THE PATENTS ACT, 1970
(39 of 1970)
ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS
_________
ACT NO. 47 OF 1970
[19thSeptember, 1999]
An Act to amend and cons olidate the law relating to patents .
BE it enacted by Parliament in the Twenty-first Year of the Republic of India as follows:-
CHAPTER I
PRELIMINARY
Section 1
Short title, extent and commencement
- This Act may be called the Patents Act, 1970.
- It extends to the whole of India.
- It shall come into force on such date as the Central
Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, appoint:
Provided
that different dates may be appointed for different provisions of this Act, and
any reference in any such provision to the commencement of this Act shall be
construed as a reference to the coming into force of that provision.
Section
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Definitions
and interpretation
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(1) In this Act, unless the
context otherwise requires,-
(a)
"Appellate Board" means the Appellate Board referred to in section
116;
(ab)
"assignee" includes an assignee of the assignee and the legal
representative of a deceased assignee and references to the assignee of any
person include references to the assignee of the legal representative or
assignee of that person;
(aba)
"Budapest Treaty" means the Budapest Treaty
on the International Recognition of the Deposit of Micro-organisms for the
purposes of Patent Procedure done at Budapest on 28th day of April, 1977, as
amended and modified from time to time;
(ac) "capable of
industrial application", in relation to an invention, means that the
invention is capable of being made or used in an industry;
(b)
"Controller" means the Controller General of Patents, Designs and
Trade Marks referred to in section 73;
(c)
"convention application" means an application for a patent made by
virtue of section 135;
(d)
"convention country" means a country or a country which is member
of a group of countries or a union of countries or an Intergovernmental
organization referred to as a convention country in section 133;
(e)
"district court" has the meaning assigned to that expression by the
Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908);
(f)
"exclusive licence" means a licence from a patentee which confers on the licensee, or
on the licensee and persons authorised by him, to
the exclusion of all other persons (including the patentee), any right in
respect of the patented invention, and exclusive licensee shall be construed
accordingly;
(g)
[Omitted]
(h)
"Government undertaking" means any industrial undertaking carried
on—
(i) by a department of the Government, or
(ii)
by a corporation established by a Central, Provincial or State Act, which is
owned or controlled by the Government, or
(iii) by
a Government company as defined in section 617 of the Companies
Act, 1956 (1 of 1956), or
(iv)
by an institution wholly or substantially
financed by the Government;
(i) "High Court", in relation to a State or
Union territory, means the High Court having territorial jurisdiction in that
State or Union territory, as the case may be;
(ia) "international application" means an
application for patent made in accordance with the Patent Cooperation
Treaty;
(j)
"invention" means a new product or process involving an inventive
step and capable of industrial application;
(ja) "inventive step" means a
feature of an invention that involves technical advance as compared to the
existing knowledge or having economic significance or both and
that makes the invention not obvious to a person skilled in the art;
(k)
"legal representative" means a person who in law represents the
estate of a deceased person;
(l)
"new invention" means any invention or technology which has not
been anticipated by publication in any document or used in the country or
elsewhere in the world before the date of filing of patent application with
complete specification, i.e.,the subject matter has
not fallen in public domain or that it does not form part of the state of the
art;
(la)
"Opposition Board" means an Opposition Board constituted under
sub-section (3) of section 25;
(m)
"patent" means a patent for any invention granted under this Act;
(n)
"patent agent" means a person for the time being registered under
this Act as a patent agent;
(o)
"patented article" and "patented process" means
respectively an article or process in respect of which a patent is in force;
(oa) "Patent Cooperation Treaty" means the Patent Cooperation
Treaty done at Washington on the 19th day of June, 1970 as amended and
modified from time to time;
(p)
"patentee" means the person for the time being entered on the
register as the grantee or proprietor of the patent;
(q)
"patent of addition" means a patent granted in accordance with
section 54;
(r)
"patent office" means the patent office referred to in section 74;
(s)
"person" includes the Government;
(t)
"person interested" includes a person engaged in, or in promoting,
research in the same field as that to which the invention relates;
(ta) "pharmaceutical substance" means any new
entity involving one or more inventive steps;
(u)
"prescribed" means,—
(A)
in relation to proceedings before a High Court, prescribed by rules made by
the High Court;
(B)
in relation to proceedings before the Appellate Board, prescribed by rules
made by the Appellate Board; and
(C)
in other cases, prescribed by rules made under this Act;
(v)
"prescribed manner" includes the payment of the prescribed fee;
(w)
"priority date" has the meaning assigned to it by section 11;
(x)
"register" means the register of patents referred to in section 67;
(y) "true and first inventor" does not include either the
first importer of an invention into India, or a person to whom an
invention is first communicated from outside India.
(2) In this Act, unless the
context otherwise requires, any reference—
(a)
to the Controller shall be construed as including a
reference to any officer discharging the functions of the Controller in
pursuance of section 73;
(b) to the patent office
shall be construed as including a reference to any branch office of the
patent office.
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CHAPTER II
INVENTIONS NOT PATENTABLE
Section 3
What are not inventions
The
following are not inventions within the meaning of this Act,—
(a) an
invention which is frivolous or which claims anything obviously contrary to
well established natural laws;
(b) an invention the primary or
intended use or commercial exploitation of which could be contrary to public
order or morality or which causes serious prejudice to human, animal or plant
life or health or to the environment;
(c) the
mere discovery of a scientific principle or the formulation of an abstract
theory or discovery of any living thing or non-living substance occurring in
nature;
(d)
the mere discovery of a new form of a known substance which does not result in
the enhancement of the known efficacy of that substance or the mere discovery
of any new property or new use for a known substance or of the mere use of a
known process, machine or apparatus unless such known process results in a new
product or employs at least one new reactant.
Explanation.—For the
purposes of this clause, salts, esters, ethers, polymorphs, metabolites, pure
form, particle size, isomers, mixtures of isomers, complexes, combinations and
other derivatives of known substance shall be considered to be the same
substance, unless they differ significantly in properties with regard to
efficacy;
(e) a
substance obtained by a mere admixture resulting only in the aggregation of the
properties of the components thereof or a process for producing such substance;
(f) the
mere arrangement or re-arrangement or duplication of known devices each
functioning independently of one another in a known way;
(g)..(omitted)
(h) a
method of agriculture or horticulture;
(i) any process for the medicinal, surgical, curative,
prophylactic diagnostic, therapeutic or other treatment of human beings or any
process for a similar treatment of animals to render them free of disease or to
increase their economic value or that of their products.
(j) plants and animals in whole or
any part thereof other than micro organisms but including seeds, varieties and
species and essentially biological processes for production or propagation of
plants and animals;
(k) a
mathematical or business method or a computer programme
per se or algorithms;
(l) a
literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work or any other aesthetic creation
whatsoever including cinematographic works and television productions;
(m) a mere
scheme or rule or method of performing mental act or method of playing game;
(n) a
presentation of information;
(o) topography
of integrated circuits;
(p) an
invention which in effect, is traditional knowledge or which is an aggregation
or duplication of known properties of traditionally known component or
components.
Section 4
Inventions
relating to atomic energy not patentable
No patent shall be granted in
respect of an invention relating to atomic energy falling within sub-section
(1) of section 20 of the Atomic
Energy Act, 1962 (33 of 1962).
CHAPTER III
APPLICATIONS FOR PATENTS
Section 6
Persons entitled to apply for
patents
(1) Subject to the provisions contained in
section 134, an application for a patent for an invention may be made by any of
the following persons, that is to say,—
(a) by any person
claiming to be the true and first inventor of the invention;
(b) by
any person being the assignee of the person claiming to be the true and first
inventor in respect of the right to make such an application;
(c) by
the legal representative of any deceased person who immediately before his
death was entitled to make such an application.
(2) An application
under sub-section (1) may be made by any of the persons referred to therein
either alone or jointly with any other person.
Section 7
Form of application
(1) Every application for a
patent shall be for one invention only and shall be made in the prescribed form
and filed in the patent office.
(1A) Every international application under the Patent Cooperation
Treaty for a patent, as may be filed designating India shall be deemed to
be an application under this Act, if a corresponding application has also been
filed before the Controller in India.
(1B) The filing date of
an application referred to in sub-section (1A) and its complete specification
processed by the patent office as designated office or elected office shall be
the international filing date accorded under the Patent Cooperation
Treaty.
(2) Where the application is made by virtue of an
assignment of the right to apply for a patent for the invention, there shall be
furnished with the application, or within such period as may be prescribed
after the filing of the application, proof of the right to make the application.
(3) Every application under this section shall
state that the applicant is in possession of the invention and shall name the
person claiming to be the true and first inventor; and where the person so
claiming is not the applicant or one of the applicants, the application shall
contain a declaration that the applicant believes the person so named to be the
true and first inventor.
(4) Every such application (not being a
convention application or an application filed under the Patent Cooperation
Treaty designating India) shall be accompanied by a provisional or a
complete specification.
Section 8
Information and undertaking regarding
foreign applications
(1) Where
an applicant for a patent under this Act is prosecuting either alone or jointly
with any other person an application for a patent in any country outside India
in respect of the same or substantially the same invention, or where to his
knowledge such an application is being prosecuted by some person through whom
he claims or by some person deriving title from him, he shall file along with
his application or subsequently within the prescribed period as the Controller
may allow—
(a) a
statement setting out detailed particulars of such application; and
(b) an
undertaking that, up to the date of grant of patent in India, he would keep the
Controller informed in writing, from time to time, of detailed particulars as
required under clause (a) in respect of every other application relating to the
same or substantially the same invention, if any, filed in any country outside
India subsequently to the filing of the statement referred to in the aforesaid
clause, within the prescribed time.
(2) At
any time after an application for patent is filed in India and till the grant
of a patent or refusal to grant of a patent made thereon, the Controller may
also require the applicant to furnish details, as may be prescribed, relating
to the processing of the application in a country outside India, and in that
event the applicant shall furnish to the Controller information available to
him within such period as may be prescribed.
Section 9
Provisional
and complete specifications
(1) Where an application, for
a patent (not being a convention application or an application filed under the Patent Cooperation
Treaty designating India) is accompanied by a provisional specification, a
complete specification shall be filed within twelve months from the date of
filing of the application, and if the complete specification is not so filed,
the application shall be deemed to be abandoned.
(2) Where two or more
applications in the name of the same applicant are accompanied by provisional
specifications in respect of inventions which are cognate or of which one is a
modification of another and the Controller is of opinion that the whole of such
inventions are such as to constitute a single invention and may properly be included
in one patent, he may allow one complete specification to be filed in respect
of all such provisional specifications.
Provided that the period of time specified under sub-section
(1) shall be reckoned from the date of filing of the earliest provisional
specification.
(3) Where an application for a
patent (not being a convention application or an application filed under the Patent Cooperation
Treaty designating India) is accompanied by a specification purporting to
be a complete specification, the Controller may, if the applicant so requests
at any time within twelve months from the date of filing of the application,
direct that such specification shall be treated, for the purposes of this Act,
as a provisional specification and proceed with the application accordingly.
(4) Where a complete
specification has been filed in pursuance of an application for a patent
accompanied by a provisional specification or by a specification treated by virtue
of a direction under sub-section (3) as a provisional specification, the
Controller may, if the applicant so requests at any time before grant of
patent, cancel the provisional specification and post-date the application to
the date of filing of the complete specification.
Section 10
Contents
of specifications
(1) Every specification,
whether provisional or complete, shall describe the invention and shall begin
with a title sufficiently indicating the subject-matter to which the invention
relates.
(2)Subject to any rules that
may be made in this behalf under this Act, drawings may, and shall, if the
Controller so requires, be supplied for the purposes of any specification,
whether complete or provisional; and any drawings so supplied shall, unless the
Controller otherwise directs be deemed to form part of the specification, and
references in this Act to a specification shall be construed accordingly.
(3) If, in any particular
case, the Controller considers that an application should be further
supplemented by a model or sample of anything illustrating the invention or
alleged to constitute an invention, such model or sample as he may require
shall be furnished before the application is found in order for grant of a
patent, but such model or sample shall not be deemed to form part of the
specification.
(4)Every complete
specification shall—
(a) fully and particularly describe the invention and its
operation or use and the method by which it is to be performed;
(b)
disclose the best method of performing the invention which is known to the
applicant and for which he is entitled to claim protection; and
(c)
end with a claim or claims defining the scope of the invention for which
protection is claimed;
(d)
be accompanied by an abstract to provide technical information on the
invention:
Provided that—
(i) the Controller may
amend the abstract for
providing better information to third parties; and
(ii)
if the applicant mentions a biological material in the
specification which may not be described in such a way as to satisfy clauses
(a) and (b), and if such material is not available to the public, the
application shall be completed by depositing the material to an international
depository authority under the Budapest Treaty
and by fulfilling the following conditions, namely:—
(A) the
deposit of the material shall be made not later than the date of filing the
patent application in India and a reference thereof shall be made in the
specification within the prescribed period;
(B) all
the available characteristics of the material required for it to be correctly identified
or indicated are included in the specification including the name, address of
the depository institution and the date and number of the deposit of the
material at the institution;
(C) access
to the material is available in the depository institution only after the date
of the application of patent in India or if a priority is claimed after the
date of the priority;
(D) disclose
the source and geographical origin of the biological material in the
specification, when used in an invention.
(4A) In case of an international application
designating India, the title, description, drawings, abstract and claims filed
with the application shall be taken as the complete specification for the
purposes of this Act.
(5) The claim or claims of a complete
specification shall relate to a single invention, or to a group of inventions
linked so as to form a single inventive concept, shall be clear and succinct
and shall be fairly based on the matter disclosed in the specification.
(6) A declaration as to the inventorship
of the invention shall, in such cases as may be prescribed, be furnished in the
prescribed form with the complete specification or within such period as may be
prescribed after the filing of that specification.
(7) Subject to the foregoing provisions of this
section, a complete specification filed after a provisional specification may
include claims in respect of developments of, or additions to, the invention
which was described in the provisional specification, being developments or
additions in respect of which the applicant would be entitled under the
provisions of section 6 to make a separate application for a patent.
Section 11
Priority
dates of claims of a complete specification
(1) There shall be a priority
date for each claim of a complete specification.
(2) Where a complete
specification is filed in pursuance of a single application accompanied by—
(a)a provisional
specification; or
(b)a specification which
is treated by virtue of a direction under subsection (3) of section 9 as a
provisional specification,
and the claim is fairly
based on the matter disclosed in the specification referred to in clause (a) or
clause (b), the priority date of that claim shall be the date of the filing of
the relevant specification.
(3) Where the complete specification is filed or
proceeded with in pursuance of two or more applications accompanied by such
specifications as are mentioned in sub-section (2) and the claim is fairly
based on the matter disclosed—
(a)in one of those
specifications, the priority date of that claim shall be the date of the filing
of the application accompanied by that specification;
(b)partly in one and partly in another, the priority date of
that claim shall be the date of the filing of the application accompanied by
the specification of the later date.
(3A) Where a complete specification based on a
previously filed application in India has been filed within twelve months from
the date of that application and the claim is fairly based on the matter disclosed
in the previously filed application, the priority date of that claim shall be
the date of the previously filed application in which the matter was first
disclosed.
(4) Where the complete specification has been
filed in pursuance of a further application made by virtue of sub-section (1)
of section 16 and the claim is fairly based on the matter disclosed in any of
the earlier specifications, provisional or complete, as the case may be, the
priority date of that claim shall be the date of the filing of that
specification in which the matter was first disclosed.
(5) Where, under the foregoing provisions of this
section, any claim of a complete specification would, but for the provisions of
this sub-section, have two or more priority dates, the priority date of that
claim shall be the earlier or earliest of those dates.
(6) In any case to which sub-sections (2), (3),
(3A), (4) and (5) do not apply, the priority date of a claim shall, subject to
the provisions of section 137, be the date of filing of the complete
specification.
(7) The reference to the date of the filing of
the application or of the complete specification in this section shall, in
cases where there has been a post-dating under section 9 or section 17 or, as
the case may be, an ante-dating under section 16, be a reference to the date as
so post-dated or ante-dated.
(8) A claim in a complete specification of a
patent shall not be invalid by reason only of—
(a)
the publication or use of the invention so far as claimed in that claim on or
after the priority date of such claim; or
(b) the grant of another patent which claims the invention, so
far as claimed in the first mentioned claim, in a claim of the same or a later
priority date.
CHAPTER IV
PUBLICATION AND EXAMINATION OF APPLICATIONS
11A. Publication of applications.—
(1)
Save as otherwise provided, no application for patent shall ordinarily be open
to the public for such period as may be prescribed.
(2)
The applicant may, in the prescribed manner, request the Controller to publish
his application at any time before the expiry of the period prescribed under
sub-section (1) and subject to the provisions of sub-section (3), the
Controller shall publish such application as soon as possible.
(3)
Every application for a patent shall, on the expiry of the period specified
under sub-section (1), be published, except in cases where the application—
(a)
in which secrecy direction is imposed under section
35; or
(b) has been abandoned
under sub-section (1) of section 9; or
(c) has been withdrawn
three months prior to the period specified under sub-section (1).
(4)
In case a secrecy direction has been given in respect of an application under
section 35, then it shall be published after the expiry of the period
prescribed under sub-section (1) or when the secrecy direction has ceased to
operate, whichever is later.
(5)
The publication of every application under this section shall include the
particulars of the date of application, number of application, name and address
of the applicant identifying the application and an abstract.
(6)
Upon publication of an application for a patent under this section—
(a)
the depository institution shall make the biological
material mentioned in the specification available to the public;
(b)
the patent office may, on payment of such fee as may
be prescribed, make the specification and drawings, if any, of such application
available to the public.
(7)
On and from the date of publication of the application for patent and until the
date of grant of a patent in respect of such application, the applicant shall
have the like privileges and rights as if a patent for the invention had been
granted on the date of publication of the application:
Provided
that the applicant shall not be entitled to institute any proceedings for
infringement until the patent has been granted:
Provided
further that the rights of a patentee in respect of applications made under
sub-section (2) of section 5 before the 1st day of January, 2005 shall accrue
from the date of grant of the patent: Provided also that after a
patent is granted in respect of applications made under sub-section (2) of
section 5, the patent-holder shall only be entitled to receive reasonable
royalty from such enterprises which have made significant investment and were
producing and marketing the concerned product prior to the 1st day of January,
2005 and which continue to manufacture the product covered by the patent on the
date of grant of the patent and no infringement proceedings shall be instituted
against such enterprises.
11B.
Request for examination.—
(1) No application for a patent
shall be examined unless the applicant or any other interested person makes a
request in the prescribed manner for such examination within the prescribed
period.
(2) ( Omitted)
(3) In case of an application in respect of a claim for a patent filed under
sub-section (2) of section 5 before the 1st day of January, 2005 a request for
its examination shall be made in the prescribed manner and within the
prescribed period by the applicant or any other interested person.
(4) In case the applicant or any other interested person does not make a
request for examination of the application for a patent within the period as
specified under sub-section (1) or sub-section (3), the application shall be
treated as withdrawn by the applicant:
Provided that—
(i)
the applicant may, at any time after filing the application but before the
grant of a patent, withdraw the application by making a request in the
prescribed manner; and
(ii) in
a case where secrecy direction has been issued under section 35, the request
for examination may be made within the prescribed period from the date of
revocation of the secrecy direction.
