasted rebate savings to just
about equal the reverse payment to Mylan.
. PASoF ¶¶265-67; Part II.A.7,
supra.
. PASoF ¶¶265-67.
PASoF ¶263.
PASoF ¶268. From this sequence of events, a reasonable jury could infer an attempt on Forest’s
part to manipulate its rebate avoidance and create analyses to disguise the reverse payment to
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Mylan, revealing Forest’s entire rebate liability argument to be pretextual.
Finally, even if Forest could convince a jury to offset ,
an unexplained reverse payment remains. PASoF ¶269. This points out a substantial flaw in
Forest’s sole fair valuation expert, Mr. Green’s, opinion: even if the jury were to accept his
creative Medicaid rebate accounting, Forest still made an actionable reverse payment to Mylan.
PASoF ¶ 288, fn 3. If the jury rejects Mr. Green’s first explanation for the reverse payment (the
“second year” argument, discussed above) then it will be required to find that Forest – which
under controlling law bears the burdens of production and persuasion in explaining and
justifying its payments to Mylan – made a large reverse payment to Mylan. PRSoF ¶ 266;
O’Shaughnessy Decl. Ex. 69 ¶ 75.
iii. The Diminished Medicaid Rebate Liability Does Not
Shrink the Reverse Payment
Mr. Green’s creative Medicaid accounting is irrelevant in any event, because as a matter
of law Forest should not be able to offset its payment by any amount with a tangential benefit it
received from a third party – here, the government, via a reduced Medicaid rebate for brand
Lexapro, a product not subject to either the Namenda settlement or the Lexapro Amendment. See
Def. Br. at 17, 25-28. Forest’s argument is illogical under Actavis, the thrust of which was to
ascertain whether the payment induced the generic to quit the patent fight. Actavis, 133 S. Ct. at
2235 (where a payment is larger than what the generic would receive by competing, “[t]he payment
may instead provide strong evidence that the patentee 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.”) (citations omitted) (emphasis added). This is such a case. See PASoF
¶¶238, 241
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In re Loestrin 24 Fe Antitrust Litig., No. MDL No. 13-2472-S-PAS, 2017 WL 3600938, at
*17 (D.R.I. Aug. 8, 2017) emphasized that “[t]he [Supreme] Court’s use of the word ‘induce’
suggests that the value to the alleged infringer is paramount, whereas the emphasis on the ‘share
of its monopoly profits’ supports the notion that the brand must be alleged to have sacrificed some
amount of its anticipated profits in order to maintain its monopoly.”) (emphasis added). That
Forest could avoid a Medicaid liability does not negate that it paid Mylan from its monopoly
profits. Only a return of value from Mylan could do so. And as Judge Underhill explained in In
re Aggrenox Antitrust Litig., 94 F. Supp. 3d 224, 243 (D. Conn. 2015) (emphasis added), a reverse
payment is unlawful if “viewed holistically, it effects a large and unexplained net transfer of value
from the patent-holder to the alleged patent-infringer.” Value external to the transfer logically
does not inform whether there has been a net transfer of value between the settling parties.
Specifically, the Medicaid rebate savings does not represent a transfer of value from Mylan back
to Forest. Forest’s Medicaid expert admitted that the rebates were not an obligation Forest would
have otherwise owed Mylan. PASoF ¶¶255-56. Hence, they cannot net against what Mylan
received. Actavis and its progeny confirm that a benefit untethered to a reverse payee’s obligation
does not factor into a fair value analysis. See, e.g., Loestrin, 2017 WL 3600938, at *19 (defendants
must show that the payment was for “fair value for services the generic manufacturer promised
to perform.”) (emphasis added). Here, it is undisputed that the only services Mylan performed for
Forest were to take over the manufacturing for AG Lexapro.
Even if Forest may deduct from its reverse payment benefits it received that were unrelated
to any services Mylan provided, Forest should not be entitled to net out the entire purported
Medicaid benefit. First, doing so assumes that the entire benefit should be attributed to the
reverse payment. But as Prof. Elhauge explains, on a standalone basis, it would have been
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beneficial to both parties to enter the Lexapro Amendment without a payment. PASoF ¶¶250-52.
Second, Forest could have achieved the same Medicaid savings by contracting with a third party
to manufacture AG Lexapro for Mylan. PASoF ¶¶258-61.
Forest cites Lamictal, 791 F.3d at 404-05, to suggest that the Actavis analysis turns on
whether the brand gave up more value than it received. That reading is incorrect. In that case the
Third Circuit merely explained that a promise from a brand to not launch an AG was equivalent to
a transfer of cash, because cash and a promise not to launch an AG both have value to the generic.
As the court explained in the paragraph following the quote Defendants cite:
If the brand uses a no-AG agreement to induce the generic to abandon the patent
fight, the chance of dissolving a questionable patent vanishes (and along with it,
the prospects of a more competitive market). As with a reverse payment of cash,
a brand agreeing not to produce an authorized generic may thereby have
“avoid[ed] the risk of patent invalidation or a finding of noninfringement.”
Id. at 2236. In addition, when the parties’ settlement includes a no-AG agreement,
the generic also presumably agrees to an early entry date that is later than it would
have otherwise accepted.
Id. at 405 (emphasis added). The Third Circuit’s analysis is clearly fixed on the size of the reverse
payment from the generic’s point of view.
iv. Forest’s “Payment for Mylan’s Antitrust Release”
Explanation Admits That It Made a Reverse Payment
Forest also argues that it paid (or some portion thereof) to Mylan for Mylan’s
release of alleged antitrust claims Mylan had against Forest (alleging an invalid PTE). Def. Br.
34. But those claims merely duplicated patent defenses and counterclaims Mylan had already
asserted in the Namenda patent litigation, and so added nothing new. PASoF ¶291. For its part,
Mylan admits that the was “
.” PASoF ¶290.
Moreover,
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, more than three years after the Namenda patent settlement agreement
(signed in July of 2010). PRSoF ¶270; PASoF ¶291.
cannot begin to justify a reverse
payment. Forest never even valued those future claims – its concern was not its potential damage
liability but rather the risk that the PTE would be invalidated, ending its Namenda monopoly.6
That is why the release in the Namenda patent settlement was revised to expressly include Mylan’s
release of its 35 U.S.C. § 156 claims. Forest’s acknowledgment that it paid Mylan to release patent
invalidity claims Mylan had asserted in the patent litigation is nothing less than a judicial
admission that it made an unlawful reverse payment: Forest is arguing that it paid Mylan not to
file an antitrust complaint that challenged the validity of Forest’s ’703 patent – an illegal payment
to avoid the risk of patent invalidation. Actavis, 133 S. Ct. at 2236.
B. Causation Is Established, or There Remain Material Disputed Facts
Plaintiffs have asserted two alternative causation scenarios, each fully supported by the
record: (1) but-for Forest’s reverse payment, Forest and Mylan would have entered a no-payment
settlement with an earlier entry date based on the bargaining strength of the parties; and (2) absent
a settlement Mylan would have prevailed in the patent litigation and entered earlier than the
agreed-to entry date.
1. Causation Is a Question for the Jury
The Supreme Court has held that “[t]he issues of proximate causation and superseding
cause involve application of law to fact, which is left to the factfinder, subject to limited review.”
