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Industrial Design Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. I-9)

 https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/I-9/FullText.html

Industrial Design Act

(R.S.C., 1985, c. I-9)

(as amended up to November 5, 2018)

An Act respecting industrial designs

Short Title

Short title

1 This Act may be cited as the Industrial Design Act.

R.S., c. I-8, s. 1.

Interpretation

Definitions

2 In this Act,

article means any thing that is made by hand, tool or machine; (objet)

Convention means the Convention of the Union of Paris made on March 20,

1883, including any amendments and revisions made from time to time to

which Canada is a party; (Convention)

country of the Union means(a) a country that is a member of the Union for the Protection of Industrial

Property constituted under the Convention, or

(b) a member of the World Trade Organization as defined in subsection 2(1)

of the World Trade Organization Agreement Implementation Act; (pays de

l’Union)

design or industrial design means features of shape, configuration, pattern or

ornament and any combination of those features that, in a finished article, appeal

to and are judged solely by the eye; (dessin)

kit means a complete or substantially complete number of parts that can be

assembled to construct a finished article; (prêt-à-monter)

Minister means such member of the Queen’s Privy Council for Canada as is

designated by the Governor in Council as the Minister for the purposes of this

Act; (ministre)

prescribed means prescribed by the regulations and, in relation to fees, includes

determined in the manner prescribed by the regulations; (Version anglaise

seulement)

set means a number of articles of the same general character ordinarily on sale

together or intended to be used together, to each of which the same design or

variants thereof are applied; (ensemble)

useful article means an article that has a utilitarian function and includes a

model of any such article; (objet utilitaire)

utilitarian function, in respect of an article, means a function other than merely

serving as a substrate or carrier for artistic or literary matter; (fonction utilitaire)

variants means designs applied to the same article or set and not differing

substantially from one another. (variantes)

R.S., 1985, c. I-9, s. 2; R.S., 1985, c. 10 (4th Supp.), s. 20; 1993, c. 15, s. 12(E), c. 44, s. 161;

2014, c. 39, s. 102.

PART I

Industrial Designs

Registration

Register

3 (1) The Minister shall cause to be kept a register called the Register of

Industrial Designs, which shall contain the prescribed information and statements

in respect of designs that are registered under this Act.

Evidence

(2) The Register of Industrial Designs is evidence of its contents, and a copy of

an entry in the Register is evidence of the particulars of the entry if the copy is

certified as a true copy by the Minister, by the Commissioner of Patents or by an

officer, clerk or employee of the Commissioner’s office.

Admissibility

(3) A copy appearing to have been certified under subsection (2) is admissible in

evidence in any court.

R.S., 1985, c. I-9, s. 3; 1992, c. 1, s. 79; 2014, c. 39, s. 103.

Obvious error

3.1 The Minister may, within six months after an entry is made in the Register of

Industrial Designs, correct any error in the entry that is obvious from the

documents relating to the registered design in question that are, at the time that

the entry is made, in the Minister’s possession.

2015, c. 36, s. 44.

Application to register design

4 (1) The proprietor of a design, whether the first proprietor or a subsequent

proprietor, may apply to register the design by paying the prescribed fees and

filing with the Minister an application that contains

(a) the name of the finished article in respect of which the design is to be

registered;

(b) a representation of the design that complies with any prescribed

requirements; and

(c) any prescribed information or statement.

Substituted applicants

(2) The application shall, subject to any prescribed terms and conditions, be

considered to have been filed by a person other than the person who filed it if,

before the design is registered, it is established to the satisfaction of the Minister

that the other person was the proprietor when the application was filed.

Filing date

(3) The filing date of an application in Canada is the date on which the Minister

receives the prescribed documents, information and statements or, if they are

received on different dates, the latest of those dates.

R.S., 1985, c. I-9, s. 4; 1992, c. 1, s. 79; 1993, c. 15, s. 13; 2014, c. 39, s. 104.

Examination of application for registration

5 The Minister shall examine, in accordance with the regulations, each application

for the registration of a design.

R.S., 1985, c. I-9, s. 5; 1992, c. 1, s. 143(E); 1993, c. 15, s. 13; 2014, c. 39, s. 105.

