- Title I General Provisions
- Title II Inventions, Utility Models andIndustrial Designs
- Part I Common Provisions
- Part II Inventions and Patents
- Chapter I Inventions
- Chapter 2 Filing of Patent Applications
- Chapter 3 Processing of Patent Applications
- Chapter 4 Secret Inventions
- Chapter 5 Patents
- Chapter 5-1 Supplementary protection right
- Chapter 6 License Contracts
- Chapter 7 Compulsory license
- Chapter 8 Invalidation and Lapse of the Patent
- Chapter 9 Special Provisions Governing Biotechnological Inventions
- Part III Utility Models and Rights of Protectionfor Utility Models
- Part IV Industrial Designs and Rights in Registrationfor Industrial Designs
- Title III Trademarks and Geographical Indications
- Part I Trademarks and Rights of Protection
- Chapter I Trademarks
- Chapter 2 Collective Trademarks and Collective Guarantee Trademarks
- Chapter 3 Filing of Trademark Applications
- Chapter 4 Processing of Trademark Applications
- Chapter 4-1 Dealing with the protection ofinternational trademarks
- Chapter 5 Rights of Protection for Trademarks
- Chapter 6 Invalidation and Lapse ofthe Right of Protection for a Trademark
- Part II Geographical Indications
- Part I Trademarks and Rights of Protection
- Title IV Topographies of Integrated Circuits
- Title V Fees, Registers, Documents and Official Communications
- Title VI A Party, Representatives, Time Limits, Appeal Measures andInformation on application in Filing and Registration Proceedi
- Title VII Litigation Procedure
- Title VIII Patent Office
- Title IX Enforcement of Claims in Civil Law Procedure
- Title X Penal Provisions
- Title XI Changes in the Effective ProvisionsTransitional and Final Provisions
ACT OF 30 JUNE 2000
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY LAW
as amended by act of 23 January 2004 and act of 29 June 2007
Title I
General Provisions
Article 1
1. This Law regulates: - (i)
-
the relationships in the field of inventions, utility models, industrial designs, trademarks, geographical indications and topographies of integrated circuits,
- (ii)
-
the principles on which entities may accept rationalisation proposals and remunerate creators thereof;
- (iii)
-
the responsibilities and organisation of the Patent Office of the Republic of Poland, hereinafter referred to as the “Patent Office”.
2. The provisions of this Law shall not prejudice the protection of the subject matter referred to in paragraph (1)(i), provided for in other legal acts.
Article 2
Combating of unfair competition is governed by a separate legal act.
Article 3
1. References in this Law: - (i)
-
to a person shall mean any natural or legal person;
- (ii)
-
to a foreign person shall mean a person not being a Polish national and not having a domicile or a seat, or a real and effective establishment on the territory of the Republic of Poland;
- (iii)
-
to an entity shall mean a person, who runs for profit the activity in manufacturing, building, trading or servicing, hereinafter referred to as “business activity”;
- (iv)
-
to an international agreement shall mean any international agreement to which the Republic of Poland is party;
- (v)
-
to the Paris Convention shall mean the Stockholm Act of the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property of 20 March 1883 (JL 1975 No 9, text 51);
- (vi)
-
to invention projects shall mean inventions, utility models, industrial designs, topographies of integrated circuits and rationalisation projects;
- (vii)
-
to the International Bureau shall mean the International Bureau of Intellectual Property set up under the Convention establishing the World Intellectual Property Organization signed at Stockholm on 14July 1967 (JL 1975, No 9, text 49);
- (viii)
-
to the international trademark shall mean a trademark registered under the procedure established in the Agreement or the Protocol;
- (ix)
-
to the Agreement shall mean the Madrid Agreement concerning the international registration of marks of 14 April 1891 (JL 1993, No 116, texts 514 and 515);
- (x)
-
to the Protocol shall mean the Protocol relating to the Madrid Agreement concerning the international registration of marks adopted at Madrid on 27 June 1989 (JL 2003, No 13, texts 129 and 130);
- (xi)
-
to the European Patent Convention shall mean the Convention on the grant of European patents adopted in Munich on 5 October 1973, amended by an act amending Article 63 of the Convention of 17 December 1991 and by the decisions of the Administrative Council of the European Patent Organization of 21 December 1978, 13 December 1994, 20 October 1995, 5 December 1996 and 10 December 1998, together with the Protocols constituting its integral part (JL 2004, No 79, texts 737 and 738).