Exxon Co., USA v. Sofec, Inc., 517 U.S. 830, 840-41 (1996) (emphasis added); Armstrong v. U.S.,
756 F.2d 1407, 1409 (9th Cir. 1985). Courts in this Circuit and elsewhere have held the same in
6 Plaintiffs’ expert valued the claims at after trebling. PASoF ¶ 291.
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the context of pharmaceutical antitrust cases. La. Wholesale Drug Co. v. Sanofi-Aventis, No. 07
CV 7343 (HB), 2008 WL 4580016, at *5 (S.D.N.Y. Oct. 14, 2008) (“at minimum this is a jury
question”); In re Flonase Antitrust Litig., 798 F. Supp. 2d 619, 627 (E.D. Pa. 2011) (causation is
“best left to the jury”) (citing Callahan v. A.E.V., Inc., 182 F.3d 237, 257 (3d Cir. 1999)); id. at
628 (“Proximate cause and intervening cause are usually issues for the jury to decide.”) (citation
omitted); In re Neurontin Antitrust Litig., MDL No. 1479, 2013 WL 4042460, *9-10 (D.N.J. Aug.
8, 2013) (summary judgment inappropriate where cause of delay was disputed) (citing Rivas v.
City of Passaic, 365 F.3d 181, 193 (3d Cir. 2004)); In re Lipitor Antitrust Litig., 2013 WL 4780496,
at *23 (D.N.J. Sept. 5, 2013) (possibility of earlier generic entry a jury question), rev’d on other
grounds, 868 F.3d 231; Andrx Pharm., Inc. v. Biovail Corp. Int’l, 256 F.3d 799, 808-09 (D.C. Cir.
2001) (same); In re Cardizem CD Antitrust Litig., 105 F. Supp. 2d 618, 649–50 (E.D. Mich. 2000)
(sufficient evidence to support inference of causation creates a jury question). See also In re
Currency Conversion Fee Antitrust Litig., 773 F. Supp. 2d 351, 373 (S.D.N.Y. 2011) (denying
summary judgment because jury could find conduct caused injury to competition).
“In the antitrust context, plaintiffs enjoy a considerable amount of leeway in ‘constructing
a hypothetical world free of the defendant’s exclusionary activities.’” Univac Dental Co. v.
Dentsply Int’l, Inc., No. 1:07–CV–0493, 2010 WL 1816745, *3 (M.D. Pa. Apr. 27, 2010). Courts
therefore routinely deny defense motions based on causation grounds that seek to hold plaintiffs
to an unrealistically high standard in proving a “but for” world free from the alleged antitrust
violation. See, e.g., In re Neurontin Antitrust Litig., MDL No. 1479, 2009 WL 2751029, at *11
(D.N.J. 2009). See also Bigelow v. RKO Radio Pictures, 327 U.S. 251, 265 (1946) (“most
elementary conceptions of justice and public policy require that the wrongdoer shall bear the risk
of the uncertainty which his own wrong has created . . . Any other rule would enable the wrongdoer
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to profit by his wrongdoing at the expense of his victim.”).
2. Argument
a. Forest and Mylan Would Have Entered into a Procompetitive
Settlement Absent the Anticompetitive Reverse Payment
Forest argues that “showing that the alternative agreement may have happened simply does
not satisfy the [Plaintiffs’] burden.” Def. Br. at 41 (citing In re Wellbutrin XL Antitrust Litig., 868
F.3d 132, 167 (3d Cir. 2017)) (emphasis in original). But Plaintiffs do not contend that Mylan
“may” have entered the Namenda market but-for Forest’s reverse payment. Rather, Plaintiffs have
sufficient evidence (not speculation) that Mylan would have entered earlier via either: (1) a
settlement agreement without the payment that purchased delay; or (2) prevailing in the ’703 patent
litigation and entering the market thereafter.
i. Objective Evidence Establishes that Forest and Mylan
Would Have Agreed to a No-Payment Settlement with
an Earlier Entry Date
Antitrust cases employ a “comparison of [] prices [] as affected by the [antitrust violation],
with what they would have been in its absence under freely competitive conditions.” Bigelow, 327
U.S. at 264. In other words, the but-for world is “free of the restraints and conduct alleged to be
anticompetitive.” Blades v. Monsanto Co., 400 F.3d 562, 569 (8th Cir. 2005). See also Apotex,
Inc. v. Cephalon, Inc., 321 F.R.D. 220, 236 (E.D. Pa. 2017) (“When recreating a but-for world to
establish antitrust damages, a plaintiff must create a world ‘characterized by the absence of the …
challenged practices.’”) (citation omitted).
For reverse payment cases, the Supreme Court has explicitly endorsed a no-payment
agreement alternative. Actavis, 133 S. Ct. at 2236-37 (parties “may . . . settle in other ways, for
example, by allowing the generic manufacturer to enter the patentee’s market prior to the patent’s
expiration, without the patentee paying the challenger to stay out prior that point.”); Lamictal, 791
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F.3d at 403 (quoting Actavis); Lidoderm, 2017 WL 5068533, at *11-13, *30-32; In re Wellbutrin
XL Antitrust Litig., 133 F. Supp. 3d 734, 757 n.37 (E.D. Pa. 2015) (“Wellbutrin”) (an alternate
settlement scenario “is one mechanism through which the plaintiffs may establish anticompetitive
effects at the summary judgment stage”).7 And the no-payment alternative must be based on an
objective evidentiary standard – in this instance, what lawful, economically rational, profit-
maximizing companies would have done. See In re Nexium (Esomeprazole) Antitrust Litig., 842
F.3d 34, 60-61 (1st Cir. 2016) (“the test here is an objective test.”); Dolphin Tours, Inc. v. Pacifico
Creative Serv., Inc., 773 F.2d 1506, 1511 (9th Cir. 1985) (plaintiffs “must presume the existence
of rational economic behavior in the hypothetical free market”); Murphy Tugboat Co. v. Crowley,
658 F.2d 1256, 1262 (9th Cir. 1981) (a “reasonable jury could not . . . indulge in the assumption
that a competitor would follow a course of behavior other than that which it believed would
maximize its profits.”).; Lidoderm, 2017 WL 5068533, at *12, *24.
For example, in In re Methyl Tertiary Butyl Ether Prods. Liab. Litig., Nos. 1:00-1898,
MDL 1358 (SAS), M21-88, 2008 WL 1971538, at *11 (S.D.N.Y. May 7, 2008), the court credited
plaintiffs’ expert’s opinion that the parties would have entered into alternative hypothetical
contracts because it “would have been economically rational.” Cf. Laumann v. NHL, 117 F. Supp.
3d 299, 324 (S.D.N.Y. 2015) (crediting expert analysis that in a but for world prices would “settle
to a competitive, profit-maximizing equilibrium”).
7 The literature is in accord. See ABA Section of Antitrust Law, Proving Antitrust Damages: Legal
and Economic Issues, 54-55 (2d ed. 2010) (“To isolate the effect of the violation . . . it is important
to modify the defendants’ conduct in the but-for world only to the extent necessary to comply with
the law.”); Areeda & Hovenkamp, IIA Antitrust Law ¶¶394 (3d ed. 2007) (to determine injury,
“the plaintiff’s actual profits are compared to what they would have been but for the antitrust
violation”); Aaron Edlin, Scott Hemphill, Herbert Hovenkamp & Carl Shapiro, The Actavis
Inference: Theory and Practice, 67 Rutgers U.L. Rev. 585, 609 (2015) (recognizing “an alternative
settlement that did not have a large payment” as an available benchmark to model effects of generic
delay).
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Providing a but-for entry date without a reverse payment is explicitly envisioned in Actavis
as an “approach[] [that is] fully consistent with the principles applied in but-for damage
calculations” – namely, that it must be presumed in constructing a but-for world that the parties
would engage in “rational economic behavior.” Lidoderm, 2017 WL 5068533, at *12 (citing
Dolphin Tours, Inc., 773 F.2d at 1511 and Murphy Tugboat Co., 658 F.2d at 1262). See also In re
Methyl Tertiary Butyl Ether Prods. Liab. Litig., 2008 WL 1971538, at *11; Laumann, 117 F. Supp.
