IPR Laws Applicable in India Patent Act 1970
What is Patentable?
Any Invention which is not obvious and is novel and not previously published in any country. Any new and useful: art, process, or method of manufacture; Machine apparatus or other article; Substance produced by manufacture.
What is Not Patentable?
1. Inventions contrary to law, morality and public health;
2. Which is Frivolous or claims which is obviously contrary to well established natural laws;
3. Mere new use or mere discovery of new property or new use of known substance or property;
4. Mere admixture resulting only in aggregation of properties;
5. Mere arrangement and rearrangement of known integers functioning independently;
6. Method for agriculture/horticulture;
7. Process for treatment on human beings, plants or animals;
8. A presentation of information;
9. A mathematical or business method or a computer program per se or algorithms.
Filing Requirements for Patent Application
1. Specification (Provisional or complete), Claims and Drawings; Name, address and nationality of the applicant;
2. Name, address and nationality of the inventor(s);
3. Details of the basic application in case any priority is claimed;
4. Authority/Power of Attorney.
Various Stages up to Grant
1. Examination - Patent applications are now not examined automatically. One has to file a request for examination within the period of 48 months from the date of the application;
2. Grant of Patent in case there is no opposition.
Opposition to Grant
Opposition may be filed by any interested person within 4 months of notification of acceptance in the Gazette
Term of Patent
Patent is granted for the period of 20 years from the date of application.
Revocation of a Patent
Validity of a patent granted under the Act, may be challenged only in a High Court in revocation proceedings Under Section 64. The revocation petition cannot be filed before the Controller of Patents.
Rectification of Register of Patent
1. An application for the rectification of patent can be filed by any person aggrieved, before the Appellate Board on any one or more of the following grounds:
2. On account of absence or omission from the register of any entry; or
3. On account of any entry made in the register without sufficient cause; or
4. On account of any entry wrongly remaining on the register; or
5. On account of any error or defect in any entry in the register.
Infringement Action
Unauthorized making, using, selling or distributing of a patented product/process amounts to an infringement. Action against infringement may be instituted in a District Court or High Court having jurisdiction. Criminal action does not lie unlike in Trade marks and Copyright. In case of any infringement of pending patent, no action can be taken unless the complete specification has been advertised as accepted.
Sandy Kathuria
Marketing Manager
Corporate Attorney India