5.1 [Repealed, 2014, c. 39, s. 105]

Refusal of application

6 (1) The Minister shall refuse an application for the registration of a design and

notify the applicant of the refusal if the Minister is satisfied that the design is not

registrable.

Registration of design

(2) If the Minister is not so satisfied, the Minister shall register the design and

notify the applicant of the registration.

R.S., 1985, c. I-9, s. 6; 1992, c. 1, s. 80; 1993, c. 15, s. 14, c. 44, s. 162; 2014, c. 39, s. 105.

Registrable design

7 A design is registrable if

(a) the application is filed in accordance with this Act;

(b) the design is novel, within the meaning of section 8.2;

(c) the design was created by the applicant or the applicant’s predecessor in

title;

(d) the design does not consist only of features that are dictated solely by a

utilitarian function of the finished article; and

(e) the design is not contrary to public morality or order.

R.S., 1985, c. I-9, s. 7; 1992, c. 1, ss. 81, 143(E); 1993, c. 15, s. 15; 2014, c. 39, s. 105.

Priority date

8 (1) The priority date of a design in an application for the registration of a design

(in this section and section 8.1 referred to as the “pending application”) is the

filing date of the application, unless

(a) the pending application is filed by a person

(i) who, on the filing date of the pending application, is a citizen or national

of, or is domiciled in, a country of the Union or has a real and effective

industrial or commercial establishment in a country of the Union, and

(ii) who has, or whose predecessor in title has, previously regularly filed an

application for the registration of a design disclosing the same design in or

for a country of the Union;

(b) the filing date of the pending application is within six months after the filing

date of the previously regularly filed application; and

(c) the applicant has made a request for priority in respect of the pending

application on the basis of the previously regularly filed application.

Filing date of previously regularly filed application

(2) In the circumstances set out in paragraphs (1)(a) to (c), the priority date of the

design is the filing date of the previously regularly filed application.

R.S., 1985, c. I-9, s. 8; 1993, c. 15, s. 16; 2014, c. 39, s. 105.

Request for priority

8.1 (1) For the purposes of section 8, an applicant for the registration of a design

may submit to the Minister a request for priority in respect of the pending

application on the basis of one or more previously regularly filed applications.

Requirements

(2) The request for priority shall be made in accordance with the regulations, and

the applicant shall submit to the Minister the filing date, the name of the country

or office of filing and the number of each previously regularly filed application on

which that request is based.

Request deemed never filed

(3) A request for priority is deemed never to have been filed if the request is not

made in accordance with the regulations or if the applicant does not submit the

information, other than the number of each previously regularly filed application,

that is required under subsection (2).

Withdrawal of request

(4) An applicant may, in accordance with the regulations, withdraw a request for

priority, either entirely or with respect to one or more previously regularly filed

applications.

Multiple previously regularly filed applications

(5) If more than one application has been previously regularly filed either in or for

the same country or in or for different countries,

(a) paragraph 8(1)(b) shall be applied using the earliest filing date of the

previously regularly filed applications; and

(b) subsection 8(2) shall be applied using the earliest filing date of the

previously regularly filed applications on which the request for priority is

based.

Previously regularly filed application deemed never filed

(6) For the purposes of section 8, a previously regularly filed application shall be

deemed never to have been filed if

(a) on the filing date of the pending application, more than six months have

elapsed since the filing date of the previously regularly filed application;

(b) before the filing date of the pending application, another application for the

registration of a design, disclosing the design in the pending application

applied to the same finished article,

(i) is filed by the person who filed the previously regularly filed application

or by that person’s successor in title or predecessor in title, and

(ii) is filed in or for the country where the previously regularly filed

application was filed; and

(c) on the filing date of the other application referred to in paragraph (b) or, if

there is more than one such other application, on the earliest of their filing

dates, the previously regularly filed application

(i) has been withdrawn, abandoned or refused without having been made

available to the public and without leaving any rights outstanding, and

(ii) has not served as a basis for a request for priority in any country,

including Canada.

2014, c. 39, s. 105.