3d at 324; Kamerman v. Steinberg, 744 F. Supp. 59, 63 (S.D.N.Y. 1990) (plaintiffs’ reliance on
circumstantial evidence failed because it ran counter to a “rational profit-maximizing approach”);
FTC v. Foster, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 47606, *103 (D.N.M. May 29, 2007) (disapproving a theory
that failed to presume that firms act in profit maximizing ways).
Despite Actavis’s explicit guidance, Forest self-servingly claims it would have never
agreed to such an earlier entry date. Def. Br. at 41-44. Defendants’ argument, however, assumes
away the key factual question the jury must answer – whether Mylan agreed to the 2015 entry date
because of the additional inducement (payment) Mylan received. See Lamictal, 791 F.3d at 405
(“when the parties’ settlement includes a [payment], the generic also presumably agrees to an early
entry date that is later than it would have otherwise accepted.”); Niaspan, 42 F. Supp. 3d at 751-
52 (a reverse payment “is likely to induce the generic to agree to enter the market at a date later
than that to which it would otherwise agree”). It also impermissibly exploits Forest’s own
wrongful conduct to its advantage:
Where the tort itself is of such a nature as to preclude the ascertainment of the amount
of damages with certainty, it would be a perversion of fundamental principles of
justice to deny all relief to the injured person, and thereby relieve the wrongdoer from
making any amend for his acts. In such case, while the damages may not be
determined by mere speculation or guess, it will be enough if the evidence show the
extent of the damages as a matter of just and reasonable inference, although the result
be only approximate. The wrongdoer is not entitled to complain that they cannot be
measured with the exactness and precision that would be possible if the case, which
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he alone is responsible for making, were otherwise.
Story Parchment Co. v. Paterson Parchment Paper Co., 282 U.S. 555, 563 (1931); see also
Bigelow, 327 U.S. at 265.
With the Story Parchment and Bigelow principles in mind, the but-for-world – a construct
necessitated by the antitrust violators’ perversion of free market conditions – is devised with
objective evidence. Plaintiffs’ economics expert Prof. Elhauge, an “antitrust titan,”8 proved, using
evidence – not speculation, that without a reverse payment, Mylan and Forest would have agreed
to an entry date of November 2, 2012, which is within a range of dates which would make both
Forest and Mylan better off than if they continued the litigation. O’Shaughnessy Decl. Ex. 121,
Elhauge Rpt. ¶¶ 64-65. The actual evidence Professor Elhauge relied on included each party’s
bargaining power as measured by reference to their share of the joint gains received from the
settlement, their profit projections, the actual settlement entry date, and the reverse payment
amount. Id. ¶¶ 58-62.
Forest’s reliance on Wellbutrin is misplaced. The district and appellate courts in Wellbutrin
actually agreed that an alternate settlement scenario can support causation; however, they found
the evidence there insufficient to support the theory. Specifically, unlike here, the expert in that
case “offer[ed] no testimony in support of a contention that an alternate settlement would have
been reached” and “did not ‘[try] to answer the question of what specifically some alternative form
of settlement would have looked like.” Wellbutrin, 133 F. Supp. 3d at 757-58. Thus, this case,
8 See, e.g., Castro v. Sanofi Pasteur Inc., 134 F. Supp. 3d 820, 830 (D.N.J. 2015) (Prof. Elhauge is
“a preeminent antitrust scholar” who is “eminently qualified” on antitrust economics and has “been
described as a ‘highly qualified antitrust titan.’”); In re Mushroom Direct Purchaser Antitrust
Litig., No. 06-0620, 2015 WL 5767415, at *4 (E.D. Pa. July 29, 2015) (“courts have admitted Prof.
Elhauge as an expert in antitrust economics generally . . . Prof. Elhauge has been described as a
‘highly qualified antitrust titan[].’”) (citation omitted).
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like Lidoderm, is distinguishable from Wellbutrin. Lidoderm, 2017 WL 5068533, at *10 (stressing
that Wellbutrin accepted the but-for no-payment settlement method for proving causation). In
Lidoderm, Judge Orrick pointed out that the Wellbutrin decisions only rejected the no-payment
settlement method on the facts of Wellbutrin, because it was not supported by any expert
testimony, unlike here, as explained above. Id. at *12 (Prof. Elhauge’s “analys[i]s – applying
accepted principles of antitrust law and settlement analysis to evidence in this case – [is] different
than what happened in Wellbutrin”).
Moreover, the Wellbutrin facts differ significantly from those here. First, the settlement in
Wellbutrin allowed the underlying patent litigation to continue – a fact that the court considered a
“critical distinction.” Wellbutrin, 133 F. Supp. 3d. at 737-38, 752. The court held that “[t]the
plaintiffs…cannot establish that the Wellbutrin settlement presented the type of anticompetitive
harm contemplated by Actavis and Lamictal because the settlement did not induce the generic
manufacturer to quit its patent challenge and thus did not eliminate the risk of patent invalidation
or a finding of non-infringement by the court.” Id. at 754 (internal quotations omitted). Second,
three separate companies owned patents that purported to cover Wellbutrin – GSK, Biovail, and
Andrx. Id. at 740, 743. Plaintiffs in Wellbutrin XL would have had to show not only that the
generics would have prevailed in litigation against (or reached an agreement for earlier entry with)
GSK and Biovail, but that Andrx would have subsequently agreed to license its patent to the
generics. Id. at 747-48. That is because plaintiffs in Wellbutrin did “not even argue that the generic
manufacturers could have succeeded in the Andrx litigation.” Id. at 767.
There is further evidence that Forest and Mylan would have entered into a no-payment
settlement agreement with an earlier launch date. Specifically, the settlements with all the prior
Namenda patent defendants included various contingent launch provisions that licensed them to
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enter should a later settler negotiate an earlier entry date. PASoF ¶204(6). Thus, Forest and the
Namenda patent defendants clearly envisioned a subsequent settlement earlier than three months
prior to patent expiry. Forest witnesses testified that these clauses had “value” to the generics
(DSoF ¶351), which would only be true if earlier launch was reasonably probable.
In addition, the record is clear that Mylan would not accept Forest’s proposed entry date
unless it received compensation,
. See PASoF ¶¶228-33,
235-38, 240, 244.
Defendants, on the other hand, support their argument only with post-hoc testimony of their
own employees. Given that Forest and Mylan decided to settle with a large reverse payment, they
unsurprisingly now claim they would not have settled without one. But the jury is not required to
believe them. Also, Forest’s employees were not asked whether without Forest making a reverse
payment, Forest would have agreed to an earlier entry date. Def. Br. at 41-42.
ii. Plaintiffs Have Sufficient Evidence to Prove That
Mylan Would Have Prevailed in the Patent Case
Forest argues that Plaintiffs “cannot establish causation and antitrust injury by reference to
a hypothetical patent trial between Forest and Mylan.” Def. Br. at 45. But this Court has already
endorsed such a theory, stating that if Forest had “lost the litigation, the patent would have been
declared invalid or not infringed and the Generic Competitors could have entered the market
immediately.” Litvin Decl. Ex. 355, Estoppel Op. at 37. This Court further held that Plaintiffs’
Section 1 claim “will presumably require proof that the ’703 Patent would likely have been found
invalid or not infringed by the Generic Competitors[.]” Id. at 40. Plaintiffs have that evidence.
