Republic of the Philippines
Congress of the Philippnes
Metro Manila
Tenth Congress
Second Regular Session
Begun and
held in Metro Manila, on Monday the twenty-second day of July, nineteen hundred
and ninety-six.
AN ACT
PRESCRIBING THE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY CODE AND ESTABLISHING THE INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY OFFICE, PROVIDING FOR ITS POWERS AND FUNCTIONS, AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES
Be it enacted by the Senate
and House of Representatives of the Philippines in Congress assembled:
PART I.
THE
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY OFFICE
SECTION 1. Title. - This Act
shall be known as the Intellectual Property Code of the Philippines.
SEC. 2. Declaration of State Policy. - The State
recognizes that an effective intellectual and industrial property system is
vital to the development of domestic and creative activity, facilitates
transfer of technology, attracts foreign investments, and ensures market access
for our products. It shall protect and secure the exclusive rights of
scientists, inventors, artists and other gifted citizens to their intellectual
property and creations, particularly when beneficial to the people, for such
periods as provided in this Act.
The use of intellectual property bears a social
function. To this end, the State shall promote the diffusion of knowledge and
information for the promotion of national development and progress and the
common good.
It is also the policy of the State to streamline administrative
procedures of registering patents, trademarks and copyright, to liberalize the
registration on the transfer of technology, and to enhance the enforcement of
intellectual property rights in the Philippines. (n)
SEC. 3. International Conventions and Reciprocity. - Any person
who is a national or who is domiciled or has a real and effective industrial
establishment in a country which is a party to any convention, treaty or
agreement relating to intellectual property rights or the repression of unfair
competition, to which the Philippines is also a party, or extends reciprocal
rights to nationals of the Philippines by law, shall be entitled to benefits to
the extent necessary to give effect to any provision of such convention, treaty
or reciprocal law, in addition to the rights to which any owner of an
intellectual property right is otherwise entitled by this Act. (n)
SEC. 4. Definitions. - 4.1. The
term intellectual property rights consists of:
a) Copyright
and Related Rights;
b) Trademarks
and Service Marks;
c) Geographic
Indications;
d) Industrial
Designs;
e) Patents;
f) Layout-Designs
(Topographies) of Integrated Circuits; and
g) Protection
of Undisclosed Information (n, TRIPS).
4.2.
The term "technology transfer arrangements"
refers to contracts or agreements involving the transfer of systematic
knowledge for the manufacture of a product, the application of a process, or
rendering of a service including management contracts; and the transfer,
assignment or licensing of all forms of intellectual property rights, including
licensing of computer software except computer software developed for mass
market.
4.3.
The term "Office" refers to the Intellectual
Property Office created by this Act.
4.4.
The term "IPO Gazette" refers to the gazette
published by the
Office under this Act. (n)
SEC.
5. Functions of the Intellectual Property Office (IPO). - 5.1. To administer and implement
the State policies declared in this Act, there is hereby created the
Intellectual Property Office (IPO) which shall have the following functions:
a) Examine
applications for grant of letters patent for inventions and register utility
models and industrial designs;
b) Examine
applications for the registration of marks, geographic indication, integrated
circuits;
c) Register
technology transfer arrangements and settle disputes involving technology
transfer payments covered by the provisions of Part II, Chapter IX on Voluntary
Licensing and develop and implement strategies to promote and facilitate
technology transfer;
d) Promote the
use of patent information as a tool for technology development;
e) Publish
regularly in its own publication the patents, marks, utility models and
industrial designs, issued and approved, and the technology transfer
arrangements registered;
f) Administratively
adjudicate contested proceedings affecting intellectual property rights; and
g) Coordinate
with other government agencies and the private sector efforts to formulate and
implement plans and policies to strengthen the protection of intellectual
property rights in the country.
5.2. The Office shall have custody of all records,
books, drawings, specifications, documents, and other papers and things
relating to intellectual property rights applications filed with the Office.
(n)
SEC. 6. The Organizational Structure of the IPO. - 6.1. The Office shall be headed by a
Director General who shall be assisted by two (2) Deputies Director
General.
6.2. The Office
shall be divided into seven (7) Bureaus, each of which shall be headed by a
Director and assisted by an Assistant Director. These Bureaus are:
a) The Bureau
of Patents;
b) The Bureau
of Trademarks;
c) The Bureau
of Legal Affairs;
d) The
Documentation, Information and Technology Transfer Bureau;
e) The
Management Information System and EDP Bureau;
f) The
Administrative, Financial and Personnel Services Bureau; and
g) The Bureau
of Copyright and Other Related Rights.
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
6.3. The
Director General, Deputies Director General, Directors and Assistant Directors
shall be appointed by the President, and the other officers and employees of
the Office by the Secretary of Trade and Industry, conformably with and under
the Civil Service Law. (n)
SEC.
7. The Director General and Deputies Director General. - 7.1. Functions. - The Director
General shall exercise the following powers and functions:
a)
Manage and direct all functions and activities of the
Office, including the promulgation of rules and regulations to implement the
objectives, policies, plans, programs and projects of the Office: Provided,
That in the exercise of the authority to propose policies and standards in
relation to the following: (1) the effective, efficient, and economical
operations of the Office requiring statutory enactment; (2) coordination with
other agencies of government in relation to the enforcement of intellectual
property rights; (3) the recognition of attorneys, agents, or other persons
representing applicants or other parties before the Office; and (4) the
establishment of fees for the filing and processing of an application for a
patent, utility model or industrial design or mark or a collective mark,
geographic indication and other marks of ownership, and for all other services
performed and materials furnished by the Office, the Director General shall be
subject to the supervision of the Secretary of Trade and Industry;
b)
Exercise exclusive appellate jurisdiction over all
decisions rendered by the Director of Legal Affairs, the Director of Patents,
the Director of Trademarks, the Director of Copyright and Other Related Rights,
and the Director of the Documentation, Information and Technology Transfer
Bureau. The decisions of the Director General in the exercise of his appellate
jurisdiction in respect of the decisions of the Director of Patents, the
Director of Trademarks and the Director of Copyright and Other Related Rights
shall be appealable to the Court of Appeals in accordance with the Rules of
Court; and those in respect of the decisions of the Director of Documentation,
Information and Technology Transfer Bureau shall be appealable to the Secretary
of Trade and Industry;
c)
Undertake enforcement functions supported by concerned
agencies such as the Philippine National Police, the National Bureau of
Investigation, the Bureau of Customs, the Optical Media Board, and the local
government units, among others;
d)
Conduct visits during reasonable hours to
establishments and businesses engaging in activities violating intellectual
property rights and provisions of this Act based on report, information or
complaint received by the office; and
e)
Such other functions in furtherance of protecting IP
rights and objectives of this Act.
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
7.2.
Qualifications.
- The Director General and the Deputies Director General must be natural
born citizens of the Philippines, at least thirty-five (35) years of age on the
day of their appointment, holders of a college degree, and of proven
competence, integrity, probity and independence: Provided, That the Director
General and at least one (1) Deputy Director General shall be members of the
Philippine Bar who have engaged in the practice of law for at least ten (10)
years: Provided further, That in the selection of the Director General and the
Deputies Director General, consideration shall be given to such qualifications
as would result, as far as practicable, in the balanced representation in the
Directorate General of the various fields of intellectual property.
7.3.
Term of
Office. - The Director General
and the Deputies Director General shall be appointed by the President for a
term of five (5) years and shall be eligible for reappointment only once:
Provided, That the first Director General shall have a first term of seven (7)
years. Appointment to any vacancy shall be only for the unexpired term of the
predecessor.
7.4.
The Office
of the Director General. - The Office of
the Director General shall consist of the Director General and the Deputies
Director General, their immediate staff and such Offices and Services that the
Director General will set up to support directly the Office of the Director
General. (n)
SEC. 8. The Bureau of
Patents. - The Bureau of Patents shall have
the following functions:
8.1.
Search and examination of patent applications and the
grant of patents;
8.2.
Registration of utility models, industrial designs,
and integrated circuits; and
8.3.
Conduct studies and researches in the field of patents
in order to assist the Director General in formulating policies on the
administration and examination of patents. (n)
SEC. 9. The Bureau of Trademarks. - The Bureau of Trademarks shall have
the following functions:
9.1.
Search and examination of the applications for the
registration of marks, geographic indications and other marks of ownership and
the issuance of the certificates of registration; and
9.2.
Conduct studies and researches in the field of
trademarks in order to assist the Director General in formulating policies on
the administration and examination of trademarks. (n)
SEC. 9A. The Bureau of
Copyright and Other Related Rights. - The Bureau of Copyright and Other
Related Rights shall have the following functions:
9A.1. Exercise
original jurisdiction to resolve disputes relating to the terms of a license
involving the author s right to public performance or other communication of
his work;
9A.2. Accept,
review and decide on applications for the accreditation of collective
management organizations or similar entities;
9A.3. Conduct
studies and researches in the field of copyright and related rights; and
9A.4. Provide other
copyright and related rights service and charge reasonable fees therefor.
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property
Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
SEC. 10. The Bureau of Legal Affairs. - The Bureau
of Legal Affairs shall have the following functions:
10.1. Hear and
decide opposition to the application for registration of marks; cancellation of
trademarks; subject to the provisions of Section 64, cancellation of patents,
utility models, and industrial designs; and petitions for compulsory licensing
of patents;
10.2. (a) Exercise original jurisdiction in
administrative complaints for violations of laws involving intellectual
property rights: Provided, That its jurisdiction is
limited to complaints where the total damages claimed are not less than Two
hundred thousand pesos (Php 200,000): Provided further, That availment of the provisional remedies may be granted in
accordance with the Rules of Court. The Director of Legal Affairs shall have
the power to hold and punish for contempt all those who disregard orders or
writs issued in the course of the proceedings. (n)
(b) After formal investigation, the Director for Legal
Affairs may impose one (1) or more of the following administrative
penalties:
(i)
The issuance of a cease and desist
order which shall specify the acts that the respondent shall cease and desist
from and shall require him to submit a compliance report within a reasonable
time which shall be fixed in the
order;
(ii) The
acceptance of a voluntary assurance of compliance or discontinuance as may be
imposed. Such voluntary assurance may include one or more of the
following:
(1) An
assurance to comply with the provisions of the intellectual property law
violated;
(2) An
assurance to refrain from engaging in unlawful and unfair acts and practices
subject of the formal investigation;
(3) An
assurance to recall, replace, repair, or refund the money value of defective
goods distributed in commerce; and
(4) An
assurance to reimburse the complainant the expenses and costs incurred in
prosecuting the case in the Bureau of Legal Affairs.
The Director of Legal Affairs may also require the
respondent to submit periodic compliance reports and file a bond to guarantee
compliance of his undertaking;
(iii)
The condemnation or seizure of products which are
subject of the offense. The goods seized hereunder shall be disposed of in such
manner as may be deemed appropriate by the Director of Legal Affairs, such as
by sale, donation to distressed local governments or to charitable or relief
institutions, exportation, recycling into other goods, or any combination
thereof, under such guidelines as he may provide;
(iv)
The forfeiture of paraphernalia and all real and
personal properties which have been used in the commission of the offense;
(v)
The imposition of administrative fines in such amount
as deemed reasonable by the Director of Legal Affairs, which shall in no case
be less than Five thousand pesos (Php 5,000) nor more
than One hundred fifty thousand pesos (Php 150,000). In addition, an additional
fine of not more than One thousand pesos (Php 1,000)
shall be imposed for each day of continuing violation;
(vi)
The cancellation of any permit, license, authority, or
registration which may have been granted by the Office, or the suspension of
the validity thereof for such period of time as the Director of Legal Affairs
may deem reasonable which shall not exceed one (1) year;
(vii) The
withholding of any permit, license, authority, or registration which is being
secured by the respondent from the Office;
(viii) The
assessment of damages;
(ix)
Censure; and
(x)
Other analogous penalties or sanctions. (Sec. 6, 7, 8,
and 9,
Executive Order No. 913 [1983] a)
10.3. The Director General may by
Regulations establish the procedure to govern the implementation of this
Section. (n)
SEC. 11. The
Documentation, Information and Technology Transfer Bureau. - The
Documentation, Information and Technology Transfer Bureau shall have the
following functions:
11.1. Support the search and examination activities of
the Office through the following activities:
(a)
Maintain and upkeep classification systems whether
they be national or international such as the International Patent
Classification (IPC) system;
(b)
Provide advisory services for the determination of
search patterns;
(c)
Maintain search files and search rooms and reference
libraries; and
(d)
Adapt and package industrial property information.
11.2. Establish
networks or intermediaries or regional representatives;
11.3. Educate the
public and build awareness on intellectual property through the conduct of
seminars and lectures, and other similar activities;
11.4. Establish
working relations with research and development institutions as well as with
local and international intellectual property professional groups and the like;
11.5. Perform
state-of-the-art searches;
11.6. Promote the
use of patent information as an effective tool to facilitate the development of
technology in the country;
11.7. Provide
technical, advisory, and other services relating to the licensing and promotion
of technology, and carry out an efficient and
effective program for technology
transfer; and
11.8. Register
technology transfer arrangements, and settle disputes involving technology
transfer payments. (n)
SEC. 12. The Management Information Services and EDP Bureau. - The Management Information Services and EDP Bureau shall:
12.1.
Conduct automation planning, research and development,
testing of systems, contracts with firms, contracting, purchase and maintenance
of equipment, design and maintenance of systems, user consultation, and the
like; and
12.2.
Provide management information support and service to
the
Office. (n)
SEC. 13. The Administrative, Financial and Human Resource Development Service
Bureau. - 13.1. The
Administrative Service shall:
(a)
Provide services relative to procurement and allocation of supplies and
equipment, transportation, messengerial work,
cashiering, payment of salaries and other Office's obligations, office
maintenance, proper safety and security, and other utility services; and comply
with government regulatory requirements in the areas of performance appraisal,
compensation and benefits,
employment records and reports;
(b)
Receive all applications filed with the Office and
collect fees therefore; and
(c)
Publish patent applications and grants, trademark
applications, and registration of marks, industrial designs, utility models,
geographic indication, and lay-out-designs of integrated circuits
registrations.
13.2. The Patent and Trademark Administration Services
shall perform the following functions among others:
(a)
Maintain registers of assignments, mergings,
licenses, and bibliographic on patents and trademarks;
(b)
Collect maintenance fees, issue certified copies of
documents in its custody and perform similar other activities; and
(c)
Hold in custody all the applications filed with the
office, and all patent grants, certificate of registrations issued by the
office, and the like.
13.3. The
Financial Service shall formulate and manage a financial program to ensure
availability and proper utilization of funds; provide for an effective
monitoring system of the financial operations of the Office; and
13.4. The Human
Resource Development Service shall design and implement human resource
development plans and programs for the personnel of the Office; provide for
present and future manpower needs of the organization; maintain high morale and
favorable employee attitudes towards the organization through the continuing
design and
implementation of employee
development programs. (n)
SEC. 14. Use of Intellectual Property Rights Fees by the IPO. - 14.1. For a more effective and expeditious
implementation of this Act, the Director General shall be authorized to retain,
without need of a separate approval from any government agency, and subject
only to the existing accounting and auditing rules and regulations, all the
fees, fines, royalties and other charges, collected by the Office under this
Act and the other laws that the Office will be mandated to administer, for use
in its operations, like upgrading of its facilities, equipment outlay, human
resource development, and the acquisition of the appropriate office space,
among others, to improve the delivery of its services to the public. This
amount, which shall be in addition to the Office's annual budget, shall be
deposited and maintained in a separate account or fund, which may be used or
disbursed directly by the Director General.
14.2. After five (5) years from the coming into force
of this Act, the Director General shall, subject to the approval of the
Secretary of Trade and Industry, determine if the fees and charges mentioned in
Subsection 14.1 hereof that the Office shall collect are sufficient to meet its
budgetary requirements. If so, it shall retain all the fees and charges it
shall collect under the same conditions indicated in said Subsection 14.1 but
shall forthwith, cease to receive any funds from the annual budget of the
National Government; if not, the provisions of said Subsection 14.1 shall
continue to apply until such time when the Director General, subject to the
approval of the Secretary of Trade and Industry, certifies that the abovestated fees and charges the Office shall collect are
enough to fund its operations. (n).
SEC. 15. Special Technical and Scientific Assistance. - The Director General is empowered to obtain
the assistance of technical, scientific or other qualified officers and
employees of other departments, bureaus, offices, agencies and
instrumentalities of the Government, including corporations owned, controlled
or operated by the Government, when deemed necessary in the consideration of
any matter submitted to the Office relative to the enforcement of the
provisions of this Act. (Sec. 3,
R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 16. Seal of Office. - The Office shall have a seal, the form and
design of which shall be approved by the Director General. (Sec. 4, R.A.
No. 165a)
SEC. 17. Publication of Laws and Regulations. - The
Director General shall cause to be printed and make available for distribution,
pamphlet copies of this Act, other pertinent laws, executive orders and
information circulars relating to matters within the jurisdiction of the
Office. (Sec. 5, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC . 18. The IPO Gazette. - All matters required to be
published under this Act shall be published in the Office's own publication to
be known as the IPO Gazette. (n)
SEC. 19.
Disqualification of Officers and Employees of the Office. - All officers and employees of the Office
shall not apply or act as an attorney or patent agent of an application for a
grant of patent, for the registration of a utility model, industrial design or
mark nor acquire, except by hereditary succession, any patent or utility model,
design registration, or mark or any right, title or interest therein during
their employment and for one (1) year thereafter. (Sec. 77, R.A. No. 165a)
PART II.
THE LAW ON
PATENTS
Chapter
I
GENERAL
PROVISIONS
SEC. 20. Definition of Terms Used in Part II, The Law on
Patents. As used in Part II,
the following terms shall have the following meanings:
20.1. "Bureau" means the
Bureau of Patents;
20.2. "Director" means
the Director of Patents;
20.3. "Regulations" means the Rules of
Practice in Patent Cases formulated by the Director of Patents and promulgated
by the Director General;
20.4. "Examiner" means
the patent examiner;
20.5. "Patent
application" or "application" means an application for a patent
for an invention except in Chapters XII and XIII, where application means an
application for a utility model and an industrial design, respectively;
and
20.6. "Priority date" means the date of
filing of the foreign application for the same invention referred to in Section
31 of this Act. (n)
Chapter II.
PATENTABILITY
SEC. 21. Patentable Inventions. - Any
technical solution of a problem in any field of human activity which is new,
involves an inventive step and is industrially applicable shall be patentable.
It may be, or may relate to, a product, or process, or an improvement of any of
the foregoing. (Sec. 7, R.A. No.165a)
SEC. 22. Non-Patentable Inventions. - The
following shall be excluded from patent protection:
22.1.
Discoveries, scientific theories and mathematical methods, and in the
case of drugs and medicines, the mere discovery of a new form or new property
of a known substance which does not result in the enhancement of the known
efficacy of that substance, or the mere discovery of any new property or new
use for a known substance, or the mere use of a known process unless such known
process results in a new product that employs at least one new reactant.
For the purpose of this clause, salts, esters, ethers,
polymorphs, metabolites, pure form, particle size, isomers, mixtures of
isomers, complexes, combinations, and other derivatives of a known substance
shall be considered to be the same substance, unless they differ significantly
in properties with regard to efficacy;
(As amended by Republic Act No.9502 or the Universally
Accessible
Cheaper and Quality Medicines Act of 2008)
22.2. Schemes,
rules and methods of performing mental acts, playing games or doing business,
and programs for computers;
22.3 Methods for treatment of the human
or animal body by surgery or therapy and diagnostic methods practiced on the
human or animal body. This provision shall not apply to products and
composition for use in any of these methods;
22.4. Plant
varieties or animal breeds or essentially biological process for the production
of plants or animals. This provision shall not apply to micro-organisms and
non-biological and microbiological processes.
Provisions under this subsection shall not preclude
Congress to consider the enactment of a law providing sui generis protection of plant varieties and animal breeds and a
system of community intellectual rights protection;
22.5. Aesthetic creations; and
22.6. Anything
which is contrary to public order or morality. (Sec. 8, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 23. Novelty. - An invention shall not be
considered new if it forms part of a prior art. (Sec. 9, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 24. Prior Art. - Prior art shall consist of:
24.1.
Everything which has been made available to the public anywhere in the
world, before the filing date or the priority date of the application claiming
the invention; and
24.2. The whole
contents of an application for a patent, utility model, or industrial design
registration, published in accordance with this Act, filed or effective in the Philippines,
with a filing or priority date that is earlier than the filing or priority date
of the application: Provided, That the application which has validly claimed
the filing date of an earlier application under Section 31 of this Act, shall
be prior art with effect as of the filing date of such earlier application:
Provided further, That the applicant or the inventor identified in both
applications are not one and the same. (Sec. 9, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 25. Non-Prejudicial Disclosure. - 25.1. The disclosure
of information contained in the application during the twelve (12) months
preceding the filing date or the priority date of the application shall not
prejudice the applicant on the ground of lack of novelty if such disclosure was
made by:
(a) The inventor;
(b) A patent
office and the information was contained (a) in
another application filed by the inventor and should not have been disclosed by
the office, or (b) in an application filed without the knowledge or consent of
the inventor by a third party which obtained the information directly or
indirectly from the inventor; or
(c) A third
party which obtained the information directly or indirectly from the
inventor.
25.2. For the
purposes of Subsection 25.1, "inventor" also means any person who, at
the filing date of application, had the right to the patent. (n)
SEC. 26. Inventive
Step. - 26.1 An
invention involves an inventive step if, having regard to prior art, it is not
obvious to a person skilled in the art at the time of the filing date or
priority date of the application claiming the invention. (n)
26.2 In the case of drugs and medicines,
there is no inventive step if the invention results from the mere discovery of
a new form or new property of a known substance which does not result in the
enhancement of the known efficacy of that substance, or the mere discovery of
any new property or new use for a known substance, or the mere use of a known
process unless such known process results in a new product that employs at
least one new reactant.
