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Actuate IP represents Chiropedic Bedding Pty Ltd in designs litigation case, appeal to the Full Court of the Federal Court.
Late last week, the Full Federal Court of Australia handed down its
decision in Chiropedic Bedding Pty Ltd v Radburg Pty Ltd [2008] FCAFC
142 (link http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/FCAFC/2008/142.html ).
Background
In 1996, one week prior to filing an application for a registered design
in a mattress, Chiropedic exhibited its design at the "The National New
Products Parade" (a trade fair held at the Melbourne Exhibition Centre
between 20 July and 23 July 1996). Chiropedic’s design was eventually
registered, protecting it from third party use.
Radburg began applying a similar design on its own products. Chiropedic commenced design infringement proceedings against Radburg on the basis of its registered design.

The Chiropedic Registration
Radburg defended the infringement action by alleging that the
registration was invalid. It claimed that because the mattress design
was shown at the 1996 trade fair prior to Chiropedic’s design
application, the design was disclosed prior to the application being
made, was therefore not novel at the time of the application, and,
consequently, invalid and unenforceable.
The Law
Normally, designs must be “novel” to be registered. Disclosure of a
design prior to filing an application for its protection can jeopardise
its novelty, and invalidate an eventual registration. However, under
the Designs Act 1906 (which has since been superseded by the Designs
Act 2003, but applied to the circumstances in Chiropedic) there is an
exception to this potential pitfall: novelty will not be destroyed
where disclosure occurs at “an official or officially recognized
international exhibition” and registration is sought no later than six
months from this disclosure.
The Result
Chiropedic argued that its registration was valid because the "The
National New Products Parade" was “an official or officially recognised
international exhibition”, and it applied for registration of the
mattress design well within the 6-month period for doing so. At trial,
the Federal Court (Finkelstein J) found that the fair had sufficient
government ties to be “officially recognised”, but found that it was
not sufficiently “international” for the exception to apply. At the
fair, 250 Australian businesses displayed their products. New Zealand
was the only other country represented, with 7 exhibiting businesses.
The Court found this insufficient for the fair to be described as
“international”, and said that the fair was better described as
“regional”.
This finding was overturned by the Full Federal Court (Rares and
Besanko JJ, as well as newly-appointed High Court Chief Justice Robert
French):
In our respectful opinion, the trial judge erred in formulating a
test of "international" which involved the need for a significant
foreign presence…the fact that there were exhibitors from Australia and
New Zealand was sufficient to make the fair an "international"
exhibition…
On this basis, Chiropedic’s registration fell within the exception and was maintained.
International Impact
The exception at issue in Chiropedic is worded identically to an
exception contained in Article 11 of the Paris Convention for the
Protection of Industrial Property (“the Paris Convention”). While the
Full Court in Chiropedic explicitly stated that it was interpreting the
Australian Designs Act 1906 (and not the Paris Convention), it is clear
that the Paris Convention exception has created legislative footprints
in a number of countries. Most notably, the same “official or
officially recognised international exhibition” exception is also found
in Article 44 of the European Community Design Regulation 2002 (which
provides for both registered design rights and copyright-like
unregistered design rights throughout the European Community). The Full
Federal Court’s decision in Chiropedic is a rarity: the wording of the
exception – which, under the Community Design Regulation, could mean
the difference between a 25 year design monopoly, or no monopoly at all
– has seldom been invoked in litigation in Australia or anywhere else.
Due to the identical wording of the exception as it appears in the
Designs Act 1906 and the European Community Design Regulation 2002, it
will be interesting to see whether the Full Court’s reasoning gets
picked up in the UK, Ireland, or other EC countries as litigation based
on the young Community Design Right becomes more prevalent.
Actuate Legal acted for Chiropedic, and has experience in dealing with both Australian and European Community Design Rights.
For more information contact Actuate IP or read about our design dispute services.
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