Ambition September/October 2021

Page 12

Columnist Cherrie Stewart Director and Chartered Trade Mark Attorney at Ansons (MacLachlan & Donaldson)

Exhausted? Ansons’ Cherrie Stewart discusses the exhaustion of rights in relation to the Northern Ireland Protocol.

to the owners of said IPRs. This is unlikely to be the long-term position. At the time of writing a consultation into the UK’s future exhaustion of intellectual property rights regime is ongoing and changes are highly likely to be made.

T

he Protocol on Ireland and Northern Ireland, (the Protocol) has created a situation wherein, in theory, Northern Ireland companies have access to markets of both the United Kingdom (UK) and the European Economic Area (EEA), which consists of the European Union plus Norway, Liechtenstein and Iceland. One thing not fully addressed in the Protocol is Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) and the doctrine of exhaustion of rights.

The Protocol and Exhaustion of Rights What does this mean for goods placed on the market in Northern Ireland, which has a ‘special’ relationship with the EU? Under Article 5(4) of the Protocol there are a number provisions of EU law which now apply to IPRs in NI. Those specifically listed under Section 45 of Annex 2 of the Protocol relate to: • geographical indications of spirit drinks; • quality schemes for agricultural products and foodstuffs; • geographical indications of aromatized wine products; • a common organisation of the markets in agricultural products; and • customs enforcement of intellectual property rights.

What is Intellectual Property? Intellectual Property is an umbrella term which covers individual rights, such as trade marks which protect those signs which distinguish one undertaking’s goods and services from those of another, patents which protect technical innovations and improvements, design rights which protect the appearance of a product and copyright which protects creative and literary works.

Mention of the doctrine of exhaustion of rights is not made and the EU Commission has previously declared that:

Exhaustion of Rights The aim of the doctrine of exhaustion of rights is to balance the rights of the owners of IPRs while preventing obstacles to freedom of movement within the EEA and encouraging competition and fair trade. Position Pre-Brexit Pre-Brexit, goods first placed on the market anywhere in the EEA (including in the UK) by the owner of the IPRs, or with their consent, “exhausted” the IPRs in those goods. This meant that the purchaser of those goods could move them anywhere within the EEA and further deal with them without, except in very specific circumstances, interference by the IPR owner.

“While the Protocol on Ireland/Northern Ireland provides that certain rules of the EU acquis in respect of goods apply to and in the United Kingdom in respect of Northern Ireland, it does not provide for the exhaustion of intellectual property rights in the EU in cases where a good has been legally put on the market of Northern Ireland.” The consequence of this is that the IPRs in goods placed on the market by their owners, or with their consent, in Northern Ireland after 1st January 2021 have not been exhausted in the EEA therefore, be warned, those who export goods from Northern Ireland into the EEA, without the consent of the owner of any IPRs, risk infringing those rights and may potentially face legal action.

Position Post-Brexit While the IPRs in any goods placed on the market within the UK or EEA before 1st January 2021 continue to be exhausted in both the UK and the EEA, as with so many other things, the situation changed. Goods placed on the market in the UK after 1st January 2021 no longer exhaust IPRs in the EEA. Those who wish to put goods from the UK onto the market in the EEA will require the consent of the owner of any IPRs in those goods which may subsist there. This includes IPRs in raw materials and parts for manufacturing as well as finished articles. However, currently the IPRs in goods placed on the market in the EEA are still exhausted in the UK, meaning goods, which have been placed on the market in the EEA by the owner of the IPRs or with their consent, can be brought into the UK without reference

Next steps For the future, keep an eye out for the likely change to the exhaustion of intellectual property rights regime of the United Kingdom. For now, we strongly recommend that, if you have not already done so, you review your supply chain. Are you exporting physical goods to the EEA, including to Ireland? Have you, or your supplier, obtained the consent of the owner of the IPRs in the goods to allow the export of those goods to the EEA? If you own IPRs, consider whether you wish to allow the export of those goods from the UK into the EEA? If not, explore what action you can take to prevent it? Without border checks between Northern Ireland and Ireland it will be difficult to place a customs order on such goods.

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Articles inside

The Old Inn Reveals £1m refurbishment

5min
pages 96-97

Jim Fitzpatrick

2min
pages 98-100

Dine & Wine - Chris Rees

4min
pages 94-95

Niamh Campbell

7min
pages 91-93

Mark Owens

6min
pages 89-90

Fuelling the Future

15min
pages 80-83

25 Years at the Heart of the

3min
pages 68-71

The Forward-Thinking Law Firm

5min
pages 78-79

New Beginnings

7min
pages 62-65

Garret Kavanagh Appointed as Director of Openreach NI

2min
pages 76-77

Infrastructure for a World Class Belfast

3min
pages 66-67

People Behind the Power

5min
pages 72-75

Professor Una McMahon Beattie and Donald Sloan

4min
pages 60-61

A Gateway to Sustainable Growth

6min
pages 56-59

Catering to an Industry Uplift

6min
pages 52-55

The Carbon Neutral Role

5min
pages 46-49

Driving Digital Transformation in the

5min
pages 36-37

Quarterly Economic Survey

15min
pages 32-33

NI Chamber In Conversation

6min
pages 34-35

NI Chamber News

5min
pages 30-31

John Campbell

4min
pages 44-45

Kate Marshall

4min
pages 26-27

Lidl Announces New

4min
pages 8-9

Stairway to Seven

4min
pages 16-17

A Glass Act

4min
pages 22-25

Cherrie Stewart

4min
pages 12-13

From Factory Floor to Board Room

2min
pages 20-21

My Ambition is to

3min
pages 14-15

Football Comes Together

2min
pages 10-11

Bill Roy

4min
pages 18-19
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