2. The provisions of this Law in parts concerning economic entities shall also apply accordingly to persons running activities other than business activity and to organisational units that do not enjoy the status of legal person.
Article 4
1. Where an international agreement or the provisions of European Union laws binding and directly applicable in all Member States provide for special procedures for granting protection for inventions, utility models, industrial designs, trademarks, geographical indications or topographies of integrated circuits, the provisions of this Law shall apply accordingly to the subject matter not governed by that agreement or these provisions, or falling within responsibilities of national authorities.
2. An international agreement or the provisions referred to in paragraph (1), indicate in particular the language of the proceedings for the grant of protection and the language in which documentation of patent, utility model, industrial design, trademark, geographical indication and topography of integrated circuits applications should be drawn up.
Article 5
1. Foreign persons shall enjoy the rights under this Law on the basis of international agreements.
2. Insofar as it is not contrary to the provisions of international agreements, foreign persons may enjoy the rights on the basis of this Law on the principle of reciprocity. It is for the President of the Patent Office to ascertain, for the purpose of the procedure before the Patent Office and after having this consulted with a competent minister, whether the reciprocity conditions are satisfied.
Article 6
1. The following shall be granted on the conditions as laid down in this Law: patents and supplementary protection rights for inventions, rights of protection for utility models and trademarks, as well as rights in registration for industrial designs, topographies of integrated circuits and geographical indications.
2. The Patent Office shall be responsible in the matters referred to in paragraph (1).
Article 7
1. Economic entities may provide for accepting rationalisation projects on conditions laid down in regulations on rationalisation activities.
2. Any technical solution susceptible of utilisation and not being a patentable invention, a utility model, an industrial design or topography of an integrated circuit may be recognised by an economic entity as a rationalisation project within the meaning of this Law.
3. In the regulations referred to in paragraph (1), an economic entity shall at least determine, what kind of solutions and made by whom may be recognised by that entity as rationalisation projects, the manner in which reported projects are to be handled as well as the rules of remunerating the creators of the projects in question.
Article 8
1. On the conditions as laid down in this Law, the creator of an invention, a utility model, an industrial design or topography of an integrated circuit shall be entitled:
(i) to obtain a patent, a right of protection or a right in registration,
(ii) to remuneration,
(iii) to be mentioned as such in specifications, registers and other documents and publications.
2. The creator of a rationalisation project accepted by an economic entity for exploitation shall be entitled to the remuneration specified in the regulations referred to in Article 7(1) effective on the report day, unless regulations subsequently promulgated are deemed more advantageous for the creator. The provisions of paragraph (1)(iii) shall apply accordingly.
3. The provisions of paragraphs (1) and (2) shall apply accordingly to the joint creator.
Article 9
Representatives of social organisations whose activities include the encouragement of activities in industrial property matters may, in accordance with their statutes, provide assistance to the creators of inventive projects and act in their interest in proceedings before judicial bodies and, subject to Article 236, before the Patent Office.
Title II
Inventions, Utility Models and
Industrial Designs
Part I
Common Provisions
Article 10
1. Decisions on the grant of a patent for an invention or a right of protection for a utility model shall be taken after having examined by the Patent Office, to the specified extent, whether the statutory requirements for the grant of a patent or a right of protection are satisfied.
2. Decisions on the registration of an industrial design shall be taken after having been checked, whether the industrial design has duly been filed with the Patent Office.
Article 11
1. Subject to paragraphs (2), (3) and (5), the right to obtain a patent for an invention or a right of protection for a utility model, or a right in registration for an industrial design shall belong to the creator.
2. Where an invention, a utility model or of an industrial design has been made jointly by a number of persons, the right to obtain a patent, a right of protection or a right in registration, respectively, shall belong to them jointly.
3. Where an invention, a utility model or an industrial design has been made by a creator in the course of employment duties or in the execution of any other contract, the right referred to in paragraph (1) shall belong to the employer or the commissioner, unless otherwise agreed by the parties concerned.
4. Agreements concluded between economic entities may designate the entity to which the rights referred to in paragraph (1) shall belong where an invention, a utility model or an industrial design has been made in connection with the execution of such agreement.
