Newsletter
TIME LIMIT FOR PRIORITY DOCUMENTS NOT INVARIABLE
In its past practice, the Intellectual Property Of-fice (IPO) has taken the view that the time limit under Article 25 of the Patent Law for submitting priority documents after filing a patent applica-tion is an invariable statutory time limit. On that basis, the IPO has generally rejected the priority claims of applicants who were unable to produce the necessary documents within the time limit. Under the Patent Law as currently in force (until the amended law takes effect in July 2004), the time limit is three months from the date of filing the patent application and asserting the priority claim.
Recently, in a case before the Taipei High Ad-ministrative Court, Lee and Li represented a client in disputing the nature of the statutory time limit for presenting priority documents. The court rejected the IPO's view that it is an in-variable time limit. In the case in question, for reasons beyond its control, our client had been unable to deliver to the IPO the documents supporting its priority claim before the three-month time period expired, and the IPO had rejected its priority claim without further consideration. Lee and Li brought an adminis-trative appeal and then an administrative suit on the client's behalf.
The court found in our client's favor, overturning both the original administrative decision and the administrative appeal decision. The court stated that statutory time limits could be divided into procedural time limits and invariable time limits, according to their nature. The time limits for patent applications and other procedures were periods for fulfilling a procedural duty to act, and by their nature could not be considered to be invariable time limits. A patent applicant who asserted a priority claim was required to submit, within three months from the filing date, docu-ments evidencing the acceptance of an applica-tion for processing by the government of another country. But this was a procedural period for providing evidentiary documents, and by its na-ture was not an invariable time limit. The IPO's assertion that it was an invariable time limit was incorrect.
The significance and implications of the judg-ment are outlined below: