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Patent Law Federal Law of 1970 as last amended by the Law of May 23 1984 amending the Patent Law and the Law Introducing Patent Treaties
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| (Federal Law of 1970, as last amended by the Law of May 23, 1984, amending the Patent Law and the Law Introducing Patent Treaties) |
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Exceptions to Patentability 2
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Right to a Patent 4 and 5
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Right of the Inventor to be Named 20
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Relationship of Co-Patentees 27
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Duration of the Patent 28
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Patentee’s Obligation to Comply with the Law 30 to 32
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Entry in the Patent Register 43
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Entries Relating to Disputes 45
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Declaration of Nullity 48
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Declaration of Lack of Title 49
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Declaration of Dependence 50
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II. Patent Authorities and Institutions
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Scope of the Patent Office’s Activity 57
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Services and Information Provided by the Patent Office 57a and 57b
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Location and Composition of the Patent Office 58 and 59
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Structure of the Patent Office 60 and 61
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Appeals against Decisions of Sections 70 to 73
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Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber (Obersier Patent-und Markensenat) 74 and 75
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Representatives of the Parties 77
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Prohibition of Unauthorized Legal Representation (Winkel-schreiberei) 78
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Patent Register, Patent Documents 80
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Samples of Deposited Microorganisms 81a
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Administrative and Disciplinary Penalties (Ordnungs- und Mutwillensstrafen) 82 to 84
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Filing of an Application 87
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Requirements of the Application 89 to 92
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Division of the Application 92a
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Preliminary Examination 99
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Rejection of Applications 100
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Publication and Laying Open for Public Inspection 101
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Procedure for Opposition 103
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Assessment of the Evidence and Decision 104
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Application for a Patent by Opponent 106
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Grant of Patent Without Opposition Proceedings 107
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Letters Patent—Publication 109
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Patents of the Federal Authorities 110
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Requirements for Applications and Processing Thereof 111a
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Making an Application 112
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Form and Contents of the Application 114
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Third Party Intervention 114a
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Procedure for Applications Challenging a Patent 115
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Preliminary Proceedings 116
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Termination of Proceedings Without a Hearing 117
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Public Notice of the Hearing 118
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Evidence and the Taking of Evidence 120
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Deliberation and Vote 121
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Contents of the Decision 123
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Announcement of the Decision 124
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Assistance of the Courts 126
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Proceedings before the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber 140 to 146
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IV. Violation of Patents and Obligation to Provide Information
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Action for Elimination 148
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Publication of the Judgment 149
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Liability of Several Persons 153
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Preliminary Questions 156
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Treatment of Prejudicial Proceedings by the Nullity Section and the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber 157
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Provisional Patent Protection 158
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Willful Patent Violation 159
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Actions under Private Law 160
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Characteristics of Criminal Prosecution 161
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Application for Declarations 163
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Infringing Objects Exempted from Elimination and Withdrawal 164
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Obligation to Provide Information Regarding Patent Protection 165
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Application Fee and Annual Fee 166
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Fee for Amendments of the Description 167
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Method of Payment of Fees 169
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Additional Provisions of the Law of May 23, 1984
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(2) The following in particular shall not be regarded as inventions:
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1. discoveries, scientific theories and mathematical methods;
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3. schemes, rules and methods for performing mental acts, playing games or doing business, and programs for computers;
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Exceptions to Patentability
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2. Patents shall not be granted:
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1. for inventions the publication or exploitation of which would be contrary to public policy or morality, provided that the exploitation shall not be deemed to be so contrary merely because it is prohibited by law;
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2. for methods for treatment of humans by surgery or therapy and diagnostic methods practiced on humans; this shall not apply to products, in particular substances or compositions, for use in any of these methods;
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3. for plant or animal varieties (animal races) or essentially biological processes for the production of plants or animals.
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3.— (1) An invention shall be considered to be new if it does not form part of the state of the art. The state of the art shall be held to comprise everything made available to the public by means of a written or oral description, by use, or in any other way, before the priority date of the application.
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1. an evident abuse in relation to the applicant or his legal predecessor or
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2. the fact that the applicant or his legal predecessor has displayed the invention at an official, or officially recognized, international exhibition falling within the terms of the Convention on International Exhibitions, BGBl. No. 445/1980, in its currently applicable version.
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4.— (1) Only the inventor or his successor in title shall have a right to the grant of a patent. Until otherwise proved, the first person to apply for a patent shall be regarded as the inventor. No subsequent application shall give a right to a patent if the invention is already the subject of a patent or of an earlier application which leads to the grant of a patent. If these circumstances apply only in part, the later applicant shall only have a right to the grant of a patent made subject to corresponding restrictions.
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(2) Where an improvement or other extension of an invention which is already protected by a patent or for which a patent has been applied for and is eventually granted is the subject of an application by the original patentee or by his successor in title, the patentee or his successor in title may apply either for an independent patent for such improvement or extension or for a patent of addition dependent on the original patent.
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5.— (1) The first applicant shall not, however, be entitled to the grant of a patent where he is not the inventor concerned or the inventor’s successor in title, or where the essence of his application has been usurped from the descriptions, drawings, models, implements or installations of a third person or from a process used by him and where, in the first case, the inventor or his successor in title or, in the second case, the injured party opposes the grant of the patent.
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(2) In the case of several persons who have usurped an invention one after the other, an earlier possessor shall, in the event of dispute, have priority over a later possessor.
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(2) “Employees” shall mean salary and wage earners of every kind.
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(2) Where a person is employed under public law, the employer may, even in the absence of agreement with the employee, claim the service inventions of the latter or the right to use such inventions, such right being also binding on third parties. In such cases, the following subsection, Sections 8 to 17 and 19 shall apply mutatis mutandis.
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(3) A service invention shall be one made by an employee which, by reason of its subject matter, falls within the activities of the enterprise in which the employee works, provided that:
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(a) the activity which has led to the invention forms part of the employee’s employment obligations; or
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(b) the invention was suggested to the employee by his work in the enterprise; or
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(c) the invention was greatly facilitated by the use of the experience or resources of the enterprise.
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8.— (1) An employee shall be entitled to special and fair remuneration where his invention becomes the property of his employer or subject to the employer’s right of use.
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(2) Where, however, the employee has been appointed expressly to create inventions in the employer’s enterprise and where this was in fact his principal activity and where such activity has led to an invention, the employee shall be entitled to special remuneration only to the extent that the higher pay received under the employment contract in view of his inventive activity does not constitute adequate remuneration.
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(a) the economic importance of the invention for the enterprise;
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(b) the possible exploitation of the invention in Austria or abroad;
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(c) the role which the suggestions, experience, preparatory work or resources of the employer’s enterprise or service instructions have played in bringing about the invention.
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10.— (1) On the application of one of the parties, the remuneration may subsequently be varied, on an equitable basis, where the circumstances on which the amount was assessed have fundamentally changed. Payments received by the employee on the basis of an earlier assessment shall, however, in no case be refunded. Similarly, payments already made or becoming due on the basis of an earlier assessment may not subsequently be supplemented, except where remuneration is in the form of a non-recurring payment.
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(2) The employee may also claim a variation of remuneration where the invention has been transferred by the employer to a third party, if the proceeds obtained by the employer through such transfer are manifestly disproportionate to the remuneration paid by the employer or if the employer continues to participate in the exploitation of the invention and obtains a return manifestly disproportionate to the remuneration paid to the employee.
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(2) The remuneration shall be assessed in the same way where the employer has transferred the invention to a third party or has otherwise alienated it, unless the employee has given his consent to such transfer or alienation and fails to prove that such transfer or alienation was only a pretense.
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(2) Where the employee fails to make such notification, he shall be liable to the employer, without prejudice to the employer’s right to the invention, for damages in respect of the loss, which shall also include loss of earnings. Where the employer fails to claim the invention or expressly does not claim it, the invention shall belong to the employee.
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13.—(1) The employer and the employee shall be under an obligation of secrecy with regard to inventions which are the subject of the notification and claim referred to in Section 12(1).
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(2) The employee’s obligation of secrecy shall lapse where:
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(3) The lapse of the obligation of secrecy in accordance with the above provision shall not affect any obligation of secrecy which may otherwise be incumbent on the employee.
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(5) The obligation of secrecy shall not preclude the employer and the employee from applying for a patent or from taking other steps to protect their rights.
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(6) Any employer or employee violating the obligation of secrecy shall be liable to remedy the loss sustained by the other party, including loss of earnings.
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14. Where an employer who has paid remuneration to an employee for a service invention finds that another of his employees had in fact made the invention or had contributed to it, the employer shall be under no obligation to pay the remuneration to the rightful claimant—either in its entirety or in proportion to the rightful claimant’s share in the invention, provided that the employer has made payment in good faith and that the invention also belongs to him under his legal relationship with the rightful claimant.
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15.—(1) Where an employer has made an agreement with an employee in respect of a service invention, he may at any time wholly or partially waive his rights to the invention. In such case, the employee may request the transfer to him of the rights to the invention that have been waived.
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(2) Where the employer waives the whole of his rights to an invention, the obligation to pay remuneration shall cease from the moment that the waiver is made. In the event of partial waiver, the employer may ask for a corresponding reduction of the remuneration to the extent that the rights transferred to the employee are capable of being assessed separately.
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(3) The obligation to pay remuneration in respect of the period preceding the waiver shall remain unaffected.
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Right of the Inventor to be Named
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20.—(1) The inventor shall be entitled to be named as such.
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(2) The right may not be transferred or inherited. Renunciation of the right shall have no legal effect.
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(4) The claim to be named as inventor may be made by the inventor, the applicant for a patent or the patentee. Where several persons are entitled to make the claim, the claimant shall produce proof that the other persons entitled agree, unless the claim is made jointly by all those entitled. Where a person other than the one already named as inventor is to be named as such in addition or in place of the person so named, proof of the consent of the person already named shall also be produced.
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(5) Where the applicant, patentee or person already named as inventor refuses his consent, the claim shall be submitted to the Patent Office within the periods set out below, on pain of inadmissibility:
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(b) for claims against the person already named as inventor, within one year of the publication of that person’s name as inventor (subsection (3)).
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21.—(1) Anyone acting as a representative before the Patent Office or before the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber shall be resident in Austria. He shall evidence his authority by producing the original written power of attorney or a certified true copy thereof. If several persons are so authorized, each one of them may act as a representative.
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(2) If a representative acts without a power of attorney, the action taken by him in the proceedings shall be valid only if he submits a regular power of attorney within the time limit prescribed therefor.
