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Le ee Ra eaysecey
BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
EFFETS DE COMMERCE DANS LE DROIT ANGLAIS
comparés avec les principales législations étrangéres. Pedone-Lauriel,
Paris, 1884,
FRENCH LAW OF BILLS OF EXCHANGE, PROMISSORY
NOTES AND CHEQUES, compared with the Bills of Exchange Act,
1882. Waterlow & Sons, Limited, London, 1884.
LE CONGRES INTERNATIONAL POUR L’UNIFICATION
DES LOIS SUR LA LETTRE DE CHANGE et la part que peut y
prendre l’Angleterre. Bulletin de législation comparée, 1885.
THE ANTWERP CONGRESS AND THE ASSIMILATION
OF MERCANTILE LAW. Law Quarterly Review, 1886.
ASSIMILATION DES LOIS CONCERNANT LA LETTRE DE
CHANGE, le billet 4 ordre et la chéque sur la base du projet du congrés
international de droit commercial. Pedone-Lauriel, Paris. Larcier,
Bruxelles, 1888.
DEPARTMENT (COUNTY) COUNCILS, LOCAL MANAGE-
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London, 1888.
EMANCIPATION CONTRACTUELLE DE LA FEMME
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NEW .FRENCH DIVORCE ACT. Law Quarterly Review, 1885.
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FRENCH LAW OF PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS with the
changes therein made by the International Convention of 1883. Angio-
French Mercantile Review, 1883.
INTERNATIONAL PROTECTION OF MERCHANDISE
MARKS: France et Great Britain. Law Magazine, 1888.
LES FRAUDES DANS LES MARQUES COMMERCIALES
Nouvelle Législation Anglaise. Pedone-Lauriel, Paris, 1889. ,
THE
LAW OF FRANCE
RELATING TO
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY.
THE
LAW OF FRANCE
RELATING TO
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY,
PATENTS, TRADE MARKS, MERCHANDISE MARKS,
TRADE NAMES, MODELS, PATTERNS, DESIGNS, WRAPPERS,
PROSPECTUSES, EXHIBITION REWARDS AND MEDALS,
UNPATENTED INDUSTRIAL SECRETS, & COLONIAL,
ALGERIAN AND TUNISIAN REGULATIONS,
WITH A
Commentary on the Industrial Property Convention, 1883,
AND THE
PROVISIONS CONCERNING BRITISH INVENTIONS AND DESIGNS
AT FRENCH EXHIBITIONS.
BY
THOMAS BARCLAY, LLB., °
OF LINCOLN’S INN, BARRISTER-AT: LAW 3 KNIGHT OF THE LEGION OF HONOUR.
LONDON :
SWEET AND MAXWELL, LimiteEp,
3, CHANCERY LANE, & 8, BELL YARD, W.C.
Law Publishers,
MEREDITH, RAY, & LITTLER, MANCHESTER.
1889.
7365
LONDON
‘BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO., PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS
Dedication
TO
H. READER LACK, ESQ
COMPTROLLER-GENERAL
OF
PATENTS, DESIGNS, AND TRADE MARKS,
Dear Mr. Reaper Lack,
L take advantage of your kind permission to dedicate
this book to you. Of Englishmen no one has been more closely .
‘associated with the international questions arising out of the
matters composing it than yourself. You were present as
British Representative at the Conferences which elaborated the
International Convention of 1883 for the Protection of
Industrial Property. In this capacity you contributed your
mature experience to the creation of an International Union
with the darect and indirect effects of which Englishmen have
every reason to feel satisfaction.
In dedicating to you a book on a branch of French law
which has been so beneficially reformed by the Convention of
viii DEDICATION.
1883, I desire to record my humble recognition or your
eminent services in a great international work, and to thank
you for the obliging readiness with which you have always
gwen me any information at your command as well ds for many
valuable suggestions you have made in the course of perusing the
proof-sheets of this volwme.
Iam, dear Mr, Reader Lack,
Yours very faithfully,
THOMAS BARCLAY.
17, Ruz Pasquier, Paris,
May 4th, 1889.
CONTENTS.
aes
PAGE
INTRODUCTION ......... 1
Patents .. 2
Trade Marka ssieuenpoaen seein 6
Désieneen’l Madels aaigrisiadais iocuhaushde wen Hhuganianenatinanaa? (18
Merchandise Marks and Trade Mame et et eee
Fraudulent Competition 2.0.0.0... cere eteeeeersee 18
Exhibition Medals and Haward.. Jiviven as pamamu sera’ 1D
Industrial Property at Hulvoitiotis,... . 19
Industrial Property Convention .. 20
Explanatory Remarks .............. 29
Conclusion .. saigauleens 31
PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS.
Law of July 5, 1844 :
Part I.—General Provisions ............ aeiuse 3B
Part IJ.—Formalities respecting the geand ‘of Patents,
Section I.—Application for Patent .......... cee 86
Section II].—Delivery of Letters Patent veer AL
Section III.—Certificates of Addition.............. jad cxsies 43
Section IV.—Assignment and Transfer of Patents...... 46
Section V.—Publication and Inspection of Specifica-
tions and Drawings of Patents..
Part III.—The Rights of Foreigners ..............
Part IV.—Annulments and Forfeitures and Actions relating
thereto:
Section I.—Annulments and Forfeitures .................. 52
Section IIl,—Actions for Annulment and Poriatture . 57
Part V.—Infringements, Proceedings and Penalties ......... 60
Part VI.—Special and Temporary Provisions .................. 65
x CONTENTS.
PAGE
Official Instructions a at the Disposal of Applicants at the
Patent Office ...........4 66
Notice to the Public as regards ‘Bearches ‘a ‘the "Ministry "of
Commerce ....... souont titeriwadatdaneneembrensmasasese 69
Unpatented Tnduetvial Seats... nian in ve Waeddetarennggene: UO
TRADE MARKS,
Law of June 23, 1857 :—
Part I.—The Ownership of Trade Marks ........c.cscseee 72
Part II.—Provisions relating to Foreigners ..........0:+0+. 76
Part ITI.—Offences lat neat Reels BeBana steal 77
Part IV.—Jurisdiction . asm cidieriomiiesee, Be
Part V.i—General and Rempooaiy provision asians 84
Act to establish a Stamp or Special Mark to be affixed t to 5 Trade
and Merchandise Marks ............. . 85
Instructions relative to Carrying ne “the Dae of mane ‘93,
1857, and the Decree of July 26, 1858, on Trade and Mer-
chandise: Marks ssicesussnutersareureriditeedanedeosncciins 89)
MERCHANDISE MARKS AND TRADE NAMES,
Law: of July 28) 1824 vic. wse sce scvsecencctsiasansesenivenneuaint inasiesqued OE
Law of June 23, 1857 oe. cccseeseecestectsetsensassecsassessersceeseezeees 9D
Law of November 26, 1873 . sieiseisseere .. 108
Circular Issued by the French ‘Minister ‘of ‘Oommen 6 on ie
Marking of Goods of Foreign Manufacture with French
Names, February 26,1886 .............. seeree 105
Inventor’s or Patentee’s Name and accessory yp appallaciond: sisitee 107
DESIGNS AND MODELS AND Non-INDUSTRIAL DRAWINGS.
Law of March 18, 1806.. seine . 109
Articles of Penal Code relating to he: Tafeiigenient of ‘Destzais
(February 19, 1810).
Ordinance of August 29, 1825, regulating the Deposit of
Designs generally .. siiibee .. 113
Decree relating to ie. Registration, ot Westen ‘and: Models
from Countries with which Diplomatic Conventions have
established Reciprocal Guarantees for the Ownership of such
Designs and Models (June 5, 1861) .. . 114
Law of November 26, 1873, Art. 9........ . 115
Assignments ............065 . 116
Non-Industrial coca Designa ‘of Phospeqtuiaus, Ornamental
Headings, etc.... sansa seeasagnane dae deushaberenieuiatzwiarsoting ALG
CONTENTS, xl
PAGE
FRAUDULENT COMPETITION .........ccscscsecsecseetscsssseurstsecetareesecses 118
Fancy Names .. és .. 119
Wrappers, Labels Bottles, Colour, ees. sainasbaarapevinatesainais 120)
Form of the Product..... dake aban uaenceeraeeamsenrcaentiavendaaaes 120
Family Names ... 120
Initials... . 121
Unregistered ' wile. Mics and Repeodnetion.t in y Brospectinses... 121
EXHIBITION REWARDS AND MEDALS.
Law of April 30, 1886 ...........c:cssesssceecsecseceeasetsseeetsecsscsessse LOB
PROTECTION o¥ INVENTIONS, DESIGNS, MODELS AND TRADE-
Marks AT PUBLIC EXHIBITIONS.
Law of May 23, 1868.. Sade . 126
Law modifying those of July 5, “1844, ‘Relating 46 “‘Patenta for
Inventions, and of June 23, 1857, on Trade-Marks for Objects
admitted to the Universal Exhibition of 1889 (October 30,
1888) o..eeeeeees . 129
Article of Tnternattonal Paccntan of 1883 for the, Protection
Of Industrial Property ........sccccccsessessecsecseessrseneesesrscseseer LBL
TREATY ARRANGEMENTS BETWEEN ENGLAND AND FRANCE IN-
CLUDING THE INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY CONVENTION.. wivevew 134
Anglo-French Trade and Navigation are (ehniaiy 28,
1882)... eas .. 184
The International Convention ior ihe: Protection of Tndecwectel
Property (concluded March 20, 1883) ......:.ccccccessseressensee 186
Protocol .....seceeeee . 153
Accession of Her Majesty’ 8 s lovemmehit: ta the store ‘Genvention 157
Decree of the President of the French Pe es
the Convention in France.. seauaieavesis sveew 159
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY IN THE FRENCH COLONIES AND ALGERIA 160
Patents 4 seve 160
Trade Marks ...... vee 164
Designs, Models, ane “Merchandise ‘Marks.. davetosweatexicovees LOO
Exhibition Rewards and Medals.. ieee - 166
International Convention for the. “Protection Of “Tnduateial
PROPOLLY: saeaccedsemasens deanse seule sar tatuerstianiseaaseanameramuceneae LOO
TUNIS .. . 167
Batactae. 167
Trade Marks, Desionay Mexchanilise “Marke, a, sigandneeneredanteas LSD
x1 CONTENTS,
PACE
APPENDICES.
A, Forms :—
Patents.
I.— Application for Letters Patent.. sehedlvanadvenng ent 186
IJ.— Application for a Patent by an dagen lductbta baa .. 187
II.—Power of Attorney to be annexed to this ‘application .. . 187
IV.—Less General Power of Attorney .. siulkarstontsne LOS
V.—Application for Letters Patent fava an :Tpantion patented
ADTOA |... ssrsareenuavsineaiee cnsvarenemnctiedin unsegesecccnss 188
VI. —Bpeetiteation ... sis secrereve 189
VIL—Application for | a ; Extent ae an ¢ Improvement $ in a
Patented Invention .........:cssecceceeeesat eee tecee ese eeees 189
VIIL.—Application for a Certificate of Addition ................ 190
IX.—Deed of Assignment of Total Property in a Padenti, einehat 190
X.—Assignment of part of a Patent ...... cee eeeeereeeee LOL
XI.—Certificate of Registration.............0.cssecseesseeeeereseres 192
Trade Marks,
I,—Power of Attorney by British Limited Company......... 193
II.—Attestation by Notary Public of Signatures of Directors
of a British Company ..........cseccceeeeseseeeeeeeerees 193
TII.—Form of Deposit... au iarspauinigarubosanaciasiavastoeraos AOE
IV.—Certificate of Registration, . ic aeg penis dactinlatusciesna’slewies, BOF
Designs and Models,
I.—Power of Attorney to Register .. sensisusstavasatneraaerae 19D
Il.—Certificate of Deposit of Desens or r Model . a hated lawaelearer 196
B. LONDON PATENT OFFICE NOTICES.
Patents (International and Colonial Arrangements), Rules, 1888 197
Schedule .............. Sinavactetmewcae: LOD
Consular Tegalivation ‘of Patent Office Dosimentac. ssivaastvers 200
International Convention ..............cceeeeeeeeeeeee cee seeeeeeteaseeteesee QOL
C, BRITISH COMPANIES.
Convention between Her Majesty and the Emperor of: the
French Republic relative to Joint Stock Companies ............ 202
D. PROPOSED PROTOCOL adopted at the Rome Conference, 1886,
of the International Union for the Protection of Industrial
PROPOR" cisco seewetsisvatesehvuanendu loud aieude sdianeeadseeatanesd@euteten sh 204
HE, EIFFEL. TOW BR. 4: cissastecsascnoversevvaecuetinesvdicscccdieebabstvaerisves BLU
WORKS OF REFERENCE ON THE FRENCH
LAW OF INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY.
PATENTS.
ALLARD. Des Inventions brevetables, Paris. 1885,
BuaNnc. L’Inventeur breveté. Paris, 3° Edition, 1852.
HUARD ET PELLETIER. Reépertoire de Législation et de Jurispru-
dence en matiére de Brevets d’Invention. Paris. 1885.
MALAPERT. Nouveau Commentaire des Lois sur les Brevets d’Inven-
tion. 1879.
NovevuieR. Des Brevets d’Invention et dela Contrefacon. 1858.
PICARD ET OLIN. Traité des Brevets d’Invention et de la Contrefagon
industrielle. 1869. Code général des Brevets d’Invention. 1882,
POUILLET, Traité théorique et pratique des Brevets d’Invention.
1879,
RENDU. Brevets d’Invention. 1879.
RENOUARD. Traité des Brevets dInvention. 1865.
TRADE-MARKS, DESIGNS, MODELS, MERCHANDISE
MARKS, FRAUDULENT COMPETITION, &c.
FAUCHILLE. Traité des Dessins et des Modéles industriels. 1882.
Huarp. Répertoire de Législation, de Doctrine et de Jurisprudence
en matiére de Marques de Fabrique, &c. 1865.
POUILLET. Traité des Marques de Fabrique et de la Concurrence
déloyale. 1883. Traité théorique et pratique des Dessins et Modéles
de Fabrique. 1884, :
RENDU. Traité pratique des Marques de Fabrique et de Commerce
et de la Concurrence déloyale. 1858.
NICOLAS ET PELLETIER. Manuel de la Propriété industrielle. 1888.
POUILLET, Marvin St. LEON ET PATAILLE. Dictionnaire de la
Propriété industrielle. 1887.
Annales de la Propriété industrielle, artistique et littéraire. 1854—
1889. (Reports.)
La Propriété industrielle, organe officielle du Bureau international
de I’Union pour la Protection de la Propriété industrielle, 1885—1889,
DALLOZ. Recueil de Jurisprudence, 1845—1889. (Reports.) Supplé-
ment du Répertoire alphabétique. 1887—1889.
ERRATA AND ADDENDA.
—+—-
Page 6, lines 23 and 24 from top. This has been modified by sec. 13 of
”
29
the Patents, &c., Act, 1888. Therefore, read ‘*one month is
allowed for opposition after the advertisement of the application,
or such further time not exceeding three months as the Comp-
troller may allow (sec. 69).” ,
7, line 23. It has, however, been decided by the High Court that
an exclusive right can only be acquired when the mark is one
strictly within the meaning of the Act. Otherwise the Court
can remove even after five years. ‘
42, Art. XI., § 4, and p. 44, Art. XVI.,§ 3. The fees mentioned for
second copies, viz. 25 f. and 20 f., are considered very high
for the purposes of the International Convention. Chapter IV.
of the Réglement agreed to at Rome (see Attestations de protec-
tion légale, p. 206) was intended to reduce the cost of evidence
required upon the extension of the time for registration in the
various States of the Union.
49, line 4 from top, for ‘‘ Royal” read ‘* Government.”
51, Art. XXVII., note (a). See Dispositions explicatives (p. 205),
agreed to at Rome, as to assimilation of subjects of States not
forming part of the Union.
55, add at end of last line but one from bottom, ‘‘ See also p, 130,
Art. III.”
68, line 12 from top. Read ‘‘ need” instead of ** shall.”
85 et seg. It would perhaps have been better to use the word
punch instead of puncheon as the translation of poingon. The
sense intended is the same.
xvi
ERRATA AND ADDENDA.
Page 137, Art. IIL, note (a). Sce p. 205, Dispositions explicatives.
a
139,
Sce p. 204, proposed addition to Art. V.
» 144, ‘The words ‘‘ duly registered” in Art. VI. are the translation
of régulierement déposé. As there is no preliminary exami-
nation under French law, the dépét of the mark is all regis-
tration amounts to, but it means simply lodging an application
for a certificate that a claim to property in the mark has been
duly recorded. It seems reasonable, therefore, that réguliére-
ment déposé should be understood as implying no more than
“duly lodged” or ‘‘ deposited,” seeing that a mark might not
be able to be registered though duly deposited (say applied for)
in one State, whilst there might be nothing in the way of its
registration in other States. This I am assured on excellent
authority, was the meaning attached to the Article in question
by the Conference at which it was adopted.
>» 154, line 5 from top. As regards the words ‘‘properly registered,”
the previous note is equally applicable.
INTRODUCTION.
—_+-—
Tue title of this book requires some explanation, Ivznopvc-
seeing that the words “ industrial property’ do not aie
in themselves convey the limited sense in which I ees
have employed them. ‘The term is a French one, a
and has been much abused for its inexplicit charac-
ter. It has, nevertheless, for convenience sake
and for want of a better one, found ‘universal
adoption in France.
The International Union for the protection of
patents, trade-marks, &c., adopted it for the same
reason, and through the Industrial Property Con-
vention, and the Parliamentary papers connected
with it, it has already made a step towards acclima-
tization in the United Kingdom. I have therefore
thought myself justified in using it as the title of a
treatise embracing a variety of subjects which cannot
otherwise be conveniently described under a single
heading. 7
BP. B
ae
2
IntRopuc-
TION.
Tendencies
of Patent
law
reform.
Prelimi-
nary exa-
mination,
Resolutions
submitted
to Congress
of 1878,
INTRODUCTION.
PATENTS.
The French law of patents for inventions at
present in force dates from 1844.
Since then the legislation on patents of every
other country has undergone modification. New
problems, moreover, have been raised and solved in
one way or another, new principles developed, and
so much ingenuity applied to the subject that it
would be no easy task to do justice to the different
arguments and theories propounded in France alone.
The tendency of the reforms which have been
worked out elsewhere since 1844 has been towards ©
what may be called the opposite pole of opinion
from that underlying French law.
The primordial question in Patent law is the
nature of the rights granted to the patentee. This
question takes the practical form of whether or not
the subject-matter of the application for letters-
patent is submitted to a preliminary examination,
and if so, to what kind of preliminary examination
it is submitted.
The five resolutions which were submitted to the
Paris Congress on Industrial Property of 1878
fairly represent the chief lines of opinion on the
subject. All except the fourth were supported by
different French authorities on Patent law.
They were as follows :—
1. The patent shall be delivered to the applicant
s
PATENTS.
3
at his risk and peril, without preliminary examina- InzRopvc-
tion ;
2. The patent shall be delivered to any applicant
at his risk and peril; it is nevertheless desirable
(utile) that the applicant receive previous notice,
especially on the subject of novelty, in order that
he may persist in, modify or abandon his applica-
tion, as he likes ;
8. It is necessary to subject applications for
patents to a preliminary examination relating exclu-
sively to the question of novelty as regards patents
previously delivered ;
_ 4. Patents shall only be registered after publica-
tion. In case of opposition patents shall be sub-
jected to a preliminary examination as regards the
degree of novelty of the invention. This examina-
tion shall be made by an administrative department,
against the decision of which appeal can be made to
a superior jurisdiction of the judicial order ;
5. Applications for patents are subjected to a pre-
liminary examination. This preliminary examina-
tion cannot entail rejection of the application by the
examiners, but the right of opposition shall be
granted to the administrative department, as well
as to third persons, by means of proper publicity.
Opposition entered according to law shall be dealt
with by the Courts of law.
Among these solutions of the difficulty of prelimi-
nary examination, French lawtakes the simple course
of applying the first, viz., that of delivering the patent
B2
TION.
French
system
4
Inrropuc-
TION.
German,
American,
and
British
systems,
Changes in
French Jaw
since 1844,
Examiners
under
British Act.
INTRODUCTION.
at the patentee’s own risk entirely; Germany and
the United States apply the system of preliminary
examination in its fullest sense, extending it to both
subject-matter and novelty; and in the United
Kingdom an intermediate system is applied (a).
The system in France is that of the law of 1844,
which has only been modified by the law of May 31,
1856. This Act altered Article 32 on the forfeiture
of patent rights (q.v., p. 54). Some exceptions
have been decreed from time to time to the same
Article on special grounds, but they have applied
only to temporary relief of the patentee against
forfeitures for non-payment of the annual fees, or
for non-working of the patent owing to industrial
or commercial disturbance caused by political events
(Arrété, February 25, 1849 ; Décrets, Sept. 10, 1870,
Oct. 14, 1870, Jan. 25, 1871; Arrété, July 5, 1871),
or to exhibits of patentees at French Exhibitions
(Laws of May 2, 1855, April 3, 1867, April 8, 1878,
and July 5, 1881).
The law of 1844 has also been completed by that
(a) Under the Act of 1883 a staff of examiners of patents
has been appointed, and though it was propesed in the Draft
Bill to invest these examiners with the duty of reporting to
the Comptroller on the subject-matter of the patent, the Act
confines their functions to ascertaining and reporting whether
the nature of the invention has been fairly described, whether
the application, specification, and drawings (if any) have been
prepared in the prescribed manner, and whether the title
sufficiently indicates the subject-matter of the invention
(Sect. 6). See Wallace’s Patents, &c. Act, 1883, p. 18.
PATENTS.
of May 28, 1868, on provisional certificates for the
protection of inventions shown at Exhibitions sanc-
tioned by Government, and new provisions in favour
of foreigners were introduced by the Industrial
Property Convention of 1883 (see p. 136).
Twice, moreover, private Acts have been passed
by Parliament, prolonging the duration of patents
in accordance with Article 15 of the law of 1844
(June 18, 1856, and August 1, 1860).
In 1858 the Government brought in a Bill super-
seding the law of 1844, with many alterations, the
most important of which was the power it granted
to the patentee to demand confirmation of his patent
after two years’ working of his invention; on con-
firmation the patent remained liable to forfeiture,
but could no longer be attacked as void ab initio.
This Bill, however, was allowed to drop, and no
further measure of reform has ever since been
seriously discussed in Parliament.
Thus in France a patent remains, as provided in
the law of 1844, merely a document certifying that
the patentee has made a declaration that the inven-
tion patented is his. It implies no sort of guarantee
of his title, the law even specially providing that he
shall add after the word ‘“breveté’’ (patented),
“‘sans garantie du gouvernement” (without guar-
antee of the government).
5
Intropuc-
TION.
Private
Acts pro-
longing
Patents.
Proposed.
reforms.
Principle
of French
Patent
law.
6
Intropvc-
TION.
Laws and
Regula-
tions
relating to
Trade
Marks,
Differences
between
British and
French
law.
INTRODUCTION.
TRADE-MARKS.
The French law of Trade Marks is of somewhat
more recent origin than that of Patents for Inven-
tions. It is contained in the law of June 23, 1857.
The Trade-Mark Rules provided for in Article 22
of that Act were issued on July 26 of the following
year (1858). The law of November 26, 1873, pro-
viding for a special stamp to be applied to Trade
Marks (sce p. 85), added some new provisions to
the law of 1857. Since then till now the law on
the subject has undergone no change, apart from the
alterations introduced in favour of the Contracting
States by the Convention of 1883 (sce p. 186).
The differences existing between the laws of
England and France in regard to patents are still
greater as regards trade-marks.
Under the English Act of 1888 the Comptroller,
if he thinks fit, may refuse to register a trade-mark,
subject to appeal to the Board of Trade, which in
turn may refer the appeal to the law courts (sec. 62).
Essential particulars as to what constitutes a trade-
mark are laid down (sec. 64): it must be registered
for particular goods or classes of goods (sec. 65) ;
two months are allowed for opposition after the first
advertisement of the application (sec. 59): a trade-
mark, when registered, can be transferred only in
connection with the good-will of the business to
which it belongs (sec. 70) ; the Comptroller, except
when the Court has decided that two or more
TRADE-MARKS.
7
persons are entitled to be registered as proprietors Po
of the same trade-mark, must decline to register, in
respect of the same goods or description of goods,
a trade-mark identical with one already on the re-
aister with respect to such goods or description of
goods (sec. 72), or in respect of the same goods or
description of goods a trade-mark so nearly re-
sembling a trade-mark already on the register as to
be calculated to deceive (sec 72). Lastly, the regis-
tration is primd facie evidence of the right to the
exclusive use of the trade-mark, and after the
expiry of five years from the date of registration is
conclusive evidence of the right to the exclusive use
of the mark (sec. 76), and no person is entitled to
institute proceedings for the infringement of a trade-
mark unless it bas been registered, if registration
is possible (sec. 77).
Thus the registration of a trade-mark in Great
Britain involves a preliminary examination, and is a
condition of ownership, and it raises a presumption
of the rightful property in the mark, which becomes
absolute after five years from the date of registra-
tion.
French law is based on exactly the reverse prin-
ciple. There is no preliminary examination. The
authorities will register any mark whatsoever: the
registration is only the affirmation of an alleged
right to the exclusive use of the mark, the property
in the mark existing independently of registration,
and no length of user of the mark can render the
No preli-
minary
examina-
tion.
8 INTRODUCTION.
TETRODUE: right to use it indefeasible. All registration does
-_——— is to raise a presumption of priority in favour of ;
Effect of : : -
registra’ the person registering it, and to give the real owner
ee a right of action against infringers. in the Correc/
tional as distinguished from the Commercial Courts,
thus protecting the owner by criminal and civil
instead of by civil remedies only.
oe A consequence of the theory of French law, that
without the trade-mark is like any other kind of rights, is
good-will. that it can be assigned without and independently
of the good-will of the business to which it
belongs.
No register Lastly, there is no register of assignments.
of assign-
ments,
DESIGNS AND MODELS.
Designs and models, of all kinds of industrial pro-
perty, have been the most neglected by the French
Legislature. In fact, they are practically only pro-
tected in virtue of a law of March 18, 1806, creating
Tawsand a Conseil de Prud’hommes for the town of Lyons.
nee The application of this enactment was later on
Designs ~~ extended by a royal ordinance to the whole country,
Models. but every attempt to bring the law into harmony
with present exigencies has as yet proved abortive.
The enactments relating to designs are as
follows :—
Law of July 19, 1798, on copyright (artistic
as distinguished from industrial) (b); the above-
, (0) The right to protection generally was originally depen:
DESIGNS AND MODELS.
mentioned law of March 18, 1806, as to a Conseil
9
cee
de Pru@’hommes for Lyons; Arts. 425, 426, and 427 ————
of the Penal Code (Feb., 1810); ordinance of
August 29, 1825, on the registration of designs;
and the Act of May 11, 1868, for the protection
of designs at public Exhibitions.
There is no law which specially relates to or
mentions models ; but, in practice, they are treated
as designs (c).
4
dent on Art. 1 of this Act. The protection of this article is
now held to be confined to artistic, or at least non-industrial,
as distinguished from industrial designs.
(c) The law relating to designs and models, as has been
remarked in the text, is in a very unsettled condition, and
though reform has ‘been on the tapis since 1847 and three
measures have been before Parliament at different times, viz.,
in 1847, 1864, 1877, no general act on the subject has yet
been adopted. The last attempt to legislate on the subject,
that made in 1877, was a bill drawn by M. Bozérian. It
passed through the Senate, but owing to pressure of other
legislation it has never been dealt with by the Chamber of
Deputies.
