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Knowing how to plead patent infringement in Canada is the single most consequential procedural decision a patent owner or exclusive licensee faces when an infringing product or process surfaces on the Canadian market. The Federal Court of Canada is the primary forum for these disputes, offering Canada-wide remedies, specialist judicial expertise and exclusive jurisdiction over certain patent matters under the Patent Act (R. S. C. , 1985, c. P‑4) and the Federal Courts Act. This guide sets out the complete patent pleadings procedure, from pre-action prerequisites through originating documents, discovery steps, interim remedies and trial preparation, with the documents, timelines and costs that in‑house counsel, pharmaceutical and biotech legal teams need in 2026.
Readers should note that ongoing procedural reforms are tightening disclosure windows and sharpening scrutiny of claim construction, making early and precise drafting more important than ever.
Patent infringement proceedings in Canada may be brought in either the Federal Court or a provincial superior court. In practice, the vast majority of patent actions, particularly those involving pharmaceutical, biotech and technology patents, are commenced in the Federal Court. The court has jurisdiction to resolve disputes regarding intellectual property rights, including patent infringement, patent validity, and matters arising under the Patented Medicines (Notice of Compliance) Regulations (PM(NOC)).
Federal Court pleadings carry several structural advantages for patent owners. Orders of the Federal Court are enforceable across Canada without the need for provincial registration. The court maintains a bench of judges experienced in patent matters and has well-developed case-management procedures for complex IP litigation. For pharmaceutical patent holders, the Federal Court is the only forum for PM(NOC) proceedings, an increasingly critical pathway as generic drug and biosimilar filings accelerate.
Typical relief available in a Federal Court patent infringement action includes:
Provincial superior courts retain concurrent jurisdiction over patent infringement claims under section 20 of the Federal Courts Act. Industry observers note, however, that provincial courts are typically chosen only when the dispute is geographically confined, or where a related contract or tort claim makes a single provincial proceeding more efficient.
Before preparing Federal Court pleadings, counsel must verify that the foundational requirements for standing, territorial jurisdiction and, where applicable, regulatory triggers are met.
Under the Patent Act, a patent infringement action may be commenced by the patentee of record or by any person claiming under the patentee, most commonly an exclusive licensee with express authority to sue. Joint patentees generally must act together unless the co-ownership agreement provides otherwise. Foreign patent owners may bring actions in the Federal Court provided the patent is a granted Canadian patent and the alleged infringing acts occur within Canada.
To infringe a Canadian patent, the infringing activity, making, constructing, using or selling the patented invention, must take place in Canada. The Canadian Intellectual Property Office (CIPO) confirms that all essential elements of a patent claim must be present in the accused product or process to establish infringement. Offering to sell or importing an infringing article into Canada may also constitute infringement, even where manufacture occurs abroad.
In pharmaceutical patent litigation, the Patented Medicines (Notice of Compliance) Regulations (SOR/93‑133) create a distinct procedural trigger. When a generic manufacturer or biosimilar applicant serves a Notice of Allegation (NOA) on the innovator, the innovator may commence an action in the Federal Court within 45 days of receiving the NOA. If the action is commenced within that window, a statutory stay can prevent Health Canada from issuing a Notice of Compliance to the generic applicant for up to 24 months. Missing the 45‑day NOA deadline forfeits the right to the stay, a potentially outcome-determinative consequence in the pharma sector.
While not legally required, sending a demand letter before filing is standard practice. A well-drafted demand letter puts the defendant on notice, may establish the date from which wilful infringement is assessed, and can facilitate early settlement. Counsel should ensure that demand correspondence does not contain admissions that could narrow the scope of subsequent pleadings. Evidence preservation, including retaining samples of the accused product, capturing online listings, and securing internal testing data, should begin immediately once infringement is suspected.
The following numbered steps map the patent pleadings procedure from the originating document through case management. The timeline table at the end of this section summarises who does what and typical durations.
A patent infringement action in the Federal Court is commenced by filing a Statement of Claim in the form prescribed by the Federal Court’s official forms. The Statement of Claim is the originating document and must be drafted to meet the material-facts pleading standard set out in the Federal Courts Rules (SOR/98‑106).