5. Where an invention, a utility model or an industrial design has been made by a creator with the assistance of an economic entity, the latter may enjoy the right to exploit the invention, the utility model or the industrial design in its own field of activity. In the agreement on the provision of assistance, the parties may stipulate that the right referred to in paragraph (1) shall belong in whole or in part to the economic entity.
Article 12
1. The right to a patent for an invention, a right of protection for a utility model or a right in registration for an industrial design may be assigned or be subject to succession.
2. A contract for the transfer of the right referred to in paragraph (1) shall be in writing on pain of invalidity.
Article 13
1. Subject to Articles 14 and 15, priority to obtain a patent, a right of protection or a right in registration shall be determined according to the date on which a patent application, a utility model application or an industrial design application has been filed with the Patent Office.
2. Subject to Article 31, an application shall be deemed to have been filed at the date at which it has been received by the Patent Office in a written form also by means of fax or electronically.
3. Where an application has been transmitted by means of fax, the original copy thereof shall be required to be furnished within 30 days from the date on which the transmission by fax was effected. The above time limit shall be non-restorable.
4. Where an application transmitted by means of fax is found illegible or lacking in identity with the original copy subsequently furnished, the date at which the original copy has been furnished in accordance with paragraph (3) shall be deemed to be the filing date.
5. The provision of paragraph (4) shall apply accordingly, where the original copy has been furnished after the expiration of the time limit referred to in paragraph (3); in that case the application transmitted by means of fax shall be deemed not to have been filed.
6. Where an application transmitted in an electronic form is affected by a harmful software, the Patent Office shall not be obliged to open such a communication and process it further. In such a case, as well as where the transmitted application has been found illegible, the provision of paragraph (1) has no effect.
7. An electronic form of an application shall mean a form set while transmitting the application with the use of a telecommunication network or on an information carrier of data within the meaning of Article 3 (i) of the act of 17 February 2005 on the informatisation of works of the entities performing public activity (JL No 64 text 565 and of 2006 No 12 text 65 and No 73 text 501).
8. In the cases referred to in paragraph (6), illegible parts of the application shall be deemed not to be filed. The provisions of Article 31 paragraphs (3) to (5) shall apply accordingly.
9. The Patent Office shall immediately notice the applicant, while using the same means of transmission, that the application transmitted by fax is illegible as a whole or in part, or that one of the situations referred to in paragraph (6) or (8) has occurred, where it is possible to find the e-mail address or establish the identity of the applicant and his address, and where it does not threaten the safety of the Patent Office’s teleinformation system, within the meaning of Article 2 (iii) of the act of 18 July 2002 on providing services electronically (JL No 144 text 1204, of 2004 No 96 text 959 and No 173 text 1808, and of 2007 No 50 text 331), and the technical conditions of the means of transmission used by the applicant allow.
Article 14
Priority to obtain a patent, a right of protection or a right in registration shall be granted in the Republic of Poland, on conditions laid down in relevant international agreements, according to the date on which a patent, utility model or industrial design application has originally and duly been filed in a designated country, provided that as from that date the application is filed with the Patent Office within:
(i) 12 months, as far as inventions and utility model applications are concerned;
(ii) 6 months as far as industrial design applications are concerned.
Article 15
1. Priority to obtain a patent, a right of protection or a right in registration shall be determined, on conditions laid down in relevant international agreements, according to the date on which the invention, the utility model or the industrial design was displayed, in Poland or elsewhere in the world, at an official or officially recognised exhibition, provided that the patent, utility model or industrial design application has subsequently been filed with the Patent Office within six months of that date.
2. (deleted)
3. (deleted)
4. (deleted)
Article 16
Where an invention, a utility model or an industrial design, being the subject of the first duly filed application, has previously been displayed on an exhibition and since the date of display up to the filing date it has enjoyed the provisional protection provided for under the Paris Convention, the priority to obtain a patent, a right of protection or a right in registration, referred to in Article 14, as well as the start of the time limits for filing applications with the Patent Office provided therein, shall be determined according to the date at which the invention, utility model or industrial design has been displayed at the exhibition concerned.