In his Exposé des Motifs M. Bozérian described the existing
confusion in the following terms :—“I confine myself to
reminding you that according to certain jurisconsults (their
opinion has not been confirmed by any judgment in appeal)
the ownership of trade models ought to be protected without
the necessity of any formality ; that according to some decisions
these models enjoy no protection by our laws (Paris, March 31,
1857 ; Annales de la Prop. Industrielle, 1857, p. 248) ; that
according to others again they are protected by the law of
July 19, 1793, but only when they have an artistic character
(Prop. Industrielle, Nos. 215 et 260); that according to still
others they are in all circumstances protected by this law
(Paris, August 13, 1837, quoted by Et. Blanc, De la Contrefagon,
?
Imperfec-
tions of
French law
of Designs
and
Models.
10
IntRopuc-
TION.
British and
French law
contrasted.
INTRODUCTION.
The principles of French law as regards designs
and models diverge, as they do from those of
Englishmen and British law, on nearly all the
matters treated of in this volume.
The British Act of 1883 limits the duration of
the protection of designs by registration to five
years (sec. 50) ; it gives the Comptroller discretion
to decline to register a design, subject to appeal
against his decision to the Board of Trade (secs. 47
and 48); before delivery on sale of any articles to
which a registered design has been applied, the:
proprietor of the design must mark each article’ |
with a prescribed mark or with words or figures
denoting that the design is registered (sec. 51;
rule 82) ; the application for registration must be
accompanied by specimens of the design (rule 9),
though, while the copyright exists, the design is not
open to inspection, except by the proprietor or by
authority of and in the presence of the Comptroller
(sec. 52). Lastly, the Comptroller may make
p. 311), in which case the registration would be public ; and that
others on the coutrary maintain they are in no circumstances
protected by this law, but are so by the law of March 18, 1806
(Cass., 2 August, 1854; Annales, 1856, p. 6), in which case
the registration is secret ; that lastly, according to the eclectics,
they are protected by the law of 1793, if they can be con-
sidered as works of art, and by that of 1806, if they are simply
industrial products (Cass., June 8, 1806, Prop. Ind., No. 145).
If jurisconsults have difficulty in finding their path amid
this judicial labyrinth, how can persons without any legal
training avoid mistakes which are often irreparable ? ’
DESIGNS AND MODELS,
Searches as to novelty (rule 35), and furnish in-
formation as to the existence of copyright (sec. 58),
on payment of prescribed fees.
French law, on the other hand, treats the regis-
tration of designs and models as a mere matter of
custody. Any person who deposits a sealed packet
in the prescribed form can assert ownership of the
design or model for three or five years or in perpe-
tuity on payment of the fees chargeable. The
contents of the packet are secret, known to the
depositor only. There is thus no preliminary ex-
amination or discretion whatsoever with the Regis-
trar, who simply gives a receipt for a sealed packet
containing certain designs or models, relating to the
manufacture specified, of the depositor. There is no
check upon the ignorance of the ‘‘ depositor” to
prevent disappointment where, for instance, the
thing registered as a design or model should have
been registered as a patent. There is no system of
marking goods for the protection of the public, no
system of searches or furnishing information, no
complete record of expired designs, and, in fact,
very little system at all. The designs and models
registered in Paris used to be transferred, after
expiry of the time for which they were deposited, to
the Industrial Arts Museum (Conservatoire des Arts
et Métiers), but this is no longer done. There is
therefore not even an ultimate benefit to the public
from granting provisional protection.
li
Intropuc-
TION
Registra-
tion a
matter of
custody.
Registrar
has no
discretion.
No system
of marking
goods
under re-
gistration, =»
12
Intropuc-
TION.
Enact-
ments
relating to
Merchan-
dise Marks
and Trade
Names.
Penal law
INTRODUCTION.
MERCHANDISE MARKS AND TRADE NAMES.
The law of merchandise marks and trade names
is no exception to the rule. It is incomplete, un-
certain, and in need of reform.
The laws under which trade names are at present
protected in France, apart from the International
Conyention for the Protection of Industrial Pro-
perty, are the Trade Names Act of July 28, 1824,
and Article 19 of the Trade Marks Act of June 23,
1857. The law of 1824 provides that any person
who shall affix, or by adding, shortening, or any
other alteration, shall cause to appear on manutfac-
tured goods the name of any manufacturer but their
real manufacturer, or the style of any manufactory
but that at which the goods were manufactured, or
the name of any place but that of manufacture, will
be liable to the penalties prescribed by Article 423
of the Penal Code, and to damages where they
exist, and that any merchant, commission agent, or
tradesman will be liable to prosecution who know-
ingly exhibits for sale or sells goods marked with
pretended or altered names.
The article of the Penal Code above referred to
provides that whosoever shall have deceived a pur-
chaser as to the nature of the goods sold, is liable
to imprisonment for from three months to one year,
and to a fine not exceeding one-fourth part of the
damages awarded, or less than fifty francs.
The above Statute only mentions manufacturers,
MERCHANDISE MARKS,
13
manufactured articles, manufactories, and places of Inzrovuc-
manufacture, and thus protects only manufacturers.
It does not protect merchants who place their names
or marks on articles offered for sale, but not manu-
factured by them.
The remedy of a merchant for the protection of
his name or mark is not under this Act but by civil
action for fraudulent competition under Article 1882
of the Civil Code (see p. 98).
Article 19 of the Law of 1857 provides that ‘all
foreign articles bearing either the trade-mark or
name of a manufacturer residing in France, or the
mame or place of a French factory, are prohibited
from entering or passing through France, or being
warehoused there, and may be seized wherever
found, either by the Customs authorities, or at the
imstance of the Public Procurator, or of a person
whose rights are infringed.”
The wording of this statute, as is seen, is absolute.
Tt does not distinguish between a case where there
is fraudulent intent and cases where there is none.
TION.
protects
manufac-
turers’
marks
only.
Merchants"
marks,
Checks on
importa-
tion of
falsely
marked
goods.
The Court of Cassation, however, by a decision of Old ruling
April 9, 1864, declared the above Article 19 of the
Law of 1857 applicable only in case of fraudulent
“‘ usurpation,” and that, consequently, there was no
offence where a manufacturer had caused or per-
mitted his name or mark to be placed on goods
manufactured abroad. In other words, the statute
did not protect the public, but manufacturers only.
A Ministerial Circular, issued on June 8, 1864, gave
of Court of
Cassation.
14
IntTRopuc-
TION.
New ruling.
Elbeuf on
collective
reputation.
INTRODUCTION.
instructions for the application of Article 19 of the
Law of 1857 in this sense (d).
The Court of Cassation, in 1884, however, sud-
denly veered round, decided that its ruling of 1864
was misunderstood, and rushed into the opposite
extreme. It found that Article 1 of the the Law of
July 28, 1824, ‘‘ prohibits absolutely and punishes
the placing on industrial products of the name of
any place other than that of manufacture, or the
causing of its appearance by means of any altera-
tion; and that the principles laid down by this Law.
have been maintained and confirmed by Article 19 :
of the Law of 23rd June, 1857, by the terms of
which all foreign products bearing either the mark
or the name of a manufacturer residing in France,
(d) The circular of June 8, 1864, gave rise to agitation in
several of the industrial centres at the time, but nothing was
done for twenty years to give satisfaction to the complainants,
‘The reputation of the manufactures of our district,” said
the Chamber of Commerce of Elbeuf, “is due to the dexterity
and honesty of the manufacturers as well as to the choice of the
good materials they particularly employ. This reputation
makes the name of the town a collective property as valuable
and as much to be respected as the individual name of each
manufacturer. Under the decision of the Court of Cassation any
manufacturer of Elbeuf could get cloths manufactured in Eng-
land or Belgium with inferior materials, introduce them into
France, and with fraudulent intent mark them with his name
and the name of this town. It is easy to see what may be the
consequences of this decision, and what frauds may result
from it. Mere men of straw might introduce into France
quantities of objects of foreign manufacture bearing the names
of French places of manufacture.”
“MERCHANDISE MARKS,
or the name or place of a French manufactory, are
prohibited from entry, excluded from transit or
warehousing, and may be seized wherever found,
either at the instance of the Customs authorities, or
of the Public Procurator, or of any person whose
interest is affected” (e). This new decision ren-
dered it requisite for M. Lockroy, then Minister
of Commerce, to recall the instructions contained
in the Ministerial Circular of June 8, 1864, and
to issue a fresh Circular, in virtue of which for
the future all goods without distinction, coming
from abroad, and bearing the mark or name of a
French manufacturer or locality, or even a name
from which it. might be inferred that the articles
were of French origin, are to be seized. A number
of seizures have been made by the authorities in
consequence of these instructions.
The ruling of the Court of Cassation seems, how-
ever, to have been misunderstood again, for the
Courts of Law have not upheld a number of seizures
which were apparently in accordance with the de-
cision of the Court of Cassation and Ministerial
Circular (f).:
In presence of the uncertainty of the law, M.
Lockroy, as Minister of Commerce, brought in a
Bill for ratifying, by a legislative enactment, the
(e) Court of Cassation, February 23, 1884,
(f) See summary of the different rulings, p. 100. See also
my articles in the Law Magazine and Review, May, 1888, and
in the Law Quarterly Review, April, 1887.
15
Intropvc-
TION.
M. Lock-
roy’s
Circular.
Proposed
legislation.
16
INTRODUCTION.
Intropvc- Jater ruling of the Court of Cassation. M. Lockroy
TION.
M. Dietz-
Monnin’s
Bill.
M. Lock-
roy’s bill,
was not aware that M. Bozérian had laid a Bill
on the table of the Senate as long ago as 1879.
This Bill dealt with the fraudulent use of trade
names and medals and rewards. It was subse-
quently divided into separate bills, of which that
relating to medals and rewards passed into law in
1887 (sce pp. 123 et seq.). The other was adjourned
for inquiry by a Special Committee of the Senate,
and the report of this Committee, drawn up by M.
Dietz-Monnin, was published also in 1887.
The general opinion of the Committee was that
there should not be a mere amending law, and that,
in view of the advantage thereof to mercantile men,
the subject should form the matter of a single con-
solidation Bill.
A general Bill, in thirty articles, was therefore
brought in by M. Dietz-Monnin, and thereafter a
counter-Bill by M. Bozérian, dealing specially with
the question of fraudulent marks employed for the
purpose of representing commodities, manufactured
or coming from abroad, as of French origin.
M. Lockroy withdrew his Bill on Jearning that |
the discussion of the matter was already so far
advanced.
M. Lockroy’s Bill made an offence of the bare
placing on goods of the name of any place
other than that of their origin. This was a pro-
vision in accordance with what was supposed to be
the current ruling of the Court of Cassation, and
MERCHANDISE MARKS,
would have been similar in effect to the British
Merchandise Marks Act.
M. Dietz-Monnin’s Bill grants ‘the same protec-
tion to Merchandise Marks and Trade Names as to
Trade-Marks under the Law of 1857 (q).
M. Bozérian’s Bill provides as follows :
Art. I. “ A fine of 1000 to 5000 francs and im-
prisonment of from three months to three years, or
one of the two, shall be imposed upon :—
“©(1.) Those who, with fraudulent intent, have
placed on goods either manufactured or
coming from abroad, or on wrappers,
bands, or labels, any names, marks, signs,
or indications destined to make believe
(destinés & faire croire) that the goods
have been manufactured in or come
from France. ;
*©(2.) Those who, with the same intent, have
employed fraudulent means or’ com-
binations of a nature to deceive (de
nature & tromper) in regard to the true
origin of goods.
“«(3.) Those who fail to indicate the country,
when goods are manufactured in or come
from a foreign locality bearing a name
similar to that of a French locality.
‘*(4.) Those who have knowingly sold, exhibited
for sale, introduced or endeavoured to
(g) Arts. 12, 17, 18, 19.
B.P. Cc
17
Intropve-
TION.
M. Bozé-
rian’s Bill.
18
IntRopUg-
TION.
French law
- of torts.
Meaning of
‘*fraudu-
lent compe-
tition.”
INTRODUCTION.
introduce into France, or put into cir-
culation such goods.”
The clause proposed by M. Bozérian, it is seen,
distinguishes between innocent and fraudulent cases,
by making fraudulent intent the criterion.
No decided course has yet been adopted by the
French Legislature, which has shelved the question
again on the pretext of making a fresh inquiry
among the representative trade corporations.
FRAUDULENT COMPETITION.
A number of frauds which would, or might be,
repressed in England by injunction, fall in France
under the application of Article 1882-of the Civil
Code, which is the foundation of the French law of
torts. This Article is as follows: ‘‘ Every act
whatsoever of a man which causes damage to
another, renders the person by whose fault it has
occurred liable to repair it.” Such acts are con-
veniently summed up, in connexion with trade com-
petition, under the term concurrence déloyale, or
“fraudulent competition.” Under this heading,
which comprises many things beyond the scope of
this work, fall imitations in the form or colour of
wrappers, bottles, boxes, prospectuses, and all kinds
of frauds not specifically dealt with by other enact-
ments.
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY AT EXHIBITIONS.
EXHIBITION MEDALS AND REWARDS.
A recent law, to which reference has been made
above (see p. 16), specifically deals with Exhibi-
tion Medals and Rewards, and represses the fraudu-
lent assumption and use of such prizes.
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY AT EXHIBITIONS.
Another subject connected with Exhibitions is
the protection of Patents and Designs at indus-
trial gatherings. Novelty, as we have seen, is
a condition of validity of the grant of a patent or
of the registration of a design. A system of provi-
sional protection was introduced by an Act of 1868
which enables poor exhibitors and such as have not
completed the formalities of registration or merely
desire provisional protection, to obtain it gratuit-
ously for the duration of the Exhibition and three
months after. As regards British subjects the In-
ternational Industrial Property Convention of 1883
grants special delays of priority in favour of the
subjects and citizens of the States belonging to it.
However, British Colonies, except Queensland, have
not yet taken advantage of Sec. 104 of the Patents,
Designs and Trade-Marks Act, 1883, which provides
for their joining the Union, and meanwhile the
ordinary law of France applies to them.
o2
19
IntRopvo-
TION.
Temporary
protection
at Exhibi-
tions.
British
Colonies
outside the
Union.
20
IntRopuc-
TION.
Origin of
the Con-
vention.
Accession
of British
Govern-
ment.
INTRODUCTION.
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY: CONVENTION.
This Convention and the scheme of a Union for
the protection of Industrial Property, resembling
in some sort the Postal Union, sprang from a Con-
gress which was held at the Exhibition of Vienna
in 1878. The question was taken up again at the
Paris Exhibition of 1878. An elaborate discussion,
the official report of which is one of the most com-
plete and valuable collections of opinions on the
subject extant, laid a solid foundation on which
some practical structure could be raised. On the
proposal of an Italian delegate, Mr. Romanelli, a
permanent committee was appointed, and in 1880,
under its impulsion (as appeared from the opening
speech of M. Teisserenc de Bort, then Minister of
Commerce,) the French Government called an
official conference to draw up a convention. This
conference, which was attended by Mr. H. Reader
Lack, the Comptroller-General of the Patent Office,
on behalf of the United Kingdom, and by official
delegates from fifteen other States, acquitted itself
very creditably of its difficult task. A scheme was
drawn up, which the negotiating States took time to
consider, and when the delegates met again in 1883,
this scheme, with but slight modifications, was
adopted. It was promulgated by France on the
6th—8th July, 1884, and the British Government,
under sec. 103 of the Patents, Designs and Trade-
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY CONVENTION.
Marks Act, 1888, joined the Union on the 17th
March, 1884.
Though the Convention was so warmly promoted
by the French Government, and the three Confer-
ences from which it directly sprang were all held in
Paris, it has never been very popular in France.
Many persons, anxious as they were to secure pro-
tection for French industrial property abroad, did
not wish to grant like protection to foreigners. —-
PART I.
GENERAL PROVISIONS.
Art. I.—§ 1. A new discovery or invention, in
any department of industry (a), confers on its
author, under the conditions and for the periods
hereinafter fixed, the exclusive right of working the
said discovery or invention for his own benefit.
§ 2. This right is certified by a document delivered
by Government called “ brevet d’ invention” (Letters
Patent).
(a) The discovery or invention must not only be new but
must also have an industrial application. See also Art. 30.
The divulging of an invention before the lodging of the
application does not entail nullity of the patent unless it is
sufficient to render possible the working of the invention.
For instance it has been held that a patent is not void where
the facts on which the alleged publication is based are drawn
from the period of the experiments made to bring the inven-
tion to perfection, or during the period of manufacture of the
apparatus when lacking one of ‘its characteristic elements.
(Cass. July 2, 1884.) Compare Art. 31.
B.P. D
Part I,
General
Provisions.
Industrial
applica-
tion.
Prior
publica-
tion,
34
Part I,
Novelty.
Bare
principle.
Non-
patentable
inventions.
Medica-
ments,
Ministerial
PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS.
Art. II.—The following. shall be deemed new
inventions or discoveries :— .
The invention of new industrial products (a).
The invention of new means, or the new appli-
ance of means already known, for obtaining an
industrial result or product (0).
(a) A product to be held an industrial product must be
marketable. Higher commercial value is held to be evidence
of novelty.
(6) A bare principle is not patentable ; if a principle is
applied to a practical industrial result, it ceases to be a bare
principle. Wherever there is an industrial appliance, the
principle becomes patentable.
It has been held that a new system of teaching or writing is
not patentable, because it does not appertain to what is classed
as “industrial.” See Art. 3 (a), and Art. 30 (3).
Arr. III.—The following are not patentable :—
1st. Pharmaceutical compounds or remedies of
any kind, these remaining subject to the special
laws and regulations relating to such substances,
and more especially to the decree of August 18,
1810, concerning secret remedies (a).
2nd. Financial plans and schemes (0).
(a) Thus medicines cannot be patented as such. This,
however, does not apply to substances for enveloping medicines
or for disguising their taste. Moreover, where the substance
is used for some purpose beyond a medicinal one, as for
painting, it may be patented for this further employment.
Neither cosmetics nor food compounds are medicines.
Modes of manufacture, though for the purpose of manu-
facturing medicines, are patentable.
(b) The ministerial circular to the registering officials, dated
GENERAL PROVISIONS.
‘October 1, 1844, provides, as regards non-patentable inven-
tions, that applicants shall be reminded—
“(1.) That no patents can be delivered for pharmaceutical
compositions and remedies of any kind, or for finan-
cial schemes or combinations ;
“(2.) That patents delivered for scientific or theoretical prin-
ciples, methods, systems, discoveries or conceptions
without industrial application are ipso facto null and
void.
“This explanation,” it continues, “if well understood, will
always decide inventors to abandon an application which could
only lead to a title without effect ; but if, contrary to my ex-
pectation, it should be otherwise, your Prefecture should not
lose sight of the fact that as regards patents solicited for prin-
ciples without industrial application, Government has not the
right to refuse to register them, and must consequently limit
its action to a semi-official warning, and as regards pharma-
ceutical preparations or financial schemes, that the law has
given to the minister of agriculture and commerce exclusively,
and not to the prefectures, the right of refusing to grant a
patent.
“Tn both cases then the applications must be registered, and
the formalities prescribed by law fulfilled.”
The documents are forwarded to the Minister of Commerce
See Art. XI. (a).
Art. IV.—§ 1. The duration of a patent shall be
five, ten, or fifteen years.
§ 2. The fees payable are as follows:
Five hundred francs for a Patent of five
years ;
One thousand franes for a Patent of ten
years ;
Fifteen hundred francs for a Patent of
fifteen years.
§ 3. These fees shall be paid. by yearly instal-
D2
3a
Parr I.
instruc-
tions as
to non-
patentable
inventions.
Duration.
Fees |
payable. °
36
Parr I.
Effect of
non-pay-
ment of an
annuity.
Parr II.
Mode of
applica-
tion.
PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS.
ments of one hundred francs, under penalty of
forfeiture of the Patent, if the Patentee leaves an
instalment unpaid (a).
(a) The non-payment of an instalment before the commence-
ment of the year for which it is due, entails forfeiture of all
rights. Payment may be made during the whole anniversary
day of the deposit of the application. It this day is a public
holiday the payment must be made on the next preceding day.
Vis major is only admitted as an excuse where a material
obstruction is clearly proven.
PART II.
FORMALITIES RESPECTING THE GRANT OF
PATENTS.
Section I.
Application for Patent.
Arr. V.—Any person (a) wishing to take out a
Patent must deposit under seal at the office of the
Secretary of the Prefecture of the department in
which he is domiciled or in any other department
on electing his domicile there :— =
Ist. His application to the Minister of Agricul-
ture and Commerce (0b); .
2nd. A description (specification) of the dis-
covery, invention, or appliance forming the
subject of the application ;
APPLICATION FOR PATENT,
3rd. The drawings or samples necessary to
render the above description intelligible (c) ; and
4th. A memorandum of the documents deposited.
(a) Any person may apply for a patent. All that is
requisite is that the application be made in accordance with
the ‘formalities provided by law. The authorities do not
make any enquiries as to the applicant’s title to the invention,
discovery or improvement. See Art. 3 (a).
A Patent may be taken out by a person who is not in the
enjoyment of full civil rights, eg., by a married woman or a
minor.
(b) No particular form of application is necessary.
(c) It is always advisable to add drawings or samples, even
though they may seem unnecessary, if they in the least render
the specification more intelligible.
Art. VI.—§ 1. The application shall be limited
to a single principal object, with the details consti-
tuting it, and the employments (applications) thereof
indicated (a).
It shall mention the period for which the appli-
cants desire to take out their patent, within the
limits fixed by Art. 4, and shall contain no condi-
tions, or reservations (0).
It shall indicate a title containing a summary
and precise designation of the object of the in-
vention (c, d).
§ 2. The description (specification) shall not be
written in a foreign language (e). It shall contain
no alterations, or words written over others. Words
obliterated shall be counted and verified, and the
pages and references initialed (f, g, h).
37
Part II.
Who may
apply for
Letters-
patent.
Contents of
application.
Specifica-
tion,
38
Part II.
Metric
scale.
Documents
to be
signed by
applicant.
Effect of
reserva-
tions.
False or
insufficient
title.
PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS.
Denominations of weights or measures other than
those inserted in the table annexed to the Act of
July 4, 1887, are forbidden (2).
§ 3. The drawings must be traced in ink (J), and
according to the metric scale.
§ 4. A duplicate of the description (specification)
and drawings shall be annexed to the application.
§ 5. All documents shall be signed by the appli-
cant or by his agent, whose power of attorney (k)
shall be appended to the application.
(a) The object of this provision is to prevent a patentee
from escaping the payment of fees, by taking out a single
patent for more than one invention.
Great care must be exercised in indicating the employments
to which the invention is applicable. The decisions tend more
and more to restrict protection to the employments indicated
in the application.
(b) The patent is none the less valid though restrictions,
conditions or reservations have been left standing or over-
looked by the authorities. They are simply without effect.
This does not apply to modified applications of the same in-.
vention, these not being considered as restrictions, conditions or
reservations. Thus, where an inventor of a metal band for
preventing perspiration-marks in hats added that he reserved
the manufacturing of such bands from wood, bark, cork, etc.,
this was held valid.
(c) A false title given with fraudulent intent avoids the
patent (Art. 30, § 5).
Insufficiency of the title of a patent only renders the patent
void where there is intent to deceive. (Paris, July 1, 1870.)
(d) The applicant may amend the title until the patent is,
delivered.
(e) Technical words borrowed from a foreign language are
of course permitted where French equivalents do not exist.
APPLICATION FOR PATENT.
(f) The applicant, however, may amend his specification
at any time, until delivery of the Patent.
(g) Art. 30, Clause 6, provides for what shall constitute a
sufficient specification.
(z) The specification need not be written on stamped paper.
(2) The Act of July 4, 1837, rendered the metric system
compulsory throughout France.
(j) Engraving or lithography are permitted and communi-
cation to an engraver or lithographer does not deprive the
invention of novelty, provided it is not communicated through
him to others. Most authorities, however, dissuade inventors
from employing ordinary engravers and lithographers to make .
the drawings.
(&) The signature of the power of attorney should be
authenticated abroad by a French Consul or local magistrate
(eg-, mayor). Recent practice, however, dispenses with such
authentication (legalisation).
Arr. VII.—§ 1. No deposit of documents shall be
received except on production of a receipt showing
the payment (a) of the sum of one hundred francs
on account of the Patent fees (b).
§ 2. A statement entered free of charge by the
General Secretary of the Prefecture on a special
register, and signed by the applicant, shall record
every such deposit, and state the day and hour
when the documents were handed in (c).
§ 8. A copy of the said statement shall be de-
livered to the depositor on payment of the amount
of the stamp duty.
(a) This payment is made in Paris at the Recette Générale,
and in the departments at the office of the Recevewr Central.
(b) Though on account, it does not of itself pledge the
applicant to continue the payment of further fees.
(c) Priority of application is primd facie evidence of priority
39:
Part IT
Communi-
cation to
engravers
and litho-
graphers.
Legalisa-
tion
of power of
attorney,
Payment o-
fees first
step.
Deposit of
documents.
Fees where
payable.
Priority of
right.
40
Part II,
Remedy in
case of
fraud or
abuse of
trust,
Extension
of time
under
Inter-
national
Conven-
tion.
Whence
duration
runs,
PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS.
of right. However, this presumption may be rebutted by evi- ©
dence that the subject-matter of the application had already
been discovered by a subsequent applicant when the first
application was made.
Where a person has appropriated and patented a new idea,
by fraud or by abuse of trust, the real inventor may claim the
’ patent fraudulently taken out (Paris, Nov. 25, 1885, and |
Cass., June 24, 1886), and obtain a judicial order for his sub-'
rogation in the rights conferred by the Joftansipitent fraudu- |
lently taken out. ,
The Court may, however, decline to grant permission to
alter the name falsely entered on the register, in which case
the subrogated inventor acts in the name of the false patentee.
By the International Convention of 1883, any person
belonging to a State forming part of the Union, who has duly
registered an application for a patent, design, model or trade
mark in one of the contracting states, enjoys, as regards regis-
tration in the other states, and subject to the rights of third
parties, a right of priority during six months for patents and
three months for designs, models and trade' marks, a month
longer being allowed for countries beyond the sea, ‘ Conse-
quently, subsequent registration in any of the other states of
the Union, before expiry of, these periods, shall not be invali-
dated through any acts accomplished in the interval, either for
instance, by registration, by publication of the invention, or by
the working of it by a third party, by the sale of copies of the
design or model, or by use of the trade mark,” (Art. 4 of the
Convention, see p. 188.)
Art. VIII.—The duration of the Patent shall run
from the date of the deposit of documents prescribed
by Article 5.
DELIVERY OF LETTERS PATENT.
Section IT.
Delivery of Letters Patent.
Arr. IX.—Immediately after registration of the
application, and within five days from the date of
the deposit, the Prefects shall forward the docu-
ments, under seal of the inventor, to the Minister
of Agriculture and Commerce, adding thereto a
certified copy of the minute recording the deposit,
the receipt for payment of the fees, and the power
of attorney, should there be one, mentioned in
Article 6.
Art. X.—On the arrival of the documents at the
Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce, they shall
be opened, the applications registered, and the
Letters Patent drawn up in the order of receipt of
the applications.
Arr. XI.—§ 1. Patents applied for in due form
shall be granted, without previous examination (a),
at the applicant’s own risk, and without guarantee
as to either the reality, novelty or merit of the
invention, or the accuracy of the description (specifi-
cation) (6).
§ 2. An order of the Minister, certifying the regu-
larity of the application, shall be delivered to the
applicant and shall constitute the Letters Patent.
