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Patents constitute (next to
utility models
and semiconductor rights) the best possibility of protection for technical inventions.
The requirements for a national Austrian patent application are identical to those for
European patents filed under the EPC:
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novelty – no general period of grace (apart from
exhibition priorities or abusive disclosures similar to
Art. 55 EPC)
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non-obviousness |
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industrial applicability |
Exceptions from patent protection are analogous to those according to Art. 52 (2),
(4) and 53 EPC (discoveries, scientific theories, mathematical methods, aesthetic
creations, inventions contrary to public order or morality, plant and animal varieties,
surgical, therapeutical or diagnostic methods on humans).
Austria is a member state of the Paris Convention (PC), of the EPC, the PCT and
– as an EU member state – of course of GATT/TRIPs. The patent law and the
court proceedings are therefore in line with the GATT/TRIPs rules.
Patents with validity in Austria may be obtained by national filing, by nationalising
a PCT application in Austria, or by filing an European patent (with Austria being
designated contracting state). All these patents obtained (for the same invention) via
these different routes may exist next to each other; there is no automatic withdrawal or
invalidity of the national patent once the European patent for Austria is validated.
Double protection is therefore possible. Once granted, the patent entitles the patentee
to exclude others from industrially producing, disposing, offering for sale or using,
importing or possessing the subject matter of the invention.
The patentee or his exclusive licensee (the non-exclusive licencee only if he is
expressely authorised thereto) may sue for an injunction, interdict restraining the
infringing act, an order to destroy the infringing objects or the means for producing
them, rendering of accounts, reasonable compensation, damages, publication of the
judgement, etc.. The patentee is furthermore entitled to prompt disclosure of the origin
and channel of distribution of the invention unauthorisedly used by the infringer. A
prosecution of infringer is possible by way of Civil Law as well as (under certain
conditions) by way of Criminal Law.
Of course, it is also possible to obtain injunctive relief in preliminary court
proceedings within a considerable short time (few weeks; however, in exceptional cases
it may take longer or also shorter). In preliminary court proceedings the alleged
infringer usually gets the opportunity to file observations.
In infringement proceedings the claimant has to provide all proofs of the infringing
acts; in Austria, in civil proceedings there are until now no "discovery"
proceedings (as in the USA) or similar proceedings (such as the "Search and Seize
Order", formerly "Anton Piller Order", or the "Saisie de
Contrefaçon"). However, in criminal law proceedings the investigating magistrate
may grant search and seize orders.
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In Austria, patent applications are automatically examined by the Patent Office
without any request being required. In the course of this examination an authorised
examiner of the Austrian Patent Office examines, whether the application satisfies the
exigencies of the relevant provisions of the Austrian Patents Act; in particular, with
regard to patentability of the subject-matter of the application.
The Austrian Patent Office issues a search report, in which prior art documents
(prepublications) are listed, which the examiner believes that they have to be taken
into account for assessing the patentability of the subject-matter of the application.
The search report is issued together with a first Office Action, in the latter the
opinion of the examiner with regard to the invention laid down in the application is
summarised. The issuance of the search report and the first Office Action may be
expected within 9 months after filing the application (however, in case of applications
claiming a (foreign) priority, it may take longer). In urgent cases the examiner can be
contacted and asked to accelerate the examination, which – in most of the
cases – will have the desired effect.
Until the expiry of 18 months from the filing date, or, if a priority is claimed from
the priority date, the content of the patent application is kept secret. After 18 months
the application will be published; in particular, the application documents as filed,
the claims as present and, if already issued, the search report. The publication will be
announced in the Austrian Patent Official Gazette, in which other applications can be
monitored. In any case, from that publication of the application any person may inspect
the file.
In the course of the examination procedure the subject-matter of the application can
be discussed with the examiner and the description, the claims, the drawings and the
abstract can be amended within the disclosure of the application as filed. When the text
of the application is agreed upon with the examiner, the grant of the patent is effected
upon decision. The grant of the application is announced in the Austrian Patent Gazette,
a patent document is published, the patent is entered into the register of the Austrian
Patent Office and the patent proprietor receives a deed.