Rather than address the patent merits as Plaintiffs do here, however, Forest asks this Court
to rule that the flurry of settlements following claim construction establish that, as a matter of law,
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Mylan could not have prevailed. Neither the Markman ruling nor the flurry of settlements –
particularly viewed in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs – supports Forest’s position. As Forest
explained to Mylan during settlement discussions, “[e]very other ANDA filer has recognized that
there is no financial upside to litigating.” PASoF ¶¶56-57; PRSoF ¶294. This had nothing to do
with the patent merits, but rather that there were fourteen first-filers who would “share [the] 180-
day exclusivity” and that “sales and profits for generic memantine [were going to] be miniscule”
as a result. Id. When the patent court issued its Markman ruling, the generics’ prospects for a
quick victory were greatly reduced. A reasonable jury could conclude that the generics’
settlements did not reflect concerns about the patent merits, but that the “miniscule” economic
“upside” from successful suit did not justify the “downside” of large litigation costs.
a. Mylan Was Likely to Prove That the ’703 Patent Is Invalid
A reasonable jury could readily conclude that Mylan was likely to prevail on its prior art
invalidity defenses. Forest’s sole argument that “the PTO already considered” the prior art (Def.
Br. at 48) ignores settled law that “[t]he courts are the final arbiter of patent validity and, although
courts may take cognizance of . . . the proceedings before the patent examiner, the question is
ultimately for the courts to decide, without deference to the rulings of the patent examiner.” Quad
Envtl. Techs. Corp. v. Union Sanitary Dist., 946 F.2d 870, 876 (Fed. Cir. 1991).
There is nothing novel or non-obvious about the ’703 patent claims. For many years before
filing the ’703 patent, Merz sold memantine tablets in Europe under the name Akatinol® to treat
patients diagnosed with organic brain syndrome (“OBS”). PASoF ¶¶36-40. OBS “is synonymous
with what neurologists refer to as Alzheimer’s disease.” PASoF ¶38. Merz then licensed Forest
to sell the same drug product in the United States to treat essentially the same disease (Alzheimer’s
disease). PASoF ¶41. The original claims of the ‘703 patent were invalid in view of prior art
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pertaining to Akatinol® and, in 2004, Forest sought reexamination. PASoF ¶42. The reexamined
claims, however, added trivial limitations that also are undisputedly disclosed in the prior art
including “orally administering” and “to a patient diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease.” PASoF
¶42. (emphasis in original). In view of the prior art references pertaining to Akatinol® and the
Fleischhacker reference that specifically disclosed administering memantine to patients diagnosed
with Alzheimer’s disease, the ‘703 patent was likely to be invalidated in the Namenda Patent
Litigation, just as the foreign counterparts to the ‘703 patent had been in Germany and Canada.
PASoF ¶¶42-50.9 Plaintiffs’ expert here, Dr. Schneider, is a leading clinician in the field of
Alzheimer’s disease and has reached the same conclusions as Mylan’s experts regarding
anticipation and obviousness. PASoF ¶51. Further, Forest’s experts have conceded key points
supporting the invalidity of the ‘703 patent claims. PASoF ¶¶46-48.
The ’703 patent was also invalid for lack of enablement. The enablement requirement is
not satisfied when there “is ‘no indication that one skilled in [the] art would accept without
question statements [as to the effects of the claimed drug products] and no evidence has been
presented to demonstrate that the claimed products do have those effects.” Rasmusson v.
SmithKline Beecham Corp., 413 F.3d 1318, 1323 (Fed. Cir. 2005). During prosecution, Forest
overcame an obviousness rejection by submitting a declaration to the Patent Office stating that “it
was understood by Physicians that NMDA receptor antagonism could impair cognition” and that
“the use of NMDA receptor antagonism in general . . . would have been contraindicated for the
treatment of Alzheimer’s disease in 1989 because it was thought that blocking of NMDA receptor
function would result in reduced cognition and greater vulnerability to excitotoxicity.” PASoF
9 Any attempt to distinguish the prior art based on Forest’s purported discovery of a new
mechanism of action would have failed because the mechanism of action of memantine – whatever
it is – would have also existed in the prior art. PASoF ¶50.
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¶52. While this representation was helpful for purposes of overcoming the obviousness rejection,
it was devastating for purposes of enablement because the ‘703 patent contains no studies on any
humans, much less any studies suggesting that memantine can be used successfully for the
treatment of Alzheimer’s disease through NMDA receptor antagonism. PASoF ¶¶52-55. Thus,
the ‘703 patent did not enable claims covering the use of memantine to treat Alzheimer’s disease
through NMDA receptor antagonism. Id.10
b. Mylan Was Likely to Prevail on Non-Infringement
A reasonable jury could also conclude that Mylan would prevail on non-infringement.
Mylan pressed two such theories – only one of which Forest even acknowledges – for which
Mylan’s expert Dr. Olney offered compelling evidence and for which Forest’s expert Dr. Doody
made key admissions. PASoF ¶¶59-64. Under Mylan’s non-infringement theories, the claim
construction Forest touts became the albatross across its neck. Although the reexamination
certificate for the ’703 patent contains nineteen claims (three of which are independent), Mylan’s
non-infringement theories can be drastically simplified. The originally-issued ’703 patent
contained only one independent claim. PASoF ¶65. If that originally-issued independent claim
was not infringed, then neither was any of the dependent claims. Wahpeton Canvas Co. v.
Frontier, Inc., 870 F.2d 1546, 1553 (Fed. Cir. 1989). Likewise, if that originally-issued
10 The ’703 patent claims also fail to satisfy the enablement requirement for an additional reason.
“To be enabling, the specification of a patent must teach those skilled in the art how to make and
use the full scope of the claimed invention without ‘undue experimentation.’” ALZA Corp. v.
Andrx Pharms., LLC, 603 F.3d 935, 940 (Fed. Cir. 2010) (emphasis added). Here, each of the
claims covers a 10,000-fold memantine dose ranging from 0.01 mg/kg to 100 mg/kg. PASoF ¶54.
But for purposes of attempting to prove infringement, Forest’s own expert Dr. Malinow admitted
that a “20 mg/kg of memantine . . . corresponds to around 4 times the highest acceptable dose in
humans” (i.e., the “highest acceptable dose in humans” is 5 mg/kg). Id. ¶55 (emphasis in original).
Thus, Dr. Malinow admitted that more than 95% of the dose range covered by the claims was not
only not enabled, but completely unacceptable. Id. Forest has not meaningfully attempted to rebut
this critical defect in the claims of the ’703 patent.
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independent claim was not infringed, then any infringed reexamined claim was necessarily invalid
as having been improperly broadened. Quantum Corp. v. Rodime, PLC, 65 F.3d 1577, 1584 (Fed.
Cir. 1995). Thus, this Court need only consider originally-issued claim 1.11
Originally-issued claim 1 was limited to a “method for the prevention or treatment of
cerebral ischemia” and required “administering…an effective amount” of a class of compounds
that included memantine. PASoF ¶73. The patent court’s claim constructions relating to
“prevention or treatment of cerebral ischemia” required that memantine achieve its therapeutic
effects through NMDA receptor antagonism. PASoF ¶¶74-78. Mylan’s expert Dr. Olney was an
extremely highly regarded neurobiologist. PASoF ¶79.
PASoF ¶82.12 These views – if accepted by the fact-finder – compelled a conclusion of non-
infringement.
A reasonable jury could also conclude that, even if memantine acted as an NMDA receptor
antagonist at the relevant doses, Forest could not meet its burden of proving that Mylan’s
was an “effective amount.” This term was construed by the patent
court to mean “an amount shown to cause improvement, in comparison to placebo.” PASoF ¶74.
11 Plaintiffs have nevertheless marshaled substantial evidence from which a reasonable juror could
also conclude that none of the reexamined claims was infringed. PASoF ¶¶66-72.