To this order shall be annexed the certified duplicate
of the specification and drawings mentioned in
Article 6, after its conformity with the original
41
Part I.
eat
of Letters-
patent.
No pre-
liminary
examina-
tion
or
guarantee.
Parr II.
Fees for
copies,
Articles
of food.
Rejection
of applica-
tion.
Official
periodical
PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS.
copy has been verified and, if necessary, authenti-
cated. .
§ 8. The first copy of the Letters Patent is
delivered free of cost.
§ 4. For all subsequent copies required by the
patentee or others entitled through him, a fee of
twenty-five francs shall be charged.
§ 5. The cost of drawings, if necessary, shall be
borne by the applicant.
(a) This does not apply to articles of food or articles de-
scribed by the applicant as articles of food. The Ministry of
Commerce is entitled to examine all such articles for the pur-
pose of ascertaining whether they are pharmaceutical. See
Art. 3 and note (b) thereon.
(b) Comp. Art. 33.
Art. XII,—AII applications in which the formali-
ties prescribed by paragraphs 2 and 3 of Article 6
have not been observed, shall be rejected; half the
sum paid shall belong to and be retained by the
Treasury ; but the whole amount will be placed to
the credit of the applicant provided he renews his
application within three months, reckoning from the
date of notice of the rejection of his application.
Art. XIJI.—Whenever, pursuant to Article 3, a
Patent cannot be granted, the fee shall be refunded.
Arr. XIV.—A Royal Ordinance inserted in the
Bulletin des Lois shall every three months make
known the Patents delivered (a).
(a) Clause 5 of the Protocol of the International Convention
provides that each country of the Union shall publish, if prac-’
ticable, an official newspaper in connection with the special.
CERTIFICATES OF ADDITION.
Government Department which by Art. 12 of the Convention
the High Contracting Parties have severally agreed to establish.
See p. 150.
The French Government, in accordance with this provision,
founded an official periodical called the Bulletin Officiel de la
Propriété Industrielle et Commerciale, published weekly, in
which the Patents taken out during the week, the assignments
of Patents and all registered trade-marks are recorded.
Arr. XV.—The duration of a Patent cannot be
extended except by an Act of Parliament (a).
(a) Thus Government is not entitled to prolong a Patent to
fifteen years which has been taken out for a shorter period,
such as five and ten years (Cons. W’Etat, June 28, 1855).
Comp. Art. 4, § 1.
See Introduction (p. 5) as to cases in which patents have
been prolonged by Act of Parliament.
Section III.
Certificates of Addition.
Arr. XVI.—§ 1. ‘The patentee or others entitled
through him, during the whole duration of the
Patent, shall have the right to make alterations
and improvements in\or additions to the invention
provided the application is made in accordance with
the formalities prescribed by Articles 5, 6 and 7.
43
Parr II,
Extension
of Patent.
: Improve-
ment
certificates.
§ 2. These alterations, improvements or additions.
shall be authenticated by certificates delivered in the
same form as the principal Patent, and shall have
from the respective dates of the applications and
44
PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS.
Parr IL delivery thereof the same effect as the said principal
Fee
payable.
Improve-
ment
Patent.
Principal
Patentee’s
prior right.
Patent, with which they shall terminate (a).
§ 8. The fee for the application for a Certificate
of Addition is twenty francs.
§ 4. A-Certificate of Addition taken out by one of
those entitled shall avail for all the others (0).
(a) Where the Patent, however, is only partly annulled, the
Certificate of Addition may continue valid provided it relate
to the part of the invention still protected. (Cass., June 13,
1858.)
(b) This is not the case where one of the assignees of the
Patent takes out a principal Patent for the addition, as
provided for by Art. 17. Such a Patent does not avail for
the other assignees.
Compare Art, 22.
Art. XVII.—A patentee who wishes to take out
for an alteration, improvement or addition a principal
Patent of five, ten or fifteen years, instead of a
Certificate of Addition expiring with the original
Patent, must comply with the formalities prescribed
by Articles 5, 6 and 7, and pay the fees mentioned
in Article 4.
Arr. XVITI.—§ 1. Nobody but the patentee or
those entitled through him, acting as above men-.
tioned, can, during one year (a), take out a valid,
Patent for an alteration, improvement or addition
to the invention forming the subject matter of the
original Patent.
§ 2. Nevertheless, any person who wishes to take
out a Patent for an alteration, addition or improve-
ment in a discovery already patented, may, during
CERTIFICATES OF ADDITION.
the said year, make an application, which will be Part II.
transmitted to the Ministry of Agriculture and
Commerce and be there kept under seal.
§ 3. At the end of the year the seal will be broken
and the Patent delivered.
§ 4. The original patentee, however, shall have
the preference in all alterations, improvements and
additions for which he has himself demanded a Cer-
tificate of Addition or a Patent in the course of the
year.
(a) By Art. 4 of the International Convention, any person
who has duly registered an application for a Patent in one of
the contracting States, enjoys as regards registration in the
other states a right of priority during six months, with a
month longer for countries beyond sea. This applies under
paragraph 2 of the protocol also to improvement patents, etc.
Thus, combining Art. 4 of the Convention with Art. 18 of the
Patent Law, the patentee of an improvement in any of the
States of the Union has now, it has been contended, a right
of priority in France during eighteen months. This, how-
ever, is not to be relied upon, and is founded on a false con-
struction of the terms of ithe Convention.
Art. XIX.—To take out a Patent for a discovery,
invention, or appliance connected with the subject
matter of another Patent does not confer a right to
work the invention already patented (a), nor can the
original patentee work the invention which forms
the subject matter of the new Patent.
(a) Of course, where the improvement relates to an inven-
tion the patent of which has expired, this Article does not
apply (Lyons, Dec. 17, 1873).
45
46
Part II,
Formalities
of assign-
ment.
‘LICENSES.
PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS.
Section IV.
Assignment and Transfer of Patents.
Art. XX.—§ 1. A patentee may assign the total
or partial ownership of his Patent (a).
§ 2. The total or partial assignment of a Patent,
whether as a gift or for a valuable consideration,
‘must be by notarial deed and after payment of the
whole of the fees prescribed by Article 4 (0).
§ 8. No assignment shall be valid, as regards
third persons, until it has been registered at the
‘Seeretary’s Office of the Prefecture of the Depart-
ment in which the deed has been executed (c).
§ 4. The registration of the deed of assignment
and of any other document effecting a change of
ownership shall be made on the production and
deposit of a certified extract of such deed or
document.
§ 5. A copy of every minute of registration, to-
gether with the extract from the deed or document
‘above mentioned shall be forwarded by the Prefects
to the Minister of Agriculture and Commerce within
five days after the date of the said minute (d).
(a) Thus the patentee may assign the right of sale while
retaining the right of manufacture and vice versd, or limit the
assignment for a certain duration of time or to a certain dis-
trict. If moreover the invention is applicable to different
objects, the patentee may assign each application separately.
(6) A simple right to work the Patent or license can be
granted without assigning any part of the ownership.
ASSIGNMENT AND TRANSFER OF PATENTS,
A license is distinguishable by the fact that the licensee can-
not bring an action against infringers of the patent in his own
‘name, and that the patentee can grant similar licenses to other
persons.
For the assignment of a license no special form is requisite ;
it need not be by notarial deed and it need not be registered,
though fiscal registration may be desirable for the purpose of
fixing the date of the license in an indisputable manner. The
parties, however, should be careful to limit the right assigned,
so as not really to grant a property in the Patent.
The license can be granted without paying up all the fees
prescribed by § 2 of this article.
' It has been decided that the transfer of a right to manufac-
ture and sell patented machinery only constitutes a working
‘license (Cass., March 8, 1853).
The-same applies to the transfer of the right of working in
‘a specified place, when the licensee cannot part with his rights
or bring an action for infringement (Rouen, June 10, 1868, and
‘Cass., April 27, 1869).
But there is a real transfer where the patentee assigns his
right of working the patent in a specified place for a certain
‘time, otherwise without restriction (Metz, July 6, 1865 ; Rouen,
January 2, 1869). This is especially so where the patentee
has authorized the transferee to make similar transfers and
pursue infringers (Cass., Nov. 24, 1866).
The character of the license is not affected by the fact that
it is stipulated that the licensee shall pay the annuities (Cass.,
May 29, 1877).
(c) As between the immediate parties an ordinary agreement
is binding.
The rule that registration is requisite to pass-the property
of the patent as against third persons is not an absolute one,
inasmuch as the executor or administrator of a patentee can
bring an action against infringers without having registered
the documents establishing his title, although as against third
persons non-registration might in other ways be prejudicial
(Cass., August 10, 1849).
Where the assignment is executed in a foreign country, it
should be made in form according to the laws of that country,
47
Part IT.
Form.
Fees.
Distin-
guishing
features.
Registra-
tion of as-
signment.
Assignment
executed
abroad.
48
Parr IL.
Form of
power of
attorney.
Registra-
tion fee.
Registra-
tion of as-
signment
executed
abroad.
Ministerial
instruc- °‘
tions as to
assign-
ments.
PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS.
but a notarial deed executed in the United Kingdom should be
made.before a French consular agent to avoid risk.
(d) French law requires that the power of attorney to be
used in a notarial transfer shall likewise be notarial (Rouen,
June 15, 1867; Cass., April 27, 1869).
With this registration must not be confounded the fiscal
registration imposed on all deeds of transfer. The registration
at the Prefecture is free of charge. The fiscal registration
duty is two per cent. of the price. (See p. 30).
No time is fixed within which this registration should
take place, but it is the interest of the transferee that it should
be effected as soon as possible.
Where the transfer has been executed abroad, it should
be registered at the Prefecture of the Seine.
(d) A ministerial circular, issued on October 31, 1844, pro-
vides as follows :—
“ Applications for transfer can only be admitted on the pro-
duction and deposit of— i
“(1.) The receipt proving the payment within the pre-
scribed period of the last annuity due, other than
the first ; .
“(2.) A receipt from the Receiver-General of taxes in’ the
department, or in -Paris of the Recevewr central,
proving full payment of all the annuities; and
“(3.) A certified extract of a notarial deed, executed before
a notary of the department, and setting forth the
total or partial transfer of the patent, ahethes with
or without valuable consideration.
“ However, should the patent have already been the subject
of a previous transfer, a copy of the minute of registration of
the said transfer, and the certified extract of the notarial deed
above mentioned, will be sufficient for registration. A minute
drawn up in the presence of the applicant, and signed by
him, will set forth the deposit of the above mentioned docu-
ments, and state the names, occupation, and domicile of the
applicant, if other than the patentee, of the assignor and of the
transferee ; the precise designation of the patent ; the nature
of the rights assigned to the transferee ; 3 and such conditions
of the said pranice as affect the property in the patent.”
ASSIGNMENT AND TRANSFER OF PATENTS.
Art. XXI—At the Ministry of Agriculture and
Commerce, a register shall be kept in which shall
be entered all changes in the ownership of Patents,
and every three months a Royal order shall make
known, in the form prescribed by Article 14, the
changes of ownership registered during the three
next preceding months.
Art. XXII.—§ 1. The assignees of a Patent and
those who may have acquired from a patentee or
those entitled through him the right to work the
discovery or invention shall have the benefit of
any Certificates of Addition, delivered to the patentee
or those entitled through him at a later date (a).
Reciprocally, the patentee or those entitled through
him shall have the benefit of Certificates of Addition
delivered at a later date to the assignees.
§ 2. Any person who has a right to make use of a
Certificate of Addition may obtain a copy thereof
at the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce on
payment of a fee of twenty francs.
(a) This does not apply to principal Patents taken out for
improvements under Art. 17, subject, however, to any right
of action -by the transferee in case of fraud or damage by the
transferor.
Section V.
\
Publication and Inspection of Specifications and
Drawings of Patents.
Arr. XXIII.—§ 1. All specifications, drawings
and specimens of Patents delivered shall, until
BP. E
49
Parr II.
Centralisa-
tion of
assign-
ments.
Rights of
assignees
as to
certificates
of improve-
ments.
Copies of
certificates
of improve-
ments.
Inspection
of specifi-
cations.
50
Part II.
Copies
of specifi-
cations.
Catalogue
of Patents.
Inspection
thereof.
Specifica-
tions and
drawings
of expired
Patents.
PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS.
expiration of such Patents, remain deposited at the
Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce, where they
may be inspected free of charge on demand.
§ 2. Any person may obtain, at his own expense,
a copy of the said specifications and drawings in
the manner set forth in the regulations to be issued
pursuant to Article 50.
Art. XXIV.—§ 1. After payment of the second
annual fee the specifications and drawings shall be
published either verbatim or by extract.
§ 2. At the beginning of each year also a cata-
logue shall be published giving the titles of the
Patents delivered in the course of the preceding
year.
Art. XXV.—The collection of specifications and
drawings and the catalogue published in accordance
with the preceding Article shall be deposited at the
Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce and at the
Secretary’s office of the Prefecture of each Depart-
ment, where they may be inspected free of charge.
Arr. XXVJ.—On expiry of a Patent the originals
of the specifications and drawings shall be deposited
at the Conservatoire des Arts et Métiers.
THE RIGHTS OF FOREIGNERS.
PART TIL.
THE RIGHTS OF FOREIGNERS.
Art. XXVII.—Foreigners (a) may obtain Patents
for inventions in France.
(a) This applies to all foreigners, whether resident in France
or not.
By Art. 3 of the International Convention subjects or
citizens of States not forming part of the Union, who are
domiciled or have industrial or commercial establishments on
the territory of any of the States of the Union, are assimilated
to the subjects or citizens of the contracting States.
By Art. 2 of the same Convention subjects or citizens
of the contracting States enjoy in all the other States of the
Union the same protection that the laws of these respective
States now grant or shall hereafter grant to their own subjects
or citizens, provided they observe the formalities and conditions
imposed on its own subjects or citizens by the internal legisla-
tion of each State.
This article must be read in conjunction with clause 3 of
the closing protocol, which provides that it shall not affect legal
procedure. Therefore the rules as to security for costs are not
modified. Art. 34 of the Patent Law places all litigation
relating to the ownership of Patents under the jurisdiction
of the civil as distinguished from commercial tribunals. By
the procedure of the civil tribunals foreign plaintiffs are re-
quired, if the defendant demands such security before defence,
to give security for the costs and damages arising out of the
suit, unless he possesses in France real property, of sufficient
value to guarantee the amount thereof or he is officially autho-
rised to reside in France (Civil Code, Arts. 13 and 16; Code of
Civil Procedure, Arts. 166 and 167). See my “ Nationality
Domicile and Residence in France,” p. 13.
Art. XXVIII.—The formalities and conditions
E2
51
Part III.
Foreigners
under In-
ternational
Conven-
tion.
Security
for costs.
52
Part ITI,
PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS.
set forth by the present Law shall apply to Patents
applied for and delivered in accordance with the
- preceding article.
Duration
of Patent
already
patented
abroad.
Part IV,
Want of
‘novelty.
Inventions
relating
to bare
principles.
_ Arr. XXIX.—A Patent may be obtained in
France for an invention or discovery already
patented abroad; but its duration cannot exceed
that of such Patent previously obtained abroad (a).
(a) The International Convention makes no alteration in
the law on this point.
PART IV.
ANNULMENTS AND FORFEITURES, AND ACTIONS
RELATING THERETO.
Section I.
- Annulments and forfeitures.
Art. XXX.—§ 1. Patents delivered in the follow-
ing cases shall be void:
1stly. When the discovery, invention, or appli-
ance is not new (a);
2ndly. When the discovery, invention, or appli-
ance is not patentable according to Article 3 ;
drdly. When the Patents relate to theoretical or
merely scientific principles, methods, systems, dis-
ANNULMENTS AND FORFEITURES,
coveries and conceptions, the industrial appliances
of which are not indicated ; 7
4thly. When the discovery, invention, or appli-
ance is held to be contrary to public order or
safety, to the public morals or laws of the country,
without prejudice in such a case and in that of the
preceding paragraph to the penalties which might be
incurred for manufacturing or selling prohibited
articles ;
5thly. When the title under which the application
for a Patent has been made fraudulently indicates
any but the real object of the invention ;
6thly. When the specification accompanying the
Patent is not sufficient for working the invention,
or when it does not completely and fairly indicate
the real means employed by the inventor ;
7thly. When the Patent has been obtained
contrary to the provisions of Article 18.
§ 2. Certificates comprising alterations, improve-
ments, or additions which are not connected with
the original Patent are likewise void (0).
(a) Comp. Arts. 2 and 31.
(b) The object of this provision is to prevent a patentee
from defrauding the state by taking out a certificate of addition
and thereby avoiding the payment of the full fees for registra-
tion of a principal Patent. Comp. Art. 4, § 2, and Art. 16, § 3.
Arr. XXXI.—No discovery, invention, or appli-
ance to which in France or abroad, and before the
date of the deposit of the application, sufficient
53
\
Parr IV.
-Tnventions
of an
Hlicit
character.
Fraudulent
title.
Insuffi-
ciency of
specifica-
tion,
Publication
before
registration
defined.
54
Part IV.
Forfeiture
of Patent.
Non-
payment
of fees.
Failure
to work
Patent.
PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS.
publicity has been given to enable it to be worked
shall be reputed new (a).
(a) Thus, before the promulgation, on July 8, 1884, of
thé International Convention of 1883, the publicity given to
an invention even a few days before by deposit at the London
Patent Office of the specifications and plans was enough to
invalidate a patent taken out in Franee (Cass., July 7, 1860),
and it was therefore customary to apply for a French. Patent
before the English final or complete specification had been.
sentin. By Art. 4 of the new Convention the law is modified
in this respect, and any person belonging to a State forming
part of the Union, who has duly registered an application for
a patent, design, model or trade mark in one of the contracting
States, enjoys, as regards registration in the other States, and
subject to the rights of third parties, a right of priority during
six months for patents and three months for designs, models
and trade marks, a month longer being allowed for countries
beyond sea. ‘‘ Consequently, subsequent registration in any of
the other states of the Union, before expiry of these periods,
shall not be invalidated through any acts accomplished in the
interval, either, for instance, by registration, by publication of
the invention or the working of it by a third party, by the
sale of copies of the design or model, or by use of the trade
mark.” (Art, 4 of the Convention).
Arr. XXXII.—§ 1. Replaced by a law of May
81, 1856, which runs as follows :
Shall forfeit all his rights :—
The patentee who has not paid his yearly instal-
ment before the beginning of each year of the term
of his Patent (a) ;
The patentee who has not worked his discovery
or invention in France within two years from the
date of the signature of the Patent, or who has
ANNULMENTS AND FORFEITURES.
ceased to work it for two consecutiye years, unless
in either case he can show good cause for not so
working it (0) ;
The patentee who imports into France articles
made abroad similar to those protected by his
Patent (¢) ;.
Nevertheless, the Minister of Commerce, Agri-
culture, and Public Works may authorise the intro-
duction : 1, of models of machines; 2, of articles
made abroad intended for public exhibitions held (d)
or for experiments made with government assent.
(c) The instalments must be paid at the latest before the
commencement, of each year of the duration of the Patent.
(Se Art. 4, and note.) The forfeiture is absolute and cannot
be covered by the payment of subsequent instalments.
(6) The forfeiture in this case is not an absolute one like
that incurred through non-payment of an instalment of the
fees (see previous paragraph), and can be rebutted by evidence
of a good and sufficient cause for not working the Patent, such
as sickness, want of capital, change in the public taste, and
probably the prevalence of an epidemic such as the cholera in
the South of France.
This forfeiture applies also to certificates of addition and
improvement patents.
The two years run from the date of the signature of the
Patent by the Minister of Commerce. ,
The Courts are not rigorous in their requirements as to
what shall constitute a working (exploitation) of the Patent.
The construction of a machine, for instance, is sufficient to
protect the Patent, though the machine constructed is not
sold. The granting of a license or obtaining of a medal at an
Exhibition has also been held to constitute a sufficient working
of the Patent.
(c) As regards subjects of States belonging to the Industrial
55
\
Parr IV.
:
Importing
patented
articles
from
abroad.
Permits.
Causes of
forfeiture
distin-
guished.
Sufficient
working
defined.
Inter-
national
56
convention
on importa-
tion of)
patented
articles.
Penalties
for mis-use
of term
“patentee”
and as to
s. g. ds g.
PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS.
Part IV. Property Union this article is repealed. Art. 5 of the Con-
‘vention provides that “the introduction by the Patentee into the
country where the Patent has been granted, of objects manu-
factured in any of the States of the union, shall not entail
_ forfeiture of the Patent.”
The same article, however, adds the following restriction :
“ Nevertheless, the patentee shall remain bound to work his
Patent in conformity with the laws of the country into which
he introduces the patented objects ;” and thus he is bound to
work his French Patent in accordance with French law, and
must, for instance, conform to the provisions of the previous
paragraphs of this article. See more full particulars hereon,
p. 139. ;
(d) See special chapter on Exhibitions, p. 126.
Arr. XXXIIT.—§. 1. Whoever on sign-boards or
in advertisements, prospectuses, placards, marks or
stamps, terms himself patentee, without possessing
a Patent delivered in accordance with the Law, or
after expiry of a former Patent, or who, being a |
patentee, mentions his title of patentee, or his |
Patent, without adding the words ‘ without
guarantee of the Government,” shall be liable to a
fine of from fifty to one thousand francs (a).
§ 2.—If the offence be repeated the fine may be
doubled.
(a) Comp. Art. 11, § 1.
It is universal to use the letters “s. g. d. g.,” instead of
printing in full the words “sans garantie du gouvernement.”
ACTIONS FOR ANNULMENT AND FORFEITURE.
Section II.
Actions for Annulment and Forfeiture.
Art. XXXIV.—Actions for annulment or for-
feiture may be brought by any person interested (a.)
Such actions, as well as all litigation relating to
the ownership of patents, shall be brought before
the civil tribunals of first instance.
(a) Authors are not agreed as to whether a simple consumer
is an interested person in the sense of this article.
Art. XXXV.—When proceedings are taken at
the same time against the patentee and one or more
assignees of a share in the patent, it shall be brought
before the tribunal of the place where the patentee
is domiciled (a).
(a) The action must be brought against the registered owner
of the patent whether he be the original patentee or the owner
hereof under a registered assignment.
It must be brought before the civil tribunal of the patentee’s
domicile when the action is an independent one, but before
the tribunal in which the prosecution for infringement is
brought if the action for annulment has been introduced as
the defence. ;
The Public Procurator through whose hands all correctional
plaints pass, may intervene in the action, if he thinks fit:
(See Art. 37.)
Art. XXXVI.—The case shall be examined and
decided in the mode prescribed for summary matters
by Article 405 et seg. of the Code of Civil Pro-
57
Part IV.
Jurisdic-
tion in
Patent
cases.
Where to
bring the
action.
Procedure.
58
Part IV.
Interven-
tion of
Public
Procurator.
Publication
of annul-
ments and
forfeitures.
\
PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS.
cedure (a). It shall be communicated to the Public
Procurator.
(a) The chief difference between the summary and the
ordinary procedure lies in the fact that under the former the
case reaches the Court without passing through the inter-
mediate proceedings of notice and delivery of pleadings.
Art. XXXVII.—§ 1. In every suit for the pur-
pose of obtaining the annulment or forfeiture of a
Patent the Public Procurator may intervene and
demand the absolute annulment or forfeiture thereof.
§ 2. He may even proceed directly by principal
action to obtain the annulment in the cases provided
for in subsections 2, 4 and 5 of Article 30 (a).
(a) Thus the Public Procurator may take the initiative of an
action for annulment where the patent has been taken out for
pharmaceutical remedies (patent medicines), or for financial
schemes, or where the patented invention is contrary to public
order or morals, or where the title of the patent has been
fraudulently employed to-mask the real subject-matter of the
invention. (See Arts. 3 and 30.)
Art. XXXVIII.—In the cases provided for by
Article 37, all parties entitled to the Patent, whose
titles have been registered at the Ministry of
Agriculture and Commerce in accordance with
Article 21, shall be cited.
Arr. XXXTX.—When the absolute annulment or
forfeiture of a Patent has been decided by judgment
which has become final (a), notice thereof shall be
given to the Minister of Agriculture and Commerce,
and the annulment or forfeiture shall be published
ACTIONS FOR ANNULMENT AND FORFEITURE, |
in the mode laid down by Article 14 for bringing
Patents to the knowledge of the public.
(a) The annulment of a patent operates to render it void
ab initio, and therefore renders all contracts or other things
done in virtue of it of no effect.
The plaintiff in an action for annulment exposes himself in
case of failure to an action for damages on the part of the
patentee, and bona fides is no answer to such an action.
A civil judgment by default in France is not final in First
Instance. The defendant is entitled to obtain a rehearing by
the procedure of “opposition” which may be entered, where
the judgment by default is for non-entry of appearance, at any
time before execution. Where the judgment by default is for
non-delivery of particulars, the opposition is only receivable
during one week after service of notice thereof. Opposition
to judgments by default in correctional cases can only be
entered within five days after service of notice.
The time within which appeal can be entered in civil cases
is two months, with extension according to distance, from the
date of service of the judgment.
In correctional cases appeal must be entered within ten
days, which run from the date of the delivery of judgment.
The time allowed for appeal to the Court of Cassation is
also two months. This Court, it may here be mentioned, is
only a Court of revision for matters of law as distinguished
from matters of fact. Thus it will not enter into the deter-
mination of what constitutes (Cass., Nov. 6, 1854, Re Danel ;
Cass. Feb. 12, 1854; Cass. Nov. 5, 1878; Cass. Jan. 22,
1878) or deprives of novelty (Cass. May 11, 1870; Cass.
April 8, 1854, Re Higton ; Cass. Dec. 22, 1855, Re Marchal),
nor into the sufficiency of the specification (Cass. May 11,
1870) ; but it will decide upon the existence of a patentable
invention, the law of July 24, 1844, having defined such inven-
tions (Cass. May 24, 1881, Re Chawviére ; Cass. Nov. 25, 1881,
Re Pérille).
6
59
Part IV.
Effect of
annulment.
Judgments
by default
subject to
opposition.
Time for
appeal.
Nature of
appeal to
the Court of
Cassation.
60
Part V.
Penalties
for in-
fringement
by licensee,
by imita-
tion.
Damages
in correc-
tional pro-
ceedings.
Prescrip-
tion of
PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS.
PART V.
INFRINGEMENTS, PROCEEDINGS, AND PENALTIES.
Arr. XL.—Infringement of the rights of a
Patentee, either by manufacture, or by the use of
methods (a) forming the subject of his patent, is
a misdemeanor (0).
+ is punishable by a fine of from one hundred to. ,
to two thousand francs.
(a) A manufacturer who has been licensed by a patentee to
manufacture the patented apparatus under certain fixed con-
ditions, such as that of placing upon the machines manufac-
tured by him the patentee’s stamp, is liable in the event of his
not so doing to penalties for the offence of counterfeiting, just
as if he had manufactured without a license. (Paris, Appeal,
Nov. 15, 1882, and Cassation, Nov. 24, 1883.) As to what
constitutes a new method, see Art. 2, note.
(b) The protection granted by this article extends to all the
essential and constituent parts of the invention. Thus it is
an infringement to copy even one of these parts. (Cass,
Jan. 5, 1878.)
The fact of imitation suffices as a ground of action.
Thus, it has been decided that where the form of the imitation
differed from the original invention and where this difference
of form rendered the application less perfect, this was never-
theless an infringement. (Paris, July 21, 1866.)
The offence being a misdemeanor, proceedings may be taken °
before the correctional tribunal; a claim for damages by
French procedure may, nevertheless, be conjointly brought
before the same tribunal. A claim for damages may also be
brought by a separate action before the civil tribunal.
