- Chapter 1 General provisions
- Chapter 2 Filing of industrial design applications
- Chapter 3 Processing of industrial design applications
- Chapter 4 Transitional and final provisions
- Annexes to the Regulation of the Prime Ministerof 30 January 2002
- Annex 1 FORMAL REQUIREMENTS CONCRENING THE DESCRIPTION OF AN INDUSTRIAL DESIGN, A DRAWING AND A PHOTO, AS WELL AS OF SAMPLES OF TEXTILES OR THREADS WITH THE RELEVANT WEAVE
- Annex 2 REQUIREMENTS CONCERNING THE DOCUMENTS ANNEXED TO INDUSTRIAL DESIGN APPLICATION
- Annex 3 LIST OF CLASSES
Regulation
of the Prime Minister
of 30 January 2002
on filing and processing industrial design applications
(as amended on 13 June 2005)
By virtue of Article 119 of the Act of 30 June 2000 – Industrial Property Law (JL 2003 No 119, text 1117, 2004 No 33, text 286 and 2005 No 10, text 68) the following is decreed:
Chapter 1
General provisions
1. This Regulation sets:
(i) the detailed requirements for filing industrial design applications,
(ii) the detailed scope and procedure of processing applications,
(iii) the manner of making available and dissemination of industrial design specifications.
2. References in this Regulation to:
(i) “Law” mean the Act of 30 June 2000 – Industrial Property Law, and references to undefined Articles mean the Articles of that Law,
(ii) “Patent Office” mean the Patent Office of the Republic of Poland,
(iii) “applicant” mean the person who is, on its own behalf, filing an industrial design application with the Patent Office.
Chapter 2
Filing of industrial design applications
3. (1). In addition to a request and a description of the design together with the illustration, the industrial design application, referred to in Article 108(1) of the Law, shall, in particular, include:
(i) where the applicant claims a right of an earlier priority – the priority document;
(ii) where the application contains forms of the industrial design – the applicant’s declaration as to which forms the priority document refers (declaration on priority dates);
(iii) where the priority document is not in the name of the applicant – the applicant’s statement of his right to enjoy an earlier priority;
(iv) where the industrial design, as filed, includes the signs referred to in Article 131(2)(ii)-(iv) of the Law – a proof of the right or authorization to use such signs in trade;
(v) where the applicant acts through the intermediary of a representative – a power of attorney.
4. (1). In addition to the elements listed in Article 31(1)(i) of the Law, a request in an industrial design application shall contain the following:
(2) The request referred to in paragraph (1) shall also include:
(3) Where the application is filed by a legal person or by an agency or a unit acting on behalf of the State Treasury, the person who signs the request for the applicant shall, if he/she is not the applicant’s representative, indicate his/her official position.
5. (1) The description of the industrial design, referred to in section 3(1), hereinafter referred to as “the description”, shall present the industrial design in a manner clear and exhaustive enough for it to be reproduced, with the help of a drawing, a photo and samples, in any of the forms presented in the application.
(2) The description shall:
6. (1) The illustration of the industrial design shall present the subject of the design with the clear indication of the essential features of the design.
(2) All the forms of the industrial design shall be presented in figures on one sheet only.
(3) It is allowed to present each or some of the forms of the industrial design additionally on separate sheets, if the presentation of those forms together with all the necessary details on one sheet is infeasible.
7. To better illustrate the industrial design, photos of the design may present the subject of the design in various views.
8. (1) The description and the illustrations of the design, as well as the samples of the textile fabric, shall be filed in three copies, while other elements of the application – in one copy only.
(2) The illustrations of the industrial design shall be signed by the applicant or his representative and the signatures shall be placed in a space enabling their omission while reproducing the design. Samples of the textile fabric shall be signed on a label.
9. The detailed requirements for filing industrial design applications are provided for in Annexes 1 and 2 to this Regulation.
Chapter 3
Processing of industrial design applications
10. (1) After having received an industrial design application the Patent Office shall immediately accord a consecutive number, note the date of receipt and notify the applicant accordingly.
(2) An industrial design application shall be deemed to have been filed, if it contains at least: a request, a description, an illustration or a sample of the textile fabric.
(3) (repealed)
(4) (repealed)
11. After having performed the acts referred to in section 10(1), the Patent Office shall check whether the application includes:
(i) a request,
(ii) a part which on the face of it seems to be a description of the industrial design,
(iii) a part which on the face of it seems to be the illustration or a sample of the textile fabric.
12. (1) Where the Patent Office finds that in the request there is no ground for the grant of a right in registration for the industrial design mentioned, it shall notify the applicant accordingly and fix a time limit for him to correct the omission. The Patent Office shall discontinue the proceedings, if the applicant fails to correct the omission within the fixed time limit.
(2) Where it has been found that the filing fee has not been paid, the Patent Office shall invite the applicant to pay the fee within one month from the date of the invitation to pay the fee being served. Failure to pay the fee within the fixed time limit shall result in the discontinuance of the proceeding.