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(3) Persons having neither residence nor establishment in Austria may claim rights under this Law before the Patent Office and before the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber only if they are represented by a representative as defined in Section 77.
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(4) The locality in which the representative is resident, or in the absence of a representative, the locality in which the Patent Office is established shall, in matters concerning the patent, be deemed the residence of a patentee not resident in Austria.
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(5) For each application, a separate power of attorney shall be submitted. This shall also apply where a representative is empowered to act in respect of a patent already granted.
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(6) Where an attorney at law or a patent attorney has been authorized to act as a representative before the Patent Office, his power of attorney shall entitle him as of right to exercise all rights deriving from this Law before the Patent Office and before the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber. In particular, he may file an application for a patent, restrict or withdraw such application, file opposition, lodge and withdraw applications or appeals to be dealt with by the Nullity Section, conclude friendly settlements, accept service of documents of every kind, receive payment of official fees and of the cost of proceedings and representation from the adverse party and appoint a representative.
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(8) If the representative is, in addition, to have power to surrender, in whole or in part, a patent granted, he must be expressly authorized to do so. A power of attorney for the transfer of a patent application or a patent itself must be publicly certified.
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22.—(1) A patent shall vest exclusive authority in the patentee to produce the subject of the invention industrially, to put it on the market, to offer it for sale or to work it.
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(2) If the patent has been granted for a process, it shall be effective also in respect of the products manufactured directly by that process.
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23.—(1) A patent shall not be effective against a person who, at the time of filing, had already begun, in good faith, to use the invention in Austria or had made the necessary arrangements for doing so (prior user).
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(2) A prior user may work the invention for the needs of his own business in his plant or workshops or in those of others.
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(3) This right may be inherited or transferred only together with the business.
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(4) The prior user may request written recognition of his right by the patentee. If such recognition is refused, the Patent Office shall, on application, determine the claim in accordance with the procedure for disputes as to title. Recognition of the right shall be entered in the Patent Register at the request of the claimant.
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24.—(1) The military authorities shall have the right, in agreement with the Federal Minister of Commerce, Trade and Industry, to use for their needs, or to arrange for their agents to use, inventions necessary for national defense relating to military weapons, explosives or ammunition, fortifications or warships and no rights under a patent shall be effective against them.
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(2) If no agreement on fair compensation is reached between the patentee and the military authorities with the assent of the Federal Minister of Finance, a decision on the matter shall be taken by the Federal Minister of Finance in agreement with the Federal Minister of Commerce, Trade and Industry and the military authorities.
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(3) The exercise of the military authorities’ right of use shall not be affected by the course of the above negotiations.
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25. To the extent that the subject matter of a patented invention is covered by a monopoly of the Federal Republic, the patent shall not be effective against the monopoly administration. The monopoly administration may work the invention for its own needs in its own plant or workshops or in those of others.
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26. The patent shall have no effect in the case of vehicles and fittings of vehicle which enter Austria only temporarily in the course of their use in traffic.
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Relationship of Co-Patentees
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27.—(1) A patent applied for by several persons as participants in the same invention shall be granted without any determination of each person’s share.
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(2) The legal relationship of the co-patentees shall be governed by civil law.
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(3) The right to permit third persons to work the invention shall in case of doubt be exercised only by all the co-patentees jointly. Each co-patentee may, however, bring proceedings for infringement.
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(2) Patents of addition shall expire at the same time as the principal patent. A patent of addition may, however, be expressly maintained as an independent patent where the principal patent is revoked, annulled or surrendered. A patent of addition that has become independent shall replace the principal patent as regards its term and the due date and amount of the annual fees.
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29.—(1) If the interest of the armed forces or of public welfare or any other compelling federal interest requires an invention in respect of which a patent has been applied for or granted to be used in whole or in part by the federal authorities or to be made accessible for general use, the federal authorities may expropriate either such patent or the right to the use of the invention in whole or in part pursuant to a decision of the competent Landeshauptmann and on payment of fair compensation. The federal authorities shall use the invention, or render it accessible for general use, in accordance with the decision approving expropriation. The Landeshauptmann of the Land in which the applicant or patentee is resident (or established) (Section 21(4)) shall be competent to take such decision. Where several Länder are involved, the authority applying for expropriation shall have freedom of choice.
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(2) In the event of imminent danger, the federal authorities may, with the provisional consent of the competent Landeshauptmann, immediately use the invention or make it accessible for general use on the basis of an application for expropriation, subject to a subsequent decision approving expropriation.
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(3) The Federal Republic shall pay fair compensation to the patentee and to persons entitled to use the invention, where such right is withdrawn.
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(4) With regard to the amount of compensation, every endeavor shall be made to reach agreement with the applicant for a patent or the patentee and the persons entitled to its use, if any. If no agreement is reached, the decision in any action for compensation shall be rendered by the courts, if necessary after hearing expert opinion. The patentee shall have the right to choose one of the experts. In all cases, the amount of compensation shall be determined solely on the basis of the effects of the expropriation of the patent arising in Austria.
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(5) The negotiations over the amount of compensation shall have no delaying effect on the exercise of the rights claimed by the federal authorities with regard to the invention, in favor of itself or the general public.
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(6) Where expropriation of a patent is applied for, interested parties whose names are entered in the Patent Register shall be immediately notified by the Patent Office.
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Patentee’s Obligation to Comply with the Law
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30. A patent shall not release the patentee from the obligation to comply with the law.
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(2) Where there are several applicants for a patent, the privilege shall be enjoyed only by those who are entitled to not less than one-fourth of the rights arising from the application.
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(3) Where the privilege is claimed by a person at a time when the rights arising from the application are shared by not more than four persons, it shall be assumed, until proved otherwise, that such person fulfills the requirement in subsection (2).
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(2) When providing that information, the person applying for a patent or the patentee shall state his place of residence, his nationality and the place where the invention is to be worked.
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33.—(1) The rights arising from a patent application or the patent itself shall be inheritable. Such rights shall not pass to the State.
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(2) Such rights may be transferred to others, either wholly or in shares, by a legal act, by a court order or by a transfer pro mortis causa.
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34. The right to a patent may be subject to a lien.
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35. The patentee may permit third parties to work the invention, in all the territory covered by the patent or part thereof. Such right (license) may or may not be made exclusive.
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36.—(1) The patentee of an invention of considerable commercial or industrial significance which cannot be worked without the use of an invention patented earlier (the earlier patent) may apply for a license to work the earlier patent. Where such license is granted, the earlier patentee may demand a license to work the later patent, to the extent that the two inventions are in fact connected.
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(2) Where a patented invention is not worked sufficiently in Austria and where the patentee has not taken all steps required for such working, any person may apply for a license to work the patent for the purposes of his business, unless the patentee shows that the invention could not reasonably have been worked, or could not reasonably have been worked to a greater extent, in Austria owing to the difficulties of exploitation.
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(3) If a license for a patented invention is required in the public interest, any person may apply for such license for the purposes of his business.
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37. A license granted by a patentee or by the Patent Office may not, without the consent of the patentee, be transferred inter vivos by the licensee except with the business for which it was granted. The license shall not pass on death to the licensee’s successor in title unless he continues the same business.
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38. Where an agreement relating to the grant of a license to work a patented invention or to the obligation to grant such license contains a term — or where there is a collateral term — preventing the licensee from exercising a given activity, or limiting such activity, which does not relate solely to the manner or the extent of working the invention, the Federal Minister of Commerce, Trade and Industry may declare such term to be wholly or partially invalid if the interests of the national economy, national defense, public safety or other general interest are prejudiced thereby.
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Entry in the Patent Register
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(2) The date of acquisition of license rights shall be governed by the civil law. License rights shall be binding on third parties only on their entry in the Patent Register.
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(3) The order of priority of the rights referred to shall be determined by the order in which applications for entry have reached the Patent Office, provided that such applications lead to entry.
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(4) Applications received at the same time shall have the same priority.
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(6) An application for such entry shall be accompanied by the instrument on which the entry is to be based. For inter vivos transactions, the instrument shall contain the essential particulars relating to the legal act and a declaration of the person alienating his right that he consents to the entry in the Patent Register. An instrument other than a public instrument shall bear the duly certified signature of the person alienating his right. In place of the original, a duly certified copy of the instrument may be submitted.
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(7) The application for entry and the instrument shall be examined by the Patent Office as to form and substance.
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44. Any person acquiring a patent shall assume the charges encumbering it which have been entered in the Patent Register, or duly filed for entry, at the time when the application for entry of the transfer is submitted to the Patent Office.
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Entries Relating to Disputes
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(2) The effect of entry of a dispute shall be to render the subsequent decision fully effective against third parties whose own entry in the Register was effected after the Patent Office had received the application for entry of the dispute.
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46.— (1) A patent shall expire:
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1. not later than completion of the maximum duration if the annual fees are paid in time;
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2. if the annual fee is not paid in time;
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3. if it is surrendered by the patentee.
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(2) Where the surrender relates only to certain parts of the patent, the patent shall remain valid with regard to the other parts, provided that these parts may still constitute the subject of an independent patent.
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(2) Revocation may not be ordered until two years have elapsed since the grant of a compulsory license became effective. A patent may not be revoked if the patentee shows that, owing to the difficulties of exploitation, he cannot reasonably work the invention in Austria or have it worked at all or to a greater extent.
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48.— (1) A patent shall be declared null and void if
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2. the invention is the subject matter of a patent belonging to a prior applicant,
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3. the patent does not disclose the invention in a manner sufficiently clear and complete for it to be carried out by a person skilled in the art,
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(b) that he has been prevented from making such new deposit by an unforeseen or unavoidable event and has subsequently made such deposit within two months of the cessation of the impediment.
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(2) Where the grounds for nullity apply only in part, the declaration of nullity shall take the form of a corresponding limitation of the patent.
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Declaration of Lack of Title
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49.— (1) A patentee shall be declared to lack title if it is shown:
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2. that the essence of the application had been usurped from the descriptions, drawings, models, implements or installations of a third person or from a process used by him.
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(3) In the first case, only the person entitled to the grant of the patent shall have a right to a declaration of lack of title; in the second case, only the injured person. A claim against a bone fida patentee shall become statute-barred after three years from the entry of the patent in the Patent Register.
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(4) Claims to compensation and reimbursement arising from a declaration of lack of title shall be governed by the civil law and be the object of civil proceedings.
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(5) Where the applicant’s claim is allowed, he may, within a month of the decision becoming final, request transfer of the patent to himself.