The right of action for infringement as in the case of other
misdemeanors is barred atter three years from the date of
INFRINGEMENTS, PROCEEDINGS, AND PENALTIES.
«ommission of the offence, unless proceedings have mean-
while been taken, and where they have been taken, after three
years from the last act in such proceedings. (Code of Criminal
Procedure, Art. 638.) The civil action is barred after the
same period as the correctional action without distinction. The
period of prescription runs from the last act of commission
where the commission consists of a series of acts, (As regards
accessories, see Arts. 41 and 43.)
Art. XLI.—Any person who has knowingly
received, sold, or offered for sale, or introduced
upon French territory one or more counterfeit
articles shall be subject to the same penalties as
infringers.
Arr. XLIT.—§ 1. No penalties established by
the present Law shall be cumulated.
§ 2. The highest penalty alone shall be inflicted
for all acts committed before the commencement of
proceedings.
Art, XLITI.—§ 1. In case of repetition of the
offence imprisonment of from one to six months
shall be inflicted in addition to the fine provided
by Articles 40 and 41.
§ 2. It shall be considered a repetition of the
offence, when a previous condemnation for one of
the offences specified by the present Law has been
inflicted during the next preceeding five years.
§ 8. Imprisonment of from one to six months
may be inflicted where the infringer is a work-
map. or has been employed in the workshop or
factory of the Patentee, or where the infringer,
having become a partner of such workman or other
61
Parr V.
right of
action,
Acces-
sories.
Penalties
not to be
cumulated.
Repetition
of offence.
Special
penalty in
case of
employes.
62
Part V.
Moving
Public
Procurator.
Exception
to ordinary
procedure.
Licensee
has no
right of
action.
PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS.
person employed by the Patentee, has thereby
become acquainted with the processes specified in
the patent.
§ 4. In the latter case such workman or other
employé may be prosecuted as an accessory.
Art. XLIV.—Article 463 (a) of the Penal Code
is applicable to the foregoing offences.
(a) This article of the Penal Code empowers the Court to
reduce the penalties where the circumstances warrant such a
reduction.
Art. XLV.—Proceedings for the enforcement of
the above penalties can only be taken by the Public
Procurator at the instance of the person whose
rights have been infringed (a).
(a) All criminal proceedings are taken in France in the
public interest and at public expense by an official called the
Public Procurator (Procureur de la République, Procureur-
général). This article is a restriction on the Public Procurator,
who can only act when moved by the person whose rights
have been infringed.
The right of action belongs to the owner, joint-owner or
assignee of the Patent, but not to the licensee; and a clause
inserted in a contract of license conferring the right to proceed
against infringers is void as being contrary to the maxim of
French law ‘nul ne plaide par procureur” (Cass. 27th April,
1869), but might operate to give the license the character of
an assignment.
Art. XLVI.—The Correctional Tribunal before
which the action for infringement is brought shall
decide on any demurrers raised by the defendant on
the ground of nullity or of forfeiture of the Patent
or in connection with the ownership of the Patent.
INFRINGEMENTS, PROCEEDINGS, AND PENALTIES.
Art. XLVII.—§ 1. Owners of a Patent may,
after obtaining an order of the President of the
Tribunal of First Instance, cause a public pro-
cess-server (huissier) to draw up a detailed descrip-
tion of the articles alleged to be counterfeit, with
or without seizure (a).
§ 2. This order shall be granted on application
and production of the Letters Patent; in case of
need it shall appoint an expert to assist the process-
server in making the description.
§ 8. When there is ground for a seizure the order
may oblige the applicant to give security, which
must be lodged before the seizure is effected.
§ 4. Security shall always be given when the
application for seizure is made by a foreigner (b).
§ 5. Copies of the order of the Court and of the
document certifying that security, where ordered or
requisite, has been lodged, shall be left with the
holder of the articles described or seized, otherwise
the proceedings shall be void and the process-server
shall be liable for damages.
(a) It is for the patentee to determine the propriety or
opportuneness of a seizure.
A seizure, owing to its vexatious character, in case the action
for infringement be dismissed, may expose the plaintiff to a
claim for damages. —
(LAW OF MAY 23, 1868).
ACT RELATING TO THE PRESERVATION OF PATENT-
ABLE INVENTIONS AND Drsians ADMITTED TO
Exnipirions AUTHORISED BY THE PUBLIC
ADMINISTRATION (a).
(a) This Act extends the provisions of the Act of May 31
1856, and generalises the rights of exhibitors at official
Exhibitions.
The Law of May 31, 1856, replacing Art. 32 of the Patents
Law of July 5, 1844, provides as follows :—
* § 1,—Shall forfeit all his rights :
(a). The patentee who has not paid his yearly instalment
before the beginning of each year of the Term of his
Patent ; :
(b). The patentee who has not worked his discovery or
invention in France within two years from the date
of the signature of the Patent, or who has ceased to
work it for two consecutive years, unless in either
case he can show good cause for not so working it ;
(c). The patentee who imports into France articles miade
abroad similar to those protected by his Patent.
“§ 2.—Nevertheless,the Minister of Commerce, Agriculture,
PROTECTION OF INVENTIONS, ETC., AT EXHIBITIONS.
and Public Works may authorise the introduction: 1, of
models of machines ; 2, of articles made abroad intended for
public exhibitions, or for experiments made with government
assent.”
Inventors, before the new Act, who had not been able to
obtain a patent were prevented from taking part in Exhibi-
tions, except by special ministerial authorization.
As regards trade-marks no provisional registration, it will
be remembered, is necessary as in the case of patents, priority
of user and not of registration being the test of property therein,
(See pp. 7 and 74.)
Art. I, Any Frenchman or foreigner who shall
have made a discovery or invention capable of being
patented under the Act of July 5, 1844, or a design
which should be registered in accordance with the
Act of March 18, 1806, or those entitled under
him, may, if it has been admitted to an Exhibition
authorised by the public authority, obtain from the
Prefect or Sub-prefect in the department or arron-
dissement in which the said Exhibition is held, a
certificate describing the object registered.
Arr. II. This certificate shall give to the
holder the same rights as would be conferred by
letters-patent (a), or the legal registration of a
design from the date of admission to the end of the
third month after the close of the Exhibition, and
shall not prejudice the patent or registration he
may effect before the expiry of this time (0).
(a) He can, therefore, pursue infringers as upon letters
patent.
(b) The applicant thus provisionally protected loses the
benefit of the protection, if he does not strictly comply with
127
Trade-
marks,
Provisional
certificates.
Rights
thereby
conferred.
Limit of
time for
applica-
tion
Inspection
of pro-
visional
certificates.
Specifica-
tion.
All docu-
ments to
be signed
PROTECTION OF INVENTIONS, ETC., AT EXHIBITIONS,
the stipulations of the present Jaw, public exhibition of any
kind otherwise than under it being a circumstance which
would essentially deprive the invention of the novelty without
which no patent is valid by French law. (Paris, April 27,
1861.) Sce Art. 31 of the Law of 1844, p. 53.
Art. III. The application for this certificate
shall be made within the first month, at latest, after
the opening of the Exhibition (a). It shall be
addressed to the Prefecture or Sub-prefecture, and
be accompanied by an exact description of the
object to be guaranteed (J), and, if necessary, by a
plan or drawing of the said object (c).
‘The applications, as well as the decisions taken
by the Prefect or Sub-prefect are inscribed on a
special register (d), which is afterwards (¢) trans-
mitted to the Ministry of Agriculture, Commerce
and Public Works, arid is open to public inspection
free of charge.
The delivery of the certificate is gratuitous.
(a) A certificate applied for after expiry of the first month
after the opening would not be granted. It would not be
granted at the applicant’s risk.
(b) The description (specification) must be sufficient, and in
judging whether it is so the applicant must be guided by his
own experience and sense, the authorities being bound to
register whatever is presented to them for registration, pro-
vided the conditions of form are fulfilled, without reference
to merits.
(c) All documents handed in must be signed either by the
exhibitor or by his legally authorised representative. Proof,
moreover, must be tendered that the object for the protection
of which application is made has been admitted to the Exhibi-’
“a
PROTECTION OF INVENTIONS, ETC., AT EXHIBITIONS,
tion and the precise date of its admission given, the guarantee
running from this date. (See Art. 2, supra).
(d) Certificates of guarantee are entered on a counterfoil
register, an extract of which is handed to the exhibitor.
(e) That is, on the closing of the Exhibition.
LAW (a) mopiryine THOSE or Juty 5, 1844, RELA-
TING TO Parents FoR INVENTIONS, AND OF
JunE 28, 1857, on Trapn-marxs (b) FOR
OBJECTS ADMITTED TO THE UNIVERSAL Ex-
HIBITION OF 1889. (October 30, 1888.)
(a) Independently of the above law of 1868, parliament has
from time to time passed enactments of a temporary character,
suspending the operation of causes of forfeiture under Art. 32
of the law of July 5, 1844 (4.2, Act of May 31, 1856), The
present is a similar measure adopted with reference to the
Exhibition of 1889.
(6) This description of the Act is incomplete, as it deals also
with designs and models. (See Art. 4 below.)
Art. I.—Any patentee in France or those en-
titled under him may without incurring forfeiture
of his patent introduce into France objects, manu-
factured abroad and similar to those guaranteed
by his patent, which he shall have been allowed
to exhibit at the Universal Exhibition of 1889.
Arr. II.—Forfeiture of the patent shall be in-
curred if these objects are not re-exported within
three months commencing from the date of the
official closing of the Exhibition (a).
(a) This article does not apply to the introduction of objects
B.P. K
129:
Temporary
Acts.
Designs.
Concurrent
effect of
130
Industrial
Property
Conven-
.tion.
Exhibits
reckoned as
working of
Patent.
Restric-
tions on
seizures.
PROTECTION OF INVENTIONS, ETC., AT EXHIBITIONS.
manufactured in any of the States of the International Union
for the protection of industrial property, Art. 5 of the Con-
vention having authorized the entry of such objects without
restriction, provided the patentee at the same time work
(eeploiter) his patent in conformity with the laws of the country
into which he introduces the patented objects (see p. 139).
Art. III.—The owner of a French patent who
shall have exhibited at the Universal Exhibition
of 1889 an object similar to one guaranteed by his
patent, shall be considered as having worked his
discovery or invention in France from the date
of the official opening of the Exhibition.
The forfeiture provided in Art. 32, § 2, of the
law of July 5, 1844, will be suspended, and the
period in question shall run afresh from the date of
the official closing of the Exhibition.
Art. IV.—Objects exhibited at the Exhibition of
1889, and for which a patent shall have been taken
out in France or a design or model registered in
accordance with the law of March 18, 1806, or
bearing a trade-mark registered in France in accord-
ance with the Law of June 23, 1857, and which
are alleged to be counterfeit, shall be subject to
seizure by description only, within the Exhibition
grounds and buildings (intérieur de ’ Exposition).
Objects exhibited by foreigners cannot be seized,
either within or outside the Exhibition, if the per-
son who levies the seizure does not enjoy protection
in the country to which the person owning the —
seized objects belongs. Nevertheless, these objects
PROTECTION OF INVENTIONS, ETC., AT EXHIBITIONS.
cannot be sold in France, and must be re-exported
within the time fixed by Art. 2.
INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION oF 1883 FoR THE
Protection oF InpustriaL PROPERTY.
Arr. XI.—The high contracting parties agree to
grant temporary protection to patentable inventions,
to industrial designs or models and trade-marks, for
articles exhibited at official or officially recognised
International Exhibitions (a).
(a) Pursuant to this provision, and in accordance with sections
39 and 57 of the Patents, Designs and Trade Marks Act, 1883
and with section 3 of the Patents Act, 1886, the following
Order in Council has been adopted with reference to the forth-
coming Paris International Exhibition :—
AT THE COURT AT WINDSOR.
The 17th day of November, 1888.
Present:—Tae QueEN’s Most ExceLLent Maszsty in
Councit.
Whereas, The Patents, Designs, and Trade Marks Act, 1883,
amongst other things, provides, by section 39, that the exhibi-
tion of an invention at an industrial or international exhibition,
certified as such by the Board of Trade, or the publication of
any description of the invention during the period of the hold-
ing of the exhibition, or the use of the invention for the pur-
pose of the exhibition in the place where the exhibition is held,
or the use of the invention during the period of the holding of
the exhibition by any person elsewhere, without the privity or
K2
131
Inter-
national
Conven-
tion.
British
Order in
Council as
to Paris
Exhibition,
1889.
Preserva-
tion of
novelty of
inventions
exhibited.
132
Notice to
Comp-
troller.
Limit of
time,
Preserva-
tion of
novelty of
designs
exhibited.
Notice to
the Comp-
troller.
Limit of
time.
PROTECTION OF INVENTIONS, ETC., AT EXHIBITIONS.
consent of the inventor, shall not prejudice the right of the
inventor or his legal personal representative to apply for and
obtain provisional protection and a patent in respect of the
invention, or the validity of any patent granted on the appli-
cation, provided that both the following conditions are com-
plied with, namely :—
(a.) The exhibitor must, before exhibiting the invention,
give the Comptroller the prescribed notice of his
intention to do so; and
(b.) The application for a patent must be made before or
within six months from the date of the opening of
the exhibition.
And whereas the said Act further provides, by section 57,
that the exhibition at an industrial or international exhibition,
certified as such by the Board of Trade, or the exhibition else-
where during the period of the holding of the exhibition,
without the privity or consent of the proprietor, of a design,
or of any article to which a design is applied, or the publica-
tion, during the holding of any such exhibition, of a descrip-
tion of a design, shall not prevent the design from being
registered, or invalidate the registration thereof, provided that
both the following conditions are complied with, namely :—
(a.) The exhibitor must, before exhibiting the design or
article, or publishing a description of the design, give
the Comptroller the prescribed notice of his intention
to do so ; and
(b.) The application for registration must be made before
or within six months from the date of the opening of
the exhibition.
And whereas Her Majesty, by virtue of the authority com-
mitted to Her by the provisions of “The Patents Act, 1886,”
is empowered by Order in Council from time to time to declare
that the provisions of the said Act of 1883 above recited shall
apply to any exhibition mentioned in the Order in like manner
as if it were an industrial or international exhibition: certified
by the Board of Trade, and to provide that the exhibitor shall
be relieved from the conditions specified in the said herein-
before recited sections of the said Act of 1883 :
PROTECTION OF INVENTIONS, ETC., AT EXHIBITIONS,
Now therefore Her Majesty, by and with the advice of Her
Privy Council, and by virtue of the authority committed to
Her by the said Act of 1886, doth declare and it is hereby
declared that the provisions of the foregoing sections of the
said Act of 1883 shall apply to the Paris Universal Exhibition
to be held at Paris in the year 1889; and further, that the
exhibitor of an invention, a design, or any article to which a
design is applied, shall be relieved from the conditions specified
in the said hereinbefore-recited sections of the said Act of
1883 of giving notice as therein required of his intention to
exhibit such invention, design, or article to which a design is
applied.
C. L. PEEL.
133
Relief from
foregoing
in case of
Paris
Exhibition,
1889,
134
Mode of
giving
effect to
treaties in
France.
Art, 10 of
Anglo-
French
Treaty of
1882,
TREATY ARRANGEMENTS.
TREATY ARRANGEMENTS BETWEEN
ENGLAND AND FRANCE,
INCLUDING THE INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY
CONVENTION (a).
—_+—
(a) The French system of giving effect to a treaty on
French territory is to submit it to Parliament with an
explanatory report for authorization to the President of the
Republic to ratify. On ratification and promulgation, the
Treaty becomes a portion of the law of the land. Being sub-
sequent in date to previous enactments, they yield to it. Of
course unilateral enactments of later date cannot modify it
so long as it remains in force.
AnGLo-FrRencH TRADE AND NavicaTIoN TREATY
(Concluded Feb. 28, 1882, Promulgated in
France, May 13, 1882.) Arr. X.
“Les ressortissants de
chacune des hautes par-
The subjects of each
of the two high contract-
ing parties shall, in the
dominions of the other
enjoy the same protec-
tion and be subject to
the: same conditions as
native subjects in regard
ties contractantes jouir-
ont dans les états de
l'autre de la méme pro-
tection et seront assu-
jettis aux mémes obliga-
tions que tous les na-
TRADE AND NAVIGATION TREATY.
to the rights of property
in trade-marks, names
of firms, and other dis-
tinctive marks showing
tionaux pour tout ce qui
concerne la propriété, soit
des marques de fabrique
et de commerce, des
the origin or quality of noms commerciaux ou
goods, as well as in
patterns and designs for
manufacture.”
d’autres marques parti-
culiéres indiquant J’ori-
gine ou la qualité des
marchandises, soit des
modéles et dessins in-
dustriels”’ (a).
(a) This Article was designed to extend the protection
enjoyed under Art. 12 of the Anglo-French Commercial
Treaty of 1860, Its importance has been pointed out in
treating of merchandise marks (see p. 104), and its application
and effect have been mentioned in connection with the different
matters to which it relates. The author drew public attention
to it in a report on the “ Sheffield” question which was pub-
lished by the British Chamber of Commerce in Paris, M.
Ferry, in his now famous letter on this subject of January 8,
1885, overlooked it as he did Art. 9 of the law of 1873, and
those whom it concerns can now hardly believe that pro-
visions of law have long been in force which give them the
protection the absence of which they have been on such good
authority lamenting for years.
The Treaty of Feb. 28, 1882, was signed in French and
English. The English version is, therefore, an original.
135
Trade
Marks.
Merchan-
dise Marks.
Designs
and
Models.
Object of
above
article.
Effect of
English
text.
136
English
text a
transla-
tion.
States
forming
Union.
General
spirit of
conven-
tion.
TREATY ARRANGEMENTS.
Tue INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION FOR THE Pro-
TECTION oF InpusTRIAL Property. (Con-
cluded March 20, 1888; Promulgated in
France, July 6—8, 1884) (a).
(a) The Convention was signed in French only. The
English text is, therefore, a translation and not an original.
Arr. I. The Governments of Belgium, Brazil,
Spain, France, Guatemala, Italy, Holland, Portugal,
Salvador, Servia and Switzerland constitute them-
selves into a Union for the protection of industrial
property (a).
(a) Since March 20, 1883, when this Convention was con-
cluded, Great Britain, Sweden and Norway, the United States
and Tunis, have acceded to its terms and joined the Union.
On the other hand Salvador has withdrawn from it, as well
as Turkey, St. Domingo, and Ecuador, which had joined it for
ashort time. See p. 201.
Art. II. The subjects or citizens of each of the
contracting States shall, in all the other States of the
Union, as regards patents, designs or models, trade-
marks, and trade names(a), enjoy the advantages
that their respective laws now grant, or shall here-
after grant, to their own subjects or citizens.
Consequently, they shall have the same protec-
tion as the latter, and the same legal remedy against
any infringement of their rights, provided they
observe the formalities and conditions imposed on
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY CONVENTION.
subjects or citizens by the internal legislation of
each State (b).
(a) The term “ trade names,” as has been seen elsewhere, is
in general expressed in English by the term “ merchandise
marks.” (See p. 98.)
The provisions of this Article are of course subject to the
qualifications made in the Articles to follow. Thus French
law protects the names of French localities without more,
whereas a false indication of place of origin calls the Conven-
tion into operation only when associated with a fictitious trade
name. See Art. 10.
(6) This Article, moreover, is subject to the qualification of
§ 3 of the Protocol, which excepts matters of procedure from
its operation. Thus it has been held by the French Courts
that a foreigner in virtue of it continues liable to deposit
security under Article 16 of the Civil Code and Article 166 of
the Code of Civil Procedure. (Seine, Feb. 4, 1888. Sce
also Belgian Court of Cassation, April 5, 1888, in the same
sense.) Compare p. 51.
Arr. III. Subjects or citizens of States not
forming part of the Union, who are domiciled or
have industrial or commercial establishments on the
territory of any of the States of the Union, shall
be assimilated to the subjects or citizens of the
contracting States (a).
(a) Thus subjects of Germany, which does not form part of
the Union, domiciled or having industrial or commercial
establishments in England, or in any other State of the Union,
are assimilated to English subjects, and enjoy the rights of
such subjects in the other States of the Union. What con-
stitutes a commercial establishment is a matter of fact for the
Court to decide. No decision has yet settled the meaning of
this Article ; but it will probably be held to apply only to
articles manufactured in and coming from a State forming
137
Sense of
phrase
“ trade-
name.”
Convention
makes no
change as
to security
for costs.
Foreigners.
settled in
a country
assimilated
to native
subjects.
Goods
from a
contracting
State
138
manufac-
tured in a
non-con-
tracting
State.
Criterion
of pro-
tection.
Prior right
of registra-
tion.
Limits of
time.
TREATY ARRANGEMENTS.
part of the Union. Any other construction would be contrary
to the spirit of the Convention, which is not to supply a
means of enjoying its benefits without joining it. The
Article was adopted to make domicile and practical establish-
ment, and not political nationality, the criterion of the rights
enjoyed by those under the protection of the contracting
States. (Minutes, 1880, p. 129 et seg.) It is a palliative to
Art. 4, which, in the original draft, seemed to exclude sub-
jects of States not forming part of the Union without
distinction,
Compare sects. 5 & 6 of the Act of 1857, supra.
Art. IV. Any person who has duly applied for
letters-patent, or for registration of a design, model,
or trade-mark in one of the contracting States,
shall enjoy, as regards registration in the other
States, and reserving the rights of third persons,
a right of priority during the periods hereinafter
stated (a).
Consequently, subsequent registration in any of
the other States of the Union before expiry of these
periods shall not be invalidated through any acts
accomplished in the interval, either, for instance,
by another registration, by publication of the inven-
tion, or by the working of it by a third person, by
the sale of copies of the design or model, or by use
of the trade-mark.
The above-mentioned terms of priority shall be
six months for patents, and three months for
designs, models, and trade-marks. A month longer
is allowed for countries beyond sea (b).
(a) The official English version “applied for a patent,
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY CONVENTION,
industrial design, or model, or trade-mark,” &c., is not quite
correct, though the meaning is perfectly clear. The French
original would read extended: dépdt d’une demande de
brevet d’invention, dépdt d’un dessin, &c. In French a
patent is demandé and a model, design, or trade-mark déposé,
as has been seen in the foregoing.
(6) Article 4, as the Convention’ stands, is the chief Article
in it, and it confers on subjects of the contracting States a
substantial benefit.
The dangers to which patentees and inventors were exposed
in regard to registration abroad are familiar. A dishonest
agent, or a third person who obtained early knowledge of a
patent, could anticipate the original patentee, who, when he
applied for registration, found he was already supplanted.
Subjects of the contracting powers now have a prior right of
registration during six months for patents and three months
for drawings, models and trade-marks.
The English Act of 1883 contains a section which was
incorporated in the Bill in anticipation of England’s joining
the Union (sec. 103). Other provisions of the Convention,
however, have been inadequately provided for by the Act of
1883.
Arr. V. The introduction by the patentee into
the country where the patent has been granted of
articles manufactured in any of the States of the
Union shall not entail forfeiture of the patent
(déchéance) (a).
Nevertheless, the patentee shall remain bound to
work (exploiter) his patent in conformity with the
laws of the country into which he introduces
the patented articles (ou wi introduit les objets
brévetés) (b).
(a) ‘The French original stops, like the English official trans-
lation, at the word “forfeiture.” This word, however, might
139
Effect of
Article 4.
Insuffi-
ciency of
English
Act.
Importa-
tion of
articles
similar to
those
patented
permitted
but with a
restriction.
Official
translation
corrected.
140
Original
article.
Object
thereof.
Opinions
expressed
at Con-
ference of
1880.
TREATY ARRANGEMENTS.
imply forfeiture of the “articles” mentioned, whereas the
sense of the word déchéance confines its application to the
patent.
(b) This Article was introduced in a very different form
from that in which it now figures in the Convention. Its.
original wording, as submitted by the French delegates at the
Conference of 1880, was as follows :—
“Le propriétaire d'un brevet d’invention aura la faculté
@introduire dans le pays ot le brevet lui aura été délivré des.
objets fabriqués dans l'un ou J’autre des pays contractants,.
sans que cette introduction puisse étre une cause de déchéance-
du brevet.”
It thus consisted of the first paragraph of the Article only.
The object of the proposed Article was to remove a pro--
hibition existing in France and some other countries which
prevents a foreigner who has taken out a patent in these-
countries from introducing into them wares manufactured
under the same patent in his own country. This article, with
its original liberal character, gave rise to more discussion at.
the Conference of 1880 than any other.
The following summary of the opinions expressed at the
Conference on the original draft Article, of which that
first paragraph of Art. 5 is merely a slightly amended repeti-
tion, will show how it was understood by the delegates, and
the motives which occasioned the addition of the second
paragraph :—
M. Bozérian (France), who presided in 1880, denounced the
present French system of obliging the patentee to manufacture
in the country “as barbarous and perfectly useless.” (Minutes,
1880, p. 57.)
M. Indelli, the Italian delegate, who accepted the paragraph,
stated that the law of Italy required the patentee to manu-
facture his patent in Italy.
M. Lagerheim, the Swedish delegate, stated that it was the
game in Sweden. (Minutes, 1880, pp. 56 and 57.)
M. Weibel, the Swiss delegate, said that if the article was
to be understood in the sense that any patentee could work
his patent in one of the States of the Union, and confine him-
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY CONVENTION.
‘self simply to importing into the other States where the patent
had been taken out, without obligation to manufacture there
the said patent, Switzerland, so long as the neighbouring
States remained protectionist and she herself practically did
not protect her manufactures, could not accept it. If this
article were adopted, Switzerland would open her frontiers to
the free importation of patented goods made abroad, whereas
her neighbours, in spite of the liberal wording of the article,
would continue to protect themselves by their customs’ duties
against the introduction of these patented goods, which would
therefore cease to be manufactured in Switzerland.
The second paragraph was then proposed to meet the wishes
of Switzerland.
M. Weerz, the Austrian delegate, remarked on the Article as
now amended, and as it stands in the Convention, that the
first paragraph permitted the introduction of patented articles
made abroad, and the second paragraph required that the
invention should be worked in the country. To him, the
Article appeared perfect. As it stood, it was in harmony with
the law of Austria.
M. Bozérian did not see how one could reconcile the two
clauses, for if the manufacture was to be exclusive, there
could be no right of introduction.
M. Demeur (Belgium) thought that the obligation to manu-
facture in the country, considering that their object was to
form a Union, amounted to undoing their own work, and
that it was harmful to the interests of all. In the case, say,
of a Union composed of fifteen or twenty States, the
patentee would have to start a manufactory in each of them,
if he wished to safeguard his rights. This was unreasonable,
for if the patentee need not have more than one manufactory
he could manifestly sell his goods much cheaper.
The Swiss delegate, however, insisted on the addition, and
was therein supported by the Hungarian representative, who
said it was an axiom that a country grants a patent in order
that the object of it may be worked in the country, andthat
it has no power to grant a privilege for any other country.
The Article, as amended, was eventually adopted.
141
142
Explana-
tory letter
of Minister
of Com-
merce to
British
Chamber of
Commerce
in Paris.
TREATY ARRANGEMENTS.
As the patentee must work his patent according to the laws
of the country into which he introduces the patented articles,
the patentee continues to be bound to manufacture in any
country, such as France, in which so to manufacture is a
condition of the grant of the patent. (See Art. 32 of the Law
of 1844, p. 54.)
As the greater contains the less, of course the importation
of a model without ministerial permission no longer entails
forfeiture. (See Art. 32 of the Law of 1844, p. 55.)