Novel design

8.2 (1) A design in an application for the registration of a design is novel if the

same design, or a design not differing substantially from it, applied to a finished

article that is the same as or analogous to the finished article in respect of which

the design is to be registered,

(a) has not been disclosed, more than 12 months before the priority date of

the design in the application, in such a manner that it became available to the

public in Canada or elsewhere, by

(i) the person who filed the application,

(ii) that person’s predecessor in title, or

(iii) a person who obtained knowledge of the design in the application,

directly or indirectly, from the person who filed the application or their

predecessor in title;

(b) has not been disclosed by any other person, before the priority date

referred to in paragraph (a), in such a manner that it became available to the

public in Canada or elsewhere; and

(c) subject to the regulations, has not been disclosed in an application filed in

Canada for the registration of a design whose priority date is before the

priority date referred to in paragraph (a).

Application deemed never filed

(2) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(c), an application referred to in that

paragraph is deemed never to have been filed if it is withdrawn before the earlier

of the date on which it is made available to the public under section 8.3 and the

date on which a design in it is registered.

2014, c. 39, s. 105.

Application and documents made available to public

8.3 (1) The Minister shall make available to the public, on the prescribed date, an

application for the registration of a design and all documents in the Minister’s

possession relating to the application and to the design’s registration.

Non-disclosure

(2) Except with the approval of the applicant or the registered proprietor, the

Minister shall, before the prescribed date referred to in subsection (1), refuse to

disclose the application for the registration of the design and any information or

document relating to the application or to the design’s registration.

Limitation

(3) The prescribed date referred to in subsection (1) may not be later than the

later of the date of registration of the design and 30 months after the filing date of

the application for registration or, if a request for priority is made in respect of the

application, the earliest filing date of a previously regularly filed application on

which the request for priority is based.

Withdrawal of request

(4) If a request for priority is withdrawn on or before the prescribed date, it shall,

for the purposes of subsection (3) and to the extent that it is withdrawn, be

deemed never to have been made.

Withdrawn applications

(5) If an application for the registration of a design is withdrawn in accordance

with the regulations on or before the prescribed date, the Minister shall not make

the application and documents referred to in subsection (1) available to the public

and shall refuse to disclose the application and documents, as well as any

information relating to them.

Prescribed date

(6) A prescribed date referred to in subsection (4) or (5) is to be no later than the

prescribed date referred to in subsection (1).

2014, c. 39, s. 105; 2017, c. 26, s. 60(E).

Exclusive Right

Exclusive right

9 The registration of a design, unless shown to be invalid, gives to the proprietor

an exclusive right in relation to the design.

R.S., 1985, c. I-9, s. 9; 2014, c. 39, s. 105.

Duration of exclusive right

10 (1) Subject to subsection (3), the term limited for the duration of an exclusive

right

(a) begins on the later of the date of registration of the design and the

prescribed date, referred to in subsection 8.3(1), on which the application for

the registration of the design is made available to the public; and

(b) ends on the later of the end of 10 years after the date of registration of the

design and the end of 15 years after the filing date of the application.

Maintenance fees

(2) The proprietor of a design shall, to maintain the exclusive right accorded by

the registration of the design, pay to the Commissioner of Patents such fees, in

respect of such periods, as may be prescribed.

Expiration of term

(3) Where the fees payable under subsection (2) are not paid within the time

provided for by the regulations, the term limited for the duration of the exclusive

right shall be deemed to have expired at the end of that time.

R.S., 1985, c. I-9, s. 10; 1993, c. 15, s. 17, c. 44, s. 163; 2014, c. 39, s. 106.

Using design without licence

11 (1) During the existence of an exclusive right, no person shall, without the

licence of the proprietor of the design,

(a) make, import for the purpose of trade or business, or sell, rent, or offer or

expose for sale or rent, any article in respect of which the design is registered

and to which the design or a design not differing substantially therefrom has

been applied; or

(b) do, in relation to a kit, anything specified in paragraph (a) that would

constitute an infringement if done in relation to an article assembled from the

kit.

Substantial differences

(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), in considering whether differences are

substantial, the extent to which the registered design differs from any previously

published design may be taken into account.