The plaintiff must set out specific infringing facts, not merely conclusions of law. Federal Court jurisprudence consistently holds that a patent infringement pleading must include:
Failure to plead sufficient particulars can result in the pleading being struck or the plaintiff being ordered to provide further and better particulars, an outcome that delays the proceeding and signals weakness to the opposing party. The Federal Court has repeatedly emphasised that boilerplate infringement allegations, without identifying specific acts and claim elements, are insufficient.
For proceedings involving confidential technical information, counsel should consider attaching technical schedules under a proposed protective order or confidentiality ring arrangement from the outset, rather than omitting critical detail from the pleading.
The Statement of Claim is filed with the Federal Court registry, which now strongly encourages electronic filing through the court’s e‑filing portal. Filing generates a court file number. The plaintiff must then serve the originating document on each defendant. Service may be effected personally, by an alternative to personal service permitted under the Federal Courts Rules, or, with leave, by substitutional service where the defendant cannot be located.
After service, a proof-of-service affidavit is filed with the court. The defendant then has a prescribed period, typically 30 days if served in Canada, within which to file and serve a Statement of Defence. If the defendant is served outside Canada, extended timelines apply under the Rules.
Where urgency demands it, a plaintiff may bring an ex parte motion for an interim injunction or a preservation order immediately upon filing, before the defendant has been served. This pathway is reserved for cases where delay would cause irreparable harm, for example, where infringing goods are about to be shipped or destroyed.
The defendant’s Statement of Defence must respond to each allegation in the Statement of Claim and plead all material facts supporting its defence. Common defences in patent infringement proceedings include:
Defendants frequently file a counterclaim for a declaration of invalidity, which the plaintiff must then answer. The counterclaim may also seek a declaration of non-infringement. Once pleadings close, typically when all statements of defence, counterclaims and replies have been exchanged, the matter proceeds to case management and discovery.
Following the close of pleadings, each party must produce an Affidavit of Documents listing all relevant documents in its possession, control or power. In patent cases, plaintiff disclosure typically includes the patent file wrapper (prosecution history), internal testing data, sales records, technical drawings and prior art considered during prosecution. Defendants must disclose their own product specifications, manufacturing processes, development records and any prior art on which they rely for invalidity.
Examinations for discovery, oral cross-examinations of a representative of each party, follow document production. Discovery in patent cases is often technically intensive and may require the examining counsel to retain scientific advisors to formulate questions.
Expert evidence is central to patent litigation. Experts are typically retained to address:
Expert reports are exchanged on a schedule directed by the case management judge, commonly 90 to 180 days before trial. Early retention of qualified experts is critical: in biotech and pharmaceutical disputes, the pool of available experts with the requisite specialisation is limited, and 2026 practice trends favour tighter expert-evidence schedules.
Confidentiality is a perennial concern. Protective orders and confidentiality rings, which restrict access to commercially sensitive documents to outside counsel and independent experts, are standard in pharmaceutical patent litigation. Draft protective order templates should be prepared at the outset and negotiated promptly with opposing counsel.
At any point after filing, the plaintiff may move for interlocutory relief. The test for an interlocutory injunction in patent cases follows the established three-part framework: the plaintiff must demonstrate a serious question to be tried (prima facie case), that it will suffer irreparable harm if the injunction is refused, and that the balance of convenience favours granting the order.
Other interim remedies include:
Case management conferences are typically ordered early in the proceeding. The case management judge sets a timetable governing all remaining steps, including amendments to pleadings, completion of discovery, delivery of expert reports and the trial date. Adhering to case-management deadlines is essential; the Federal Court takes a dim view of delay and may impose costs consequences for non-compliance.
