SAINT ISLAND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY GROUP

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Will the TIPO significantly relax the “sufficiency-of-disclosure” requirement on Drawing or Photograph for a Design application?

As a drawing or photograph constitutes the entire visual disclosure of what is claimed in a design application, it must be clear and complete. On this score, according to the Enforcement Rules of Taiwan’s Patent Act implemented prior to January 1, 2013, the Applicant was required to submit a drawing or photograph illustrating the perspective and six views (i.e. front view, left side view, right side view, bottom view, top view and rear view) of the  claimed design.

It was when the Amendment to the Enforcement Rules took effect on January 1, 2013, the aforesaid formality prerequisite was “literally relaxed” and replaced by a substantial requirement that a drawing or photograph is adequate if it contains a sufficient number of views that constitute a complete disclosure of the appearance of the claimed design.

Lately, the TIPO has expressed some intent to revise the current patent examination benchmark, making it clear that those not illustrated in the drawing shall be deemed to be the non-claimed portions of an article and form no part of a claimed design. However, it does not mean that the TIPO is apt to significantly relax the  “sufficiency-of-disclosure” requirement. That is to say, under the general principle  that the outer appearance of a claimed design must be depicted in the drawing or photograph in its entirety, a design application will still be rejected if the drawing submitted contains  only a perspective view and a plan view.  The rationale behind this rejection is that a drawing cannot constitute a complete disclosure of the appearance of a design if not all the content of an omitted view(s) can be directly regarded as the "non-claimed portion of the design”, or if any of the claimed aesthetic features of the design is regarded as not having been clearly depicted in the submitted views in terms of appearance and shape of the article.

Due to the seemingly obstinate attitude taken by the TIPO toward the “sufficiency-of-disclosure” requirement, the Applicant is recommended to always submit a drawing or photograph that contains the perspective and six plan views, if at all possible, so as to forestall any potential rejection.

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The above contents are intended as general discussion of the subject matter only and shall not be deemed as legal advice to any particular case or issue.

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