Wednesday 26 October 2022

Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Bill


 







Jane Lambert

The second reading of the Retained EI Law (Revocation and Reform) Bill took place on St Crispin's Day,  Ironically it was the day on which the bill's sponsor, Mr Jacob Rees-Mogg MP, resigned his portfolio as Business Secretary.  A copy of Mr Rees-Mogg's letter of resignation appears on his website.

According to its explanatory notes, the purpose of the bill is to enable the government to remove the special features of retained European Union law ("REUL") in the English and Welsh, Scottish and Northern Irish legal systems by the end of 2023.  REUL is not defined in the bill but it refers to the regulations and directives of the European Council and Commission and the judgments of the Court of Justice of the European Law which were retained by ss. 2 to 7 of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 as amended by the European Union (Withdrawal Agreement) Act 2020.   This bill, if passed, is likely to affect intellectual property law in the United Kingdom because much of that law implements EU legislation and case law.

Paea 3 of the explanatory notes states that the bill will achieve its objective by:

(a) repealing or assimilating REUL, within a defined scope, by the end of 2023 

(b) Repealing the principle of supremacy of EU law from UK law by the end of 2023; 

(c) Facilitating domestic courts departing from retained case law; 

(d) Providing a mechanism for UK government and devolved administration law officers to intervene in cases regarding retained case law, or refer them to an appeal court, where relevant; 

(e) Repealing directly effective EU law rights and obligations in UK law by the end of 2023; 

(f) Abolishing general principles of EU law in UK law by the end of 2023; 

(g) Establishing a new priority rule requiring retained direct EU legislation (RDEUL) to be interpreted and applied consistently with domestic legislation; 

(h) Downgrading the status of RDEUL for the purpose of amending it more easily;

(i) Creating a suite of powers that allow REUL to be revoked or replaced, restated or updated and removed or amended to reduce burdens.

The bill as introduced consists of 23 clauses and 3 schedules.

I shall follow the progress of the bill and its application to intellectual property law.  Anyone wishing to discuss this topic may call me on +44 (0)20 7404 5252 during office hours or send me a message through my contact page.

Saturday 22 October 2022

Unified Patent Court Opening Soon

Jane Lambert













According to its Implementation Roadmap, the Unified Patent Court ("UPC") will open for business on 1 April 2023.  It published a list of judges on 19 Oct 2022 (see Unified Patent Court judicial appointments and Presidium elections 19 Oct 2022) and will launch a new website on 7 Nov 2022 (see New Unified Patent Court website launch 13 Oct 2022).

The UPC judiciary will consist of 85 judges.   Thirty-four of them are legally qualified and fifty-one technically qualified.  The President of the Court of Appeal will be Klaus Grabinski, a justice of the German Supreme Court, and the President of the Court of First Instance will be Florence Butin of the Paris Court of Appeal.  Sadly there will be no British judges despite the contribution of British lawyers and others to the UPC's establishment because of the British government's withdrawal from the UPC Agreement (see Volte Face on the Unified Patent Court Agreement 29 Feb 2022 NIPC News).

The announcement of a new UPC website states that it will contain the following information:
  • Court locations;
  • Registry and Sub-Registries contact information;
  • Legal documents published;
  • Committees Representatives;
  • Official communications from the UPC;
  • Job vacancies
  • Information on the judges.
Even though the UPC will have no jurisdiction over the UK, a court that will cover the territories of most of the EU member states will be of interest to British businesses and institutions.   It should simplify enforcement and reduce costs and the uncertainties of litigation.

Anyone wishing to discuss this article is welcome to call me on +44 (0)20 7404 5252 during British office hours or send me a message through my contact page. 

