The Delhi High Court on Thursday set aside its single judge’s order restraining Mumbai-based generic drug maker Glenmark Pharmaceuticals Ltd from making and selling antibiotic medicine Linezolid.
Linezolid is a synthetic antibiotic used to treat skin and blood infections, and pneumonia.
A Bench of justices Badar Durrez Ahmed and Sanjeev Sachdeva, while setting aside a January 19 interim order, directed Glenmark to maintain accounts of manufacture and sale of its medicine and file the same in the court.
It also issued notice to Symed Laboratories, a Hyderabad-based company, on whose plea the earlier order had restrained Glenmark from making Linezolid. Symed had claimed that Glenmark was making its medicine by using the processes patented by it.
While setting aside the January 19 order, the court noted: “It was incumbent upon the single judge to prima facie come to a finding that the active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) of both Glenmark and Symed were identical.”
“This ( prima facie finding) does not appear to have been done. In these circumstances, we are vacating the interim order and modifying the same by directing appellant (Glenmark) to maintain accounts and file same in court..,” the Bench said and listed the matter for further hearing on March 16.
It also noted that the single judge did not go into the point regarding applicability of section 104A of the Patents Act 1970 as per which in suits alleging infringement of process patents, the defendant has to prove its process is different from that of the plaintiff.
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