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(6) Failure to request such transfer in time shall be regarded as equivalent to surrender of the patent.
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Declaration of Dependence
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50. Any patentee may apply to the Patent Office for a declaration that the industrial application of a patented invention entails the full or partial use of his invention. Such application shall be dealt with by the Patent Office under the procedure relating to disputes as to title.
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51. Retaliatory measures may be provided for by order of the Federal Government against citizens of a foreign State which accords no protection or imcomplete protection to the inventions of Austrian citizens.
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52.— (1) Where a time limit is not prescribed by law or statutory order, the competent authority shall lay down such time limit having regard to the requirements and the nature of each case unless the President of the Patent Office has issued provisions on the time limits concerned (Section 99(6), second sentence).
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(2) The time limits laid down by law or statutory order may not, unless provided otherwise, be extended. The time limits laid down by an authority may be extended.
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53.— (1) Time shall begin to run from the event which is determined by law or statutory order as the starting point or, unless otherwise provided when the time limit was fixed, from the date when the decision or order fixing the time limit was served on the party or, where the decision or order was not served but published, from the date of publication.
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(2) Where a time limit is expressed as a number of days, the day of the event, the service or the publication which has been fixed as the starting point shall not be counted.
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(3) Where a time limit is expressed in weeks, months or years, the period shall end with the end of the day of the last week or the last month which in name or number corresponds to the date on which time began to run. Where there is no such day in the last month, the period shall end at the end of the last day of that month.
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54.— (1) The beginning and the end of the period shall be unaffected by Sundays and holidays.
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(2) If the end of the period falls on a Sunday or holiday or on a working day on which the mail reception center of the Patent Office is closed, the next working day shall be deemed to be the last day of the period.
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(3) In the case of submissions posted in Austria, the days during which such documents are in the post shall not be counted for the purposes of the time limit. This shall not apply in cases where the day of receipt of the submission by the Patent Office is the operative date (Sections 102(1) and 129(3)).
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55. Where different time limits are laid down for one and the same action to be taken by several persons concerned in the same case, the action may be taken by any one of those persons as long as the time limit laid down for one of them has not been passed.
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56. Where a submission comprises several industrial property rights (patents, marks, industrial designs) or several applications relating to such rights, separate applications may be asked for in respect of each or some of the rights in question, a time limit being set for filing. The separate applications shall, if they have been received in time, be deemed to have been received on the day on which the original submission was received. Section 163(4) shall remain unaffected.
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| II. Patent Authorities and Institutions |
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Scope of the Patent Office’s Activity
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(2) It may be agreed, in the interests of international cooperation in the field of industrial property, that the Patent Office provide, to States or international inter-governmental or non-governmental organizations dealing with matters in that field, technical or legal assistance free of charge or on reimbursement of reasonable costs. Provision of services free of charge may only be agreed where this is in the public interest, or is for the purposes of development aid or incurs only insignificant costs.
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Services and Information Provided by the Patent Office
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57a. The Patent Office shall, on request, furnish written reports
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1. on the state of the art in relation to a specific technical problem (searches) and
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57b.— (1) The Patent Office shall develop the services and information it provides and shall, in particular, exploit its documentation in order to make it more accessible and shall furnish to the public improved information in all relevant areas.
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(2) The President of the Patent Office shall lay down the fees for the provision of services and information by the Patent Office in a schedule of charges based on the principle of cost coverage. In those cases in which the service provided is primarily in the public interest, a lower charge or no charge may be provided for.
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(3) The schedule of charges and any amendments thereto shall be notified in the Patent Gazette (Section 79).
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Location and Composition of the Patent Office
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58.— (1) The Patent Office shall be located at Vienna. It shall constitute an externally independent office as far as its conduct of business is concerned.
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(2) The Patent Office shall consist of the President, his deputies and the required number of legally qualified and technically qualified members.
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(3) There shall be both permanent and temporary members.
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(4) The President and his deputies shall possess the qualifications prescribed for permanent members of the Patent Office, at least one of them possessing the qualifications of a legally qualified member and one those of a technically qualified member.
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(5) The President, his deputies and the permanent members shall be salaried federal civil servants.
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(6) The President, his deputies and the members of the Patent Office shall be appointed by the President of the Federal Republic.
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(7) The President shall be in charge of the Patent Office. In addition to the tasks conferred on him by this Law, he shall direct the Office’s activities and supervise the staff.
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(8) The President of the Patent Office shall also be responsible for the industrial property service of the Federal Ministry of Commerce, Trade and Industry.
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59.— (1) The legally qualified temporary members shall have completed studies in law and political science and shall have held, for not less than five years, a position for which completion of such a course was required. In addition, they shall have engaged in research or practical work in the field of the protection of industrial property.
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(2) The technically qualified temporary members shall have completed a course at a technical university or a course in mathematics or science in the philosophy faculty of a university, and shall have held, for not less than five years, a position for which completion of such a course was required. In addition, they must have special knowledge of a particular technological subject.
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(3) Only Austrian citizens of moral integrity and having full legal capacity may be appointed as temporary members. For the duration of their membership, they shall have the title of “Counsellor to the Patent Office” (Rat des Patentamtes).
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(4) The temporary members shall be appointed for a period of five years; they may be reappointed. The appointment shall in no case prevent voluntary withdrawal on permanent retirement.
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(5) A temporary member shall cease to hold office if he loses Austrian citizenship, if his legal capacity is restricted, if he is condemned to more than one year’s imprisonment as a result of a willfully committed indictable act or if he is convicted of an indictable offense committed with a view to enrichment.
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(6) Temporary members who are not civil servants shall take the following oath before the President prior to exercising their duties: “I solemnly promise that I shall perform my duties conscientiously and impartially and that I shall observe secrecy on anything that may come to my knowledge in the course of my official duties.” This oath shall be signed. Where an official is reappointed, it shall be sufficient to remind him of the oath he has taken.
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(7) The temporary members shall receive special-duty pay, in accordance with their assignment:
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(a) rapporteurs (joint rapporteurs) shall receive from 8 to 40 percent; and
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(b) assessors shall receive from 4 to 15 percent of the monthly salary of a federal civil servant in active service in salary step 1 of service grade VIII of the General Administration whenever they are called upon to serve. Special-duty pay shall be determined by the President of the Patent Office for all cases completed in one calendar year, with due regard to the time and labor required for each case.
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(8) A temporary member shall be asked to serve only where in a particular case no permanent member is available for the subject in question or where his inclusion appears necessary having regard to the special nature of the case, the speed with which it has to be settled or the burden of work on the permanent member concerned.
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Structure of the Patent Office
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60.— (1) The Patent Office shall have:
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(a) Technical Sections and at least one Legal Section,
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(b) at least one Appeal Section,
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(c) at least one Nullity Section,
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(d) at least one President’s Section,
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(3) Without prejudice to the duties assigned to these Sections in other provisions,
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(d) the President’s Section shall be responsible for matters reserved to the President.
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(4) For the discharge of the Patent Office’s functions, the President shall also establish the necessary sub-offices.
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(5) The President may place a sub-office directorate in charge of sub-offices.
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61.— (1) The President shall subdivide the whole field of technology into classes of patents; if required, further subdivisions shall be made. He shall assign questions relating to the various classes or subdivisions to the Technical Sections in accordance with existing requirements.
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(2) The President shall establish the various Sections for every year in advance. In the course of any one year, the composition of Sections may be altered only for important reasons, such as a change in the establishment, leave, illness, excessive work load or insufficient occupation of particular members.
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(3) The Technical Sections shall consist of technically qualified permanent members and the Legal Sections shall consist of legally qualified permanent members. The Appeal and the Nullity Sections shall consist of legally qualified and technically qualified members. The members of the Technical Sections and Legal Sections may be required to act at the same time in the Appeal and the Nullity Sections.
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(4) The President shall appoint a Section head from among the members of each Technical Section, Legal Section and President’s Section to direct and supervise their activities; he shall also appoint the requisite number of chairmen from among the permanent members of the Appeal and the Nullity Sections and make arrangements for others to act as their deputies. The President and his deputies shall be members of the Appeal Section and, if they are legally qualified members, also of the Nullity Section, as chairmen.
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(6) The allocation of activities in the Technical Section and Legal Section shall be determined by the President for every year in advance on the advice of the Section head. Short-term changes in the allocation of business necessitated by illness or other events preventing attendance shall be arranged by the head of the Technical Section or Legal Section.
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(7) In the Appeal and the Nullity Sections, the various cases shall be assigned to the chairmen by the President. In this connection, the work load and, in the case of the technically qualified chairmen, also the particular technical subject shall be taken into account.
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Decisions in the Sections
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62.— (1) Decisions and orders within the purview of the Technical Section shall be the responsibility of the competent technically qualified member (examiner), unless otherwise provided in subsections (3) and (4).
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1. where patentability is to be decided from the standpoint of industrial applicability or on the basis of Section 2;
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3. where a decision is to be taken on applications to be dealt with under Section 110;
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4. where a decision is to be taken on priority rights claimed on the basis of international agreements and the legal foundations of such claims are in doubt or are contested;
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5. where witnesses or experts have been heard or an inspection has been carried out;
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6. where a decision is to be taken regarding an administrative or disciplinary penalty.
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63.— (1) For final decisions of the Appeal and the Nullity Sections, the following members shall participate in addition to the chairman:
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1. in the Appeal Section, three technically qualified members and one legally qualified members, except in the case of appeals against decisions of a legally qualified member, in which case three members of the Section, two of whom being legally qualified members, shall take the decision;
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2. in the Nullity Section, by two legally qualified members and three technically qualified members.
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(2) The chairmen of the Nullity Section shall be legally qualified, and the chairmen of the Appeal Section shall be legally qualified in the case of appeals against the decisions of a legally qualified member.
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(3) In the case of interim decisions in the Appeal and the Nullity Sections, the presence of three members shall be sufficient.
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64.— (1) Decisions of the board shall be taken by a simple majority. The chairman shall have the deciding vote.
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(2) The decisions of the Patent Office shall be accompanied by a statement of reasons; they shall be in writing and served on all parties. If an application to the Technical Section or Legal Section is approved in its entirely in ex parte proceedings, the statement of reasons may be dispensed with.
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(3) All decisions of the Patent Office shall be taken in the name of the “Austrian Patent Office,” with the addition of the Section or sub-office; in matters reserved to the President, the words “the President” should be included. Written communications shall be dated and signed. Collective decisions shall be signed by the President. The signature may be replaced by an official certification to the effect that the copy delivered is a true copy of the document in question and that the original contains the signature required. Further particulars shall be settled by order.