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY LAW
as amended by act of 23 January 2004 and act of 29 June 2007
Title I
General Provisions
Article 1
1. This Law regulates: - (i)
-
the relationships in the field of inventions, utility models, industrial designs, trademarks, geographical indications and topographies of integrated circuits,
- (ii)
-
the principles on which entities may accept rationalisation proposals and remunerate creators thereof;
- (iii)
-
the responsibilities and organisation of the Patent Office of the Republic of Poland, hereinafter referred to as the “Patent Office”.
2. The provisions of this Law shall not prejudice the protection of the subject matter referred to in paragraph (1)(i), provided for in other legal acts.
Article 2
Combating of unfair competition is governed by a separate legal act.
Article 3
1. References in this Law: - (i)
-
to a person shall mean any natural or legal person;
- (ii)
-
to a foreign person shall mean a person not being a Polish national and not having a domicile or a seat, or a real and effective establishment on the territory of the Republic of Poland;
- (iii)
-
to an entity shall mean a person, who runs for profit the activity in manufacturing, building, trading or servicing, hereinafter referred to as “business activity”;
- (iv)
-
to an international agreement shall mean any international agreement to which the Republic of Poland is party;
- (v)
-
to the Paris Convention shall mean the Stockholm Act of the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property of 20 March 1883 (JL 1975 No 9, text 51);
- (vi)
-
to invention projects shall mean inventions, utility models, industrial designs, topographies of integrated circuits and rationalisation projects;
- (vii)
-
to the International Bureau shall mean the International Bureau of Intellectual Property set up under the Convention establishing the World Intellectual Property Organization signed at Stockholm on 14July 1967 (JL 1975, No 9, text 49);
- (viii)
-
to the international trademark shall mean a trademark registered under the procedure established in the Agreement or the Protocol;
- (ix)
-
to the Agreement shall mean the Madrid Agreement concerning the international registration of marks of 14 April 1891 (JL 1993, No 116, texts 514 and 515);
- (x)
-
to the Protocol shall mean the Protocol relating to the Madrid Agreement concerning the international registration of marks adopted at Madrid on 27 June 1989 (JL 2003, No 13, texts 129 and 130);
- (xi)
-
to the European Patent Convention shall mean the Convention on the grant of European patents adopted in Munich on 5 October 1973, amended by an act amending Article 63 of the Convention of 17 December 1991 and by the decisions of the Administrative Council of the European Patent Organization of 21 December 1978, 13 December 1994, 20 October 1995, 5 December 1996 and 10 December 1998, together with the Protocols constituting its integral part (JL 2004, No 79, texts 737 and 738).
2. The provisions of this Law in parts concerning economic entities shall also apply accordingly to persons running activities other than business activity and to organisational units that do not enjoy the status of legal person.
Article 4
1. Where an international agreement or the provisions of European Union laws binding and directly applicable in all Member States provide for special procedures for granting protection for inventions, utility models, industrial designs, trademarks, geographical indications or topographies of integrated circuits, the provisions of this Law shall apply accordingly to the subject matter not governed by that agreement or these provisions, or falling within responsibilities of national authorities.
2. An international agreement or the provisions referred to in paragraph (1), indicate in particular the language of the proceedings for the grant of protection and the language in which documentation of patent, utility model, industrial design, trademark, geographical indication and topography of integrated circuits applications should be drawn up.
Article 5
1. Foreign persons shall enjoy the rights under this Law on the basis of international agreements.
2. Insofar as it is not contrary to the provisions of international agreements, foreign persons may enjoy the rights on the basis of this Law on the principle of reciprocity. It is for the President of the Patent Office to ascertain, for the purpose of the procedure before the Patent Office and after having this consulted with a competent minister, whether the reciprocity conditions are satisfied.
Article 6
1. The following shall be granted on the conditions as laid down in this Law: patents and supplementary protection rights for inventions, rights of protection for utility models and trademarks, as well as rights in registration for industrial designs, topographies of integrated circuits and geographical indications.
2. The Patent Office shall be responsible in the matters referred to in paragraph (1).
Article 7
1. Economic entities may provide for accepting rationalisation projects on conditions laid down in regulations on rationalisation activities.
2. Any technical solution susceptible of utilisation and not being a patentable invention, a utility model, an industrial design or topography of an integrated circuit may be recognised by an economic entity as a rationalisation project within the meaning of this Law.