Section 12
Examination of application
(1)
When a request for examination has been made in respect of an application for a
patent in the prescribed manner under sub-section (1) or sub-section (3) of
section 11B, the application and specification and other documents related
thereto shall be referred at the earliest by the Controller to an examiner for
making a report to him in respect of the following matters, namely:—
(a)
whether the application and the specification and
other documents relating thereto are in accordance with the requirements of
this Act and of any rules made thereunder;
(b)
whether there is any lawful ground of objection to the
grant of the patent under this Act in pursuance of the application;
(c)the result of investigations made under section 13; and
(d)
any other matter which may be prescribed.
(2)
The examiner to whom the application and the specification and other documents
relating thereto are referred under sub-section (1) shall ordinarily make the
report to the Controller within such period as may be prescribed.
Section 13
Search for anticipation by previous publication and by prior
claim.
(1)
The examiner to whom an application for a patent is referred under section 12
shall make investigation for the purpose of ascertaining whether the invention
so far as claimed in any claim of the complete specification—
(a)
has been anticipated by publication before the date of filing of the
applicant's complete specification in any specification filed in pursuance of
an application for a patent made in India and dated on or after the 1st day of
January, 1912;
(b)
is claimed in any claim of any other complete
specification published on or after the date of filing of the applicant's
complete specification, being a specification filed in pursuance of an
application for a patent made in India and dated before or claiming the
priority date earlier than that date.
(2)
The examiner shall, in addition, make such investigation for the purpose of
ascertaining whether the invention, so far as claimed in any claim of the
complete specification, has been anticipated by publication in India or
elsewhere in any document other than those mentioned in sub-section (1) before
the date of filing of the applicant's complete specification.
(3)Where
a complete specification is amended under the provisions of this Act before the
grant of patent, the amended specification shall be examined and investigated in
like manner as the original specification.
(4)The
examination and investigations required under section 12 and this section shall
not be deemed in any way to warrant the validity of any patent, and no
liability shall be incurred by the Central Government or any officer thereof by
reason of, or in connection with, any such examination or investigation or any
report or other proceedings consequent thereon.
Section 14
Consideration of the report of examiner by Controller
Where,
in respect of an application for a patent, the report of the examiner received
by the Controller is adverse to the applicant or requires any amendment of the
application, the specification or other documents to ensure compliance with the
provisions of this Act or of the rules made thereunder,
the Controller, before proceeding to dispose of the application in accordance
with the provisions hereinafter appearing, shall communicate as
expeditiously as possible the gist of the objections to the applicant and
shall, if so required by the applicant within the prescribed period, give him
an opportunity of being heard.
Section 15
Power of Controller to refuse or require amended
applications, etc., in certain case
Where
the Controller is satisfied that the application or any specification or any
other document filed in pursuance thereof does not comply with the requirements
of this Act or of any rules made thereunder, the
Controller may refuse the application or may require the application,
specification or the other documents, as the case may be, to be amended to his
satisfaction before he proceeds with the application and refuse the application
on failure to do so.
Section 16
Power of Controller to make orders respecting division of
application
(1)
A person who has made an application for a patent under this Act may, at any
time before the grant of the patent, if he so desires, or with a view to remedy
the objection raised by the Controller on the ground that the claims of the
complete specification relate to more than one invention, file a further
application in respect of an invention disclosed in the provisional or complete
specification already filed in respect of the first mentioned application.
(2).
The further application under sub-section (1) shall be accompanied by a
complete specification, but such complete specification shall not include any
matter not in substance disclosed in the complete specification filed in
pursuance of the first mentioned application.
(3).
The Controller may require such amendment of the complete specification filed
in pursuance of either the original or the further application as may be
necessary to ensure that neither of the said complete specifications includes a
claim for any matter claimed in the other.
Explanation.—For the purposes of this Act, the further application and
the complete specification accompanying it shall be deemed to have been filed
on the date on which the first mentioned application had been filed, and the
further application shall be proceeded with as a substantive application and be
examined when the request for examination is filed within the prescribed
period.
Section 17
Power of Controller to make orders respecting dating of
application
(1)
Subject to the provisions of section 9, at any time after the filing of an
application and before the grant of the patent under this Act, the Controller
may, at the request of the applicant made in the prescribed manner, direct that
the application shall be post-dated to such date as may be specified in the
request, and proceed with the application accordingly:
Provided
that no application shall be post-dated under this sub-section to a date later
than six months from the date on which it was actually made or would, but for
the provisions of this sub-section, be deemed to have been made.
(2)
Where an application or specification (including drawings) or any other
document is required to be amended under section 15, the
application or specification or other document shall, if the
Controller so directs, be deemed to have been made on the date on which the
requirement is complied with or where the application or specification or other
document is returned to the applicant on the date on which it is re-filed after
complying with the requirement.
Section 18
Powers of Controller in cases of anticipation
(1)
Where it appears to the Controller that the invention so far as claimed in any
claim of the complete specification has been anticipated in the manner referred
to in clause (a) of sub section (1) or sub-section (2) of section 13, he may
refuse the application unless the applicant—
(a)
shows to the satisfaction of the Controller that the
priority date of the claim of his complete specification is not later than the
date on which the relevant document was published; or
(b)amends his complete specification to the satisfaction of
the Controller.
(2)
If it appears to the Controller that the invention is claimed in a claim of any
other complete specification referred to in clause (b) of sub-section (1) of
section 13, he may, subject to the provisions hereinafter contained, direct
that a reference to that other specification shall be inserted by way of notice
to the public in the applicant's complete specification unless within such time
as may be prescribed,—
(a)
the applicant shows to the satisfaction of the Controller that the priority
date of his claim is not later than the priority date of the claim of the said
other specification; or
(b)
the complete specification is amended to the
satisfaction of the Controller.
(3)
If it appears to the Controller, as a result of an investigation under section
13 or otherwise,—
(a)
that the invention so far as claimed in any claim of the applicant's complete
specification has been claimed in any other complete specification referred to
in clause (a) of sub-section (1) of section 13; and
(b)
that such other complete specification was published on or after the priority
date of the applicant's claim,
then, unless it is shown to the satisfaction of the Controller that the
priority date of the applicant's claim is not later than the priority date of
the claim of that specification, the provisions of sub-section (2) shall apply
thereto in the same manner as they apply to a specification published on or
after the date of filing of the applicant's complete specification.
(4)
[Omitted]
Section 19
Powers of Controller in case of potential infringement
(1)
If, in consequence of the investigations required under this Act, it appears to
the Controller that an invention in respect of which an application for a
patent has been made cannot be performed without substantial risk of
infringement of a claim of any other patent, he may direct that a reference to
that other patent shall be inserted in the applicant's complete specification
by way of notice to the public, unless within such time as may be prescribed—
(a)
the applicant shows to the satisfaction of the
Controller that there are reasonable grounds for contesting the validity of the
said claim of the other patent; or
(b )the complete specification is amended to the satisfaction
of the Controller.
(2)
Where, after a reference to another patent has been inserted in a complete
specification in pursuance of a direction under sub-section (1)—
(a)
that other patent is revoked or otherwise ceases to be
in force; or
(b)
the specification of that other patent is amended by
the deletion of the relevant claim; or
(c)
it is found, in proceedings before the court or the
Controller, that the relevant claim of that other patent is invalid or is not
infringed by any working of the applicant's invention,
the Controller may, on the application of the applicant, delete the reference
to that other patent.
Section 20
Powers of Controller to make orders
regarding substitution of applicants, etc.
(1)
If the Controller is satisfied, on a claim made in the prescribed manner at any
time before a patent has been granted, that by virtue of any assignment or
agreement in writing made by the applicant or one of the applicants for the
patent or by operation of law, the claimant would, if the patent were then
granted, be entitled thereto or to the interest of the applicant therein, or to
an undivided share of the patent or of that interest, the Controller may,
subject to the provisions of this section, direct that the application shall
proceed in the name of the claimant or in the names of the claimants and the
applicant or the other joint applicant or applicants, accordingly as the case
may require.
(2)
No such direction as aforesaid shall be given by virtue of any assignment or
agreement made by one of two or more joint applicants for a patent except with
the consent of the other joint applicant or applicants.
(3)
No such direction as aforesaid shall be given by virtue of any assignment or
agreement for the assignment of the benefit of an invention unless—
a)
the invention is identified therein by reference to
the number of the application for the patent; or
(b)
there is produced to the Controller an acknowledgement by the person by whom
the assignment or agreement was made that the assignment or agreement relates
to the invention in respect of which that application is made; or
(c)
the rights of the claimant in respect of the invention
have been finally established by the decision of a court; or
(d)
the Controller gives directions for enabling the
application to proceed or for regulating the manner in which it should be
proceeded with under sub-section (5).
(4)Where
one of two or more joint applicants for a patent dies at any time before the
patent has been granted, the Controller may, upon a request in that behalf made
by the survivor or survivors, and with the consent of the legal representative
of the deceased, direct that the application shall proceed in the name of the
survivor or survivors alone.
(5)If
any dispute arises between joint applicants for a patent whether or in what
manner the application should be proceeded with, the Controller may, upon application
made to him in the prescribed manner by any of the parties, and after giving to
all parties concerned an opportunity to be heard, give such directions as he
thinks fit for enabling the application to proceed in the name of one or more
of the parties alone or for regulating the manner in which it should be
proceeded with, or for both those purposes, as the case may require.
Section 21
Time for putting application in order for grant
(1)
An application for a patent shall be deemed to have been abandoned unless,
Within such period as may be prescribed, the applicant has complied with all
the requirements imposed on him by or under this Act, whether in connection
with the complete specification or otherwise in relation to the application
from the date on which the first statement of objections to the application or
complete specification or other documents related thereto is forwarded to the
applicant by the Controller.
Explanation.—Where the application for a patent or any specification or,
in the case of a convention application or an application filed under the Patent Cooperation
Treaty designating India any document filed as part of the application has
been returned to the applicant by the Controller in the course of the
proceedings, the applicant shall not be deemed to have complied with such
requirements unless and until he has re-filed it or the applicant proves to the
satisfaction of the Controller that for the reasons beyond his control such
document could not be re-filed.
(2)
If at the expiration of the period as prescribed under sub
section
(1),—
(a)
an appeal to the High Court is pending in respect of
the application for the patent for the main invention; or
(b)
in the case of an application for a patent of addition, an appeal to the High
Court is pending in respect of either that application or the application for
the main invention, the time within which the requirements of the Controller
shall be complied with shall, on an application made by the applicant before
the expiration of the period as prescribed under sub-section (1), be extended
until such date as the High Court may determine.
(3)
If the time within which the appeal mentioned in sub-section (2) may be
instituted has not expired, the Controller may extend the period as prescribed
under sub-section (1), to such further period as he may determine:
Provided
that if an appeal has been filed during the said further period, and the High
Court has granted any extension of time for complying with the requirements of
the Controller, then the requirements may be complied with within the time
granted by the Court.
CHAPTER V
OPPOSITION PROCEEDINGS TO GRANT OF
PATENTS
Section 25
Opposition to the patent
(1) Where an
application for a patent has been published but a patent has not been granted,
any person may, in writing, represent by way of opposition to the Controller
against the grant of patent on the ground—
(a) that the applicant
for the patent or the person under or through whom he claims, wrongfully
obtained the invention or any part thereof from him or from a person under or
through whom he claims;
(b)
that the invention so far as claimed in any claim of
the complete specification has been published before the priority date of the
claim—
(i) in any specification filed in pursuance of
an application for a patent made in India on or after the 1st day of January,
1912; or
(ii)
in India or elsewhere, in any other document:
Provided
that the ground specified in sub-clause (ii) shall not be available where such
publication does not constitute an anticipation of the invention by virtue of
sub-section (2) or subsection (3) of section 29;
(c) that the invention so far as claimed in any
claim of the complete specification is claimed in a claim of a complete
specification published on or after priority date of the applicant's claim and
filed in pursuance of an application for a patent in India, being a claim of
which the priority date is earlier than that of the applicant's claim;
(d) that the invention so far as claimed in any
claim of the complete specification was publicly known or publicly used in
India before the priority date of that claim.
Explanation.—For the purposes of
this clause, an invention relating to a process for which a patent is claimed
shall be deemed to have been publicly known or publicly used in India before
the priority date of the claim if a product made by that process had already
been imported into India before that date except where such importation has
been for the purpose of reasonable trial or experiment only;
(e) that the invention so far as claimed in
any claim of the complete specification is obvious and clearly does not involve
any inventive step, having regard to the matter published as mentioned in
clause (b) or having regard to what was used in India before the priority date
of the applicant's claim;
(f)
that the subject of any claim of the complete
specification is not an invention within the meaning of this Act, or is not
patentable under this Act;
(g)
that the complete specification does not sufficiently
and clearly describe the invention or the method by which it is to be
performed;
(h)
that the applicant has failed to disclose to the
Controller the information required by section 8 or has furnished the
information which in any material particular was false to his knowledge;
(i) that in the case of a
convention application, the application was not made within twelve months from
the date of the first application for protection for the invention made in a
convention country by the applicant or a person from whom he derives title;
(j)
that the complete specification does not
disclose or wrongly mentions the source or geographical origin of
biological material used for the invention;
(k)
that the invention so far as claimed in any claim of the complete specification
is anticipated having regard to the knowledge, oral or otherwise, available
within any local or indigenous community in India or elsewhere,
but on no other ground, and the Controller shall, if requested by such person
for being heard, hear him and dispose of such representation in such manner and
within such period as may be prescribed.
(2)
At any time after the grant of patent but before the expiry of a period of one
year from the date of publication of grant of a patent, any person interested
may give notice of opposition to the Controller in the prescribed manner on any
of the following grounds, namely:—
(a)
that the patentee or the person under or through whom
he claims, wrongfully obtained the invention or any part thereof from him or
from a person under or through whom he claims;
(b)
that the invention so far as claimed in any claim of
the complete specification has been published before the priority date of the
claim—
(i) in any specification filed in
pursuance of an application for a patent made in India on or after the 1st day
of January, 1912; or
(ii)
in India or elsewhere, in any other document:Provided that the ground specified in sub-clause
(ii) shall not be available where such publication does not constitute an
anticipation of the invention by virtue of sub-section (2) or sub-section (3)
of section 29;
(c)
that the invention so far as claimed in any claim of the complete specification
is claimed in a claim of a complete specification published on or after the
priority date of the claim of the patentee and filed in pursuance of an
application for a patent in India, being a claim of which the priority date is
earlier than that of the claim of the patentee;
(d)
that the invention so far as claimed in any claim of the complete specification
was publicly known or publicly used in India before the priority date of that
claim.
Explanation.—For
the purposes of this clause, an invention relating to a process for which a
patent is granted shall be deemed to have been publicly known or publicly used
in India before the priority date of the claim if a product
made by that process had already been imported into India before that date
except where such importation has been for the purpose of reasonable trial or
experiment only;
(e)
that the invention so far as claimed in any claim of the complete specification
is obvious and clearly does not involve any inventive step, having regard to
the matter published as mentioned in clause (b) or having regard to what was
used in India before the priority date of the claim;
(f)
that the subject of any claim of the complete
specification is not an invention within the meaning of this Act, or is not
patentable under this Act;
(g)
that the complete specification does not sufficiently
and clearly describe the invention or the method by which it is to be
performed;
(h)
that the patentee has failed to disclose to the
Controller the information required by section 8 or has furnished the
information which in any material particular was false to his knowledge;
(i) that in the case of a patent granted on a convention
application, the application for patent was not made within twelve months from
the date of the first application for protection for the invention made in a
convention country or in India by the patentee or a person from whom he derives
title;
(j)
that the complete specification does not disclose or
wrongly mentions the source and geographical origin of biological material used
for the invention;
(k)
that the invention so far as claimed in any claim of the complete specification
was anticipated having regard to the knowledge, oral or otherwise, available
within any local or indigenous community in India or elsewhere,
but on no other ground.
(3) (a) Where any such notice of opposition is duly given under
sub-section (2), the Controller shall notify the patentee.
(b)
On receipt of such notice of opposition, the Controller shall, by order in
writing, constitute a Board to be known as the Opposition Board consisting of such
officers as he may determine and refer such notice of opposition along with the
documents to that Board for examination and submission of its recommendations
to the Controller.
(c)
Every Opposition Board constituted under clause (b) shall conduct the
examination in accordance with such procedure as may be prescribed.
(4)
On receipt of the recommendation of the Opposition Board and after giving the
patentee and the opponent an opportunity of being heard, the Controller shall
order either to maintain or to amend or to revoke the patent.
(5)
While passing an order under sub-section (4) in respect of the ground mentioned
in clause (d) or clause (e) of sub-section (2), the Controller shall not take
into account any personal document or secret trial or secret use.
(6)
In case the Controller issues an order under sub-section (4) that the patent
shall be maintained subject to amendment of the specification or any other
document, the patent shall stand amended accordingly.
Section 26
In
cases of "obtaining" Controller may treat the patent as the patent of
opponent
(1)
Where in any opposition proceeding under this Act the
Controller finds that—
(a) the
invention, so far as claimed in any claim of the complete specification, was
obtained from the opponent in the manner set out in clause (a) of sub-section
(2) of section 25 and revokes the patent on that ground, he may, on request by
such opponent made in the prescribed manner, direct that the patent shall stand
amended in the name of the opponent;
(b) a
part of an invention described in the complete specification was so obtained
from the opponent, he may pass an order requiring that the specification be
amended by the exclusion of that part of the invention.
(2)
Where an opponent has, before the date of the order of the Controller requiring
the amendment of a complete specification referred to in clause (b) of
sub-section (1), filed an application for a patent for an invention which
included the whole or a part of the invention held to have been obtained from
him and such application is pending, the Controller may treat such application
and specification in so far as they relate to the invention held to have been
obtained from him, as having been filed, for the purposes of this Act relating
to the priority dates of claims of the complete specification, on the date on
which the corresponding document was or was deemed to have been filed by the
patentee in the earlier application but for all other purposes the application
of the opponent shall be proceeded with as an application for a patent under
this Act.
Section 28
Mention of inventor as such in patent
(1) If the Controller is
satisfied, upon a request or claim made in accordance with the provisions of
this section,—
(a) that the person in
respect of or by whom the request or claim is made is the inventor of an
invention in respect of which application for a patent has been made, or of a
substantial part of that invention; and
(b) that the
application for the patent is a direct consequence of his being the inventor, the
Controller shall, subject to the provisions of this section, cause him to be
mentioned as inventor in any patent granted in pursuance of the application in
the complete specification and in the register of patents:
Provided that the mention of any person as inventor under this section shall
not confer or derogate from any rights under the patent.
(2)A request that any
person shall be mentioned as aforesaid may be made in the prescribed manner by
the applicant for the patent or (where the person alleged to be the inventor is
not the applicant or one of the applicants) by the applicant and that person.
(3) If any person other
than a person in respect of whom a request in relation to the application in
question has been made under sub-section (2) desires to be mentioned as
aforesaid, he may make a claim in the prescribed manner in that behalf.
(4) A request or claim
under the foregoing provisions of this section shall be made before the grant
of patent.
(5) [Omitted]
(6) Where a claim is
made under sub-section (3), the Controller shall give notice of the claim to
every applicant for the patent (not being the claimant) and to any other person
whom the Controller may consider to be interested; and before deciding upon any
request or claim made under sub-section (2), or subsection (3), the Controller
shall, if required, hear the person in respect of or by whom the request or
claim is made, and, in the case of a claim under sub-section (3), any person to
whom notice of the claim has been given as aforesaid.