In reply to an inquiry on behalf of the British Chamber of
Commerce in Paris as to the administrative construction of
Art. 5, the French Minister of Commerce wrote on July 3, 1883,
as follows :—
“You have consulted me on behalf of the British Chamber
of Commerce, as to the meaning of Article 5 of the Convention
concluded March 20, 1883, between France and a certain
number of other countries for the protection of industrial
property. ,
“You express the desire to know : First, whether, after the
ratification of the Convention, a patentee will be able to
import into the territory of the Republic, without forfeiting
his rights thereby, objects made abroad similar to those pro-
tected under the French patent : Secondly, whether, in case
this be not allowed, he would be permitted to introduce a
model of a machine into France without ministerial per-
inission.
“T have the honour to inform you that, dating from the
exchange of ratifications, Article 32, § 3 of the French law
of July 5, 1844, will no longer apply to the subjects of the
contracting States ; the importation into France by a subject
of one of these States of objects similar to those protected
under the French patent, and manufactured in any one of the
countries of the Union will not entail forfeiture of the patent,
“No ministerial permission will be required for such
introduction.
“ But conformably to the stipulation set forth in the second
paragraph of Article 5 of the Convention, the patentee will
remain under the obligation to work (exploiter), under
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY CONVENTION.
penalty of forfeiture, his patent in France according to the
conditions laid down by the law of 1844.”
A circular of the Minister of Commerce issued on August
26, 1884, confirms and amplifies this construction in the
following terms :—
“ Art. 5 contains a provision of importance which departs
from the law of July 5, 1844, on patents for invention.
Art. 32 of this law modified by the law, of May 20—31, 1856,
provides, as you know, that, &c. (see Art. 32 of the Act of
1844, p. 54).
“ Art. 5 of the Convention stipulates that the introduction
by the patentee into the country in which the patent has
been taken out of articles manufactured in one or the other of
the States of the Union shall not entail forfeiture ; with the
reservation, however, that the patentee shall remain subject to
the obligation to work his invention in accordance with the
laws of the country into which such articles are introduced.
“Holders of French patents who wish to introduce into
France articles similar to those which are guaranteed by their
patents, and manufactured on the territory of one of the con-
tracting States, need no longer address a petition for this
purpose to the Commercial Department, and may introduce
such articles freely. But they remain as heretofore liable to
comply with the provisions of the aforesaid Art. 32 of the
Act of July 5, 1844, as regards articles manufactured in any
other countries but such as belong to the Union.”
This Article of the Convention has given rise to much
opposition in France, on the ground that it repeals for the
countries of the Union a clause of the laws of 1844 and 1856,
specially adopted for the protection of French industry (Act of
1844, Art. 32; Act of 1856, § 3), a clause, says M. Bozérian
(Temps, Jan. 11, 1886), one of the chief promoters of the
Convention in France, which, so far as he knows, exists in the
legislation of no other country.
As regards the sense of the word “exploiter,” as to which a
proposal was made at the Conference of 1886 at Rome, it was
explained by the Tunisian delegate that exploiter meant
fabriquer. In this he was slightly in error (see note to Art. 32
143
Construc-
tion of
Article 5
in a Minis-
terial
circular.
Agitation
against the
article.
Sense of
word ‘‘ ex-
ploiter.”
144
Marks to
be regis-
tered as in
country of
origin.
Meaning
of country
of origin.
Restriction
against
certain
marks
removed,
Original
TREATY ARRANGEMENTS.
above-mentioned, p. 55), though it is usual to conform to the
law by manufacturing an article and having the fact put on
record by a hyissier.
Art. VI. Every trade-mark duly (régulicrement)
registered in the country of origin shall be admitted
for registration, and protected in the form originally
registered (a) in all the other countries of the
Union (0).
That country shall be deemed the country of
origin where the applicant has his chief seat of
business. If this chief seat of business is not
situated in one of the countries of the Union,
the country to which the applicant belongs shall
be deemed the country of origin.
Registration may be refused if the object for
which it is solicited is considered contrary to
morality or public order (5).
(«) The words in italics are the translation of “telle
quelle” as explained in the Protocol, § 4, which states that
paragraph 1 of Art. 6 is to be understood as meaning that
no trade-mark shall be excluded from protection in any
State of the Union, because it does not satisfy, in regard to
the signs composing it, the conditions of the legislation of that
State, provided that on this point it comply with the legal
requirements of the country of origin, and that it had been
properly registered in said country of origin.
In Germany, Austria, Brazil, and the Argentine Republic,
for instance, trade-marks made up exclusively of letters or
figures are not admitted to registration. But wherever the
Convention operates, the mark, if originally registered in a
State forming part of the Union which recognises the validity
of such marks, will now be protected.
(b) Tite‘terms of this Article gave rise at the Conference
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY CONVENTION.
of 1880 to a great deal of discussion, The original wording
was as follows: “The property of industrial designs or
models and trade-marks (marques de fabrique ou de commerce)
shall be considered in all the States of the Union as legiti-
mately belonging to those who make use in accordance with
the legislation of the country of origin, of the said designs,
models, and trade-marks.”
This provision was borrowed from the French treaties with
Belgium and Russia. Russian law protected only marks in
Russian characters. It was arranged that French marks
regularly registered in France should be admitted telles quelles,
and protected in Russia, though in French characters.
The Dutch representative pointed out the want of lucidity
of the article as thus worded. He understood it to mean that
a person who had properly registered his mark in’ France, and
wished to register it in Holland, could obtain such registration
without any preliminary examination. This did not seem to
him acceptable. In Holland anyone wishing to register a
trade-mark had to deposit it at the district tribunal. But this
deposit did not grant an exclusive right to use the mark ; on
the first day of the following month the Official Journal pyb-
lished the application for the mark, and during six months
145
terms of
Article 6.
Whence
taken,
Discussion
thereon in
1880.
any person interested had the right to lodge a caveat against
the delivery of a certificate on the simple ground that the
mark was not sufficiently distinct from another mark already
registered. The Dutch delegate said he could agree to nothing
that would interfere with the right of third persons to lodge
such a caveat, which was a fundamental part of the Dutch law
on trade-marks,
M. Bozérian acknowledged that the text was not sufficiently
clear, but he thought that everyone was agreed as to the
object in view. He observed that the French applicant would
be subjected to the internal legislation of each contracting
State, and that his mark could be rejected in Holland. The
Article only applied to the composition (ce qui constitue, see § 4
of the Protocol, p. 154, infra) of the mark. Thus in France the
law permits the registration of a number as a trade-mark. It
might happen that in other countries the law did not permit
BP. L
146
Meaning of
words
** duly ”
xegistered.
Nature of
goods not
har to
wegistra-
tion.
Ofcial
‘translation
eerrected.
TREATY ARRANGEMENTS.
such registration, in which case a French mark of this descrip-
tion would have no protection. Several treaties had altered
this state of things as regarded France, Belgium, Italy, and
Russia. The object was to remove the obstacle everywhere.
What he had said in regard to marks applied also to industrial
designs and models.
Count Castell, on behalf of Austria, asked whether a mark
containing treasonable emblems would have to be registered.
It would not be so in Austria. He thought it necessary to
make an exception excluding designs and trade-marks con-
trary to public morals and order.
The Swiss delegate made the suppression of the words
“designs and models” a sine qud non tor Switzerland.
Eventually a reading drawn up by the Brazilian delegate to
meet the different views expressed, was taken as a basis, and
this was the one which with some modifications was eventually
adopted by the Conference of 1880, and confirmed by that of
1883.
In the reading proposed by the Brazilian delegate the
Article began as follows: “Towle marque de fabrique ou de
commerce valablement déposée dans le pays dorigine sera ad-
mise, be.”
The word “ valablement” was considered as going too far,
and the word “ réguliérement” (duly) was substituted. Accord-
ing to one of the French delegates “duly registered” and
“registered” were exchangeable. (Procés-verbaux, 1880,
p: 70 ef seg., and p. 138 et seq.).
Art. VII. The nature of the goods to which the
trade-mark is to be affixed (apposé) can, in no case,
be an obstacle to the registration thereof (a).
(a) The English official translation renders the word
“ appos¢” by “used.” This is not quite correct, and might
lead to confusion (see p. 122),
The principle underlying the Article is that the mark is
independent of the merchandise. Thus, where permission of
the authorities is required before manufacturing or selling any
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY CONVENTION.
product, the absence of this permission is no obstacle to the
registration of the mark.
The French delegate, M. Jagerschmidt, at the Conference
otf 1880, explained that in certain countries when a manu-
facturer or merchant applied to register a mark for pharma-
ceutical products (patent medicines), for instance, registration
was refused because the Medical Council had not approved
the product. As the mark was to be independent of the pro-
duct, its owner would be able under this Article to register it
and thus safeguard his rights until the sale of the product
was eventually permitted. France had already concluded
treaties with Belgium, Italy, and Russia, under which marks
registered in the country of origin were admitted in the form
so registered to registration in the contracting countries
reciprocally.
Several countries belonging to the Union, such as Brazil,
Spain, Sweden, and Norway, made distinctions which the
Convention has now removed,
Art. VIII. A trade name shall be protected in
all the countries of the Union, without necessity of
registration (a), whether it form part or not of a
trade-mark (b).
(a) This is the common law of France (see p. 97).
(6) This portion of the Article removes a hardship as regards
the contracting States, which has resulted from the decision of
the Court of Cassation in the case of Veuve Etienne Beissel et
fils. An Aix-la-Chapelle house of this name had registered its
name as a portion of a trade-mark. The trade-mark expired,
and the question arose whether the name forming part of it
became public property with the rest of the mark. The Court
of Appeal of Paris decided that it did. The German Govern-
ment made representations to the French Government on the
iniquitous cousequences entailed by such a decision. The
minister of Justice solicited a careful examination of the
question by the Court of Cassation, to whom the case had
been carried, but this Court upheld the decision of the lower
L 2
147
** Patent
Medi-
cines,”
French
treaties in
sense of
Article 7.
Effect of
article in
Brazil,
Spain,
Sweden
and
Norway.
Protection
of trade
names.
Trade
names
forming
part of
trade
mark,
148
Stoppage
of goods
bearing
false
marks.
Restricted
application
of previous
article.
Cutlers’Co.
thereon.
TREATY ARRANGEMENTS.
Court, and the question was thus solved: in the sense that a
trade name forming part of a trade mark followed the fate
of the mark (Cass. Jan, 13, 1880).
Arr. IX. All goods illegally bearing a trade-mark
or trade name may be seized on importation into
those States of the Union where this mark or name
has a right to legal protection.
The seizure shall be effected at the request of
the Public Procurator (Ministére public) (a) or of
the interested party, pursuant to the internal legis-
lation of each country.
(a) The English official translation of Ministére public by
“proper Public Department,” though not correct, render the
meaning and effect which are necessarily given to the term in
Great Britain, where.the Public Procurator or Ministére public
does not represent the public interest exclusively.
Arr. X. The provisions of the preceding Article
shall apply to all goods falsely bearing the name of
any locality as place of origin, when this indication
is associated with a fictitious trade name, or one
assumed with a fraudulent intention.
Any manufacturer of, or trader in, these goods,
established in the locality falsely designated as
the place of origin, shall be deemed an interested
party (a).
(a) It was to extend the application of this article that
special English delegates (Mr. Belk and Mr. Hughes from
Sheffield) attended the Conference at Rome in 1886. The
Article of which they succeeded in obtaining the acceptance
by a number of the delegates of other States, has been given in
the Introduction. As this Article has not been ratified, it
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY CONVENTION.
leaves the above text unmodified, (See as regards the protec-
tion of English marks in France, observations under Art. 19 of
the Trade Marks Act, 1857, p. 99, Art. 9 of the Trade Marks
Act, 1873, p. 103, and Art. 10 of the Treaty of 1882, p. 134.)
A question of construction has arisen between the Italian
and French Governments in reference to Arts. 9 and 10.
The former maintains that under these Articles, France has no
right to stop goods bearing a false mark of origin unless
coupled with a fictitious trade name, or one assumed with a
fraudulent intention. The French Government, on the con-
trary, considers that the wording of the article is not a restric-
tion on those States which are favourable to more rigorous
protection, but is the limit beyond which protection cannot be
claimed under the Convention by the contracting States from
each other. It was, in other words, the maximum the con-
tracting States would unanimously concede to each other, but
it left each State free to take such further precautions as
it might think fit.
The object of the Article as originally framed was to give
the manufacturers and places of manufacture of the contracting
States the same protection as is given to native citizens. It
was borrowed in the original French project from Art. 19
of the Act of June 23, 1857 (Procés-verbaux, 1880, p. 81).
Its motive, as appears from the minutes of the Conference of
1880, was to prevent fraudulent descriptions of origin by
restrictions as far as unanimity would permit, and not to
remove any existing prohibitions of fraud. It is not easy to
see upon what a different construction of the Article can be
based.
Art. XI. The High Contracting Parties agree to
grant temporary protection to patentable inventions,
to designs, models, and trade-marks for articles
appearing at official, or officially recognized, Inter-
national Exhibitions (a).
(a) See the special provisions of French law hereon (p, 126)-
149°
Construc-
tion of
Italian
Govern-
ment.
Construc-
tion of
French
Govern-
ment.
Provision
whence
derived. .
Exhibi-
tions,
150
Central
offices to
be created.
Want of
central
office in
France.
Searches
where to
be made.
Inter-
national
office for
Industrial
Property.
TREATY ARRANGEMENTS.
Art. XII. Each of the High Contracting Parties
agrees to establish a special governmental depart-
ment for industrial property, and a central office
for communication to the public of patents, designs,
models, and trade-marks.
The publication of patents in France is insufficient to satisfy
the needs of the public. Searches are rendered difficult by
the existence of two central registries, the one for existing
patents (Ministry of Commerce), and the other. for expired
patents (Conservatoire des Arts et Meétiers). One central office,
like the Patent Office in London, is a desirable reform which
has often been advocated in France.
At present, moreover, patents are registered at one place
(Ministry of Commerce), trade-marks at another (Tribunal of
Commerce), and designs and models at a third (Consetl de
Pru@hommes), and proposals to centralize the registration
have not been favourably received in the provincial centres.
At present there is no centralization for designs and models,
nor is any search possible so long as the registration is
secret. Trade-marks are transmitted with some delay to the
Conservatowre des Arts et Métiers. An improvement has been
made since 1884 by the publication of trade-marks in the weekly
Bulletin Officiel de la Propriété industrielle, pursuant to § 5
of the Final Protocol (see p. 154). Otherwise, as regards
centralization, things remain as before the International Con-
vention.
Art. XITI. An International Office shall be or-
ganized under the name of ‘‘ Bureau International
de l'Union pour la Protection de la Propriété In-
dustrielle’’ (International Oftice of the Union for
the Protection of Industrial Property).
This office, the expense of which shall be defrayed
by the Governments of all the Contracting States,
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY CONVENTION.
shall be placed under the high authority of the
Central Administration of the Swiss Confederation,
and shall work under its supervision. Its func-
tions shall be determined by agreement between
the States of the Union.
Art. XIV. The present Convention shall be sub-
mitted to periodical revisions, with a view to in-
troducing improvements calculated to perfect the
system of the Union.
To this end conferences shall be successively held
in each of the Contracting States by delegates of
the said States. The next meeting shall take place,
in 1885, at Rome (a).
(a) This Conference was not held till 1886. The resolutions
there adopted but not ratified will be found in the Appendix
(p. 186). See also p. 21 e¢ seg. of the Introduction.
Arr. XY. It is agreed that the High Contracting
Parties respectively reserve to themselves the right
to make separately, as between themselves, special
arrangements for the protection of industrial pro-
perty, in so far as such arrangements do not
contravene the provisions of the present Conven-
tion.
Art. XVI. States which have not taken part in
the present Convention shall be permitted to accede
to it at their request.
This accession shall be notified diplomatically to
the Government of the Swiss Confederation, and
by the latter to all the others. It shall ipso facto.
154
Periodical.
revisions
of Convez-
tion.
Separate
conven-
tions per-
missible.
Union how
joined.
152
Ratifica-
tion.
Duration
of Conven-
tion.
Denuncia-
tion.
TREATY ARRANGEMENTS.
imply acceptance of all the clauses, and admission
to all the advantages stipulated by the present Con-
vention.
Arr. XVII. The carrying out of the reciprocal
engagements contained in the present Convention
is subordinated, in so far as necessary, to the obser- ,
vance of the formalities and rules established by
the constitutional laws of those of the High Con-
tracting Parties who are bound to procure the
application thereof, which they engage to do as
early as possible.
Arr. XVIII. The present Convention shall come
into operation within one month after the exchange
of ratifications, and shall remain in force for an
unlimited time, till the expiry of one year from the
date of its denunciation. This denunciation shall
be addressed to the Government commissioned to
receive accessions. It shall only affect the State
which shall have denounced the Convention—the
Convention remaining intact for the other Con-
tracting Parties.
Art. XIX. The present Convention shall be
ratified, and the ratifications of it exchanged in
Paris, within one year at the latest.
In witness whereof the respective plenipotentiaries
have signed it, and thereto affixed their seals.
Done at Paris, March 20, 18838.
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY CONVENTION.
PROTOCOL.
The plenipotentiaries of the Contracting States,
when signing the accompanying Convention, at the
same time signed an explanatory protocol, which is
as follows :—
1. The words “ industrial property” are to be
understood in their broadest sense; they are not to
apply simply to industrial products properly so
called, but also to agricultural products (wines,
corn, fruits, cattle, &c.), and to mineral products
employed in commerce (mineral waters, &c.).
2. Under the word “ patents ” are comprised the
various kinds of industrial patents recognised by
the legislation of the Contracting States, such as
importation patents, improvement patents (a), &c.
(a) See p. 438.
8. The last paragraph of Article 2 does not affect
the legislation of any of the Contracting States,
relating to legal procedure, jurisdiction, &c. (a).
(a) See note (0) to Art. 2, p. 137.
4, Paragraph 1 of Article 6 is to be understood
as meaning that no trade-mark shall be excluded
from protection in any State of the Union, simply
153
Merchan-
dise to
which Con-
vention
‘applies.
Sense of
word
“¢ patents.””
Rules of
procedure
excepted.
Composi-
tion of
trade
marks not
obstacle to
154
registra-
tion.
Public
armorial
bearings
and decora-
tions,
Official
periodical.
Organisa-
tion of
Inter-
national
office,
TREATY ARRANGEMENTS.
because it does not satisfy, in regard to the signs
composing it, the conditions of the legislation of
that State, provided that on this point it comply
with the legal requirements of the country of origin,
and that it shall have been properly registered in
said country of origin. With this exception, which
relates only to the form of the mark, and under
reserve of the clauses of the other articles of the
Convention, the internal legislation of each State
shall remain in force.
To avoid misconstruction it is agreed that the
use of public armorial bearings and decorations.
may be considered as contrary to public order in
the sense of the last paragraph of Article 6.
5. Each country of the Union shall publish, if
practicable, an official periodical, in connection with
the special government department mentioned in
Article 12 (a).
(a) See note to Art. 12, p. 150.
6. The common expenses of the International
Office, instituted by virtue of Article 18, are in no
case to exceed for a single year a total sum repre-
senting an average of 2,000 francs for each Con- |.
tracting State.
To determine the part which each State should
contribute to this total of expenses, the Contracting
States, and those which may afterwards join the
Union, shall be divided into six classes, each con-
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY CONVENTION.
tributing in the proportion of a certain number of
units, namely :—
Units.
1st class : : * és 7 . 25
2nd class . : ‘ ‘ F . . 20
3rd class ‘ i . 2 : . 15
4th class . i ‘ ‘ b ao 10
5th class. : . ‘ i a 5
6th class . ; ; é : oe 3
These co-efficients will be multiplied by the
number of States in each class, and the sum of the
result thus obtained will supply the number of units
by which the total expense has to be divided. The
quotient will give the amount of the unit of expense.
The Contracting States are classed as follows,
with regard to the division of expense :—
Ist class . . France, Italy.
Qnd class . . Spain.
3rd class . . Belgium, Brazil, Portugal, Switzerland.
4th class . . Holland.
5th class . . Servia.
6th class . . Guatemala, Salvador.
The Swiss Government will superintend the
expenses of the International Office, advance the
necessary funds, and render an annual account,
which will be communicated to all the other Ad-
ministrations.
The International Office will centralise informa-
tion of every kind relating to the protection of
Oo
156
TREATY ARRANGEMENTS.
Industrial Property, and will bring it together in
the form of a general statistical statement which
will be distributed to all the Administrations. It
will interest itself in all matters of common utility
to the Union, and will edit, with the help of the
documents supplied to it by the various Adminis-
trations, a periodical paper in the French language
dealing with questions regarding the object of the
Union.
The numbers of this paper, as well as all the
documents published by the International Office,
will be circulated among the Administrations of the
States of the Union in the proportion of the number
of contributing units as mentioned above. Such
further copies as may be desired either by the said
Administrations, or by Societies or private persons
will be paid for separately.
The International Office shall at all times hold
itself at the service of members of the Union, in
order to supply them with any special information
they may need on questions relating to the inter-
national system of Industrial Property.
The Administration of the country in which the
next conference is to be held will make preparation
for the transactions of that conference, with the
assistance of the International Office.
The Director of the International Office will be
present at the meetings of the conferences, and will
take part in the discussions, but without the privi-
lege of voting.
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY CONVENTION,
He will furnish an annual Report upon his ad-
ministration of the office, which shall be communi-
cated to all the members of the Union.
The official language of the International Office
will be French.
7. The present Final Protocol, which shall be
ratified along with the Convention concluded this
day, shall be considered as forming an integral part
of and shall have the same force, validity and dura-
tion as the Convention itself.
ACCESSION OF HER MAJESTY’S GOVERNMENT
TO THE ABOVE CONVENTION.
The Undersigned, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipo-
tentiary of Her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Ireland to the French Republic, declares
that Her Britannic Majesty, having had the International
Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property, con-
cluded at Paris on the 20th March, 1883, and the Protocol
relating thereto, signed on the same date, laid before her, and
availing herself of the right reserved by Article XVI. of that
Convention to States not parties to the original Convention,
accedes, on behalf of the United Kingdom of Great Britain
and Ireland, to the said International Convention for the Pro-
tection of Industrial Property, and to the said Protocol, which
are to be considered as inserted word for word in the present
Declaration, and formally engages, as far as regards the Presi-
dent of the French Republic and the other High Contracting
Parties, to co-operate on her part in the execution of the
157
Effect of
Protocol,
Accession
of United
Kingdom
to Union.
TREATY ARRANGEMENTS.
stipulations contained in the Convention and Protocol afore-
said.
The Undersigned makes this Declaration on the part of Her
Britannic Majesty with the express understanding that power
is reserved to Her Britannic Majesty to accede to the Conven-
tion on behalf of the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands, and
any of Her Majesty’s possessions, on due notice to that effect
being given through Her Majesty’s Government.
In witness whereof the Undersigned, duly authorised, has
signed the present Declaration of Accession, and has affixed
thereto the seal of his arms.
Done at Paris on the 17th day of March, 1884.
(L.S.) (Signed) — Lyons.
(Translation.)
Her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Ireland, having acceded to the International Con-
vention relative to the Protection of Industrial Property, con-
cluded at Paris, March 20, 1883, together with a Protocol
dated the same day, by the Declaration of Accession delivered
by Her Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to the
Government of the French Republic; the text of which
Declaration is word for word as follows :—
(Here 1s inserted the teat of the above Declaration.)
The President of the French Republic has authorised the
Undersigned, President of the Council, Minister for Foreign
Affairs, to formally accept the said Accession, together with
the reserves which are contained in it concerning the Isle of
Man, the Channel Islands, and all other possessions of Her
Britannic Majesty, engaging as well in his own name as in
that of the other High Contracting Parties to assist in the
accomplishment of the obligations stipulated in the Conven-
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY CONVENTION. 159
tion and the Protocol thereto annexed, which may concern the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
In witness whereof the Undersigned, duly authorised, has
drawn up the present Declaration of Acceptance and has
affixed thereto his seal.
Done at Paris, the 2nd April, 1884.
(L.S.) (Signed) § JuLEes Frrry.
DECREE OF THE PRESIDENT OF FRENCH RE-
PUBLIC PROMULGATING THE CONVENTION
IN FRANCE.
Le Président de la République Frangaise,—Sur la proposi- Decree
tion du président du conseil, ministre des affaires ¢trangeres,— Promul-
A gating
Décréte : Conven-
Le Sénat et la Chambre des députés ayant approuvé la con- tion.
vention pour la protection de la propriété industrielle, signée
le 20 Mars 1883, entre la France, la Belgique, le Brésil,
l’Espagne, le Guatémala, l’Italie, les Pays-Bas, le Portugal, le
Salvador, la Serbie et la Suisse, et suivie d’un protocole de
cloture, les ratifications de cet acte ayant été échangées a Paris,
le 6 Juin 1884; le royaume-uni de la Grande-Bretagne et
d'Irlande, la Tunisie et ’Equateur y ayant accédé, et les actes
d’accession ayant été également déposés le 6 Juin 1884, ladite
convention et ledit protocole de cléture dont la teneur suit,
recevront leur pleine et entitre exécution.
160
Patents
taken out
in France
and in
French
colonies.
' Formali-
ties.
FRENCH COLONIES AND ALGERIA.
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY IN THE
FRENCH COLONIES AND ALGERIA.
—_+—
PATENTS.
ORDER REGULATING THE APPLICATION OF THE Law
or Jury 5, 1844, on Patents. (October 21,
1848.)
Art. I.—The law of July 5, 1844, on patents
shall be applied in the colonies from the publication
of the present decree (a).
(a) Patents taken out in the Colonies are valid in France,
and patents taken out in France are valid in the Colonies.
See note to Article 8.
Art. II.—Any person desirous of taking out a
patent in the colonies shall deposit at the offices of
the Director of the Interior, three copies (a) of the
documents required by Article 5 of the above-men-
tioned law. The minute recording this deposit
shall be inscribed in a register kept for the purpose
and signed by the above official and by the appli-
cant, in accordance with Article 7 of the said law.
(a) For letters patent in France two copies suffice. Article
3 (2) explains the object of the additional copy.
PATENTS.
Art. III.—Before proceeding to draw up the
minute of registration the Director of the Interior
shall require :—(1.) The receipt delivered by the
Treasury of the Colony certifying the payment of
the sum of one hundred francs, being the first
annuity of the tax; (2.) Three copies of each docu-
ment mentioned in paragraphs 1, 2, 3, and 4 of
Article 5 of the law of July 5, 1844. A copy of
each of these documents shall remain deposited
under seal in the said offices for reference if neces-
sary. The two other copies shall be placed ina
single envelope by the applicant, who shall close
and seal it himself.
Art. IV.—The Governor of each Colony shall
with the shortest possible delay after registering ap-
plications, transmit to the Minister of Industry and
Commerce, through the Minister of the Marine and
the Colonies, the sealed envelope containing the two
copies in question, and add thereto a certified copy
of the minute, the receipt for payment of the first
annuity, and, where there is one, the procuration of
the agent.
Art. V.—Patents when delivered are transmitted
with the least possible delay to their destination
through the Minister of the Marine and the
Colonies.
Arr. VI.—Registration of transfers of patents
dealt with in Article 20 of the law of July 5, 1844,
shall be effected at the offices of the Director of the
Interior. The copies of the minute of registration
BP. M
161
Applica-
tions in
French
Colonies
forwarded
to Paris.
Assign-
ments.
Jurisdic-
tion,
FRENCH COLONIES AND ALGERIA.
accompanied by the certified extract from the deed
of transfer and the receipt for the complete payment
of the annuities shall be transmitted to the Ministry
of Agriculture and Commerce in accordance with
Article 4 of the present decree.