3. In the regulations referred to in paragraph (1), an economic entity shall at least determine, what kind of solutions and made by whom may be recognised by that entity as rationalisation projects, the manner in which reported projects are to be handled as well as the rules of remunerating the creators of the projects in question.
Article 8
1. On the conditions as laid down in this Law, the creator of an invention, a utility model, an industrial design or topography of an integrated circuit shall be entitled:
(i) to obtain a patent, a right of protection or a right in registration,
(ii) to remuneration,
(iii) to be mentioned as such in specifications, registers and other documents and publications.
2. The creator of a rationalisation project accepted by an economic entity for exploitation shall be entitled to the remuneration specified in the regulations referred to in Article 7(1) effective on the report day, unless regulations subsequently promulgated are deemed more advantageous for the creator. The provisions of paragraph (1)(iii) shall apply accordingly.
3. The provisions of paragraphs (1) and (2) shall apply accordingly to the joint creator.
Article 9
Representatives of social organisations whose activities include the encouragement of activities in industrial property matters may, in accordance with their statutes, provide assistance to the creators of inventive projects and act in their interest in proceedings before judicial bodies and, subject to Article 236, before the Patent Office.
Title II
Inventions, Utility Models and
Industrial Designs
Part I
Common Provisions
Article 10
1. Decisions on the grant of a patent for an invention or a right of protection for a utility model shall be taken after having examined by the Patent Office, to the specified extent, whether the statutory requirements for the grant of a patent or a right of protection are satisfied.
2. Decisions on the registration of an industrial design shall be taken after having been checked, whether the industrial design has duly been filed with the Patent Office.
Article 11
1. Subject to paragraphs (2), (3) and (5), the right to obtain a patent for an invention or a right of protection for a utility model, or a right in registration for an industrial design shall belong to the creator.
2. Where an invention, a utility model or of an industrial design has been made jointly by a number of persons, the right to obtain a patent, a right of protection or a right in registration, respectively, shall belong to them jointly.
3. Where an invention, a utility model or an industrial design has been made by a creator in the course of employment duties or in the execution of any other contract, the right referred to in paragraph (1) shall belong to the employer or the commissioner, unless otherwise agreed by the parties concerned.
4. Agreements concluded between economic entities may designate the entity to which the rights referred to in paragraph (1) shall belong where an invention, a utility model or an industrial design has been made in connection with the execution of such agreement.
5. Where an invention, a utility model or an industrial design has been made by a creator with the assistance of an economic entity, the latter may enjoy the right to exploit the invention, the utility model or the industrial design in its own field of activity. In the agreement on the provision of assistance, the parties may stipulate that the right referred to in paragraph (1) shall belong in whole or in part to the economic entity.
Article 12
1. The right to a patent for an invention, a right of protection for a utility model or a right in registration for an industrial design may be assigned or be subject to succession.
2. A contract for the transfer of the right referred to in paragraph (1) shall be in writing on pain of invalidity.
Article 13
1. Subject to Articles 14 and 15, priority to obtain a patent, a right of protection or a right in registration shall be determined according to the date on which a patent application, a utility model application or an industrial design application has been filed with the Patent Office.
2. Subject to Article 31, an application shall be deemed to have been filed at the date at which it has been received by the Patent Office in a written form also by means of fax or electronically.
3. Where an application has been transmitted by means of fax, the original copy thereof shall be required to be furnished within 30 days from the date on which the transmission by fax was effected. The above time limit shall be non-restorable.
4. Where an application transmitted by means of fax is found illegible or lacking in identity with the original copy subsequently furnished, the date at which the original copy has been furnished in accordance with paragraph (3) shall be deemed to be the filing date.
5. The provision of paragraph (4) shall apply accordingly, where the original copy has been furnished after the expiration of the time limit referred to in paragraph (3); in that case the application transmitted by means of fax shall be deemed not to have been filed.
6. Where an application transmitted in an electronic form is affected by a harmful software, the Patent Office shall not be obliged to open such a communication and process it further. In such a case, as well as where the transmitted application has been found illegible, the provision of paragraph (1) has no effect.