(7) Where any person
has been mentioned as inventor in pursuance of this section, any other person
who alleges that he ought not to have been so mentioned may at any time apply
to the Controller for a certificate to that effect, and the Controller may,
after hearing, if required, any person whom he may consider to be interested,
issue such a certificate, and if he does so, he shall rectify the specification
and the register accordingly.
CHAPTER
VI
ANTICIPATION
Section 29
Anticipation by previous publication
(1) An invention claimed in a complete specification
shall not be deemed to have been anticipated by reason only that the invention
was published in a specification filed in pursuance of an application for a
patent made in India and dated before the 1st day of January, 1912.
(2) Subject as hereinafter provided, an invention
claimed in a complete specification shall not be deemed to have been
anticipated by reason only that the invention was published before the priority
date of the relevant claim of the specification, if the patentee or the
applicant for the patent proves—
(a)
that the matter published was obtained from him, or (where he is not himself
the true and first inventor) from any person from whom he derives title, and
was published without his consent or the consent of any such person; and
(b)
where the patentee or the applicant for the patent or any person from whom he
derives title learned of the publication before the date of the application for
the patent, or, in the case of a convention application, before the date of the
application for protection in a convention country, that the application or the
application in the convention country, as the case may be, was made as soon as
reasonably practicable thereafter:
Provided that this
sub-section shall not apply if the invention was before the priority date of
the claim commercially worked in India, otherwise than for the purpose of
reasonable trial, either by the patentee or the applicant for the patent or any
person from whom he derives title or by any other person with the consent of
the patentee or the applicant for the patent or any person from whom he derives
title.
(3) Where a complete
specification is filed in pursuance of an application for a patent made by a
person being the true and first inventor or deriving title from him, an
invention claimed in that specification shall not be deemed to have been
anticipated by reason only of any other application for a patent in respect of
the same invention made in contravention of the rights of that person, or by
reason only that after the date of filing of that
other application the invention was used or published, without the consent of
that person, by the applicant in respect of that other application, or by any
other person in consequence of any disclosure of any invention by that
applicant.
Section 30
Anticipation by previous
communication to Government
An
invention claimed in a complete specification shall not be deemed to have been
anticipated by reason only of the communication of the invention to the
Government or to any person authorized by the Government to investigate the
invention or its merits, or of anything done, in consequence of such a
communication, for the purpose of the investigation.
Section 31
Anticipation by public display, etc.
An
invention claimed in a complete specification shall not be deemed to have been
anticipated by reason only of—
(a) the display of the invention
with the consent of the true and first inventor or a person deriving title from
him at an industrial or other exhibition to which the provisions of this section
have been extended by the Central Government by notification in the Official
Gazette, or the use thereof with his consent for the purpose of such an
exhibition in the place where it is held; or
(b) the
publication of any description of the invention in consequence of the display
or use of the invention at any such exhibition as aforesaid; or
(c) the use of the invention, after
it has been displayed or used at any such exhibition as aforesaid and during
the period of the exhibition, by any person without the consent of the true and
first inventor or a person deriving title from him; or
(d) the
description of the invention in a paper read by the true and first inventor
before a learned society or published with his consent in the transactions of
such a society,
if the application for the patent is
made by the true and first inventor or a person deriving title from him not
later than twelve months after the opening of the exhibition or the reading or
publication of the paper, as the case may be.
Section 32
Anticipation
by public working
An invention claimed in a complete specification shall
not be deemed to have been anticipated by reason only that
at any time within one year before the priority date of the relevant claim of
the specification, the invention was publicly worked in India—
(a) by the patentee or applicant for the patent or
any person from whom he derives title; or
(b) by any other person with the consent of the
patentee or applicant for the patent or any person from whom he derives title,
if the working was effected for the
purpose of reasonable trial only and if it was reasonably necessary, having
regard to the nature of the invention, that the working for that purpose should
be effected in public.
Section 33
Anticipation
by use and publication after provisional specification
(1) Where a complete specification is filed or proceeded
with in pursuance of an application which was accompanied by a provisional
specification or where a complete specification filed along with an application
is treated by virtue of a direction under sub-section (3) of section 9 as a
provisional specification, then, notwithstanding anything contained in this
Act, the Controller shall not refuse to grant the patent, and the patent shall
not be revoked or invalidated, by reason only that any matter described in the
provisional specification or in the specification treated as aforesaid as a
provisional specification was used in India or published in India or elsewhere
at any time after the date of the filing of that specification.
(2) Where a complete specification is filed in pursuance
of a convention application, then, notwithstanding anything contained in this
Act, the Controller shall not refuse to grant the patent, and the patent shall
not be revoked or invalidated, by reason only that any matter disclosed in any
application for protection in a convention country upon which the convention
application is founded was used in India or published in India or elsewhere at
any time after the date of that application for protection.
Section 34
No
anticipation if circumstances are only as described in sections 29,30, 31 and 32
Notwithstanding anything contained
in this Act, the Controller shall not refuse to grant a patent, and a patent
shall not be revoked or invalidated by reason only of any circumstances which,
by virtue of section 29 or section 30 or section 31 or section 32, do not
constitute an anticipation of the invention claimed in the specification.
CHAPTER
VII
PROVISIONS FOR SECRECY OF CERTAIN
INVENTIONS
Section 35
Secrecy directions relating to
inventions relevant for defence purposes
(1) Where, in respect of an
application made before or after the commencement of this Act for a patent, it
appears to the Controller that the invention is one of a class notified to him
by the Central Government as relevant for defence
purposes, or, where otherwise the invention appears to him to be so relevant,
he may give directions for prohibiting or restricting the publication of
information with respect to the invention or the communication of such
information.
(2)Where the Controller gives any
such directions as are referred to in sub-section (1), he shall give notice of
the application and of the directions to the Central Government, and the
Central Government shall, upon receipt of such notice, consider whether the publication
of the invention would be prejudicial to the defence
of India, and if upon such consideration, it appears to it that the publication
of the invention would not so prejudice, give notice to the Controller to that
effect, who shall thereupon revoke the directions and notify the applicant
accordingly.
(3)Without prejudice to the
provisions contained in sub-section (1), where the Central Government is of
opinion that an invention in respect of which the Controller has
not given any directions under sub-section (1), is relevant for defence purposes, it may at any time before grant of patent
notify the Controller to that effect, and thereupon the provisions of that
sub-section shall apply as if the invention where one of the class notified by
the Central Government, and accordingly the Controller shall give notice to the
Central Government of the directions issued by him.
Section 36
Secrecy
directions to be periodically reviewed
(1) The question whether an
invention in respect of which directions have been given under section 35
continues to be relevant for defence purposes shall
be reconsidered by the Central Government at intervals of six months or on a
request made by the applicant which is found to be reasonable by the Controller
and if, on such reconsideration it appears to the Central Government that the
publication of the invention would no longer be prejudicial to the defence of India or in case of an application filed by a
foreign applicant it is found that the invention is published outside India it
shall forthwith give notice to the Controller to revoke the direction and the
Controllers shall thereupon revoke the directions previously given by him.
(2) The result of every
re-consideration under sub-section (1), shall be
communicated to the applicant within such time and in such manner as may be
prescribed.
Section 37
Consequences of secrecy directions
(1)
So long as any directions under section 35 are in
force in respect of an application—
(a) the Controller shall not pass an order refusing to grant the
same; and
(b) notwithstanding
anything contained in this Act, no appeal shall lie from any order of the
Controller passed in respect thereof:
Provided that the application may,
subject to the directions, proceed up to the stage of grant of the patent, but
the application and the specification found to be in order for grant of the
patent shall not be published, and no patent shall be granted in pursuance of
that application.
(2) Where a complete specification filed in
pursuance of an application for a patent for an invention in respect of which
directions have been given under section 35 is found to be in order for grant
of the patent during the continuance in force of the directions, then—
(a) if, during the continuance in force of the directions, any use of the
invention is made by or on behalf of, or to the order of the Government, the
provisions of sections 100,101 and 103 shall apply in relation to that use as if
the patent had been granted for the invention; and
(b)
if it appears to the Central Government that the applicant for the patent has
suffered hardship by reason of the continuance in force of the directions, the
Central Government may make to him such payment (if any) by way of solatium as appears to the Central Government to be
reasonable having regard to the novelty and utility of the invention and the
purpose for which it is designed, and to any other relevant circumstances.
(3) Where a patent is granted in pursuance
of an application in respect of which directions have been given under section
35, no renewal fee shall be payable in respect of any period during which those
directions were in force.
Section 38
Revocation
of secrecy directions and extension of time
When
any direction given under section 35 is revoked by the Controller, then,
notwithstanding any provision of this Act specifying the time within which any
step should be taken or any act done in connection with an application for the
patent, the Controller may, subject to such conditions, if any, as he thinks
fit to impose, extend the time for doing anything required or authorised to be done by or under this Act in connection
with the application whether or not that time has previously expired.
Section 39
Residents
not to apply for patents outside India without prior permission
(1)
No person resident in India shall, except under the authority of a written
permit sought in the manner prescribed and granted by or on behalf of the
Controller, make or cause to be made any application outside India for the
grant of a patent for an invention unless—
(a)
an application for a patent for the same invention has been made in India, not
less than six weeks before the application outside India; and
(b) either no direction has been given under
sub-section (1) of section 35 in relation to the application in India, or all
such directions have been revoked.
(2)
The Controller shall dispose of every such application within such period as may
be prescribed:
Provided that if the invention is relevant for defence
purpose or atomic energy, the Controller shall not grant permit without the
prior consent of the Central Government.
(3)
This section shall not apply in relation to an invention for which an
application for protection has first been filed in a country outside India by a
person resident outside India.
Section 40
Liability
for contravention of section 35 or section 39
Without
prejudice to the provisions contained in Chapter XX, if in respect of an
application for a patent any person contravenes any direction as to secrecy
given by the Controller under section 35 or makes or causes to be made an
application for grant of a patent outside India in contravention of section 39
the application for patent under this Act shall be deemed to have been
abandoned and the patent granted, if any, shall be liable to be revoked under
section 64.
Section 41
Finality
of orders of Controller and Central Government
All
orders of the Controller giving directions as to secrecy as well as all orders
of the Central Government under this Chapter shall be final and shall not be
called in question in any court on any ground whatsoever.
Section 42
Savings
respecting disclosure to Government
Nothing
in this Act shall be held to prevent the disclosure by the Controller of
information concerning an application for a patent or a specification filed in
pursuance thereof to the Central Government for the purpose of
the application or specification being examined for considering whether an
order under this Chapter should be made or whether an order so made should be
revoked.
CHAPTER
VIII
GRANT OF PATENTS AND RIGHTS CONFERRED
THEREBY
Section 43
Grant
of patents
(1) Where an application for a
patent has been found to be in order for grant of the patent and either—
(a) the application has
not been refused by the Controller by virtue of any power vested in him by this
Act; or
(b) the application has
not been found to be in contravention of any of the provisions of this Act,
the patent
shall be granted as expeditiously as possible to the applicant or, in the case
of a joint application, to the applicants jointly, with the seal of the patent
office and the date on which the patent is granted shall be entered in the
register.
(2) On the grant of patent,
the Controller shall publish the fact that the patent has been granted and
thereupon the application, specification and other documents related thereto
shall be open for public inspection.
Section 44
Amendment
of patent granted to deceased applicant
Where, at any time after a
patent has been granted in pursuance of an application under this Act, the
Controller is satisfied that the person to whom the patent was granted had
died, or, in the case of a body corporate, had ceased to exist, before the
patent was granted, the Controller may amend the patent by substituting for the
name of that person the name of the person to whom the patent ought to have
been granted, and the patent shall have effect, and shall be deemed always to
have had effect, accordingly.
Section 45
Date
of patent
(1) Subject to the other
provisions contained in this Act, every patent shall be dated as of the date on
which the application for patent was filed.
(2) The date of every patent shall
be entered in the register.
(3) Notwithstanding anything
contained in this section, no suit or other proceeding shall be commenced or
prosecuted in respect of an infringement committed before the date of
publication of the application.
Section 46
Form,
extent and effect of patent
(1) Every patent shall be in
the prescribed form and shall have effect throughout India.
(2) A patent shall be granted
for one invention only:
Provided that it shall not be
competent for any person in a suit or other proceeding to take any objection to
a patent on the ground that it has been granted for more than one invention.
Section 47
Grant
of patents to be subject to certain conditions
The grant of a patent under
this Act shall be subject to the condition that—
(1) any machine, apparatus or
other article in respect of which the patent is granted or any article made by
using a process in respect of which the patent is granted, may be imported or
made by or on behalf of the Government for the purpose merely of its own use;
(2) any
process in respect of which the patent is granted may be used by or on behalf
of the Government for the purpose merely of its own use;
(3) any machine, apparatus or
other article in respect of which the patent is granted or any article made by
the use of the process in respect of which the patent is granted, may be made
or used, and any process in respect of which the patent is granted may be used,
by any person, for the purpose merely of experiment or research including the
imparting of instructions to pupils; and
(4) in the case of a patent in
respect of any medicine or drug, the medicine or drug may be imported by the
Government for the purpose merely of its own use or for distribution in any
dispensary, hospital or other medical institution maintained by or on behalf of
the Government or any other dispensary, hospital or other medical institution
which the Central Government may, having regard to the public service that such
dispensary, hospital or medical institution renders, specify in this behalf by
notification in the Official Gazette.
Section 48
Rights
of patentees
Subject to the other
provisions contained in this Act and the conditions specified in section 47, a
patent granted under this Act shall confer upon the patentee—
(a) where the subject matter of the patent is a
product, the exclusive right to prevent third parties, who do not have his
consent, from the act of making, using, offering for sale, selling or importing
for those purposes that product in India;
(b) where the subject matter of the patent is a
process, the exclusive right to prevent third parties, who do not have his
consent, from the act of using that process, and from the act of using,
offering for sale, selling or importing for those purposes the product obtained
directly by that process in India:
Section 49
Patent
rights not infringed when used on foreign vessels etc., temporarily or
accidentally in India
(1) Where a vessel or aircraft
registered in a foreign country or a land vehicle owned by a person ordinarily
resident in such country comes into India (including the territorial waters
thereof) temporarily or accidentally only, the rights conferred by a patent for
an invention shall not be deemed to be infringed by the use of the invention—
(a) in the body of the vessel
or in the machinery, tackle, apparatus or other accessories thereof, so far as
the invention is used on board the vessel and for its actual needs only; or
(b) in
the construction or working of the aircraft or land vehicle or of the
accessories thereof,
as the case may be.
(2) This section shall not
extend to vessels, aircrafts or land vehicles owned by persons ordinarily
resident in a foreign country the laws of which do not confer corresponding
rights with respect to the use of inventions in vessels, aircraft or land
vehicles owned by persons ordinarily resident in India while in the ports or
within the territorial waters of that foreign country or otherwise within the
jurisdiction of its courts.
Section 50
Rights
of co-owners of patents
(1)
Where a patent is granted to two or more persons, each of those persons shall,
unless an agreement to the contrary is in force, be entitled to an equal
undivided share in the patent.
(2)
Subject to the provisions contained in this section and in section 51, where
two or more persons are registered as grantee or proprietor of a patent, then,
unless an agreement to the contrary is in force, each of those persons shall be
entitled, by himself or his agents, to rights conferred by section 48 for his
own benefit without accounting to the other person or persons.
(3)
Subject to the provisions contained in this section and in section 51 and to
any agreement for the time being in force, where two or more persons are
registered as grantee or proprietor of a patent, then, a licence
under the patent shall not be granted and share in the patent shall not be
assigned by one of such persons except with the consent of the other person or
persons.
(4)
Where a patented article is sold by one of two or more persons registered as
grantee or proprietor of a patent, the purchaser and any person claiming
through him shall be entitled to deal with the article in the same manner as if
the article had been sold by a sole patentee.
(5)
Subject to the provisions contained in this section, the rules of law
applicable to the ownership and devolution of movable property generally shall
apply in relation to patents; and nothing contained in sub-section (1) or subsection
(2) shall affect the mutual rights or obligations of trustees or of the legal
representatives of a deceased person or their rights or obligations as such.
(6)
Nothing in this section shall affect the rights of the assignees of a partial
interest in a patent created before the commencement of this Act.
Section 51
Power
of Controller to give directions to co-owners
(1) Where two or more persons
are registered as grantee or proprietor of a patent, the Controller may, upon
application made to him in the prescribed manner by any of those persons, give
such directions in accordance with the application as to the sale or lease of
the patent or any interest therein, the grant of licenses under the patent, or
the exercise of any right under section 50 in relation thereto, as he thinks
fit.
(2) If any person registered as grantee or
proprietor of a patent fails to execute any instrument or to do any other thing
required for the carrying out of any direction given under this section within
fourteen days after being requested in writing so to do by any of the other
persons so registered, the Controller may, upon application made to him in the
prescribed manner by any such other person, give directions empowering any
person to execute that instrument or to do that thing in the name and on behalf
of the person in default.
(3) Before giving any directions in pursuance of
an application under this section, the Controller shall give an opportunity to
be heard—
(a) in the case of an
application under sub-section (1) to the other person or persons registered as
grantee or proprietor of the patent;
(b) in the case of an
application under sub-section (2), to the person in default.
(4) No direction shall be given under this
section so as to affect the mutual rights or obligations of trustees or of the
legal representatives of a deceased person or of their rights or obligations as
such, or which is inconsistent with the terms of any agreement between persons
registered as grantee or proprietor of the patent.
Section 52
Grant of patent to true and first inventor where it
has been obtained by another in fraud of him.
(1) Where the patent has been
revoked under section 64 on the ground that the patent was obtained wrongfully
and in contravention of the rights of the petitioner or any person under or through
whom he claims, or, where in a petition for revocation, the Appellate Board or
court, instead of revoking the patent, directs the complete specification to be
amended by the exclusion of a claim or claims in consequence of a finding that
the invention covered by such claim or claims had been obtained from the
petitioner, the Appellate Board or court may, by order passed in the same
proceeding, permit the grant to the petitioner of the whole or such part of the
invention which the Appellate Board or court finds has been wrongfully obtained
by the patentee, in lieu of the patent so revoked or is excluded by amendment.
(2) Where any such order is
passed, the Controller shall, on request by the petitioner made in the
prescribed manner grant to him—
(i) in cases where the Appellate Board or court permits the
whole of the patent to be granted, a new patent bearing the same date and
number as the patent revoked;
(ii) in cases where the
Appellate Board or court permits a part only of the patent to be granted, a new
patent for such part bearing the same date as the patent revoked and numbered
in such manner as may be prescribed:
Provided that the Controller
may, as a condition of such grant, require the petitioner to file a new and
complete specification to the satisfaction of the Controller describing and
claiming that part of the invention for which the patent is to be granted.
(3) No suit shall be brought
for any infringement of a patent granted under this section committed before the
actual date on which such patent was granted.
Section 53
Term
of patent
(1)
Subject to the provisions of this Act, the term of every patent granted, after
the commencement of the Patents (Amendment) Act, 2002, and the term of every
patent which has not expired and has not ceased to have effect, on the date of
such commencement, under this Act, shall be twenty years from the date of
filing of the application for the patent.
Explanation.—For the purposes of this sub-section, the term of patent in
case of International applications filed under the Patent Cooperation
Treaty designating India, shall be twenty years from the international
filing date accorded under the Patent Cooperation
Treaty.
(2)
A patent shall cease to have effect notwithstanding anything therein or in this
Act on the expiration of the period prescribed for the payment of any renewal
fee, if that fee is not paid within the prescribed period or within such
extended period as may be prescribed.