R.S., 1985, c. I-9, s. 11; 1993, c. 44, s. 164.

Restriction on protection

11.1 No protection afforded by this Act shall extend to features applied to a useful

article that are dictated solely by a utilitarian function of the article or to any

method or principle of manufacture or construction.

2014, c. 39, s. 107.

Proprietorship

First proprietor

12 (1) The author of a design is the first proprietor of the design, unless the

author has executed the design for another person for a good and valuable

consideration, in which case the other person is the first proprietor.

Acquired right

(2) The right of another person to the property shall only be co-extensive with the

right that the other person has acquired.

R.S., 1985, c. I-9, s. 12; 1993, c. 15, s. 18.

Transfers

Design transferable

13 (1) Every design, whether registered or unregistered, is transferable in whole

or in part.

Recording of transfer of application

(2) The Minister shall, subject to the regulations, record the transfer of an

application for the registration of a design on the request of the applicant or, on

receipt of evidence satisfactory to the Minister of the transfer, on the request of a

transferee of the application.

Registration of transfer of design

(3) The Minister shall, subject to the regulations, register the transfer of any

registered design on the request of the registered proprietor or, on receipt of

evidence satisfactory to the Minister of the transfer, on the request of a transferee

of the design.

Transfer void

(4) A transfer of a registered design that has not been registered is void against a

subsequent transferee if the transfer to the subsequent transferee has been

registered.

Removal of recording or registration

(5) The Minister shall remove the recording or registration of the transfer of an

application for the registration of a design or the transfer of a registered design on

receipt of evidence satisfactory to the Minister that the transfer should not have

been recorded or registered.

Limitation

(6) The Minister is not authorized to remove the registration of a transfer of a

registered design for the reason only that the transferor had previously

transferred the registered design to another person.

R.S., 1985, c. I-9, s. 13; 1993, c. 15, s. 19; 2014, c. 39, s. 108.

14 [Repealed, 1993, c. 15, s. 20]

Action for Infringement

Action by proprietor or licensee

15 (1) An action for infringement of an exclusive right may be brought in any court

of competent jurisdiction by the proprietor of the design or by an exclusive

licensee of any right therein, subject to any agreement between the proprietor

and the licensee.

Proprietor to be a party

(2) The proprietor of the design shall be or be made a party to any action for

infringement of the exclusive right.

R.S., 1985, c. I-9, s. 15; 1993, c. 44, s. 166.

Power of court to grant relief

15.1 In any proceedings under section 15, the court may make such orders as the

circumstances require, including orders for relief by way of injunction and the

recovery of damages or profits, for punitive damages, and for the disposal of any

infringing article or kit.

1993, c. 44, s. 166.

Concurrent jurisdiction

15.2 The Federal Court has concurrent jurisdiction to hear and determine

(a) any action for the infringement of an exclusive right; and

(b) any question relating to the proprietorship of a design or any right in a

design.

1993, c. 44, s. 166.

16 [Repealed, 1993, c. 44, s. 167]

Defence

17 (1) In any proceedings under section 15, a court shall not award a remedy,

other than an injunction, if the defendant establishes that, at the time of the act

that is the subject of the proceedings, the defendant was not aware, and had no

reasonable grounds to suspect, that the design was registered.

Exception

(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if the plaintiff establishes that the capital letter

"D" in a circle and the name, or the usual abbreviation of the name, of the

proprietor of the design were marked on

(a) all, or substantially all, of the articles to which the registration pertains and

that were distributed in Canada by or with the consent of the proprietor before

the act complained of; or

(b) the labels or packaging associated with those articles.

Proprietor

(3) For the purposes of subsection (2), the proprietor is the proprietor at the time

the articles, labels or packaging were marked.

R.S., 1985, c. I-9, s. 17; 1993, c. 15, s. 21, c. 44, s. 168.

Limitation

18 No remedy may be awarded for an act of infringement committed more than

three years before the commencement of the action for infringement.

R.S., 1985, c. I-9, s. 18; 1993, c. 44, s. 169.