7. An electronic form of an application shall mean a form set while transmitting the application with the use of a telecommunication network or on an information carrier of data within the meaning of Article 3 (i) of the act of 17 February 2005 on the informatisation of works of the entities performing public activity (JL No 64 text 565 and of 2006 No 12 text 65 and No 73 text 501).
8. In the cases referred to in paragraph (6), illegible parts of the application shall be deemed not to be filed. The provisions of Article 31 paragraphs (3) to (5) shall apply accordingly.
9. The Patent Office shall immediately notice the applicant, while using the same means of transmission, that the application transmitted by fax is illegible as a whole or in part, or that one of the situations referred to in paragraph (6) or (8) has occurred, where it is possible to find the e-mail address or establish the identity of the applicant and his address, and where it does not threaten the safety of the Patent Office’s teleinformation system, within the meaning of Article 2 (iii) of the act of 18 July 2002 on providing services electronically (JL No 144 text 1204, of 2004 No 96 text 959 and No 173 text 1808, and of 2007 No 50 text 331), and the technical conditions of the means of transmission used by the applicant allow.
Article 14
Priority to obtain a patent, a right of protection or a right in registration shall be granted in the Republic of Poland, on conditions laid down in relevant international agreements, according to the date on which a patent, utility model or industrial design application has originally and duly been filed in a designated country, provided that as from that date the application is filed with the Patent Office within:
(i) 12 months, as far as inventions and utility model applications are concerned;
(ii) 6 months as far as industrial design applications are concerned.
Article 15
1. Priority to obtain a patent, a right of protection or a right in registration shall be determined, on conditions laid down in relevant international agreements, according to the date on which the invention, the utility model or the industrial design was displayed, in Poland or elsewhere in the world, at an official or officially recognised exhibition, provided that the patent, utility model or industrial design application has subsequently been filed with the Patent Office within six months of that date.
2. (deleted)
3. (deleted)
4. (deleted)
Article 16
Where an invention, a utility model or an industrial design, being the subject of the first duly filed application, has previously been displayed on an exhibition and since the date of display up to the filing date it has enjoyed the provisional protection provided for under the Paris Convention, the priority to obtain a patent, a right of protection or a right in registration, referred to in Article 14, as well as the start of the time limits for filing applications with the Patent Office provided therein, shall be determined according to the date at which the invention, utility model or industrial design has been displayed at the exhibition concerned.
General Provisions
1. This Law regulates: the relationships in the field of inventions, utility models, industrial designs, trademarks, geographical indications and topographies of integrated circuits, the principles on which entities may accept rationalisation proposals and remunerate creators thereof; the responsibilities and organisation of the Patent Office of the Republic of Poland, hereinafter referred to as the “Patent Office”.
2. The provisions of this Law shall not prejudice the protection of the subject matter referred to in paragraph (1)(i), provided for in other legal acts.
Combating of unfair competition is governed by a separate legal act.
1. References in this Law: to a person shall mean any natural or legal person; to a foreign person shall mean a person not being a Polish national and not having a domicile or a seat, or a real and effective establishment on the territory of the Republic of Poland; to an entity shall mean a person, who runs for profit the activity in manufacturing, building, trading or servicing, hereinafter referred to as “business activity”; to an international agreement shall mean any international agreement to which the Republic of Poland is party; to the Paris Convention shall mean the Stockholm Act of the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property of 20 March 1883 (JL 1975 No 9, text 51); to invention projects shall mean inventions, utility models, industrial designs, topographies of integrated circuits and rationalisation projects; to the International Bureau shall mean the International Bureau of Intellectual Property set up under the Convention establishing the World Intellectual Property Organization signed at Stockholm on 14July 1967 (JL 1975, No 9, text 49); to the international trademark shall mean a trademark registered under the procedure established in the Agreement or the Protocol; to the Agreement shall mean the Madrid Agreement concerning the international registration of marks of 14 April 1891 (JL 1993, No 116, texts 514 and 515); to the Protocol shall mean the Protocol relating to the Madrid Agreement concerning the international registration of marks adopted at Madrid on 27 June 1989 (JL 2003, No 13, texts 129 and 130); to the European Patent Convention shall mean the Convention on the grant of European patents adopted in Munich on 5 October 1973, amended by an act amending Article 63 of the Convention of 17 December 1991 and by the decisions of the Administrative Council of the European Patent Organization of 21 December 1978, 13 December 1994, 20 October 1995, 5 December 1996 and 10 December 1998, together with the Protocols constituting its integral part (JL 2004, No 79, texts 737 and 738).