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Against decisions in opposition proceedings – as well as against decisions in
the examination proceedings –, an appeal within two months can be filed. An appeal
can only be lodged by the adversely affected party, i.e. by that party which has not
achieved what it had requested in the contested decision. Within the open term the
appeal must be filed together with an extensive substantiation of the grounds of appeal
(statement of appeal). Because the appeal proceedings are proceedings revising the
contested decision, the submission of new evidence is restricted to supporting or
confuting the facts brought forward before the first instance (interdiction of
novation). The other side can reply to the statement of appeal, for which another two
months are provided. In contrast to the two-months-term first mentioned for lodging the
appeal, this term is extendable.
Prior to the remittance of the appeal to the authorised appeal department and prior
to the factual start of the appeal proceedings, the first instance, which has issued the
contested decision, can conduct so called preliminary appeal proceedings (similar to the
interlocutary revision in proceedings before the European Patent Office), through which
the appeal may be already settled in the run-up.
About two months (from the filing date of the appeal) are scheduled for the
preliminary appeal proceedings. Preliminary proceedings are finalised with issuing a
preliminary appeal decision. This preliminary decision is a substantial decision which
displaces the contested decision of the first instance if the appeal is not rejected as
being inadmissible. Thereby, the first decision will be amended or reversed. If a party,
nevertheless, wants to carry out the factual appeal proceedings, a request of remittance
is to be furnished within 14 days to the appeal department. Therewith the preliminary
appeal decision is suspended and the factual appeal proceedings may begin.
The appeal proceedings before the appeal department of the Austrian Patent Office
substantially consists of the exchange of writs and a hearing. The decision (final
decision) of the appeal department is contestable, wherein a further instance, the
Supreme Senate for Patent and Trademark Matters (Oberster Patent- und Markensenat OPM)
acts as an independent legal authority. As in opposition proceedings each party to the
proceedings has to bear its own costs.
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In principle, (with the exception of special terms, like the period to claim a
priority, the period for filing an opposition, and the period for lodging an appeal),
all terms within proceedings are extendable upon request. If no instructions have been
received in time, normally, petitions for extension of term are filed, and the new term
will be communicated.
Whatever terms possible, extendable or non-extendable, are monitored by us and
communicated to you on time together with a respcetive advice.
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| Handling of Patent Applications in our firm |
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With an order to file a patent application, a basis text (accompanied by drawings) is
desirable, which – except an order to the contrary exists – is revised,
checked and, if necessary, adapted to the Austrian practice. We communicate the proposal
on the text of the patent application to you which we then amend and broaden according
to your wishes and finish it for its filing. To keep the costs as low as possible, the
application documents are prepared in a way that the best use is made of the permitted
40 lines per page, with a minimal margin left. Thus, the publication fee for publishing
the patent document is kept low. This is because, practically, the highest expenses for
voluminous applications arise when it comes to the publication of the patent
application, which fee depends on the number of pages of the application document
(200,-- EUR + from the 16th page, for each succeeding 15 pages, repectively, 130,-- EUR,
wherein also only partly written pages do count). Therto the document fees are to add
which are to be paid retrospectively when the proceedings has been finalised. These
document duties incur for all petitions being made before the Austrian Patent Office in
the course of the examination procedure, such as, for instance, for each request on an
extension of term. On top of this, the first annual (renewal) fee to be paid (third,
fourth or further annual fee) is to be included, which is due after the issuance of
patent grant.
All Office Actions and copies of the references cited therein are sent to you;
usually, proposals how to respond to the Office Actions are already made when sending
the Office Action to you.
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| Sonn/Alge/Beetz |
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» Chapter Austria, Manual Industrial Property,
Kluwer Law International, 2005
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| Sonn |
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» Chapter Austria, Enforcement of Intellectual Property Rights through Border Measures,
Oxford University Press, 2006
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| Sonn/Pawloy/Alge |
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» Patentwissen leicht gemacht – Wer schützt Daniel Düsentrieb?,
[Patent knowledge – the easy way! Who protects
Gyro Gearloose?], third, extended edition 2005,
Redline Wirtschaft, ISBN 3-636-01210-X
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| Sonn/Alge/Beetz |
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Chapter for Austria in "International
Patent Litigation",
Meller (Ed.) BNA Books, 2004
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NEWS |
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04/2013
Remuneration for employee inventions in a group of companies
» more
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03/2013
Take it e@sy
» more
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02/2013
Broken wings
» more
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