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(4) Communications issued with automated aids need not be signed or certified.
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65.— (1) The instructions required to prepare the decision to be adopted by the Technical Section shall be issued by the examiner. Except insofar as merely formal defects in submissions or the description submitted are to be corrected, a record shall always be taken where parties, witnesses or experts are heard.
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(2) Decisions shall be taken on the basis of a request substantiated in writing. Amendments adopted at the meeting shall be entered in the text of the request. If the decision departs in essentials from the terms of the request, the text shall be drawn up afresh in consultation with the member on whose draft the decision was based.
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(3) Each member of the board may change his opinion up until the end of the meeting. If, as a result, the decision adopted no longer commands a majority, a new vote shall be taken.
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(4) If there is no unanimity in the board regarding the decision or the reasons given for it, a record shall be taken showing the views of the members of the board and the result of the vote taken. Otherwise an entry regarding the vote signed by all members of the board shall be sufficient.
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66. Boards dealing with cases before the Appeal and the Nullity Sections shall be set up by the chairmen separately for each case. In this connection, the work load and, in the case of the technically qualified members, the subject of the particular case shall be taken into account.
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67.— (1) At all hearings, the members of the Appeal and the Nullity Sections shall wear official dress. An order shall be issued to regulate further the kind of dress and the wearing of such dress.
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68. The business routine in the Sections and sub-offices shall be regulated by an order of the President of the Patent Office, having regard to the need for orderly and rapid work and to the tasks of the Patent Office. The order shall also determine how applications may be made direct to the Patent Office and when they are deemed to have reached the Office. Care shall be taken to ensure that the time of receipt of the application is precisely identified by day, hour and minute.
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69. Against the decisions of the President falling within his responsibility under this Law, an appeal shall lie only if it is expressly provided for in this Law. Section 2(2) of the Law on Administrative Procedure (BGBl No. 54/1958) shall not, however, be affected.
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Appeals Against Decisions of Sections
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70.— (1) The decisions of the Technical Section and Legal Section shall be subject to appeal.
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(2) Against the decisions (interim and final) of the Appeal Section, no further appeal shall lie to a higher authority nor may an appeal be made to the Administrative Court.
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(3) The final decisions of the Nullity Section may be the object of an appeal to the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber as the highest authority.
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(4) No separate appeal shall lie against the rapporteur’s acts preparing a decision of a Technical Section or Legal Section or a decision of the Appeal or the Nullity Section.
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(5) Similarly, no separate appeal shall lie against interim decisions of the Nullity Section, but an amendment of the rapporteur’s preparatory acts may be applied for in all three Sections and an amendment of interim decisions of the Appeal or the Nullity Section may be applied for in the Section concerned.
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71.— (1) The appeal shall contain a formal application and shall be lodged with the Patent Office within two months from the date when the decision was served; it shall be substantiated not later than one month after the expiration of this period.
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(2) If the appeal is contested, the submission intended for the Patent Office shall be accompanied by one copy of the appeal and its attachments for each adverse party.
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(4) In proceedings before the Appeal Section, new facts and evidence shall be admissible only to support or refute facts and evidence submitted in time in the first instance; this shall not preclude restriction or clarification of the application for protection. The parties shall be given an opportunity to state their views on the new facts submitted and on the result of any new hearing of witnesses.
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72.— (1) For appeals against decisions of the Technical Section, the chairman shall appoint a rapporteur from among the voting members. The rapporteur shall be either a technically qualified permanent member or, if the chairman is not himself legally qualified, the legally qualified member, according to whether technical or legal questions are of greater importance for the decision. For appeals against decisions of the Legal Section, the chairman shall appoint a legally qualified permanent member as rapporteur.
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(2) The rapporteur shall send a copy of the appeal with its attachments to the adverse party, requesting him to submit his objections within a period of not less than one month, which may be extended in justifying circumstances. The rapporteur shall also make the necessary arrangements for the rendering of the decision or for the hearing, particularly in view of any further written submissions which may be necessary or for the taking of evidence offered by the parties.
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(3) At the end of the preliminary proceedings, the rapporteur shall submit the files to the chairman with a written statement of all points of fact and law on which the decision essentially depends, with a statement of his conclusions (report). The chairman may request the rapporteur or any other voting member to supplement the report.
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73.— (1) The chairman may order a hearing in the appeal. He shall order a hearing if the applicant or any adverse party so requests. The hearing shall not be in public. Section 119(2) shall apply.
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(2) The chairman shall open the proceedings and satisfy himself as to the identity of all persons appearing; he shall examine their status as parties and any powers of attorney. He shall conduct the hearing, without permitting digression or unnecessary detail, in such a way as to ensure the parties right to be heard.
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(3) The chairman shall determine the order in which the parties are to be heard, the evidence is to be taken, and the results of earlier evidence or findings are to be submitted and discussed. The chairman or any members of the board appointed by him shall study the case on points of fact and law with the parties.
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(4) A record of the hearing shall be taken by a registrar. The record shall show the place, time and subject of the hearing and, in addition, the names of the members of the board, the registrar, the parties, their representatives, the witnesses heard and the experts, and also a summary of the contents and course of the proceedings. The record shall be signed by the chairman and the registrar.
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(5) The Appeal Section shall reach its own decision, having complete discretion as to its evaluation of the facts and evidence submitted. The Appeal Section may substitute its opinion for that of the Technical Section or Legal Section, both as to the decision and to the reasons given. It may accordingly amend the decision appealed against in any way.
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(7) The rapporteur shall draw up the decision on the basis of the resolutions adopted. If his views are those of the minority, he shall draw up the text of the decision in consultation with the member on whose draft the decision was based. The chairman may, however, assign the preparation of the text or parts thereof to another member of the board.
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Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber
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(Oberster Patent- und Markensenat)
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74.— (1) The Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber shall be established in Vienna for appeals against final decisions of the Nullity Section of the Patent Office. The Chamber shall consist of a president, a vice-president, no less than eight other legally qualified members and the required number of technically qualified members as counsellors. During their term of office they shall have the title of “Counsellor of the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber” (Rat des Obersten Patent- und Markensenates).
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(2) The president and the vice-president shall be or have been members of the Supreme Court as president or vice-president, or chairman of a division.
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(3) The legally qualified members shall have completed a university course in law and political science and shall have held, for not less than 10 years, a position for which completion of such a course was required. In addition, they shall have engaged in research or practical work in the field of the protection of industrial property. At least three members shall be judges; at least three members shall be lawyers of Group A in the Federal Ministry of Commerce, Trade and Industry or legally qualified permanent members of the Patent Office.
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(4) The technically qualified members shall have completed a course at a technical university or a course in mathematics or science in the philosophy faculty of a university; they must have special knowledge of a particular technological subject and be not less than 30 years old.
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(5) Only Austrian citizens of moral integrity and having full legal capacity may be appointed members.
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(6) The members of the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber shall be appointed by the President of the Federal Republic for a period of five years; they may be reappointed. The appointment shall in no case prevent a member from voluntarily leaving the Chamber on permanent retirement.
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(7) The term of office shall end on December 31 of the year in which a member reaches the age of 70. It shall also end if a member loses Austrian citizenship, if his legal capacity is restricted or if he is condemned to imprisonment for more than one year for a willfully committed indictable act or if he is convicted for an indictable act committed with a view to enrichment.
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(8) Members who are not civil servants shall take the following oath before the President prior to exercising their duties: “I solemnly promise that I shall perform my duties conscientiously and impartially and that I shall maintain secrecy on anything that may come to my knowledge in the course of my official duties.” This oath shall be signed. Where an official is reappointed, it shall be sufficient to remind him of the oath he has taken.
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(9) The members shall be independent in the exercise of their duties and shall not be bound by instructions from anyone. The decisions of the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber may not be annulled or amended by administrative procedures.
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(10) The registrars shall be appointed by the Federal Minister of Commerce, Trade and Industry from among civil servants of Group A in that Ministry or in the Patent Office.
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(11) The president of the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber as the head of that authority shall be entitled to annual special-duty pay at the rate of 250 percent and the vice-president at the rate of 125 percent of the monthly salary of a federal civil servant in active service in salary step 1 of service grade IX of the General Administration.
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(12) All other members and registrars shall receive special-duty pay in accordance with their assignment:
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(a) rapporteurs (joint rapporteurs) shall receive 8 to 40 percent;
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(b) assessors shall receive 4 to 15 percent; and
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(c) registrars shall receive 3 to 10 percent
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of the monthly salary referred to in subsection (11) whenever they are called upon to serve. Special-duty pay shall be determined by the Federal Minister of Commerce, Trade and Industry on the advice of the president at the end of the calendar year for all cases completed during the calendar year in question, with due regard to the time and labor required for each case.
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(13) The secretarial work of the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber shall be performed by the Patent Office.
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75.—(1) The Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber shall deliberate and take decisions under the chairmanship of the president or—if he is unable to attend—of the vice-president in boards consisting of five members: a chairman, two legally qualified members and two technically qualified members. The chairman shall ensure that the board includes at lest one lawyer of Group A and at least one judge. The lawyer shall be the rapporteur, if necessary, the chairman may appoint further members of the board as joint rapporteurs.
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(2) At all hearings, the members of the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber shall wear official dress. An order shall regulate further the kind of dress and the wearing of such dress.
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76.—(1) Members of the Patent Office and of the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber may not take part:
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1. in cases in which they are themselves parties or in which they have a joint interest or joint liability with one of the parties or may be liable to one of the parties;
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2. in cases concerning their spouses or persons directly related to them through consanguinity or marriage or who are related by marriage or who are their relatives by a collateral line up to the fourth degree or who are related by marriage up to the second degree;
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3. in cases concerning their foster parents, foster chiledren, wards or children committed to their care;
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4. in cases in which they represent or have represented one of the parties or have had or may have a material advantage or loss;
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5. in appeals against a decision in which they have taken part;
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6. for any other major reason likely to place their complete impartiality in doubt.
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(2) Members of the Patent Office may not take part in decisions of the Appeal Section regarding the filing of a patent or a patent itself if they have taken part in the Technical Section’s decision regarding publication or grant of the patent. Nor may they take part in an appeal against the decision of a Technical Section of which they are members or to which they have been assigned as legally qualified members.
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(3) Members of the Patent Office may not take part in the work of the Nullity Section and members of the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber may not take part in the work of the Chamber:
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1. in proceedings concerning applications for a declaration of nullity of a patent if they have taken part in the decision regarding the publication or the grant of the patent;
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(5) If, in proceedings before the Patent Office or the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber, a party pleads a reason for the exclusion of a member, the procedure set out in subsection (4) shall be followed.