PART II

General 19 [Repealed, 2001, c. 34, s. 52]

20 [Repealed, 2015, c. 36, s. 45]

Extension of Time

Time period extended

21 (1) If a time period fixed under this Act for doing anything ends on a prescribed

day or a day that is designated by the Minister, that time period is extended to the

next day that is not a prescribed day or a designated day.

Power to designate day

(2) The Minister may, on account of unforeseen circumstances and if the Minister

is satisfied that it is in the public interest to do so, designate any day for the

purposes of subsection (1). If a day is designated, the Minister shall inform the

public of that fact on the website of the Canadian Intellectual Property Office.

R.S., 1985, c. I-9, s. 21; 1993, c. 15, s. 22; 2015, c. 36, s. 46.

Procedure as to Rectification and Alteration

Federal Court may rectify entries

22 (1) The Federal Court may, on the information of the Attorney General or at

the suit of any person aggrieved by any omission without sufficient cause to make

any entry in the Register of Industrial Designs, or by any entry made without

sufficient cause in the Register, make such order for making, expunging or

varying any entry in the Register as the Court thinks fit, or the Court may refuse

the application.

Costs

(2) In either case, the Federal Court may make such order with respect to the

costs of the proceedings as the Court thinks fit.

Questions to be decided

(3) The Federal Court may in any proceedings under this section decide any

question that may be necessary or expedient to decide for the rectification of the

Register.

Jurisdiction

(4) The Federal Court has exclusive jurisdiction to hear and determine

proceedings under this section.

R.S., c. I-8, s. 22; R.S., c. 10(2nd Supp.), s. 64.

Application to alter design

23 (1) The registered proprietor of any registered industrial design may apply to

the Federal Court for leave to add to or alter any industrial design in any particular

not being an essential particular, and the Court may refuse or grant leave on such

terms as it may think fit.

Notice to Minister

(2) Notice of any intended application to the Federal Court under this section for

leave to add to or alter any industrial design shall be given to the Minister, and the

Minister is entitled to be heard on the application.

R.S., c. I-8, s. 23; R.S., c. 10(2nd Supp.), s. 64.

Consequent rectification of register

24 A certified copy of any order of the Federal Court for the making, expunging or

varying of any entry in the Register of Industrial Designs, or for adding to or

altering any registered industrial design, shall be transmitted to the Minister by an

officer of the Registry of the Court, and the Register shall thereupon be rectified

or altered in conformity with the order, or the purport of the order otherwise duly

entered therein, as the case may be.

R.S., c. I-8, s. 24; R.S., c. 10(2nd Supp.), s. 65.

Electronic Form and Means

Electronic form and means

24.1 (1) Subject to the regulations, any document, information or fee that is

submitted to the Minister or the Commissioner of Patents under this Act may be

submitted in any electronic form, and by any electronic means, that is specified by

the Minister or the Commissioner of Patents.

Collection, storage, etc.

(2) Subject to the regulations, the Minister and the Commissioner of Patents may

use electronic means to create, collect, receive, store, transfer, distribute, publish,

certify or otherwise deal with documents or information.

Definition of electronic

(3) In this section, electronic, in reference to a form or means, includes optical,

magnetic and other similar forms or means.

2014, c. 39, s. 110.

Regulations

Regulations

25 The Governor in Council may make regulations

(a) governing titles of designs;

(b) respecting the form and contents of applications for the registration of

designs, including

(i) the manner of naming finished articles,

(ii) the manner of identifying features of shape, configuration, pattern or

ornament of all or part of a finished article, and

(iii) the manner of identifying that an application relates to only some of the

features of shape, configuration, pattern or ornament that, in a finished

article, appeal to and are judged solely by the eye, or to only some or all of

those features of a part of a finished article;

(b.1) respecting the processing and examination of applications for the

registration of designs, including the circumstances in which applications shall

be deemed to be abandoned and the circumstances in which they shall be

reinstated;

(b.2) respecting the circumstances in which paragraph 8.2(1)(c) does not

apply in respect of a design that has been disclosed in an application for the

registration of a design that was filed in Canada by a person referred to in

subparagraph 8.2(1)(a)(i) or (ii);

