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Business News/ Companies / News/  Delhi high court notice to Novartis on Cipla plea
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Delhi high court notice to Novartis on Cipla plea

The plea was against an order restraining Cipla from making its respiratory disease drug, Indaflo, till it obtains a compulsory licence

A bench of justices Badar Durrez Ahmed and Sanjeev Sachdeva, however, refused to pass any interim order to allow Cipla to manufacture its Indacaterol-based drug saying, it will give an early hearing to the matter. Photo: MintPremium
A bench of justices Badar Durrez Ahmed and Sanjeev Sachdeva, however, refused to pass any interim order to allow Cipla to manufacture its Indacaterol-based drug saying, it will give an early hearing to the matter. Photo: Mint

New Delhi: Delhi high court on Wednesday sought the response of Switzerland-based drug major Novartis AG on the plea of Indian pharma firm Cipla against an order restraining it from making its respiratory disease drug, Indaflo, till it obtains a compulsory licence.

A bench of justices Badar Durrez Ahmed and Sanjeev Sachdeva, however, refused to pass any interim order to allow Cipla to manufacture its Indacaterol-based drug saying, it will give an early hearing to the matter.

“We will not give you an interim order. We will hear it on an early date and dispose it of. Notice. Renotify on 5 February," the bench said.

It also questioned Novartis as to how much quantity of the drug does it import in the country and why a royalty arrangement cannot be worked out. It raised the query after senior advocates P. Chidambaram and Pratibha M. Singh, who appeared for Cipla, argued how Novartis could claim to working its patent when it was not manufacturing its drug Indaflo in India and was importing it in limited quantities, which too is not completely sold.

They opposed the restraint on Cipla, saying where the interests of public at large are involved, an injunction ought not to have been granted. Chidambaram also suggested that Cipla was willing to pay royalty to Novartis for making the drug and would abide by any order of the court in this regard.

He contended that the Novartis’ drug was five times costlier than that of Cipla and was not available in majority of the medical stores in the national capital or other cities. Senior advocate C.A. Sundaram, who appeared for Novartis, opposed the contentions and said that Cipla initially sold its product by copying the Swiss firm’s trademark.

He said that Cipla had also admitted to infringing the patent of Novartis. In response to the contention that Novartis imported limited quantities of its drug, Sundaram said Cipla which started selling the medicine in October 2014 was yet to finish selling its stock, which was permitted by the high court while restraining the Indian company from further production till it obtained a compulsory licence.

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Published: 14 Jan 2015, 05:50 PM IST
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