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Representatives of the Parties
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Prohibition of Unauthorized Legal Representation
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78.—(1) Anyone who, in matters relating to the protection of inventions,
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1. prepares written documents or drawings for proceedings before Austrian or foreign authorities,
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3. represents parties before Austrian authorities, or
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4. offers to conduct any of the activities referred to in items 1 to 3,
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without being authorized in Austria to represent parties professionally in such matters, shall be guilty of unauthorized legal representation and shall be liable to a fine not exceeding 3,000 schillings imposed by the district administrative authority.
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(2) The special provisions relating to the treatment of unauthorized legal representation and opinions in the ordinary courts shall not be affected.
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79.—(1) The Patent Office shall issue periodically a Patent Gazette (Patentblatt) containing the public notices provided for in this Law and the orders issued by the President of the Patent Office, except where they are solely intended for the sections and sub-offices of the Patent Office. Unless otherwise provided, these orders shall take effect on the day after the issue of the Patent Gazette containing the notice concerned.
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(2) The preparation and publication of the Gazette shall be regulated by an order of the Federal Minister of Commerce, Trade and Industry.
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Patent Register, Patent Documents
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80.—(1) The Patent Office shall keep a Patent Register which shall specify the number, title, application date and priority, if any, of patents granted, and the name and residence of patentees and their representatives. The following shall also be recorded: the beginning of the period in force, lapse, revocation, declarations of nullity, lack of title, or expropriation of the patent, designation of the inventor, declaration of independence of a patent of addition, declaration of dependence, transfers of patents, licenses, liens and other rights in rem relating to a patent, employer’s rights under Section 7(2), rights of prior user (Section 23), restoration of rights (Section 133), decisions relating to declarations under Section 163, disputes, and indications under Section 156(2).
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(2) The descriptions, drawings, models and samples relating to existing patents and also the applications and documents on which entries in the Register are based shall be kept by the Patent Office.
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(3) Any person may inspect the Patent Register.
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(4) The Patent Office shall publish the descriptions, claims, drawings and abstracts of granted patents, on condition that they are open to public inspection, in separate printed copies (patent specifications). The specification shall state the citations that the Patent Office has taken into consideration in assessing the patentability of the filed invention.
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(5) Institutions under public law may, at their request, be provided free of charge with one copy each of all patent documents (Patentschriften), issued as from the time of receipt of the respective request, when those documents are made accessible to the public.
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(6) On request, the Patent Office shall issue certified copies of entries in the Register.
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81.—(1) The parties to proceedings may inspect documents relating to those proceedings.
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(5) The right to inspect documents shall also include the right to make copies thereof. Copies shall be certified by the Patent Office on request.
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(6) Information and official certificates as to the date and title of an application, the name of the applicant and of his agent (if any), the serial number, the class of patents to which it belongs, any priority claimed, the serial number of the application on which priority is based, whether an independent patent or a patent of addition is sought, where applicable the person named as inventor, whether the application is still pending, and whether and to whom the rights under the application have been transferred shall be supplied to any person.
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(7) Records of deliberations and parts of files relating solely to internal administrative transactions shall not be accessible to the public.
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Samples of Deposited Microorganisms
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Administrative and Disciplinary Penalties
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(Ordnungs- und Mutwillensstrafen)
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82.—(1) The person who is in charge of deliberations or an examination or who is taking evidence or hearing a witness shall ensure that order and propriety are maintained.
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(2) Persons who disrupt official proceedings or violate the rules of propriety by misconduct shall be reprimanded; if the reprimand is not needed, they may, after a prior warning, be deprived of the right to speak, or removed and ordered to appoint a representative, or sentenced to a fine of 1,000 schillings and, in default, to detention not exceeding three days. In aggravating circumstances, the sentence of detention may be substituted for the fine or imposed in addition.
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(3) The same disciplinary penalties may be imposed on persons who draw up their written submissions in an insulting manner.
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(5) Disciplinary penalties against public authorities who, in the exercise of their duties, act as representatives and are not subject to disciplinary regulations may not take the form of detention. Where public authorities and representatives authorized to act for parties on a professional basis are subject to disciplinary regulations, no disciplinary penalty shall be imposed but the case may be reported to the disciplinary authority in question.
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(6) The imposition of a disciplinary penalty shall not preclude the institution of criminal proceedings for the same action.
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83. Persons who avail themselves of the services of the Patent Office or the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber in an obviously frivolous fashion or make incorrect statements in order to obstruct the proceedings may be sentenced to a fine not exceeding 1,000 schillings and, in default, to detention not exceeding three days. In proceedings where the decision is taken by a board, the board shall decide on the disciplinary penalty.
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86. In case of doubt, where an application has been made by two or more persons not all of whom live in Austria, the Austrian resident whose signature first appears on the application shall be deemed to be authorized to act on behalf of all the interested parties.
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87.—(1) Applications for patents shall be filed at the Patent Office in the written form prescribed. Filing may be effected by hand or by post. There shall be an application fee (Section 166(1)).
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(2) The date of an application’s arrival at the Patent Office shall be regarded as the date of filing.
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87a.—(1) The patent application must disclose the invention in a manner sufficiently clear and complete for it to be carried out by a person skilled in the art.
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(2) If an invention concerns a microbiological process or the product of such process and involves the use of a microorganism which is not available to the public and which cannot be described in the application in such a manner as to enable the invention to be carried out by a person skilled in the art, the invention shall only be regarded as being disclosed as prescribed in subsection (1) if
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1. a culture of the microorganism has been deposited with a depositary authority under the Budapest Treaty not later than the filing date of the application,
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2. the application as filed gives such relevant information as is available to the applicant on the characteristics of the microorganism, and
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3. the depository authority and the file number of the culture deposit are notified to the Patent Office before the decision to publish (Section 101(1)) is taken.
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88. The application shall relate to one invention only or to a group of inventions so linked as to form a single general inventive concept.
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Requirements of the Application
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89.—(1) The application shall contain:
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1. the name and place of business or place of residence of the applicant and, where appropriate, of his representative in Austria;
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2. the request for the grant of a patent;
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3. a short, relevant designation of the claimed invention (title);
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4. a description of the invention;
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6. any drawings required to understand the invention;
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90. Where the application is made through a representative, his power of attorney shall be attached.
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91.—(1) The claims shall define in an exact and differentiated manner the matter for which protection is sought. They shall be supported by the description.
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(2) The abstract shall contain a short version of the disclosure contained in the application. It shall merely serve for use as technical information and may not be taken into account for any other purpose, in particular not for the purpose of interpreting the extent of protection.
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(2) Where no translation is filed within the time limit, the application shall be deemed to have been withdrawn.
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92. The form and content of applications shall be governed in detail by ordinance. Consideration shall be paid thereby to optimum practically and simplicity and to the comprehensibility of the patent specification and also to the needs of printing and publication.
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Division of the Application
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93.—(1) The applicant shall have priority from the date on which his application for a patent was duly filed (Sections 87 to 92).
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(2) From such date he shall have priority over every similar invention the subject of a later application.
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94.—(1) Separate priority for separate parts of the subject matter of the application (partial priorities) may be claimed only on the basis of international agreements. Such partial priorities shall also be admitted where the date of receipt of the application by the Patent Office is decisive for the priority of a characteristic of the subject matter of the application. More than one priority may be claimed for each patent claim.
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95.—(1) The right of priority granted in Article 4 of the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property in its currently applicable form (BGBl. No. 369/1973) must be expressly claimed. The date and country of the application, the priority of which is claimed, shall be indicated (declaration of priority), as well as the serial number of that application.
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(3) If the grant or maintenance of the protected right depends on the validity of the claim to priority, the right of priority must be proved. The evidence required for such proof (evidence of priority) and the time of production shall be laid down by ordinance.
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(4) If the declaration of priority is not made in good time, if evidence of priority is not submitted in good time or if the serial number of the application whose priority is claimed is not notified on official demand within the specified time limit, priority shall be determined in accordance with the filing date of the application in Austria.
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99.—(1) The preliminary examination of the application shall be made by a member of the Technical Section. The examination shall not relate to the financial return to be expected from the invention.
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(2) If the application does not fulfill the requirements laid down, the applicant shall be invited to remedy the defects within a prescribed period.
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(6) The President of the Patent Office may issue guidelines on the principles governing the preliminary examination and on the procedure for such examination by the members of the Technical Section. In particular, he may determine the time limits to be laid down by the Office. In this connection, he shall take account of the need for as rational and careful a preliminary examination as possible and for uniformity in the treatment of applications.
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Rejection of Applications
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(2) Where the application is to be rejected for a reason which was not already communicated to the applicant during the preliminary examination, he shall be given an opportunity to state his case in regard to that reason within a prescribed period.
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Publication and Laying Open for Public Inspection
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101.—(1) Where the Patent Office considers that the application has been made in proper form and that the grant of a patent is not precluded, it shall order the application to be published (invitation for opposition). This shall be done in the form of a notice in the Patent Gazette giving the name and residence of the applicant and an appropriate brief designation of the subject of the invention (title) and the date of the application.
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(3) The application, together with all attachments, shall be laid open for public inspection in the Patent Office for a period of four months, dating from the day of publication, on all days on which the Patent Office is open for, the filing of patent applications. Where appropriate, the Patent Office may order such laying-open also at other places. An order shall be issued to determine the details of such inspection; in that connection, every endeavor shall be made to ensure adequate and orderly inspection safeguarding, at the same time, the rights of the applicant. The President shall, with due regard to the interests of the service and of the public interested in the inspection, issue regulations for visitors to the place of display. He may prohibit access, for a period not exceeding six months, by persons who infringe the regulations despite written warnings.
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(4) At the applicant’s request, publication and laying-open shall be suspended for a period of three months from the date of the decision regarding publication. Publication and laying-open may also be suspended at the applicant’s request for a period of one year from the date referred to.
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102.—(1) Opposition to the grant of a patent may be made within four months of the date of publication. Such opposition must reach the Patent Office not later than the last day of the period laid down.