Art. VII.—The payment prescribed by Articles
4, 7, 11, and 22 of the law of July 5, shall be paid
to the Treasurer of each Colony, who shall convey
it to the Public Treasury, and transmit to the
Minister of Agriculture and of Commerce by the
same channel a statement thereof.
Art. VIII.—Actions for infringement shall be
dealt with by the Court of Appeal in the Colonies(a).
The periods fixed by Article 48 of the said law
shall be modified in accordance with the decrees
which relate to procedure in civil matters in the
Colonies.
(«) The owner of a patent taken out in France may enforce
his rights in the French Colonies without having complied
with the above formalities, which are practically confined to
providing for convenient registration by colonial inventors.
PATENTS.
DEcREE RELATING TO THE APPLICATION TO ALGERIA
or THE Law or Juty 5, 1844, on RATENTH
(June 5, 1850.) (a)
(a) Algeria was recently constituted an extension of France.
Article 2 of the Decree of August 26, 1881, which effected
this reform, provides that “the laws, decrees, orders, regula-
tions, and ministerial instructions affecting the different ser-
vices in France, shall apply in Algeria in all provisions with
which the special legislation of the country does not conflict.”
The same Decree gave each Minister jurisdiction in Algeria,
as if it were a portion of France, the Governor being like the
Prefect in the Department, the agent of each Minister. The
circuitous communications provided for in the text below,
are therefore now removed.
Arr. II —The documents required by Article 5
of the law of July 5, 1844, shall be lodged in three
parts (a) by the applicant at the secretary's office of
the Prefecture, at Algiers, Oran, or Constantine.
A copy of these documents shall remain deposited
under seal at the office of the general secretary of
the Prefecture where the deposit shall have been
amade, to be resorted to, if need be. The two other
copies shall be enclosed in a single envelope and
. sealed by the applicant (déposant), to be addressed
to the Minister of War. s
(a) For France two copies suffice. The sequel of the Article
explains the object of the third copy.
Arr. III.—The Prefect shall, as soon as possible
after registration of the applications, address to the
Minister of War, who shall transmit them to the
M 2
163
Algeria
extension
of France.
164
Trade
Marks in
French
Colonies.
FRENCH COLONIES AND ALGERIA.
Minister of Agriculture and Commerce, the sealed
envelope containing the two copies in question, to
which shall be added the other documents required
under Article 7 of the law of July 5, 1844. The
letters patent delivered shall be sent by the Minister
of Commerce to the Minister of War, who will
transmit them to the Prefect to be forwarded to the
applicants.
Art. [V.—The fees prescribed by Articles 4, 7,
11, and 22 of the law of July 5, 1844, shall be paid
to the Trésorier-payeur, who will convey them to
the Treasury, and who will send the Minister of
Agriculture and Commerce a statement of the
fees paid.
Art. V.—Actions for offences and infringements
shall be judged by the competent Tribunals in
Algeria. The delay for distance fixed by Article 48
of the law of July 5, 1844, shail be modified in
accordance with the laws and decrees which govern
civil procedure in Algeria.
TRADE-MARKS.
DEcREE DECLARING THE Law or JunE 23, 1857,
APPLICABLE TO THE CoLonrEs. (August 8,
1873.)
Art. I.—Subject to the modifications herein con-
tained the following shall apply to the Colonies (a).
(a) This is held to include Algeria, ‘See, moreover, note to
Decree of June 5, 1850, p. 163.
TRADE-MARKS.
(1.) The law of June 28, 1857, on trade-marks.
(2.) The decree of July 26, 1858, regulating the
administrative details for carrying out the said law
of June 28, 1857.
Art. II.—The increase of delay for distance shall
be one day for two myriamétres.
Art. III.—The copy of the mark which in France
must be transmitted in five days to the Minister of
_ Agriculture and Commerce, shall be transmitted
within the same time to the Director of the Interior,
or to whosoever shall be acting as such, to be for-
warded to the Minister of the Marine and the
Colonies, who in turn shall forward the same to the
Minister of Agriculture and Commerce, for deposit
at the Conservatoire des Arts et Métiers.
Art. IV.—The fixed fee of one franc granted to
the registrar by Article 4 of the law of June 23,
1857, and by Article 6 of the decree of July 28,
1868, is raised in all cases to two francs.
Art. V.—The present decree as well as the law
and decree to which it refers shall come into force
as soon as their promulgation is reputed to be
known in accordance with the special rules existing
for each colony.
The Act of November 26, 1873 (sce p. 88),
specifically states that it is applicable to the Colo-
nies and Algeria (Article 8).
Centralisa
tion in
Paris,
166
Merchan-
dise Marks,
Designs
and
Models,
FRENCH COLONIES AND ALGERIA.
DESIGNS, MODELS AND MERCHANDISE
MARKS.
The laws and regulations relating to commercial
names (merchandise marks), designs, and models,
seem not to have been specifically extended to the
Colonies. The Courts would probably, in the
absence of special decrees, confine themselves to
applying Art. 1882 of the Civil Code (see p. 118)
against infringers. As regards Algeria, see note to
Decree of June 5, 1850, p. 163.
EXHIBITION REWARDS AND MEDALS.
Art. 7 of the Law of April 30, 1886, relating to
the usurpation of Industrial Medals and Rewards,
extends this law to Algeria and the Colonies (see
p. 123).
INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION FOR
THE PROTECTION OF INDUSTRIAL
PROPERTY.
The Convention of 1883 is applied in the French
Colonies as in France.
TUNIS—-PATENTS,
TUNIS.
PATENTS FOR INVENTIONS.
(LAW OF DECEMBER 26, 1888.)
pga
LAW RELATING To Patents FoR INVENTIONS (4).
(a) This law is based on the French Act of 1844. The
main lines of it are those of the law of France. Though
Art. 9 does not contain the words “without preliminary ,
examination,” it leaves standing the provision that the patent
is delivered at the applicant’s own risk. The only innovation
of principle is the system introduced in Art. 8 of allowing
opposition to be made to the grant of the patent during two
months from publication of the application.
At the foot of each article I have inserted references to the
parallel provisions of French law (see p. 33 et seq.) which will
enable the reader to find the corresponding notes without
difficulty.
(Reference to the parallel articles of the French Act of 1844
(p. 33 et seq.) are indicated by numbers at the foot of each
article.)
PART I.
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Arr. I.—§ 1. A new discovery or invention, in
any department of industry, confers on its author,
167
Principles
adopted.
Part I.
General
provisions,
168
Parr I.
Novelty.
Non-
patentable
inventions.
Duration.
Fees
payable.
TUNIS—PATENTS,
under the conditions and for the periods hereinafter
fixed, the exclusive right of working the said dis-
covery or invention for his own benefit.
§ 2. This right is certified by a document de-
livered by the Tunisian Government called “ brevet
d invention” (Letters Patent). (1.)
Art. I].—The following shall be deemed new
inventions or discoveries :—
The invention of new industrial products.
The invention of new means, or the new appliance
of means already known, for obtaining an industrial
result or product. (II.)
Arr. III.—The following shall not be patent-
able :—
Financial plans and schemes, and generally in-
ventions the popularising of which would be con-
trary to law and good morals. If the invention
is connected with foods or medicaments, the inven-
tion cannot be delivered for the goods themselves,
but exclusively for the special method of their
manufacture. (III.)
Arr. IV.—§ 1. The duration of a patent shall be
five, ten, or fifteen years.
§ 2. The fees payable are as follows :
Five hundred piastres (a) for a Patent of
five years ; ,
One thousand piastres for a Patent of ten
years ;
Fifteen hundred piastres for a Patent of
fifteen years.
FORMALITIES, IN GRANTING OF PATENTS,
§ 3. These fees shall be paid by yearly instal-
ments of one hundred piastres, under penalty of
forfeiture of the Patent, if the Patentee leaves an
instalment unpaid. (IV.)
(a) The value in English money of a piastre averages about
Gd.
PART IL.
FORMALITIES TO BE OBSERVED IN THE
GRANTING OF PATENTS.
Art. V.—Any person wishing to take. out a
Patent must deposit under seal in person or by
attorney, or apply through the post by registered
letter (a) to our Prime Minister :
1st. His application ;
2nd. A specification of the discovery, invention,
or appliance forming the subject of the applica-
tion ;
3rd. The drawings or samples necessary to render
the specification intelligible ; and
4th. A memorandum of the documents deposited.
The applications will be entered in the order of
their reception in a register, which will indicate the
date and hour of their arrival, the name of the ap-
169
Part I.
Parr, II.
Formalities
respecting
grant of
patents.
Entry of
applica-
tions.
170
Part IT.
Form of
applica-
tion.
Title,
Specifica-
tion.
Language
to be used.
Weights
and
measures,
Drawings.
Documents
to be
TUNIS— PATENTS.
plicant, the object of the application, and the num-
ber of the inscription.
A minute of reception of the application shall be
delivered without charge on demand. (V.)
(a) This utilisation of the postal service is an intelligent
improvement, which might be extended to France.
Art. VI.—§ 1. The application shall be limited
to a single principal object, with the details consti-
tuting it, and the employments (applications) thereof
indicated.
It shall mention the period for which the appli-
cants desire to take out their patent, within the
limits fixed by Art. 4, and shall contain no condi-
tions or reservations.
It shall indicate a title containing a summary and
precise designation of the object of the invention.
§ 2. The specification must be written in the
French language only. It shall contain no altera-
tions, or words written over others. Words ob-
literated shall be counted and verified, and the
pages and references initialed.
The denominations of weights or measures shall
be given on the metric system.
§ 8. The drawings must be traced in ink, and
according to the metric scale.
§ 4. A duplicate of the specification and drawings
shall be annexed to the application.
§ 5. All documents shall be signed by the appli-
FORMALITIES IN GRANTING OF PATENTS,
cant or by his agent, whose power of attorney shall
be appended to the application. (VI.)
Art. VII.—No deposit of documents shall be
received except on production of a receipt show-
ing the payment of the sum of one hundred piastres
on account of the Patent fees at the office of the
Receiver-General of the Government of Tunis.
The first payment is retained by the State,
although the application for the invention be ulti-
mately refused. (VII.)
Art. VIII.—If the documents annexed to the
application for the Patent are complete, and there
is no ground for rejecting the said application, in
accordance with Articles 3, 5, and 7, the Prime
Minister will publish the application, with a sum-
mary of its contents, in the Official Journal.
During a period of two months from the publica-
tion, it will be lawful for anybody to make opposi-
tion in writing to the application for the patent.
On the expiration of this period, and if no opposi-
tion has been made, a fiat of the Prime Minister or
his delegate, attesting the regularity of the applica-
tion and the absence of opposition, shall be delivered
to the applicant, and will constitute the letters
patent. This document will likewise be inscribed
in a register to be called “‘ the Register of Patents,”
and notice thereof will be given in the Official
Journal. Where the application has been rejected,
communication of such rejection will be made to
the applicant or his authorised agent.
171
Part IT,
signed by
applicant.
Payment
of fees
first step.
First pay-
ment not
returnable.
Publication
of applica-
tions.
Opposi-
tions.
Delivery of
patent.
Rejection
of applica-
tion.
172
Part i.
Pricedure:
after
opposition
entered.
Patents
granted at
applicant’s
risk and
without
guarantee.
Certificate
of addition,
alterations,
improve-
ments,
Fee
payable.
TUNIS—-PATENTS,
If oppositions are made, the Patent will only be
delivered after the applicant shall have obtained
the removal of such opposition by the competent
Tribunals (a).
(a) This article constitutes an innovation of the system of
the French Act of 1844 which is set out in Arts. IX. and X.
thereof, See note, p. 167.
Art. IX.—Patents shall be granted (a) at the
applicant’s own risk, and without, guarantee as
to either the reality, novelty or merit of the in-
vention, or the accuracy of the specification. (XI.)
(a) The words “without examination ” which figure in the
French Act (see p. 41) in this place have been omitted.
Arr. X.—§ 1. The patentee or others entitled
through him, during the whole duration of the
Patent, shall have the right to make alterations
and improvements in or additions to the invention,
provided the application is made in accordance with
‘the formalities prescribed by Articles 5 and 6.
§ 2. These alterations, improvements or additions
shall be authenticated by certificates delivered in
the same form as the principal Patent, and shall have
from the expiration of the time allowed for making
opposition the same effect as the said principal
Patent, with which they shall terminate.
§ 8. The fee for the application for a Certificate
of Addition is twenty piastres in the manner fixed
by Article 7.
FORMALITIES IN GRANTING OF PATENTS.
§ 4. A certificate of Addition taken out by one
of those entitled shall avail for all the others.
(XVI)
Art. XI.—A patentee who wishes to take out
for an alteration, improvement or addition a principal
Patent of five, ten or fifteen years, instead of a
Certificate of Addition expiring with the original
Patent, must comply with the formalities prescribed
by Articles 5, 6 and 7, and pay the fees mentioned
in Article 4. (XVII.)
Arr. XII.—§ 1. Nobody but the patentee or
those entitled through him, acting as above men-
tioned, can, during one year, take out a valid
Patent for an alteration, improvement or addition
to the invention forming the subject-matter of the
original Patent.
§ 2. Nevertheless, any person who wishes to
take out a Patent for an alteration, addition or
improvement in a discovery already patented,
may, during the said year, make an application
which will be deposited under seal with the Prime
Minister.
§ 38. At the end of the year the seal will be broken
and the Patent delivered in accordance with the
procedure prescribed by Article 8.
§ 4. The original patentee, however, shall have
the preference in all alterations, improvements and
additions for which he has himself demanded a
Certificate of Addition or a Patent in the course of
the year. (XVIII.)
173
Part II,
Principal
patent for
improve-
ment.
Principal
patentee’s
prior right.
174
Parr II.
As to con-
flicting
interests
connected
therewith,
Formalities
of assign-
ment.
Register of
Patents,
Rights of
assignees
as regards
additions,
&e.
Copies of
certificates
of addition.
Inspection
TUNIS—PATENTS, |
Arr. XIII.—To take out a Patent for a discovery,
invention, or appliance connected with the subject-
matter of another Patent does not confer a right to
work the invention already patented, nor can the
original patentee work the invention which forms
the subject-matter, of the new Patent. (XIX.)
Art. XIV.—§ 1. A patentee may assign the total
or partial ownership of his Patent.
§ 2. The total or partial assignment of a Datant
whether as a gift or for a valuable consideration,
must be by notarial deed and after payment. of the
whole of the fees prescribed by Article 4.
§ 8. No assignment shall be valid, as regards
third persons, until it has been registered, and the
person last inscribed as proprietor on the Register
of Patents shall be reputed real proprietor of the
Patent delivered. (XX.)
Art. XV.—§ 1. The assignees of a Patent and
those who may have acquired from a patentee or
those entitled through him the right to work the
discovery or invention shall have the benefit of any
Certificates of Addition, delivered to the patentee
or those entitled through him at a later date.
Reciprocally, the patentee or those entitled through
him shall have the benefit of Certificates of Addition
delivered at a later date to the assignees,
§ 2. Any person who has a right to make use of
a Certificate of Addition may obtain a copy thereof
on payment of a fee of twenty piastres. (XXII)
Art. XVI.—§ 1. All specifications, drawings,
PROVISIONAL PROTECTION AT EXHIBITIONS.
models, and specimens of Patents delivered may,
until the expiration of such Patents, be inspected
free of charge on demand.
§ 2. Any person may obtain, at his own expense,
a copy of the said specifieations and drawings.
(XXTIT.)
Art. XVII.—At the beginning of each year a
list shall be published in the Tunisian official
journal giving the titles of the Patents delivered in
the course of the preceding year. (XXIV.)
PART IIL
PROVISIONAL PROTECTION AT EXHIBITIONS.
Art. XVIII.—Any Tunisian or foreigner, author
of a discovery or invention capable of being patented,
or of an industrial design which should be registered,
or other persons entitled through him, may, if they
are admitted to a public Exhibition authorised by
the Administration, obtain from the Prime Minister
a certificate descriptive of the object registered (a).
(a) See note to Art. 20, p. 176.
Art. XIX.—This certificate will secure to the
person obtaining it the same rights as a patent for
175
Part II.
of specifi-
cations,
&e.
Copies
thereof.
Annual
list of
Patents.
Part IIT
Provisional
protection
at Exhibi-
tions for
Patents
and
Designs
Rights
conferred
thereby,
176
Part III.
Limit of
time for
application.
Inspection
of pro-
visional
certificates,
Delivery of
certificates
gratuitous.
TUNIS—PATENTS.
invention or the registration of an industrial design
would confer, such right dating from the day of
admission till the end of the third month following
the close of the Exhibition, without prejudice to
the patent which the exhibitor may take out, or to
the registration of the design which he may effect
before the expiration of the said time (a).
(a) See note to Art. 20 below.
Art. XX.—The application for this certificate
must be made during the first month, at latest,
from the opening of the Exhibition. It must be
addressed to the Prime Minister and accompanied
by an exact description of the object to be guaran-
teed, and, if necessary, by a plan or drawing of the
said object.
These applications, as well as the decisions of the
Prime Minister, will be inscribed in a special
Register which will be open to inspection on
demand.
The delivery of the certificate is gratuitous (a).
(a) These provisions are borrowed from the French Act of
May 23, 1868, see p. 126,
FORFEITURES,
PART IV.
FORFEITURES.
Art. XXI.—§ 1. Patents delivered in the follow-
ing cases are void :
Istly. When the discovery, invention, or appli-
ance is not new;
2ndly. When the discovery, invention, or appli-
ance is not patentable according to Article 8 ;
3rdly. When the Patents relate to theoretical or
merely scientific principles, methods, systems, dis-
coveries and conceptions, the industrial appliances
of which are not indicated ;
4thly. When the discovery, invention, or appli-
ance is held to be contrary to public order or
safety or to the laws of the country, without preju-
dice in such a case to the penalties which might be
incurred for manufacturing or selling prohibited
articles ;
5thly. When the title under which the application
for a Patent has been made fraudulently indicates
any but the real object of the invention ;
-6thly. When the specification accompanying the
Patent is not sufficient for working the invention,
or when it does not completely and fairly indicate
the real means employed by the inventor ;
Tthly. When the Patent has been obtained
contrary to the provisions of Article 12.
B.P. N
177
Part IV.
Cases of
nullity of
Patent.
Want of
novelty.
Inventions
relating
to bare
principles.
Illicit
inventions.
Fraudulent
title.
Insuffi-
ciency
of specifi.
cation,
178
Part IV.
Publicity
before re-
gistration
defined.
Forfeiture
of Patent.
Non-pay-
ment of
fees.
Failure
to work
Patent.
importing
patented
goods from
abroad.
TUNIS—PATENTS,
§ 2. Certificates comprising alterations, improve-
ments, or additions which are not connected with
the original Patent are likewise void. (XXX.)
Ant. XXII.—No discovery, invention, or appli-
ance to which in the Regency or abroad, and before
the date of the deposit of the application, sufficient
publicity has been given to enable it to be worked
shall be reputed new (a). (XXXI.)
(a) This is subject, of course, to Art. 4 of the Industrial
Property Convention. See pp. 138 and 185.
Art. XXIII.—§ 1. Shall forfeit all his rights :—
The patentee who has not paid his yearly instal-
ment before the beginning of each year of the term
of his Patent ;
The patentee who has not worked his discovery
or invention in the Regency within two years from
the date of the signature of the Patent, or who has-
ceased to work it for two consecutive years, unless
in either case he can show good cause for not so-
working it;
The patentee who imports into the Regency
articles made abroad similar to those protected by
his Patent ;
The introduction will, nevertheless, be authorised
of: (1), models of machines; (2), objects manu-
factured abroad destined for public Exhibitions (a),
or for experiments made with the assent of the
government. (XXXII.)
(a) See, however, Articles 18, 19, 20.
=
FORFEITURES.
Arr. XXIV.—§. 1. Whoever on sign-boards or
in advertisements, prospectuses, placards, marks
or stamps, terms himself ‘‘ patentee,” without
possessing a Patent delivered in accordance with
the Law, or after expiry of a former Patent, or who,
being a patentee, mentions his title of patentee, or
his Patent, without adding the words “ without
guarantee of the Tunisian Government,” shall be
liable to a fine of from fifty to one thousand piastres.
§ 2. If the offence be repeated, the fine may be
doubled. (XX XTIT.) ,
Art. XXV.—Actions for annulment or forfeiture
may be brought by any person interested. Such
‘ actions, as well as all litigation relating to the
ownership of patents, shall be brought before the
French tribunals of first instance.
Art. XXVI.—When the absolute annulment or
forfeiture of a Patent has been decided by judgment
which has become final, notice thereof shall be given
to the Prime Minister, and the annulment or for-
feiture shall be published in the mode laid down by
Article 8 for bringing Patents to the knowledge of
the public. (XXXIX.)
Art. XXVII.—When proceedings are taken at the
same time against the patentee and one or more
assignees of a share in the Patent, it shall be
brought before the tribunal of the place where the
patentee is domiciled. (XXXYV.)
Art. XXVIII.—The case shall be examined and
decided in the mode prescribed for summary matters
N 2
179
Part IV.
Misuse of
rm
“ paten-
tee,” and
obligation
to use
words
** sans
garantie du
Gouverne-
ment.”
Jurisidic-
tion in
Patent
cases.
Publication
of annul-
ments and
forfeitures.
Procedure.
180
. Parr IV.
Interven-
tion of
Public
Procurator.
Part V.
Tenalties
for infringe-
Inent.
Acces-
sories.
TUNIS—PATENTS.
by Article 405 et seq. of the Code of Civil Pro-
cedure. It shall be communicated to the Public
Procurator. (XXXVI.)
Arr, XXIX.—S§ 1. In every suit for the purpose
of obtaining the annulment or forfeiture of a Patent
the Public Procurator may intervene and demand
the absolute annulment or forfeiture thereof.
§ 2. He may even proceed directly by principal
action to obtain the annulment in the cases pro-
vided for in subsections 2, 4, and 5 of Article 21.
(XXXVILI.)
Arr. XXX.—In the cases provided for by
Article 29 all parties entitled to the Patent, and
whose titles have been registered with the Tunisian
Government, shall be cited. (XXXVIII.)
PART V.
PENALTIES,
Arr. XXXI.—Infringement of the rights of 2
Patentee, either by manufacture, or by the use of
methods forming the subject of his patent, is a
misdemeanor.
It is punishable by a fine of from one hundred to
to two thousand piastres. (XL.)
Art. XXXII.—Any person who has knowingly
received, sold, or offered for sale, or introduced
PENALTIES,
upon the territory of the Regency one or more
counterfeit articles shall be subject to the same
penalties as an infringer. (XLI.)
Arr. XXXIII.—§ 1. No penalties established by
the present Decree (a) shall be cumulated.
§ 2. The highest penalty alone shall be inflicted
for all acts committed before the commencement of
proceedings. (XLII.)
(a) This is no doubt a clerical oversight, as the present text
isa Law not a Decree. See also § 2 of Article 34.
Art. XXXIV.—§ 1. In case of repetition of the
offence imprisonment of from one to six months
shall be inflicted in addition to the fine provided
by the preceding Articles.
§ 2. It shall be considered a repetition of the
offence, when a previous condemnation for one of
the offences specified by the present Law has been
inflicted during the next preceding five years.
§ 3. Imprisonment of from one to six months
may be inflicted where the infringer is a workman
or has been employed in the workshop or factory
of the Patentee, or where the infringer, having
become a partner of such workman or other person
employed by the Patentee, has thereby become
acquainted with the processes specified in the
Patent.
§ 4. In the latter case such workman or other
employé may be prosecuted as an accessory.
(XLII)
181
Part V.
Penalties
not to he
cumulated.
Repetition
of offence.
Special
penalty
in case of
employés.
182
Part V.
Moving
Public
Procurator.
Seizure of
counterfeit
articles.
TUNIS—PATENTS,
Arr. XXXV.—Article 463 of the French Penal
Code is applicable to the foregoing offences.
(XLIV.)
Art. XXXVI.—Proceedings for the enforcement
of the above penalties can only be taken by the
Public Procurator at the instance of the person
whose rights have been infringed. (XLV.)
Art. XXXVII.—The Correctional Tribunal
before which the action for infringement is brought
shall decide on any demurrers raised by the defen-
dant on the ground of nullity or of forfeiture of the
Patent or in connection with the ownership of the
Patent. (XLVI.)
Arr. XXXVITI.—Owners of a Patent may, after
obtaining an order of the President of the Tribunal
of First Instance, cause a public provess-server
(huissier) to draw up a detailed description of the
articles alleged to be counterfeit, with or without
seizure.
This order shall be granted on application and
production of the Letters Patent; in case of need
it shall appoint an expert to assist the process-
server in making the description.
When there is ground for a seizure the order
may oblige the applicant to give security, which
must be lodged before the seizure is effected (a).
Copies of the order of the Court and of the
document certifying that security, where ordered or
requisite, has been lodged, shall be left with the
holder of the articles described or seized, otherwise
é
PENALTIES.
the proceedings shall be void and the process-server
shall be liable for damages. (XLVII.)
(a) The provisions of the French Act as to security be ng
indispensable in the case of foreigners is omitted. See p. 63.
Arr, XXXIX.—In default of the applicant taking
either civil or criminal proceedings within eight
days, with one day more for every three myria-
metres (a) between the place where the objects seized
o1 described are situated and the domicil of the
infringer, fraudulent receiver, importer or vendor,
tke seizure or description shall be ipso facto void
without prejudice to the claim for damages provided
for by Article 28. (XLVIII.)
(a) A myriamétre is 6.2 miles.
Art. XL.—§ 1. The confiscation of the articles
held to be counterfeit, and of any instruments, or
machinery designed for the manufacture of such
articles, shall, even in case of acquittal, be ordered
against the infringer, receiver, importer or vendor.
§ 2. The confiscated articles shall be handed
over to the owner of the Patent without prejudice
to his claim for further damages and to publication
of the judgment if need be. (XLIX.)
183
Part Y.
Confisca-
tion of
counterfeit
urticles.
184 TUNIS—PATENTS.
PART VI.
SPECIAL AND TEMPORARY PROVISIONS.
Parr VI, ART. XLI.—The Government shall specify tle
Monifiaraiy administrative details for carrying out the present
provisions. Taw, which shall not come into force until six
months after its promulgation (a). (L.)
(a) It, therefore, does not come into operation till June oh
1889. The réglement giving the administrative details referr
to in the text is at present in course of preparation.
TRADE MARKS, DESIGNS, MERCHANDISE MARKS, ETC.
TRADE MARKS, DESIGNS, MERCHAN-
DISH MARKS, ETC.
\
Tunis possesses no special laws on trade-marks,
or names, designs, or models (see, however, Art. 18
of the foregoing law), and there is no provision as
vet there for the registration thereof. The subject,
however, is believed to be at present under con-
sideration at head-quarters. As all cases in which
Europeans are concerned are tried in the French
Courts of the Protectorate, under the Decree of
July 31, 1884 (Tunisian law of March 27, 1883),
the general principles of the French Codes are
applicable; for their protection. Thus they would
probably have the benefit of Art. 1382 of the Civil
Code (see p. 118) in case of infringement of any
rights not yet specially provided for.
As regards the Industrial Property Convention,
Tunis being a member of the Union, British
subjects enjoy its advantages there, so far as legis-
lation on the subject-matter thereof exists.
Trade-
Marks,
Designs,
&e.
Industrial
Property
Conven-
tion.
APPENDIX A.
APPENDICES.
APPENDIX A.
FORMS.
—.—-
PATENTS.