12 Moreover, Forest overlooks that, if Mylan obtained a reversal of the patent court’s claim
construction ruling, Mylan would prevail on non-infringement as a matter of law because
. PASoF ¶58.
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The sole evidence relied upon by Forest’s expert to establish that Mylan’s proposed memantine
dose was an “effective amount”
. PASoF ¶64. At her deposition, Forest’s expert in the
underlying patent case, Dr. Doody, admitted that this clinical study provided no evidence of
memantine’s mechanism of action or whether there was any improvement in “the treatment or
prevention of cerebral ischemia” as the claim required. PASoF ¶¶64, 74-78. Mylan’s expert Dr.
Olney opined that . PASoF ¶63.
Indeed, Dr. Olney’s evidence showed that
. PASoF ¶83.
Plaintiffs’ evidence confirms Mylan’s non-infringement defenses. Plaintiffs’ expert, Dr.
Herrmann, is a leading researcher in the field of Alzheimer’s disease and has reached virtually the
same conclusions as Dr. Olney regarding non-infringement. PASoF ¶84. And Forest’s own
experts admitted key points undermining Forest’s infringement theory. PASoF ¶¶85-86. For
example, Dr. Malinow testified that the relevant dose of memantine “provides a neuroprotective
effect by antagonizing NMDA receptors.” Id. But he admitted that “neuroprotection would cause
slowing of neurodegeneration.” Id. The FDA-approved Namenda label states that “[t]here is no
evidence that memantine prevents or slows neurodegeneration in patients with Alzheimer’s
disease.” Id. ¶86. Thus, Forest’s own label confirms that there is “no evidence” that memantine
is functioning as an NMDA receptor antagonist at the relevant doses.
c. Mylan Was Likely to Prevail on its PTE Validity Challenge
At trial, the jury could further determine that Mylan was more likely than not to prevail on
its challenge to the validity of Forest’s PTE. Under 35 U.S.C. § 282, “[i]nvalidity of the extension
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of a patent term or any portion thereof” may be based on “the material failure . . . by the applicant
for the extension . . . to comply with the requirements of [35 U.S.C. § 156].” During the PTE
proceeding, Forest claimed a 1,250 day extension based on a “testing phase” that began in 1997.
PASoF ¶98. However, FDA viewed the “testing phase” as beginning in 1990, and PTO ultimately
awarded a 5-year PTE. PASoF ¶¶99-116. Forest committed two material failures in connection
with its request for a PTE. First, Forest failed to declare the number of days during the expanded
“testing phase” when there was a failure to act with due diligence. PASoF ¶¶100-02, 106, 109.
Second, Forest failed to provide a chronology of studies over the expanded “testing phase.”
PASoF ¶¶102-03, 109. Forest’s own experts, Mssrs. McKelvie and Rosen, do not dispute that
these were material failures under the statute. PASoF ¶110. Rather than address these material
failures, Forest introduces a “red herring” – that FDA’s due diligence determination under §
156(d)(2) is not reviewable in a patent infringement trial. See Def. Br. at 49; 35 U.S.C. § 282(c).
But Mylan was not challenging FDA’s due diligence determination; Mylan instead alleged that
There is no legitimate dispute that those material failures of section
156 are a defense in a patent infringement trial. 35 U.S.C. § 282(c).13
d. Mylan’s Likelihood of Success in the Patent Litigation
A reasonable jury could also conclude that Mylan was more likely than not to prevail based
upon the testimony of patent litigation experts. Plaintiffs’ expert, Mr. Johnston,14 is a former Chief
13 As previously explained, this claim supports injunctive relief to invalidate the extended term of
the patent, but not damages, which Mylan conceded would not even begin to accrue until more
than three years after the Namenda patent settlement was reached.
14 As explained in more detail in DPP’s concurrently filed Opp’n to Forest’s Mot. to exclude Mr.
Johnston (ECF No. 443), Mr. Johnston’s testimony on how a reasonable patent attorney would
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Patent Counsel at Roche Pharmaceuticals, Inc. who routinely handicapped patent litigation during
his 30-year tenure at the company. PASoF ¶87. After a detailed analysis of Mylan’s invalidity and
non-infringement defenses, he concluded that a reasonable patent attorney would conservatively
conclude that Mylan had a greater than 60% chance of prevailing on liability issues in the Namenda
Patent Litigation and a 50% chance of prevailing on the PTE issue. PASoF ¶¶88-89.15 A
reasonable juror could conclude that, based on Mr. Johnston’s expert handicapping of the case,
Mylan was more likely than not to prevail.
e. The Pediatric Exclusivity Provision Was Anticompetitive
Forest argues that Plaintiffs’ “pediatric exclusivity allegation rises or falls on the issue of
whether there was a large and unjustified reverse payment . . . that caused delay” and that Plaintiffs
have not met their burden on this issue. Def. Br. at 50. This argument fails because it grossly
misstates the evidence in the case. As set forth infra, Plaintiffs have adduced significant evidence
and will prove that the payment to Mylan was large and unjustified. See Part III.A,
supra. Moreover, Plaintiffs’ economic expert explains in his report, using robust mathematical
calculations of the bargaining strength of the parties during settlement negotiations, that the reverse
objectively view the parties’ likelihoods of success is necessary because Forest has consistently
claimed privilege on its subjective beliefs on the merits. E.g., Forest Disclosure Pursuant to the
May 19, 2017 Order at 5 (“Forest does not intend to affirmatively rely on its subjective beliefs to
rebut any argument that (1) its position in the patent case was weak….”). Forest now reneges by
relying upon testimony from its Chief IP attorney that Forest believed it “had a very strong case.”
Def. Br. at 50, 39. The Court should disregard this testimony.
15 Defendants’ expert, Mr. McKelvie, opined that Forest was “more likely than not” to win on each
of Mylan’s eight defenses, and would not testify that Forest’s chances were any higher than that.
PASoF ¶90-91. But he admitted that Mylan would prevail if it won on any one of those eight
defenses. Id. ¶92. Even assuming Forest’s likelihood of prevailing on each of those defenses was
75%, Forest’s chances of running the table on each – as it was required to do to prevail – was far
less than 50%. See Wellbutrin, 868 F.3d at 169 n.61 (recognizing that likelihood of success overall
requires multiplying odds of success on different defenses for which patent holder must prevail).
Thus, Defendants’ own expert effectively concedes that Mylan was more likely than not to win.
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payment to Mylan delayed the generic entry date by . PRSoF ¶¶332, 354;
O’Shaughnessy Decl. Ex. 121, Elhauge Report ¶ 2. Finally, Plaintiffs have adduced significant
evidence that, absent the anticompetitive delay, four or more generic competitors (including
Mylan) would have launched their generic Namenda products years earlier than they actually did,
and that Forest would have concurrently launched an AG. PASoF ¶¶117-99; PRSoF ¶¶333-36;
Litvin Decl. Ex. 343, Thomas Report ¶¶7-8; O’Shaughnessy Decl. Ex. 356, DeLeon Report ¶¶10-
11. Forest also ignores a “but for world” where there is no settlement – in which case the generics
who received final approval prior to the expiration of the patent could all market their generic
Namenda products without regard to Forest’s Pediatric Exclusivity. Litvin Decl. Ex. 343, Thomas
Report ¶¶126-127, 129-131, 134-135, 318-319, 142-144; O'Shaughnessy Decl. Ex. 356, DeLeon
Report ¶¶10, 123-25. Consequently, the Pediatric Exclusivity issue is a question for the jury.