(3)
[Omitted]
(4)
Notwithstanding anything contained in any other law for the time being in
force, on cessation of the patent right due to non-payment of renewal fee or on
expiry of the term of patent, the subject matter covered by the said patent
shall not be entitled to any protection.
CHAPTER
IX
PATENTS OF ADDITION
Section 54
Patents of addition
(1)
Subject to the provisions contained in this section, where an application is
made for a patent in respect of any improvement in or modification of an invention
described or disclosed in the complete specification filed therefor (in this
Act referred to as the "main invention") and the applicant also
applies or has applied for a patent for that invention or is the patentee in
respect thereof, the Controller may, if the applicant so requests, grant the
patent for the improvement or modification as a patent of addition.
(2) Subject to the
provisions contained in this section, where an invention, being an improvement
in or modification of another invention, is the subject of an independent
patent and the patentee in respect of that patent is also the patentee in
respect of the patent for the main invention, the Controller may, if the
patentee so requests, by order, revoke the patent for the improvement or modification
and grant to the patentee a patent of addition in respect thereof, bearing the
same date as the date of the patent so revoked.
(3) A patent shall not
be granted as a patent of addition unless the date of filing of the application
was the same as or later than the date of filing of the application in respect
of the main invention.
(4) A patent of
addition shall not be granted before grant of the patent for the main
invention.
Section 55
Term
of patents of addition
(1) A patent of addition shall be granted for a term
equal to that of the patent for the main invention, or so much thereof as has
not expired, and shall remain in force during that term or until the previous
cesser of the patent for the main invention and no longer:
Provided that if the patent for the main invention is
revoked under this Act, the court, or, as the case may be, the Controller, on
request made to him by the patentee in the prescribed manner, may order that
the patent of addition shall become an independent patent for the remainder of
the term for the patent for the main invention and thereupon the patent shall
continue in force as an independent patent accordingly.
(2) No renewal fees shall be
payable in respect of a patent of addition, but, if any such patent becomes an
independent patent under sub-section (1) the same fees shall thereafter be
payable, upon the same dates, as if the patent had been originally granted as
an independent patent.
Section 56
Validity of patents of
addition
(1) The grant of a patent of
addition shall not be refused, and a patent granted as a patent of addition
shall not be revoked or invalidated, on the ground only that the invention
claimed in the complete specification does not involve any inventive step
having regard to any publication or use of—
(a)
the main invention described in the complete specification relating thereto; or
(b)
any improvement in or modification of the main invention described in the
complete specification of a patent of addition to the patent for the main
invention or of an application for such a patent of addition,
and the validity of a
patent of addition shall not be questioned on the ground that the invention
ought to have been the subject of an independent patent.
(2) For the removal of doubts it is hereby
declared that in determining the novelty of the invention claimed in the
complete specification filed in pursuance of an application for a patent of
addition regard shall be had also to the complete specification in which the
main invention is described.
CHAPTER
X
AMENDMENT OF APPLICATIONS AND
SPECIFICATIONS
Section 57
Amendment
of application and specification or any document relating thereto before
Controller
(1)
Subject to the provisions of section 59, the Controller may, upon application
made under this section in the prescribed manner by an applicant for a patent
or by a patentee, allow the application for the patent or the complete
specification or any document relating thereto to be amended subject to such
conditions, if any, as the Controller thinks fit:
Provided
that the Controller shall not pass any order allowing or refusing an
application to amend an application for a patent or a specification or any
document relating thereto under this section while any suit before a court for
the infringement of the patent or any proceeding before the High Court for the
revocation of the patent is pending, whether the suit or proceeding commenced
before or after the filing of the application to amend.
(2) Every application for
leave to amend an application for a patent or a complete specification or any
document relating thereto under this section shall state the nature of the
proposed amendment, and shall give full particulars of the reasons for which
the application is made.
(3) Any application for leave
to amend an application for a patent or a complete specification or a document
related thereto under this section made after the grant of patent and the
nature of the proposed amendment may be published.
(4)Where an application is
published under sub-section (3), any person interested may, within the
prescribed period after the publication thereof, give notice to the Controller
of opposition thereto; and where such a notice is given within the period
aforesaid, the Controller shall notify the person by whom the application under
this section is made and shall give to that person and to the opponent an
opportunity to be heard before he decides the case.
(5)An amendment under this
section of a complete specification may be, or include, an amendment of the
priority date of a claim.
(6) The provisions of this
section shall be without prejudice to the right of an applicant for a patent to
amend his specification or any other document related thereto to comply with
the directions of the Controller issued before the grant of a patent.
Section 58
Amendment of specification before
Appellate Board or High Court
(1) In any proceeding before
the Appellate Board or the High Court for the revocation of a patent, the
Appellate Board or the High Court, as the case may be, may, subject to the
provisions contained in section 59, allow the patentee to amend his complete
specification in such manner and subject to such terms as to costs,
advertisement or otherwise, as the Appellate Board or the High Court may think
fit, and if, in any proceedings for revocation the Appellate Board, or the High
Court decides that the patent is invalid, it may allow the specification to be
amended under this section instead of revoking the patent.
(2) Where an application for an order under this
section is made to the Appellate Board or the High Court, the applicant shall
give notice of the application to the Controller, and the Controller shall be
entitled to appear and be heard, and shall appear if so directed by the
Appellate Board or the High Court.
(3) Copies of all orders of the Appellate Board
or the High Court allowing the patentee to amend the specification shall be
transmitted by the Appellate Board or the High Court to the Controller who
shall, on receipt thereof, cause an entry thereof and reference thereto to be
made in the register.
Section 59
Supplementary provisions as to
amendment of application or specification
(1)
No amendment of an application for a patent or a complete specification or any
document relating thereto shall be made except by way of disclaimer, correction
or explanation, and no amendment thereof shall be allowed, except for the
purpose of incorporation of actual fact, and no amendment of a complete
specification shall be allowed, the effect of which would be that the
specification as amended would claim or describe matter not
in substance disclosed or shown in the specification before the amendment, or
that any claim of the specification as amended would not fall wholly within the
scope of a claim of the specification before the amendment.
(2)
Where after the date of grant of patent any amendment of the specification or
any other documents related thereto is allowed by the Controller or by the
Appellate Board or the High Court, as the case may be,—
(a) the
amendment shall for all purposes be deemed to form part of the specification
along with other documents related thereto;
(b) the fact that the specification or any other
documents related thereto has been amended shall be published as expeditiously
as possible; and
(c) the right of the applicant or patentee to
make amendment shall not be called in question except on the ground of fraud.
(3) In construing the specification as amended, reference may be made to the
specification as originally accepted.
CHAPTER
XI
RESTORATION OF LAPSED PATENTS
Section 60
Applications
for restoration of lapsed patents
(1) Where a patent has ceased
to have effect by reason of failure to pay any renewal fee within the period
prescribed under section 53 or within such period as may be allowed under
sub-section (4) of section 142, the patentee or his legal representative, and
where the patent was held by two or more persons jointly, then, with the leave
of the Controller, one or more of them without joining the others, may, within
eighteen months from the date on which the patent ceased to have effect, make
an application for the restoration of the patent.
(2) [Omitted]
(3) An application under this section shall
contain a statement, verified in the prescribed manner, fully setting out the
circumstances which led to the failure to pay the prescribed fee, and the
Controller may require from the applicant such further evidence as he may think
necessary.
Section 61
Procedure
for disposal of applications for restoration of lapsed patents
(1) If, after hearing the applicant in cases where the
applicant so desires or the Controller thinks fit, the Controller is prima
facie satisfied that the failure to pay the renewal fee
was unintentional and that there has been no undue delay in the making of the
application, he shall publish the application in the prescribed manner; and
within the prescribed period any person interested may give notice to the
Controller of opposition thereto on either or both of the following grounds,
that is to say,—
(a) that the failure to pay the renewal fee was not
unintentional; or
(b) that
there has been undue delay in the making of the application.
(2) If notice of opposition is given within the period
aforesaid, the Controller shall notify the applicant, and shall give to him and
to the opponent an opportunity to be heard before he decides the case.
(3) If no notice of opposition is given within the period aforesaid or if in
the case of opposition, the decision of the Controller is in favour of the applicant, the Controller shall, upon payment
of any unpaid renewal fee and such additional fee as may be prescribed, restore
the patent and any patent of addition specified in the application which has
ceased to have effect on the cesser of that patent.
(4) The Controller may, if he thinks fit as a condition of restoring the
patent, require that an entry shall be made in the register of any document or
matter which, under the provisions of this Act, has to be entered in the
register but which has not been so entered.
Section 62
Rights
of patentees of lapsed patents which have been restored
(1) Where a patent is
restored, the rights of the patentee shall be subject to such provisions as may
be prescribed and to such other provisions as the Controller thinks fit to
impose for the protection or compensation of persons who may have begun to
avail themselves of, or have taken definite steps by contract or otherwise to
avail themselves of, the patented invention between the date when the patent
ceased to have effect and the date of publication of the application for
restoration of the patent under this Chapter.
(2) No suit or other proceeding shall be
commenced or prosecuted in respect of an infringement of a patent committed
between the date on which the patent ceased to have effect and the date of the
publication of the application for restoration of the patent.
CHAPTER
XII
SURRENDER AND REVOCATION OF PATENTS
Section 63
Surrender
of patents
(1) A patentee may, at any
time by giving notice in the prescribed manner to the Controller, offer to
surrender his patent.
(2) Where such an offer is made, the Controller
shall publish the offer in the prescribed manner, and also notify every person
other than the patentee whose name appears in the register as having an
interest in the patent.
(3) Any person interested may, within the
prescribed period after such publication, give notice to the Controller of
opposition to the surrender, and where any such notice is given the Controller
shall notify the patentee.
(4) If the Controller is satisfied after hearing
the patentee and any opponent, if desirous of being heard, that the patent may
properly be surrendered, he may accept the offer and, by order, revoke the
patent.
Section 64
Revocation of patents
(1) Subject to the provisions
contained in this Act, a patent, whether granted before or after the
commencement of this Act, may, be revoked on a petition of any person
interested or of the Central Government by the Appellate Board or on a
counter-claim in a suit for infringement of the patent by the High Court on any
of the following grounds, that is to say—
(a) that the invention, so far as claimed
in any claim of the complete specification, was claimed in a valid claim of
earlier priority date contained in the complete specification of another patent
granted in India;
(b) that the patent was
granted on the application of a person not entitled under the provisions of
this Act to apply therefor:
(c) that the
patent was obtained wrongfully in contravention of the rights of the petitioner
or any person under or through whom he claims;
(d) that the
subject of any claim of the complete specification is not an invention within
the meaning of this Act;
(e) that the invention so far as claimed
in any claim of the complete specification is not new, having regard to what
was publicly known or publicly used in India before the priority date of the
claim or to what was published in India or elsewhere in any of the documents
referred to in section 13;
(f) that the invention so far as claimed
in any claim of the complete specification is obvious or does not involve any
inventive step, having regard to what was publicly known or publicly used in
India or what was published in India or elsewhere before the priority date of
the claim;
(g) that the
invention, so far as claimed in any claim of the complete specification, is not
useful;
(h) that the complete specification does
not sufficiently and fairly describe the invention and the method by which it
is to be performed, that is to say, that the description of the method or the
instructions for the working of the invention as contained in the complete
specification are not by themselves sufficient to enable a person in India
possessing average skill in, and average knowledge of, the art to which the
invention relates, to work the invention, or that it does not disclose the best
method of performing it which was known to the applicant for the patent and for
which he was entitled to claim protection;
(i) that the scope of any claim of the complete specification is
not sufficiently and clearly defined or that any claim of the complete
specification is not fairly based on the matter disclosed in the specification;
(j) that the
patent was obtained on a false suggestion or representation;
(k) that the
subject of any claim of the complete specification is not patentable under this
Act;
(l) that the invention so far as claimed
in any claim of the complete specification was secretly used in India,
otherwise than as mentioned in sub-section (3), before the priority date of the
claim;
(m) that the
applicant for the patent has failed to disclose to the Controller the
information required by section 8 or has furnished information which in any
material particular was false to his knowledge;
(n) that the applicant contravened any
direction for secrecy passed under section 35 or made or caused to be made an
application for the grant of a patent outside India in contravention of section
39;
(o) that leave to
amend the complete specification under section 57 or section 58 was obtained by
fraud.
(p) that the
complete specification does not disclose or wrongly mentions the source or
geographical origin of biological material used for the invention;
(q) that the invention so far as claimed
in any claim of the complete specification was anticipated having regard to the
knowledge, oral or otherwise, available within any local or indigenous
community in India or elsewhere.
(2) For the purposes of clauses (e) and (f)
of sub-section (1)—
(a) no account shall
be taken of personal document or secret trial or secret use; and
(b) where the patent is for a process or
for a product as made by a process described or claimed, the importation into
India of the product made abroad by that process shall constitute knowledge or
use in India of the invention on the date of the importation, except where such
importation has been for the purpose of reasonable trial or experiment only.
(3) For the purpose of clause (1) of
sub-section (1), no account shall be taken of any use of the invention—
(a) for the
purpose of reasonable trial or experiment only; or
(b) by the Government or by any person authorised by the Government or by a Government
undertaking, in consequence of the applicant for the patent or any person from
whom he derives title having communicated or disclosed the invention directly
or indirectly to the Government or person authorised
as aforesaid or to the Government undertaking; or
(c) by any other
person, in consequence of the applicant for the patent or any person from whom
he derives title having communicated or disclosed the invention, and without
the consent or acquiescence of the applicant or of any person from whom he
derives title.
(4) Without prejudice to the provisions contained
in sub-section (1) a patent may be revoked by the High Court on the petition of
the Central Government, if the High Court is satisfied that the patentee has
without reasonable cause failed to comply with the request of the Central
Government to make, use or exercise the patented invention for the purposes of
Government within the meaning of section 99 upon reasonable terms.
(5) A notice of any petition for revocation of a
patent under this section shall be served on all persons appearing from the
register to be proprietors of that patent or to have shares or interests
therein and it shall not be necessary to serve a notice on any other person.
Section
65
Revocation of patent or amendment of
complete specification on directions from Government in cases relating to
atomic energy
(1) Where at any time after
grant of a patent, the Central Government is satisfied that a patent is for an
invention relating to atomic energy for which no patent can be granted under
sub-section (1) of section 20 of the Atomic Energy Act, 1962 (33 of
1962), it may direct the Controller to revoke the patent, and thereupon the
Controller, after giving notice, to the patentee and every other person whose
name has been entered in the register as having an interest in the patent, and
after giving them an opportunity of being heard, may revoke the patent.
(2) In any proceedings under sub-section (1), the
Controller may allow the patentee to amend the complete specification in such
manner as he considers necessary instead of revoking the patent.
Section 66
Revocation
of patent in public interest
Where the Central Government
is of opinion that a patent or the mode in which it is exercised is mischievous
to the State or generally prejudicial to the public, it may, after giving the
patentee an opportunity to be heard, make a declaration to that effect in the
Official Gazette and thereupon the patent shall be deemed to be revoked.
CHAPTER
XIII
REGISTER OF PATENTS
Section 67
Register of patents and
particulars to be entered therein
(1) There shall be kept at the
patent office a register of patents, wherein shall be entered—
(a) the names and
addresses of grantees of patents;
(b) notifications
of assignments, extension, and revocations of patents; and
(c) particulars
of such other matters affecting the validity or proprietorship of patents as
may be prescribed.
(2) No notice of any trust, whether express,
implied or constructive, shall be entered in the register, and the Controller
shall not be affected by any such notice.
(3) Subject to the superintendence and directions
of the Central Government, the register shall be kept under the control and
management of the Controller.
(4) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (1), it shall be lawful for the Controller to keep the register of
patents or any part thereof in computer floppies, diskettes or any other
electronic form subject to such safeguards as may be prescribed.
(5) Notwithstanding anything contained in the Indian
Evidence Act, 1872 (1 of 1872), a copy of, or extracts from, the register
of patents, certified to be a true copy under the hand of the Controller or any
officer duly authorised by the Controller in this
behalf shall, in all legal proceedings, be admissible in evidence.
(6) In the event the register is kept wholly or
partly in computer floppies, diskettes or any other electronic form,—
(a) reference in this Act to an entry in the
register shall be deemed to include reference to a record of particulars kept
in computer floppies, diskettes or any other electronic form and comprising the
register or part of the register;
(b) references in this Act to particulars
being registered or entered in the register shall be deemed to include
references to the keeping of record of those particulars comprising the
register or part of the register in computer floppies, diskettes or any other
electronic form; and
(c) references in
this Act to the rectification of the register are to be read as including
references to the rectification of the record of particulars kept in computer
floppies, diskettes or any other electronic form and comprising the register or
part of the register.
Section 68
Assignments, etc., not to be
valid unless in writing and duly executed
An
assignment of a patent or of a share in a patent, a mortgage, licence or the creation of any other interest in a patent
shall not be valid unless the same were in writing and the agreement between
the parties concerned is reduced to the form of a document embodying all the
terms and conditions governing their rights and obligations and duly executed.
Section 69
Registration of assignments,
transmissions, etc
(1) Where any person becomes entitled by assignment,
transmission or operation of law to a patent or to a share in a patent or
becomes entitled as a mortgagee, licensee or otherwise to any other interest in
a patent, he shall apply in writing in the prescribed manner to the Controller
for the registration of his title or, as the case may be, of notice of his
interest in the register.
(2) Without prejudice to the provisions of sub-section (1), an application
for the registration of the title of any person becoming entitled by assignment
to a patent or a share in a patent or becoming entitled by virtue of a
mortgage, licence or other instrument to any other
interest in a patent may be made in the prescribed manner by the assignor,
mortgagor, licensor or other party to that instrument, as the case may be.
(3) Where an application is made under this section for the registration of
the title of any person the Controller shall, upon proof to title of his
satisfaction,-
(a)
where that person is entitled to a patent or a share in a patent, register him
in the register as proprietor or co-proprietor of the patent, and enter in the
register particulars of the instrument or even by which he derives title; or
(b)
where that person is entitled to any other interest in
the patent, enter in the register notice of his interest, with particulars of
the instrument, if any, creating it:
Provided
that if there is any dispute between the parties whether the assignment,
mortgage, licence, transmission, operation of law or
any other such transaction has validly vested in such person a title to the
patent or any share or interest therein, the Controller may refuse to take any
action under clause (a) or, as the case may be, under clause (b), until the
rights of the parties have been determined by a competent court.
(4) There shall be
supplied to the Controller in the prescribed manner for being filed in the patent
office copies of all agreements, licences and other
documents affecting the title to any patent or any licence
thereunder authenticated in the prescribed manner and
also such other documents as may be prescribed relevant to the subject-matter:
Provided that in the
case of a licence granted under a patent, the
Controller shall, if so requested by the patentee or licensee, take steps for
securing that the terms of the licence are not
disclosed to any person except under the order of a court.
(5) Except for the purposes of an application under sub-section (1) or of an
application to rectify the register, a document in respect of which no entry
has been made in the register under sub-section (3) shall not be admitted by
the Controller or by any court as evidence of the title of any person to a
patent or to a share or interest therein unless the Controller or the court,
for reasons to be recorded in writing, otherwise directs.
