Design in India

Legislation

The Indian law of designs is enshrined in the Designs Act, 2000. The Act seeks to provide for the registration of designs in India. The rights granted under the Act are operative in the whole of india.

What is a Design

A DESIGN is defined as the features of shape, configuration, pattern, ornament or composition of lines or colours applied to any article by any industrial process or means, whether manual, mechanical or chemical, separate or combined, which in the finished article appeal to and are judged solely by the eye, but does not include any mode or principle of construction or anything which is in substance a mere mechanical device and does not include any trademark or property mark or artistic work .

Design Act protects only designs that is aesthetic in nature. They may be decorative elements added to the article or they may be part of very shape or configuration. Novelty and originality are important criteria in a design for registration. In addition, only those designs that are applied to an article by an industrial process will be protected.

Classification*

Almost all jurisdictions including India follow Locarno Classification for registration of design comprising 32 classes, numbered 1 to 31 and an additional class 99 to include articles not falling under the aforesaid 31 classes. Most of the classes are further divided into sub classes. Design applications must be filed in a particular class depending upon the predominant material with which the article is made or is capable of being made.

Rights conferred by registration

The registration of a design confers the proprietor copyright in the design for the period of registration. Copyright means the exclusive right to apply the design in respect of the article for which it is registered.

Who Can Apply For A Design

An inventor or any other person/company assigned by the inventor can apply and obtain the registration for the design.

Filing and Prosecuting Design Applications

An application for design on Form-1 accompanied by four copies of representation of the design and prescribed fee of Rs. 1000/- is filed at one of the four office of the Patent Office located at, Kolkata, Mumbai, Delhi and Chennai. The Designs Office initially provides a filing number and filing date and issues a filing receipt, which is sent to the applicant or his attorney. Thereafter the application is formally examined by the Designs Office. Defects will be communicated to the applicant. Once the application is found to be in order it is accepted and the Designs Office issues the registration certificate.

Duration of registration

The term of a design registration is initially for a period of ten years. The renewal is possible for further period of 5 years.

Remedies For Infringement

It is the sole responsibility of the proprietor to see that his design is not being infringed upon by others. It is the proprietor's duty to file a suit of infringement against the infringer. The reliefs which may be usually awarded in such a suit are –

Injunctons whether interim or final.
Damages.
Use of Design In Foreign Countries

Design rights are granted on a country-by-country basis. An Indian registration provides protection only in India and its territories. If the proprietor of a design wishes to protect a design in other countries, the owner must seek protection in each country separately under the relevant laws.

International design protection

There is no system as yet wherein a single design application is sufficient to protect the design right internationally. However, Paris convention * provides certain privileges to member countries in design registration. A party who files design application in a member state of the Convention, such as India, can within six months of that filing date file applications in other member countries claiming the priority of the first application. If such a design is accepted for registration it will be deemed to have registered from the same date on which the application is made in the home country.

* Paris Convention is the most basic and important multilateral convention relating to intellectual property, including trademarks, of which India is a member. It defined the meaning and scope of industrial property rights protection and established basic principles and rules.

* Classification for the Purposes of the Registration of Designs

According to the Locarno Classification system the Designs Register is divided into 32 classes. The application for design has to be filed in a particular class to obtain protection in that class.

List of classes :

CLASS 1 Foodstuffs.
CLASS 2 Articles of clothing and haberdashery.
CLASS 3 Travel goods, cases, parasols and personal belongings, not elsewhere specified.
CLASS 4 Brushware.
CLASS 5 Textile piecegoods, artificial and natural sheet material.
CLASS 6 Furnishing.
CLASS 7 Household goods, not elsewhere specified.
CLASS 8 Tools and hardware.
CLASS 9 Packages and containers for the transport or handling of goods.
CLASS 10 Clocks and watches and other measuring instruments, checking and signalling instruments.
CLASS 11 Articles of adornment.
CLASS 12 Means of transport or hoisting.
CLASS 13 Equipment for production, distribution or transformation of electricity.
CLASS 14 Recording, communication or information retrieval equipment.
CLASS 15 Machines, not elsewhere specified.
CLASS 16 Photographic, cinematographic and optical apparatus.
CLASS 17 Musical instruments.
CLASS 18 Printing and office machinery.
CLASS 19 Stationary and office equipment, artists' and teaching materials.
CLASS 20 Sales and advertising equipment, signs.
CLASS 21 Games, toys, tents and sports goods.
CLASS 22 Arms, pyrotechnic articles, articles for hunting, fishing and pest killing.
CLASS 23 Fluid distribution equipment, sanitary, heating, ventilation and air-conditioning equipment,
CLASS 24 Medical and laboratory equipment.
CLASS 25 Building units and construction elements.
CLASS 26 Lighting apparatus.
CLASS 27 Tobacco and smokers' supplies.
CLASS 28 Pharmaceutical and cosmetic products, toilet articles and apparatus.
CLASS 29 Devices and equipment against fire hazards, for accident prevention and for rescue.
CLASS 30 Articles for the care and handling of animals.
CLASS 31 Machines and appliances for preparing food or drink, not elsewhere specified.
CLASS 99 Miscellaneous.


PMG ASSOCIATES

Advocates, Patent & Trademark Attorneys
EF7-10, Vasanth Nagar, Palarivattom
Cochin-682 025, INDIA
Tel:+91484 2337856 / 6457856
Fax :+91 484 2347893 / 2337057
E-Mail : info@pmgip.com