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(2) Opposition shall be submitted in writing and in duplicate. It may be based only on the following grounds, which must be substantiated by definite facts:
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1. that the subject matter of the published application is not patentable under Sections 1, 2 and 3;
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2. that the invention is, in whole or in part, already the subject matter of a patent or of an earlier publication which is pending with a view to the grant of a patent;
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3. that the published application does not disclose the invention in a manner sufficiently clear and complete for it to be carried out by a person skilled in the art;
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4. that the subject matter of the published application
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(a) extends beyond the content of the application as filed, or
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(a) that he has made a new deposit of the microorganism and that the deposit is to be dealt with in accordance with Article 4 of that Treaty as if it had been made on the day of the original deposit, or
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(b) that such new deposit had been prevented by an unforeseen or unavoidable event and that it was subsequently made within two months of the cessation of that impediment;
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7. that the essence of the application which is opposed has been usurped from the descriptions, drawings, models, implements or installations of a third party or from a process used by that party without its consent.
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(4) A copy of the opposition shall be served on the applicant, who may submit his written reply within a period of one month, which may be extended on grounds meriting consideration.
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103.—(1) As soon as the applicant’s reply has been submitted, or the period for its submission has expired, the rapporteur in charge of the case shall issue instructions relating to any further correspondence that may be necessary, the hearing of the parties, the taking of evidence from the parties, the hearing of witnesses and, in general, any other measures required for the establishment of the facts.
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(2) The Law on the Scale of Fees, 1975 (Gebührenanspruchgesetz), BGBl. No. 136/1975, in its currently applicable form, shall be applicable. However, witnesses may only claim reimbursement of costs if their place of residence is in Austria.
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Assessment of the Evidence and Decision
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104. After the preliminary procedure, the Patent Office (Technical Section) shall freely assess the evidence in camera and take its decision on the grant of a patent.
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105. The reimbursement of procedural and representation costs shall be determined by the application, mutatis mutandis, of Sections 40, 41(1) and (3) and 42 to 45 of the Code of Civil Procedure (ZPO).
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Application for a Patent by Opponent
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Grant of Patent Without Opposition Proceedings
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Letters Patent—Publication
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109. When the patent has been finally granted, the Patent Office shall order the entry of the protected invention in the Patent Register, the publication of the grant in the Patent Gazette, the issue of letters patent (Patenturkunde) to the patentee, and the printing and publication of the patent specification.
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Patents of the Federal Authorities
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(2) The duration of such unpublished patents shall be 18 years from the final decision to grant, but with a maximum of 20 years from the date of filing.
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(3) The first annual fee shall be payable before any decision regarding the grant of the patent is taken and within two months after the official notice asking for payment has been served. If no payment is made, the application shall be deemed withdrawn.
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(4) The second and subsequent annual fees shall be payable for each year in advance from the day of the final decision. Payment of these fees shall be governed by the rules which are otherwise applicable regarding payment of annual fees.
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Requirements for Applications and Processing Thereof
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(5) Where the request or an annex is defective, the applicant shall be called upon to remedy the defect within a specified time limit. Where the defect is not remedied, the request shall be rejected by decision. The decision to reject may be appealed from.
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112.—(1) Proceedings for revocation or for a declaration of nullity or lack of title in relation to a patent shall be instituted only on application. However, the Patent Office may ex officio continue any proceedings for revocation or nullity of a patent where such application has been withdrawn.
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(2) Applicants not resident in Austria shall provide security for the costs of proceedings if the defendant so requires. Such request must be made within 14 days of notification of the application, failing which security may no longer be demanded.
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(3) The Patent Office shall determine, at its discretion, the amount of security and set a time limit for the deposit thereof. If security is not furnished in time, the application shall be deemed withdrawn.
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(2) Similarly, applications shall, without further proceedings, be rejected with a statement of reasons where the Nullity Section is not competent to take a decision or where a case has been decided or is still pending.
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(3) Such decisions shall be final.
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Form and Contents of the Application
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114.—(1) The application shall contain a brief presentation of the case in dispute, and it shall set out the request that is being made and the evidence to be submitted.
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(2) Where an application is directed against a single patentee, it shall be submitted with its attachments, in duplicate, to the Patent Office.
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(3) Where an application is directed against several patentees, in addition to the copy intended for the Patent Office, a copy of the application and its attachments shall be supplied to each of the parties concerned.
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114a.—(1) Any person with a legitimate interest having a proceeding, which is in progress between other persons before the Nullity Section or the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber, decided in favor of one of those persons may intervene on behalf of that person (third party intervention). The intervening third party shall have the status of joint litigant (Section 14, Code of Civil Procedure), even if the conditions of Section 20, Code of Civil Procedure, are not present.
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(2) In all other cases, Sections 18 to 20 of the Code of Civil Procedure shall apply mutatis mutandis.
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Procedure for Applications Challenging a Patent
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115.—(1) The chairman shall appoint as rapporteurs one technically qualified permanent member and one legally qualified permanent member.
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(2) The legally qualified rapporteur shall, if the application has been considered well-founded, send a copy, together with copies of the attachments, to the defendant inviting him to submit his reply in writing and in duplicate within a period of not less than one month, which may be extended for reasons meriting consideration.
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(2) In the preliminary proceedings, the entire evidence in the dispute shall be prepared for the hearing so that it may, if possible, be conducted without interruption. In particular, the parties shall be heard or statements shall be obtained from them to ascertain the facts not in dispute, wherever they are not apparent from the evidence submitted.
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(3) The preliminary proceedings shall also include the taking of evidence, such as personal inspection, the hearing of non-local witnesses and time-consuming investigations by experts if the taking of such evidence during the main hearing would considerably complicate or delay that hearing or cause disproportionately high costs or if it is essential to take the evidence immediately.
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(4) Whenever evidence is taken in the preliminary proceedings, the parties shall be summoned. Their failure to appear shall not prevent the evidence from being taken.
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(7) The chairman may order an extension of the preliminary proceedings with respect to certain clearly specified facts.
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(8) After the reply has been received or the period laid down for its submission has expired and also, if applicable, after the preliminary proceedings have been held, the rapporteur shall submit the files to the chairman with a written statement of the facts and of all points of fact and law relevant to the decision, as well as his conclusions (report). The legally qualified rapporteur shall report on legal questions and the technically qualified rapporteur on technical questions. The chairman may request a rapporteur or other voting member to supplement the report.
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Termination of Proceedings Without a Hearing
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Public Notice of the Hearing
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118.—(1) The chairman shall give public notice of the hearing. The applicant shall receive the reply not later than the time when public notice was given.
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(2) The hearing may, for important reasons, be postponed to another date by the chairman on application or ex officio.
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(3) The parties or their representatives and the witnesses and experts to be questioned during the hearing shall be summoned to attend the hearing.
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(4) Absence of the parties or their representatives shall not prevent the hearing from being held and the decision from being rendered.
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(5) The board shall decide on any application for adjournment during the hearing.
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(2) In addition to the cases set out in Section 172 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the public may be excluded on application for part or all of the hearing if the presence of the public would endanger a major interest of the Federal Republic or a trade secret of one of the parties or of a witness.
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(3) Members of the Patent Office and of the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber and officials of Group A of the Federal Ministry of Commerce, Trade and Industry shall have access to the hearing even where the public is excluded.
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Evidence and the Taking of Evidence
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120.—(1) Unless otherwise provided by this Law, Sections 266 to 283 of the Code of Civil Procedure shall apply mutatis mutandis to the taking of evidence.
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(2) Depositions of witnesses made before the Patent Office and sworn depositions of the parties made before the Patent Office shall be treated as equivalent to depositions made in court.
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(3) The above principles regarding the taking of evidence shall apply both to the preliminary proceedings and to the hearing.
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(4) The Law on the Scale of Fees, 1975, BGBl. No. 136/1975, in its currently applicable form, shall be applicable. However, witnesses may only claim reimbursement of costs if their place of residence is in Austria.
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(5) Disciplinary penalties imposed pursuant to Sections 313, 326, 333 and 354 of the Code of Civil Procedure shall not exceed 1,000 schillings or a three-day detention in default of payment. While evidence is taken during a hearing, disciplinary penalties shall be imposed by the board; during the preliminary proceedings, they shall be imposed by the rapporteur (Section 116(1)). Section 84(1) and (3) shall apply.
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121. The Nullity Section shall deliberate and vote in camera, Decisions to stay proceedings may be taken in writing by circular on condition that no member is opposed.
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(2) Where an application is withdrawn, the applicant shall reimburse the defendant’s costs.
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123. The document setting forth the decision shall contain:
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1. the designation of the Section and the names of the members who took part in the decision;
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2. the designation of the parties, their representatives and agents and the parties case;
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4. the facts of the case, consisting of a brief description of the facts resulting from the hearing, with special reference to the main pleas made by the parties;
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5. the reasons for the decision;
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6. information as to the means of appeal.
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Announcement of the Decision
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124.—(1) The decision, together with the principal reasons for it, shall, if possible, be announced orally immediately after the end of the hearing.
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(2) At all events, the decision and a full statement of the reasons shall be served on the parties as soon as possible.
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125.—(1) A record shall be taken by a registrar of all evidence in the preliminary proceedings and in the hearing. The record shall be signed by the registrar and by the chairman or, in the case of preliminary proceedings, by the rapporteur in charge of taking the evidence.
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126. The courts shall provide their assistance to the Patent Office and the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber.
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127.—(1) Where a decision has wholly or partially revoked or annulled a patent, or declared a patentee to lack title, or where an application for such a decision has been rejected, proceedings which have been terminated may be reopened on the application of a party in the following cases:
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1. where a document on which the decision is based has been forged or falsified;
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2. where the decision is based on a false deposition of a witness or expert or on a perjurious statement of the defendant made during the hearing;
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3. where the decision was obtained through fraud, amounting to a crime, on the part of the representative of the party or the defendant or his representative;
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4. where a member who has taken part in the decision or in an earlier decision on which the decision is based has, to the party’s detriment, committed a violation of his official duties amounting to a crime;
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5. where the decision was based on a finding made during criminal proceedings which has subsequently been upset in a judgment that has become final.
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(2) The application to reopen proceedings may, however, only be made by the parties to the dispute within one year after the decision to be annulled has become final and without prejudice to the rights acquired in the meantime by third parties.
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(3) In particular, persons who have, since the first decision, begun to work the invention or have made arrangements to work it shall acquire the rights of prior user (Section 23).
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(4) The reopening of proceedings shall be decided by the patent authority (Nullity Section of the Patent Office or Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber) which took the challenged decision. Where the application to reopen proceedings is allowed by the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber, the Chamber shall at the same time decide whether proceedings are to be reopened before it or before the Nullity Section.
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(5) An application to reopen proceedings shall have no delaying effect on the execution of the decision.