Section 70
Power
of registered grantee or proprietor to deal with patent
Subject to the provisions contained
in this Act relating to co-ownership of patents and subject also to any rights
vested in any other person of which notice is entered in the register, the
person or persons registered as grantee or proprietor of a patent shall have
power to assign, grant licences under, or otherwise
deal with, the patent and to give effectual receipts for any consideration for
any such assignment, licence or dealing:
Provided that any equities in respect of the patent may be
enforced in like manner as in respect of any other movable property.
Section 71
Rectification
of register by Appellate Board
(1) The Appellate Board may, on the application of any
person aggrieved—
(a) by the absence or
omission from the register of any entry; or
(b) by any entry made in the
register without sufficient cause; or
(c) by any entry wrongly remaining
on the register; or
(d) by any error or defect in any
entry in the register,
make such order for the making, variation or
deletion, of any entry therein as it may think fit.
(2)In any proceeding under this section the Appellate Board may decide any
question that may be necessary or expedient to decide in connection with the
rectification of the register.
(3)Notice of any application to the Appellate Board under this section shall
be given in the prescribed manner to the Controller who shall be entitled to
appear and be heard on the application, and shall appear if so directed by the
Board.
(4) Any order of the Appellate Board under this section rectifying the
register shall direct that notice of the rectification shall be served upon the
Controller in the prescribed manner who shall upon
receipt of such notice rectify the register accordingly.
Section 72
Register to be open for
inspection
(1) Subject to the provisions contained in this Act and
any rules made thereunder, the register shall at all
convenient times be open to inspection by the public; and certified copies,
sealed with the seal of the patent office, of any entry in the register shall
be given to any person requiring them on payment of the prescribed fee.
(2) The register shall be prima facie evidence of any matters
required or authorised by or under this Act to be
entered therein.
(3) If the record of particulars is kept in computer floppies or diskettes
or in any other electronic form, sub-sections (1) and (2) shall be deemed to
have been complied with if the public is given access to such computer
floppies, diskettes or any other electronic form or printouts of such record of
particulars for inspection.
CHAPTER
XIV
PATENT OFFICE AND ITS ESTABLISHMENT
Section 73
Controller
and other officers
(1) The Controller General of
Patents, Designs and Trade Marks appointed under sub-section (1) of section 3
of the Trade Marks Act, 1999 (47 of 1999), shall be the Controller of Patents
for the purposes of this Act.
(2) For the purposes of this Act, the Central
Government may appoint as many examiners and other officers and with such
designations as it thinks fit.
(3) Subject to the provisions of this Act, the
officers appointed under subsection (2) shall discharge under the
superintendence and directions of the Controller such functions of the
Controller under this Act as he may, from time to time by general or special
order in writing, authorise them to discharge.
(4) Without prejudice to the generality of the
provisions of sub-section (3), the Controller may, by order in writing and for
reasons to be recorded therein withdraw any matter pending before an officer appointed
under sub-section (2) and deal with such matter himself either de novo or
from the stage it was so withdrawn or transfer the same to another officer
appointed under sub-section (2) who may, subject to special directions in the
order of transfer, proceed with the matter either de novo or from the
stage it was so transferred.
Section 74
Patent office and its branches
(1) For the purposes of this
Act, there shall be an office which shall be known as the patent office.
(2) The Central Government may, by notification
in the Official Gazette, specify the name of the Patent Office.
(3)The head office of the patent office shall be
at such place as the Central Government may specify, and for the purpose of
facilitating the registration of patents there may be established, at such
other places as the Central Government may think fit, branch offices of the
patent office.
(4)There shall be a seal of the patent office.
Section 75
Restriction
on employees of patent office as to right or interest in patents
All officers and employees of
the patent office shall be incapable, during the period for which they hold
their appointments, to acquire or take, directly or indirectly, except by
inheritance or bequest, any right or interest in any patent issued by that office.
Section 76
Officers
and employees not to furnish information, etc
An officer or employee in the
patent office shall not, except when required or authorised
by this Act or under a direction in writing of the Central Government or
Appellate Board or the Controller or by order of a court,—
(a) furnish
information on a matter which is being, or has been, dealt with under this Act
; or
(b) prepare or
assist in the preparation of a document required or permitted by or under this
Act , to be lodged in the patent office; or
(c) conduct a
search in the records of the patent office.
CHAPTER
XV
POWERS OF CONTROLLER
GENERALLY
Section 77
Controller
to have certain powers of a civil court
(1) Subject to any rules made in this behalf, the
Controller in any proceedings before him under this Act shall have the powers of
a civil court while trying a suit under the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), in respect of the following matters, namely:—
(a) summoning and enforcing the attendance of any
person and examining him on oath;
(b) requiring the discovery and
production of any document;
(c) receiving evidence on
affidavits;
(d)issuing commissions for the examination of witnesses or
documents;
(e)awarding costs;
(f) reviewing his own decision on
application made within the prescribed time and in the prescribed manner;
(g) setting aside an order passed ex-
parte on application made within the prescribed time and in the prescribed
manner;
(h) any other matter
which may be prescribed.
(2) Any order for costs awarded by the Controller in exercise of the powers
conferred upon him under sub-section (1) shall be executable as a decree of a
civil court.
Section 78
Power
of Controller to correct clerical errors etc.
(1) Without prejudice to the provisions contained in
sections 57 and 59 as regards amendment of applications for patents or complete
specifications or other documents related thereto and subject to the provisions
of section 44, the Controller may, in accordance with the provisions of this
section, correct any clerical error in any patent or in any specification or
other document filed in pursuance of such application or in any application for
a patent or any clerical error in any matter which is entered in the register.
(2) A correction may be made in pursuance of this section either upon a
request in writing made by any person interested and accompanied by the
prescribed fee, or without such a request.
(3) Where the Controller proposes to make any such correction as aforesaid
otherwise than in pursuance of a request made under this section, he shall give
notice of the proposal to the patentee or the applicant for the patent, as the
case may be, and to any other person who appears to him to be concerned, and
shall give them an opportunity to be heard before making the correction.
(4) Where a request is made under this section for the correction of any
error in a patent or application for a patent or any document filed in
pursuance of such an application, and it appears to the Controller that the
correction would materially alter the meaning or scope of the document to which
the request relates and ought not to be made without notice to persons affected
thereby, he shall require notice of the nature of the proposed correction to be
published in the prescribed manner.
(5) Within the prescribed time after any such publication as aforesaid any
person interested may give notice to the Controller of opposition to the
request, and, where such notice of opposition is given, the Controller shall
give notice thereof to the person by whom the request was made, and shall give
to him and to the opponent an opportunity to be heard before he decides the
case.
Section 79
Evidence
how to be given and powers of Controller in respect thereof
Subject to any rules made in
this behalf, in any proceeding under this Act before the Controller, evidence
shall be given by affidavit in the absence of directions by the Controller to
the contrary, but in any case in which the Controller thinks it right so to do,
he may take oral evidence in lieu of, or in addition to, evidence by an
affidavit, or may allow any party to be cross-examined on the contents of his
affidavit.
Section 80
Exercise
of discretionary powers by Controller
Without prejudice to any
provision contained in this Act requiring the Controller to hear any party to
the proceedings thereunder or to give any such party
an opportunity to be heard, the Controller shall give to any applicant for a
patent, or for amendment of a specification (if within the prescribed time the
applicant so requires) an opportunity to be heard before exercising adversely
to the applicant any discretion vested in the Controller by or under this Act.
Provided
that the party desiring a hearing makes the request for such hearing to the
Controller at least ten days in advance of the expiry of the time-limit
specified in respect of the proceeding.
Section 81
Disposal
by Controller of applications for extension of time
Where under the provisions of
this Act or the rules made thereunder the Controller
may extend the time for doing any act, nothing in this Act shall be deemed to
require him to give notice to or hear the party interested in opposing the
extension, nor shall any appeal lie from any order of the Controller granting
such extension.
CHAPTER
XVI
WORKING OF PATENTS,COMPULSORY
LICENCES AND REVOCATION
Section 82
Definition of "patented
articles" and "patentee"
In this Chapter, unless the context otherwise requires,—
(a) "patented article" includes any
article made by a patented process; and
(b) "patentee" includes an exclusive
licensee.
Section 83
General
principles applicable to working of patented inventions
Without prejudice to the other provisions contained in
this Act, in exercising the powers conferred by this Chapter, regard shall be
had to the following general considerations, namely;—
- that patents are granted to encourage inventions and to
secure that the inventions are worked in India on a commercial scale and
to the fullest extent that is reasonably practicable without undue delay;
- that they are not granted merely to enable patentees to
enjoy a monopoly for the importation of the patented article;
- that the protection and enforcement of patent rights
contribute to the promotion of technological innovation and to the
transfer and dissemination of technology, to the mutual advantage of
producers and users of technological knowledge and in a
manner conducive to social and economic welfare, and to a balance of
rights and obligations;
- that patents granted do not impede protection of public
health and nutrition and should act as instrument to promote public
interest specially in sectors of vital importance for socio-economic and
technological development of India;
- that patents granted do not in any way prohibit Central
Government in taking measures to protect public health;
- that the patent right is not abused by the patentee or
person deriving title or interest on patent from the patentee, and the
patentee or a person deriving title or interest on patent from the
patentee does not resort to practices which unreasonably restrain trade or
adversely affect the international transfer of technology; and
- that patents are granted to make the benefit of the
patented invention available at reasonably affordable prices to the
public.
Section 84
Compulsory
licences
(1) At any time after the expiration of three years from
the date of the grant of a patent, any person interested may make an
application to the Controller for grant of compulsory licence
on patent on any of the following grounds, namely:—
(a) that the reasonable requirements of the public with respect
to the patented invention have not been satisfied, or
(b) that the patented invention is
not available to the public at a reasonably affordable price, or
(c) that the patented invention is
not worked in the territory of India.
(2) An application under this section may be made by any person
notwithstanding that he is already the holder of a licence
under the patent and no person shall be estopped from
alleging that the reasonable requirements of the public with respect to the
patented invention are not satisfied or that the patented invention is not
worked in the territory of India or that the patented invention is not
available to the public at a reasonably affordable price by reason of any
admission made by him, whether in such a licence or
otherwise or by reason of his having accepted such a licence.
(3) Every application under sub-section (1) shall contain a statement
setting out the nature of the applicant's interest together with such
particulars as may be prescribed and the facts upon which the application is
based.
(4) The Controller, if satisfied that the reasonable requirements of the
public with respect to the patented invention have not been satisfied or that
the patented invention is not worked in the territory of India or that the
patented invention is not available to the public at a reasonably affordable
price, may grant a licence upon such terms as he may
deem fit.
(5) Where the Controller directs the patentee to grant a licence
he may, as incidental thereto, exercise the powers set out in section 88.
(6) In considering the application field under this section, the Controller
shall take into account,—
(i) the nature of the invention,
the time which has elapsed since the sealing of the patent and the measures
already taken by the patentee or any licensee to make full use of the
invention;
(ii) the ability of the
applicant to work the invention to the public advantage;
(iii)
the capacity of the applicant to undertake the risk in
providing capital and working the invention, if the application were granted;
(iv) as to whether the applicant has made efforts
to obtain a licence from the patentee on reasonable
terms and conditions and such efforts have not been successful within a
reasonable period as the Controller may deem fit:
Provided that this clause
shall not be applicable in case of national emergency or other circumstances of
extreme urgency or in case of public non-commercial use or on
establishment of a ground of anticompetitive practices adopted by the
patentee,
but shall not be required to take into account matters subsequent to the making
of the application.
Explanation.—For the purposes of clause (iv),
"reasonable period" shall be construed as a period not ordinarily
exceeding a period of six months.
(7) For the purposes of this Chapter, the reasonable requirements of the
public shall be deemed not to have been satisfied—
(a) if, by reason of the refusal of the patentee to
grant a licence or licences
on reasonable terms,—
(i) an existing trade or industry
or the development thereof or the establishment of any new trade or industry in
India or the trade or industry of any person or class of persons trading or
manufacturing in India is prejudiced; or
(ii) the demand for the patented
article has not been met to an adequate extent or on reasonable terms; or
(iii) a market for
export of the patented article manufactured in India is not being supplied or
developed; or
(iv) the establishment
or development of commercial activities in India is prejudiced; or
(b) if, by reason of conditions imposed by the patentee upon
the grant of licences under the patent or upon the
purchase, hire or use of the patented article or process, the manufacture, use
or sale of materials not protected by the patent, or the establishment or
development of any trade or industry in India, is prejudiced; or
(c) if the patentee imposes a condition upon the grant of licences under the patent to provide exclusive grant back,
prevention to challenges to the validity of patent or coercive package
licensing; or
(d) if the patented invention is not being worked in the
territory of India on a commercial scale to an adequate extent or is not being
so worked to the fullest extent that is reasonably practicable; or
(e) if the working of the patented invention in the territory
of India on a commercial scale is being prevented or hindered by the
importation from abroad of the patented article by—
(i) the
patentee or persons claiming under him; or
(ii) persons directly or
indirectly purchasing from him; or
(iii)
other persons against whom the patentee is not taking
or has not taken proceedings
for infringement.
Section 85
Revocation
of patents by the Controller for non-working
(1) Where, in respect of a patent, a compulsory licence has been granted, the Central Government or any
person interested may, after the expiration of two years from the date of the
order granting the first compulsory licence, apply to
the Controller for an order revoking the patent on the ground that the patented
invention has not been worked in the territory of India or that reasonable
requirements of the public with respect to the patented invention has not been
satisfied or that the patented invention is not available to the public at a
reasonably affordable price.
(2 )Every application under sub-section (1) shall
contain such particulars as may be prescribed, the facts upon which the
application is based, and, in the case of an application other than by the
Central Government, shall also set out the nature of the applicant's interest.
(3) The Controller, if satisfied that the reasonable requirements of the
public with respect to the patented invention have not been satisfied or that
patented invention has not been worked in the territory of India or that the
patented invention is not available to the public at a reasonably affordable
price, may make an order revoking the patent.
(4) Every application under sub-section (1) shall ordinarily be decided within
one year of its being presented to the Controller.
Section 86
Power
of Controller to adjourn applications for compulsory licences,
etc., in certain cases
(1) Where an application under
section 84 or section 85, as the case may be, is made on the grounds that the
patented invention has not been worked in the territory of India or on the
ground mentioned in clause (d) of sub-section (7) of section 84 and the
Controller is satisfied that the time which has elapsed since the sealing of
the patent has for any reason been insufficient to enable the invention to be
worked on a commercial scale to an adequate extent or to enable the invention
to be so worked to the fullest extent that is reasonably practicable, he may,
by order, adjourn the further hearing of the application for such period not
exceeding twelve months in the aggregate as appears to him to be sufficient for
the invention to be so worked:
Provided that in any case where the
patentee establishes that the reason why a patented invention could not be
worked as aforesaid before the date of the application was due to any State or
Central Act or any rule or regulation made thereunder
or any order of the Government imposed otherwise than by way of a condition for
the working of the invention in the territory of India or for the disposal of
the patented articles or of the articles made, by the process or by the use of
the patented plant, machinery, or apparatus, then, the period of adjournment
ordered under this sub-section shall be reckoned from the date on which the
period during which the working of the invention was prevented by such Act,
rule or regulation or order of Government as computed from the date of the
application, expires.
(2) No adjournment under sub-section (1) shall be ordered unless the Controller
is satisfied that the patentee has taken with promptitude adequate or
reasonable steps to start the working of the invention in the territory of
India on a commercial scale and to an adequate extent.
Section 87
Procedure
for dealing with applications under sections 84 and 85
(1) Where the Controller is satisfied, upon consideration
of an application under section 84, Or section 85, that a prima
facie case has been made out for the making of an
order, he shall direct the applicant to serve copies of the application upon
the patentee and any other person appearing from the register to be interested
in the patent in respect of which the application is made, and shall publish
the application in the official journal.
(2)The patentee or any other person desiring to oppose the application may,
within such time as may be prescribed or within such further time as the
Controller may on application (made either before or after the expiration of
the prescribed time) allow, give to the Controller notice of opposition.
(3)Any such notice of opposition shall contain a statement setting out the
grounds on which the application is opposed.
(4)Where any such notice of opposition is duly given, the Controller shall
notify the applicant, and shall give to the applicant and the opponent an
opportunity to be heard before deciding the case.
Section 88
Powers
of Controller in granting compulsory licences
(1) Where the Controller is satisfied on an application
made under section 84 that the manufacture, use or sale of materials not
protected by the patent is prejudiced by reason of conditions imposed by the
patentee upon the grant of licences under the patent,
or upon the purchase, hire or use of the patented article or process, he may,
subject to the provisions of that section, order the grant of licences under the patent to such customers of the
applicant as he thinks fit as well as to the applicant.
(2) Where an application under section 84 is made by a person being the
holder of a licence under the patent, the Controller
may, if he makes an order for the grant of a licence
to the applicant, order the existing licence to be
cancelled, or may, if he thinks fit, instead of making an order for the grant
of a licence to the applicant, order the existing licence to be amended.
(3)Where two or more patents are held by the same patentee and an applicant
for a compulsory licence establishes that the
reasonable requirements of the public have not been satisfied with respect to
some only of the said patents, then, if the Controller is satisfied that the
applicant cannot efficiently or satisfactorily work the licence
granted to him under those patents without infringing the other patents held by
the patentee and if those patents involve important technical advancement or
considerable economic significance in relation to the other patents, he may, by
order, direct the grant of a licence in respect of
the other patents also to enable the licensee to work the patent or patents in
regard to which a licence is granted under section
84.
(4) Where the terms and conditions of a licence have been settled by the Controller, the licensee
may, at any time after he has worked the invention on a commercial scale for a
period of not less than twelve months, make an application to the Controller
for the revision of the terms and conditions on the ground that the terms and
conditions settled have proved to be more onerous than originally expected and
that in consequence thereof the licensee is unable to work the invention except
at a loss:
Provided that no such application shall be
entertained a second time.
Section 89
General
purposes for granting compulsory licences
The powers of the Controller upon an application made
under section 84 shall be exercised with a view to securing the following
general purposes, that is to say,-
(a) that patented inventions are worked on a
commercial scale in the territory of India without undue delay and to the
fullest extent that is reasonably practicable;
(b) that the interests of any person for the time
being working or developing an invention in the territory of India under the
protection of a patent are not unfairly prejudiced.
Section 90
Terms
and conditions of compulsory licences
(1) In settling the terms and conditions of a licence under section 84, the Controller shall endeavour to secure—
(i) that the royalty and other remuneration, if any,
reserved to the patentee or other person beneficially entitled to the patent,
is reasonable, having regard to the nature of the invention, the expenditure
incurred by the patentee in making the invention or in developing it and
obtaining a patent and keeping it in force and other relevant factors;
(ii) that the patented invention is
worked to the fullest extent by the person to whom the licence
is granted and with reasonable profit to him;
(iii) that the patented articles are
made available to the public at reasonably affordable prices;
(iv) that the licence
granted is a non-exclusive licence;
(v) that the right of the licensee is non-assignable;
(vi) that the licence
is for the balance term of the patent unless a shorter term is consistent with
public interest;
(vii) that the licence
is granted with a predominant purpose of supply in the Indian market and that
the licensee may also export the patented product, if need be in accordance
with the provisions of sub-clause (iii) of clause (a) of sub-section (7) of
section 84;
(viii) that in the case of
semi-conductor technology, the licence granted is to
work the invention for public non-commercial use;
(ix) that in case the licence is
granted to remedy a practice determined after judicial or administrative
process to be anti-competitive, the licensee shall be permitted to export the
patented product, if need be.
