Definition of a design
Under the legislation, a design, in relation to a product, means the overall appearance of the product resulting from one or more visual features of the product.''Designs Act 2003'' (Cth) s5. Further, the design is only a design, for the purposes of the Designs Act, when it is used in relation to the registered product. This illustrates that the registration of the design does not protect the business against the same design being used on other products; the pattern itself cannot be registered. In addition, the act covers both, two-dimensional designs''Designs Act 2003'' (Cth) s6(3). (such as a logo on a cup), and three-dimensional designs (such as the shape of the cup). Furthermore, Dixon J, in ''Macrae Knitting Mills Ltd v Lowes Ltd'' (1936) 55 CLR 725, confirms that ‘The Act is concerned with shape and configuration, not function’. The Act, stipulates that a visual feature may, but need not, serve a functional purpose. However, if the design’s every visual feature serves a functional purpose, then common law states that the design is not registrable. Furthermore, the Designs Act states that should an innovation be both, a visual feature, and serve a functional purpose, there is nothing to stop the design being registered. In common law, ''British Franco Electric Pty Ltd v Dowling Plastics Pty Ltd''Definition of a ‘product’
The act outlines, that a product is a thing that is manufactured or handmade. Further, even if a component part of a product is made separately from the product itself, for the purposes of the Designs Act, it is still a product. Even a kit made for assembly of a particular product, is that product. When the issue came to designs that vary in their dimensions (such as roof guttering), the items are still considered products, as long as following conditions apply: * a) A cross-section taken across any indefinite dimension is fixed or varies according to a regular pattern; * b) All the dimensions remain in proportion * c) The cross-sectional shape remains the same throughout, whether or not the dimensions of that shape vary according to a ratio or series of ratios; * d) It has a pattern or ornamentation that repeats itself.Distinction between the design and the product
One of the deep-seated aspects of the Designs Act is the distinction between the idea of a product, and the design relating to that product. Thus, the designs act will not grant a monopoly to a business attempting to register a fundamental or essential form of a product. This is supported by common law, in ''Dalgety Australia Operations Ltd v Seeley Nominees Pty Ltd'' (1985) 5 IPR 97, when the High Court held that the Designs Act does not give a monopoly to the trading of the article to which it is applied. For example, without a design, a chair would still be a chair, a fork would still be a fork, etc... Bollen, J, further clarified thata design turns a chair into something more than a mere chair. It becomes a chair with a conception or suggestion about shape or configuration beyond the fundamental form of a chair. Thus, the case established that a fundamental form cannot be registered as a design.
Component and spare parts
The Designs Act also caters for components and spare parts of a product. The Act provides a monopoly for a component part of a product, which it deems to be a product for the purposes of the act. However, The Designs Act does not provide clarity when the issue is regarding a fundamental nature of components and spare parts. It is deep-seated in legislation and common law, that if a product is a fundamental form or shape of a product, then the product cannot be registrable. Although the spare part is purely manufactured for the purpose of attaching to its larger counterpart, it is not clear if that is seen, by legislation and common law, as being dictated by a functional purpose. Further, in most cases, the designer of the spare part also had a number of potential shapes to choose from, thus the spare part cannot be the fundamental form, thus rendering the product registrable.When is a design registrable?
The design is registrable if it fits the following characteristics: * a) The design is new * b) The design is distinctive when compared to theDesign rights
After registration, the owner of the registered design owns a renewable monopoly for 5 years, and has theInfringement of designs
A person infringes a registered design if, during the term of registration of the design, and without the licence or authority of the registered owner of the design, the person: * (a) makes or offers to make a product, in relation to which the design is registered, which embodies a design that is identical to, or substantially similar in overall impression to, the registered design; or * (b) imports such a product into Australia for sale, or for use for the purposes of any trade or business; or * (c) sells, hires or otherwise disposes of, or offers to sell, hire or otherwise dispose of, such a product; or * (d) uses such a product in any way for the purposes of any trade or business; or * (e) keeps such a product for the purpose of doing any of the things mentioned in paragraph (c) or (d)Identical or substantially similar in overall impression
In subsection (a), the section mentions a design that is identical to, or substantially similar in overall impression. While the test for the design being identical is uncomplicated, to determine whether the design is substantially similar in overall impression and how it is substantially similar, the act refers to s19. The section stipulates that the court pay more attention to the similarities rather than the differences, must have regard for prior art base, and contextualize a certain part of the design that is similar, in relation to the whole design. The court must then apply the standard of a person who is familiar with the product to which the design relates, or products similar to the product to which the design relates. The Act does not require any party to establish that the registered design was copied, the mere registration of the design, protects against independent creation.Defences
If the defendant is repairing a complex product that has at least two replaceable component parts, permitting disassembly and re-assembly, then they may claim a defence under s72 of the Act, on the condition that the repair is for the purpose of restoring the complex products’ overall appearance. Further, the onus of proof is on the plaintiff to prove that the defendant knew, or ought reasonably to have known that the use of authorisation was not for the permitted purpose.''Designs Act 2003'' (Cth) s72(2).Reference list
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