I.
APPLICATION FOR LETTERS PATENT.
A M. le Ministre de Agriculture et du Commerce.
Demande de Brevet.
Je, soussigné [name, christian names and description], de-
meurant & , Tue No. , déclare vouloir
prendre un brevet d’invention de quinze ans pour [title of the
invention].
Je joins a la présente demande :
1° Un récépissé constatant le versement d’une somme de
cent francs 4 valoir sur le montant de la taxe du brevet :
2° Une description originale de l'invention faisant objet du
brevet demandeé ;
3° Les dessins et échantillons nccessaires 4 intelligence
de la description ;
4° Le duplicata de la description et des dessins ;
5° Un bordereau des pieces déposées.
(Signature)
(All the annexed documents should be signed.)
FORMS—PATENTS.
II.
APPLICATION FOR A PaTENT BY AN AGENT,
A M. le Ministre de l’Agriculture et du Commerce.
Demande de Brevet.
Le soussigné [name, christian names and description],
demeurant 4 , Tue ) agissant au nom et comme
mandataire de Monsieur [name, christian names and descrip-
tion], demeurant & » rue » aux termes du
pouvoir que ledit Monsieur lui a donné le ;
certifié véritable par ledit mandataire, a déclaré vouloir
prendre audit nom et en ladite qualité un brevet d'invention
de quinze ans pour (the rest as in Form I, :)
6° La procuration sus-cnoncée.
III.
Power OF ATTORNEY TO BE ANNEXED TO THE APPLICATION.
Je, soussigné , fabricant de , demeurant
a , ai par les présentes donné pouvoir 4 M
demeurant a , de pour moi et en mon nom prendre
tous brevets d’invention pour découvertes par moi faites ou
a faire ; de fixer la durée de ces brevets ainsi qu'il le jugera
convenable ; de prendre tous certificats d’addition devant se
rattacher, soit aux brevets dés 4 présent obtenus par moi, soit
db ceux que je pourrai obtenir 4 lavenir ; aux fins sus-énoncées
et dans les différents cas qui pourront se présenter, faire
toutes déclarations et élections de domicile, signer, parafer,
approuver toutes piéces et mentions, requérir tous procés-
verbaux, signer et émarger tous registres, substituer dans tout
ou partie des présents pouvoirs et faire en général tout ce qui
sera nécessaire pour l’obtention et déliveencs des brevets et
certificats d’addition, ainsi que les expéditions desdits actes.
Bon pour pouvoir.
(The words “bon pour pouvoir” must be in the handwriting
of the person signing.)
187
188
APPENDIX A
IV.
LEss GENERAL POWER OF ATTORNEY.
Je, soussigné, &., donne par ces présentes pouvoir 4
M. O. , ingénieur demeurant 4 Paris, de, pour moi et en
mon nom, demander un brevet d’invention de quinze ans
pour [description of invention], Vautorise 4 élire domicile chez
lui pour J’exécution des formalités prescrites par la loi du
5 juillet, 1844; 4 signer tous actes et 4 satisfaire 4 toutes les
obligations imposées aux brevetés par ladite loi. Le présent
pouvoir aura force et valeur pour déposer en mon nom toutes
demandes de certificats d’addition se rattachant 4 ladite
invention. Je lautorise en outre & retirer des mains de qui
de droit tous titres et pices relatifs audit brevet et & en
donner décharge; promettant d’avoir le tout pour agréable
et de le ratifier au besoin.
Fait 4 le :
Bon pour pouvoir.
(See note to previous Form.)
Vv.
APPLICATION FoR Lerrers Parent FoR AN INVENTION
PatENTED ABROAD.
A M. le Ministre de lV Agriculture et du Commerce,
; Demande de Brevet.
Le soussigné, &¢., demeurant & , faisant Clection de
domicile chez Monsieur , demeurant a > rue ;
déclare vouloir prendre un brevet Vinvention de ans
pour une découverte pour laquelle il a obtenu en Angleterre
le une patente ayant encore années de durée,
laquelle invention consiste en
I] joint 4 la demande les pitces capes écrites intégrale-
ment en langue frangaise :
(See List of Documents, Form I.)
FORMS—PATENTS. 189
VI.
SPECIFICATION.
Mémoire descriptif & Vappui de la demande de brevet
formée par [name of inventor].
Mon invention consiste dans le procédé ci-aprés [detailed
and exact description of the invention].
Ce procédé est destiné principalement 4 étre appliqué A la
fabrication de [state precisely its principal applications].
Mais il peut étre également appliqué a [state precisely its
accessory applications].
Je déclare expressément que j’entends me réserver toutes
les applications indiquées ci-dessus et autres analogues.
Mon procédé se distingue de tous autres antérieurement
connus en ce qwil réunit pour la premitre fois [state precisely
the differences], qui wavaient été jusqwd présent appliqués
qwisolément et pour une autre destination.
Les avantages qu'il présente sont [detailed enumeration of its
advantages].
Pour appliquer utilement mon procédé et en obtenir les
résultats et avantages énumérés ci-dessus il faut [precise and
complete indication of the means used to apply the invention].
Mots rayés wuls.
Renvois approuvés.
(Signature)
VII.
APPLICATION FOR A PATENT FOR AN IMPROVEMENT IN A
PatENTED INVENTION.
A M. Je Ministre de Agriculture et du Commerce.
Demande de Brevet pour un Perfectionnement.
Je, soussigné [name, christian names and description], de-
meurant d , rue , faisant élection de domicile
190
APPENDIX A.
chez Monsieur , rue gia , déclare vouloir
prendre un brevet de ans pour un perfectionnement
& Vinvention objet du brevet délivré au profit de Mon-
sieur , le pour ledit perfectionnement
consistant en
Je produis avec la présente demande :
(See List of Documents, Form I.)
VIil.
APPLICATION FOR A CERTIFICATE OF ADDITION.
AM. le Ministre de Agriculture et du Commerce.
Demande de Certificat d Addition.
Je, soussigné [name, christian names and description], de-
meurant & » rue No. , déclare vouloir
prendre un certificat d’addition au brevet d’invention de
ans qui m’a été délivré le pour , laquelle
addition consiste en ;
Je joins & ma demande les piéces ci-aprés :
1° Un récépissé constatant le versement d’une somme de
vingt francs ;
2° Une description originale de V’addition faisant Pobjet du
certificat demandé ;
3° Les dessins nécessaires pour intelligence de la descrip-
tion ;
4° Le duplicata de la description et des dessins ;
5° Le borderean des piéces déposées.
IX.
DEED oF ASSIGNMENT OF ToraL PROPERTY IN A PATENT.
Par devant moi, notaire 4 ,en présence des témoins
ci-aprés dénommeés, domicili¢s et qualifies ;
FORMS—PATENTS.
Est comparu , demeurant & » lequel a par
ces prdsentes cédé et transporté sans autre garantie que celle de
ses faits personnels & , demeurant & > ici
présent et ce acceptant le brevet d’invention pris en France
par le comparant le pour ans, ledit brevet
ayant pour objet [title of patent].
Ladite cession faite, sans réserve aucune pour la totalité de
la propriété du brevet, aura pour effet de transporter au
cessionnaire tous les droits et actions quelconques résultant
dudit brevet, et de lui conférer conformément 4 la loi le profit
des certificats d’addition qui seraient ult¢rieurement délivrés
au breveté ou a ses ayants droit.
La présente cession est faite moyennant la somme de
que le sieur reconnait avoir regue et dont il donne
quittance et en outre 4 la charge par le concessionnaire de payer
les frais du présent acte et de remplir toutes les conditions
imposées aux cessionnaires pour assurer la validité et les effets
de la cession. Dont acte
XxX.
ASSIGNMENT OF PaRT OF A PATENT.
Par devant moi, notaire 4 , en présence des témoins
ci-apres dénummeés, domiciliés et qualifiés ;
Est comparu , demeurant a » lequel a par
ces présentes cédé se transporté a » demeurant
a , ici présent et ce acceptant et pour la partie ci-aprés
déterminée, la propriété du brevet d’invention pris en France
par le comparant le pour ans, ledit brevet
ayant pour objet [title of patent].
Ladite cession partielle a pour objet spécial et unique l'un
des procédés compris dans l’invention brevetée, ledit procédé
décrit sous Ie No. , et consistant en , il est
convenu et entendu entre les parties que, relativement audit
procédé le cessionnaire exercera seul 4 l’exclusion de tous
autres et-méme du cédant, tous droits et actions quelconques
191
APPENDIX A.
résultant du brevet sans pouvoir prétendre aucunement 4
Yexploitation des autres procédés étrangers & la présente
cession, mais seulement aux certificats d’addition relatifs au
procédé transporté par les présentes, que le cédant pourrait
ultérieurement obtenir. ,
La présente cession est faite (the rest as in Form LX.).
XI.
CERTIFICATE OF REGISTRATION.
Décret Ministériel.
Ministére de Agriculture et du Commerce.
Durée ans.
No. 3
Brevet Invention sans Garantie du Gouvernement.
Le Ministre, secrétaire d’Etat au département de l’Agriculture
et du Commerce ;
Vu la loi du 5 juillet, 1844 ;
Vu le procés-verbal dressé le | 18 , a
heure minutes, au secrétariat général de la Préfecture ,
du département d et constatant le dépét fait par le’
sieur dune demande de brevet d’invention de
années pour ;
Arréte ce qui. suit :
Art. 1.—Il est délivré au sieur » Sans examen
préalable, 4 ses risques et perils, et sans garantie, soit de la
réalité, de la nouveauté ou du mérite de Pinvention, soit de la
fidélité ou de Vexactitude de la description, un brevet
invention de années, qui ont commencé & courir
le pour finir lé a
Art. 2.—Le présent arrété, qui constitue le brevet d’inven-
tion, est délivré an sieur , pour lui servir de titre.
A cet arrété demeureront joint un des doubles de la
description et un des doubles du dessin déposés & l’appui de
FORMS—TRADE MARKS. : 123
la demande, la conformité entre les pitces descriptives ayant
été diment reconnue.
Paris le ‘
Pour le Ministre et par délégation,
Le chef de division,
Signé
Pour expédition certifiée conforme,
Le chef de bureau délégué,
Signé
TRADE MARKS.
I.
Power oF ATTORNEY BY British Limitep CoMPANY.
Nous, soussignés , demeurant a et
demeurant a , administrateurs de la société Britannique
a responsabilité limitée » ayant son siége social
a et agissant en son nom, donnons pour le présent
pouvoir a , demeurant 4 , de pour ladite société
déposer au greffe du Tribunal de Commerce de la Seine, les
signes distinctifs constituant ses marques de fabrique.
Et en conséquence faire prés les autorités tout ce qui sera
nécessaire pour la validité des dépéts desdites marques.
Fait & le z
IL.
ATTESTATION BY Notary PuBiic oF SIGNATURES OF
DIRECTORS OF A BRITISH CoMPANY.
Je, soussigné , notaire public par autorité Royale,
‘dament admis et assermenté, certifie et atteste 4 tous ceux qui
B.P. oO
194
APPENDIX A,
les présentes verront, que les signatures qui précédent ont été
apposées en ma présence et qu’elles sont bien véritablement les
signatures de et , administrateurs de la société
Britannique 4 responsabilité limitée et obligent ladite société.
III.
Form oF Deposit (REGISTRATION).
Greffe du Tribunal de Commerce de Paris.
No. 5
Dépdt du ,18 ,ah.
Cette marque (dénomination, étiquette), qui peut varier de
couleur, disposition et de forme, est destinée a étre appliquée
a (here follows nature of merchandise],
Signature of applicant
Signature of registrar :
(Special forms are supplied at the Registry.)
IV.
CERTIFICATE OF REGISTRATION.
Extrait des Minutes du Greffe du Tribunal de Commerce du
département de la Seine séant & Paris.
Le mil huit cent quatre vingt a
heures, a comparu au Greffe du Tribunal et devant nous
Greffier soussigné le sieur lequel au nom et comme
ayant charge suivant pouvoir sous signature privée enregistré
et annexé de aux termes de la convention du
20 Mars, 1883, déposé entre nos mains comme marques de
fabrique :
Premiérement deux exemplaires d’une marque destingée i
des produits en et autres—la dite marque consiste
dans la dénomination et
FORMS—DESIGNS AND MODELS.
constitue la marque de fabrique de , classée sous le
No. :
Deuxigmement deux exemplaires d’une marque destinée
des produits en et autres—ladite marque consiste en
un , le tout constitue la
marque de fabrique de , classée sous le No.
Troisiemement deux exemplaires d’une marque destinée 4
des produits en et autres—la dite marque consiste en
un , le tout constitue la
marque de fabrique de , classée sous le No.
Duquel dépét qu'il déclare faire pour conserver la propriété
desdites marques pour une période de quinze années & compter
de ce jour, et ce conformément a Varticle 3 de la loi du 23 Juin
1857, le comparant a requis acte 4 lui octroyé et a signé avec
nous Greffier aprés lecture.
DESIGNS AND MODELS.
I.
Power oF ATTORNEY TO REGISTER.
Nous, soussignés , demeurant & , donnons par
le présent pouvoir 4 M. de pour nous et en notre nom
déposer au Conseil des Prud’hommes du département de la
Seine les dessins et en conséquence faire prés les
autorités tout ce qui sera nécessaire pour la validité du dépét
desdits dessins.
o
196
APPENDIX A.
II.
CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT (REGISTRATION) OF DESIGN OR
MopeEt,
Extrait des Minutes du Secrétariat du Conseil des Prud’hommes
de Paris pour le Département de la Seine et pour ?Industrie
des Métaux.
Conseil de Prud’hommes de Paris pour TIndustrie des
Métaux
Registre de dépédt de modeéles et dessins de
fabrique.
Numéro
Lan mil huit cent quatre vingt
A comparu au Secrétariat
Lequel nous a déposé une boite en entourée d’une
ficelle fixée par deux cachets en cire quil nous a déclaré
contenir
dont-il entend conserver la propriété et V’applica-
tion pendant ans de ce jour, et signé avec nous
Secrétaire, lecture faite, ayant versé indemnité de la
ville.
Signé
Secrétaire
Duquel dépdt acte a été donné au comparant pour constater
son droit.
En marge de la minute du procés-verbal est’inscrit la men-
tion d’enregistrement suivante :
Le certificat a été enregistré gratis & Paris le mil
huit cent quatre vingt F
Pour expédition conforme délivrée conformément a la déci-
sion du Ministre des Finances en date du vingt juin, mil huit
cent quatre-vingt.
Le Secrétaire 2
LONDON PATENT OFFICE NOTICES,
APPENDIX BB.
—_—
LONDON PATENT OFFICE NOTICES.
PATENTS (INTERNATIONAL AND COLONIAL
ARRANGEMENTS) RULES, 1888,
The Board of Trade, by virtue of the provisions of the
Patents, Designs, and Trade Marks Act, 1883, do hereby make
the following Rules :
1. These Rules may be cited as the Patents (International
and Colonial Arrangements) Rules, 1888.
2. These Rules shall be construed as if they formed part of
the Patents Rules, 1883, 1885, and 1886.
3. These Rules shall come into force on the 1st day of June,
1888.
4, The term “foreign application” shall mean an applica-
tion by any person for protection of his invention in a Foreign
State or British Possession to which by any Order of Her
Majesty in Council for the time being in force the provisions
of section 103 of the Patents, Designs, and Trade Marks Act,
1883, have been declared applicable.
5. An application in the United Kingdom for a patent for
any invention in respect of which a foreign application has
been made shall contain a declaration that such foreign appli-
cation has been made, and shall specify all the Foreign States
or British Possessions in which foreign applications have been
made, and the official date or dates thereof respectively. The
application must be made within seven months from the date
of the first foreign application, and must be signed by the
person or persons by whom such first foreign application was
made. If such person, or any of such persons, be dead, the
application must be signed by the legal personal representative
of such dead person, as well as by the other applicants, if any.
197
198 ; APPENDIX B. ~
6. The application in the United Kingdom shall be made in
the Form A? in the Schedule hereto, and in addition to the
specification, provisional or complete, left with such applica-
tion must be accompanied by
(1.) A copy or copies of the specification and drawings or
documents corresponding thereto, filed or deposited
by the applicant in the Patent Office of the Foreign,
State or British Possession in respect of the first
foreign application duly certified by the official chiet
or head of the Patent Office of such Foreign State or
British Possession as aforesaid, or otherwise verified
to the satisfaction of the Comptroller ;
(2.) A statutory declaration as to the identity of the inven-
tion in respect of which the application is made with
the invention in respect of which the said first foreign:
application was made, and if the specification or docu-
ment corresponding thereto be in a foreign language,
a translation thereof shall be annexed to and verified
by such statutory declaration.
7. On receipt of such application, together with the prescribed
specification and the other document or documents accompany-
ing the same, required by the last preceding rule, and with
such other proof (if any) as the Comptroller may require of or
relating to such foreign application or of the official date thereof
the Comptroller shall make an entry of the applications in
both countries, and of the official dates of such applications
respectively.
8. All further proceedings in connection with such applica-
tion shall be taken within the times and in the manner pre-
scribed by the Acts or Rules for ordinary applications.
9. The patent shall be entered in the Register of Patents as
dated of the date on which the first foreign application was
made, and the payment of renewal fees, and the expiration of
the patent, shall be reckoned as from the date of the first
foreign application.
M. E. Hicxs-Bracu,
: President of the Board of Trade.
15th May, 1888.
LONDON PATENT OFFICE NOTICES.
INTERNATIONAL AND COLONIAL ARRANGE-
MENTS. ,
Schedule.
Patents, Desiens, AND TRADE Marks Acts, 1883 To 1886.
Form A’
Application for Patent under International and Colonial
Arrangements.
[Here insert name and full address and calling of applicant,
or of each of the applicants] do hereby declare that I (or we)
~ have made foreign applications for protection of my (or our)
invention of [here insert title of invention] in the following
Foreign States and on the following official dates, viz. : [here
insert the names of each Foreign State, followed by the official date
of the application in each respectively], and in the following
British Possessions and on the following official dates, viz. :
[here insert the names of each British Possession, followed by
the official date of the application in each respectively]: That the
said invention was not in use within the United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Ireland and the Isle of Man by any other
person or persons before the [here insert the official date of
the earliest foreign application], to the best of knowledge,
information and belief, and humbly pray that a patent
may be granted to for the said invention in priority
to other applicants, and that such patent shall have the date
[here insert the official date of the earliest foreign application].
[signature of applicant or of each of applicants].
199:
200
APPENDIX B,
CONSULAR LEGALISATION
OF PATENT OFFICE
DOCUMENTS.
The signature of the Comptroller, and the seal of the
Patent Office, will henceforth be :verified by the Consuls
of the under-mentioned States, resident in London, without
the intervention of a Notary.
Argentine Republic.
Austria-Hungary.
Bolivia.
Chile.
Colombia.
Denmark.
Ecuador.
France.
Germany.
Greece.
Guatemala.
Haiti,
Hawaiian Islands.
Italy.
Japan,
Liberia.
Mexico.
Netherlands.
Nicaragua.
Orange Free State. .
Paraguay.
Portugal.
Roumania.
Russia.
Siam.
Spain.
Sweden & Norway.
Switzerland.
Turkey.
United States.
Uruguay.
LONDON PATENT OFFICE NOTICES. 201
INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION.’
An International Convention for the protection of Industrial
Property exists between the following States :—
Belgium. Portugal.
Brazil. Servia.
France. Spain.
Great Britain. Sweden.
Guatemala. Switzerland.
Italy. Tunis.
Netherlands. United States of
Norway. America.
Under this Convention, an applicant for a patent in any
one of the contracting States, may obtain six or seven months
priority in any of the other States.
202
APPENDIX C.
APPENDIX C.
—>—
BRITISH COMPANIES.
CONVENTION setrween Her Masesty AND THE EMPEROR
OF THE FRENCH RELATIVE TO JoINT STocK COMPANIES.
(Signed at Paris, April 30, 1862.)
Her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Ireland and His Majesty the Emperor of the
French having judged it expedient to come to an understand-
ing in order to define, within their respective dominions and
possessions, the position of commercial, industrial, and financial
companies and associations constituted and authorized in con-
formity with the laws in force in either of the two countries, .
have resolved to conclude a Convention for that purpose, and
have named as their plenipotentiaries, &. Who, after having
communicated to each other their respective full powers found
in good and due form, have agreed upon and concluded the
following articles :—
Art. 1.—The High Contracting Parties declare that they
mutually grant to all companies and other associations, com-
mercial, industrial, or financial, constituted and authorized in
conformity with the laws in force in either of the two coun-
tries, the power of exercising all their rights and of appearing
before the tribunals, whether for the purpose of bringing an
action or for defending the same throughout the dominions
and possessions of the other Power, subject to the sole condi-
‘tion of conforming to the laws of such dominions and posses-
sions.
Art, 2.—It is agreed that the stipulations of the preceding
article shall apply as well to companies and associations con-
BRITISH COMPANIES CONVENTION.
stituted and authorized previously to the signature of the
present Convention as to those which may subsequently be so
constituted and authorized.
Art, 3.—The present Convention is concluded without limit
as to duration. Either of the High Powers shall, however, be
at liberty to terminate it by giving to the other a year’s pre-
vious notice. The two High Powers, moreover, reserve to
themselves the power to introduce into the Convention, by
common consent, any modifications which experience may
shew to be desirable.
Art. 4.—The present Convention shall be ratified, and the
ratifications shall be exchanged at Paris in fifteen days, or
sooner if possible.
203
204
APPENDIX D,
APPENDIX D.
PROPOSED PROTOCOL ADOPTED AT THE
ROME CONFERENCE, 1886,
OF THE INTERNATIONAL UNION FOR THE PROTECTION OF
INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY.
La Conférence internationale de l’Union pour la protection
de la propriété industrielle, convoquée 4 Rome le 29 avril
1886, ayant terminé ses travaux, soumet aux Gouvernements
des Etats qui s’y sont fait représenter, les articles additionnels
a la Convention conclue a Paris le 20 mars 1883, et le Régle-
ment pour l’exécution de ladite Convention, dont Ja teneur
suit :—
ARTICLES ADDITIONNELS A LA CONVENTION CONCLUE A
Paris LE 20 MARS 1883.
A Varticle 5.
Chaque pays aura 4 déterminer le sens dans lequel ily a
lieu @’interpréter chez lui le terme “ exploiter.”
A Particle 10.
1.—Tout produit portant illicitement une indication men-
songére de provenance pourra étre saisi 4 V’importation dans
tous les Etats contractants.
La saisie pourra également étre effectuée dans le pays ot
Vindication mensongere aura été apposée, ainsi que dans le
pays ow le produit aura été introduit.
La saisie aura lieu a la requéte soit du Ministére public, soit
dune partie intéressée, individu, ou société, conformément & la
législation intérieure de chaque Etat.
PROPOSED PROTOCOL.
Les tribunaux de chaque pays auront 4 décider quelles sont
les appellations, qui, & raison de Jeur caractére générique,
échappent anx présentes dispositions.
Les autorités ne sont pas tenues d’effectuer la saisie en cas
de transit.
2.—I] n’y a pas intention frauduleuse dans le cas prévu par
le paragraphe 1* de Varticle 10 de la Convention, lorsqu’il sera
prouvé que c’est du consentement du fabricant dont le nom se
trouve apposé sur les produits importés, que cette apposition a
été faite.
Les présents articles additionnels seront ratifiés, et les
ratifications seront échangées 4 Rome dans le délai d’un an,
ou plus tét si faire se peut.
Ils entreront en vigueur un mois aprés l’échange des ratifica-
tions et auront la méme durée que la Convention.
REGLEMENT POUR L’EXMCUTION DE LA CONVENTION CONCLUE
A PaRIs LE 20 MARS 1883.
I.—Dispositions explicatives.
1.—Pour pouvoir étre assimilés aux sujets ou citoyens des
Etats contractants, aux termes de Varticle 3 de la Convention,
les sujets ou citoyens d’Etats ne faisant pas partie de Union
et qui, sans y avoir leur domicile, possédent des établissements
industriels ou commerciaux sur le territoire Wun des Etats de
YUnion, doivent étre propri¢taires exclusifs desdits établisse-
ments, y étre représentés par un mandataire général, et justifier,
en cas de contestation, qwils y exercent d’une manitre réelle et
continue leur industrie ou leur commerce.
2.—Relativement aux Etats de Union situés en Europe,
sont considérés comme “ pays d’outre-mer” (art. 4), les pays
extra-européens qui ne sont pas riverains de la Méditerranée.
TL— Accession de nouveaux Etats & V Union internationale.
Lorsqu’un nouvel Etat adhere & la Cunvention, la date de la
note par laquelle son accession est annoncée au Conseil fédéral
205
206
APPENDIX D.
suisse sera considérée comme celle de Ventrée dudit Etat dans
P'Union, 4 moins que son Gouvernement n’indique une date
d’accession postérieure,
III.—-Ressort de ? Union.
Sont considérés comme appartenant 4 1’Union internationale
pour la protection de la propricté industrielle :
(Les diverses Administrations fourniront au Bureau
international Vindication de ceux de leurs terri-
toires, colonies ou possessions qui font partie de
PUnion par le seul fait de l’accession dela métro-
pole.)
IV.—Attestations de protection légale.
1.— Pour assurer la protection des marques de fabrique ou
de commerce de leurs ressortissants dans tout le territoire de
YUnion, les Administrations du pays d’origine leur délivreront
une attestation constatant que lesdites marques ont été déposées
dans le pays d’origine.
2.—La légalisation de attestation ci-dessus n’est pas
requise.
3.—Toute demande tendant 4 étendre un brevet 4 d’autres
pays de PUnion devra étre accompagnée d’un exemplaire,
manuscrit ou imprimé, de la description de Pinvention et des
dessins (s'il en existe), tels qwils auront été déposés dans le
pays ou la premitre demande a été faite.
Cette copie devra étre certifiée par le service spécial de la
propriété industrielle de ce dernier pays,
‘'V.—Renseignements @ fournir par le Bureaw international.
1.—Le Bureau international est tenu de fournir gratuite-
ment aux diverses Administrations les renseignements qu’elles
pourront lui demander sur les brevets et les marques de fab-
rique ou de commerce.
2.—Les mémes renseignements seront fournis aux parti-
culiers domiciliés dans le territoire de l'Union, moyennant
une taxe de 1 franc par renselgnement demande.
PROPOSED PROTOCOL.
Cette taxe pourra étre payée en timbres-poste des divers
Etats contractants, et cela sur la base suivante pour les Etats
qui n’ont pas le franc pour unité monétaire, savoir :—
Brésil . . ‘ . 1 franc = 400 reis ;
Dominicaine (République) ,, = 20 centavos de peso ;
Espagne . . ‘i + 55 = I peseta ;
Grande-Bretagne . - + = 10 pence;
Guatémala . ; - » = 20 centavos de peso ;
Norvége . 5 - . 9 = 80 cere;
Pays-Bas . » = 50 cents;
Portugal - 9, =200 reis ;
Suéde : ‘ : - y = 80ere;
Salvador . : . + 4, = 20 centavos de peso.
3,—Les Administrations des divers Etats ci-dessus accep-
teront, aux taux indiqués dans le paragraphe précédent, les
timbres de leur pays que le Bureau international aura recus &
titre de frais de renseignements.
VI.—Protection temporaire des inventions, dessins, modeéles et
marques figurant aux expositions internationales.