(2) No licence granted by the Controller shall authorise the licensee to import the patented article or an
article or substance made by a patented process from abroad where such
importation would, but for such authorisation,
constitute an infringement of the rights of the patentee.
(3) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (2), the Central
Government may, if in its opinion it is necessary so to do, in the public
interest, direct the Controller at any time to authorise
any licensee in respect of a patent to import the patented article or an
article or substance made by a patented process from abroad (subject to such
conditions as it considers necessary to impose relating among other matters to
the royalty and other remuneration, if any, payable to the patentee, the
quantum of import, the sale price of the imported article and the period of
importation), and thereupon the Controller shall give effect to the directions.
Section 91
Licensing
of related patents
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in the other provisions of this
Chapter, at any time after the sealing of a patent, any person who has the
right to work any other patented invention either as patentee or as licensee
thereof, exclusive or otherwise, may apply to the Controller for the grant of a
licence of the first mentioned patent on the ground
that he is prevented or hindered without such licence
from working the other invention efficiently or to the best advantage possible.
(2) No order under sub-section (1) shall be made unless the Controller is
satisfied—
(i) that the
applicant is able and willing to grant, or procure the grant to the patentee
and his licensees if they so desire, of a licence in
respect of the other invention on reasonable terms; and
(ii)
that the other invention has made a substantial
contribution to the establishment or development of commercial or industrial
activities in the territory of India.
(3) When the Controller is satisfied that the conditions mentioned in
sub section (1) have been established by the applicant, he may make an order
on such terms as he thinks fit granting a licence
under the first mentioned patent and a similar order under the other patent if
so requested by the proprietor of the first mentioned patent or his licensee:
Provided that the licence granted by the Controller
shall be non-assignable except with the assignment of the respective patents.
(4) The provisions of sections 87, 88, 89 and 90 shall apply to licences granted under this section as they apply to licences granted under section 84.
Section 92
Special
provision for compulsory licences on notifications by
Central Government
(1) If the Central Government is satisfied, in respect of
any patent in force in circumstances of national emergency or in circumstances
of extreme urgency or in case of public non-commercial use, that it is
necessary that compulsory licenses should be granted at any time after the
sealing thereof to work the invention, it may make a
declaration to that effect, by notification in the Official Gazette, and
thereupon the following provisions shall have effect, that is to say—
(i) the Controller shall on application made at any time
after the notification by any person interested, grant to the applicant a licence under the patent on such terms and conditions as he
thinks fit;
(ii)
in settling the terms and conditions of a licence
granted under this section, the Controller shall endeavour
to secure that the articles manufactured under the patent shall be available to
the public at the lowest prices consistent with the patentees deriving a
reasonable advantage from their patent rights.
(2) The provisions of sections 83, 87, 88, 89 and 90 shall apply in relation
to the grant of licences under this section as they
apply in relation to the grant of licences under
section 84.
(3) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (2), where the
Controller is satisfied on consideration of the application referred to in
clause (i) of sub-section (1) that it is necessary
in—
(i) a circumstance of
national emergency; or
(ii)
a circumstance of extreme urgency; or
(iii)
a case of public non-commercial use,
which may arise or is required, as the case may be, including public health
crises, relating to Acquired Immuno Deficiency
Syndrome, Human Immuno Deficiency Virus, tuberculosis,
malaria or other epidemics, he shall not apply any procedure specified in
section 87 in relation to that application for grant of licence
under this section:
Provided that the Controller shall, as soon as may be practicable, inform the
patentee of the patent relating to the application for such non-application of
section 87.
Section 92A
Compulsory licence
for export of patented pharmaceutical products in certain exceptional
circumstances
(1) Compulsory licence shall be
available for manufacture and export of patented pharmaceutical products to any
country having insufficient or no manufacturing capacity in the pharmaceutical
sector for the concerned product to address public health problems, provided
compulsory licence has been granted by such country
or such country has, by notification or otherwise, allowed importation of the
patented pharmaceutical products from India.
(2) The Controller shall, on receipt of an application in the prescribed
manner, grant a compulsory licence solely for manufacture
and export of the concerned pharmaceutical product to such country under such
terms and conditions as may be specified and published by him.
(3) The provisions of
sub-sections (1) and (2) shall be without prejudice to the extent to which
pharmaceutical products produced under a compulsory license can be exported
under any other provision of this Act.
Explanation.—For the purposes of
this section, 'pharmaceutical products' means any patented product, or product
manufactured through a patented process, of the pharmaceutical sector needed to
address public health problems and shall be inclusive of ingredients necessary
for their manufacture and diagnostic kits required for their use.
Section 93
Order
for licence to operate as a deed between parties concerned
Any
order for the grant of a licence under this Chapter
shall operate as if it were a deed granting a licence
executed by the patentee and all other necessary parties embodying the terms
and conditions, if any, settled by the Controller.
Section 94
Termination
of compulsory licence
(1)
On an application made by the patentee or any other person deriving title or
interest in the patent, a compulsory licence granted
under section 84 may be terminated by the controller, if and when the
circumstances that gave rise to the grant thereof no longer exist and such
circumstances are unlikely to recur:
Provided
that the holder of the compulsory licence shall have
the right to object to such termination.
(2) While considering an application under section (1), the Controller shall
take into account that the interest of the person who had previously been
granted the licence is not unduly prejudiced.
CHAPTER
XVII
USE OF INVENTIONS FOR PURPOSES OF
GOVERNMENT AND ACQUISITION OF INVENTIONS BY CENTRAL GOVERNMENT
Section 99
Meaning
of use of invention for purposes of Government
(1) For the purposes of this
Chapter, an invention is said to be used for the purposes of Government if it
is made, used, exercised or vended for the purposes of the Central Government,
a State Government or a Government undertaking.
(2) [omitted]
(3) Nothing contained in this Chapter shall apply
in respect of any such importation, making or using of any machine, apparatus
or other article or of any such using of any process or of any such
importation, using or distribution of any medicine or drug, as may be made by
virtue of one or more of the conditions specified in section 47.
Section 100
Power
of Central Government to use inventions for purposes of Government
(1) Notwithstanding anything
contained in this Act, at any time after an application for a patent has been
filed at the patent office or a patent has been granted, the Central Government
and any person authorised in writing by it, may use
the invention for the purposes of Government in accordance with the provisions
of this Chapter.
(2) Where an invention has, before the priority
date of the relevant claim of the complete specification, been duly recorded in
a document, or tested or tried, by or on behalf of the Government or a
Government undertaking, otherwise than in consequence of the communication of
the invention directly or indirectly by the patentee or by a person from whom
he derives title, any use of the invention by the Central Government or any
person authorised in writing by it for the purposes
of Government may be made free of any royalty or other remuneration to the
patentee.
(3) If and so far as
the invention has not been so recorded or tried or tested as aforesaid, any use
of the invention made by the Central Government or any person authorised by it under sub-section (1), at any time after
grant of the patent or in consequence of any such communication as aforesaid,
shall be made upon terms as may be agreed upon either before or after the use,
between the Central Government or any person authorised
under sub-section (1) and the patentee, or, as may in default of agreement be
determined by the High Court on a reference under section 103:
Provided that in case
of any such use of any patent, the patentee shall be paid not more than
adequate remuneration in the circumstances of each case, taking into account
the economic value of the use of the patent.
(4)The authorisation by
the Central Government in respect of an invention may be given under this
section, either before or after the patent is granted and either before or
after the acts in respect of which such authorisation
is given or done, and may be given to any person whether or not he is authorised directly or indirectly
by the applicant or the patentee to make, use, exercise or vend the invention
or import the machine, apparatus or other article or medicine or drug covered
by such patent.
(5) Where an invention has been used by or with
the authority of the Central Government for the purposes of Government under
this section, then, except in case of national emergency or other circumstances
of extreme urgency or for noncommercial use, the Government shall notify the
patentee as soon as practicable of the fact and furnish him with such
information as to the extent of the use of the invention as he may, from time
to time, reasonably require; and where the invention has been used for the
purposes of a Government undertaking, the Central Government may call for such
information as may be necessary for this purpose from such undertaking.
(6)The right to make, use, exercise and vend an
invention for the purposes of Government under sub-section (1) shall include
the right to sell on noncommercial basis, the goods have been made in exercise
of that right, and a purchaser of goods so sold, and a person claiming through
him, shall have the power to deal with the goods as if the Central Government
or the person authorised under sub-section (1) were
the patentee of the invention.
(7) Where in respect of a patent which has been
the subject of an authorisation under this section,
there is an exclusive licensee as is referred to in sub-section (3) of section
101, or where such patent has been assigned to the patentee in consideration of
royalties or other benefits determined by reference to the use of the invention
(including payments by way of minimum royalty), the notice directed to be given
under sub-section (5) shall also be given to such exclusive licensee or
assignor, as the case may be, and the reference to the patentee in sub-section
(3) shall be deemed to include a reference to such assignor or exclusive
licensee.
Section 101
Rights
of third parties in respect of use of invention for purposes of Government
(1) In relation to any use of
a patented invention, or an invention in respect of which an application for a
patent is pending, made for the purposes of Government—
(a) by the Central
Government or any person authorised by the Central
Government under section 100; or
(b) by the patentee or applicant for the patent
to the order made by the Central Government,
the provisions of any licence, assignment or
agreement granted or made, between the patentee or applicant for the patent (or
any person who derives title for him or from whom he derives title) and any
person other than the Central Government shall be of no effect so far as those
provisions—
(i) restrict or
regulate the use for the purposes of Government of the invention, or of any
model document or information relating thereto, or
(ii) provide for the making of payments in respect of any use of the
invention or of the model, document or information relating thereto for the
purposes of Government,
and the reproduction or publication of any model or document in connection with
the said use for the purposes of Government shall not be deemed to be an
infringement of any copyright subsisting in the model or document.
(2) Where the patent, or the right to apply for
or obtain the patent, has been assigned to the patentee in consideration of
royalties or other benefits determined by reference to the use of the
invention then, in relation to any use of the invention made for the
purposes of Government by the patentee to the order of the Central Government,
sub-section (3) of section 100 shall have effect as if that use were made by
virtue of an authority given under that section; and use of the invention for
the purposes of Government by virtue of sub-section (3) of that section shall
have effect as if the reference to the patentee included a reference to the
assignor of the patent, and any sum payable by virtue of that sub-section shall
be divided between the patentee and the assignor in such proportion as may be
agreed upon between them or as may in default of agreement be determined by the
High Court on a reference under section 103.
(3) Where by virtue of sub-section (3) of section
100, payments are required to be made by the Central Government or persons authorised under sub-section (1) of that section in respect
of the use of an invention for the purposes of Government and where in respect
of such patent there is an exclusive licensee authorised
under his licence to use the invention for the
purposes of Government, such sum shall be shared by the patentee and such
licensee in such proportions, if any, as may be agreed upon between them or as
may in default of agreement be determined by the High Court on a reference
under section 103 to be just, having regard to any expenditure incurred by the
licensee—
(a) in developing the
said invention; or
(b) in making payments
to the patentees other than royalties or other benefits determined by reference
to the use of the invention in consideration of the licence.
Section 102
Acquisition
of inventions and patents by the Central Government
(1) The Central Government
may, if satisfied that it is necessary that an invention which is the subject
of an application for a patent or a patent should be acquired from the
applicant or the patentee for a public purpose, publish a notification to that
effect in the Official Gazette, and thereupon the invention or patent and all
rights in respect of the invention or patent shall, by force of this section,
stand transferred to and be vested in the Central Government.
(2) Notice of the acquisition shall be given to
the applicant, and, where a patent has been granted, to the patentee and other
persons, if any, appearing in the register as having an interest in the patent.
(3)The Central Government shall pay to the
applicant, or, as the case may be, the patentee and other persons appearing on
the register as having an interest in the patent such compensation as may be
agreed upon between the Central Government and the applicant, or the patentee
and other persons; or, as may, in default of agreement, be determined by the
High Court on a reference under section 103 to be just having regard to the expenditure
incurred in connection with the invention and, in the case of a patent, the
term thereof, the period during which and the manner in which it has already
been worked (including the profits made during such period by the patentee or
by his licensee whether exclusive or otherwise) and other relevant factors.
Section 103
Reference to High Court of disputes
as to use for purposes of Government
(1) Any dispute as to the
exercise by the Central Government or a person authorised
by it of the powers conferred by section 100, or as to terms for the use of an
invention for the purposes of Government thereunder
or as to the right of any person to receive any part of a payment made in
pursuance of sub-section (3) of that section or as to the amount of
compensation payable for the acquisition of an invention or a patent under
section 102, may be referred to the High Court by either party to the dispute
in such manner as may be prescribed by the rules of the High Court.
(2) In any proceedings under this section to
which the Central Government is a party, the Central Government may,—
(a)
if the patentee is a party to the proceedings, petition by way of counter-claim
for revocation of the patent on any ground upon which a patent may be revoked
under section 64; and
(b)
whether a patentee is or is not a party to the
proceedings, put in issue the validity of the patent without petitioning for
its revocation.
(3)If in such proceedings as aforesaid any
question arises whether an invention has been recorded, tested or tried as is
mentioned in section 100, and the disclosure of any document regarding the
invention, or of any evidence of the test or trial thereof, would, in the
opinion of the Central Government, be prejudicial to the public interest, the
disclosure may be made confidentially to the advocate of the other party or to
an independent expert mutually agreed upon.
(4)In determining under this section any dispute
between the Central Government and any person as to terms for the use of an
invention for the purposes of Government, the High Court shall have regard to
any benefit or compensation which that person or any person from whom he
derives title, may have received, or may be entitled to receive, directly or
indirectly in respect of the use of the invention in question for the purposes
of Government.
(5)In any proceedings under this section, the
High Court may at any time order the whole proceedings or any question or issue
of fact arising therein to be referred to an official referee, commissioner or
an arbitrator on such terms as the High Court may direct, and references to the
High Court in the foregoing provisions of this section shall be construed
accordingly.
(6)Where the invention claimed in a patent was
made by a person who at the time it was made was in the service of the Central
Government or of a State Government or was an employee of a Government
undertaking and the subject-matter of the invention is certified by the
relevant Government or the principal officer of the Government undertaking to
be connected with the work done in the course of the normal duties of the
Government servant or employee of the Government undertaking, then,
notwithstanding anything contained in this section, any dispute of the nature
referred to in sub-section (1) relating to the invention shall be disposed of
by the Central Government conformably to the provisions of this section so far
as may be applicable, but before doing so the Central Government shall give an
opportunity to the patentee and such other parties as it considers have an
interest in the matter to be heard.
CHAPTER XVIII
SUITS CONCERNING INFRINGEMENT
OF PATENTS
Section 104
Jurisdiction
No suit for a declaration under section
105 or for any relief under section 106 or for infringement of a patent shall
be instituted in any court inferior to a district court having jurisdiction to
try the suit:
Provided that where a counter-claim for revocation of the
patent is made by the defendant, the suit, along with the counter-claim, shall
be transferred to the High Court for decision.
Section
104A
Burden of proof in case of
suits concerning infringement
(1) In any suit for infringement of a patent, where the
subject matter of patent is a process for obtaining a product, the court may
direct the defendant to prove that the process used by him to obtain the
product, identical to the product of the patented process, is different from
the patented process if,—
(a)the subject matter of the patent is a
process for obtaining a new product; or
(b)there
is a substantial likelihood that the identical product is made by the process,
and the patentee or a person deriving title or interest in the patent from him,
has been unable throughreasonable efforts to
determine the process actually used:
Provided that the patentee or a
person deriving title or interest in the patent from him first proves that the
product is identical to the product directly obtained by the patented process.
(2) In considering whether a party
has discharged the burden imposed upon him by sub-section (1), the court shall
not require him to disclose any manufacturing or commercial secrets, if it
appears to the court that it would be unreasonable to do so.
Section
105
Power of court to make
declaration as to non-infringement
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in section 34 of
the Specific
Relief Act,1963 (47 of 1963), any person may institute a suit for a
declaration that the use by him of any process, or the making, use or sale of
any article by him does not, or would not, constitute an infringement of a
claim of a patent against the patentee or the holder of an exclusive licence under the patent, notwithstanding that no assertion
to the contrary has been made by the patentee or the licensee, if it is shown—
(a)
that the plaintiff has applied in writing to the
patentee or exclusive licensee for a' written acknowledgements to the effect of
the declaration claimed and has furnished him with full particulars in writing
of the process or article in question; and
(b)
that the patentee or licensee has refused or neglected
to give such an acknowledgement.
(2) The costs of all parties in a suit for a declaration brought by virtue
of this section shall, unless for special reasons the court thinks fit to order
otherwise, be paid by the plaintiff.
(3) The validity of a claim of the specification of a patent shall not be
called in question in a suit for a declaration brought by virtue of this
section, and accordingly the making or refusal of such a declaration in the
case of a patent shall not be deemed to imply that the patent is valid or
invalid.
(4) A suit for a declaration may be brought by virtue of this section at any
time after the publication of grant of a patent, and references in this section
to the patentee shall be construed accordingly.
Section
106
Power of court to grant
relief in cases of groundless threats of infringement proceedings
(1) Where any person (whether entitled to or interested
in a patent or an application for patent or not) threatens any other person by
circulars or advertisements or by communications, oral or in writing addressed
to that or any other person, with proceedings for infringement of a patent, any person aggrieved thereby may bring a suit against him
praying for the following reliefs, that is to say—
(a)
a declaration to the effect that the threats are
unjustifiable;
(b)
an injunction against the continuance of the threats;
and
(c)
such damages, if any, as he has sustained thereby.
(2) Unless in such suit the defendant proves that the acts
in respect of which the proceedings were threatened constitute or, if done,
would constitute, an infringement of a patent or of rights arising from the
publication of a complete specification in respect of a claim of the
specification not shown by the plaintiff to be invalid the court may grant to
the plaintiff all or any of the reliefs prayed for.
Explanation.—A mere notification of the existence of a patent does not
constitute a threat of proceeding within the meaning of this section.
Section 107
Defences, etc., in suits
for infringement
(1) In any suit for infringement of a patent every ground
on which it may be revoked under section 64 shall be available as a ground for defence.
(2) In any suit for infringement of a patent by the making, using or
importation of any machine, apparatus of other article or by the using of any
process or by the importation, use or distribution or any medicine or drug, it
shall be a ground for defence that such making,
using, importation or distribution is in accordance with any one or more of the
conditions specified in section 47.
Section
107A
Certain acts not to be
considered as infringement
For the purposes of this Act,—
(a)
any act of making, constructing, using, selling or importing a patented
invention solely for uses reasonably related to the development and submission
of information required under any law for the time being in force, in India, or
in a country other than India, that regulates the manufacture, construction,
use, sale or import of any product;
(b)
importation of patented products by any person from a
person who is duly authorised under the law to
produce and sell or distribute the product, shall not be considered as a
infringement of patent rights.
Section
108
Reliefs in suit for
infringement
(1) The reliefs which a court may grant in any suit for
infringement include an injunction (subject to such terms, if any, as the court
thinks fit) and, at the option of the plaintiff, either damages or an account
of profits.
(2) The court may also order that the goods which are found to be infringing
and materials and implements, the predominant use of which is in the creation
of infringing goods shall be seized, forfeited or destroyed, as the court deems
fit under the circumstances of the case without payment of any compensation.