2. The provisions of this Law in parts concerning economic entities shall also apply accordingly to persons running activities other than business activity and to organisational units that do not enjoy the status of legal person.
1. Where an international agreement or the provisions of European Union laws binding and directly applicable in all Member States provide for special procedures for granting protection for inventions, utility models, industrial designs, trademarks, geographical indications or topographies of integrated circuits, the provisions of this Law shall apply accordingly to the subject matter not governed by that agreement or these provisions, or falling within responsibilities of national authorities.
2. An international agreement or the provisions referred to in paragraph (1), indicate in particular the language of the proceedings for the grant of protection and the language in which documentation of patent, utility model, industrial design, trademark, geographical indication and topography of integrated circuits applications should be drawn up.
1. Foreign persons shall enjoy the rights under this Law on the basis of international agreements.
2. Insofar as it is not contrary to the provisions of international agreements, foreign persons may enjoy the rights on the basis of this Law on the principle of reciprocity. It is for the President of the Patent Office to ascertain, for the purpose of the procedure before the Patent Office and after having this consulted with a competent minister, whether the reciprocity conditions are satisfied.
1. The following shall be granted on the conditions as laid down in this Law: patents and supplementary protection rights for inventions, rights of protection for utility models and trademarks, as well as rights in registration for industrial designs, topographies of integrated circuits and geographical indications.
2. The Patent Office shall be responsible in the matters referred to in paragraph (1).
1. Economic entities may provide for accepting rationalisation projects on conditions laid down in regulations on rationalisation activities.
2. Any technical solution susceptible of utilisation and not being a patentable invention, a utility model, an industrial design or topography of an integrated circuit may be recognised by an economic entity as a rationalisation project within the meaning of this Law.
3. In the regulations referred to in paragraph (1), an economic entity shall at least determine, what kind of solutions and made by whom may be recognised by that entity as rationalisation projects, the manner in which reported projects are to be handled as well as the rules of remunerating the creators of the projects in question.
1. On the conditions as laid down in this Law, the creator of an invention, a utility model, an industrial design or topography of an integrated circuit shall be entitled:
(i) to obtain a patent, a right of protection or a right in registration,
(ii) to remuneration,
(iii) to be mentioned as such in specifications, registers and other documents and publications.
2. The creator of a rationalisation project accepted by an economic entity for exploitation shall be entitled to the remuneration specified in the regulations referred to in Article 7(1) effective on the report day, unless regulations subsequently promulgated are deemed more advantageous for the creator. The provisions of paragraph (1)(iii) shall apply accordingly.
3. The provisions of paragraphs (1) and (2) shall apply accordingly to the joint creator.
Representatives of social organisations whose activities include the encouragement of activities in industrial property matters may, in accordance with their statutes, provide assistance to the creators of inventive projects and act in their interest in proceedings before judicial bodies and, subject to Article 236, before the Patent Office.
Inventions, Utility Models and
Industrial Designs
Article 10
1. Decisions on the grant of a patent for an invention or a right of protection for a utility model shall be taken after having examined by the Patent Office, to the specified extent, whether the statutory requirements for the grant of a patent or a right of protection are satisfied.
2. Decisions on the registration of an industrial design shall be taken after having been checked, whether the industrial design has duly been filed with the Patent Office.
1. Subject to paragraphs (2), (3) and (5), the right to obtain a patent for an invention or a right of protection for a utility model, or a right in registration for an industrial design shall belong to the creator.
2. Where an invention, a utility model or of an industrial design has been made jointly by a number of persons, the right to obtain a patent, a right of protection or a right in registration, respectively, shall belong to them jointly.
3. Where an invention, a utility model or an industrial design has been made by a creator in the course of employment duties or in the execution of any other contract, the right referred to in paragraph (1) shall belong to the employer or the commissioner, unless otherwise agreed by the parties concerned.
4. Agreements concluded between economic entities may designate the entity to which the rights referred to in paragraph (1) shall belong where an invention, a utility model or an industrial design has been made in connection with the execution of such agreement.