Furthermore, the prospect that some generic companies, including Mylan, would have
entered the market “at risk” was explicitly recognized by Forest and the settling generic companies
in the contingent launch provisions of the respective patent settlement agreements. As discussed
above, these provisions allowed for earlier entry by a settling generic should a non-settling generic
enter the market in any one of three ways, including “at risk.” Forest has admitted that these early
entry provisions were demanded by the generics, were valuable to them, and fostered earlier
generic competition. Forest is correct – the early launch provisions were valuable because it was
reasonably probable that Mylan, the last of the settling generics, would enter the market “at risk”
absent being paid to delay its market entry.
C. Forest’s Hard Switch Efforts Caused Plaintiffs to Sustain Antitrust Injury
Standard for Proving Injury and Damages
Contrary to Forest’s argument, controlling Supreme Court law requires a plaintiff to show
only that illegal conduct is “a material cause of the injury; a plaintiff need not exhaust all possible
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alternative sources of injury in fulfilling his burden of proving compensable injury” under section
4 of the Clayton Act. Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Res., Inc., 395 U.S. 100, 114 n.9 (1969).
The Second Circuit has explained this means “an antitrust defendant’s unlawful conduct need not
be the sole cause of the plaintiffs’ alleged injuries; to prove a ‘causal connection’ between the
defendant’s unlawful conduct and the plaintiff’s injury, the plaintiff need only ‘demonstrate that
[the defendant’s] conduct was a substantial or materially contributing factor’ in producing that
injury.” In re Publ’n Paper Antitrust Litig., 690 F.3d 51, 66 (2d Cir. 2012) (emphasis and
alteration in original) (quoting Litton Sys., Inc. v. AT&T Co., 700 F.2d 785, 823 n.49 (2d Cir.
1983)); Actos, 848 F.3d at 97 (“defendant’s anticompetitive act” need not be “sole cause” of
plaintiffs’ injury). See also Litvin Decl. Ex. 355, Estoppel Op. at 33 (“plaintiff need only show
that the illegal conduct ‘was a substantial or materially contributing factor’ to its injuries.’”)
(quoting Litton, 700 F.2d at 823 n.49). Further, “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.” Actos,
848 F.3d at 101 (quoting Publ’n Paper, 690 F.3d at 66). And, as noted above, the causation issue
is left to the jury. See Part III.B.1., supra.
As noted above, the Supreme Court has long recognized that a defendant should not be
able to benefit from the uncertainty that its own conduct has produced. See Part III.B.1, 2 supra.
Thus, once the fact of injury is shown, damage “calculations need not be exact.” Comcast Corp.
v. Behrend, 133 S. Ct. 1426, 1433 (2013). See also LePage’s Inc. v. 3M, 324 F.3d 141, 166 (3d
Cir. 2003) (“Once a jury has found that the unlawful activity caused the antitrust injury, the
damages may be determined without strict proof of what act caused the injury, as long as the
damages are not based on speculation or guesswork.”). See also Direct Purchaser Class Plaintiffs’
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Mem. in Opp’n to Forest’s Mot. to Exclude Dr. Russell Lamb (“Lamb Daubert Opp’n”), filed
contemporaneously herewith (discussing applicable law of proving injury and damages).
Plaintiffs Have Demonstrated that Forest’s Hard Switch Strategy
was a Substantial Factor in Causing Harm to Plaintiffs
Plaintiffs adduce abundant proof that Forest’s lengthy promotional blitz of its hard switch
was a “materially contributing factor,” Publ’n Paper, 690 F.3d at 66, in causing direct purchasers
to buy more Namenda XR – at supracompetitive prices – than they would have otherwise.
As Judge Sweet found, and as Forest is estopped from contesting, “the purpose of the
switch was anticompetitive: to put barriers obstacles in the path of producers of generic memantine
and thereby protect Namenda’s revenues from a precipitous decline following generic entry.”
O’Shaughnessy Decl. Ex. 6, Unredacted Sweet Op. at 119. See also PASoF ¶¶30-33 (citing
testimony from Forest executives that generics would take or more of brand sales within
months of entry). Judge Sweet extensively cited Forest’s own forecasts detailing the expected
impact of its hard switch strategy. This Court reiterated Judge Sweet’s findings that “a
‘significantly higher‘ number of patients would convert from Namenda IR to Namenda XR than
if Forest had not attempted to pull Namenda IR from the market and that “Forest’s own internal
projections estimated that, using only soft-switch tactics, only of Namenda IR patients would
voluntarily switch to Namenda XR.” PRSoF ¶488 (quoting Estoppel Op. at 24) (emphasis added).
The record here confirms that Forest prepared a series of forecasts predicting that its “soft switch”
strategy would convert only approximately of branded Namenda IR sales to Namenda XR
before generic entry. PASoF ¶¶301-19; PRSoF ¶¶388-90, 396, 464. However, Forest was not
meeting its conversion goals using “soft switch” tactics alone; at one point Forest noted it was
struggling to “meet our FY14 goal of ,” and that it was not gaining share as expected in the
Long Term Care market. PASoF ¶¶320-22. By October 2013, conversion to Namenda XR had
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plateaued, PASoF ¶¶323-30, and Forest decided to pursue its hard-switch strategy to withdraw
Namenda IR from the market. PASoF ¶¶331-35. Forest began communicating its hard switch
decision in October 2013 to managed care to obtain more favorable formulary placement for
Namenda XR, accelerating conversion. PASoF ¶340; PRSoF ¶373. See also Plaintiffs’ Opp’n to
Mot. to Exclude Opinions of Dr. Lamb at 18-19 (“Lamb Daubert Opp’n”), filed
contemporaneously herewith.
Following the February 14, 2014 hard switch announcement and the marketwide
promotional blitz about withdrawal, Forest was able to artificially boost the conversion rate to at
least – far greater than was expected via soft switch tactics. As this Court held:
Importantly, Judge Sweet found that Forest’s hard-switch tactics had already
resulted in more customers converting from Namenda IR to Namenda XR than
Forest had estimated would convert voluntarily. At the time the preliminary
injunction was entered, “about of existing patients [had] converted from
Namenda IR to Namenda XR in anticipation of the lack of availability of Namenda
IR.” This is significantly more than the that Forest had estimated would
convert if only soft-switch tactics were employed.
PRSoF ¶488 (quoting Estoppel Op. at 25) (internal citation omitted). These findings are binding.
Drs. Berndt and Lamb confirmed and expanded upon these findings through detailed
analyses. Dr. Berndt examined the content and evolution of Forest’s forecasting of its IR/XR
conversion using just soft switch tactics. He observed that with real-world experience following
Forest’s June 2013 launch of Namenda XR, Forest recognized that using soft switch tactics alone,
it would achieve only about conversion for Namenda XR. Dr. Berndt concluded these
internal forecasts were reliable for the economic analysis performed by Dr. Lamb. O’Shaughnessy
Decl. Ex. 231, Berndt Report ¶40. See also O’Shaughnessy Decl. Ex. 55, Berndt Reply ¶¶4-20.
Using such forecasts, Dr. Lamb modeled what would have happened absent the hard switch tactics.
Dr. Lamb relies on Forest’s own post-XR-launch forecasts (the same sort of forecasts Judge Sweet
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relied upon), and Forest’s adoption of those forecasts in internal discussions among high-level
executives (including Forest’s Board) to arrive at an expected estimated conversion rate from
IR to XR, in the absence of the wrongful “hard switch.” O’Shaughnessy Decl. Ex. 193, Am.
Expert Report of Dr. Russell L. Lamb (“Lamb Report”) ¶¶151-54; O’Shaughnessy Decl. Ex. 56,
Am. Exp. Reply Rep. of Dr. Russell L. Lamb (Nov. 9, 2017) (“Lamb Reply”) ¶¶30-36, 42, 97. Dr.