Section
109
Right of exclusive licensee
to take proceedings against infringement
(1)
The holder of an
exclusive licence shall have the like right as the
patentee to institute a suit in respect of any infringement of the patent committed
after the date of the licence, and in awarding
damages or an account of profits or granting any other relief in any such suit
the court shall take into consideration any loss suffered or likely to be
suffered by the exclusive licensee as such or, as the case may be, the profits
earned by means of the infringement so far as it constitutes an infringement of
the rights of the exclusive licensee as such.
(2)
(2) In any suit for infringement of a patent by the
holder of an exclusive licence under sub-section (1),
the patentee shall, unless he has joined as a plaintiff in the suit, be added
as a defendant, but a patentee so added as defendant shall not be liable for
any costs unless he enters an appearance and takes part in the proceedings.
Section 110
Right of licensee under
section 84 to take proceedings against infringement
Any person to whom a licence
has been granted under section 84 shall be entitled to call upon the patentee
to take proceedings to prevent any infringement of the patent, and, if the
patentee refuses or neglects to do so within two months after being so called
upon, the licensee may institute proceedings for the infringement in his own
name as though he were the patentee, making the patentee a defendant; but a
patentee so added as defendant shall not be liable for any costs unless he
enters an appearance and takes part in the proceedings.
Section 111
Restriction on power of court
to grant damages or account of profits for infringement
(1) In a suit for infringement of patent, damages or an account of
profits shall not be granted against the defendant who proves that at the date
of the infringement he was not aware and had no reasonable grounds for
believing that the patent existed.
Explanation.—A
person shall not be deemed to have been aware or to have had reasonable grounds
for believing that a patent exists by reason only of the application to an
article of the word "patent", "patented" or any word or
words expressing or implying that a patent has been obtained for the article,
unless the number of the patent accompanies the word or words in question.
(2) In any suit for infringement of a patent the court may, if it thinks
fit, refuse to grant any damages or an account of profits in respect of any
infringement committed after a failure to pay any renewal fee within the
prescribed period and before any extension of that period.
(3) Where an amendment of a specification by way of disclaimer, correction
or explanation has been allowed under this Act after the publication of the
specification, no damages or account of profits shall be granted in any
proceeding in respect of the use of the invention before the date of the
decision allowing the amendment, unless the court is satisfied that the
specification as originally published was framed in good faith and with
reasonable skill and knowledge.
(4) Nothing in this section shall affect the power of the court to grant an
injunction in any suit for infringement of a patent.
Section 113
Certificate of validity of
specification and costs of subsequent suits for infringement thereof
(1) If in any proceedings before
the Appellate Board or a High Court for the revocation of a patent
under section 64 and section 104, as the case may be, the validity of any claim
of a specification is contested and that claim is found by the Appellate Board
or the High Court to be valid, the Appellate Board or the High Court may
certify that the validity of that claim was contested in those proceedings and
was upheld.
(2) Where any such certificate has been granted,
then, if in any subsequent suit before a court for infringement of that claim
of the patent or in any subsequent proceeding for revocation of the patent in sofar as it relates to that claim, the patentee or other
person relying on the validity of the claim obtains a final order or judgment
in his favour, he shall be entitled to an order for
the payment of his full costs, charges and expenses of and incidental to any
such suit or proceeding properly incurred so far as they concern the claim in
respect of which the certificate was granted, unless the court trying the suit
or proceeding otherwise directs:
Provided that the costs as specific in this
sub-section shall not be ordered when the party disputing the validity of the
claim satisfies the court that he was not aware of the grant of the certificate
when he raised the dispute and withdrew forthwith such defence
when he became aware of such a certificate.
(3) Nothing contained in this section shall be
construed as authorising the courts or the Appellate
Board hearing appeals from decrees or orders in suits for infringement or
petitions for revocation, as the case may be, to pass orders for costs on the
scale referred to therein.
Section 114
Relief
for infringement of partially valid specification
(1)
If in proceedings for infringement of a patent it is found that any claim of
the specification, being a claim in respect of which infringement is alleged,
is valid, but that any other claim is invalid, the court may grant relief in
respect of any valid claim which is infringed:
Provided
that the court shall not grant relief except by way of injunction save in the
circumstances mentioned in sub-section (2).
(2) Where the plaintiff
proves that the invalid claim was framed in good faith and with reasonable
skill and knowledge, the court shall grant relief in respect of any valid claim
which is infringed subject to the discretion of the court as to costs and as to
the date from which damages or an account of profits should be reckoned, and in
exercising such discretion the court may take into consideration the conduct of
the parties in inserting such invalid claims in the specification or permitting
them to remain there.
Section 115
Scientific advisers
(1)
In any suit for infringement or in any proceeding before a court under this
Act, the court may at any time, and whether or not an application has been made
by any party for that purpose, appoint an independent scientific adviser, to
assist the court or to inquire and report upon any such question of fact or of
opinion (not involving a question of interpretation of law) as it may formulate
for the purpose.
(2) The remuneration of the scientific adviser
shall be fixed by the court and shall include the costs of making a report and
a proper daily fee for any day on which the scientific adviser may be required
to attend before the court, and such remuneration shall be defrayed out of
moneys provided by Parliament by law for the purpose.
CHAPTER
XIX
APPEALS TO THE APPELLATE BOARD
Section 116
Appellate
Board
(1)
Subject to the provisions of this Act, the Appellate Board established under
section 83 of the Trade Marks Act, 1999 shall be the Appellate Board for the
purposes of this Act and the said Appellate Board shall exercise the
jurisdiction, power and authority conferred on it by or under this Act:
Provided
that the Technical Member of the Appellate Board for the purposes of this Act
shall have the qualifications specified in sub-section (2).
(2) A person shall not be qualified for
appointment as a Technical Member for the purposes of this Act unless he—
(a) has, at least five years
held the post of Controller under this Act or has exercised the functions of
the Controller under this Act for at least five years; or
(b) has, for at least ten
years functioned as a Registered Patent Agent and possesses a degree in
engineering or technology or a masters degree in science from any University
established under law for the time being in force or equivalent; or
(c)
[Omitted]
Section 117
Staff
of Appellate Board
(1) The Central Government
shall determine the nature and categories of the officers and other employees
required to assist the Appellate Board in the discharge of its functions under
this Act and provide the Appellate Board with such officers and other employees
as it may think fit.
(2) The salaries and allowances and conditions of
service of the officers and other employees of the Appellate Board shall be
such as may be prescribed.
(3) The officers and other employees of the
Appellate Board shall discharge their functions under the general
superintendence of the Chairman of the Appellate Board in the manner as may be
prescribed.
117A. Appeals to Appellate Board.—(1)
Save as otherwise expressly provided in sub-section (2), no appeal shall lie
from any decision, order or direction made or issued under this Act by the
Central Government, or from any act or order of the Controller for the purpose
of giving effect to any such decision, order or direction.
(2) An appeal shall lie to the Appellate Board
from any decision, order or direction of the Controller or Central Government
under section 15, section 16, section 17, section 18, section 19,section 20,
sub-section (4) of section 25, section 28, section 51, section 54, section 57,
section 60, section 61, section 63, section 66, sub-section (3) of section 69,
section 78, sub-sections (1) to (5) of section 84, section 85, section 88,
section 91, section 92 and section 94.
(3) Every appeal under this section shall be in
the prescribed form and shall be verified in such manner as may be prescribed
and shall be accompanied by a copy of the decision, order or direction appealed
against and by such fees as may be prescribed.
(4) Every appeal shall be made within three
months from the date of the decision, order or direction, as the case may be,
of the Controller or the Central Government or within such further time as the
Appellate Board may, in accordance with the rules made by it allow.
117B. Procedure and powers of Appellate
Board.—The provisions of subsections (2) to (6) of section 84,
section 87, section 92, section 95 and section 96 of the Trade Marks Act, 1999
(47 of 1999) shall apply to the Appellate Board in the discharge of its
functions under this Act as they apply to it in the discharge of its functions
under the Trade Marks Act, 1999.
117C. Bar
of jurisdiction of courts, etc.—No court or other authority shall have
or, be entitled to, exercise any jurisdiction, powers or authority in relation
to the matters referred to in sub-section (2) of section 117A or section 117D.
117D. Procedure for application for
rectification, etc., before Appellate Board.—(1) An application for
revocation of a patent before the Appellate Board under section 64 and an
application for rectification of the register made to the Appellate Board under
section 71 shall be in such form as may be prescribed.
(2) A certified copy of every order or judgment
of the Appellate Board relating to a patent under this Act shall be
communicated to the Controller by the Board and the Controller shall give effect
to the order of the Board and shall, when so directed, amend the entries in, or
rectify, the register in accordance with such order.
117E. Appearance of Controller in legal
proceedings.—(1) The Controller shall have the right to appear and be
heard—
(a) in any legal proceedings before the Appellate Board in which
the relief sought includes alteration or rectification of the register or in
which any question relating to the practice of the patent office is raised;
(b) in any appeal to the Appellate Board from an order of the
Controller on an application for grant of a patent—
(i) which is not opposed, and the
application is either refused by the Controller or is accepted by him subject
to any amendments, modifications, conditions or limitations, or
(ii)
which has been opposed and the Controller considers
that his appearance is necessary in the public interest,
and the Controller shall
appear in any case if so directed by the Appellate Board.
(2) Unless the Appellate Board otherwise directs,
the Controller may, in lieu of appearing, submit a statement
in writing signed by him, giving such particulars as he thinks proper of the
proceedings before him relating to the matter in issue or of the grounds of any
decision given by him or of the practice of the patent office in like cases, or
of other matters relevant to the issues and within his knowledge as the
Controller may deem it necessary, and such statement shall be evidence in the
proceeding.
117F. Costs of
Controller in proceedings before Appellate Board.—In
all proceedings under this Act before the Appellate Board, the costs of the
Controller shall be in the discretion of the Board, but the Controller shall
not be ordered to pay the costs of any of the parties.
117G. Transfer of pending proceedings to
Appellate Board.—All cases of appeals against any order or decision of
the Controller and all cases pertaining to revocation of patent other than on a
counter-claim in a suit for infringement and rectification of register pending
before any High Court, shall be transferred to the Appellate Board from such
date as may be notified by the Central Government in the Official Gazette and
the Appellate Board may proceed with the matter either de novo or from
the stage it was so transferred.
117H. Power of Appellate Board to make
rules.—The Appellate Board may make rules consistent with this Act as
to the conduct and procedure in respect of all proceedings before it under this
Act.
CHAPTER XX
PENALTIES
Section 118
Contravention of secrecy
provisions relating to certain inventions
If any person fails to comply
with any direction given under section 35 or makes or causes to be made an
application for the grant of a patent in contravention of section 39 he shall
be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to two years, or
with fine, or with both.
Section 119
Falsification of entries in
register, etc.
If any person makes, or causes
to be made, a false entry in any register kept under this Act, or a writing
falsely purporting to be a copy of an entry in such a register, or produces or
tenders, or causes to be produced or tendered, in evidence any such writing
knowing the entry or writing to be false, he shall be punishable with
imprisonment for a term which may extend to two years, or with fine, or with
both.
Section 120
Unauthorised claim of patent rights
If any person falsely
represents that any article sold by him is patented in India or is the subject
of an application for a patent in India, he shall be punishable with fine which
may extend to one lakh rupees.
Explanation 1.—For
the purposes of this section, a person shall be deemed to represent—
(a) that an article is patented in India if there
is stamped, engraved or impressed on, or otherwise applied to, the article the
word "patent" or "patented" or some other word expressing
or implying that a patent for the article has been obtained in India;
(b) that an article is the subject of an
application for a patent in India, if there are stamped, engraved or impressed
on, or otherwise applied to, the article the words "patent applied
for", "patent pending", or some other words implying that an
application for a patent for the article has been made in India.
Explanation 2.—The use of words
"patent", "patented", "patent applied for",
"patent pending" or other words expressing or implying that an
article is patented or that a patent has been applied for shall be deemed to
refer to a patent in force in India, or to a pending application for a patent
in India, as the case may be, unless there is an accompanying indication that
the patent has been obtained or applied for in any country outside India.
Section 121
Wrongful use of words
"patent office"
If any person uses on his
place of business or any document issued by him or otherwise the words
"patent office" or any other words which would reasonably lead to the
belief that his place of business is, or is officially connected with, the
patent office, he shall be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may
extend to six months, or with fine, or with both.
Section 122
Refusal
or failure to supply information
(1) If any person refuses or fails to furnish—
(a) to the Central
Government any information which he is required to furnish under sub-section
(5) of section 100;
(b)
to the Controller any information or statement which
he is required to furnish by or under section 146, he shall be punishable with
fine which may extend to ten lakh rupees.
(2) If any person, being required to furnish any
such information as is referred to in sub-section (1), furnishes information or
statement which is false, and which he either knows or has reason
to believe to be false or does not believe to be true, he shall be punishable
with imprisonment which may extend to six months, or with fine, or with both.
Section 123
Practice by non-registered
patent agents
If any person
contravenes the provisions of section 129, he shall be punishable with fine
which may extend to one lakh rupees in the case of a
first offence and five lakh rupees in the case of a
second or subsequent offence
Section 124
Offences
by companies
(1) If the person committing
an offence under this Act is a company, the company as well as every person in
charge of, and responsible to, the company for the conduct of its business at
the time of the commission of the offence shall be deemed to be guilty of the
offence and shall be liable to be proceeded against and punished accordingly:
Provided that nothing contained in this
sub-section shall render any such person liable to any punishment if he proves
that the offence was committed without his knowledge or that he exercised all
due diligence to prevent the commission of such offence.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (1), where an offence under this Act has been committed by a
company and it is proved that the offence has been committed with the consent
or connivance of, or that the commission of the offence is attributable to any
neglect on the part of any director, manager, secretary or other officer of the
company, such director, manager, secretary or other officer shall also be
deemed to be guilty of that offence and shall be liable to be proceeded against
and punished accordingly.
Explanation.—For the purposes of this
section,—
(a) "company"
means any body corporate and includes a firm or other
association of individuals; and
(b) "director",
in relation to a firm, means a partner in the firm.
CHAPTER XXI
PATENT AGENTS
Section 125
Register
of patent agents
(1) The Controller shall
maintain a register to be called the register of patent agents in which shall
be entered the names, addresses and other relevant particulars, as may be
prescribed, of all persons qualified to have their names so entered under
section 126.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (1), it shall be lawful for the Controller to keep the register of
patent agents in computer floppies, diskettes or any other electronic form
subject to such safeguards as may be prescribed.
Section 126
Qualifications
for registration as patent agents
(1) A person shall be qualified to have his name entered
in the register of patent agents if he fulfils the
following conditions, namely:-
- he is a citizen of India;
- he has completed the age of 21 years;
- he has obtained a degree in science, engineering or
technology from any university established under law for the time being in
force in the territory of India or possesses such other equivalent
qualifications as the Central Government may specify in this behalf, and,
in addition,—
(i) [Omitted]
(ii) has passed the qualifying
examination prescribed for the purpose; or
(iii) has, for a total period of not less than ten years, functioned
either as an examiner or discharged the functions of the Controller under
section 73 or both, but ceased to hold any such capacity at the time of
making the application for registration;
- he has paid such fee as may be prescribed.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (1), a person who has been registered as a patent agent before the
commencement of the Patents (Amendment) Act, 2005 shall be entitled to continue
to be, or when required to be re-registered, as a patent agent, on payment of
the fees as may be prescribed.
Section 127
Rights
of patent agents
Subject to the provisions contained in this Act and in
any rules made thereunder, every patent agent whose
name is entered in the register shall be entitled:-
- to practice before the Controller; and
- to prepare all documents, transact all business and discharge
such other functions as may be prescribed in connection with any
proceeding before the Controller under this Act.
Section 128
Subscription
and verification of certain documents by patent agents
(1) all applications and
communications to the Controller under this Act may be signed by a patent agent
authorised in writing in this behalf by the person
concerned.
Provided that if such person is absent from India, they may be signed and
verified on his behalf by a patent agent authorised
by him in writing in that behalf.
(2) [Omitted]
Section 129
Restrictions
on practice as patent agents
(1) No person, either alone or in partnership with any
other person, shall practise, describe or hold
himself out as a patent agent, or permit himself to be so described or held
out, unless he is registered as a patent agent or, as the case may be, unless
he and all his partners are so registered.
(2) No company or other body corporate shall practise, describe itself or hold itself out as patent
agents or permit itself to be so described or held out.
- applying for or obtaining patents in India or
elsewhere;
- preparing specifications or other documents for the
purposes of this Act or of the patent law of any other country;
- giving advice other than of a scientific or technical nature
as to the validity of patents or their infringement.
Section 130
Removal from register of patent
agents and restoration
(1) The Controller may remove the name of any person from
the register when he is satisfied, after giving that person a reasonable opportunity
of being heard and after such further inquiry, if any, as he thinks fit to
make—
(i) that his name has been entered
in the register by error or on account of misrepresentation or suppression of
material fact;
(ii)
that he has been convicted of any offence and
sentenced to a term of imprisonment or has been guilty of misconduct in his
professional capacity which in the opinion of the Controller renders him unfit
to be kept in the register.
(2) The Controller may, on application and on sufficient cause being shown,
restore to the register the name of any person removed therefrom.
Section 131
Power
of Controller to refuse to deal with certain agents
(1) Subject to any rules made in this behalf, the
Controller may refuse to recognise as agent in
respect of any business under this Act—
- any individual whose name has been removed from, and
not restored to, the register;
- any person who has been convicted of an offence under
section 123;
- any person, not being registered as a patent agent, who
in the opinion of the Controller is engaged wholly or mainly; in
acting as agent in applying for patents in India or elsewhere in the name
or for the benefit of the person by whom he is employed;
- any company or firm, if any person whom the Controller
could refuse to recognise as agent in respect of
any business under this Act, is acting as a director or manager of the
company or is a partner in the firm.
(2) The Controller shall refuse to recognise as agent in respect of any business under this
Act any person who neither resides nor has a place of business in India.
Section 132
Savings
in respect of other persons authorised to act as
agents
Nothing in the Chapter shall be deemed to prohibit—
- the applicant for a patent from drafting any
specification or appearing or acting before the Controller, or
- an advocate, not being a patent agent, from taking part
in any hearing before the Controller on behalf of a party who is taking
part in any proceeding under this Act.
CHAPTER XXII
INTERNATIONAL
ARRANGEMENTS
Section 133
Convention countries
Any
country, which is a signatory or party or a group of countries, union of
countries or intergovernmental organisations which
are signatories or parties to an international, regional or bi-lateral treaty,
convention or arrangement to which India is also a signatory or party and which
affords to the applicants for patents in India or to citizens of India similar
privileges as are granted to their own citizens or citizens to their member
countries in respect of the grant of patents and protection of patent rights
shall be a convention country or convention countries for the purposes of this
Act.
Section 134
Notification as to countries not providing for
reciprocity
Where any country specified by the
Central Government in this behalf by notification in the Official Gazette does
not accord to citizens of India the same rights in respect of the grant of
patents and the protection of patent rights as it accords to its own nationals,
no national of such country shall be entitled, either solely or jointly with
any other person,—
- to apply for the
grant of a patent or be registered as the proprietor of a patent;
- to be registered
as the assignee of the proprietor of a patent; or
- to apply for a licence or hold any licence
under a patent granted under this Act.
Section 135
Convention applications
(1) Without prejudice to the provisions
contained in section 6, where a person has made an application for a patent in
respect of an invention in a convention country (hereinafter referred to as the
"basic application"), and that person or the legal representative or
assignee of that person makes an application under this Act for a patent within
twelve months after the date on which the basic application was made, the
priority date of a claim of the complete specification, being a claim based on
matter disclosed in the basic application, is the date of making of the basic application.