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128. If the Patent Office has mistakenly entered a patent in the Register as invalid, it shall, after ascertaining the mistake, order the entry to be removed and the removal to be published. Rights of third parties which have in the meantime been acquired in good faith shall be safeguarded in this case as in that of the reopening of proceedings.
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129.—(1) Any person who is prevented by an unforeseeable or unavoidable event from observing a time limit, and is thus prejudiced by the application of a rule relating to the protection of inventions, may apply for restoration of rights. A failure to comply implying a lesser degree of oversight shall not prevent restoration of rights.
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(2) Restoration shall not be granted:
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3. where the time limit for lodging a claim in the ordinary courts has not been observed.
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130.—(1) A decision on the application shall be taken by the Section before which the action omitted was to be taken. If an action before a Technical Section was omitted, the legally qualified member assigned to the Section shall decide the application.
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(2) In matters within the responsibility of the Nullity Section of the Patent Office, decisions shall be taken by the chairman of the Section, from whom an appeal shall lie to the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber in accordance with the relevant provisions. For all other matters within the responsibility of the Patent Office, the other provisions in force shall apply to the manner in which the decision is taken and in which it may be contested.
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131.—(1) The application for restoration shall be filed within two months from the day on which the impediment ceased to exist and, in any case, not later than 12 months from the expiry of the time limit concerned.
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(2) The applicant shall state the facts on which his application is based and, unless they are well known to the authority, he shall produce evidence of them. The action omitted shall be taken at the time the application is made.
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(3) A copy of the application for restoration and its attachments shall be supplied to any adverse party in the case.
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132.—(1) The following procedural fees shall be payable when the application is made:
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(a) where payment of a fee or any action for which a separate fee is payable in addition to stamp duty has been omitted, the fee which was not paid or which is due when the action omitted is taken, in addition to any surcharge applicable;
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(b) in all other cases, the fee payable on filing.
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(2) Half the procedural fee shall be refunded if the application is withdrawn before a decision is taken.
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133.—(1) If the application or the action taken belatedly is defective, the applicant shall be asked to remedy the defects within a prescribed period before a decision is taken.
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(2) In the case of a protected right recorded in a public register, the application and the manner it has been dealt with shall be entered in the Register.
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(3) Any acceptance of restoration shall be published in the Patent Gazette to the extent that it relates to a protected right the extinction of which requires official publication.
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134.—(1) Before a decision is taken, any adverse party in the case shall be given an opportunity to make a submission within a prescribed period (Section 131(3)).
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(2) The applicant shall be ordered to pay the costs incurred by the adverse party in connection with the application (the cost of proceedings and of legal representation) irrespective of whether or not the application is granted.
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135. With the acceptance of restoration, the legal consequences resulting from non-observance of the time limit shall cease to have effect. The authority shall issue appropriate instructions to give effect to the decision.
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137.—(1) Final decisions of the Patent Office and of the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber shall give a right to execution within the meaning of Section 1 of the Regulations on Execution.
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(2) The Patent Office shall ex officio make the necessary entries and deletions in its registers to give effect to its own final decisions and to those of the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber. In the case of collective decisions of the Patent Office, the President shall issue the necessary instructions; in the case of decisions of the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber, this shall be done by the chairman of the Nullity Section. This provision shall also apply to reimbursement of the fees under Section 168(5).
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138.—(1) Any party aggrieved by a final decision of the Nullity Section of the Patent Office may appeal to the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber. Such appeal shall have a delaying effect.
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(2) There shall be no separate remedy against the decisions of the Nullity Section in the course of the preliminary proceedings or of the hearing. Such decisions may be challenged by appeal to the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber only if they have affected the final decision (Section 70).
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(3) The appeal shall be lodged in writing with the Patent Office within two months after the decision has been served. It shall contain a request for review with a statement of reasons.
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(4) The appeal and its attachments shall be submitted in duplicate. Where the appeal is directed against several adverse parties, in addition to the copy intended for the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber, a copy of the appeal and its attachments shall be provided for each of the adverse parties.
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139.—(1) For all matters within the responsibility of the Patent Office concerning appeals to the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber, the Nullity Section shall be competent. Its decisions, which shall be taken in camera, shall be final.
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(2) Where an appeal lodged in time and containing a substantiated request for review has formal defects, the legally qualified rapporteur of the Nullity Section shall impose a time limit for amendment on the appellant. If the defects are remedied within the period prescribed, the appeal shall be considered lodged in due form.
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(4) In all other cases, the legally qualified rapporteur shall send a copy of the appeal document to the party opposing the appeal with the indication that he is free to file a rebuttal of the appeal within two months.
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(5) Where the rebuttal of the appeal has been filed in time, or after expiration of the two-month period without such a rebuttal having been filed, the files shall be submitted to the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber by the legally qualified rapporteur.
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Proceedings before the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber
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(2) The Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber shall not hear further evidence.
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(3) If the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber finds that the Nullity Section has infringed procedural provisions thereby preventing a decision according to law or if the Chamber considers further evidence essential, it shall refer the case back to the Nullity Section.
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142.—(1) The Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber shall render its decision without preliminary proceedings and without a hearing in the following cases:
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1. where the formal defects of the appeal have not been remedied within the period prescribed under Section 141;
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2. where the appellant is not entitled to lodge the appeal;
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3. where the appeal ought to have been dismissed by the Nullity Section (Section 139(3));
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5. where the appeal is against a decision regarding an application for restoration (Section 130(2));
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6. where the appeal is solely against a decision regarding reimbursement of costs (Section 122);
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7. where the appeal is solely based on the claim that an infringement of procedural provisions has prevented a decision according to law or where the documents in the file show that the case must be referred back to the Nullity Section because of the infringement of such procedural provisions.
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(2) Where no final decision regarding an appeal is to be rendered, a decision may also be taken internally without a meeting of the Chamber if the president regards a meeting as unnecessary because of the simplicity of the case. If, in these circumstances, a member of the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber expresses an opinion differing from the rapporteur’s proposal, a meeting shall in any event be held.
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143.—(1) If a party waives his claim to a hearing, if the adverse party does not insist on a hearing within the period prescribed by the rapporteur and if the president does not consider a hearing essential, the case shall be decided in camera.
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(2) After the case has been called, the hearing shall begin with the reading of the rapporteur’s written report. The report shall contain a statement of the principal facts, the content of the appeal and the reply to the appeal; it shall express no opinion as to the decision to be made.
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(3) The appellant and then the adverse party shall at this point be heard. The adverse party shall in any event be entitled to the last word.
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(4) The decision shall be rendered only by those members of the board who took part in the hearing. If there is a change in the membership of the board before a decision is rendered, there shall be a rehearing before the reconstituted board.
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144. The appeal may be withdrawn before the end of the hearing. If the appeal is withdrawn before the hearing, the adverse party shall, if necessary, be allowed a period in which to substantiate a claim to reimbursement of his costs. If no costs are recorded, the rapporteur shall terminate the proceedings. In all other cases, decisions regarding the close of proceedings and the claim to reimbursement of costs, if any, shall be taken in camera.
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145.—(1) The Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber shall render its decision and draw up its statement of reasons by an absolute majority. The chairman shall preside over the deliberations and the vote. He shall take part in the vote like any other member of the board. After the statement of the facts and conclusions by the rapporteur and joint rapporteurs (if any), the chairman shall call upon the voting members to speak in the order in which they have asked for the floor. At the end of the deliberation, he shall put the proposals made to a vote. The chairman shall determine the questions and the order in which they are put to a vote. A member may not refuse to participate in the vote even where he was in the minority over a preliminary question. Before the end of the meeting, any voting member may change his vote.
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(2) The result of the vote shall be recorded by the registrar and shall be signed by the registrar and the chairman. Any voting member may have the reasons for his opinion included in the record of the vote if his opinion was not incorporated in the decision.
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(3) The rapporteur shall draw up the decision to be issued on the basis of the decisions taken. If his views were those of the minority, the chairman may assign the preparation of the text or parts thereof to another member of the board. The chairman shall check the decision prepared to ensure its conformity with decisions taken.
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| IV. Violation of Patents and Obligation to Provide Information |
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147.—(1) Any person who has suffered a violation of one of the rights belonging to him under a patent or has to take action against such a violation may apply for an injunction.
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(2) Injunctions may be issued even where the conditions specified in Section 381 of the Code of Distraint are not met. Where reasonable grounds exist, the court may withdraw an injunction it has issued if the defendant provides adequate security.
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148.—(1) The party having violated the patent shall be obliged to eliminate the circumstances constituting the violation of the Law. The injured party may in particular demand that, at the expense of the infringer, the objects infringing the patent be destroyed, and that the implements, machinery and other means having served solely or mainly for the manufacture of the infringing objects be rendered unusable, insofar as the material rights of third parties are not thereby infringed.
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(2) Where the infringing objects or means specified in subsection (1), above, contain parts of which the continued existence and use by the defendant do not infringe the exclusive right of the plaintiff, the court shall specify those parts in the judgment ordering them to be destroyed or rendered unusable. In the execution of the judgment these parts shall, as far as possible, not be destroyed or rendered unusable if the guilty party pays the cost associated therewith in advance. If it becomes apparent in the course of execution that greater costs would be incurred by making the means of infringement unusable than by destroying them, and if those costs have not been paid in advance by the guilty party, the court that rendered the decision shall, after having heard the parties, order the destruction of the means of infringement. If the patent-infringing circumstances can be eliminated in another way, which involves no or less reduction in value, the injured party may request only measures of that kind. The injured party may, instead of demanding that the infringing objects be destroyed or the means of infringement rendered unusable, demand that the infringing objects or means of infringement be handed over to him by their owner in exchange for adequate compensation not exceeding the cost of their manufacture.
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(3) Execution in matters of elimination shall, where necessary, take place in the presence of an expert for the designation of the objects to be included in the said execution.
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Publication of the Judgment
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149.—(1) In an action for restraint or elimination, the court shall on request grant the successful party, if the latter has a legitimate interest therein, the right to have the judgment published at the expense of the opposing party within a period to be specified in accordance with Section 409(2) of the Code of Civil Procedure. The extent and nature of the publication shall be specified in the judgment.
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(2) Publication shall comprise the judgment. At the request of the successful party, however, the court may decide to publish a text with a content that differs from the judgment in extent or wording or which supplements it. Such request shall be made at the latest four weeks after the judgment becomes legally valid. If the request is not made until after completion of the oral hearing, the decision shall be taken by the first instance court once the judgment has become legally valid.
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(3) The court of first instance shall, at the request of the successful party, specify the costs of publishing the judgment and order the opposing party to repay them.