Lamb focused on “forecast documents that were created after Namenda XR had entered the market
and before the Hard Switch was implemented” and which included an expected generic IR entry
date of July 2015 (as actually occurred) to compute the but-for conversion rate. Lamb Report ¶152
(including table showing soft switch conversion rates in eight separate Forest forecasts). After
reviewing this evidence, Dr. Lamb compares the but-for sales that Namenda XR would have gotten
absent Forest’s illegal hard switch with the artificially inflated sales Namenda XR did achieve. Id.
¶¶143-56.
Importantly, Forest’s forecasts that Dr. Berndt and Dr. Lamb analyzed contained both a
“withdrawal” (or “hard switch”) scenario and a “conventional” (or “soft switch”) scenario, as well
as internal high-level discussions of, and reliance upon, these forecasts to reach conclusions about
what the conversion rate from Namenda IR to XR would have been absent the hard switch strategy.
Thus, Forest’s own forecasts of the effects of a soft switch – including detailing to physicians and
lobbying health plans to cover XR – as compared to a hard switch demonstrate the incremental
effect on the rate of conversion of the hard switch. See PASoF ¶312, 396; PRSoF ¶¶463-64, 478.
These documents were prepared contemporaneously with the decision to engage in the hard
switch in 2013, and were relied upon by Forest to estimate the expected incremental effects of a
possible hard switch strategy – over and above a soft-switch-only approach – and the ability of a
hard switch to limit the “patent cliff” effects associated with generic entry. These documents –
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admissions by Forest of the effects of its hard switch – provide a reliable basis to estimate what
would have happened had Forest not embarked on its anticompetitive hard switch strategy.
Moreover, Forest’s documents reveal
See O’Shaughnessy Decl. Ex. 193, Lamb Report ¶¶93-97 & Fig. 6; PASoF ¶¶402, 370;
PRSoF ¶464 (citing Forest documents that in
). Thus, Forest’s own analyses
.” See, e.g., PRSoF ¶464. This was borne out in practice,
as evidenced by the deposition of Dr. Lah, a neurologist who treats a large Alzheimer’s patient
population, and who testified in the New York Attorney General action that “knowing that
Namenda IR would no longer be available past a certain date, we began switching patients from
Namenda IR to Namenda XR.” PASoF ¶¶348, 369.
Moreover, Forest understood that once physicians got into the habit of writing Namenda
XR prescriptions, they would likely maintain that habit, because as Forest itself stated: “
,” and Forest not only widely broadcast its plan to withdraw IR,
it averred to the Second Circuit that it had stopped manufacturing IR (before the injunction) “
.” PRSoF ¶¶412, 397. Once converted,
physicians would continue to prescribe Namenda XR for all of their patients, even after Namenda
IR became available. See PRSoF ¶¶359, 412, 472; O’Shaughnessy Decl. Ex. 56, Lamb Reply
¶¶87, 90, 93; O’Shaughnessy Decl. Ex. 55, Berndt Reply ¶18.
In addition, Forest’s hard switch communications strategy was not limited to the
announcement on February 14, 2014. Rather, Forest aggressively, repeatedly, and widely
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publicized the hard switch to physicians, caregivers, pharmacies, and health plans in advance of
the planned August 2014 withdrawal, and Dr. Lamb reviewed evidence confirming that the
publicity affected prescriptions in advance of the threatened withdrawal. See PASoF ¶¶365-68;
PRSoF ¶373; see also O’Shaughnessy Decl. Ex. 193, Lamb Report ¶¶98-105; O’Shaughnessy
Decl. Ex. 55, Berndt Reply ¶25.
Forest’s own citations agree that all that is required is that “damages awarded must be
traced to some degree to unlawful acts.” U.S. Football League v. Nat’l Football League, 842 F.2d
1335, 1378 (2d Cir. 1988). But they are off-point in other respects. In U.S. Football, the plaintiff
obtained only nominal damages after trial (it did not lose on summary judgment), and the Second
Circuit affirmed because the defendant offered “much evidence” that plaintiffs’ “self-destructive”
business decision, not alleged anticompetitive conduct, led to the injury, id. at 1377, quipping that
“[c]ourts do not exclude evidence of suicide in a murder trial.” Id. at 1370. In Forest’s other cases,
plaintiffs failed to “show any form of causality[.]” Unitherm Food Sys., Inc. v. Swift-Eckrich, Inc.,
375 F. 3d 1341, 1365 (Fed. Cir. 2004) (emphasis added); see also Ashley Creek Phosphate Co. v.
Chevron USA, Inc., 315 F. 3d 1245, 1252, 1260 (10th Cir. 2003) (plaintiff “ha[d] simply not put
forward even a scintilla of evidence to demonstrate that it suffered any [antitrust] harm to its
property at the hands of [defendant].”).
Plaintiffs’ Injury Model Is Consistent with This Court’s Prior Opinions
Defendants use a pastiche of out-of-context quotes to conjure a supposed three-part test for
proving injury. Def. Br. 57-58. Cf. Lamb Daubert Opp’n at 16-18 (detailing how Defendants
have mischaracterized this Court’s motion to dismiss opinion). In Defendants’ motion to dismiss,
they argued that Plaintiffs could not demonstrate any injury. See Mot. to Dismiss, ECF No. 57 at
30. In rejecting that argument, the Court recognized one theory of alleged injury. MTD Op., 2016
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WL 4992690, at *12. But the opinion in no way set outer boundaries on what types of injuries
direct purchasers can prove – particularly as the Plaintiffs did not have occasion to argue these
points on the motion to dismiss, and there was no evidentiary record before the Court. See
Schwabenbauer v. Bd. of Educ., 777 F.2d 837, 842 (2d Cir. 1985) (issue not briefed or argued
previously and not necessary to resolution is dicta and does not bind court). The Court, for
instance, did not have occasion to address Plaintiffs’ allegation that injuries continued past the
injunction and past generic entry. See Pls.’ Compl., ECF No. 26, ¶¶226-29.
Since then, Plaintiffs have developed robust evidence to demonstrate the injury caused by
the hard switch campaign, including the evidence of Forest’s lengthy and pervasive post February
14, 2014 actions to convince physicians, caregivers, health care plans and the rest of the market
that Namenda IR would be discontinued with the purpose, intent, and effect of influencing the
decision making and habits of physicians to convert to Namenda XR. As shown below, while
Judge Sweet ordered Forest to keep Namenda IR on the market until shortly after generic entry in
July 2015 and to send out some communications regarding his injunction, the record demonstrates
that Forest’s post-injunction conduct was no cure. Forest’s communications about the injunction
were far more limited than the pervasive messaging about the withdrawal, and were tainted with
Forest’s vow that it was appealing the ruling, leaving fear, uncertainty and doubt about Namenda
IR’s continued availability.
Plaintiffs Do Not Need to Trace Switching at a Patient Level
It is unnecessary to trace the effects of a “hard switch” to individual patients to establish
injury to direct purchasers. The Plaintiffs here are direct purchasers, not patients or health plans.
PRSoF ¶458. Two pharmaceutical antitrust cases have addressed – and soundly rejected – Forest’s
proposal. In In re Warfarin Sodium Antitrust Litigation, 214 F.3d 395 (3d Cir. 2000), a class of
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purchasers brought antitrust claims against DuPont for suppressing generic competition to
Coumadin. The Warfarin plaintiffs alleged that “DuPont, anticipating a loss of market share
resulting from the introduction of a cheaper generic substitute for Coumadin, orchestrated a
campaign disparaging generic substitutes.” Id. at 397. The net effect (like a product hop) was not
to bar generic entry, but “to disable its market penetration,” and as a result “due to DuPont’s effort
to derail generic competition, [individual purchasers] have paid inflated prices for Coumadin.” Id.