Settlement discussions and alternative dispute resolution, including mediation, may be directed or encouraged by the case management judge. In PM(NOC) cases, the statutory stay mechanism may itself create settlement incentives, as the stay effectively blocks the generic product from market entry pending resolution.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration / Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Prepare originating document (Statement of Claim) | Plaintiff counsel (with technical experts) | 2–6 weeks (complex biotech may take longer) |
| File and e‑file in Federal Court; effect service | Plaintiff counsel / process server | File same day; service usually within 7–14 days of filing |
| Defendant files Statement of Defence / counterclaim | Defendant counsel | 30 days from service within Canada (Federal Courts Rules) |
| Document disclosure / initial production | Both parties | 4–12 weeks after close of pleadings (case-management dependent) |
| Expert reports exchanged | Both parties / experts | Court-directed, commonly 90–180 days before trial |
| Discovery examinations | Both parties | 2–8 weeks within the disclosure window |
| Interim applications (injunction / preservation) | Plaintiff | Can be filed immediately, emergency timelines apply |
| Case management to trial | Both parties / Case management judge | 9–24 months to trial depending on complexity |
Assembling the right documents before drafting the Statement of Claim reduces the risk of deficient particulars and accelerates the proceeding. The following checklist covers the documents needed for a Federal Court patent infringement action.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Statement of Claim (Federal Court originating document) | Drafted by plaintiff counsel; must include material facts, specific infringing acts, claim identification and relief sought. E‑file PDF via Federal Court e‑filing portal. |
| Patent documentation (certificate, claims, file history) | Obtain from CIPO patent register. Include full claim language, priority dates and any re-examination history. Authority: Patent Act. |
| Claim chart / infringement map | Element-by-element mapping of each asserted patent claim to the accused product or process. Critical for meeting the particulars standard. |
| Evidence of infringing acts | Invoices, purchase receipts, lab analysis reports, product samples, online listings (screenshot with metadata). Maintain chain of custody for physical samples. |
| Prior art / invalidity evidence (proactive) | If anticipating an invalidity counterclaim, compile relevant prior art publications, patents and lab notebooks with dates. |
| Expert CVs and instruction letters | Credentials and scope of engagement for technical experts retained for claim construction, infringement analysis and validity opinions. |
| Prosecution history / file wrapper | Downloadable from CIPO. Include all communications between the applicant and the patent examiner, essential for claim construction. |
| Demand letter / pre-action correspondence | If sent, include as evidence of notice. Review for inadvertent admissions before attaching. |
| Draft protective order / confidentiality affidavit | Required where trade secrets or commercially sensitive manufacturing information will be exchanged. Prepare early for negotiation with opposing counsel. |
| Affidavit of documents / disclosure schedule | Follows Federal Court format. Must be comprehensive, deliberate omission may attract adverse inferences or cost sanctions. |
Strict compliance with the patent pleadings procedure timeline is essential. Missing a statutory or court-ordered deadline can result in dismissal, loss of the PM(NOC) stay, or adverse cost awards. The table below summarises the key deadlines governing a Federal Court patent infringement action.
| Event | Deadline / Timing | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Statement of Defence | 30 days from service within Canada | Federal Courts Rules (SOR/98‑106) |
| Interim injunction application | As soon as grounds arise; ex parte if urgency warrants | Federal Court practice and case law |
| Exchange of expert reports | Court-directed; commonly 90–180 days before trial | Court timetable / practice directions |
| 45‑day NOA response window (PM(NOC)) | 45 days from receipt of Notice of Allegation | Patented Medicines (NOC) Regulations (SOR/93‑133) |
| Affidavit of documents | Within the time fixed by the case management judge; typically 4–8 weeks after close of pleadings | Federal Courts Rules / case management order |
The costs of a patent action in Federal Court can vary enormously depending on the technology area, the number of patents and claims at issue, and the scope of discovery. The following table provides indicative guidance on major cost categories. All filing fee amounts should be confirmed against the current Federal Court fee schedule before filing.
| Item | Typical Amount (Guidance) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Federal Court filing fee | Consult current fee schedule | Varies by document type; verify on Federal Court forms/fees page before filing. |
| Counsel fees | Varies by firm, city and complexity | Request a detailed fee estimate at the outset. Pharmaceutical patent actions in major centres typically involve senior and junior counsel plus a patent agent. |
| Expert report (technical) | CAD 10,000 – 100,000+ | Biotech and pharmaceutical expert evidence is at the high end due to specialised knowledge requirements. |
| e-Discovery / forensic data collection | CAD 5,000 – 50,000+ | Depends on data volume, number of custodians and complexity of managed review. |
| Translation (if bilingual issues arise) | Variable | The Federal Court operates in both official languages; translation of key documents may be required. |
Budgeting should account for the possibility of a counterclaim for invalidity, which effectively doubles the discovery and expert evidence burden. In pharmaceutical cases, the statutory stay under the PM(NOC) Regulations adds a further cost-benefit dimension: the commercial value of maintaining market exclusivity during the stay period often justifies significant litigation expenditure.
Several developments in 2026 are reshaping how patent infringement actions are pleaded and managed in the Federal Court. Industry observers expect these trends to intensify through 2027 and beyond.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Marian Wolanski at BELMORE NEIDRAUER LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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