5. Where an invention, a utility model or an industrial design has been made by a creator with the assistance of an economic entity, the latter may enjoy the right to exploit the invention, the utility model or the industrial design in its own field of activity. In the agreement on the provision of assistance, the parties may stipulate that the right referred to in paragraph (1) shall belong in whole or in part to the economic entity.
1. The right to a patent for an invention, a right of protection for a utility model or a right in registration for an industrial design may be assigned or be subject to succession.
2. A contract for the transfer of the right referred to in paragraph (1) shall be in writing on pain of invalidity.
1. Subject to Articles 14 and 15, priority to obtain a patent, a right of protection or a right in registration shall be determined according to the date on which a patent application, a utility model application or an industrial design application has been filed with the Patent Office.
2. Subject to Article 31, an application shall be deemed to have been filed at the date at which it has been received by the Patent Office in a written form also by means of fax or electronically.
3. Where an application has been transmitted by means of fax, the original copy thereof shall be required to be furnished within 30 days from the date on which the transmission by fax was effected. The above time limit shall be non-restorable.
4. Where an application transmitted by means of fax is found illegible or lacking in identity with the original copy subsequently furnished, the date at which the original copy has been furnished in accordance with paragraph (3) shall be deemed to be the filing date.
5. The provision of paragraph (4) shall apply accordingly, where the original copy has been furnished after the expiration of the time limit referred to in paragraph (3); in that case the application transmitted by means of fax shall be deemed not to have been filed.
6. Where an application transmitted in an electronic form is affected by a harmful software, the Patent Office shall not be obliged to open such a communication and process it further. In such a case, as well as where the transmitted application has been found illegible, the provision of paragraph (1) has no effect.
7. An electronic form of an application shall mean a form set while transmitting the application with the use of a telecommunication network or on an information carrier of data within the meaning of Article 3 (i) of the act of 17 February 2005 on the informatisation of works of the entities performing public activity (JL No 64 text 565 and of 2006 No 12 text 65 and No 73 text 501).
8. In the cases referred to in paragraph (6), illegible parts of the application shall be deemed not to be filed. The provisions of Article 31 paragraphs (3) to (5) shall apply accordingly.
9. The Patent Office shall immediately notice the applicant, while using the same means of transmission, that the application transmitted by fax is illegible as a whole or in part, or that one of the situations referred to in paragraph (6) or (8) has occurred, where it is possible to find the e-mail address or establish the identity of the applicant and his address, and where it does not threaten the safety of the Patent Office’s teleinformation system, within the meaning of Article 2 (iii) of the act of 18 July 2002 on providing services electronically (JL No 144 text 1204, of 2004 No 96 text 959 and No 173 text 1808, and of 2007 No 50 text 331), and the technical conditions of the means of transmission used by the applicant allow.
Priority to obtain a patent, a right of protection or a right in registration shall be granted in the Republic of Poland, on conditions laid down in relevant international agreements, according to the date on which a patent, utility model or industrial design application has originally and duly been filed in a designated country, provided that as from that date the application is filed with the Patent Office within:
(i) 12 months, as far as inventions and utility model applications are concerned;
(ii) 6 months as far as industrial design applications are concerned.
Article 15
1. Priority to obtain a patent, a right of protection or a right in registration shall be determined, on conditions laid down in relevant international agreements, according to the date on which the invention, the utility model or the industrial design was displayed, in Poland or elsewhere in the world, at an official or officially recognised exhibition, provided that the patent, utility model or industrial design application has subsequently been filed with the Patent Office within six months of that date.
2. (deleted)
3. (deleted)
4. (deleted)
Article 16
Where an invention, a utility model or an industrial design, being the subject of the first duly filed application, has previously been displayed on an exhibition and since the date of display up to the filing date it has enjoyed the provisional protection provided for under the Paris Convention, the priority to obtain a patent, a right of protection or a right in registration, referred to in Article 14, as well as the start of the time limits for filing applications with the Patent Office provided therein, shall be determined according to the date at which the invention, utility model or industrial design has been displayed at the exhibition concerned.
Title I
Article 1
Article 2
Article 3
Article 4
Article 5
Article 6
Article 7
Article 8
Article 9
Title II
Part I
Common Provisions
Article 11
Article 12
Article 13
Article 14