DuPont, like Forest here, argued that plaintiffs had to show that individual patients were deceived,
but the Third Circuit, affirming class certification, disagreed:
[P]laintiffs have alleged that DuPont engaged in a broad-based campaign, in
violation of federal and state consumer fraud and antitrust laws, to deceive
consumers, TPPs, health care professionals, and regulatory bodies into believing
that generic warfarin sodium was not an equivalent alternative to Coumadin…
[P]roof of liability does not depend on evidence that DuPont made deceptive
communications to individual class members or of class members’ reliance on those
communications;… the fact that plaintiffs allege purely an economic injury as a
result of DuPont’s conduct (i.e., overpayment for warfarin sodium), and not any
physical injury, further supports a finding of commonality and predominance
because there are little or no individual proof problems in this case.
In re Warfarin Sodium Antitrust Litig., 391 F.3d 516, 528-29 (3d Cir. 2004) (emphasis added).
In TriCor, another “hard switch” product hop case, the court also rejected the same impact
theory Forest advocates. The defendants argued that “even if TriCor prices would have been lower
in the ‘but for’ world, it is impossible to determine, through class-wide proof, which class members
would have continued to purchase TriCor rather than switching to a still lower priced generic
fenofibrate or some other [] therapy.” Teva Pharm. USA, Inc. v. Abbott Labs., 252 F.R.D. 213, 229
(D. Del. 2008) (“TriCor”). The court rejected this theory. “[D]irect purchaser plaintiffs only are
required to show that they, in fact, did purchase TriCor at a higher price once an antitrust violation
and causal relationship are established.” Id. at 230-31 (footnote and citations omitted).
In this light, and in view of the fact that direct purchasers stock products in anticipation of
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customer demand, this Court’s observation that Plaintiffs’ proof of injury may involve showing
“patients switched to Namenda XR because of the announced withdrawal of Namenda IR,” MTD
Op., 2017 WL 4992690, *12, requires nothing more than, as indicated in Warfarin and TriCor,
proof that the volume of Namenda XR purchases by Plaintiffs (wholesalers) exceed the volume of
Namenda XR purchases that would have been made had Forest engaged in soft-switch tactics
alone. Plaintiffs have done precisely that, demonstrating that Forest expected it could capture only
approximately of the market without the illegal, hard switch tactics.
Despite Defendants’ contentions to the contrary (Def. Br. at 58), Dr. Lamb’s damage model
does exclude damages not attributable to the hard switch strategy. See PRSoF ¶¶464-94. Indeed,
Dr. Lamb’s analysis only re-confirms this Court’s prior conclusion that Forest’s own expectation
of what the conversion would be absent the hard-switch ( ) was reasonable. See Litvin Decl.
Ex. 355, Estoppel Op. at 24-25 (citing New York v. Actavis, PLC, No. 14 CIV. 7473, 2014 WL
7015198, at *80, 109-11 (S.D.N.Y. Dec. 11, 2014)). While Defendants cite Dr. Lamb’s testimony
that he did not directly test whether a particular individual switched because of the hard switch
strategy, Dr. Lamb’s analysis – incorporating defendants’ own forecasts, National Sales
Perspectives data from IMS, and manufacturer data – reliably measures what ultimately matters
here: the incremental effect of the hard switch on purchases by wholesalers, and this measurement
necessarily reflects the increased conversion by patients. PRSoF ¶¶460-62. Dr. Lamb confirmed
at his deposition that physicians or patients “who prefers some aspect of… Namenda XR would
be accounted for under the patients that switched in the but-for world in the soft switch strategy.”
PRSoF ¶460. Dr. Lamb thus correctly rejected the suggestion his “damages analysis doesn’t
account for the fact that there are some physicians or patients who might have some preference for
Namenda XR for whatever reason.” Id.
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And although Defendants fault Dr. Berndt for not conducting a regression or econometric
analysis, Def. Br. at 60, Dr. Lamb does precisely this, conducting a structural break test (a form of
regression analysis based on IMS National Sales Perspective data) that reveals a statistical
difference in the rate of conversion to Namenda XR before and after the widespread February 2014
announcement of the hard switch campaign for nearly all purchasers who bought monthly from
June 2013 through June 2015. See PRSoF ¶468. Thus, Dr. Lamb supports his reliance on Forest’s
forecasts with an econometric analysis based on data completely independent of those forecasts.
As Plaintiffs’ damage models account for other conduct which may have caused purchases
of Namenda XR not attributable in part to the hard switch strategy, Defendants’ cases (Def. Br. at
60-61) are distinguishable. See, e.g., Gatt Commcn’s, Inc. v. PMC Assocs., L.L.C., 711 F. 3d 68,
74, 77-78 (2d Cir. 2013) (plaintiff “had identified neither a relevant product market nor an adverse
effect on competition in any market[,]” “it was not clear the underlying conduct is prohibited by
the antitrust laws[,]” and any injuries were attributed to only lawful conduct); U.S. Football
League, 842 F.2d at 1369-70, 1377 (plaintiffs’ decisions, not defendants conduct, led to injury);
MCI Commcn’s Corp. v. AT&T Co., 708 F.2d 1081, 1162 (7th Cir. 1982) (plaintiff offered no
method to disaggregate effects of lawful and unlawful conduct).
Plaintiffs Have Adequately Accounted for Various Post-February 14, 2014
Events; Neither Judge Sweet’s Injunction Nor Forest’s Tainted
Communications Campaign Undid the Effects of the Hard Switch
Defendants argue that Judge Sweet’s injunction somehow removed the anticompetitive
effects of the hard switch tactics. Not so. Forest engaged in a months-long, sustained
communications blitz, repeatedly informing doctors, caregivers, and other market participants of
the impending removal of Namenda IR. PASoF ¶¶350-52; PRSoF ¶¶398, 484, 489. While the
injunction required Forest to communicate that Namenda IR would remain on the market, its post-
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injunction communications were not nearly as pervasive or repetitive as the months-long campaign
to “over-communicat[e]” the hard switch (to borrow Forest’s phrase). PRSoF ¶¶398, 484, 489.
Forest also limited its post-injunction communications to those entities that had received the
February 14, 2014 announcement; this effort was not designed to include those who otherwise
were informed of the impending withdrawal, whether by the multiple millions of emails and letters
or the months of visits to physicians’ offices by Forest’s representatives. PRSoF ¶398.
In addition, the post-injunction communications campaign merely continued the
uncertainty as to the continued availability of Namenda IR. Even before the injunction was
entered, Forest announced it would appeal, then announced it was “optimistic” the injunction
would be overturned. See PRSoF ¶397. When Forest eventually sent communications in January
2015 mentioning the injunction, it often simultaneously announced that Forest was appealing
(challenging) it. See PASoF ¶¶373-384; PRSoF ¶¶397-99, 484. Defendants’ economist, Dr.
Pierre-Yves Cremieux,
.” PRSoF ¶397. And Forest cites
no evidence it engaged in a communications campaign after losing its appeal in May 2015.
Moreover, the injunction prohibiting the removal of Namenda IR did not switch back those
who had already converted to the new formulation or demonstrably influence physicians’
prescribing habits that were improperly impacted by the hard switch strategy. As Forest noted
when planning its switch campaign, “ .” PRSoF
¶412. Thus, once physicians began prescribing Namenda XR, absent a compelling reason to do
so, they would be slow to switch back to Namenda IR. PRSoF ¶¶472, 473. Judge Sweet similarly
found that physicians would be unlikely to convert patients back to Namenda IR once converted.
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