Explanation.—Where applications have been made
for similar protection in respect of an invention in two or more convention
countries, the period of twelve months referred to in this sub-section shall be
reckoned from the date on which the earlier or earliest of the said
applications was made.
(2)
Where applications for protection have been made in one or more convention
countries in respect of two or more inventions which are cognate or of which
one is a modification of another, a single convention application may, subject
to the provisions contained in section 10, be made in respect of those
inventions at any time within twelve months from the date of the earliest of
the said applications for protection:
Provided
that the fee payable on the making of any such application shall be the same as
if separate applications have been made in respect of each of the said
inventions, and the requirements of clause (b) of sub-section (1) of section
136 shall, in the case of any such application, apply separately to the
applications for protection in respect of each of the said inventions.
(3)
In case of an application filed under the Patent Cooperation
Treaty designating India and claiming priority from a previously filed
application in India, the provisions of sub-sections (1) and (2) shall apply as
if the previously filed application were the basic application:
Provided that a request for examination
under section 11B shall be made only for one of the applications filed in
India.
Section 136
Special provisions relating to convention application
(1)
Every convention application shall—
- be accompanied
by a complete specification; and
- specify the date
on which and the convention country in which the application for
protection, or as the case may be, the first of such applications was
made; and
- state that no
application for protection in respect of the invention had been made in a
convention country before that date by the applicant or by any person from
whom he derives title.
(2) Subject
to the provisions contained in section 10, a complete specification filed with
a convention application may include claims in respect of developments of, or
additions to, the invention in respect of which the application for protection
was made in a convention country, being developments or additions in respect of
which the applicant would be entitled under the provisions of section 6 to make
a separate application for a patent.
(3)A convention application shall
not be post-dated under sub-section (1) of section 17 to a date later than the
date on which under the provisions of this Act the application could have been
made.
Section
137
Multiple priorities
(1)
Where two or more applications for patents in respect of inventions have been
made in one or more convention countries and those inventions are so related as
to constitute one invention, one application may be made by any or all of the
persons referred to in sub-section (1) of section 135 within twelve months
from the date on which the earlier or earliest of those applications was made,
in respect of the inventions disclosed in the specifications which accompanied
the basic applications.
(2)The
priority date of a claim of the complete specification, being a claim based on
matters disclosed in one or more of the basic applications, is the date on
which that matter was first so disclosed.
(3)For
the purposes of this Act, a matter shall be deemed to have been disclosed in a
basic application for protection in a convention country if it was claimed or
disclosed (otherwise than by way of disclaimer or acknowledgement of a prior
art) in that application, or any documents submitted by the applicant for
protection in support of and at the same time as that application but no
account shall be taken of any disclosure effected by any such document unless a
copy of the documents is filed at the patent office with the convention
application or within such period as may be prescribed after the filing of that
application.
Section 138
Supplementary provisions as to convention applications
(1)
Where a convention application is made in accordance with the provisions of
this Chapter, the applicant shall furnish, when required by the Controller, in
addition to the complete specification, copies of the specifications or
corresponding documents filed or deposited by the applicant in the patent
office of the convention country as referred to in section 133 verified to the
satisfaction of the Controller, within the prescribed period from the date of
communication by the Controller.
(2) If
any such specification or other document is in a foreign language, a
translation into English of the specification or document,
verified by affidavit or otherwise to the satisfaction of the Controller, shall
be furnished when required by the Controller.
(3) For
the purposes of this Act, the date on which an application was made in a
convention country is such date as the Controller is satisfied, by certificate
of the official chief or head of the patent office of the convention country or
otherwise, is the date on which the application was made in that convention
country.
(4) An
international application filed under the Patent Cooperation
Treaty designating India shall have effect of filing an application for
patent under section 7, section 54 and section 135, as the case may be, and the
title, description, claim and abstract and drawings, if any, filed in the
international application shall be taken as complete specification for the
purposes of this Act.
(5) The
filing date of application for patent and its complete specification processed
by the patent office as designated office shall be the international filing
date accorded under the Patent Cooperation
Treaty.
(6)
Amendment, if any, proposed by the applicant for an international application
designating India or designating and electing India before international
searching authority or preliminary examination authority shall, if the
applicant so desires, be taken as an amendment made before the patent office.
Section 139
Other provisions of Act to apply to convention applications
Save as
otherwise provided in this Chapter, all the provisions of this Act shall apply
in relation to a convention application and a patent granted in pursuance
thereof as they apply in relation to an ordinary application and a patent
granted in pursuance thereof.
CHAPTER
XXIII
MISCELLANEOUS
Section 140
Avoidance of certain restrictive conditions
(1) It
shall not be lawful to insert—
(i) in any contract for
or in relation to the sale or lease of a patented article or an article made by
a patented process; or
(ii)
in licence to manufacture or
use a patented article; or
(iii)
in a licence to work any
process protected by a patent, a condition the effect of which may be—
- to require the
purchaser, lessee, or licensee to acquire from the vendor, lessor, or licensor or his nominees, or to prohibit
him from acquiring or to restrict in any manner or to any extent his right
to acquire from any person or to prohibit him from acquiring except from
the vendor, lessor, or licensor or his nominees
any article other than the patented article or an article other than that
made by the patented process; or
- to prohibit the
purchaser, lessee or licensee from using or to restrict in any manner or
to any extent the right of the purchaser, lessee or licensee, to use an
article other than the patented article or an article other than that made
by the patented process, which is not supplied by the vendor, lessor or licensor or his nominee; or
- to prohibit the
purchaser, lessee or licensee from using or to restrict in any manner or
to any extent the right of the purchaser, lessee or licensee to use any
process other than the patented process,
- to
provide exclusive grant back, prevention to challenges to validity of
Patent & Coercive package licensing,
and any such condition shall be void.
(
2) A condition of the
nature referred to in clause (a) or clause (b) or clause (c) of sub-section (1)
shall not cease to be a condition falling within that sub-section merely by
reason of the fact that the agreement containing it has been entered into
separately, whether before or after the contract relating to the sale, lease or
licence of the patented article or process.
(3) In proceedings
against any person for the infringement of a patent, it shall be a defence to prove that at the time of the infringement there
was in force a contract relating to the patent and containing a condition
declared unlawful by this section:
Provided that this sub-section shall not apply if the plaintiff is not a party
to the contract and proves to the satisfaction of the court that the
restrictive condition was inserted in the contract without his knowledge and
consent, express or implied.
(4) Nothing in this section shall—
- affect a
condition in a contract by which a person is prohibited from selling goods
other than those of a particular person;
- validate a
contract which, but for this section, would be invalid;
- affect a condition in
a contract for the lease of, or licence to use a
patented article, by which the lessor or
licensor reserves to himself or his nominee the right to supply such new
parts of the patented article as may be required or to put or keep it in
repair.
(5) [Omitted]
Section 141
Determination of certain contracts
(1)
Any contract for the sale or lease of a patented article or for licence to manufacture, use or work a patented article or
process, or relating to any such sale, lease or licence,
may at any time after the patent or all the patents by which the article or
process was protected at the time of the making of the contract has or have
ceased to be in force, and notwithstanding anything to the contrary in the
contract or in any other contract, be determined by the purchaser, lessee, or
licensee, as the case may be, of the patent on giving three months notice in
writing to the other party.
(2)
The provisions of this section shall be without prejudice to any right of
determining a contract exercisable apart from this section.
Section 142
Fees
(1)
There shall be paid in respect of the grant of patents and applications therefor, and in respect of other matters in relation to
the grant of patents under this Act, such fees as may be prescribed by the
Central Government.
(2)
Where a fee is payable in respect of the doing of an act by the Controller, the
Controller shall not do that act until the fee has been paid.
(3)
Where a fee is payable in respect of the filing of a document at the patent
office, the fee shall be paid along with the document or within the prescribed
time and the document shall be
deemed not to have been filed at the office if the fee has not
been paid within such time.
(4)
Where a principal patent is granted later than two years from the date of the
filing of the application, the fees which have become due in the meantime may be paid within a term of
three months from the date of the recording of the patent in the register or
within the extended period not later than nine months from the date of
recording.
Section 143
Restrictions upon publication of specification
Subject
to the provisions of Chapter VII, an application for a patent, and any
specification filed in pursuance thereof, shall not, except with the consent of
the applicant, be published by the Controller before the expiration of the
period prescribed under sub-section (1) of section 11A or before the same is
open to public inspection in pursuance of sub-section (3) of section 11A or
section 43.
Section 144
Reports of examiners to be confidential
The
reports of examiners to the Controller under this Act shall not be open to
public inspection or be published by the Controller; and such reports shall not
be liable to production or inspection in any legal proceeding unless the court
certifies that the production or inspection is desirable in the interests of
justice, and ought to be allowed.
Section 145
Publication of official journal
The
Controller shall publish periodically an official journal which shall contain
such information as may be required to be published by or under the provisions
of this Act or any rule made thereunder.
Section 146
Power of Controller to call for information from
patentees
(1) The
Controller may, at any time during the continuance of the patent, by notice in
writing, require a patentee or a licensee, exclusive or otherwise, to furnish
to him within two months from the date of such notice or within such further
time as the Controller may allow, such information or such periodical
statements as to the extent to which the patented invention has been
commercially worked in India as may be specified in the notice.
(2) Without
prejudice to the provisions of sub-section (1), every patentee and every
licensee (whether exclusive or otherwise) shall furnish in such manner and form
and at such intervals (not being less than six months) as may be prescribed
statements as to the extent to which the patented invention has been worked on
a commercial scale in India.
(3) The
Controller may publish the information received by him under subsection (1) or
sub-section (2) in such manner as may be prescribed.
Section 147
Evidence of entries,
documents, etc.
(1)
A certificate purporting to be signed by the Controller as to any entry, matter
or thing which he is authorized by this Act or any rules made thereunder to make or do, shall be prima facie evidence of the entry having been made and
of the contents thereof and of the matter or thing having been done or omitted
to be done.
(2) A
copy of any entry in any register or of any document kept in the patent office
or of any patent, or an extract from any such register or document, purporting
to be certified by the Controller and sealed with the seal of the patent office
shall be admitted in evidence in all courts, and in all proceedings, without
further proof or production of the original.
(3) The
Controller or any other officer of the patent office shall not, in any legal
proceedings to which he is not a party, be compellable to produce the register
or any other document in his custody, the contents of which can be proved by
the production of a certified copy issued under this Act or to appear as a
witness to prove the matters therein recorded unless by order of the court made
for special causes.
Section 148
Declaration by infant, lunatic etc.
(1) If
any person is, by reason of minority, lunacy or other disability, incapable of
making any statement or doing anything required or permitted by or under this
Act, the lawful guardian, committee or manager (if any) of the person subject
to the disability, or if there be none, any person appointed by any court
possessing jurisdiction in respect of his property, may make such statement or
a statement as nearly corresponding thereto as circumstances permit, and do
such thing in the name and on behalf of the person subject to the disability.
(2) An
appointment may be made by the court for the purposes of this section upon the
petition of any person acting on behalf of the person subject to the disability
or of any other person interested in the making of the statement or the doing
of the thing.
Section 149
Service of notices, etc., by post
Any
notice required or authorised to be given by or under
this Act, and any application or other document so authorised
or required to be made or filed, may be given, made or filed by post
Section 150
Security for costs
If any
party by whom notice of any opposition is given under this Act or by whom
application is made to the Controller for the grant of a licence
under a patent neither resides nor carries on business in India, the Controller
may require him to give security for the costs of the proceedings, and in
default of such security being given may treat the opposition or application as
abandoned.
Section 151
Transmission of orders of courts to Controller
(1)
Every order of the High Court or the Appellate Board on a petition for
revocation, including orders granting certificates of validity of any claim,
shall be transmitted by the High Court or the Appellate Board to the Controller
who shall cause an entry thereof and reference thereto to be made in the
register.
(2)Where
in any suit for infringement of a patent or in any suit under section 106 the
validity of any claim or a specification is contested and that claim is found
by the court to be valid or not valid, as the case may be, the court shall
transmit a copy of its judgment and decree to the Controller who shall on
receipt thereof cause an entry in relation to such proceeding to be made in the
prescribed manner in a supplemental record.
(3)The
provisions of sub-sections (1) and (2) shall also apply to the court to which
appeals are preferred against decisions of the Appellate Board or the courts,
as the case may be, referred to in those sub-sections.
Section 153
Information relating to patents
A
person making a request to the Controller in the prescribed manner for
information relating to any such matters as may be prescribed as respects any
patent specified in the request or as respects any application for a patent so
specified shall be entitled, subject to the payment of the prescribed fee, to
have information supplied to him accordingly.
Section 154
Loss or destruction of patents
If a
patent is lost or destroyed, or its non-production is accounted for to the
satisfaction of the controller, the Controller may at any time, on application
made in the prescribed manner and on payment of the prescribed fee, cause a
duplicate thereof to be sealed and delivered to the applicant.
Section 155
Reports of Controller to be placed before
Parliament
The
Central Government shall cause to be placed before both Houses of Parliament
once a year a report respecting the execution of this Act by or under the
Controller.
Section 156
Patent to bind Government
Subject
to the other provisions contained in this Act, a patent shall have to all
intents the like effect as against Government as it has against any person.
Section 157
Right of Government to sell or use forfeited
articles
Nothing
in this Act shall affect the power of the Government or of any person deriving
title directly or indirectly from the Government to sell or use any articles
forfeited under any law for the time being in force.
Section 157A
Protection of security of India
Notwithstanding
anything contained in this Act, the Central Government shall:-
(a)
not disclose any information relating to any
patentable invention or any application relating to the grant of patent under
this Act, which it considers prejudicial to the interest of security of India;
(b)
take any action including the revocation of any patent which it considers
necessary in the interest of the security of India by issue if a notification
in the Official Gazette to that effect.
Explanation.- For the purposes of this section, the expression
"security of India" includes any action necessary for the security of
India which-
(i) relates to fissionable
materials or the materials from which they are derived; or
(ii)
relates to the traffic in arms, ammunition and implements of war and to such
traffic in other goods and materials as is carried on directly or indirectly
for the purpose of supplying a military establishment; or
(iii)
is taken in time of war or other emergency in
international relations.
Section 158
Power of High Courts to make rules
The High Court may make rules consistent
with this Act as to the conduct and procedure in respect of all proceedings
before it under this Act.
Section 159
Power of Central Government to make rules
(1) The Central
Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, make rules for
carrying out the purposes of this Act.
(2) Without
prejudice to the generality of the foregoing power, the Central Government may
make rules to provide for all or any of the following matters, namely:—
(i) the form and manner in which
any application for a patent, any specifications or drawings and any other
application or document may be filed in the patent office;
(ia) the period which the Controller may allow
for filing of statement and undertaking for in respect of applications under
sub-section (1), the period within which the details relating to processing of
applications may be filed before the Controller and the details to be furnished
by the applicant to the Controller under sub-section (2) of section 8;
(ib) the period within
which a reference to the deposit of materials shall be made in the
specification under sub-clause (A) of clause (ii) of the proviso to sub-section
(4) of section 10;
(ic) the period for which application for patent
shall not be open to the public under sub-section (1) and the manner in which
the applicant may make a request to the Controller to publish his application
under sub-section (2) of section 11 A;
(id) the manner of making the request for
examination for an application for patent and the period within which such
examination shall be made under sub-sections (1) and (3) of section 11B;
(ie) the manner in
which an application for withdrawal of an application for grant of a patent
shall be made and the period within which a request for examination from the
date of revocation of secrecy directions shall be made under the proviso to
sub-section (4) of section 11B.
(ii)
the time within which any act or thing may be done
under this Act, including the manner in which and the time within which any
matter may be published under this Act;
(iii)
the fees which may be payable under this Act and the
manner and time of payment of such fees;
(iv)
the matters in respect of which the examiner may make
a report to the Controller;
(v)
the manner in which and the period within which the
Controller shall consider and dispose off a representation under sub-section
(1) of section 25;
(va) the period within which the
Controller is required to dispose of an application under section 39;
(vi)
the form and manner in which and the time within which
any notice may be given under this Act;
(vii)
the provisions which may be inserted in an order for
restoration of a patent for the protection of persons who may have availed
themselves of the subject-matter of the patent after the patent had ceased;
(viii)
the establishment of branch offices of the patent
office and the regulation generally of the business of the patent office,
including its branch offices;
(ix)
the maintenance of the register of patents and the safeguards to be observed in
the maintenance of such register in computer floppies, diskettes or any other
electronic form and the matters to be entered therein;
(x)
the matters in respect of which the Controller shall
have powers of a civil court;
(xi)
the time when and the manner in which the register and
any other document open to inspection may be inspected under this Act;
(xii)
the qualifications of, and the preparation of a roll
of, scientific advisers for the purpose of section 115;
(xiia) the salaries and allowances and other conditions of
service of the officers and other employees of the Appellate Board under subsection
(2) and the manner in which the officers and other employees of the Appellate
Board shall discharge their functions under subsection (3) of section 117;
(xiib) the form of making an
appeal, the manner of verification and the fee payable under sub-section (3) of
section 117A;
(xiic) the form in which, and the
particulars to be included in the application to the Appellate Board under
sub-section (1) of section 117D;
(xiii)
the manner in which any compensation for acquisition
by Government of an invention may be paid;
(xiv)
the manner in which the register of patent agents may be maintained under
sub-section (1) of section 125 and the safeguards to be observed in the
maintenance of such register of patent agents on computer floppies, diskettes
or any other electronic form under subsection (2) of that section; the conduct
of qualifying examinations for patent agents; and matters connected with their
practice and conduct, including the taking of disciplinary proceedings against
patent agents for misconduct;
(xv)
the regulation of the making, printing, publishing and selling of indexes to,
and abridgements of, specifications and other documents in the patent office;
and the inspection of indexes and abridgements and other documents;
(xvi)
any other matter which has to be or may be prescribed.
(3) The power to make rules under this
section shall be subject to condition of the rules being made after previous
publication:
Provided that the Central Government may,
if it is satisfied that the circumstances exist which render it practically not
possible to comply with such condition of previous publication, dispense with
such compliance.
Section 160
Rules to be placed before Parliament
Every
rule made under this Act shall be laid, as soon as may be after it is made,
before each House of Parliament while it is in session for a total period of
thirty days which may be comprised in one session or in two or more successive
sessions, and if, before the expiry of the session immediately following the
session or the successive sessions aforesaid, both Houses agree in making any
modification in the rule or both Houses agree that the rule should not be made,
the rule shall thereafter have effect only in such modified form or be of no
effect, as the case may be; so, however, that any such modification or
annulment shall be without prejudice to the validity of anything previously
done under that rule.
Section 162
Repeal of Act 2 of 1911 in so far as it relates to
patents and savings
(1) The Indian
Patents and Designs Act, 1911, in so far as it relates to patents, is hereby
repealed, that is to say, the said Act shall be
amended in the manner specified in the Schedule.
(2)
[Omitted]
(3) [Omitted]
(4) The mention of particular
matters in this section shall not prejudice the general application of the General
Clauses Act, 1897 (10 of 1897), with respect to repeals.
(5) Notwithstanding anything
contained in this Act, any suit for infringement of a patent or any proceeding
for revocation of a patent, pending in any court at the commencement of this
Act, may be continued and disposed of, as if this Act had not been passed.