1. The utility model
What is the origin of the utility model?
The utility model is a legal institution the origins of which go
back to 1891 in Germany. It was created to fill a gap in the law. The German
patent office only granted patents for inventions that were new and displayed a
certain level of inventiveness. But there were a great number of technical
solutions consisting of industrial creations with little technical or
constructive complexity. They were characterised by the fact that they
generally included a formal modification of objects in common use and simple
tools, where, despite the simplicity of the innovation, there was nonetheless a
technical advance on what was previously known. These "small inventions" were
not patentable, but the German legislature believed that they did not deserve
to remain unprotected seeing as they had an undeniable economic value. That is
why the legislature deemed it necessary to create a specific exclusive right,
different from the patent and suitable for protecting these minor
inventions.
The utility model was soon adopted by other countries, including
Japan, Poland, Spain, Italy, and Portugal. Not only has the utility model
survived in all those countries, but more recently, it has also been introduced
in other states such as Greece (1987), Finland (1991), Denmark (1992) and
Austria (1994).
What sorts of inventions are protected by the utility
model?
Broadly speaking, and excluding some particularities of
different States' laws, the utility model protects technical inventions
(process inventions are excluded from the protection of the utility model) that
fulfil the requirements of novelty and industrial application - some degree of
"inventive step" is also required, but it is much lower than for patents.
What are the requirements for an invention to be
protected by a utility model?
The novelty requirement is the same as for patent law, that is
to say, the invention is novel if it is not included in the worldwide state of
the art when the application is submitted. There are some exceptions, such as
in the case of Spain, where only national novelty is required and Germany,
where only written disclosures made in any part of the world and the use of the
invention within German territory may affect the novelty of a utility
model.
The requirement of an inventive step is defined differently from
the requirement of an inventive step for a patentable invention. In most
legislation on utility models, a lower level of inventive activity is required.
Although it is very difficult to assess the level of inventiveness that
qualifies, there have been attempts to express, in legal terms, the lower
rigour of this requirement with expressions such as "the invention should not
derive from the state of the art in a
very
obvious way for an expert in the field" (instead of the expression
"it should not be deduced in an
obvious
way..." used in patent law
Sometimes the requirement of inventiveness (the "inventive
step") does not apply. For instance, Polish law requires that the model itself
be useful, meaning that a practical aim is achieved through the solution in the
production and use of the products.
Finally, in some countries, for example Germany and Austria,
there is a grace period. That is to say, the printed publication or use of the
invention by the applicant (or by someone acting on the applicant's behalf)
does not affect novelty as long as it has taken place within a period of six
months prior to the date of filing the application for the utility model.
What are the most important characteristics of the
procedure for obtaining a utility model?
Usually, the procedure for obtaining this form of protection is
a simple registration procedure. That is to say, the patent office only
examines the fulfilment of the formal requirements for application. Once this
formal examination has been completed, the body will proceed to grant the
utility model. In this way, the time during which the applicant has provisional
protection is considerably shortened. As a general rule, six months after an
application is filed, a utility model can be obtained, which means full
exclusive rights to the invention are granted.
In Spain, for example, after the formal examination of the
application, there is an opposition stage: a third party with a legitimate
interest may oppose the registration of the utility model by claiming that the
invention lacks one of the requirements for protection established by
law.
In Germany, Austria, Finland and Denmark, the applicant may ask
the relevant patent office to write a "report on the state of the art". From
this report, it can be determined whether the invention is novel and whether it
involves an inventive step. But the report is not legally binding, and the
office must grant utility model registration no matter what the result of the
report may be.
In Portugal, the new Industrial Property Code, approved in March
2003, introduced a patent and utility model granting process that includes the
examination of the protection requirements, even though, as regards utility
models, it is, in principal, a voluntary process. If the utility model
applicant does not request a prior examination, the Patent Office, once it has
examined the formal requirements of the application, will register the utility
model. This will be considered a "provisional utility model". This provisional
title will be made "definitive" once the applicant, at any moment of the
registration procedure, or any third party, once the provisional utility model
has been registered, requests that the patent office carry out a prior
examination. The corresponding examination fees should also be paid. In
addition, if the holder of a provisional utility model intends to enforce its
right against a third party, it will have to request that the Office carry out
a prior examination.
Poland is an exception to this general rule: formal examination
of the application is followed by an examination of the legal conditions for
protection.
In almost all national utility model systems, certain mechanisms
connect the utility model to the patent. These mechanisms exist to prevent
mistakes on the part of the inventor in applying for adequate protection: there
will often be a way to transform a patent application into a utility model
application and vice versa. In other cases, these mechanisms prevent the
invention from being deprived of protection when the inventor does not have a
clear idea of the invention's level of inventiveness. Thus, inventors are
allowed to simultaneously apply for a patent and a utility model for the same
invention, the registration of the utility being granted only if the patent
application fails for want of an inventive step. Finally, in other cases, there
is an attempt to offer the inventor full protection for the invention by
granting a utility model registration while the patent application is pending
(which, as we have said, usually takes a couple of years). This is the case of
the so-called internal priority or derivation.
Again, Poland is an exception. The change of application is only
one-directional, that is to say that during the examination stage or for a
period of two months from the refusal to grant a patent, the applicant may
apply for a utility model protection right. It is not possible, however, to
convert a utility model application into an invention application.
What is the duration of the exclusive right granted for
a utility model?
The duration of the exclusive right granted for a utility model
is, as a general rule, ten years (except in Greece, where the duration is seven
years.)
2. The short-term patent
This is an expedited patent that is cheaper than a traditional
patent. It confers the same rights, but for a shorter period of time, normally
six years.
This option exists in the Netherlands and Belgium. In fact, it
does not mean that a legal right different from a patent is legally recognised
but that respective patent laws allow the option to obtain a patent without
fulfilling all of the procedural requirements necessary to obtain an ordinary
patent, with the proviso that the duration of the exclusive right is then
shorter.
In France, however, there is a specific legal protection called
the
"certificat d'utilité", which can be
applied for independently to protect a technical invention. However, despite
the name, the
certificat d'utilité is a
second-tier patent, different from what we know as a utility model
In the Netherlands and Belgium, as well as in France, protection
by means of a short-term patent or a
certificat
d'utilité is for technical inventions that fulfil the patentability
requirements (novelty, inventive step and industrial application). There is no
lesser inventive step requirement, nor are process inventions excluded.