1.—La protection temporaire prévue 4 Varticle 11 de la
Convention consiste dans un délai de priorité, s’étendant au
minimum jusqw’s six mois 4 partir du jour de admission du
produit 4 lexposition, et pendant lequel l’exhibition, la publi-
cation ou Yemploi non autorisé par l’ayant droit, de Yinven-
tion, du dessin, du modéle ou de la marque ainsi protégés, ne
pourront pas empécher celui qui a obtenu ladite protection
temporaire, de faire valablement, dans ledit délai, la demande
de brevet ou le dépét nécessaire pour s’assurer la protection
_ définitive dans tout le territoire de PUnion.
Chaque Etat aura la faculté d’étendre ledit délai.
2,—La susdite protection temporaire n’aura d’effet que si,
pendant sa durée, il est présenté une demande de brevet ou
fait un dépot en vue d’assurer 4 Vobjet auquel elle s’applique
la protection définitive dans un des Etats contractants,
3,—Les délais de priorité mentionnés 4 article 4 de la
207
208
APPENDIX D.
Convention sont indépendants de ceux dont il est question
dans le 1** paragraphe du présent article.
'4,—Les inventions brevetables auxquelles la protection pro-
visoire aura été accordée en vertu du présent article, devront
étre notifiées au Bureau international et faire lobjet d'une
publication dans Vorgane officiel dudit Bureau.
VII.—Statistique,
1, Avant la fin du premier semestre de chaque année, les
Administrations de l'Union transmettront au Bureau interna-
tional les indications statistiques suivantes concernant année
‘précédente, savoir :
(a.) Brevets dinvention.
1°, Nombre des brevets demandés ;
2°. Nombre des brevets délivrés ;
3°. Sommes percues de ce chef.
(b.) Dessins ou modeles industriels.
1°. Nombre des dessins ou modéles déposés ;
2°, Nombre des dessins ou modéles enregistrés ;
3°. Sommes pergues de ce chef.
(c.) Marques de fabrique ou de commerce.
1°. Nombre des marques déposées ;
2°. Nombre des marques enregistrées ;
3°. Sommes pergues de ce chef.
2.—Pour la statistique des brevets d’invention, des marques
de fabrique ou de commerce, et des dessins ou modéles indus-
triels (article 6 du Protocole de cléture), le Bureau interna-
tional pourra adopter la classification qu’il jugera la meilleure.
VIII.— Entrée en vigueur du présent Reglement.
Le présent Réglement sera exécutoire dans un délai aussi
rapproché que possible.
PROPOSED PROTOCOL.
209
Vau MIs PAR LA CONFERENCE.
La Conférence a émis, en outre, le voeu suivant, se rapportant
a Particle 2 de la Convention du 20 mars 1883 :
Les Etats faisant partie de PUnion, qui ne posstdent pas de
lois sur toutes les branches de la propriété industrielle, devront
compléter dans le plus court délai possible leur législation sur
ce point.
Il en sera de méme pour les Etats qui entreraient ultérieure-
ment dans l'Union.
En foi de quoi les soussignés délégués par leurs Gouverne-
ments respectifs & la Conférence internationale de Rome ont
dressé le présent procés-verbal et y ont apposé leurs signa-
tures.
Fait & Rome le 11 mat 1886.
Pour ]’Allemagne
Pour la Belgique .
Pour le Brésil .
Pour l’Espagne
Dr. Sttve.
DuJeEvx.
Lopez Netto,
ComMTE DE Rascon
[Hes M. pe Larra.
Bas. SpPorrorno.
Pour les Etats-Unis @’Amérique J. B. Sratio.
Pour la France
Pour la Grande-Bretagne .
Pour l'Italie
Pour le Luxembourg
Pour le Mexique .
Pour la Norvége
Pour le Paraguay
Pour les Pays-Bas
BP.
Vee pu Tour.
>. NICOLAS.
H. Reaper Lack.
i H. G. Brerene.
UBALDINO PERUZZI.
{ Awrone Monzi.u.
( OrRESTE LattTEs.
Remy TRINCHERI.
SPEDENER.
SancHEZ AZCONA.
Comte Hamitton.
E. Renazzi.
WESTENBERG,
‘0 George Snyper v. W.
P
210
Pour le Portugal .
Pour la Roumanie
Pour la Serbie
Pour la Suéde .
' Pour la Suisse .
Pour la Tunisie
Pour Uruguay .
APPENDIX D.
E. pe Souza PREGo.
5 . A. ©. Piagino.
% . . M. CaristrrcH.
. Comtr Haminton.
§ BAvIER.
. °° (Dr. WiLL.
a MicHEL PELLETIER.
. - . P. Antonini Diez.
EIFFEL TOWER.
APPENDIX E.
—>—
EIFFEL TOWER.
Tue Council of State having been consulted by the French
Government on March 9, 1889, as to whether the monopoly in
the exploitation of the tower granted to M. Eiffel covered
accessory applications such as the production and sale of
pictures of it, replied in the negative. The terms of the
question submitted by the Government, and the reply given
by the Council of State, are as follow :—
1° Le traité passé par M. Eiffel avec une Société pour lui
assurer le monopole des reproductions de la tour rentre-t-il
dans l’exploitation autorisée par la convention intervenue entre
VEtat, la Ville de Paris et M: Eiffel ? {
“Vu la convention du 8 janvier 1887, relative & la tour
Eiffel ;
“ Considérant qu’aux termes de la convention ci-dessus visée
du 8 janvier 1887, M. Hiffel s’est engagé & construire ‘en
qualité d’entrepreneur,’ dans l’enceinte de /’Exposition, une
tour de 300 métres de hauteur, conformément aux plans,
devis et détails d’exécution approuvés ou 4 approuver par une
commission spéciale désignée par le Ministre du Commerce et
de VIndustrie ; que cette tour, ‘qui fait partie des constructions
de Y’Exposition’ pendant la durée de cette dernitre, doit
devenir la propriété de la Ville de Paris aprés 1’Exposition et
dés la remise par ’Etat 4 la Ville du pare du Champ-de-Mars ;
“ Considérant que le droit de propriété de ]’Etat, pendant la
premitre période, découle nettement, tant de lassimilation
précitée entre la tour et les constructions de l’Exposition, que
des articles 14 et 15 du traité, qui attribuent a l’Etat, pendant
la durée de ladite Exposition, certains droits inhérents & la
P2
211
212
APPENDIX E.
qualité de maitre de V’ouvrage, tels que le droit d’autoriser la
substitution & M. Eiffel d’une société de construction ou
@exploitation et celui, au cas dinexécution des ouvrages
prévus, de prononcer la mise en régie de J’entreprise ou la
résiliation et au besoin Ja démolition des constructions
effectuées ;
“ Considérant d’autre part que l'article 7 du traité accorde a
M. Eiffel, comme prix de ses travaux, une somme de 1,500,000
frances et la jouissance de l’exploitation de la tour pendant
Yannée de l’Exposition et pendant les vingt années qui
suivront, 2 dater du ler janvier. 1890: que le méme article
précise les droits de jouissance de l’entrepreneur en en limitant
Yexploitation & Vascension du public et 4 Vinstallation, dans
les constructions de la tour, de cafés, restaurants et autres
cétablissements analogues ;
“ Considérant que, de tout ce qui précéde, il résulte que Ja
Tour Eiffel est un monument public qui appartient 4 lEtat
pendant toute la durée de Exposition et ensuite 4 la ville de
Paris; qu’ainsi, & aucun moment, M. Eiffel ne saurait étre
regardé comme le propriétaire de la tour, qu'il n’en est que le
concessionnaire, et qu’d ce titre il ne peut exercer que les
droits de jouissance limitativement ¢numérés dans lacte de
concession, parmi lesquels ne figure pas le droit exclusif de
reproduction.de la tour ;
“ Considérant, en conséquence, que M. Eiffel ne pouvait pas
aliéner 4 un tiers un droit qu’il ne s'est pas réservé et que le
traité passé en vue de cette aliénation ne rentre pas dans
Pexploitation autorisée par l’acte de concession ;
“ Est davis :
“Quwil y a lieu de répondre a Ja question posée par le
ministre dans le sens des observations qui précédent,”
The Civil Tribunal of the Seine delivered judgment on
April 18, 1889, against M. Eiffel’s claim to the exclusive right
of reproduction on similar grounds,
INDEX.
PAGE
ACCESSORIES of infringement of a patent .....ccccceesenseee OL
ACCESSORY APPELLATIONS .........cccssccssessscesrsseessseneses LOT
ACTION,
* (Patents)
for annulment or forfeiture ...........ccccscseessecsecssceeesscnesessreee
civil proceedings .. scidhidiyaes 57
correctional procdedlage westaunege? ae cnsapanat 62
for damages may be joined in seni pmmeetine’ tesserseeree 60
(Trade-Marks)
GLY PLOCEOMIN Ss Sos esce ceeetenncad Gus sswsclecdacphseevonsacssevsuaisayoriaahee
correctional proceedings ..
(Verchandize Marks, $c.)
Correctional Provisions ...........s.csceeecesecesereesessecseesetes seeeee 97, 98
CIVIL PLO CCCMID ES fe rrasccicnsd se saaceucace savsnse te assaeundewsenaadartisses 98, 119
(Designs and Models)
Correctional Provisions .........:cc.scesceecsececersstesseccerssetevsersersoe LIL
(Fraudulent Competition)
proceedings ...... . eaiid adabtuascagiasasaranecsecoeeaaseoL LO
(Evhibition Romar de and Medals)
proceedings ............... satigidateaivangsesetantenitines dao
(Provisional Protection ae Exhibitions) |
proceedings by-author of invention or design ...........2:sssceeeeee 127
ADDITION, see CERTIFICATE OF ADDITION, IMPROVEMENTS.
ADVERTISEMENTS, mentioning of exhibition and other medals
and rewardsin ......... vee 124
See FRAUDULENT ComPrrirroy, “PATENTEE, "BRevarh
SANS GARANTIE DU GOUVERNEMENT.
AGENT,
application by... sca coaaaeevesscimuosaserccanesrae 66
form of power of aitneaey fo. 08 see ¢ FoRMs,
214 INDEX.
PAGE
ALGERIA, French laws applicable to, as extension of France ...... 163
ALIENS, see FOREIGNER.
AMENDMENT
Of Specification .....c.eceecececeecec erect eee eeesteeneetetessseneeerereeeees 39
of title .........0 ai Lo iteVndeisreases, (BO
AMENDMENTS of the ae repose. .. 5, 15 et seq., 21
AMERICAN SYSTEM of patent law ....... 4
ANGLO-FRENCH CONVENTION clan to ‘fadnstial praperty,
sce TREATY OF 1882,
ANNUITY, :
(Patents)
effect of non-payment OE at aaa eoneten ns 36, 54, 55
See FEES.
time allowed for payment Of ......ccccssseseseeceeesetesseessseeneesee BO
ANNULMENT
Of patent, action Lor oo... cesecseseecevecccseecerseeserrsssceesssesserecses OF
See FORFEITURE.
publication of judgment of . Sad ae ssieapdenn anibamanucabiccntenntendasem IDO
CHECHOE ~ sacscunenrvnt snigdgu SuesSRbiG.seeavauseadntvsabeusieadiansaerss? OO
damages where notion ‘fails. ibe shseadanberies OO
APPEAL, time for.. wanesy. (09
APPEAL from Hewiatas of Wradle. Marka to" Phesdlent of Tetbanal., 91
APPELLATION, descriptive, follows patent . aeiesetiews a "107
APPLICANT, see PATENT LAW, TRADE- MauKs, Destans ; AND
MODELS, PROVISIONAL PROTECTION AT EXHIBITIONS,
APPLIANCE,
industrial, requisite for valid patent ........cccccsesscesesetteenecees BB
or new appliance of existing Means ......... cee eeeeeceetteetenee BA
APPLICATION,
(Patents)
mode of... seccseeeee 36, 66
form of.. . 37, 66, 186
by spent « edd eedusansiaesinsay 66
ieserentieasl in, , effect éf,. ssi sae ples a3 38
Wher Can be TE]ECHEM sis: canes ves ce ses dganeansecdaseasapesieapeseabasmvaneen: 2D)
APPLICATION, sce APPLIANCE,
ARTISTIC distinguished from industrial designs ..............06+ 8, 117
ARTIZAN,
where infringement of patent by... eeessessssseseesenenee 61
unishable for revelation of industrial secret . seseeee 10, 71
INDEX, , 215
PAGE
ASSIGNEE, right of action of, in case of infringement ...........4.. 62
ASSIGNMENTS,
(Patents)
formalities Of MODELS.
CONSERVATOIRE DES ARIS ET MUTIERS,
specifications and drawings of expired patents deposited at...... 50
trade-marks, searches for, at ......scssesseesessserrteeaberteetecreteeae 96
designs as regards .......-:..0++ sate . 110
preservation of ipadeemanke He ana communication to allies “92, 96
CONSULAR LEGALISATIONS . zie oe . 200
CONSULS qualified to report on Fraudulent 0 use sof French risk. 87
CONVENTION, special, with France relating to industrial pro-
perty, see TREATY OF 1882.
CONVENTION, International, on Industrial Property, see InDUS-
TRIAL PROPERTY CONVENTION.
COPIES
of letters patent .. exe
of certificates of improvement. “ see vias 49
of certificates of registration of cradle + imitans. 9
218 INDEX.
PAGE
COPIES—continued.
but copies of models not permitted.......scssssecrseeeecnes 95
of trade-marks sent to Conservatoire ae Arts et Métiers .. .. 96
COPYRIGHT OF DESIGNS, see DESIGNS AND MODELS.
CORPORATE MARKS ane Seg Sevedussnmeaeemnvaeeacemeessicaaiy (UO
CORRECTIONAL COURT, aipipeal: front 2GedysneAsisenacaabsncerasaneacicaven 59
CORRECTIONAL PROCEEDINGS in France, how taken ...... ve 62
COUNTERFEIT ARTICLES,
under patent, seizure Of ....scssesessessesesseeeeeeseereqeeseccserses 6B
confiscation Of ........c.eee . 64
COUNTERFEITING of trade mark distinguished ‘eens srattattont o 79
COURT OF CASSATION,
rulings of, as regards merchandise marks.........
nature of appeal to.. sels :
CRIMINAL PROCEEDINGS in Hrpuce, ‘how taken, & see » CORREC-
TIONAL PROCEEDINGS.
CUTLERS’ COMPANY, action of, in reference to merchandise
MALKS .......... 0000s acest . 22, 104, 148
CUSTOMS, stoppage ‘of onile hearing: false migke of ovigit nage 13, 84,
99 et seq., 148 et seq.
13 et seq., 99 et seg.
serseceereee BY
DAMAGES
in case of failure of action for annulment of patent ............+ 59
claim for, may be joined in correctional action . steaveveres 60, 82
in case of vexatious eacesten for infingement of
patent .. cotton iGiniahlanereaeiaatareeneteas 02
for chrentaning i cay SELZULC .ooceeecseeeeeeserseeseceenes 63
DEFINITION
of patent .. wee 5
of trade- baer: suaiveete: AD
DELIVERY of letters gabe aie evsasae. “SE
DESCRIPTION OF ORIGIN, | see FALSELY ‘MARKED G@oond,
DESCRIPTIVE APPELLATION, sce APPELLATION.
DESIGNS AND MODELS,
laws and regulations relating t0...........c:ccseseeeseseeeees 8, 110 et seq.
imperfections of French law thereon ............ccssecseessereene ees 9
British and French law thereof contrasted ........... 10
registration a matter of custody .. ll
no system of marking Roots thereunder. he seh
INDEX. 219
‘ PAGE
DESIGN 8 AND MODELS—continued.
artistic as distinguished from industrial ............s0s0ece0 eeeees 8,117
mode of registration ...........csccecccssecaecesssteerscsecssssesseareeseses LOY
where to be made ..........cccccsseseeeee nuns
in case of foreigners ...
effect of registration .. exsist aca ae
in case of dispute belies rival danositows .. asaevdenesewansanne LLO
duration of protection ........... sists reese suciwaeuseweyarese LILO
preservation of, on expiry of protection. ete . 110, 111
Perialvies): sfc ciccaivasssn wei ccseravarees . lll
confiscations .. . 112
GAMA GES. i55 ics aii carssiec ts euatienneouasinctsraonnsesiens deumiaenatrommmaeawe LED
assignments... aeiagluisis vepidanceaievaral aha aang Nets Meee cekeaetsny . 116
rights of foreigners penprally-. okdiooanals ee . 115
British subjects in seatlenleny sedan § on ovisions of
Anglo-French Treaty of 1882 ne ie Baha 116, 134
provisional protection of, at Exhibitions ...........0csseseeseeree LOZ
(Colonies)
HOW PPOECtEM, a acteascsdiecctienusesels cdnsedeis awseednedaenaarsavergansy LOG
Forms .......... éapesen eyuees “195, 196°
‘DIETZ-MONNIN g QL) Bill o on nti andl igrenaaiclise rates savers 16
DIFFERENCES between ae and French law of enn sais 4
trade-marks. . ciahy a vaniheeintem iene ssdeeyane ns : veces 6
designs and srigiiella baie Mishaai saauavendesie. LO
DISTINCTIONS conferred by — amu acientifie fodles sevsereee 124
DISTINCTIVE character, requisite of trade-mark .............4
DOCUMENTS to be deposited (patents) ..
DOMICILE, foreigner admitted to, abeolyett ey giving seouity
LOT COStS: cessasisensorsntniaassusenenisse im mashiaaiace eae OL
DRAWINGS
in application for patent .............. sige . 38, 67, 68
inspection of, see INSPECTION OF SPECIFICATIONS. |
(Non-industrial)
artistic distinguished from industrial ....0c....cceseeeeeereereeeeeeee LIT
COpyTIght Of ssesesiespectegsveenamee qedoree ei penne aesnee ALT
where registered.......csscsecssesreene teeseceeseensreeseeseescntesseseeseeeee LIT
Hiffel GOwer Cas@is secs. uassareessesetnesave rescsovecessavescarewsesceee LILY, 211
piracy . e is lll
sale of pirated Works. . LIL
PCTIANICS 0... eeeeeeseessecseceeneecnseessesercusersetretsessrerseeesreesesteveee LIL
220 INDEX.
PAGE
DRAWINGS—continued.
limitation of action .......... 112
confiscation of pirated ublications . wary 212
CATIA GES waicssaonae cnvass dis savasesiee sas var edecadievesvarvanitieemenienmice TLS
DURATION
OE PAtENtS cies ianddacecsidasnacesstvceceassde ed can avenntceadacesdacsseseswer Dy O8
whence runs .... wee 40
prolongation of ... seats icencaie a .. 5, 42
duration of patent aiveiedse patented abroad dsnide Td ownaaaiaws 52
Of tradesMaArks® ..0.scdecdecvaigeieceecied nie secaveresteecsssvesdadeessceccsean 0D
of designs and models ............ iene ee . 110
EIFFEL TOWER, pictures of, qusdens as ny jez «117, 211
ELBEUF on reputation of collective names ..........cccseeceeesecerenee 1A
ENGLISH SYSTEM, see BRITISH SYSTEM.
ENGRAVERS, communication of patent to .....c.cecessereessteeeees 3D
EVIDENCE,
registration presuinptive, of ownership of trade-mark ......... 7, 74
burden of proof where trade-mark resembles one previously
registered............0cs00- seahidaueauewenganeceas 09.
of hifin geen: of trade- cia ee SHINEE. ssedinvexgene 182
EXAMINATION, sce PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION.
EXAMINERS under British Act . sige ae &
EXHIBITING goods bearing connteriet rien at public ‘Exhibi-
tion ........ 78
EXHIBITION (Paria) of 1889, rpeubatiins ‘qonneciol wighe patents,
designs, models and trade-marks ...........0 tcsniee 129
See PROVISIONAL PROTECTION OF Tay ENETONE: Ee,
British Order in Council relative to inventions exhibited at ... 131
preservation of novelty thereunder ................cceeeeeeeseees 131
recital of obligations under Acts of Parliament ............... 132
relief therefrom . ase . 133
EXHIBITION REWARDS, "AN D MEDALS, see , REWARDS | AND
MEDALS,
EXHIBITIONS,
provisional protection of patents, designs, models and trade-
marks at . res w esate svsweeseecenccsvavers 126,149
See EageRIONAy ‘PROTECTION, ‘ec:
EXPLOITATION, see WORKING.
EXPLOITER, sense of term ........ . 143
EXTENSION OF DURATION OF PATENT, see ¢ PRoLonGaTioN.
INDEX. 221
PAGE
FALSE TITLE of patent .. er ace . 38, 53
FALSE DESCRIPTION OF “ORIGIN, see ; Vatauny, Tice
Goons.
FALSELY MARKED GOODS,
checks on importation of 18, 84, 99 e¢ seg., 105, 148, 149
in bond.. nie sticisieestne ress LOD
See MERCHANDISE ‘Marks, "TRADE “Mange,
FANCY NAMES.. ai auvvoevamebeayTath Yaeendetcnissntardsesscetaesuee LOT TLD
FEES,
(Patents)
annuity (¢.v.).. saeiriuatonnes wsteidecdaescwiaaisneesesieeeieiaes, BD
.payment of, first | a in registration iad vqueuaseates’ 39
WHETE PAVable. vn. vacvessiescdeensisian diss deaguteetagseasbeas Semawoumne sdeeee ses 39
for copies of letters patent 10.0.0... .ccceeeseeteceeteetecetecvestensenree AZ
when application rejected .......... 42
on assignment 46
as to licences ...... i 47
non-payment of, effect of x . 36, 54, 55
within what time payment sist be aad: sedan bac aeitanaranitssineeer. BO
(Lrade Marks)
for Tegistration OL 6 vs.ssevesiesrseoasnesiecneusessedoserssosseaeiaesesesiaence OL
(Designs and Models)
LOL CEPOSIt sescaciwecesvennvsvernsseoersendernsicwiseussvenrnpanvarccses LIL
on powers of nthieney ee isimersneNsbeeseanienaetrwe “FB
for provisional registration ‘at Exhibitions smdeesmnemevned 128
for stamped paper.. tis soeeseue AO
FERRY’S (M.), letter as “to protection ‘of “British “guerehuariline
MAIS AW PLACE .00..0.cesccwosuisee sss ser eneneatonse ete viet . 23
his errors .........- isinfuass no viv aldleermapiasea ¥ale'payenined aheceats 25, 104, 135
FIGURES, sce NUMBERS.
FINANCIAL plans and schemes not pie seavacaaboswamiarimiege: OL
FISCAL REGISTRATION amen saiaraievahineweenia OO
amount of duty .. Brore {Wi viete sated: £S
FOOD PRODUCTS, patents dow Boatnctieny 42
FOREIGN LANGUAGE forbidden (ontaita) 37, 67
FOREIGN STATES
belonging to Industrial Property Union ......... iv . 201
rights of subjects and citizens of, not belonging i the Unions 137
FOREIGNER,
may be applicant for patent .....ccseseeeereceseoeenss OL
222 INDEX.
PAGE
FOREIGNER—continued.
his rights under Industrial Property Convention .......... . 5)
to give security in case of seizure for protection of patent
TIGHTS sssssusisevnes Larisa Slobelavacetelomainausennntedes 63
registration of tride-torke oF darsitelasleleamaaauegguSeecieeentees 74, 76
where to he effected ........cceeeeeeceeeee sees . 76, 96
to have benefit of French law on trade names, sree heinilian
and trade-marks, designs and models where laws or treaty
give reciprocity... F ee 108 ct seq.
revelation of stipatonted industrial seutet toa wee . 70, 71
registering design or model.. epee ches . 114
settled in a country belonging ta the Industrial Eianery ‘Tinion
assimilated to native subjects .........ccsecsecesceeceececeseerersneess 137
FORFEITURE,
Causes Of, OF PAbent) cciiicsisucieersaiecee cosesnsssevinesseescdsornenesesa: D4, BD
Action: 10: elect: i.cssssndsten socuyanuamivenqseus eit suaulaanememneiatoraeues 57
JUTISGICHON, . vc srannsriaidsnenennanninmeniacd ATE
COPIES THELEOL co .citveeceseseiaesidensasunisaierncde canada ves LAG
_ annual list of patenis sug usiedsp baeacd di adaaitavend dea sk avtede seraarmesaeraesans 2AD
cases of nullity of patent owing o.
want of novelty .. Kreecentian satus aibilelactvavercoiamioneiae Wade
invention relating 6 Maes principles .. vongawe canes’? geimmededannas MAE
HMicit: IDVENLION. actin cscs a ecioayiapsicensaagprvareeeguveserdeenssenmeneses AE
Fraudulent: Tle: joc 2 cease secs wscissnedsies cease aves slenidlassian vgs eoaineamseates 177
insufficiency of apeciiinations,, eis nig ste we ATT
publicity before registration defined . . 178
forfeiture of patent fF ..........cceccecerccectescssesetseceesseasecsereseee LTB
non-payment of fees voc .cssssasievevscaaccecssrecswerosiesrecnerceseeesee 178
failure to work patent: gate boayianes xf .. 178
importing patented ee from abroad . .. 178
misuse of word “ patentee ” sace es AAD
obligation to use words “ sans 5s dae en da. gouver nontene®™ Be esas 179
jurisdiction in patent cases . aes Wechivareosunteesereent che
publication of annulments oad forfattares: aaiini sseccare segaigteetdee LCD)!
INDEX. 243
‘TUNIS—continued. fae
procedure.. ry disaatidelansanesel suasuisaveeasanniee’ LN.
intervention of Public Browonitor . ASS ae une aeaeesleneadagnaanoeediwoneaes LOO.
penalties for infringement . s+. 180
not to be cumulated .. . 181
accessories salaadase 180
Tepetition of efines, adindwsbaavaie sais aseity 181
special, in case of employés ...... stevia raseaenetes 181
moving Public Procurator......... 182
seizure of counterfeit articles ........sccscssecsessesssesesssoteeeresenes 182
Confiscation thereof .........csssesetessecsecseteecnscsesseanesscessesseses 183
temporary provisions.. ae Votuiddiuseebiasiad auetaadeiveostee LOO
(Patents and Designs at Hohsbeteensy
provisional protection at exhibitions for patents and ashe . 175
rights conferred thereby, limit of time for a caine vee 175
inspection of, provisional certificates . atest setinaiassrnisaecan: 200
delivery of certificates gratuitous oo... ccsseeestecseesesreceeseneees LTE
UNION, Industrial Property, see INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY CONVEN-
TION.
UNPATENTED INDUSTRIAL SECRETS,
not protected like trade-marks independently of registration ... 70
but enjoy protection against revelation by employés ........0000 70
revelation to Frenchmen and aaa eee geuer OL
penalties............. sanesassreamonicesaccennee “10,71
UNREGISTERED TRADE- MARKS . ne wee 74,121
USER, fraudulent, of trade-mark distinguished sasiimacinns @8,d22
VEXATIOUS PROCEEDINGS for infringement of patent ......... 62
VIS MAJOR as a ground for non-payment of annual fees........... 36
WAREHOUSE, public, see BonD, &c.
WORKING PATENT,
in France a condition of validity ...ccccccscecctestrcerrtserseeeennee 5B
sufficient working defined... ie 55
when good and sufficient cause efor not onein i 59
exhibiting at Exhibition of 1889 to be reckoned as a wouking, widen 130
244 INDEX.
PAGE
WORKMAN,
when infringer of patent .. sane idtviveer eesmerwstneesy: (OL
punishable for revelation of industrial eeesotl ¢ 70, 71
WORKS OF REFERENCE on French law of Industrial Preperty. xiii
WRAPPERS,
of trade competitor used for Spree) i a aioe 78
independent protection Of .......:s0esee saeeapasaseeene 220
THE END,
BRADBURY AGNEW, & CO PRINTERS WHITEFRIARS,
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LAW BOOKS—SWEET AND MAXWELL, LIMITED.
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