(As amended by Republic Act No.9502 or the Universally
Accessible Cheaper and Quality Medicines Act of 2008)
SEC. 27. Industrial Applicability. - An invention that can be produced and used in
any industry shall be industrially applicable. (n)
Chapter
III.
RIGHT TO A
PATENT
SEC. 28. Right to a
Patent. - The right to a patent belongs to the inventor,
his heirs, or assigns. When two (2) or more persons have jointly made an
invention, the right to a patent shall belong to them jointly. (Sec.
10, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 29. First to File
Rule. -
If two (2) or more
persons have made the invention separately and independently of each other, the
right to the patent shall belong to the person who filed an application for
such invention, or where two or more applications are filed for the same
invention, to the applicant who has the earliest filing date or, the earliest
priority date. (3rd sentence, Sec. 10, R.A. No. 165a.)
SEC. 30. Inventions
Created Pursuant to a Commission. -
30.1. The person who commissions the work shall own the patent, unless
otherwise provided in the contract.
30.2. In case
the employee made the invention in the course of his employment contract, the
patent shall belong to:
(a) The
employee, if the inventive activity is not a part of his regular duties even if
the employee uses the time, facilities and materials of the employer.
(b) The
employer, if the invention is the result of the performance of his
regularly-assigned duties, unless there is an agreement, express or implied, to
the contrary. (n)
SEC. 31. Right of
Priority. - An application for patent filed by
any person who has previously applied for the same invention in another country
which by treaty, convention, or law affords similar privileges to Filipino
citizens, shall be considered as filed as of the date of filing the foreign
application: Provided, That: (a) the local application expressly claims
priority; (b) it is filed within twelve (12) months from the date the earliest
foreign application was filed; and (c) a certified copy of the foreign
application together with an English translation is filed within six (6) months
from the date of filing in the Philippines. (Sec. 15, R.A. No.
165a)
Chapter
IV.
PATENT
APPLICATION
SEC. 32. The
Application. - 32.1. The
patent application shall be in Filipino or English and shall contain the
following:
(a)
A request for the grant of a patent;
(b)
A description of the invention;
(c)
Drawings necessary for the understanding of the
invention; (d)
One or more claims; and (e) An abstract.
32.2. No patent
may be granted unless the application identifies the inventor. If the applicant
is not the inventor, the Office may require him to submit said authority. (Sec.
13, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 33. Appointment of
Agent or Representative. - An applicant who is not a resident
of the Philippines must appoint and maintain a resident agent or representative
in the Philippines upon whom notice or process for judicial or administrative
procedure relating to the application for patent or the patent may be served.
(Sec. 11, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 34. The Request. - The request shall contain a petition for the
grant of the patent, the name and other data of the applicant, the inventor and
the agent and the title of the invention. (n)
SEC. 35. Disclosure and Description of the Invention. - 35.1. Disclosure. - The application shall disclose the invention in a
manner sufficiently clear and complete for it to be carried out by a person
skilled in the art. Where the application concerns a microbiological process or
the product thereof and involves the use of a micro-organism which cannot be
sufficiently disclosed in the application in such a way as to enable the
invention to be carried out by a person skilled in the art, and such material
is not available to the public, the application shall be supplemented by a
deposit of such material with an international depository institution.
35.2. Description. - The Regulations shall
prescribe the contents of the description and the order of presentation. (Sec.
14, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 36. The Claims.
- 36.1. The application shall
contain one (1) or more claims which shall define the matter for which
protection is sought. Each claim shall be clear and concise, and shall be
supported by the description.
36.2. The Regulations shall prescribe the manner of
the presentation of claims. (n)
SEC. 37. The Abstract. -
The abstract shall consist of a concise summary of the
disclosure of the invention as contained in the description, claims and
drawings in preferably not more than one hundred fifty (150) words. It must be
drafted in a way which allows the clear understanding of the technical problem,
the gist of the solution of that problem through the invention, and the
principal use or uses of the invention. The abstract shall merely serve for
technical information. (n)
SEC. 38. Unity of
Invention. - 38.1. The application shall relate to one invention only or
to a group of inventions forming a single general inventive concept.
38.2. If several
independent inventions which do not form a single general inventive concept are
claimed in one application, the Director may require that the application be
restricted to a single invention. A later application filed for an invention
divided out shall be considered as having been filed on the same day as the
first application: Provided, That the later application is filed within four
(4) months after the requirement to divide becomes final, or within such
additional time, not exceeding four (4) months, as may be granted: Provided
further, That each divisional application shall not go
beyond the disclosure in the initial application.
38.3. The fact
that a patent has been granted on an application that did not comply with the
requirement of unity of invention shall not be a
ground to cancel the patent. (Sec.
17, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC.39. Information
Concerning Corresponding Foreign Application for Patents. - The applicant shall, at the request of the
Director, furnish him with the date and number of any application for a patent
filed by him abroad, hereafter referred to as the "foreign application,"
relating to the same or essentially the same invention as that claimed in the
application filed with the Office and other documents relating to the foreign
application. (n)
Chapter
V.
PROCEDURE
FOR GRANT OF PATENT
SEC. 40. Filing Date
Requirements. - 40.1. The
filing date of a patent application shall be the date of receipt by the Office
of at least the following elements:
(a)
An express or implicit indication that a Philippine
patent is sought;
(b)
Information identifying the applicant; and
(c)
Description of the invention and one (1) or more
claims in Filipino or English.
40.2. If any of
these elements is not submitted within the period set by the Regulations, the
application shall be considered withdrawn. (n)
SEC. 41. According a
Filing Date. - The Office shall examine whether the patent
application satisfies the requirements for the grant of date of filing as
provided in Section 40 hereof. If the date of filing cannot be accorded, the
applicant shall be given an opportunity to correct the deficiencies in
accordance with the implementing Regulations. If the application does not
contain all the elements indicated in Section 40, the filing date should be
that date when all the elements are received. If the deficiencies are not
remedied within the prescribed time limit, the
application shall be considered
withdrawn. (n)
SEC. 42. Formality
Examination. - 42.1. After
the patent application has been accorded a filing date and the required fees
have been paid on time in accordance with the Regulations, the applicant shall
comply with the formal requirements specified by Section 32 and the Regulations
within the prescribed period, otherwise the application shall be considered
withdrawn.
42.2. The Regulations shall determine the procedure
for the reexamination and revival of an application as well as the appeal to
the Director of Patents from any final action by the examiner. (Sec. 16, R.A.
No. 165a)
SEC. 43. Classification and Search. - An
application that has complied with the formal requirement shall be classified
and a search conducted to determine the prior art. (n)
SEC. 44. Publication of Patent Application. - 44.1. The patent application shall be published in the IPO Gazette
together with a search document established by or on behalf of the Office
citing any documents that reflect prior art, after the expiration of eighteen
(18) months from the filing date or priority date.
44.2. After
publication of a patent application, any interested party may inspect the
application documents filed with the Office.
44.3. The
Director General, subject to the approval of the Secretary of Trade and
Industry, may prohibit or restrict the publication of an application, if in his
opinion, to do so would be prejudicial to the national security and interests
of the Republic of the Philippines. (n)
SEC. 45.
Confidentiality Before Publication. -
A patent application, which has not yet been published, and
all related documents, shall not be made available for inspection without the
consent of the applicant. (n)
SEC. 46. Rights
Conferred by a Patent Application After Publication.
- The applicant shall have all the rights of a
patentee under Section 76 against any person who, without his authorization,
exercised any of the rights conferred under Section 71 of this Act in relation
to the invention claimed in the published patent application, as if a patent
had been granted for that invention: Provided, That the said person had:
46.1. Actual
knowledge that the invention that he was using was the subject matter of a
published application; or
46.2. Received
written notice that the invention that he was using was the subject matter of a
published application being identified in the said notice by its serial number:
Provided, That the action may not be filed until after the grant of a patent on
the published application and within four (4) years from the commission of the
acts complained of. (n)
SEC. 47. Observation by
Third Parties. - Following the publication of the patent
application, any person may present observations in writing concerning the
patentability of the invention. Such observations shall be communicated to the
applicant who may comment on them. The Office shall acknowledge and put such
observations and comment in the file of the application to which it relates.
(n)
SEC. 48. Request for
Substantive Examination. - 48.1. The application shall be deemed withdrawn unless
within six (6) months from the date of publication under Section 41, a written
request to determine whether a patent application meets the requirements of
Sections 21 to 27 and Sections 32 to 39 and the fees have been paid on time.
48.2.
Withdrawal of the request for examination shall be irrevocable and shall
not authorize the refund of any fee. (n)
SEC. 49. Amendment of
Application. - An applicant may amend the patent
application during examination: Provided, That such
amendment shall not include new matter outside the scope of the disclosure
contained in the application as filed. (n)
SEC. 50. Grant of Patent. - 50.1. If the application
meets the requirements of this Act, the Office shall grant the patent:
Provided, That all the fees are paid on time.
50.2. If the required fees for grant
and printing are not paid in due time, the application shall be deemed to be
withdrawn.
50.3. A patent
shall take effect on the date of the publication of the grant of the patent in
the IPO Gazette. (Sec. 18, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 51. Refusal of the
Application. - 51.1. The
final order of refusal of the examiner to grant the patent shall be appealable
to the Director in accordance with this Act.
51.2. The Regulations shall provide for the procedure
by which an appeal from the order of refusal from the Director shall be
undertaken. (n)
SEC. 52. Publication
Upon Grant of Patent. - 52.1. The
grant of the patent together with other related information shall be published
in the IPO Gazette within the time prescribed by the Regulations.
52.2. Any interested party may inspect the complete
description, claims, and drawings of the patent on file with the Office. (Sec.
18, R.A.
No. 165a)
SEC. 53. Contents of
Patent. - The patent shall be issued in the name of the
Republic of the Philippines under the seal of the Office and shall be signed by
the Director, and registered together with the description, claims, and
drawings, if any, in books and records of the Office. (Secs. 19 and 20, R.A.
No. 165a)
SEC. 54. Term of
Patent. - The term of a patent shall be
twenty (20) years from the filing date of the application. (Sec. 21, R.A. No.
165a)
SEC. 55. Annual Fees.
- 55.1. To maintain the patent
application or patent, an annual fee shall be paid upon the expiration of four
(4) years from the date the application was published pursuant to Section 44
hereof, and on each subsequent anniversary of such date. Payment may be made
within three (3) months before the due date. The obligation to pay the annual
fees shall terminate should the application be withdrawn, refused, or
cancelled.
55.2. If the annual fee is not paid, the patent
application shall be deemed withdrawn or the patent considered as lapsed from
the day following the expiration of the period within which the annual fees
were due. A notice that the application is deemed withdrawn or the lapse of a
patent for non-payment of any annual fee shall be published in the IPO Gazette
and the lapse shall be recorded in the Register of the Office.
55.3. A grace
period of six (6) months shall be granted for the payment of the annual fee,
upon payment of the prescribed surcharge for delayed payment. (Sec. 22, R.A.
No. 165a)
SEC. 56. Surrender of
Patent. - 56.1. The
owner of the patent, with the consent of all persons having grants or licenses
or other right, title or interest in and to the patent and the invention
covered thereby, which have been recorded in the Office, may surrender his
patent or any claim or claims forming part thereof to the Office for cancellation.
56.2. A person
may give notice to the Office of his opposition to the surrender of a patent
under this section, and if he does so, the Bureau shall notify the proprietor
of the patent and determine the question.
56.3. If the Office is satisfied that the patent may
properly be surrendered, he may accept the offer and, as from the day when
notice of his acceptance is published in the IPO Gazette, the patent shall
cease to have effect, but no action for infringement shall lie and no right compensation
shall accrue for any use of the patented invention before that day for the
services of the government. (Sec. 24, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 57. Correction of Mistakes of the Office. - The
Director shall have the power to correct, without fee, any mistake in a patent
incurred through the fault of the Office when clearly disclosed in the records
thereof, to make the patent conform to the records. (Sec. 25, R.A. No. 165)
SEC. 58. Correction of Mistake in the Application. - On request
of any interested person and payment of the prescribed fee, the Director is
authorized to correct any mistake in a patent of a formal and clerical nature,
not incurred through the fault of the Office. (Sec. 26, R.A. No.
165a)
SEC. 59. Changes in
Patents. - 59.1. The owner of a patent shall have the
right to request the Bureau to make the changes in the patent in order to:
(a)
Limit the extent of the protection conferred by
it;
(b)
Correct obvious mistakes or to correct clerical
errors; and
(c)
Correct mistakes or errors, other than those referred
to in letter (b), made in good faith: Provided, That
where the change would result in a broadening of the extent of protection
conferred by the patent, no request may be made after the expiration of two (2)
years from the grant of a patent and the change shall not affect the rights of
any third party which has relied on the patent, as published.
59.2. No change
in the patent shall be permitted under this section, where the change would
result in the disclosure contained in the patent going beyond the disclosure
contained in the application filed.
59.3. If, and to
the extent to which the Office changes the patent according to this section, it
shall publish the same. (n)
SEC. 60. Form and Publication of Amendment. - An amendment or correction
of a patent shall be accomplished by a certificate of such amendment or
correction, authenticated by the seal of the Office and signed by the Director,
which certificate shall be attached to the patent. Notice of such amendment or
correction shall be published in the IPO Gazette and copies of the patent kept
or furnished by the Office shall include a copy of the certificate of amendment
or correction. (Sec. 27,
R.A. No. 165)
Chapter VI.
CANCELLATION
OF PATENTS AND
SUBSTITUTION
OF PATENTEE
SEC. 61. Cancellation
of Patents. - 61.1. Any
interested person may, upon payment of the required fee, petition to cancel the
patent or any claim thereof, or parts of the claim, on any of the following
grounds:
(a)
That what is claimed as the invention is not new or
patentable;
(b)
That the patent does not disclose the invention in a
manner sufficiently clear and complete for it to be carried out by any person
skilled in the art; or
(c)
That the patent is contrary to public order or
morality.
61.2. Where the
grounds for cancellation relate to some of the claims or parts o the claim, cancellation may be effected
to such extent only.
(Secs. 28 and 29, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 62. Requirement of
the Petition. - The
petition for cancellation shall be in writing, verified by the petitioner or by
any person in his behalf who knows the facts, specify the grounds upon which it
is based, include a statement of the facts to be relied upon, and filed with
the Office. Copies of printed publications or of patents of other countries,
and other supporting documents mentioned in the petition shall be attached
thereto, together with the translation thereof in English, if not in the
English language. (Sec. 30, R.A. No. 165)
SEC. 63. Notice of Hearing. - Upon filing
of a petition for cancellation, the Director of Legal Affairs shall forthwith
serve notice of the filing thereof upon the patentee and all persons having
grants or licenses, or any other right, title or interest in and to the patent
and the invention covered thereby, as appears of record in the Office, and of
notice of the date of hearing thereon on such persons and the petitioner.
Notice of the filing of the petition shall be published in the IPO Gazette.
(Sec. 31,
R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 64. Committee of
Three. -
In cases involving highly technical issues, on motion of any
party, the Director of Legal Affairs may order that the petition be heard and
decided by a committee composed of the Director of Legal Affairs as chairman
and two (2) members who have the experience or expertise in the field of
technology to which the patent sought to be cancelled relates. The decision of
the committee shall be appealable to the Director General. (n)
SEC. 65. Cancellation
of the Patent. - 65.1. If
the Committee finds that a case for cancellation has been proved, it shall
order the patent or any specified claim or claims thereof cancelled.
65.2. If the
Committee finds that, taking into consideration the amendment made by the
patentee during the cancellation proceedings, the patent and the invention to
which it relates meet the requirement of this Act, it may decide to maintain
the patent as amended: Provided, That the fee for printing of a new patent is
paid within the time limit prescribed in the Regulations.
65.3. If the fee
for the printing of a new patent is not paid in due time, the patent should be
revoked.
65.4. If the
patent is amended under Subsection 65.2 hereof, the Bureau shall, at the same
time as it publishes the mention of the cancellation decision, publish the
abstract, representative claims and drawings indicating clearly what the
amendments consist of. (n)
SEC. 66. Effect of
Cancellation of Patent or Claim. - The rights conferred by the patent
or any specified claim or claims cancelled shall terminate. Notice of the
cancellation shall be published in the IPO Gazette. Unless restrained by the
Director General, the decision or order to cancel by Director of Legal Affairs
shall be immediately executory even pending appeal. (Sec. 32, R.A. No.
165a)
Chapter
VII.
SEC. 67. Patent Application by Persons Not Having the Right to
a Patent. - 67.1. If a
person referred to in Section 29 other than the applicant, is declared by final
court order or decision as having the right to the patent, such person may,
within three (3) months after the decision has become final:
(a)
Prosecute the application as his own application in
place of the applicant;
(b)
File a new patent application in respect of the same
invention;
(c)
Request that the application be refused; or
(d)
Seek cancellation of the patent, if one has already
been issued.
67.2. The
provisions of Subsection 38.2 shall apply mutatis mutandis to a new application
filed under Subsection 67.1(b). (n)
SEC. 68. Remedies of the
True and Actual Inventor. - If a person, who was deprived of the patent
without his consent or through fraud is declared by final court order or
decision to be the true and actual inventor, the court shall order for his
substitution as patentee, or at the option of the true inventor, cancel the
patent, and award actual and other damages in his favor if warranted by the
circumstances. (Sec. 33, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC . 69. Publication of
the Court Order. - The court shall furnish the Office
a copy of the order or decision referred to in Sections 67 and 68, which shall
be published in the IPO Gazette within three (3) months from the date such
order or decision became final and executory, and shall be recorded in the
register of the Office. (n)
SEC. 70. Time to File Action in Court. - The actions
indicated in Sections 67 and 68 shall be filed within one (1) year from the
date of publication made in accordance with Sections 44 and 51, respectively.
(n)
Chapter
VIII.
SEC. 71. Rights
Conferred by Patent. - 71.1. A patent
shall confer on its owner the following exclusive rights:
(a)
Where the subject matter of a patent is a product, to
restrain, prohibit and prevent any unauthorized person or entity from making,
using, offering for sale, selling or importing that product;
(b)
Where the subject matter of a patent is a process, to
restrain, prevent or prohibit any unauthorized person or entity from using the
process, and from manufacturing, dealing in, using, selling or offering for
sale, or importing any product obtained directly or indirectly from such
process.
71.2. Patent owners shall also have the right to
assign, or transfer by succession the patent, and to conclude licensing
contracts for the same.
(Sec. 37, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 72. Limitations of
Patent Rights. - The owner of a patent has no right
to prevent third parties from performing, without his authorization, the acts
referred to in Section 71 hereof in the following circumstances:
72.1. Using a
patented product which has been put on the market in the Philippines by the
owner of the product, or with his express consent, insofar as such use is
performed after that product has been so put on the said market: Provided,
That with regard to drugs and medicines, the limitation on patent rights shall
apply after a drug or medicine has been introduced in the Philippines or
anywhere else in the world by the patent owner, or by any party authorized to
use the invention: Provided, further, That
the right to import the drugs and medicines contemplated in this section shall
be available to any government agency or any private third party;
72.2. Where the
act is done privately and on a non-commercial scale or for a non-commercial
purpose: Provided, That
it does not significantly prejudice the economic interests of the owner of the
patent;
72.3. Where the
act consists of making or using exclusively for experimental use of the
invention for scientific purposes or educational purposes and such other
activities directly related to such scientific or educational experimental use;
72.4. In the case
of drugs and medicines, where the act includes testing, using, making or
selling the invention including any data related thereto, solely for purposes reasonably
related to the development and submission of information and issuance of
approvals by government regulatory agencies required under any law of the
Philippines or of another country that regulates the manufacture, construction,
use or sale of any product: Provided, That,
in order to protect the data submitted by the original patent holder from
unfair commercial use provided in Article 39.3 of the Agreement on
Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS Agreement), the
Intellectual Property Office, in consultation with the appropriate government
agencies, shall issue the appropriate rules and regulations necessary therein
not later than one
hundred twenty (120) days after the
enactment of this law;
72.5. Where the
act consists of the preparation for individual cases, in a pharmacy or by a
medical professional, of a medicine in accordance with a medical prescription
or acts concerning the medicine so prepared; and
72.6. Where the
invention is used in any ship, vessel, aircraft, or land vehicle of any other
country entering the territory of the Philippines temporarily or accidentally: Provided, That
such invention is used exclusively for the needs of the ship, vessel, aircraft,
or land vehicle and not used for the manufacturing of anything to be sold
within the
Philippines. (Secs. 38 and 39, R.A.
No. 165a)
(As amended by Republic Act No.9502 or the Universally
Accessible
Cheaper and Quality Medicines Act of 2008)
SEC. 73. Prior User.
- 73.1. Notwithstanding Section 72 hereof, any prior
user, who, in good faith was using the invention or has undertaken serious
preparations to use the invention in his enterprise or business, before the
filing date or priority date of the application on which a patent is granted,
shall have the right to continue the use thereof as envisaged in such
preparations within the territory where the patent produces its effect.
73.2. The right of the
prior user may only be transferred or assigned together with his enterprise or
business, or with that part of his enterprise or business in which the use or
preparations for use have been made. (Sec.
40, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 74. Use of
Invention by Government. - 74.1. A
Government agency or third person authorized by the Government may exploit the
invention even without agreement of the patent owner where:
(a)
The public interest, in particular, national security,
nutrition, health or the development of other sectors, as determined by the
appropriate
agency of the government, so
requires; or
(b)
A judicial or administrative body has determined that
the manner of exploitation, by the owner of the patent or his licensee, is
anticompetitive; or
(c)
In the case of drugs and medicines, there is a
national emergency or other circumstance of extreme urgency requiring the use
of the invention; or
(d)
In the case of drugs and medicines, there is a public
noncommercial use of the patent by the patentee, without satisfactory reason;
or
(e)
In the case of drugs and medicines, the demand for the
patented article in the Philippines is not being met to an adequate extent and
on reasonable terms, as determined by the Secretary of the Department of
Health.
74.2 Unless otherwise provided herein,
the use by the Government, or third person authorized by the Government shall
be subject, where applicable, to the following provisions:
(a)
In situations of national emergency or other
circumstances of extreme urgency as provided under Section 74.1 (c), the right
holder shall be notified as soon as reasonably practicable;
(b)
In the case of public non-commercial use of the patent
by the patentee, without satisfactory reason, as provided under Section 74.1
(d), the right holder shall be informed promptly: Provided, That, the Government or third person authorized by the
Government, without making a patent search, knows or has demonstrable ground to
know that a valid patent is or will be used by or for the Government;
(c)
If the demand for the patented article in the
Philippines is not being met to an adequate extent and on reasonable terms as
provided under
Section 74.1 (e), the right holder
shall be informed promptly;
(d)
The scope and duration of such use shall be limited to
the purpose for which it was authorized
(e)
Such use shall be non-exclusive;
(f)
The right holder shall be paid adequate remuneration
in the circumstances of each case, taking into account the economic value of
the authorization; and
(g)
The existence of a national emergency or other
circumstances of extreme urgency, referred to under Section 74.1 (c), shall be
subject to the determination of the President of the Philippines for the
purpose of determining the need for such use or other exploitation, which shall
be immediately executory.
74.3.All cases
arising from the implementation of this provision shall be cognizable by courts
with appropriate jurisdiction provided by law.
No court, except the Supreme Court of the Philippines,
shall issue any temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction or such
other provisional remedies that will prevent its immediate execution.
74.4.The
Intellectual Property Office (IPO), in consultation with the appropriate
government agencies, shall issue the appropriate implementing rules and
regulations for the use or exploitation of patented inventions as contemplated
in this section within one hundred twenty (120) days after the effectivity of
this law.
(As amended by Republic Act No.9502 or the Universally
Accessible Cheaper and Quality Medicines Act of 2008)
SEC. 75. Extent of
Protection and Interpretation of Claims. -
75.1. The extent of protection conferred by the patent shall
be determined by the claims, which are to be interpreted in the light of the
description and drawings.
75.2. For the purpose of determining the extent of
protection conferred by the patent, due account shall be taken of elements
which are equivalent to the elements expressed in the claims, so that a claim
shall be considered to cover not only all the elements as expressed therein,
but also equivalents. (n)
SEC. 76. Civil Action for Infringement. - 76.1. The making, using, offering
for sale, selling, or importing a patented product or a product obtained
directly or indirectly from a patented process, or the use of a patented
process without the authorization of the patentee constitutes patent
infringement. Provided, That, this
shall not apply to instances covered by Sections 72.1 and 72.4 (Limitations of
Patent Rights); Section 74 (Use of Invention by Government); Section 93.6
(Compulsory Licensing); and Section 93-A (Procedures on Issuance of a Special
Compulsory License under the TRIPS Agreement) of this Code.
(As amended by Republic Act No.9502 or the Universally
Accessible
Cheaper and Quality Medicines Act of 2008)
76.2. Any
patentee, or anyone possessing any right, title or interest in and to the
patented invention, whose rights have been infringed, may bring a civil action
before a court of competent jurisdiction, to recover from the infringer such
damages sustained thereby, plus attorney s fees and other expenses of
litigation, and to secure an injunction for the protection of his rights.
76.3. If the
damages are inadequate or cannot be readily ascertained with reasonable
certainty, the court may award by way of damages a sum equivalent to reasonable
royalty.
76.4. The court
may, according to the circumstances of the case, award damages in a sum above
the amount found as actual damages sustained: Provided, That the award does not
exceed three (3) times the amount of such actual damages.
76.5. The court
may, in its discretion, order that the infringing goods, materials and
implements predominantly used in the infringement be disposed of outside the
channels of commerce or destroyed, without compensation; and
76.6. Anyone who
actively induces the infringement of a patent or provides the infringer with a
component of a patented product or of a product produced because of a patented
process knowing it to be especially adopted for infringing the patented
invention and not suitable for substantial non-infringing use shall be liable
as a contributory infringer and shall be jointly and severally liable with the
infringer. (Sec. 42, R.A.
No. 165a)
SEC. 77. Infringement Action by a Foreign National. - Any foreign
national or juridical entity who meets the requirements of Section 3 and not
engaged in business in the Philippines, to which a patent has been granted or
assigned under this Act, may bring an action for infringement of patent,
whether or not it is licensed to do business in the Philippines under existing
law. (Sec. 41-A, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 78. Process Patents; Burden of Proof. - If the subject matter of a patent is a process
for obtaining a product, any identical product shall be presumed to have been
obtained through the use of the patented process if the product is new or there
is substantial likelihood that the identical product was made by the process
and the owner of the patent has been unable despite reasonable efforts, to
determine the process actually used. In ordering the defendant to prove that
the process to obtain the identical product is different from the patented
process, the court shall adopt measures to protect, as far as practicable, his
manufacturing and business secrets. (n)
SEC. 79. Limitation of Action for Damages. - No damages
can be recovered for acts of infringement committed more than four (4) years
before the institution of the action for infringement. (Sec. 43, R.A. No.
165)
SEC. 80. Damages; Requirement of Notice. - Damages
cannot be recovered for acts of infringement committed before the infringer had
known, or had reasonable grounds to know of the patent. It is presumed that the
infringer had known of the patent if on the patented product, or on the
container or package in which the article is supplied to the public, or on the
advertising material relating to the patented product or process, are placed
the words "Philippine Patent" with the number of the patent. (Sec.
44, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 81. Defenses
in Action for Infringement. - In an action for infringement, the
defendant, in addition to other defenses available to him, may show the
invalidity of the patent, or any claim thereof, on any of the grounds on which
a petition of cancellation can be brought under Section 61 hereof. (Sec. 45,
R.A. No. 165)
SEC. 82. Patent Found Invalid May be Cancelled. - In an
action for infringement, if the court shall find the patent or any claim to be
invalid, it shall cancel the same, and the Director of Legal Affairs upon
receipt of the final judgment of cancellation by the court, shall record that
fact in the register of the Office and shall publish a notice to that effect in
the IPO Gazette. (Sec. 46, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 83. Assessor in
Infringement Action. - 83.1. Two
(2) or more assessors may be appointed by the court. The assessors shall be
possessed of the necessary scientific and technical knowledge required by the
subject matter in litigation. Either party may challenge the fitness of any
assessor proposed for appointment.
83.2. Each assessor shall receive a compensation in
an amount to be fixed by the court and advanced by the complaining party, which
shall be awarded as part of his costs should he prevail in the action. (Sec.
47, R.A.
No. 165a)
SEC. 84. Criminal
Action for Repetition of Infringement. - If infringement is repeated by the
infringer or by anyone in connivance with him after finality of the judgment of
the court against the infringer, the offenders shall, without prejudice to the
institution of a civil action for damages, be criminally liable therefor and,
upon conviction, shall suffer imprisonment for the period of not less than six
(6) months but not more than three (3) years and/or a fine of not less than One
hundred thousand pesos (PhP 100,000) but not more
than Three hundred thousand pesos (Php 300,000), at the discretion of the
court. The criminal action herein provided shall prescribed in three (3) years
from date of the commission of the crime. (Sec. 48, R.A. No. 165a)
Chapter
IX.
VOLUNTARY
LICENSING
SEC. 85. Voluntary License Contract. - To encourage the transfer and dissemination of
technology, prevent or control practices and conditions that may in particular
cases constitute an abuse of intellectual property rights having an adverse
effect on competition and trade, all technology transfer arrangements shall
comply with the provisions of this Chapter. (n)
SEC. 86. Jurisdiction
to Settle Disputes on Royalties. - The Director of the Documentation,
Information and Technology Transfer Bureau shall exercise quasi-judicial
jurisdiction in the settlement of disputes between parties to a technology
transfer arrangement arising from technology transfer payments, including the
fixing of appropriate amount or rate of royalty. (n)
SEC. 87. Prohibited Clauses. - Except in cases under Section 91, the
following provisions shall be deemed prima
facie to have an adverse effect on competition and trade:
87.1. Those
which impose upon the licensee the obligation to acquire from a specific source
capital goods, intermediate products, raw materials, and other technologies, or
of permanently employing personnel indicated by the licensor;
87.2. Those
pursuant to which the licensor reserves the right to fix the sale or resale
prices of the products manufactured on the basis of the license;
87.3. Those that contain restrictions regarding the
volume and structure of production;
87.4. Those that prohibit the use of competitive
technologies in a nonexclusive technology transfer agreement;
87.5. Those
that establish a full or partial purchase option in favor of the licensor;
87.6. Those that obligate the licensee to transfer for
free to the licensor the inventions or improvements that may be obtained
through the use of the licensed technology;
87.7. Those
that require payment of royalties to the owners of patents for patents which
are not used;
87.8. Those that prohibit the licensee to export the
licensed product unless justified for the protection of the legitimate interest
of the licensor such as exports to countries where exclusive licenses to
manufacture and/or distribute the licensed product(s) have already been
granted;
87.9. Those
which restrict the use of the technology supplied after the expiration of the
technology transfer arrangement, except in cases of early termination of the
technology transfer arrangement due to reason(s) attributable to the licensee;
87.10. Those
which require payments for patents and other industrial property rights after
their expiration, termination arrangement;
87.11. Those which require that the technology
recipient shall not contest the validity of any of the patents of the
technology supplier;
87.12. Those which restrict the research and
development activities of the licensee designed to absorb and adapt the
transferred technology to local conditions or to initiate research and
development programs in connection with new products, processes or equipment;
87.13. Those
which prevent the licensee from adapting the imported technology to local
conditions, or introducing innovation to it, as long as it does not impair the
quality standards prescribed by the licensor;
87.14. Those which exempt the licensor for liability
for nonfulfillment of his responsibilities under the technology transfer
arrangement and/or liability arising from third party suits brought about by
the use of the licensed product or the licensed technology; and
87.15. Other clauses
with equivalent effects. (Sec. 33-C(2), RA 165a)
SEC. 88. Mandatory Provisions. - The following
provisions shall be included in voluntary license contracts:
88.1. That the
laws of the Philippines shall govern the interpretation of the same and in the
event of litigation, the venue shall be the proper court in the place where the
licensee has its principal office;
88.2. Continued
access to improvements in techniques and processes related to the technology
shall be made available during the period of the technology transfer
arrangement;
88.3. In the
event the technology transfer arrangement shall provide for arbitration, the
Procedure of Arbitration of the Arbitration Law of the Philippines or the
Arbitration Rules of the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law
(UNCITRAL) or the Rules of Conciliation and Arbitration of the International
Chamber of Commerce (ICC) shall apply and the venue of arbitration shall be the
Philippines or any neutral country; and
88.4. The
Philippine taxes on all payments relating to the technology transfer
arrangement shall be borne by the licensor. (n)
SEC. 89. Rights of
Licensor. - In the absence of any provision to the
contrary in the technology transfer arrangement, the grant of a license shall
not prevent the licensor from granting further licenses to third person nor
from exploiting the subject matter of the technology transfer
arrangement himself. (Sec. 33-B,
R.A. 165a)
SEC. 90. Rights of Licensee. - The
licensee shall be entitled to exploit the subject matter of the technology
transfer arrangement during the whole term of the technology transfer
arrangement. (Sec. 33-C (1),
R.A. 165a)
SEC. 91. Exceptional
Cases. - In exceptional or meritorious cases where
substantial benefits will accrue to the economy, such as high technology
content, increase in foreign exchange earnings, employment generation, regional
dispersal of industries and/or substitution with or use of local raw materials,
or in the case of Board of Investments, registered companies with pioneer
status, exemption from any of the above requirements may be allowed by the
Documentation, Information and Technology Transfer Bureau after evaluation
thereof on a case by case basis. (n)
SEC. 92.
Non-Registration with the Documentation, Information and Technology
Transfer Bureau. - Technology transfer arrangements
that conform with the provisions of Sections 86 and 87 need not be registered
with the Documentation, Information and Technology Transfer Bureau.
Non-conformance with any of the provisions of Sections 87 and 88, however,
shall automatically render the technology transfer arrangement unenforceable,
unless said technology transfer arrangement is approved and registered with the
Documentation, Information and Technology Transfer Bureau under the provisions
of Section 91 on exceptional cases.
(n)
Chapter X.
COMPULSORY
LICENSING
SEC. 93. Grounds for Compulsory Licensing. - The Director General of the Intellectual
Property Office may grant a license to exploit a patented invention, even
without the agreement of the patent owner, in favor of any person who has shown
his capability to exploit the invention, under any of the following
circumstances:
93.1. National emergency or other circumstances of
extreme urgency;
93.2. Where the public interest, in particular,
national security, nutrition, health or the development of other vital sectors
of the national economy as determined by the appropriate agency of the
Government, so requires; or
93.3. Where a
judicial or administrative body has determined that the manner of exploitation
by the owner of the patent or his licensee is anticompetitive; or
93.4. In case of public non-commercial use of the
patent by the patentee, without satisfactory reason;
93.5. If the
patented invention is not being worked in the Philippines on a commercial
scale, although capable of being worked, without satisfactory reason: Provided, That the importation of the
patented article shall constitute working or using the patent. (Secs. 34, 34-A,
34-B, R.A.
No. 165a) and
93.6. Where the
demand for patented drugs and medicines is not being met to an adequate extent
and on reasonable terms, as determined by the Secretary of the Department of
Health.
(As amended by Republic Act No.9502 or the Universally
Accessible Cheaper and Quality Medicines Act of 2008)
SEC. 93-A. Procedures on Issuance of a Special Compulsory
License under the TRIPS Agreement. - 93-A.1. The Director General of the
Intellectual Property Office, upon the written recommendation of the Secretary
of the Department of Health, shall, upon filing of a petition, grant a special
compulsory license for the importation of patented drugs and medicines. The
special compulsory license for the importation contemplated under this
provision shall be an additional special alternative procedure to ensure access
to quality affordable medicines and shall be primarily for domestic
consumption: Provided, That adequate
remuneration shall be paid to the patent owner either by the exporting or
importing country. The compulsory license shall also contain a provision
directing the grantee the license to exercise reasonable measures to prevent
the re-exportation of the products imported under this provision.
The grant of a special compulsory
license under this provision shall be an exception to Sections 100.4 and 100.6
of Republic Act No. 8293 and shall be immediately executory.
No court, except the Supreme Court
of the Philippines, shall issue any temporary restraining order or preliminary
injunction or such other provisional remedies that will prevent the grant of
the special compulsory license.
93-A.2. A compulsory license shall
also be available for the manufacture and export of drugs and medicines to any
country having insufficient or no manufacturing capacity in the pharmaceutical
sector to address public health problems: Provided,
That, a compulsory license has been granted by such country or such country
has, by notification or otherwise, allowed importation into its jurisdiction of
the patented drugs and medicines from the Philippines in compliance with the
TRIPS Agreement.
93-A.3. The right to grant a special compulsory
license under this section shall not limit or prejudice the rights, obligations
and flexibilities provided under the TRIPS Agreement and under Philippine laws,
particularly Section 72.1 and Section 74 of the Intellectual Property Code, as
amended under this Act. It is also without prejudice to the extent to which
drugs and medicines produced under a compulsory license can be exported as
allowed in the TRIPS Agreement and applicable laws.
(As amended by Republic Act No.9502 or the Universally
Accessible
Cheaper and Quality Medicines Act of 2008)
SEC. 94. Period for
Filing a Petition for a Compulsory License. -
94.1. A compulsory license may not be applied for on the
ground stated in Subsection 93.5 before the expiration of a period of four (4)
years from the date of filing of the application or three (3) years from the
date of the patent whichever period expires last.
94.2. A
compulsory license which is applied for on any of the grounds stated in
Subsections 93.2, 93.3, 93.4 and 93.6 and Section 97 may be applied for at any
time after the grant of the patent. (Sec. 34(1), R.A. No. 165)
(As amended by Republic Act No.9502 or the Universally
Accessible
Cheaper and Quality Medicines Act of 2008)
SEC. 95. Requirement to Obtain a License on Reasonable
Commercial Terms. - 95.1. The
license will only be granted after the petitioner has made efforts to obtain authorization
from the patent owner on reasonable commercial terms and conditions but such
efforts have not been successful within a reasonable period of time.
95.2. The
requirement under Subsection 95.1 shall not apply in any of the following
cases:
(a)
Where the petition for compulsory license seeks to
remedy a practice determined after judicial or administrative process to be
anticompetitive;
(b)
In situations of national emergency or other
circumstances of extreme urgency;
(c)
In cases of public non-commercial use; and
(d)
In cases where the demand for the patented drugs and
medicines in the Philippines is not being met to an adequate extent and on
reasonable terms, as determined by the Secretary of the Department of Health.
95.3. In situations
of national emergency or other circumstances of extreme urgency, the right
holder shall be notified as soon as reasonably practicable.
95.4. In the case
of public non-commercial use, where the government or contractor, without
making a patent search, knows or has demonstrable grounds to know that a valid
patent is or will be used by or for the
government, the right holder shall
be informed promptly. (n)
95.5. Where the
demand for the patented drugs and medicines in the Philippines is not being met
to an adequate extent and on reasonable terms, as determined by the Secretary
of the Department of Health, the right holder shall be informed promptly.
(As amended by Republic Act No.9502 or the Universally
Accessible
Cheaper and Quality Medicines Act of 2008)
SEC. 96. Compulsory
Licensing of Patents Involving Semi-Conductor Technology. - In the case of compulsory licensing of patents
involving semi-conductor technology, the license may only be granted in case of
public non-commercial use or to remedy a practice determined after judicial or
administrative process to be anti-competitive. (n)
SEC. 97. Compulsory
License Based on Interdependence of Patents.- If the invention protected by a patent,
hereafter referred to as the "second patent," within the country
cannot be worked without infringing another patent, hereafter referred to as
the "first patent," granted on a prior application or benefiting from
an earlier priority, a compulsory license may be granted to the owner of the
second patent to the extent necessary for the working of his invention, subject
to the following conditions:
97.1. The
invention claimed in the second patent involves an important technical advance
of considerable economic significance in relation to the first patent;
97.2. The owner
of the first patent shall be entitled to a cross-license on reasonable terms to
use the invention claimed in the second patent;
97.3. The use authorized in respect of the first
patent shall be nonassignable except with the
assignment of the second patent; and
97.4. The terms
and conditions of Sections 95, 96 and 98 to 100 of this Act. (Sec. 34-C, R.A.
No. 165a)
SEC. 98. Form and Contents of Petition. - The
petition for compulsory licensing must be in writing, verified by the
petitioner and accompanied by payment of the required filing fee. It shall
contain the name and address of the petitioner as well as those of the
respondents, the number and date of issue of the patent in connection with
which compulsory license is sought, the name of the patentee, the title of the
invention, the statutory grounds upon which compulsory license is sought, the
ultimate facts constituting the petitioner's cause of action, and the relief
prayed for. (Sec. 34-D, R.A. No. 165)
SEC. 99. Notice of Hearing. -
99.1. Upon filing of a petition, the Director of Legal Affairs
shall forthwith serve notice of the filing thereof upon the patent owner and
all persons having grants or licenses, or any other right, title or interest in
and to the patent and invention covered thereby as appears of record in the
Office, and of notice of the date of hearing thereon, on such persons and
petitioner. The resident agent or representative appointed in accordance with
Section 33 hereof, shall be bound to accept service of notice of the filing of
the petition within the meaning of this Section.
99.2. In every
case, the notice shall be published by the said Office in a newspaper of
general circulation, once a week for three (3) consecutive weeks and once in
the IPO Gazette at applicant s expense. (Sec. 34-E,
R.A. No. 165)
SEC. 100. Terms and
Conditions of Compulsory License. - The basic terms and conditions including the
rate of royalties of a compulsory license shall be fixed by the Director of
Legal Affairs subject to the following conditions:
100.1. The
scope and duration of such license shall be limited to the purpose for which it
was authorized;
100.2. The license shall be
non-exclusive;
100.3. The license shall be non-assignable, except
with that part of the enterprise or business with which the invention is being
exploited;
100.4. Use of the subject matter of the license shall
be devoted predominantly for the supply of the Philippine market: Provided, That this limitation shall not apply where the grant of the
license is based on the ground that the patentee s manner of exploiting the
patent is determined by judicial or administrative process, to be
anti-competitive.
100.5. The license may be terminated upon proper
showing that circumstances which led to its grant have ceased to exist and are
unlikely to recur: Provided, That adequate protection
shall be afforded to the legitimate interest of the licensee; and
100.6. The
patentee shall be paid adequate remuneration taking into account the economic
value of the grant or authorization, except that in cases where the license was
granted to remedy a practice which was determined after judicial or
administrative process, to be anti-competitive, the need to correct the
anti-competitive practice may be taken into account in fixing the amount of
remuneration. (Sec. 35-B, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 101. Amendment, Cancellation, Surrender of Compulsory
License. - 101.1. Upon
the request of the patentee or the licensee, the Director of Legal Affairs may
amend the decision granting the compulsory license, upon proper showing of new
facts or circumstances justifying such amendment.
101.2. Upon the
request of the patentee, the said Director may cancel the compulsory
license:
(a)
If the ground for the grant of the compulsory license
no longer exists and is unlikely to recur;
(b)
if the licensee has neither begun to supply the
domestic market nor made serious preparation therefor;
(c)
if the licensee has not complied with the prescribed
terms of the license;
101.3. The
licensee may surrender the license by a written declaration submitted to the
Office.
101.4. The said
Director shall cause the amendment, surrender, or cancellation in the Register,
notify the patentee, and/or the licensee, and cause notice thereof to be
published in the IPO Gazette. (Sec. 35-D, R.A.
No. 165a)
SEC. 102. Licensee s
Exemption from Liability. - Any person who works a patented
product, substance and/or process under a license granted under this Chapter,
shall be free from any liability for infringement: Provided however, That in the case of voluntary licensing, no collusion with
the licensor is proven. This is without prejudice to the right of the rightful
owner of the patent to recover from the licensor whatever he may have received
as royalties under the license. (Sec. 35-E,
R.A. No. 165a)
Chapter
XI.
ASSIGNMENT
AND TRANSMISSION OF RIGHTS
SEC. 103. Transmission
of Rights. - 103.1.
Patents or applications for patents and invention to which they relate, shall
be protected in the same way as the rights of other property under the Civil
Code.
103.2.
Inventions and any right, title or interest in and to patents and
inventions covered thereby, may be assigned or transmitted by inheritance or
bequest or may be the subject of a license contract. (Sec. 50, R.A. No.
165a)
SEC. 104. Assignment of
Inventions. - An
assignment may be of the entire right, title or interest in and to the patent
and the invention covered thereby, or of an undivided share of the entire
patent and invention, in which event the parties become joint owners thereof.
An assignment may be limited to a specified territory. (Sec. 51, R.A. No.
165)
SEC. 105. Form of
Assignment. - The assignment must be in writing,
acknowledged before a notary public or other officer authorized to administer
oath or perform notarial acts, and certified under the hand and official seal
of the notary or such other officer. (Sec. 52, R.A. No. 165)
SEC. 106. Recording.
- 106.1. The Office shall
record assignments, licenses and other instruments relating to the transmission
of any right, title or interest in and to inventions, and patents or
application for patents or inventions to which they relate, which are presented
in due form to the Office for registration, in books and records kept for the
purpose. The original documents together with a signed duplicate thereof shall
be filed, and the contents thereof should be kept confidential. If the original
is not available, an authenticated copy thereof in duplicate may be filed. Upon
recording, the Office shall retain the duplicate, return the original or the
authenticated copy to the party who filed the same and notice of the recording
shall be published in the IPO Gazette.
106.2. Such instruments shall be void as against any
subsequent purchaser or mortgagee for valuable consideration and without
notice, unless, it is so recorded in the Office, within three (3) months from
the date of said instrument, or prior to the subsequent purchase or mortgage.
(Sec. 53, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 107. Rights of
Joint Owners. - If two (2) or more persons jointly own a
patent and the invention covered thereby, either by the issuance of the patent
in their joint favor or by reason of the assignment of an undivided share in
the patent and invention or by reason of the succession in title to such share,
each of the joint owners shall be entitled to personally make, use, sell, or
import the invention for his own profit: Provided, however, That neither of the
joint owners shall be entitled to grant licenses or to assign his right, title or
interest or part thereof without the consent of the other owner or owners, or
without proportionally dividing the proceeds with such other owner or owners.
(Sec. 54, R.A. No.
165)
Chapter
XII.
REGISTRATION
OF UTILITY MODELS
SEC. 108. Applicability of Provisions Relating to Patents.
- 108.1. Subject to Section
109, the provisions governing patents shall apply, mutatis mutandis, to the registration of utility models.
108.2. Where
the right to a patent conflicts with the right to a
utility model registration in the case referred to in Section 29, the said
provision shall apply as if the word "patent" were replaced by the
words "patent or utility model registration." (Sec. 55, R.A. No.
165a)
SEC. 109. Special Provisions Relating to Utility Models. - 109.1 (a) An invention qualifies
for registration as a utility model if it is new and industrially
applicable. b) Section 21,
"Patentable Inventions", shall apply except the reference to inventive
step as a condition of protection.
109.2. Sections 43 to 49 shall not apply in the case
of applications for registration of a utility model.
109.3. A utility model registration shall expire,
without any possibility of renewal, at the end of the seventh year after the
date of the filing of the application.
109.4. In proceedings under Sections 61 to 64, the
utility model registration shall be cancelled on the following grounds:
(a)
That the claimed invention does not qualify for registration
as a utility model and does not meet the requirements of registrability, in
particular having regard to Subsection 109.1 and Sections 22, 23, 24 and
27;
(b)
That the description and the claims do not comply with
the prescribed requirements;
(c)
That any drawing which is necessary for the
understanding of the invention has not been furnished;
(d)
That the owner of the utility model registration is
not the inventor or his successor in title. (Secs. 55, 56, and 57, R.A. No.
165a)
SEC. 110. Conversion of Patent Applications or Applications for
Utility Model Registration. - 110.1. At
any time before the grant or refusal of a patent, an applicant for a patent
may, upon payment of the prescribed fee, convert his application into an
application for registration of a utility model, which shall be accorded the
filing date of the initial application. An application may be converted only
once.
110.2. At any time before the grant or refusal of a
utility model registration, an applicant for a utility model registration may,
upon payment of the prescribed fee, convert his application into a patent
application, which shall be accorded the filing date of the initial
application. (Sec. 58, R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 111. Prohibition against Filing of Parallel Applications.
-
An applicant may not file two (2) applications for the same
subject, one for utility model registration and the other for the grant of a
patent whether simultaneously or consecutively. (Sec. 59, R.A. No. 165a)
Chapter
XIII.
INDUSTRIAL
DESIGN AND LAYOUT-DESIGNS
(TOPOGRAPHIES)
OF INTEGRATED CIRCUITS
SEC. 112. Definition of Terms. - 1. An
Industrial Design is any composition of lines or colors or any
three-dimensional form, whether or not associated with lines or colors: Provided, That
such composition or form gives a special appearance to and can serve as pattern
for an industrial product or handicraft. (Sec. 55, R.A. No. 165a)
2.
Integrated Circuit means a product, in its final form,
or an intermediate form, in which the elements, at least one of which is an
active element and some or all of the interconnections are integrally formed in
and/or on a piece of material, and which is intended to perform an electronic
function; and
3.
Layout-Design is synonymous with 'Topography' and
means the three-dimensional disposition, however expressed, of the elements, at
least one of which is an active element, and of some or all of the
interconnections of an integrated circuit, or such a three-dimensional
disposition prepared for an integrated circuit intended for manufacture.
(As amended by Republic Act No. 9150, Protection of
Layout-Designs
(Topographies) of Integrated Circuits)
SEC. 113. Substantive Conditions for Protection. - 113.1. Only industrial designs that are
new or ornamental shall benefit from protection under this Act.
113.2. Industrial
designs dictated essentially by technical or functional considerations to
obtain a technical result or those that are contrary to
public order, health or morals
shall not be protected. (n)
113.3. Only
layout-designs of integrated circuits that are original shall benefit from
protection under this Act. A layout-design shall be considered original if it
is the result of its creator's own intellectual effort and is not commonplace
among creators of layout-designs and manufacturers of integrated circuits at
the time of its creation.
113.4. A
layout-design consisting of a combination of elements and interconnections that
are commonplace shall be protected only if the combination, taken as a whole,
is original.
(As amended by Republic Act No. 9150, Protection of
Layout-Designs
(Topographies) of Integrated Circuits)
SEC. 114. Contents of
the Application. - 114.1.
Every application for registration of an industrial design or layout-design
shall contain:
(a)
A request for registration of the industrial design or
layout-design;
(b)
Information identifying the applicant;
(c)
An indication of the kind of article of manufacture or
handicraft to which the industrial design or layout-design shall be applied;
(d)
A representation of the article of manufacture or
handicraft by way of drawings, photographs or other adequate graphic
representation of the industrial design or of the layout-design as applied to
the article of manufacture or handicraft which clearly and fully discloses
those features for which protection is claimed; and
(e)
The name and address of the creator, or where the
applicant is not the creator, a statement indicating the origin of the right to
the industrial design or layout-design registration.
114.2. The application may be accompanied by a
specimen of the article embodying the industrial design or layout-design and
shall be subject to the payment of the prescribed fee.(n)
(As amended by Republic Act No. 9150, Protection of
Layout-Designs (Topographies) of Integrated Circuits)
SEC. 115. Several Industrial Designs in One Application. - Two (2) or more industrial designs may be the
subject of the same application: Provided, That they
relate to the same sub-class of the International Classification or to the same
set or composition of articles. (n)
SEC. 116. Examination.
- 116.1. The Office shall
accord as the filing date the date of receipt of the application containing
indications allowing the identity of the applicant to be established and a
representation of the article embodying the industrial design or the layout-design or a pictorial representation thereof.
116.2. If the
application does not meet these requirements, the filing date should be that
date when all the elements specified in Sec. 114 are filed or the mistakes
corrected. Otherwise if the requirements are not
complied within the prescribed period, the application shall be considered
withdrawn.
116.3. After the
application has been accorded a filing date and the required fees paid on time,
the applicant shall comply with the requirements of Sec. 114 within the
prescribed period, otherwise the application shall be considered withdrawn.
116.4. The Office
shall examine whether the industrial design or layout-design complies with
requirements of Sec. 112 (Definitions) and Sec. 113 (Substantive Conditions for
Protection).
(As amended by Republic Act No. 9150, Protection of
Layout-Designs
(Topographies) of Integrated Circuits)
SEC. 117. Registration. - 117.1. Where the Office
finds that the conditions referred to in Sec. 113 are fulfilled, it shall order
that registration be effected in the industrial design
or layout-design register and cause the issuance of an industrial design or
layout-design certificate of registration; otherwise, it shall refuse the
application.
117.2. The form
and contents of an industrial design or layout-design certificate shall be
established by the Regulations: Provided,
That the name and address of the creator shall be mentioned in every case.
117.3. Registration
shall be published in the form and within the period fixed by the
Regulations.
117.4. The Office
shall record in the register any change in the identity of the proprietor of
the industrial design or layout-design or his representative, if proof thereof
is furnished to it. A fee shall be paid, with the request to record the change
in the identity of the proprietor. If the fee is not paid, the request shall be
deemed not to have been filed. In such case, the former proprietor and the
former representative shall remain subject to the rights and obligations as
provided in this Act.
117.5. Anyone may
inspect the Register and the files of registered industrial designs or
layout-designs including the files of cancellation proceedings. (n)
(As amended by Republic Act No. 9150, Protection of
Layout-Designs (Topographies) of Integrated Circuits)
SEC. 118. The Term of Industrial Design or Layout-Design
Registration. - 118.1. The
registration of an industrial design shall be for a period of five (5) years
from the filing date of the application.
118.2. The
registration of an industrial design may be renewed for not more than two (2)
consecutive periods of five (5) years each, by paying the renewal fee.
118.3. The renewal
fee shall be paid within twelve (12) months preceding the expiration of the
period of registration. However, a grace period of six (6) months shall be
granted for payment of the fees after such expiration, upon payment of a
surcharge.
118.4. The
Regulations shall fix the amount of renewal fee, the surcharge and other
requirements regarding the recording of renewals of registration.
118.5. Registration
of a layout-design shall be valid for a period of ten (10) years, without
renewal, and such validity to be counted from the date of commencement of the
protection accorded to the layout-design. The protection of a layout-design
under this Act shall commence:
a)
on the date of the first commercial exploitation,
anywhere in the world, of the layout-design by or with the consent of the right
holder: Provided, That
an application for registration is filed with the Intellectual Property Office
within two (2) years from such date of first commercial exploitation; or
b)
on the filing date accorded to the application for the
registration of the layout-design if the layout-design has not been previously
exploited commercially anywhere in the world.
(As amended by Republic Act No. 9150, Protection of
Layout-Designs
(Topographies) of Integrated Circuits)
SEC. 119. Application of
Other Sections and Chapters. - 119.1. The
following provisions relating to patents shall apply mutatis mutandis to an industrial design registration:
Section 21 - Novelty
Section 24 - Prior
art; Provided, That the disclosure is
contained in printed documents or
in any tangible form;
Section 25 - Non-prejudicial
Disclosure;
Section 28 - Right
to a Patent;
Section 29 - First
to File Rule;
Section 30 - Inventions
Created Pursuant to a Commission;
Section 31 - Right of Priority:
Provided, That the application for industrial design shall be filed within six
(6) months from the earliest filing date of the corresponding foreign
application;
Section 33 - Appointment
of Agent or Representative;
Section 51 - Refusal
of the Application;
Sections 56 to 60 - Surrender,
Correction of and Changes in Patent;
Chapter VII
- Remedies of a Person with a Right to
Patent;
Chapter VIII - Rights
of Patentees and Infringement of Patents; and
Chapter XI - Assignment and Transmission of Rights
119.2. If the essential elements of an industrial
design which is the subject of an application have been obtained from the
creation of another person without his consent, protection under this Chapter
cannot be invoked against the injured party. (n)
119.3. The
following provisions relating to patents shall apply mutatis mutandis to a layout -design of integrated circuits
registration:
SECTION 28 - Right to a Patent;
SECTION 29 - First to File Rule;
SECTION 30
- Inventions Created Pursuant to a
Commission;
SECTION 33
- Appointment of Agent or
Representative;
SECTION 56
- Surrender of Patent;
SECTION 57 - Correction of Mistakes of the
Office;
SECTION 58 -
Correction of Mistakes in the Application;
SECTION 59 -
Changes in Patents;
SECTION 60
- Form and Publication of Amendment; CHAPTER
VII - Remedies of a Person with a Right
to Patent;
CHAPTER VIII - Rights of Patentees and Infringement
of Patents: Provided, That the
layout-design rights and limitation of layout-design rights provided hereunder
shall govern: CHAPTER X - Compulsory Licensing;
CHAPTER XI
- Assignment and Transmission of
Rights
119.4. Rights Conferred to the Owner of a
Layout-Design Registration. - The
owner of a layout-design registration shall enjoy the following rights:
(1)
to reproduce, whether by incorporation in an
integrated circuit or otherwise, the registered layout-design in its entirety
or any part thereof, except the act of reproducing any part that does not
comply with the requirement of originality; and
(2)
to sell or otherwise distribute for commercial
purposes the registered layout-design, an article or an integrated circuit in
which the registered layout-design is incorporated.
119.5. Limitations of Layout Rights. - The
owner of a layout design has no right to prevent third parties from
reproducing, selling or otherwise distributing for commercial purposes the
registered layout-design in the following circumstances:
(1)
Reproduction of the registered layout-design for
private purposes or for the sole purpose of evaluation, analysis, research or
teaching;
(2)
Where the act is performed in respect of a
layout-design created on
the basis of such analysis or
evaluation and which is itself original in the meaning as provided herein;
(3)
Where the act is performed in respect of a registered
lay-outdesign, or in respect of an integrated circuit
in which such a layout-design is incorporated, that has been put on the market
by or with the consent of the right holder;
(4)
In respect of an integrated circuit where the person
performing or ordering such an act did not know and had no reasonable ground to
know when acquiring the integrated circuit or the article incorporating such an
integrated circuit, that it incorporated an unlawfully reproduced layoutdesign: Provided,
however, That after the time that such person has received sufficient
notice that the layout-design was unlawfully reproduced, that person may
perform any of the said acts only with respect to the stock on hand or ordered
before such time and shall be liable to pay to the right holder a sum
equivalent to at least 5% of net sales or such other reasonable royalty as
would be payable under a freely negotiated license in respect of such
layout-design; or
(5)
Where the act is performed in respect of an identical
layout-design which is original and has been created independently by a third
party.
(As amended by Republic Act No. 9150, Protection of
Layout-Designs
(Topographies) of Integrated Circuits)
SEC. 120. Cancellation
of Design Registration. - 120.1. At
any time during the term of the industrial design registration, any person upon
payment of the required fee, may petition the Director of Legal Affairs to
cancel the industrial design on any of the following grounds:
(a)
If the subject matter of the industrial design is not
registrable within the terms of Sections 112 and 113;
(b)
If the subject matter is not new; or
(c)
If the subject matter of the industrial design extends
beyond the content of the application as originally filed.
120.2. Where the
grounds for cancellation relate to a part of the industrial design,
cancellation may be effected to such extent only. The
restriction may be effected in the form of an
alteration of the effected features of the design. (n)
120.3. Grounds for Cancellation of Layout-Design of
Integrated Circuits.- Any
interested person may petition that the registration of a layout-design be
cancelled on the ground that:
(i) the
layout-design is not protectable under this Act;
(ii)
the right holder is not entitled to protection under
this Act; or
(iii)
where the application for registration of the
layout-design, was not filed within two (2) years from its first commercial
exploitation anywhere in the world.
Where the grounds for cancellation
are established with respect only to a part of the layout-design, only the
corresponding part of the registration shall be cancelled.
Any cancelled layout-design
registration or part thereof, shall be regarded as null and void from the
beginning and may be expunged from the records of the Intellectual Property
Office. Reference to all cancelled layout-design registration shall be
published in the IPO Gazette.
(As amended by Republic Act No. 9150, Protection of
Layout-Designs
(Topographies) of Integrated Circuits)
PART III.
THE LAW ON
TRADEMARKS, SERVICE MARKS
AND TRADE
NAMES
SEC. 121. Definitions. - As used in
Part III, the following terms have the following meanings:
121.1. "Mark" means any visible sign capable
of distinguishing the goods (trademark) or services (service mark) of an
enterprise and shall include a stamped or marked container of goods; (Sec. 38,
R.A. No. 166a)
121.2.
"Collective mark" means any visible sign designated as such in
the application for registration and capable of distinguishing the origin or
any other common characteristic, including the quality of goods or services of
different enterprises which use the sign under the control of the registered
owner of the collective mark; (Sec. 40, R.A. No. 166a)
121.3. "Trade name" means the name or
designation identifying or distinguishing an enterprise; (Sec. 38, R.A. No. 166a)
121.4. "Bureau" means the
Bureau of Trademarks;
121.5. "Director" means the Director of
Trademarks;
121.6. "Regulations" means the Rules of
Practice in Trademarks and Service Marks formulated by the Director of
Trademarks and approved by the Director General; and
121.7. "Examiner" means the trademark
examiner. (Sec. 38, R.A. No. 166a)
SEC. 122. How Marks are
Acquired. - The rights in a mark shall be
acquired through registration made validly in accordance with the provisions of this law. (Sec. 2-A,
R.A. No. 166a)
SEC. 123.
Registrability. - 123.1. A
mark cannot be registered if it:
(a)
Consists of immoral, deceptive or scandalous matter,
or matter which may disparage or falsely suggest a connection with persons,
living or dead, institutions, beliefs, or national symbols, or bring them into
contempt or disrepute;
(b)
Consists of the flag or coat of arms or other insignia
of the Philippines or any of its political subdivisions, or of any foreign
nation, or any simulation thereof;
(c)
Consists of a name, portrait or signature identifying
a particular living individual except by his written consent, or the name,
signature, or portrait of a deceased President of the Philippines, during the
life of his widow, if any, except by written consent of the widow;
(d)
Is identical with a registered mark belonging to a
different proprietor or a mark with an earlier filing or priority date, in
respect of:
(i) The same
goods or services, or
(ii)
Closely related goods or services, or
(iii)
If it nearly resembles such a mark as to be likely to
deceive or cause confusion;
(e)
Is identical with, or confusingly similar to, or
constitutes a translation of a mark which is considered by the competent
authority of the Philippines to be well-known internationally and in the
Philippines, whether or not it is registered here, as being already the mark of
a person other than the applicant for registration, and used for identical or
similar goods or services: Provided,
That in determining whether a mark is wellknown,
account shall be taken of the knowledge of the relevant sector of the public,
rather than of the public at large, including knowledge in the Philippines
which has been obtained as a result of the promotion of the mark;
(f)
Is identical with, or confusingly similar to, or
constitutes a translation of a mark considered well-known in accordance with
the preceding paragraph, which is registered in the Philippines with respect to
goods or services which are not similar to those with respect to which registration
is applied for: Provided, That use of
the mark in relation to those goods or services would indicate a connection
between those goods or services, and the owner of the registered mark: Provided further, That the interests of the owner of the registered mark are
likely to be damaged by such use;
(g)
Is likely to mislead the public, particularly as to
the nature, quality, characteristics or geographical origin of the goods or
services;
(h)
Consists exclusively of signs that are generic for the
goods or services that they seek to identify;
(i)
Consists exclusively of signs or of indications that
have become customary or usual to designate the goods or services in everyday
language or in bona fide and
established trade practice;
(j)
Consists exclusively of signs or of indications that
may serve in trade to designate the kind, quality, quantity, intended purpose,
value, geographical origin, time or production of the goods or rendering of the
services, or other characteristics of the goods or services;
(k)
Consists of shapes that may be necessitated by
technical factors or by the nature of the goods themselves or factors that
affect their intrinsic value;
(l)
Consists of color alone, unless defined by a given
form; or
(m)
Is contrary to public order or morality.
123.2. As regards
signs or devices mentioned in paragraphs (j), (k), and (l), nothing shall
prevent the registration of any such sign or device which has become
distinctive in relation to the goods for which registration is requested as a
result of the use that have been made of it in commerce in the Philippines. The
Office may accept as prima facie evidence that the mark has become distinctive,
as used in connection with the applicant s goods or services in commerce, proof
of substantially exclusive and continuous use thereof by the applicant in
commerce in the Philippines for five (5) years before the date on which the
claim of distinctiveness is made.
123.3. The nature
of the goods to which the mark is applied will not constitute an obstacle to
registration. (Sec. 4, R.A. No. 166a)
SEC. 124. Requirements
of Application. - 124.1. The
application for the registration of the mark shall be in Filipino or in English
and shall contain the following:
(a)
A request for registration;
(b)
The name and address of the applicant;
(c)
The name of a State of which the applicant is a
national or where he has domicile; and the name of a State in which the
applicant has a real and effective industrial or commercial establishment, if
any;
(d)
Where the applicant is a juridical entity, the law
under which it is organized and existing;
(e)
The appointment of an agent or representative, if the
applicant is not domiciled in the Philippines;
(f)
Where the applicant claims the priority of an earlier
application, an indication of:
i) The name of
the State with whose national office the earlier application was filed or if
filed with an office other than a national office, the name of that
office,
ii) The date on
which the earlier application was filed, and iii) Where available, the application
number of the earlier application;
(g)
Where the applicant claims color as a distinctive
feature of the mark, a statement to that effect as well as the name or names of
the color or colors claimed and an indication, in respect of each color, of the
principal parts of the mark which are in that color;
(h)
Where the mark is a three-dimensional mark, a
statement to that
effect;
(i)
One or more reproductions of the mark, as prescribed
in the Regulations;
(j)
A transliteration or translation of the mark or of
some parts of the mark, as prescribed in the Regulations;
(k)
The names of the goods or services for which the
registration is sought, grouped according to the classes of the Nice
Classification, together with the number of the class of the said
Classification to which each group of goods or services belongs; and
(l)
A signature by, or other self-identification of, the
applicant or his representative.
124.2. The
applicant or the registrant shall file a declaration of actual use of the mark
with evidence to that effect, as prescribed by the Regulations within three (3)
years from the filing date of the application. Otherwise, the application shall
be refused or the mark shall be removed from the Register by the Director.
124.3. One (1)
application may relate to several goods and/or services, whether they belong to
one (1) class or to several classes of the Nice Classification.
124.4. If during
the examination of the application, the Office finds factual basis to reasonably
doubt the veracity of any indication or element in the application, it may
require the applicant to submit sufficient evidence to remove the doubt. (Sec.
5, R.A. No. 166a)
SEC. 125. Representation; Address for Service. - If the
applicant is not domiciled or has no real and effective commercial
establishment in the Philippines, he shall designate by a written document
filed in the office, the name and address of a Philippine resident who may be
served notices or process in proceedings affecting the mark. Such notices or
services may be served upon the person so designated by leaving a copy thereof
at the address specified in the last designation filed. If the person so
designated cannot be found at the address given in the last designation, such notice
or process may be served upon the Director. (Sec. 3, R.A. No. 166a)
SEC. 126. Disclaimers. - The Office may allow or require the applicant
to disclaim an unregistrable component of an otherwise registrable mark but
such disclaimer shall not prejudice or affect the applicant s or owner s rights
then existing or thereafter arising in the disclaimed matter, nor such shall
disclaimer prejudice or affect the applicant s or owner s right on another
application of later date if the disclaimed matter became distinctive of the
applicant s or owner s goods, business or services. (Sec. 13, R.A. No.
166a)
SEC. 127. Filing Date. -
127.1. Requirements. - The filing date of an application
shall be the date on which the Office received the following indications and
elements in English or Filipino:
(a) An express
or implicit indication that the registration of a mark is sought;
(b) The identity
of the applicant;
(c) Indications
sufficient to contact the applicant or his representative, if any;
(d) A
reproduction of the mark whose registration is sought; and
(e) The list of
the goods or services for which the registration is sought.
127.2 No filing date shall be
accorded until the required fee is paid. (n)
SEC. 128. Single Registration for Goods and/or Services. - Where goods
and/or services belonging to several classes of the Nice Classification have
been included in one (1) application, such an application shall result in one
registration. (n)
SEC. 129. Division of Application. - Any
application referring to several goods or services, hereafter referred to as
the "initial application," may be divided by the applicant into two
(2) or more applications, hereafter referred to as the "divisional
applications," by distributing among the latter the goods or services
referred to in the initial application. The divisional applications shall
preserve the filing date of the initial application or the benefit of the right
of priority. (n)
SEC. 130. Signature and
Other Means of Self-Identification. - 130.1.
Where a signature is required, the Office shall accept:
(a) A
hand-written signature; or
(b) The use of
other forms of signature, such as a printed or stamped signature, or the use of
a seal, instead of a hand-written signature: Provided, That where a seal is used, it
should be accompanied by an indication in letters of the name of the
signatory.
130.2. The Office
shall accept communications to it by telecopier, or by electronic means subject
to the conditions or requirements that will be prescribed by the Regulations.
When communications are made by telefacsimile, the reproduction of the
signature, or the reproduction of the seal together with, where required, the
indication in letters of the name of the natural person whose seal is used, appears.
The original communications must be received by the Office within thirty (30)
days from date of receipt of the telefacsimile.
130.3. No
attestation, notarization, authentication, legalization or other certification
of any signature or other means of self-identification referred to in the
preceding paragraphs, will be required, except, where the signature concerns
the surrender of a registration. (n)
SEC. 131. Priority Right. - 131.1. An application for registration of
a mark filed in the Philippines by a person referred to in Section 3, and who
previously duly filed an application for registration of the same mark in one
of those countries, shall be considered as filed as of the day the application
was first filed in the foreign country.
131.2. No
registration of a mark in the Philippines by a person described in this section
shall be granted until such mark has been registered in the country of origin
of the applicant.
131.3. Nothing in
this section shall entitle the owner of a registration granted under this
section to sue for acts committed prior to the date on which his mark was
registered in this country: Provided,
That, notwithstanding the foregoing, the owner of a well-known mark as defined
in Section 123.1(e) of this Act, that is not registered in the Philippines,
may, against an identical or confusingly similar mark, oppose its registration,
or petition the cancellation of its registration or sue for unfair competition,
without prejudice to availing himself of other remedies provided for under the
law.
131.4. In like
manner and subject to the same conditions and requirements, the right provided
in this section may be based upon a subsequent regularly filed application in
the same foreign country: Provided,
That any foreign application filed prior to such subsequent application has
been withdrawn, abandoned, or otherwise disposed of, without having been laid
open to public inspection and without leaving any rights outstanding, and has
not served, nor thereafter shall serve, as a basis for claiming a right of
priority. (Sec. 37, R.A. No. 166a)
SEC. 132. Application
Number and Filing Date. - 132.1. The
Office shall examine whether the application satisfies the requirements for the
grant of a filing date as provided in Section 127 and Regulations relating
thereto. If the application does not satisfy the filing requirements, the
Office shall notify the applicant who shall within a period fixed by the
Regulations complete or correct the application as required, otherwise, the
application shall be considered withdrawn.
132.2 Once an application meets the
filing requirements of Section 127, it shall be numbered in the sequential
order, and the applicant shall be informed of the application number and the
filing date of the application will be deemed to have been abandoned. (n)
SEC. 133. Examination and Publication. - 133.1. Once the application meets
the filing requirements of Section 127, the Office shall examine whether the
application meets the requirements of Section 124 and the mark as defined in
Section 121 is registrable under Section 123.
133.2. Where the
Office finds that the conditions referred to in Subsection 133.1 are fulfilled,
it shall, upon payment of the prescribed fee, forthwith cause the application,
as filed, to be published in the prescribed manner.
133.3. If after
the examination, the applicant is not entitled to registration for any reason,
the Office shall advise the applicant thereof and the reasons therefor. The
applicant shall have a period of four (4) months in which to reply or amend his
application, which shall then be reexamined. The Regulations shall determine
the procedure for the reexamination or revival of an application as well as the
appeal to the Director of Trademarks from any final action by the Examiner.
133.4. An
abandoned application may be revived as a pending application within three (3)
months from the date of abandonment, upon good cause shown and the payment of
the required fee.
133.5. The final
decision of refusal of the Director of Trademarks shall be appealable to the
Director General in accordance with the
procedure fixed by the Regulations.
(Sec. 7, R.A. No. 166a)
SEC. 134. Opposition. -
Any person who believes that he would be damaged by the registration of
a mark may, upon payment of the required fee and within thirty (30) days after
the publication referred to in Subsection 133.2, file with the Office an
opposition to the application. Such opposition shall be in writing and verified
by the oppositor or by any person on his behalf who
knows the facts, and shall specify the grounds on which it is based and include
a statement of the facts relied upon. Copies of certificates of registration of
marks registered in other countries or other supporting documents mentioned in
the opposition shall be filed therewith, together with the translation in
English, if not in the English language. For good cause shown and upon payment
of the required surcharge, the time for filing an opposition may be extended by
the Director of Legal Affairs, who shall notify the applicant of such
extension. The Regulations shall fix the maximum period of time within which to
file the opposition. (Sec. 8,
R.A. No. 165a)
SEC. 135. Notice and
Hearing. - Upon the
filing of an opposition, the Office shall serve notice of the filing on the
applicant, and of the date of the hearing thereof upon the applicant and the oppositor and all other persons having any right, title or
interest in the mark covered by the application, as appear of record in the
Office. (Sec. 9 R.A. No. 165)
SEC. 136. Issuance and
Publication of Certificate. - When the period for filing the opposition has
expired, or when the Director of Legal Affairs shall have denied the
opposition, the Office upon payment of the required fee, shall issue the
certificate of registration. Upon issuance of a certificate of registration,
notice thereof making reference to the publication of the application shall be
published in the IPO Gazette. (Sec.
10, R.A. No. 165)
SEC. 137. Registration of Mark and Issuance of a Certificate to
the Owner or his Assignee. - 137.1. The
Office shall maintain a Register in which shall be registered marks, numbered
in the order of their registration, and all transactions in respect of each
mark, required to be recorded by virtue of this law.
137.2. The
registration of a mark shall include a reproduction of the mark and shall
mention: its number; the name and address of the registered owner and, if the
registered owner s address is outside the country, his address for service
within the country; the dates of application and registration; if priority is
claimed, an indication of this fact, and the number, date and country of the
application, basis of the priority claims; the list of goods or services in
respect of which registration has been granted, with the indication of the
corresponding class or classes; and such other data as the Regulations may
prescribe from time to time.
137.3. A certificate of registration of a mark may be
issued to the assignee of the applicant: Provided, That the assignment is
recorded in the Office. In case of a change of ownership, the Office shall at
the written request signed by the owner, or his representative, or by the new
owner, or his representative and upon a proper showing and the payment of the
prescribed fee, issue to such assignee a new certificate of registration of the
said mark in the name of such assignee, and for the unexpired part of the
original period.
137.4. The Office
shall record any change of address, or address for service, which shall be
notified to it by the registered owner.
137.5. In the
absence of any provision to the contrary in this Act, communications to be made
to the registered owner by virtue of this Act shall be sent to him at his last
recorded address and, at the same, at his last recorded address for service.
(Sec. 19, R.A. No. 166a)
SEC. 138. Certificates of Registration. - A
certificate of registration of a mark shall be prima facie evidence of the validity of the registration, the
registrant s ownership of the mark, and of the registrant s exclusive right to
use the same in connection with the goods or services and those that are
related thereto specified in the certificate. (Sec. 20, R.A. No. 165)
SEC. 139. Publication of
Registered Marks; Inspection of Register. -
139.1. The Office shall publish, in the form and within the period
fixed by the Regulations, the mark registered, in the order of their
registration, reproducing all the particulars referred to in Subsection 137.2.
139.2. Marks
registered at the Office may be inspected free of charge and any person may
obtain copies thereof at his own expense. This provision shall also be
applicable to transactions recorded in respect of any registered mark. (n)
SEC. 140. Cancellation
upon Application by Registrant; Amendment or Disclaimer of
Registration. - Upon application of the registrant, the Office
may permit any registration to be surrendered for cancellation, and upon cancellation
the appropriate entry shall be made in the records of the Office. Upon
application of the registrant and payment of the prescribed fee, the Office for
good cause may permit any registration to be amended or to be disclaimed in
part: Provided, That the amendment or
disclaimer does not alter materially the character of the mark. Appropriate
entry shall be made in the records of the Office upon the certificate of
registration or, if said certificates is lost or destroyed, upon a certified
copy thereof. (Sec.
14, R.A. No. 166)
SEC. 141. Sealed and
Certified Copies as Evidence. - Copies of any records, books, papers, or
drawings belonging to the Office relating to marks, and copies of
registrations, when authenticated by the seal of the Office and certified by
the Director of the Administrative, Financial and Human Resource Development
Service Bureau or in his name by an employee of the Office duly authorized by
said Director, shall be evidence in all cases wherein the originals would be
evidence; and any person who applies and pays the prescribed fee shall secure
such copies. (n)
SEC. 142. Correction of
Mistakes Made by the Office. - Whenever a material mistake in a
registration incurred through the fault of the Office is clearly disclosed by
the records of the Office, a certificate stating the fact and nature of such
mistake shall be issued without charge, recorded and a printed copy thereof
shall be attached to each printed copy of the registration. Such corrected
registration shall thereafter have the same effect as the original certificate;
or in the discretion of the Director of the Administrative, Financial and Human
Resource Development Service Bureau a new certificate of registration may be
issued without charge. All certificates of correction heretofore issued in
accordance with the Regulations and the registration to which they are attached
shall have the same force and effect as if such certificates and their issuance
had been authorized by this Act. (n)
SEC. 143. Correction of Mistakes Made by Applicant. - Whenever a mistake is made in a
registration and such mistake occurred in good faith through the fault of the
applicant, the Office may issue a certificate upon the payment of the
prescribed fee: Provided, That the
correction does not involve any change in the registration that requires
republication of the mark. (n)
SEC. 144. Classification of Goods and Services. - 144.1. Each registration, and any
publication of the Office which concerns an application or registration
effected by the Office shall indicate the goods or services by their names,
grouped according to the classes of the Nice Classification, and each group
shall be preceded by the number of the class of that Classification to which
that group of goods or services belongs, presented in the order of the classes
of the said Classification.
144.2. Goods or services may not be considered as
being similar or dissimilar to each other on the ground that, in any
registration or publication by the Office, they appear in different classes of
the Nice Classification. (Sec. 6, R.A. No. 166a)
SEC. 145. Duration. - A
certificate of registration shall remain in force for ten (10) years: Provided, That the registrant shall file
a declaration of actual use and evidence to that effect, or shall show valid
reasons based on the existence of obstacles to such use, as prescribed by the
Regulations, within one (1) year from the fifth anniversary of the date of the
registration of the mark. Otherwise, the mark shall be removed from the
Register by the Office. (Sec. 12, R.A. No. 166a)
SEC. 146. Renewal.
- 146.1. A
certificate of registration may be renewed for periods of ten (10) years at its
expiration upon payment of the prescribed fee and upon filing of a request. The
request shall contain the following indications:
(a)
An indication that renewal is sought;
(b)
The name and address of the registrant or his
successor-in-interest, hereafter referred to as the "right
holder";
(c)
The registration number of the registration
concerned;
(d)
The filing date of the application which resulted in
the registration concerned to be renewed;
(e)
Where the right holder has a representative, the name
and address of that representative;
(f)
The names of the recorded goods or services for which
the renewal is requested or the names of the recorded goods or services for
which the renewal is not requested, grouped according to the classes of the
Nice Classification to which that group of goods or services belongs and
presented in the order of the classes of the said Classification; and (g) A signature
by the right holder or his representative.
146.2. Such
request shall be in Filipino or English and may be made at any time within six
(6) months before the expiration of the period for which the registration was
issued or renewed, or it may be made within six (6) months after such
expiration on payment of the additional fee herein prescribed.
146.3. If the
Office refuses to renew the registration, it shall notify the registrant of his
refusal and the reasons therefor.
146.4. An
applicant for renewal not domiciled in the Philippines shall be subject to and
comply with the requirements of this Act. (Sec. 15, R.A.
No. 166a)
SEC. 147. Rights
Conferred. - 147.1.
Except in cases of importation of drugs and medicines allowed under Section
72.1 of this Act and of offpatent drugs and
medicines, the owner of a registered mark shall have the exclusive right to
prevent all third parties not having the owner s consent from using in the
course of trade identical or similar signs or containers for goods or services
which are identical or similar to those in respect of which the trademark is
registered where such use would result in a likelihood of confusion. In case of
the use of an identical sign for identical goods or services, a likelihood of
confusion shall be presumed.
There shall be no infringement of trademarks or
tradenames of imported or sold patented drugs and medicines allowed under
Section 72.1 of this Act, as well as imported or sold off-patent drugs and
medicines; Provided, That said drugs and medicines bear the
registered marks that have not been tampered, unlawfully modified, or infringed
upon, under Section 155 of this Code.
(As amended by Republic Act No.9502 or the Universally
Accessible
Cheaper and Quality Medicines Act of 2008)
147.2. The exclusive right of the owner of a
well-known mark defined in Subsection 123.1(e) which is registered in the
Philippines, shall extend to goods and services which are not similar to those
in respect of which the mark is registered: Provided,
That use of that mark in relation to those goods or services would indicate a
connection between those goods or services and the owner of the registered
mark: Provided further, That the interests of the owner of the registered mark
are likely to be damaged by such use. (n)
SEC. 148. Use of Indications by Third Parties for Purposes Other
than those for which the Mark is Used. - Registration of the mark shall not
confer on the registered owner the right to preclude third parties from using
bona fide their names, addresses, pseudonyms, a geographical name, or exact
indications concerning the kind, quality, quantity, destination, value, place
of origin, or time of production or of supply, of their goods or services: Provided, That such use is confined to
the purposes of mere identification or information and cannot mislead the
public as to the source of the goods or services. (n)
SEC. 149. Assignment and
Transfer of Application and Registration. -
149.1. An application
for registration of a mark, or its registration, may be assigned or transferred
with or without the transfer of the business using the mark. (n)
149.2. Such
assignment or transfer shall, however, be null and void if it is liable to
mislead the public, particularly as regards the nature, source, manufacturing
process, characteristics, or suitability for their purpose, of the goods or
services to which the mark is applied.
149.3. The assignment of the application for
registration of a mark, or of its registration, shall be in writing and require
the signatures of the contracting parties. Transfers by mergers or other forms
of succession may be made by any document supporting such transfer.
149.4. Assignments and transfers of registration of
marks shall be recorded at the Office on payment of the prescribed fee;
assignment and transfers of applications for registration shall, on payment of
the same fee, be provisionally recorded, and the mark, when registered, shall
be in the name of the assignee or transferee.
149.5. Assignments and transfers shall have no effect
against third parties until they are recorded at the Office. (Sec. 31, R.A. No.
166a)
SEC. 150. License Contracts. -
150.1. Any license contract concerning the registration of a
mark, or an application therefor, shall provide for effective control by the
licensor of the quality of the goods or services of the licensee in connection
with which the mark is used. If the license contract does not provide for such
quality control, or if such quality control is not effectively carried out, the
license contract shall not be valid.
150.2. A
license contract shall be submitted to the Office which shall keep its contents
confidential but shall record it and publish a reference thereto. A license
contract shall have no effect against third parties until such recording is effected. The Regulations shall
fix the procedure for the recording of the license contract. (n)
SEC. 151. Cancellation. -
151.1. A petition to cancel a registration of a mark under
this Act may be filed with the Bureau of Legal Affairs by any person who
believes that he is or will be damaged by the registration of a mark under this
Act as follows:
(a)
Within five (5) years from the date of the
registration of the mark under this Act.
(b)
At any time, if the registered mark becomes the
generic name for the goods or services, or a portion thereof, for which it is
registered, or has been abandoned, or its registration was obtained
fraudulently or contrary to the provisions of this Act, or if the registered
mark is being used by, or with the permission of, the registrant so as to
misrepresent the source of the goods or services on or in connection with which
the mark is used. If the registered mark becomes the generic name for less than
all of the goods or services for which it is registered, a petition to cancel
the registration for only those goods or services may be filed. A registered
mark shall not be deemed to be the generic name of goods or services solely
because such mark is also used as a name of or to identify a unique product or
service. The primary significance of the registered mark to the relevant public
rather than purchaser motivation shall be the test for determining whether the
registered mark has become the generic name of goods or services on or in
connection with which it has been used. (n)
(c)
At any time, if the registered owner of the mark
without legitimate reason fails to use the mark within the Philippines, or to
cause it to be used in the Philippines by virtue of a license during an
uninterrupted period of three (3) years or longer.
151.2. Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions, the
court or the administrative agency vested with jurisdiction to hear and
adjudicate any action to enforce the rights to a registered mark shall likewise
exercise jurisdiction to determine whether the registration of said mark may be
cancelled in accordance with this Act. The filing of a suit to enforce the
registered mark with the proper court or agency shall exclude any other court
or agency from assuming jurisdiction over a subsequently filed petition to cancel
the same mark. On the other hand, the earlier filing of petition to cancel the
mark with the Bureau of Legal Affairs shall not constitute a prejudicial
question that must be resolved before an action to enforce the rights to same
registered mark may be decided. (Sec. 17, R.A.
No. 166a)
SEC. 152. Non-use of a
Mark When Excused. - 152.1. Non-use of a mark may be excused if caused by
circumstances arising independently of the will of the trademark owner. Lack of
funds shall not excuse non-use of a mark.
152.2. The use of
the mark in a form different from the form in which it is registered, which
does not alter its distinctive character, shall not be ground for cancellation
or removal of the mark and shall not diminish the protection granted to the
mark.
152.3. The use of
a mark in connection with one or more of the goods or services belonging to the
class in respect of which the mark is registered shall prevent its cancellation
or removal in respect of all other goods or services of the same class.
152.4. The use of
a mark by a company related with the registrant or applicant shall inure to the
latter s benefit, and such use shall not affect the validity of such mark or of
its registration: Provided, That such mark is not used in such manner as to deceive the
public. If use of a mark by a person is controlled by the registrant or
applicant with respect to the nature and quality of the goods or services, such
use shall inure to the benefit of the registrant or applicant. (n)
SEC. 153. Requirements
of Petition; Notice and Hearing. - Insofar as applicable, the petition for
cancellation shall be in the same form as that provided in Section 134 hereof,
and notice and hearing shall be as provided in Section 135 hereof.
SEC. 154. Cancellation of Registration. - If the Bureau of Legal Affairs finds that a
case for cancellation has been made out, it shall order the cancellation of the
registration. When the order or judgment becomes final, any right conferred by
such registration upon the registrant or any person in interest of record shall
terminate. Notice of cancellation shall be published in the IPO Gazette. (Sec.
19. R.A. No. 166a)
SEC. 155. Remedies;
Infringement. - Any person
who shall, without the consent of the owner of the registered mark:
155.1. Use in
commerce any reproduction, counterfeit, copy, or colorable imitation of a
registered mark or the same container or a dominant feature thereof in
connection with the sale, offering for sale, distribution, advertising of any
goods or services including other preparatory steps necessary to carry out the
sale of any goods or services on or in connection with which such use is likely
to cause confusion, or to cause mistake, or to deceive; or
155.2. Reproduce,
counterfeit, copy or colorably imitate a registered
mark or a dominant feature thereof and apply such reproduction, counterfeit,
copy or colorable imitation to labels, signs, prints, packages, wrappers,
receptacles or advertisements intended to be used in commerce upon or in
connection with the sale, offering for sale, distribution, or advertising of
goods or services on or in connection with which such use is likely to cause
confusion, or to cause mistake, or to deceive, shall be liable in a civil
action for infringement by the registrant for the remedies hereinafter set
forth: Provided, That the
infringement takes place at the moment any of the acts stated in Subsection
155.1 or this subsection are committed regardless of whether there is actual
sale of goods or services using the infringing material. (Sec. 22, R.A. No
166a)
SEC. 156. Actions, and
Damages and Injunction for Infringement. 156.1. The owner
of a registered mark may recover damages from any person who infringes his
rights, and the measure of the damages suffered shall be either the reasonable
profit which the complaining party would have made, had the defendant not
infringed his rights, or the profit which the defendant actually made out of
the infringement, or in the event such measure of damages cannot be readily
ascertained with reasonable certainty, then the court may award as damages a
reasonable percentage based upon the amount of gross sales of the defendant or
the value of the services in connection with which the mark or trade name was
used in the infringement of the rights of the complaining party. (Sec. 23,
first par.,
R.A. No. 166a)
156.2. On
application of the complainant, the court may impound during the pendency of
the action, sales invoices and other documents evidencing sales. (n)
156.3. In cases
where actual intent to mislead the public or to defraud the complainant is
shown, in the discretion of the court, the damages may be doubled. (Sec. 23,
first par., R.A. No. 166)
156.4. The
complainant, upon proper showing, may also be granted injunction. (Sec. 23,
second par., R.A. No. 166a)
SEC. 157. Power of Court to Order Infringing Material
Destroyed. 157.1. In any action arising under this Act, in which a
violation of any right of the owner of the registered mark is established, the
court may order that goods found to be infringing be, without compensation of
any sort, disposed of outside the channels of commerce in such a manner as to
avoid any harm caused to the right holder, or destroyed; and all labels, signs,
prints, packages, wrappers, receptacles and advertisements in the possession of
the defendant, bearing the registered mark or trade name or any reproduction,
counterfeit, copy or colorable imitation thereof, all plates, molds, matrices
and other means of making the same, shall be delivered up and destroyed.
157.2. In regard to counterfeit goods, the simple
removal of the trademark affixed shall not be sufficient other than in
exceptional cases which shall be determined by the Regulations, to permit the
release of the goods into the channels of commerce. (Sec. 24, R.A. No. 166a)
SEC. 158. Damages; Requirement of Notice. - In any suit
for infringement, the owner of the registered mark shall not be entitled to
recover profits or damages unless the acts have been committed with knowledge
that such imitation is likely to cause confusion, or to cause mistake, or to
deceive. Such knowledge is presumed if the registrant gives notice that his
mark is registered by displaying with the mark the words "Registered Mark"
or the letter R within a circle or if the defendant had otherwise actual notice
of the registration. (Sec. 21, R.A. No. 166a)
SEC. 159. Limitations to Actions for Infringement. - Notwithstanding any other provision of this
Act, the remedies given to the owner of a right infringed under this Act shall
be limited as follows:
159.1. Notwithstanding
the provisions of Section 155 hereof, a registered mark shall have no effect
against any person who, in good faith, before the filing date or the priority
date, was using the mark for the purposes of his business or enterprise: Provided, That
his right may only be transferred or assigned together with his enterprise or
business or with that part of his enterprise or business in which the mark is
used.
159.2. Where an
infringer who is engaged solely in the business of printing the mark or other
infringing materials for others is an innocent infringer, the owner of the
right infringed shall be entitled as against such infringer only to an
injunction against future printing.
159.3. Where the
infringement complained of is contained in or is part of paid advertisement in
a newspaper, magazine, or other similar periodical or in an electronic
communication, the remedies of the owner of the right infringed as against the
publisher or distributor of such newspaper, magazine, or other similar
periodical or electronic communication shall be limited to an injunction
against the presentation of such advertising matter in future issues of such
newspapers, magazines, or other similar periodicals or in future transmissions
of such electronic communications. The limitations of this subparagraph shall
apply only to innocent infringers: Provided,
That such injunctive relief shall not be available to the owner of the right
infringed with respect to an issue of a newspaper, magazine, or other similar
periodical or an electronic communication containing infringing matter where
restraining the dissemination of such infringing matter in any particular issue
of such periodical or in an electronic communication would delay the delivery
of such issue or transmission of such electronic communication is customarily
conducted in accordance with the sound business practice, and not due to any
method or device adopted to evade this section or to prevent or delay the
issuance of an injunction or restraining order with respect to such infringing
matter; and
159.4. There shall
be no infringement of trademarks or tradenames of imported or sold drugs and
medicines allowed under Section 72.1 of this Act, as well as imported or sold
off-patent drugs and medicines: Provided, That said
drugs and medicines bear the registered marks that have not been tampered,
unlawfully modified, or infringed upon as defined under Section 155 of this
Code.
(As amended by Republic Act No.9502 or the Universally
Accessible Cheaper and Quality Medicines Act of 2008)
SEC. 160. Right of Foreign Corporation to Sue in Trademark or
Service Mark Enforcement Action. - Any foreign
national or juridical person who meets the requirements of Section 3 of this
Act and does not engage in business in the Philippines may bring a civil or
administrative action hereunder for opposition, cancellation, infringement,
unfair competition, or false designation of origin and false description,
whether or not it is licensed to do business in the Philippines under existing
laws.
(Sec. 21-A, R.A. No. 166a)
SEC. 161. Authority to Determine Right to Registration. - In any action involving a registered mark, the
court may determine the right to registration, order the cancellation of a
registration, in whole or in part, and otherwise rectify the register with
respect to the registration of any party to the action in the exercise of this.
Judgment and orders shall be certified by the court to the Director, who shall
make appropriate entry upon the records of the Bureau, and shall be controlled
thereby. (Sec. 25,
R.A. No. 166a)
SEC. 162. Action for False or Fraudulent Declaration. - Any person
who shall procure registration in the Office of a mark by a false or fraudulent
declaration or representation, whether oral or in writing, or by any false
means, shall be liable in a civil action by any person injured thereby for any
damages sustained in consequence thereof. (Sec. 26, R.A.
No. 166)
SEC. 163. Jurisdiction of Court. - All actions
under Sections 150, 155, 164, and 166 to 169 shall be brought before the proper
courts with appropriate jurisdiction under existing laws. (Sec. 27, R.A. No.
166)
SEC. 164. Notice of
Filing Suit Given to the Director. - It shall be the duty of the clerks of such
courts within one (1) month after the filing of any action, suit, or proceeding
involving a mark registered under the provisions of this Act, to notify the
Director in writing setting forth: the names and addresses of the litigants and
designating the number of the registration or registrations and within one (1)
month after the judgment is entered or an appeal is taken, the clerk of court
shall give notice thereof to the Office, and the latter shall endorse the same
upon the filewrapper of the said registration or
registrations and incorporate the same as a part of the contents of said filewrapper. (n)
SEC. 165. Trade Names or Business Names. - 165.1. A name or designation may
not be used as a trade name if by its nature or the use to which such name or
designation may be put, it is contrary to public order or morals and if, in
particular, it is liable to deceive trade circles or the public as to the
nature of the enterprise identified by that name.
165.2. (a) Notwithstanding any laws or regulations
providing for any obligation to register trade names, such names shall be
protected, even prior to or without registration, against any unlawful act
committed by third parties.
(b) In particular, any subsequent use of the trade
name by a third party, whether as a trade name or a mark or collective mark, or
any such use of a similar trade name or mark, likely to mislead the public,
shall be deemed unlawful.
165.3. The remedies provided for in Sections 153 to
156 and Sections 166 and 167 shall apply mutatis
mutandis.
165.4. Any change in the ownership of a trade name
shall be made with the transfer of the enterprise or part thereof identified by
that name. The provisions of Subsections 149.2 to 149.4 shall apply mutatis mutandis.
SEC. 166. Goods Bearing Infringing Marks or Trade Names. - No article of imported merchandise which shall
copy or simulate the name of any domestic product, or manufacturer, or dealer,
or which shall copy or simulate a mark registered in accordance with the
provisions of this Act, or shall bear a mark or trade name calculated to induce
the public to believe that the article is manufactured in the Philippines, or
that it is manufactured in any foreign country or locality other than the
country or locality where it is in fact manufactured, shall be admitted to entry
at any customhouse of the Philippines. In order to aid the officers of the
customs service in enforcing this prohibition, any person who is entitled to
the benefits of this Act, may require that his name and residence, and the name
of the locality in which his goods are manufactured, a copy of the certificate
of registration of his mark or trade name, to be recorded in books which shall
be kept for this purpose in the Bureau of Customs, under such regulations as
the Collector of Customs with the approval of the Secretary of Finance shall
prescribe, and may furnish to the said Bureau facsimiles of his name, the name
of the locality in which his goods are manufactured, or his registered mark or
trade name, and thereupon the Collector
of Customs shall cause one (1) or more copies of the same to be
transmitted to each collector or to other proper officer of the Bureau of
Customs. (Sec. 35, R.A. No. 166)
SEC. 167. Collective Marks. -
167.1. Subject to Subsections 167.2 and 167.3, Sections 122
to 164 and 166 shall apply to collective marks, except that
references therein to "mark" shall be read as "collective
mark."
167.2. (a) An application for registration of a
collective mark shall designate the mark as a collective mark and shall be
accompanied by a copy of the agreement, if any, governing the use of the
collective mark.
(b) The registered owner of a collective mark shall
notify the Director of any changes made in respect of the agreement referred to
in paragraph
(a).
167.3. In addition to the grounds provided in Section
149, the Court shall cancel the registration of a collective mark if the person
requesting the cancellation proves that only the registered owner uses the
mark, or that he uses or permits its use in contravention of the agreements
referred to in Subsection 166.2 or that he uses or permits its use in a manner
liable to deceive trade circles or the public as to the origin or any other
common characteristics of the goods or services concerned.
167.4. The registration of a collective mark, or an
application therefor shall not be the subject of a license contract. (Sec. 40,
R.A. No. 166a)
SEC. 168. Unfair Competition, Rights, Regulation and Remedies.
- 168.1. A person who has identified in the mind of the public the
goods he manufactures or deals in, his business or services from those of
others, whether or not a registered mark is employed, has a property right in
the goodwill of the said goods, business or services so identified, which will
be protected in the same manner as other property rights.
168.2. Any person who shall employ deception or any
other means contrary to good faith by which he shall pass off the goods
manufactured by him or in which he deals, or his business, or services for
those of the one having established such goodwill, or who shall commit any acts
calculated to produce said result, shall be guilty of unfair competition, and
shall be subject to an action therefor.
168.3. In particular, and without in any way limiting
the scope of protection against unfair competition, the following shall be
deemed guilty of unfair competition:
(a)
Any person, who is selling his goods and gives them
the general appearance of goods of another manufacturer or dealer, either as to
the goods themselves or in the wrapping of the packages in which they are
contained, or the devices or words thereon, or in any other feature of their
appearance, which would be likely to influence purchasers to believe that the goods
offered are those of a manufacturer or dealer, other than the actual
manufacturer or dealer, or who otherwise clothes the goods with such appearance
as shall deceive the public and defraud another of his legitimate trade, or any
subsequent vendor of such goods or any agent of any vendor engaged in selling
such goods with a like purpose;
(b)
Any person who by any artifice, or device, or who
employs any other means calculated to induce the false belief that such person
is offering the services of another who has identified such services in the
mind of the public; or
(c)
Any person who shall make any false statement in the
course of trade or who shall commit any other act contrary to good faith of a
nature calculated to discredit the goods, business or services of another.
168.4. The remedies provided by Sections 156, 157 and
161 shall apply mutatis mutandis.
(Sec. 29, R.A. No. 166a)
SEC. 169. False Designations of Origin; False Description or
Representation. - 169.1. Any
person who, on or in connection with any goods or services, or any container
for goods, uses in commerce any word, term, name, symbol, or device, or any
combination thereof, or any false designation of origin, false or misleading
description of fact, or false or misleading representation of fact, which:
(a)
Is likely to cause confusion, or to cause mistake, or
to deceive as to the affiliation, connection, or association of such person
with another person, or as to the origin, sponsorship, or approval of his or
her goods, services, or commercial activities by another person; or
(b)
In commercial advertising or promotion, misrepresents
the nature, characteristics, qualities, or geographic origin of his or her or
another person s goods, services, or commercial activities, shall be liable to
a civil action for damages and injunction provided in Sections 156 and 157 of
this Act by any person who believes that he or she is or likely to be damaged
by such act.
169.2. Any goods marked or labeled in contravention of
the provisions of this Section shall not be imported into the Philippines or
admitted entry at any customhouse of the Philippines. The owner, importer, or
consignee of goods refused entry at any customhouse under this section may have
any recourse under the customs revenue laws or may have the remedy given by
this Act in cases involving goods refused entry or seized. (Sec. 30, R.A. No.
166a)
SEC. 170. Penalties. - Independent of the civil and
administrative sanctions imposed by law, a criminal penalty of imprisonment
from two (2) years to five (5) years and a fine ranging from Fifty thousand
pesos (P50,000) to Two hundred thousand pesos (P200,000), shall be imposed on
any person who is found guilty of committing any of the acts mentioned in
Section 155, Section 168 and Subsection 169.1. (Arts. 188 and 189, Revised
Penal Code)
PART IV.
THE LAW ON
COPYRIGHT
Chapter I.
PRELIMINARY
PROVISIONS
SEC. 171. Definitions. -
For the purpose of this Act, the following
terms have the following meaning:
171.1. "Author" is the
natural person who has created the work;
171.2. A "collective work" is a work which
has been created by two (2) or more natural persons at the initiative and under
the direction of another with the understanding that it will be disclosed by
the latter under his own name and that contributing natural persons will not be
identified;
171.3. "Communication to the public" or
"communicate to the public" means any communication to the public,
including broadcasting, rebroadcasting, retransmitting by cable, broadcasting
and retransmitting by satellite, and includes the making of a work available to
the public by wire or wireless means in such a way that members of the public
may access these works from a place and time individually chosen by them;
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
171.4. A "computer" is an electronic or
similar device having information-processing capabilities, and a "computer
program" is a set of instructions expressed in words, codes, schemes or in
any other form, which is capable when incorporated in a medium that the
computer can read, or causing the computer to perform or achieve a particular
task or result;
171.5. "Public lending" is the transfer of
possession of the original or a copy of a work or sound recording for a limited
period, for non-profit purposes, by an institution the services of which are
available to the public, such as public library or archive;
171.6. "Public performance," in the case of a work
other than an audiovisual work, is the recitation, playing, dancing, acting or
otherwise performing the work, either directly or by means of any device or
process; in the case of an audiovisual work, the showing of its images in
sequence and the making of the sounds accompanying it audible; and, in the case
of a sound recording, making the recorded sounds audible at a place or at
places where persons outside the normal circle of a family and that family s
closest social acquaintances are or can be present, irrespective of whether
they are or can be present at the same place and at the same time, or at
different places and/or at different times, and where the performance can be
perceived without the need for communication within the meaning of Subsection
171.3;
171.7.
"Published works" means works, which, with the consent of the
authors, are made available to the public by wire or wireless means in such a
way that members of the public may access these works from a place and time
individually chosen by them: Provided,
That availability of such copies has been such, as to
satisfy the reasonable requirements of the public, having regard to the nature
of the work;
171.8. "Rental" is the transfer of the
possession of the original or a copy of a work or a sound recording for a
limited period of time, for profit-making purposes;
171.9. "Reproduction" is the making of one
(1) or more copies, temporary or permanent, in whole or in part, of a work or a
sound recording in any manner or form without prejudice to the provisions of
Section 185 of this Act (Sec. 41 [E], P.D. No. 49a);
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
171.10. A
"work of applied art" is an artistic creation with utilitarian
functions or incorporated in a useful article, whether made by hand or produced
on an industrial scale;
171.11. A "work of the Government of the
Philippines" is a work created by an officer or employee of the Philippine
Government or any of its subdivisions and instrumentalities, including
government-owned or controlled corporations as part of his regularly prescribed
official duties.
171.12. Technological measure means any technology, device
or component that, in the normal course of its operation, restricts acts in
respect of a work, performance or sound recording, which are not authorized by
the authors, performers or producers of sound recordings concerned or permitted
by law;
171.13. Rights management information means
information which identifies the work, sound recording or performance; the
author of the work, producer of the sound recording or performer of the
performance; the owner of any right in the work, sound recording or
performance; or information about the terms and conditions of the use of the
work, sound recording or performance; and any number or code that represent
such information, when any of these items is attached to a copy of the work,
sound recording or fixation of performance or appears in conjunction with the
communication to the public of a work, sound recording or performance.
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
CHAPTER II.
ORIGINAL
WORKS
SEC. 172. Literary and Artistic Works. - 172.1 Literary and artistic works,
hereinafter referred to as "works", are original intellectual
creations in the literary and artistic domain protected from the moment of
their creation and shall include in particular:
(a)
Books, pamphlets, articles and other writings;
(b)
Periodicals and newspapers;
(c)
Lectures, sermons, addresses, dissertations prepared
for oral delivery, whether or not reduced in writing or other material
form;
(d)
Letters;
(e)
Dramatic or dramatico-musical
compositions; choreographic works or entertainment in dumb shows;
(f) Musical
compositions, with or without words;
(g)
Works of drawing, painting, architecture, sculpture,
engraving, lithography or other works of art; models or designs for works of
art;
(h)
Original ornamental designs or models for articles of
manufacture, whether or not registrable as an industrial design, and other
works of applied art;
(i) Illustrations,
maps, plans, sketches, charts and three-dimensional works relative to
geography, topography, architecture or science;
(j) Drawings or
plastic works of a scientific or technical character;
(k)
Photographic works including works produced by a
process analogous to photography; lantern slides;
(l) Audiovisual
works and cinematographic works and works produced by
a process analogous to cinematography or any process for making audio-visual
recordings;
(m)
Pictorial illustrations and advertisements;
(n)
Computer programs; and
(o)
Other literary, scholarly, scientific and artistic
works.
172.2. Works are protected by the sole fact of their
creation, irrespective of their mode or form of expression, as well as of their
content, quality and purpose. (Sec. 2, P.D. No. 49a)
Chapter
III.
DERIVATIVE
WORKS
SEC. 173. Derivative
Works. 173.1. The following derivative works shall also be
protected by copyright:
(a)
Dramatizations, translations, adaptations,
abridgments, arrangements, and other alterations of literary or artistic works;
and
(b)
Collections of literary, scholarly or artistic works,
and compilations of data and other materials which are original by reason of
the selection or coordination or arrangement of their contents. (Sec. 2, [P]
and [Q], P.D. No. 49)
173.2. The
works referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b) of Subsection 173.1 shall be
protected as new works: Provided however,
That such new work shall not affect the force of any
subsisting copyright upon the original works employed or any part thereof, or
be construed to imply any right to such use of the original works, or to secure
or extend copyright in such original works. (Sec. 8, P.D. 49; Art. 10, TRIPS)
SEC. 174. Published
Edition of Work. - In addition to the right to publish
granted by the author, his heirs or assigns, the publisher shall have a
copyright consisting merely of the right of reproduction of the typographical
arrangement of the published edition of the work. (n)
CHAPTER IV.
WORKS NOT
PROTECTED
SEC. 175. Unprotected Subject Matter. - Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 172
and 173, no protection shall extend, under this law, to any idea, procedure,
system, method or operation, concept, principle, discovery or mere data as
such, even if they are expressed, explained, illustrated or embodied in a work;
news of the day and other miscellaneous facts having the character of mere
items of press information; or any official text of a legislative,
administrative or legal nature, as well as any official translation thereof.
(n)
SEC. 176. Works of the Government. - 176.1. No copyright shall subsist
in any work of the Government of the Philippines. However, prior approval of
the government agency or office wherein the work is created shall be necessary
for exploitation of such work for profit. Such agency or office may, among
other things, impose as a condition the payment of royalties. No prior approval
or conditions shall be required for the use of any purpose of statutes, rules
and regulations, and speeches, lectures, sermons, addresses, and dissertations,
pronounced, read or rendered in courts of justice, before administrative
agencies, in deliberative assemblies and in meetings of public character. (Sec.
9, first par., P.D. No. 49)
176.2. The author of speeches, lectures, sermons,
addresses, and dissertations mentioned in the preceding paragraphs shall have
the exclusive right of making a collection of his works. (n)
176.3.
Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions, the Government is not
precluded from receiving and holding copyrights transferred to it by
assignment, bequest or otherwise; nor shall publication or republication by the
government in a public document of any work in which copyright is subsisting be
taken to cause any abridgment or annulment of the copyright or to authorize any
use or appropriation of such work without the consent of the copyright owner.
(Sec. 9, third par., P.D. No. 49)
CHAPTER V.
COPYRIGHT
OR ECONOMIC RIGHTS
SEC. 177. Copyright or Economic Rights. - Subject to the provisions of
Chapter VIII, copyright or economic rights shall consist of the exclusive right
to carry out, authorize or prevent the following acts:
177.1. Reproduction of the work or substantial
portion of the work;
177.2. Dramatization, translation, adaptation,
abridgment, arrangement or other transformation of the work;
177.3. The
first public distribution of the original and each copy of the work by sale or
other forms of transfer of ownership;
177.4. Rental of the original or a copy of an
audiovisual or cinematographic work, a work embodied in a sound recording, a
computer program, a compilation of data and other materials or a musical work
in graphic form, irrespective of the ownership of the original or the copy
which is the subject of the rental; (n)
177.5. Public display of the
original or a copy of the work;
177.6. Public performance of the
work; and
177.7. Other communication to the public of the work
(Sec. 5, P.D.
No. 49a)
CHAPTER VI.
OWNERSHIP
OF COPYRIGHT
SEC. 178. Rules on Copyright Ownership. - Copyright ownership shall be governed by the
following rules:
178.1. Subject
to the provisions of this section, in the case of original literary and
artistic works, copyright shall belong to the author of the work;
178.2. In the
case of works of joint authorship, the co-authors shall be the original owners
of the copyright and in the absence of agreement, their rights shall be
governed by the rules on co-ownership. If, however, a work of joint authorship
consists of parts that can be used separately and the author of each part can
be identified, the author of each part shall be the original owner of the
copyright in the part that he has created;
178.3. In the case of work created by an author during
and in the course of his employment, the copyright shall belong to:
(a)
The employee, if the creation of the object of
copyright is not a part of his regular duties even if the employee uses the
time, facilities and materials of the employer.
(b)
The employer, if the work is the result of the
performance of his regularly-assigned duties, unless there is an agreement,
express or implied, to the contrary.
178.4. In the case
of a work commissioned by a person other than an employer of the author and who
pays for it and the work is made in pursuance of the commission, the person who
so commissioned the work shall have ownership of the work, but the copyright
thereto shall remain with the creator, unless there is a written stipulation to
the contrary;
178.5. In the case
of audiovisual work, the copyright shall belong to the producer, the author of
the scenario, the composer of the music, the film director, and the author of
the work so adapted. However, subject to contrary or other stipulations among
the creators, the producer shall exercise the copyright to an extent required
for the exhibition of the work in any manner, except for the right to collect
performing license fees for the performance of musical compositions, with or
without words, which are incorporated into the work; and
178.6. In respect
of letters, the copyright shall belong to the writer subject to the provisions
of Article 723 of the Civil Code. (Sec. 6, P.D.
No. 49a)
SEC. 179. Anonymous and
Pseudonymous Works. - For purposes of this Act, the publishers shall
be deemed to represent the authors of articles and other writings published
without the names of the authors or under pseudonyms, unless the contrary
appears, or the pseudonyms or adopted name leaves no doubts as to the author s
identity, or if the author of the anonymous works discloses his identity. (Sec.
7, P.D. 49)
CHAPTER
VII.
SEC. 180. Rights of
Assignee or Licensee. - 180.1. The
copyright may be assigned or licensed in whole or in part. Within the scope of
the assignment or license, the assignee or licensee is entitled to all the
rights and remedies which the assignor or licensor had with respect to the
copyright.
180.2. The copyright is not deemed assigned or
licensed inter vivos,
in whole or in part, unless there is a written indication of such intention.
180.3. The submission
of a literary, photographic or artistic work to a newspaper, magazine or
periodical for publication shall constitute only a license to make a single
publication unless a greater right is expressly granted. If two (2) or more
persons jointly own a copyright or any part thereof, neither of the owners
shall be entitled to grant licenses without the prior written consent of the
other owner or owners. (Sec. 15, P.D. No. 49a)
180.4. Any exclusivity in the economic rights in a work may be
exclusively licensed. Within the scope of the exclusive license, the licensee
is entitled to all the rights and remedies which the licensor had with respect
to the copyright.
180.5. The copyright owner has the right to regular
statements of accounts from the assignee or the licensee with regard to
assigned or licensed work.
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property
Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
SEC. 181. Copyright and Material Object. - The
copyright is distinct from the property in the material object subject to it.
Consequently, the transfer, assignment or licensing of the copyright shall not
itself constitute a transfer of the material object. Nor shall a transfer or
assignment of the sole copy or of one or several copies of the work imply
transfer, assignment or licensing of the copyright. (Sec. 16, P.D. No. 49)
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property
Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
SEC. 182. Filing of Assignment or License. - An
assignment or exclusive license may be filed in duplicate with the National
Library upon payment of the prescribed fee for registration in books and
records kept for the purpose. Upon recording, a copy of the instrument shall be
returned to the sender with a notation of the fact of record. Notice of the
record shall be published in the IPO Gazette. (Sec. 19, P.D. No. 49a)
SEC 183. Designation of
Society. - The owners of copyright and related rights or
their heirs may designate a society of artists, writers, composers and other
right-holders to collectively manage their economic or moral rights on their
behalf. For the said societies to enforce the rights of their members, they
shall first secure the necessary accreditation from the Intellectual Property
Office. (Sec. 32, P.D. No. 49a)
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
CHAPTER
VIII.
LIMITATIONS
ON COPYRIGHT
SEC. 184. Limitations on Copyright. - 184.1. Notwithstanding the
provisions of Chapter V, the following acts shall not constitute infringement
of copyright:
(a)
The recitation or performance of a work, once it has
been lawfully made accessible to the public, if done privately and free of
charge or if made strictly for a charitable or religious institution or
society; (Sec. 10(1), P.D. No.49)
(b)
The making of quotations from a published work if they
are compatible with fair use and only to the extent justified for the purpose,
including quotations from newspaper articles and periodicals in the form of
press summaries: Provided, That the
source and the name of the author, if appearing on the work, are mentioned;
(Sec. 11, third par., P.D. No. 49)
(c)
The reproduction or communication to the public by
mass media of articles on current political, social, economic, scientific or
religious topic, lectures, addresses and other works of the same nature, which
are delivered in public if such use is for information purposes and has not
been expressly reserved: Provided,
That the source is clearly indicated; (Sec. 11, P.D. No. 49)
(d)
The reproduction and communication to the public of
literary, scientific or artistic works as part of reports of current events by
means of photography, cinematography or broadcasting to the extent necessary
for the purpose; (Sec. 12, P.D. No. 49)
(e)
The inclusion of a work in a publication, broadcast,
or other communication to the public, sound recording or film, if such
inclusion is made by way of illustration for teaching purposes and is
compatible with fair use: Provided,
That the source and of the name of the author, if appearing in the work, are
mentioned;
(f)
The recording made in schools, universities, or
educational institutions of a work included in a broadcast for the use of such
schools, universities or educational institutions: Provided, That such recording must be
deleted within a reasonable period after they were first broadcast: Provided, further, That such recording may not be made from audiovisual
works which are part of the general cinema repertoire of feature films except
for brief excerpts of the work;
(g)
The making of ephemeral recordings by a broadcasting
organization by means of its own facilities and for use in its own broadcast;
(h)
The use made of a work by or under the direction or
control of the Government, by the National Library or by educational,
scientific or professional institutions where such use is in the public
interest and is compatible with fair use;
(i)
The public performance or the communication to the
public of a work, in a place where no admission fee is charged in respect of
such public performance or communication, by a club or institution for
charitable or educational purpose only, whose aim is not profit making, subject
to such other limitations as may be provided in the Regulations;
(n)
(j)
Public display of the original or a copy of the work
not made by means of a film, slide, television image or otherwise on screen or
by means of any other device or process: Provided,
That either the work has been published, or, that the
original or the copy displayed has been sold, given away or otherwise
transferred to another person by the author or his successor in title; and
(k)
Any use made of a work for the purpose of any judicial
proceedings or for the giving of professional advice by a legal practitioner.
(l)
The reproduction or distribution of published articles
or materials in a specialized format exclusively for the use of the blind,
visually- and reading-impaired persons: Provided,
That such copies and distribution shall be made on a
nonprofit basis and shall indicate the copyright owner and the date of the
original publication.
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property
Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
184.2. The
provisions of this section shall be interpreted in such a way as to allow the
work to be used in a manner which does not conflict with the normal
exploitation of the work and does not unreasonably prejudice the right holder's
legitimate interests.
SEC. 185. Fair Use of a
Copyrighted Work. - 185.1. The
fair use of a copyrighted work for criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching
including limited number of copies for classroom use, scholarship, research,
and similar purposes is not an infringement of copyright.
Decompilation, which is
understood here to be the reproduction of the code and translation of the forms
of a computer program to achieve the interoperability of an independently
created computer program with other programs may also constitute fair use under
the criteria established by this section, to the extent that such decompilation is done for the purpose of obtaining the
information necessary to achieve such interoperability. In determining whether
the use made of a work in any particular case is fair use, the factors to be
considered shall include:
(a)
The purpose and character of the use, including
whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for non-profit educational
purposes;
(b)
The nature of the copyrighted work;
(c)
The amount and substantiality of the portion used in
relation to the copyrighted work as a whole; and
(d)
The effect of the use upon the potential market for or
value of the copyrighted work.
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property
Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
185.2. The fact that a work is unpublished shall not
by itself bar a finding of fair use if such finding is made upon consideration
of all the above factors.
SEC. 186. Work of Architecture. - Copyright in a work of architecture
shall include the right to control the erection of any building which
reproduces the whole or a substantial part of the work either in its original
form or in any form recognizably derived from the original; Provided, That the copyright in any such
work shall not include the right to control the reconstruction or
rehabilitation in the same style as the original of a building to which that
copyright relates. (n)
SEC. 187. Reproduction of Published Work. - 187.1. Notwithstanding the
provision of Section 177, and subject to the provisions of Subsection 187.2,
the private reproduction of a published work in a single copy, where the
reproduction is made by a natural person exclusively for research and private study,
shall be permitted, without the authorization of the owner of copyright in the
work.
187.2. The permission granted under
Subsection 187.1 shall not extend
to the reproduction of:
(a)
A work of architecture in the form of building or
other construction;
(b)
An entire book, or a substantial part thereof, or of a
musical work in graphic form by reprographic means;
(c)
A compilation of data and other materials;
(d)
A computer program except as provided in Section 189;
and
(e)
Any work in cases where reproduction would
unreasonably conflict with a normal exploitation of the work or would otherwise
unreasonably prejudice the legitimate interests of the author. (n)
SEC. 188. Reprographic Reproduction by Libraries - 188.1. Notwithstanding the provisions of
Subsection 177.1, any library or archive whose activities are not for profit
may, without the authorization of the author or copyright owner, make a limited
number of copies of the work, as may be necessary for such institutions to
fulfill their mandate, by reprographic reproduction:
(a)
Where the work by reason of its fragile character or
rarity cannot be lent to user in its original form;
(b)
Where the works are isolated articles contained in
composite works or brief portions of other published works and the reproduction
is necessary to supply them; when this is considered expedient, to persons
requesting their loan for purposes of research or study instead of lending the
volumes or booklets which contain them; and
(c)
Where the making of such limited copies is in order to
preserve and, if necessary in the event that it is
lost, destroyed or rendered unusable, replace a copy, or to replace, in the
permanent collection of another similar library or archive, a copy which has
been lost, destroyed or rendered unusable and copies are not available with the
publisher.
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
188.2. Notwithstanding the above provisions, it shall
not be permissible to produce a volume of a work published in several volumes
or to produce missing tomes or pages of magazines or similar works, unless the
volume, tome or part is out of stock; Provided,
That every library which, by law, is entitled to receive copies of a printed
work, shall be entitled, when special reasons so require, to reproduce a copy
of a published work which is considered necessary for the collection of the
library but which is out of stock. (Sec. 13, P.D. 49a)
SEC. 189. Reproduction of Computer
Program. -
189.1.
Notwithstanding the provisions of
Section 177, the reproduction in one (1) back-up copy or adaptation of a
computer program shall be permitted, without the authorization of the author
of, or other owner of copyright in, a computer program, by the lawful owner of
that computer program: Provided, That
the copy or adaptation is necessary for:
(a)
The use of the computer program in conjunction with a
computer for the purpose, and to the extent, for which the computer program has
been obtained; and
(b)
Archival purposes, and, for the replacement of the
lawfully owned copy of the computer program in the event that the lawfully
obtained copy of the computer program is lost, destroyed or rendered unusable.
189.2. No copy or
adaptation mentioned in this Section shall be used for any purpose other than
the ones determined in this Section, and any such copy or adaptation shall be
destroyed in the event that continued possession of the copy of the computer
program ceases to be lawful.
189.3. This provision
shall be without prejudice to the application of Section 185 whenever
appropriate. (n)
SEC. 190. Importation and Exportation of Infringing Materials.
- Subject to the approval of the Secretary of Finance, the Commissioner of
Customs is hereby empowered to make rules and regulations for preventing the
importation or exportation of infringing articles prohibited under Part IV of
this Act and under relevant treaties and conventions to which the Philippines
may be a party and for seizing and condemning and disposing of the same in case
they are discovered after they have been imported or before they are exported.
(Sec. 30, P.D. No. 49)
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
CHAPTER IX.
DEPOSIT AND
NOTICE
SEC. 191. Deposit and Notice of Deposit with the National
Library and the Supreme Court Library. - At any time during the subsistence
of the copyright, the owner of the copyright or of any exclusive right in the
work may, for the purpose of completing the records of the National Library and
the Supreme Court Library, register and deposit with them, by personal delivery
or by registered mail, two (2) complete copies or reproductions of the work in
such form as the Directors of the said libraries may prescribe in accordance
with regulations: Provided, That only
works in the field of law shall be deposited with the Supreme Court Library.
Such registration and deposit is not a condition of
copyright protection.
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending certain
provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property
Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
SEC. 192. Notice of Copyright. - Each copy
of a work published or offered for sale may contain a notice bearing the name
of the copyright owner, and the year of its first publication, and, in copies
produced after the creator s death, the year of such death. (Sec. 27, P.D. No.
49a)
CHAPTER X.
MORAL
RIGHTS
SEC. 193. Scope of Moral Rights. - The author
of a work shall, independently of the economic rights in Section 177 or the
grant of an assignment or license with respect to such right, have the right:
193.1. To
require that the authorship of the works be attributed to him, in particular,
the right that his name, as far as practicable, be indicated in a prominent way
on the copies, and in connection with the public use of his work;
193.2. To make
any alterations of his work prior to, or to withhold it from publication;
193.3. To object
to any distortion, mutilation or other modification of, or other derogatory
action in relation to, his work which would be prejudicial to his honor or
reputation; and
193.4. To
restrain the use of his name with respect to any work not of his own creation
or in a distorted version of his work. (Sec. 34, P.D. No.
49)
SEC. 194. Breach of Contract. - An author
cannot be compelled to perform his contract to create a work or for the
publication of his work already in existence. However, he may be held liable
for damages for breach of such contract. (Sec. 35, P.D. No. 49)
SEC. 195. Waiver of
Moral Rights. - An author may waive his rights
mentioned in Section 193 by a written instrument, but no such waiver shall be
valid where its effects is to permit another:
195.1. To use the name of the author, or the title of
his work, or otherwise to make use of his reputation with respect to any
version or adaptation of his work which, because of alterations therein, would
substantially tend to injure the literary or artistic reputation of another
author; or
195.2. To use the name of the author with respect to a
work he did not create. (Sec. 36, P.D. No. 49)
SEC. 196. Contribution to Collective Work. - When an author contributes to a
collective work, his right to have his contribution attributed to him is deemed
waived unless he expressly reserves it. (Sec.
37. P.D. No. 49)
SEC. 197. Editing, Arranging and Adaptation of Work. - In the absence of a contrary stipulation at
the time an author licenses or permits another to use his work, the necessary
editing, arranging or adaptation of such work, for publication, broadcast, use
in a motion picture, dramatization, or mechanical or electrical reproduction in
accordance with the reasonable and customary standards or requirements of the
medium in which the work is to be used, shall not be deemed to contravene the
author's rights secured by this chapter. Nor shall complete destruction of a
work unconditionally tranferred by the author be
deemed to violate such rights. (Sec. 38, P.D. No. 49)
SEC. 198. Term of Moral Rights. - 198.1. The rights of an author under
Section 193.1. shall last during the lifetime of the author and in perpetuity
after his death while the rights under Sections 193.2. 193.3. and 193.4. shall be coterminous with
the economic rights, the moral rights shall not be assignable or subject to
license. The person or persons to be charged with the posthumous enforcement of
these rights shall be named in a written instrument which shall be filed with
the National Library. In default of such person or persons, such enforcement
shall devolve upon either the author s heirs, and in default of the heirs, the
Director of the National Library.
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
198.2. For purposes of this Section,
"Person" shall mean any individual, partnership, corporation,
association, or society. The Director of the National Library may prescribe
reasonable fees to be charged for his services in the application of provisions
of this Section. (Sec. 39, P.D. No. 49)
SEC. 199. Enforcement Remedies. - Violation
of any of the rights conferred by this Chapter shall entitle those charged with
their enforcement to the same rights and remedies available to a copyright
owner. In addition, damages which may be availed of under the Civil Code may
also be recovered. Any damage recovered after the creator's death shall be held
in trust for and remitted to his heirs, and in default of the heirs, shall
belong to the government. (Sec. 40, P.D. No. 49)
CHAPTER XI.
RIGHTS TO
PROCEEDS IN SUBSEQUENT TRANSFERS
SEC. 200. Sale or Lease of Work. - In every sale or lease of an original work of
painting or sculpture or of the original manuscript of a writer or composer,
subsequent to the first disposition thereof by the author, the author or his
heirs shall have an inalienable right to participate in the gross proceeds of
the sale or lease to the extent of five percent (5%). This right shall exist
during the lifetime of the author and for fifty (50) years after his death.
(Sec. 31, P.D. No. 49)
SEC. 201. Works Not
Covered. - The
provisions of this Chapter shall not apply to prints, etchings, engravings,
works of applied art, or works of similar kind wherein the author primarily
derives gain from the proceeds of reproductions. (Sec. 33, P.D. No. 49)
CHAPTER XII
RIGHTS OF
PERFORMERS, PRODUCERS OF SOUND
SEC. 202. Definitions. - For the purpose of this Act, the following
terms shall have the following meanings:
202.1.
"Performers" are actors, singers, musicians, dancers, and
other persons who act, sing, declaim, play in, interpret, or otherwise perform
literary and artistic work;
202.2. "Sound recording" means the fixation
of the sounds of a performance or of other sounds, or representation of sound,
other than in the form of a fixation incorporated in a cinematographic or other
audiovisual work;
202.3. An
"audiovisual work or fixation" is a work that consists of a series of
related images which impart the impression of motion, with or without
accompanying sounds, susceptible of being made visible and, where accompanied
by sounds, susceptible of being made audible;
202.4. "Fixation" means the embodiment of
sounds, or of the representations thereof, from which they can be perceived,
reproduced or communicated through a device;
202.5.
"Producer of a sound recording" means the person, or the legal
entity, who or which takes the initiative and has the responsibility for the
first fixation of the sounds of a performance or other sounds, or the
representation of sounds;
202.6. "Publication of a fixed performance or a
sound recording" means the offering of copies of the fixed performance or
the sound recording to the public, with the consent of the right holder: Provided, That
copies are offered to the public in reasonable quality;
202.7.
"Broadcasting" means the transmission by wireless means for
the public reception of sounds or of images or of representations thereof; such
transmission by satellite is also "broadcasting" where the means for
decrypting are provided to the public by the broadcasting organization or with
its consent;
202.8.
"Broadcasting organization" shall include a natural person or
a juridical entity duly authorized to engage in broadcasting; and
202.9. "Communication to the public of a
performance or a sound recording" means the transmission to the public, by
any medium, otherwise than by broadcasting, of sounds of a performance or the
representations of sounds fixed in a sound recording. For purposes of Section
209, "communication to the public" includes making the sounds or
representations of sounds fixed in a sound recording audible to the public.
SEC. 203. Scope of
Performers' Rights. - Subject to the provisions of
Section 212, performers shall enjoy the following exclusive rights:
203.1. As regards their
performances, the right of authorizing:
(a) The
broadcasting and other communication to the public of their performance; and
(b) The
fixation of their unfixed performance.
203.2. The right
of authorizing the direct or indirect reproduction of their performances fixed
in sound recordings or audiovisual works or fixations in any manner or form;
203.3. Subject to
the provisions of Section 206, the right of authorizing the first public
distribution of the original and copies of their performance fixed in the sound
recordings or audiovisual works or fixations through sale or rental of other
forms of transfer of ownership;
203.4. The right
of authorizing the commercial rental to the public of the original and copies
of their performances fixed in sound recordings or audiovisual works or
fixations, even after distribution of them by, or pursuant to the authorization
by the performer; and
203.5. The right
of authorizing the making available to the public of their performances fixed
in sound recordings or audiovisual works or fixations, by wire or wireless
means, in such a way that members of the public may access them from a place
and time individually chosen by them. (Sec. 42, P.D. No. 49a)
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
SEC. 204. Moral Rights of Performers. - 204.1. Independently of a
performer's economic rights, the performer, shall, as regards his live aural
performances or performances fixed in sound recordings or in audiovisual works
or fixations, have the right to claim to be identified as the performer of his
performances, except where the omission is dictated by the manner of the use of
the performance, and to object to any distortion, mutilation or other
modification of his performances that would be prejudicial to his reputation.
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
204.2. The rights granted to a performer in accordance
with Subsection 203.1 shall be maintained and exercised fifty (50) years after
his death, by his heirs, and in default of heirs, the government, where
protection is claimed. (Sec. 43, P.D. no. 49)
SEC. 205. Limitation on
Right. - 205.1. Subject to
the provisions of Section 206, once the performer has authorized the
broadcasting or fixation of his performance, the provisions of Sections 203
shall have no further application.
205.2. The provisions of Section 184 and Section 185
shall apply mutatis mutandis to
performers. (n)
SEC. 206. Additional Remuneration for Subsequent Communications
or Broadcasts. - Unless otherwise provided in the contract, in
every communication to the public or broadcast of a performance subsequent to
the first communication or broadcast thereof by the broadcasting organization,
the performer shall be entitled to an additional remuneration equivalent to at
least five percent (5%) of the original compensation he or she received for the
first communication or broadcast. (n)
SEC. 207. Contract Terms. - Nothing in this Chapter shall be
construed to deprive performers of the right to agree by contracts on terms and
conditions more favorable for them in respect of any use of their performance.
(n)
CHAPTER XIII.
PRODUCERS
OF SOUND RECORDINGS
SEC. 208. Scope of
Right. - Subject to
the provisions of Section 212, producers of sound recordings shall enjoy the
following exclusive rights:
208.1. The
right to authorize the direct or indirect reproduction of their sound
recordings, in any manner or form; the placing of these reproductions in the
market and the right of rental or lending;
208.2. The
right to authorize the first public distribution of the original and copies of
their sound recordings through sale or rental or other forms of transferring
ownership; and
208.3. The
right to authorize the commercial rental to the public of the original and
copies of their sound recordings, even after distribution by them by or
pursuant to authorization by the producer. (Sec. 46, P.D. No.