(3) Where the application has been filed by a person claiming to be the applicant’s representative and the Patent Office finds that a power of attorney has not been submitted to the files, the Patent Office shall invite that person and a party to correct the omission within the fixed time limit, failing which the proceeding shall be discontinued.
13. (repealed)
14. When reasonable, the Patent Office may invite the applicant to submit, within the fixed time limit, evidence and explanations related to the industrial design application, and in particular to state the grounds for his/her right to be granted a right in registration or a right to an earlier priority.
15. (1) Where the Patent Office finds that the industrial design application contains an unacceptable number of forms, which number is specified in Article 108(5) of the Law, the Patent Office shall fix a time limit for the applicant to file separate applications contained in the original application and to pay filing fees for those applications. The fee paid for the filing of the industrial design application shall be deemed to be a fee related to the application containing the forms listed as first among the forms maintained by the applicant, which application shall keep the number of the original application. The other applications shall be accorded the numbers corresponding to the date of receipt, the original filing date remaining the same.
(1a) A decision on filing separate applications requires to provide substantive evidence that a form of the product lacks essential common features, or that there are more than acceptable 10 forms of the design in the application, or that there is a lack of features enabling the applied products to be considered to form a set.
(2) If the applicant fails, within the fixed time limit, to file separate industrial design applications and pay the respective filing fees, the application shall be deemed to cover the first ten forms presented in the description (list). In that case, the application shall, in part related to the other forms, be deemed withdrawn and the proceeding shall discontinue.
(3) In the case referred to in paragraph (2) the Patent Office shall not invite the applicant, before checking whether the applied industrial design may be granted a right of protection, to make corrections in the documents, resulting from the withdrawal of some forms of the design. The applicant shall be free to make such corrections by himself.
(4) The provisions of paragraphs (1) and (2) shall apply accordingly, if the applicant, while not being invited by the Patent Office to do so, files a separate application of the industrial designs in respect of the forms of the design contained in the original application, even if the application meets the requirements specified in Article 108 (4) and (5).
16. If the applicant makes additions or corrections in his application, which can not be accepted, the Patent Office shall, to the extent as it is bound to verify the correctness of the application, decide in an order on the inadmissibility thereof and invite the applicant to correct that defect.
17. (1) If the Patent Office finds that working of the industrial design would be contrary to the public order or morality, the Patent Office shall notify the applicant accordingly and fix a time limit for him to take a stance in respect of the circumstances, which may show the existence of obstacles preventing the grant of a right in registration.
(2) If the Patent Office finds that the industrial design as filed contains signs, use of which have to be subject of authorisation or signs which appear to be such kind of signs, and the applicant failed to produce evidence that he is authorised to use them in trade, the provision of paragraph (1) shall apply accordingly.
(3) In the cases referred to in paragraphs (1) and (2), failure of taking a stance by the applicant within the fixed time limit may not constitute a ground for refusal to grant a right in registration, if the circumstances indicated in the notification are found not being the obstacles preventing the grant of the right.
18. Where the obstacles preventing the grant of a right in registration, referred to in section 17(1) and (2), are not eliminated by the applicant and it is not the case as referred to in section 17(3), the Patent Office shall take a decision on refusal to grant a right in registration.
19. (1) If the Patent Office does not find any irregularities, referred to in section 17(1) and (2), in the industrial design application, the Office shall take a decision on the grant of a right in registration, provided that a fee for the first protection period has been paid and invite the applicant to pay the publication fee.
(2) Before the decision, referred to in paragraph (1), is taken and in cases other than those specified in section 16, the Patent Office may demand in an order that the applicant remove, from the description of the design or from the illustration, within the fixed time limit and under the pain of discontinuance of the proceeding, in particular inscriptions or illustrations contrary to the public order or morality, as well as make corrections, as appropriate, resulting from the withdrawal of certain forms of the design.
(3) The Patent Office shall make itself corrections in the application files only in order to eliminate minor formal defects and other obvious mistakes and language errors, as well as in the cases referred to in paragraph (4).
(4) In case of a decision on the grant of a right in registration in respect of a part of the application only, the Patent Office shall decide at the same time to make modifications in the description and drawings and indicate them clearly in the conclusion of the decision.
(5) When taking the decision referred to in paragraph (1), the Patent Office shall, at the same time, assign the design to an appropriate class specified in Annex 3 to this Regulation.
(6) The modifications in the description, referred to in paragraph (4), shall consist of the deletion or removal of its clearly singled out parts covering the designs for which the grant of protection is refused, as well as of making necessary routine corrections resulting therefrom, in particular such as relating to the title and the definition of the subject of the design. Deletions and corrections shall be made in a manner ensuring legibility of the text.
20. (1) In the course of processing an industrial design application the Patent Office shall be authorised to issue, at the request of the applicant, the priority document referred to in Article 19 of the Law.