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150.—(1) The injured party in a case of unauthorized use of a patent shall have a claim on the infringer of appropriate monetary compensation.
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(2) In cases of willful patent violation, the injured party may demand, in the place of appropriate compensation (subsection (1)):
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(a) damages, including the profits of which he has been deprived; or
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(b) surrender of the profits realized by the infringer through the patent violation.
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151. The infringer shall be obliged to draw up accounts for the benefit of the injured party and to have their accuracy verified by an expert. Where such verification reveals a higher amount than that resulting from the accounts, the cost of the verification shall be borne by the infringer.
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Liability of Several Persons
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155. In the case of a patent for a process for the manufacture of a new substance, any substance with the same composition shall, pending proof of the contrary, be regarded as having been manufactured according to the patented process.
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156.—(1) The validity or effectiveness of a patent on which an infringement action is based may be judged separately by the court as a preliminary question, subject to subsection (3).
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(2) The court of first instance shall send to the Patent Office in respect of every judgment ruling on the validity or effectiveness of a patent a copy confirming the legal force of the decision, for attachment to the patent grant files. A notation shall be made in the Patent Register concerning such a judgment.
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(4) Where the court proceeding has been interrupted on account of a procedure pending before the Patent Office, the court shall, after the decision on the preliminary question has come into full force, continue the proceeding at the request of one of the parties on the basis of the decision on the preliminary question.
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(5) Where the validity or effectiveness of a patent has been assessed by the Patent Office or the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber in a way that differs from that of the court hearing the dispute, this shall give grounds for a request for a new hearing (Section 530(1) of the Code of Civil Procedure); Section 532(2) of the Code of Civil Procedure shall apply mutatis mutandis in respect of jurisdiction and Section 544(1) of the Code of Civil Procedure shall apply mutatis mutandis to interruption of appeal proceedings; the time limit for appeal (Section 534(1) of the Code of Civil Procedure) shall be calculated from the day on which the decision as to the validity or effectiveness of the patent becomes legally valid.
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Treatment of Prejudicial Proceedings by the Nullity Section and the Supreme Patent and Trademark Chamber
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1. The procedure shall be handled rapidly.
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2. The receiving department shall immediately confirm to the party having filed a suspension decision, by means of the certifying copy of the relevant notification (Halbschrift), that he has initiated a proceeding before the Nullity Section, has engaged in a pending proceeding in the capacity of intervening third party, or has filed a decision to suspend in relation to a proceeding in progress.
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4. Proof of statements that has not been submitted to the Patent Office and communicated to the opposing party two weeks at the latest before the oral proceedings may only be taken into consideration if the opposing party has no objection thereto.
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Provisional Patent Protection
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159.—(1) Any person who violates a patent shall be condemned by the court to a fine of up to 360 times the per diem rate for calculating fines (Tagessatz).
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(2) The same penalty shall be imposed on the owner or director of an enterprise who does not prevent the violation of a patent committed by a person working for him or on his behalf in the course of the activities of the enterprise. Where the owner of the enterprise is a legal entity, this provision shall apply to the bodies of the enterprise that have made themselves liable to the serving of an injunction. The enterprise shall be jointly and equally liable with the guilty party for the fines inflicted on the bodies.
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(3) Prosecution shall take place only at the request of the injured party.
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Characteristics of Criminal Prosecution
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161. Criminal prosecution shall be governed by Sections 148, 149, 157 and 158, mutatis mutandis, and also by Section 156 with the following derogations: the period of one month under Section 156(3) shall begin to run on the date on which the criminal court calls upon the guilty party to certify that he has filed an application for nullity with the Patent Office, that a nullity declaration proceeding is already pending between the parties to the dispute, or that he has engaged in such a proceeding in the capacity of intervening third party. If the guilty party does not file the application for nullity in time, the court shall, where it considers nullity of the patent to be possible, make the application for nullity ex officio. The parties in such proceedings shall be the court making the application, the private plaintiff and the guilty party; the costs arising in the course of this proceeding shall be included among the costs of the criminal proceeding.
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(2) Jurisdiction in criminal matters under this Federal Law shall belong to the Vienna Provincial Court for Criminal Matters.
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Application for Declarations
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163.—(1) Any person who is manufacturing on an industrial scale, who brings into circulation, places on sale or uses an object, applies a process on an industrial scale or intends to take such steps may apply to the Patent Office for a declaration against the owner of the patent or the exclusive licensee, stating that the object or the process is not covered either completely or partly by the patent.
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(2) The owner of a patent or the exclusive licensee may apply to the Patent Office for a declaration against any person who is manufacturing on an industrial scale, who brings into circulation, places on sale or uses an object, applies a process on an industrial scale or intends to take such steps, which declaration shall state that the object or the process is covered either completely or partly by the patent.
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(4) The application for a declaration may relate to only one patent, including any patent of addition. The application shall be accompanied by an accurate and clear description of the object or process, and drawings where necessary, in four copies. One copy of the description, and of the drawings if any, shall be attached to the final decision.
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(5) When assessing the extent of protection under a patent that is the subject matter of declaration proceedings, the Patent Office shall take into consideration the contents of the grant file and of the prior art evidenced by the parties.
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(6) The cost of the proceedings shall be borne by the applicant if the opponent has not provoked the application by his conduct and recognizes the claim within the period allowed him for his reply.
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(7) In all other cases, the provisions on the procedure for challenge shall apply to the declaration procedure.
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Infringing Objects Exempted from Elimination and Withdrawal
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(2) The damages caused by such infringing objects to the party having suffered the expropriation shall be taken into consideration for the overall compensation.
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Obligation to Provide Information Regarding Patent Protection
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165. Any person who describes products in a manner likely to give the impression that they enjoy patent protection shall on request provide information regarding the patent on which the description is based.
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Application Fee and Annual Fee
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166.—(1) For every patent and for every patent of addition, an application fee of 600 schillings shall be payable on filing.
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(2) In addition, an annual fee shall be payable for each patent in proportion to the duration of protection requested.
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(3) The annual fee shall be:
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for the first year |
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in addition to a fee of 350 schillings for the sixth and every subsequent page of the description and claims displayed and of 350 schillings for the third and every subsequent sheet of the drawings attached to that description, | |
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for the third year |
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for the fourth year |
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for the fifth year |
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for the sixth year |
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for the seventh year |
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for the eighth year |
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for the ninth year |
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for the tenth year |
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for the eleventh year |
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for the twelfth year |
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for the thirteenth year |
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for the fourteenth year |
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for the fifteenth year |
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for the sixteenth year |
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for the seventeenth year |
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(7) The second and subsequent annual fees may be paid three months before the due date. They shall be paid not later than six months after the due date. Whenever payment is made after the due date, a surcharge of 20 percent of the annual fee shall also be paid. There shall be no surcharge for annual fees which do not become due until notice has been given of the entry of the patent in the Patent Register (subsection (5)).
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(8) Payment of annual fees may be made by any person interested in the patent.
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1. up to 40 lines shall be counted as a page;
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2. representations of formulae shall be counted as full lines in accordance with the area they occupy on the page;
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3. incomplete pages shall be counted as full pages;
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4. an area with maximum dimensions of 34 × 22 cm shall be counted as a sheet.
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168.—(1) The following procedural fees shall be payable:
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(6) Special fees for official copies, publications, confirmations, certifications and extracts from the register may be laid down by ordinance. In the determination of the fees for each particular case, which shall not exceed 270 schillings, account shall be taken of the labor and material required for the official service involved. To the extent to which fees depend on the number of pages or sheets, Section 166(10) shall apply.
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Method of Payment of Fees
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169. The method of payment of the fees charged within the jurisdiction of the Patent Office shall be laid down by order, which shall specify when any payment of fees to the Patent Office is deemed to have been made in time. The order shall be so framed as to take into account, on the one hand, methods of payment available other than payment in cash and, on the other hand, the need for simple and economical verification by the Patent Office.
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170. Letters patent issued under this Law shall be exempt from stamp duty. In all other cases, the provisions regarding stamp duty and direct charges shall remain unaffected.
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Exemption from Payment of Fees
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171.—(1) The President of the Patent Office shall, on request, grant a respite for payment of the application fee and of the annual fee for the first, second and third years, or of some of these fees, up to the due date for the second, third or fourth annual fees if the applicant proves that he is without means or files an application the evident purpose of which is the production or saving of energy. In such cases, the grant of the patent applied for must not appear improbable. The fees in question shall be cancelled if the patent expires by the end of the third year of the period of protection. Failure to pay the deferred application fee shall cause the patent to expire, according to the period of respite granted, at the end of the first, second or third year of protection. These provisions shall also apply to the application fee and the annual fees for patents of addition. The period to be taken into consideration begins on the day of publication of the application for a patent of addition in the Patent Gazette (Section 101).
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(3) When deciding whether the applicant is without means, the President shall take account of the applicant’s present or prospective income, his capital and the charges borne by the capital and the number of persons that he is maintaining.
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173. The following shall be responsible for the implementation of this Law:
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9. in the case of all other provisions of this Federal Law, the Federal Minister of Commerce, Trade and Industry.
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| Additional Provisions of the Law of May 23, 1984 |
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V.—(1) Patents granted prior to the entry into force of this Federal Law (Section VII(1)) shall be declared null and void on request, should it transpire that their subject matter was not patentable under Sections 1 to 3 of the Patent Law 1970 (BGBl. No. 259/1970), or that the invention constitutes the subject matter of a patent belonging to a prior applicant.
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(2) Priority rights within the meaning of Sections 96 to 98 of the Patent Law 1970 (BGBl. No. 259/1970), as amended by the Patent Law Amending Law 1977 (BGBl. No. 349/1977), claimed prior to the entry into force of this Federal Law, shall remain valid.
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(2) Section I.15, where it concerns Section 57b of the Patent Law, Section I.16, 17, 20, 21, 47, 48, 50 to 59 and 65, Section II.4,5,6 and 9, as also Section III shall enter into force at the start of the second month following publication.
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(4) Orders based on the Patent Law as amended by this Federal Law may be issued as from the day following its publication. However, they may not enter into force until this Federal Law enters into force.
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VIII. The following shall be responsible for implementing this Law:
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2. with respect to Section I.50 to 55 and 57, the Federal Minister for Justice;
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3. with respect to Section I.65, the Federal Minister for Commerce, Trade and Industry, in consultation with the Federal Minister for Finance,
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4. with respect to all other provisions, the Federal Minister for Commerce, Trade and Industry.
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