49a)
208.4. The
right to authorize the making available to the public of their sound recordings
in such a way that members of the public may access the sound recording from a
place and at a time individually chosen or selected by them, as well as other
transmissions of a sound recording with like effect.
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
SEC. 209. Communication to the Public. - If a sound
recording published for commercial purposes, or a reproduction of such sound
recording, is used directly for broadcasting or for other communication to the
public, or is publicly performed with the intention of making and enhancing
profit, a single equitable remuneration for the performer or performers, and
the producer of the sound recording shall be paid by the user to both the
performers and the producer, who, in the absence of any agreement shall share
equally. (Sec. 47, P.D. No. 49a)
SEC. 210. Limitation of Right. - Sections
184 and 185 shall apply mutatis mutandis
to the producer of sound recordings. (Sec. 48, P.D. No.
49a)
CHAPTER XIV.
BROADCASTING ORGANIZATIONS
SEC. 211. Scope of
Right. - Subject to the provisions of
Section 212, broadcasting organizations shall enjoy the exclusive right to
carry out, authorize or prevent any of the following acts:
211.1. The rebroadcasting of their
broadcasts;
211.2. The recording in any manner, including the
making of films or the use of video tape, of their broadcasts for the purpose
of communication to the public of television broadcasts of the same; and
211.3. The use of such records for fresh transmissions
or for fresh recording. (Sec. 52, P.D. No. 49)
CHAPTER XV
LIMITATIONS
ON PROTECTION
SEC. 212. Limitations on Rights. - The
provisions of Chapter VIII shall apply mutatis
mutandis to the rights of performers, producers of sound recordings and
broadcasting organizations.
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property
Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
CHAPTER XVI.
TERM OF
PROTECTION
SEC. 213. Term of Protection. -
213.1. Subject to the provisions of Subsections 213.2 to
213.5, the copyright in works under Sections 172 and 173 shall be protected
during the life of the author and for fifty (50) years after his death. This
rule also applies to posthumous works. (Sec. 21, first sentence, P.D. No.
49a)
213.2. In case of works of joint authorship, the
economic rights shall be protected during the life of the last surviving author
and for fifty (50) years after his death. (Sec. 21, second sentence, P.D. no.
49)
213.3. In case of anonymous or pseudonymous works, the
copyright shall be protected for fifty (50) years from the date on which the
work was first lawfully published: Provided,
That where, before the expiration of the said period, the author's identity is
revealed or is no longer in doubt, the provisions of Subsections 213.1 and
213.2 shall apply, as the case may be: Provided,
further, That such works if not published before shall be protected for
fifty (50) years counted from the making of the work. (Sec.
23, P.D. No. 49)
213.4. In case of works of applied art the protection
shall be for a period of twenty-five (25) years from the date of making. (Sec.
24(B),
P.D. No. 49a)
213.5. In case
of photographic works, the protection shall be for fifty (50) years from
publication of the work and, if unpublished, fifty (50) years from the making.
(Sec. 24(C), P.D. 49a)
213.6. In case of audio-visual works including those
produced by process analogous to photography or any process for making
audio-visual recordings, the term shall be fifty (50) years from date of
publication and, if unpublished, from the date of making. (Sec. 24(C), P.D. No.
49a)
SEC. 214. Calculation of
Term. -
The term of protection
subsequent to the death of the author provided in the preceding Section shall
run from the date of his death or of publication, but such terms shall always
be deemed to begin on the first day of January of the year following the event
which gave rise to them. (Sec. 25, P.D. No. 49)
SEC. 215. Term of Protection for Performers, Producers and
Broadcasting Organizations. - 215.1. The
rights granted to performers and producers of sound recordings under this law
shall expire:
(a)
For performances not incorporated in recordings, fifty
(50) years from the end of the year in which the performance took place;
and
(b)
For sound or image and sound recordings and for
performances incorporated therein, fifty (50) years from the end of the year in
which the recording took place.
215.2. In case of broadcasts, the term shall be twenty
(20) years from the date the broadcast took place. The extended term shall be
applied only to old works with subsisting protection under the prior law. (Sec.
55, P.D.
No. 49a)
CHAPTER XVII.
INFRINGEMENT
SEC. 216. Infringement.
Any person infringes a right protected under
this Act when one:
(a)
Directly commits an infringement;
(b)
Benefits from the infringing activity of another
person who commits an infringement if the person benefiting has been given
notice of the infringing activity and has the right and ability to control the
activities of the other person;
(c)
With knowledge of infringing activity, induces, causes
or materially contributes to the infringing conduct of another.
216.1. Remedies
for Infringement Any person infringing a right protected under this law shall
be liable:
(a)
To an injunction restraining such infringement. The
court may also order the defendant to desist from an infringement, among
others, to prevent the entry into the channels of commerce of imported goods
that involve an infringement, immediately after customs clearance of such
goods.
(b)
To pay to the copyright proprietor or his assigns or
heirs such actual damages, including legal costs and other expenses, as he may
have incurred due to the infringement as well as the profits the infringer may
have made due to such infringement, and in proving profits the plaintiff shall
be required to prove sales only and the defendant shall be required to prove
every element of cost which he claims, or, in lieu of actual damages and
profits, such damages which to the court shall appear to be just and shall not
be regarded as penalty: Provided,
That the amount of damages to be awarded shall be doubled against any person who:
(i) Circumvents
effective technological measures; or
(ii)
Having reasonable grounds to know that it will induce,
enable, facilitate or conceal the infringement, remove or alter any electronic
rights management information from a copy of a work, sound recording, or
fixation of a performance, or distribute, import for distribution, broadcast,
or communicate to the public works or copies of works without authority,
knowing that electronic rights management information has been removed or
altered without authority.
(c)
Deliver under oath, for impounding during the pendency
of the action, upon such terms and conditions as the court may prescribe, sales
invoices and other documents evidencing sales, all articles and their packaging
alleged to infringe a copyright and implements for making them.
(d)
Deliver under oath for destruction without any
compensation all infringing copies or devices, as well as all plates, molds, or
other means for making such infringing copies as the court may order.
(e)
Such other terms and conditions, including the payment
of moral and exemplary damages, which the court may deem proper, wise and
equitable and the destruction of infringing copies of the work even in the
event of acquittal in a criminal case.
The copyright owner may elect, at any time before
final judgment is rendered, to recover instead of actual damages and profits,
an award of statutory damages for all infringements involved in an action in a
sum equivalent to the filing fee of the infringement action but not less than Fifty thousand pesos (Php50,000.00). In awarding statutory
damages, the court may consider the following factors:
(1)
The nature and purpose of the infringing act;
(2)
The flagrancy of the infringement;
(3)
Whether the defendant acted in bad faith;
(4)
The need for deterrence;
(5)
Any loss that the plaintiff has suffered or is likely
to suffer by reason of the infringement; and
(6)
Any benefit shown to have accrued to the defendant by
reason of the infringement.
In case the infringer was not aware
and had no reason to believe that his acts constitute an infringement of
copyright, the court in its discretion may reduce the award of statutory
damages to a sum of not more than Ten thousand pesos
(Php10,000.00): Provided, That the
amount of damages to be awarded shall be doubled against any person who:
(i) Circumvents
effective technological measures; or
(ii)
Having reasonable grounds to know that it will induce,
enable, facilitate or conceal the infringement, remove or alter any electronic
rights management information from a copy of a work, sound recording, or
fixation of a performance, or distribute, import for distribution, broadcast,
or communicate to the public works or copies of works without authority,
knowing that electronic rights management information has been removed or
altered without authority.
216.2. In an
infringement action, the court shall also have the power to order the seizure
and impounding of any article which may serve as evidence in the court
proceedings, in accordance with the rules on search and seizure involving
violations of intellectual property rights issued by the Supreme Court.
(Sec.28, P.D. No. 49a)
The foregoing shall not preclude an independent suit
for relief by the injured party by way of damages, injunction, accounts or
otherwise.
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
SEC. 217. Criminal Penalties. -
217.1. Any person infringing any right secured by provisions
of Part IV of this Act or aiding or abetting such infringement shall be guilty
of a crime punishable by:
(a)
Imprisonment of one (1) year to three (3) years plus a
fine ranging from Fifty thousand pesos (P50,000) to One hundred fifty thousand
pesos (P150,000) for the first offense.
(b)
Imprisonment of three (3) years and one (1) day to six
(6) years plus a fine ranging from One hundred fifty thousand pesos (P150,000)
to Five hundred thousand pesos (P500,000) for the second offense.
(c)
Imprisonment of six (6) years and one (1) day to nine
(9) years plus a fine ranging from Five hundred thousand pesos (P500,000) to One
million five hundred thousand pesos (P1,500,000) for the third and subsequent
offenses.
(d)
In all cases, subsidiary imprisonment in cases of
insolvency.
217.2. In
determining the number of years of imprisonment and the amount of fine, the
court shall consider the value of the infringing materials that the defendant
has produced or manufactured and the damage that the copyright owner has
suffered by reason of the infringement: Provided,
That the respective maximum penalty stated in Section 217.1. (a), (b) and
(c) herein for the first, second, third and subsequent offense, shall be
imposed when the infringement is committed by:
(a)
The circumvention of effective technological measures;
(b)
The removal or alteration of any electronic rights
management information from a copy of a work, sound recording, or fixation of a
performance, by a person, knowingly and without authority; or
(c)
The distribution, importation for distribution,
broadcast, or communication to the public of works or copies of works, by a
person without authority, knowing that electronic rights management information
has been removed or altered without authority.
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property
Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
217.3. Any
person who at the time when copyright subsists in a work has in his possession
an article which he knows, or ought to know, to be an infringing copy of the
work for the purpose of:
(a)
Selling, letting for hire, or by way of trade offering
or exposing for sale, or hire, the article;
(b)
Distributing the article for purpose of trade, or for
any other purpose to an extent that will prejudice the rights of the copyright
owner in the work; or
(c)
Trade exhibit of the article in public, shall be
guilty of an offense and shall be liable on conviction to imprisonment and fine
as above mentioned. (Sec. 29, P.D. No. 49a)
SEC. 218. Affidavit
Evidence. - 218.1. In an action under this Chapter, an
affidavit made before a notary public by or on behalf of the owner of the
copyright in any work or other subject matter and stating that:
(a)
At the time specified therein, copyright subsisted in
the work or other subject matter;
(b)
He or the person named therein is the owner of the
copyright; and
(c)
The copy of the work or other subject matter annexed
thereto is a true copy thereof.
The affidavit shall be admitted in evidence in any
proceedings under this Chapter and shall be prima
facie proof of the matters therein stated until the contrary is proved, and
the court before which such affidavit is produced shall assume that the
affidavit was made by or on behalf of the owner of the copyright.
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
218.2. In an action under this
Chapter:
(a)
Copyright shall be presumed to subsist in the work or
other subject matter to which the action relates if the defendant does not put
in issue the question whether copyright subsists in the work or other subject
matter; and
(b)
Where the subsistence of the copyright is established,
the plaintiff shall be presumed to be the owner of the copyright if he claims
to be the owner of the copyright and the defendant does not put in issue the
question of his ownership.
(c)
Where the defendant, without good faith, puts in issue
the questions of whether copyright subsists in a work or other subject matter
to which the action relates, or the ownership of copyright in such work or
subject matter, thereby occasioning unnecessary costs or delay in the
proceedings, the court may direct that any costs to the defendant in respect of
the action shall not be allowed by him and that any costs occasioned by the
defendant to other parties shall be paid by him to such other parties. (n)
SEC. 219. Presumption of Authorship. - 219.1. The natural person whose
name is indicated on a work in the usual manner as the author shall, in the
absence of proof to the contrary, be presumed to be the author of the work.
This provision shall be applicable even if the name is a pseudonym, where the
pseudonym leaves no doubt as to the identity of the author.
219.2. The person or body corporate whose name appears
on an audiovisual work in the usual manner shall, in the absence of proof to
the contrary, be presumed to be the maker of said work. (n)
SEC. 220. International Registration of Works. - A statement
concerning a work, recorded in an international register in accordance with an
international treaty to which the Philippines is or may become a party, shall
be construed as true until the contrary is proved except:
220.1. Where the
statement cannot be valid under this Act or any other law concerning
intellectual property.
220.2. Where the
statement is contradicted by another statement recorded in the international
register. (n)
SEC. 220A. Disclosure of Information. - Where any
article or its packaging or an implement for making it is seized or detained
under a valid search and seizure under this Act is, or is reasonably suspected
to be, by an authorized enforcement officer, in violation of this Act, the said
officer shall, wherever reasonably practicable, notify the owner of the
copyright in question or his authorized agent of the seizure or detention, as
the case may be.
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
CHAPTER XVIII.
SCOPE OF
APPLICATION
SEC. 221. Points of Attachment for Works under Sections 172 and
173. - 221.1. The
protection afforded by this Act to copyrightable works under Sections 172 and
173 shall apply to:
(a)
Works of authors who are nationals of, or have their
habitual residence in, the Philippines;
(b)
Audio-visual works the producer of which has his
headquarters or habitual residence in the Philippines;
(c)
Works of architecture erected in the Philippines or
other artistic works incorporated in a building or other structure located in
the
Philippines;
(d)
Works first published in the Philippines; and
(e)
Works first published in another country but also
published in the Philippines within thirty days, irrespective of the
nationality or residence of the authors.
221.2. The
provisions of this Act shall also apply to works that are to be protected by
virtue of and in accordance with any international convention or other
international agreement to which the Philippines is a party. (n)
SEC. 222. Points of Attachment for Performers. - The
provisions of this Act on the protection of performers shall apply to:
222.1.
Performers who are nationals of the Philippines;
222.2.
Performers who are not nationals of the Philippines
but whose performances:
(a)
Take place in the Philippines; or
(b)
Are incorporated in sound recordings that are
protected under this Act; or
(c)
Which has not been fixed in sound recording but are
carried by broadcast qualifying for protection under this Act. (n)
SEC. 223. Points of Attachment for Sound Recordings. - The
provisions of this Act on the protection of sound recordings shall apply to:
223.1. sound
recordings the producers of which are nationals of the
Philippines; and
223.2. sound
recordings that were first published in the Philippines.
(n)
SEC. 224. Points of Attachment for Broadcasts. - 224.1. The provisions of this Act
on the protection of broadcasts shall apply to:
(a)
Broadcasts of broadcasting organizations the
headquarters of which are situated in the Philippines; and
(b)
Broadcasts transmitted
from transmitters
situated in
the
Philippines.
224.2.
The provisions of this Act shall also apply to performers who, and to
producers of sound recordings and broadcasting organizations which, are to be
protected by virtue of and in accordance with any international convention or
other international agreement to which the
Philippines is a party. (n)
CHAPTER XIX.
INSTITUTION
OF ACTIONS
SEC. 225. Jurisdiction. -
Without prejudice to the provisions of Subsection 7.1(c),
actions under this Act shall be cognizable by the courts with appropriate
jurisdiction under existing law. (Sec. 57, P.D. No.49a)
SEC. 226. Damages. - No damages
may be recovered under this Act after the lapse of four (4) years from the time
the cause of action arose. (Sec. 58, P.D. No. 49)
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
CHAPTER XX.
MISCELLANEOUS
PROVISIONS
SEC.
227. Ownership of Deposit and Instruments. - All copies deposited
and instruments in writing filed with the National Library and the Supreme
Court Library in accordance with the provisions of this Act shall become the
property of the Government. (Sec. 60,P.D. No. 49)
SEC. 228. Public
Records. - The section or division of the National
Library and the Supreme Court Library charged with receiving copies and
instruments deposited and with keeping records required under this Act and
everything in it shall be opened to public inspection. The Director of the
National Library is empowered to issue such safeguards and regulations as may
be necessary to implement this Section and other provisions of this Act. (Sec.
61, P.D. No. 49)
SEC. 229. Copyright Division Fees. - The
Copyright Section of the National Library shall be classified as a Division
upon the effectivity of this Act. The National Library shall have the power to
collect, for the discharge of its services under this Act, such fees as may be
promulgated by it from time to time subject to the approval of the Department
Head.
(Sec. 62, P.D. 49a)
SEC. 230. Adoption of
Intellectual Property (IP) Policies. - Schools and universities shall adopt
intellectual property policies that would govern the use and creation of
intellectual property with the purpose of safeguarding the intellectual
creations of the learning institution and its employees, and adopting
locally-established industry practice fair use guidelines. These policies may
be developed in relation to licensing agreements entered into by the learning
institution with a collective licensing organization.
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property
Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
PART V.
FINAL
PROVISIONS
SEC. 231. Equitable Principles to Govern Proceedings
In all inter partes proceedings in the Office under this Act, the
equitable principles of laches, estoppel, and acquiescence where applicable,
may be considered and applied. (Sec. 9-A, R.A. No. 165)
SEC. 232. Reverse Reciprocity of Foreign Laws Any
condition, restriction, limitation, diminution, requirement, penalty or
any similar burden imposed by the law of a foreign country on a Philippine
national seeking protection of intellectual property rights in that country,
shall reciprocally be enforceable upon nationals of said country, within
Philippine jurisdiction. (n)
SEC. 233. Appeals 233.1. Appeals
from decisions of regular courts shall be governed by the Rules of Court.
Unless restrained by a higher court, the judgment of the trial court shall be
executory even pending appeal under such terms and conditions as the court may
prescribe.
233.2. Unless expressly provided in this Act or
other statutes, appeals from decisions of administrative officials shall be
provided in the Regulations. (n)
SEC. 234. Organization of the Office; Exemption from
the Salary Standardization Law and the Attrition Law - 234.1. The Office shall be organized within one (1)
year after the approval of this Act. It shall not be subject to the provisions
of Republic Act. No. 7430.
234.2. The Office
shall institute its own compensation structure: Provided, That the Office shall make its own system to conform as
closely as possible with the principles provided for under Republic Act No.
6758.
(n)
SEC. 235. Abolition of the Bureau of Patents,
Trademarks, and Technology Transfer. The Bureau of Patents,
Trademarks, and Technology Transfer under the Department of Trade and Industry
is hereby abolished. All unexpended funds and fees, fines, royalties and other
charges collected for the calendar year, properties, equipment and records of
the Bureau of Patents, Trademarks and Technology Transfer, and such personnel
as may be necessary are hereby transferred to the Office. Personnel not
absorbed or transferred to the Office shall enjoy the retirement benefits
granted under existing law, otherwise, they shall be paid the equivalent of one month basic salary for every year of service, or the
equivalent nearest fractions thereof favorable to them on the basis of the highest
salary received. (n)
SEC. 236. Applications Pending on Effective Date of Act
236.1 All applications for patents
pending in the Bureau of Patents, Trademarks and Technology Transfer shall be
proceeded with and patents thereon granted in accordance with the Acts under
which said applications were filed, and said Acts are hereby continued to be
enforced, to this extent and for this purpose only, notwithstanding the
foregoing general repeal thereof: Provided,
That applications for utility models or industrial designs pending at the
effective date of this Act, shall be proceeded with in accordance with the
provisions of this Act, unless the applicants elect to prosecute said
applications in accordance with the Acts under which they were filed.
236.2. All
applications for registration of marks or trade names pending in the Bureau of
Patents, Trademarks and Technology Transfer at the effective date of this Act
may be amended, if practicable to bring them under the provisions of this Act.
The prosecution of such applications so amended and the grant of registrations
thereon shall be proceeded with in accordance with the provisions of this Act.
If such amendments are not made, the prosecution of said applications shall be
proceeded with and registrations thereon granted in accordance with the Acts
under which said applications were filed, and said Acts hereby continued in
force to this extent for this purpose only, notwithstanding the foregoing
general repeal thereof. (n)
SEC. 237. Preservation of Existing Rights Nothing
herein shall adversely affect the rights on the enforcement of rights in
patents, utility models, industrial designs, marks and works, acquired in good
faith prior to the effective date of this Act. (n)
SEC. 238. Notification on Berne Appendix The Philippines shall by proper
compliance with the requirements set forth under the Appendix of the Berne
Convention (Paris Act, 1971) avail itself of the special provisions regarding
developing countries, including provisions for licenses grantable by competent
authority under the Appendix. (n)
SEC. 239. Appropriations The funds
needed to carry out the provisions of this Act shall be charged to the
appropriations of the Bureau of Patents, Trademarks, and Technology Transfer
under the current General Appropriations Act and the fees, fines, royalties and
other charges collected by the Bureau for the calendar year pursuant to
Sections 14.1 and 234 of this Act. Thereafter such sums as may be necessary for
its continued implementations shall be included in the annual General
Appropriations Act. (n)
SEC. 240. Repeals. 240.1. All Acts
and parts of Acts inconsistent herewith, more particularly Republic Act No.
165, as amended; Republic Act No. 166, as amended; and Articles 188 and 189 of
the Revised Penal Code; Presidential Decree No. 49, including Presidential
Decree No. 285, as amended, are hereby repealed.
240.2. Marks
registered under Republic Act No. 166 shall remain in force but shall be deemed
to have been granted under this Act and shall be due for renewal within the
period provided for under this Act and, upon renewal, shall be reclassified in
accordance with the International Classification. Trade names and marks
registered in the Supplemental Register under Republic Act No. 166 shall remain
in force but shall no longer be subject to renewal.
240.3. The provisions of this Act shall apply to
works in which copyright protection obtained prior to the effectivity of this
Act is subsisting: Provided, That the
application of this Act shall not result in the diminution of such protection.
(n)
SEC. 241. Separability If any
provision of this Act or the application of such provision to any circumstances
is held invalid, the remainder of the Act shall not be affected thereby. (n)
SEC. 242. Effectivity This Act shall
take effect on 1 January 1998.
(n)
(As amended by Republic Act No.10372 or an Act Amending
certain provisions of Republic Act No. 8293 otherwise known as the Intellectual
Property Code of the Philippines, and for other Purposes)
Approved,
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