(b.3) respecting the withdrawal of an application for the registration of a

design and, for the purposes of subsections 8.3(4) and (5), prescribing the

date, or the manner of determining the date, on or before which a request for

priority or an application for the registration of a design shall be withdrawn;

(c) respecting the payment of fees and the amount of those fees;

(d) respecting the return of any fees paid under this Act;

(d.1) authorizing the Minister to waive, subject to any prescribed terms and

conditions, the payment of a fee if the Minister is satisfied that the

circumstances justify it;

(e) respecting the registration of sets and of variants of a design;

(e.1) respecting the correction of obvious errors in documents submitted to the

Minister or the Commissioner of Patents, including

(i) the determination of what constitutes an obvious error, and

(ii) the effect of the correction;

(f) respecting requests for priority, including

(i) the period within which priority shall be requested,

(ii) the information and documentation that shall be submitted in support of

requests for priority,

(iii) the period within which that information and documentation shall be

submitted,

(iv) the withdrawal of requests for priority, and

(v) the correction of requests for priority or of information or documentation

submitted in support of them and the effect of corrections on the

application of section 8.3;

(g) respecting certificates of registration;

(g.1) respecting the recording of documents relating to a design;

(g.2) respecting the recording or registration of transfers of applications for the

registration of designs or transfers of registered designs;

(g.3) respecting the provision, including in electronic form and by electronic

means, of documents and information to the Minister or the Commissioner of

Patents, including the time at which they are deemed to be received by the

Minister or the Commissioner of Patents;

(g.4) respecting the use of electronic means for the purposes of subsection

24.1(2);

(g.5) respecting communications between the Minister or the Commissioner of

Patents and any other person;

(g.6) for carrying into effect, despite anything in this Act, the Geneva (1999)

Act of the Hague Agreement Concerning the International Registration of

Industrial Designs, adopted at Geneva on July 2, 1999, including any

amendments and revisions made from time to time to which Canada is a

party; and

(h) prescribing anything else that is to be prescribed under this Act and

generally for carrying out the purposes and provisions of this Act.

R.S., 1985, c. I-9, s. 25; 1993, c. 15, s. 23, c. 44, s. 170; 2014, c. 39, s. 111; 2015, c. 36, s. 47;

2017, c. 26, s. 61(E).

26 to 28 [Repealed, 1993, c. 15, s. 23]

Transitional Provisions

Definition of coming-into-force date

29 In sections 30 to 32, coming-into-force date means the day on which

subsection 104(2) of the Economic Action Plan 2014 Act, No. 2 comes into force.

R.S., 1985, c. I-9, s. 29; 1993, c. 44, s. 171; 1994, c. 47, s. 118; 2014, c. 39, s. 112.

29.1 [Repealed, 2014, c. 39, s. 112]

Prior applications — filing date

30 An application for the registration of a design whose filing date, determined

under this Act as it read immediately before the coming-into-force date, is before

the coming-into-force date, shall be dealt with and disposed of in accordance with

(a) the provisions of this Act, as they read immediately before the coming-into-

force date, other than sections 5, 13 and 20; and

(b) sections 5, 13, 21 and 24.1.

1993, c. 15, s. 24; 2014, c. 39, s. 112; 2015, c. 36, s. 48.

Prior application — no filing date

31 An application for the registration of a design that is filed before the coming-

into-force date and that does not, on that date, have a filing date, determined

under this Act as it read immediately before the coming-into-force date, shall be

deemed never to have been filed.

2014, c. 39, s. 112.

Registered designs

32 Any matter arising on or after the coming-into-force date, in respect of a

design registered before that date or a design registered on or after that date on

the basis of an application whose filing date, determined under this Act as it read

immediately before the coming-into-force date, is before the coming-into-force

date, shall be dealt with and disposed of in accordance with

(a) the provisions of this Act, as they read immediately before the coming-into-

force date, other than sections 3, 13 and 20; and

(b) sections 3, 3.1, 13, 21 and 24.1.

2014, c. 39, s. 112; 2015, c. 36, s. 49.

Regulations

33 For greater certainty, a regulation made under section 25 applies to an

application referred to in section 30 and to a design referred to in section 32,

unless the regulation provides otherwise.

2014, c. 39, s. 112.