Thursday 6 October 2022

Protecting Intellectual Assets Abroad

World Intellectual Property Organization ("WIPO") Geneva
Author Emmanuel Berrod  Licence CC BY-SA 4.0  Source  flicker

 





































Whenever an inventor applies for a British patent, he or she makes a bargain with the British public.  In return for disclosing "the invention in a manner which is clear enough and complete enough for the invention to be performed by a person skilled in the art" the inventor is granted a monopoly of the the invention  in the United Kingdom for up to 20 years.   Folks outside the United Kingdom are not privy to that agreement so unless the inventor applies for patents elsewhere, there is nothing to stop a competitor from making, selling  or using the invention overseas.

As other countries' patent laws require the invention to be new at the time of the application, inventors had to apply for patents simultaneously to the intellectual property offices of all the countries in which they sought patent protection.  As can be imagined, that could be expensive and complicated.  The financial and administrative burden was mitigated by the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property which allowed applicants to backdate their applications to the date of their first application provided they filed their second and subsequent applications within a year of the first application.  That is known as a "right of priority" which is granted by art 4 of the Convention.

Having 12 months in which to file foreign patent applications certainly made life easier for applicants but they still had to make separate applications to each intellectual property office.  On 17 Oct 1977, the European Patent Convention ("EPC") came into force.   The EPC established the European Patent Office ("EPO") which grants patents known as "European patents" for the territories of the governments that are party to that Convention.   Despite their name, European patents are not patents for the whole continent or even the European Union.  They are granted for designated contracting states 
on behalf of the governments of those states.  A European patent designating the UK is known as a European patent (UK) and is treated for almost all practical purposes as if it had been granted by the Intellectual Property Office.in Newport.  The great advantage of applying to the EPO is that applications can be made simultaneously for European patents for up to 39 states from a single filing.  

On 1 June 1978, the Patent Cooperation Treaty ("PCT") came into force.   That Treaty enables patent applications to be made simultaneously to up to 156  states from a single filing.   Applications can be made directly or indirectly to the World Intellectual Property Organization ("WIPO") which is the UN specialist agency for intellectual property.  If requested, the WIPO will carry out an international preliminary examination which will examine the invention for novelty, inventiveness and utility.  If the examination is favourable the applicant can ask for the application to be forwarded to the national intellectual property offices for further consideration.   More information on the EPO and PCT is offered by the IPO in Protecting Your Patent Abroad which was last updated on 1 July 2022.

Art 4 of the Paris Convention confers a 6-month right of priority from the date of the first application upon applicants for trade marks and registered designs.  While the UK was in the European Union, applicants had the choice of applying to national intellectual property offices for the registration of national trade marks or designs or to the European Union Intellectual Property Office ("EUIPO") for the registration of European Union trade marks or registered Community designs which applied to the UK and the other 27 member states of the EU. Since 31 Dec 2020 EU trade marks and registered Community designs have continued to apply to the remaining 27 member states but not here.  Accordingly, UK brand or design owners can still apply to the EUIPO for new EU trade mark or RCD registrations.

Just as the PCT enables applications to be made for patents in many countries from a single filing the Madrid Protocol facilitates multiple trade mark applications from a single filing.   Updated guidance on applications for EU trade marks and the Madrid Protocol is provided by the IPO in Protecting your trade mark abroad.  Similarly, the Hague Agreement permits multiple design registration applications from a single filing.   Details on applications for registered Community designs and under the Hague Agreement are available from the IPO in Protecting your Design Abroad.

Owners of UK copyrights will acquire automatically corresponding local copyrights in countries that are party to the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works.  Similarly, owners of rights in performances in the UK will acquire automatically local corresponding rights in countries that are party to the Rome Convention (International Convention for the Protection of Performers, Producers of Phonograms and Broadcasting Organizations).   Guidance from the IPO is in Protecting your Copyright Abroad.  

There is no equivalent to unregistered design right in most countries.  In some, however.  designs that are protected by unregistered design rights in the UK may be registered as utility models which are unknown in this country.

Anyone wishing to discuss this article may call me on +44 (0)20 7404 5252 during office hours or send me a message through my contact form. at any other time.

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