Union Jack Kat |
Readers
with an interest in UK design law will remember that the Intellectual Property Act 2014 introduced a
new appeal regime for designs.
The system
of appeals to an Appointed Person, as an alternative to the route of appealing
to the High Court in heavier and more complex cases, was intended to mirror the
longstanding system of appeals to an Appointed Person (AP) in trade mark
appeals. In fact, the relevant rules for design appeals are modelled on those
for trade mark cases.
Readers
will also remember that Sir Richard Arnold had advocated the
extension of the Appointed Person appeal route for registered designs instead
of the appeal route to the Patents County Court, which was enacted but never
brought into force in place of the Registered Designs Appeal Tribunal.
Now via
Sir Richard Arnold comes the news that last week Martin Howe QC issued the
first decision of an AP in a registered design (Appeal O/253/17).
The appeal
concerned a request to invalidate two registered designs
(both consisting of a garment on the chest of which a somewhat modified
Union Jack flag) on the ground that they lacked novelty or
individual character under section 1B(1) of the Registered Designs Act 1949, as amended.
Valid design? |
The
argument was that similar designs have been sold in the London souvenir market
for many years prior to the application dates for the concerned designs and, as
a result, their owner "had registered existing generic designs, hijacking
the London souvenir market."
Despite
the lack of systematic evidence, the Hearing Officer relied on two (a
photograph published on Facebook and two witness statements) of the many items
produced to conclude that - on the balance of probabilities - these had
been made available to the public prior to the concerned designs. Following a comparison of the designs at
hand, she concluded that those registered were invalid.
The
decision was appealed to the AP together with a request to introduce additional
materials, as well as allegation of fraud and forgery against the publication
date of the Facebook photograph.
Martin
Howe QC dismissed such requests, and upheld the Hearing Officer’s findings on
the evidence that the Facebook photograph and the garment identified in the two
witness statements were prior art as against the two registered designs in
suit.
However, the AP found that the Hearing Officer’s comparison of the designs in suit to
the prior art had incorrectly characterised the features of the designs in
suit. Nonetheless, having carried out the comparison myself, the AP came to the
same conclusion that the two registered designs lack individual character in
the light of the above prior art. As a result, he dismissed the appeal.
Appointed Person issues first appeal decision in a design case
Reviewed by Eleonora Rosati
on
Sunday, May 28, 2017
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