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Assignment Agreements and Indian IP laws

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Assignment can be defined as transferring the title and rights associated with a particular property from one person to another. The individual who transfers the title is called the transferor/assignor, and the person who receives the title is called the transferee/assignee. The result of an assignment is the transfer of all interest present in a particular property to the transferee.

Assignment in the context of intellectual property is the transfer of all the intellectual property rights held by a registered user (or creator, only in cases of copyrightable works) to another party. Assignment agreements are usually in writing and are duly signed by the assignee and the assignor.

The Indian Contracts Act of 1872 provides the general essentials that make a contract valid. These apply to assignment agreements as well. These essentials include the competency of parties to enter into a contract, legal consideration, promise and acceptance, and a lawful object. In addition to those mandates, assignment agreements about Intellectual Property have several other requirements to be fulfilled. Those requirements vary according to the type of intellectual property, i.e., artistic work, trademark, invention, design, etc.

Assignment of Copyrights

The bundle of economic and moral rights is called copyright. Economic rights consist of the right to distribute, reproduce, transform, translate, perform, private copying, etc. These rights can either be wholly or partially assigned according to the parties will. Section 18 and 19 of the Copyrights Act, 1957 refers to the assignment. The work that is to be assigned has to be in existence. The authors of musical/literary work cannot assign their right to receive a royalty to any other party except their legal heirs. The Copyrights Act 1957 mandates the assignment to be made through a written and signed document.

These agreements should consist of the work and the rights assigned, the duration and territorial extent of assignment, the amount of royalty payable to the party or their legal heir, and revision/extension/termination on mutually agreed upon terms. In the absence of details present in the agreement, the default term of the contract will be five years, and the default territorial extent will be limited to India.

The assignment must be recorded in the register in case of registered work.

Assignment of Trademark

Assignment of the trademark could concern certain goods/services or fully, with/without goodwill or any combination thereof. Assignment of trademarks is specified in Section 37-43 of the Trademarks Act, 1999. The agreement has to be in written form and duly signed by the parties involved, and the agreement should specify whether the goodwill is to be transferred along with the trademark.

An application to register the change in ownership of the title of trademark has to be made through From TM-P along with a duly certified copy of the original document and the instrument or deed used for the transfer of rights.

Assignment of Geographical Indications

Geographical indications (GI) are different from trademarks; they belong to a particular association or group of people who produce certain goods in a specific geographical area with special characteristics or quality. The usage of such a mark indicates the presence of such quality or characteristic that is a specialty to that territory. As GIs are public property, they cannot be subject to assignment, transmission, licensing, pledging, mortgaging, or any such types of agreements as mentioned in Section 24 of the Geographical Indications of Goods Act, 1999. The GI could be subject to succession, but it is possible only when the production of such a product remains within the territory mentioned.

Assignment of Patent rights

Assignment of patents has to be done through a written instrument. Section 68-70 of the Patents Act 1970 covers the assignment of patents. This instrument should specify all the terms and conditions governing the rights transferred and obligations imposed. Assignment of patents can be informed of legal assignment, equitable assignment, or mortgages. This ownership transfer must be registered in the register through a Form 16 application made to the Controller, along with two copies of the deed agreement document duly certified.

Assignment of Designs

The assignment of designs is regulated by the Manual of Designs Practice and Procedure. Sec 30 of the Designs Act, 2000 provides the information related to the assignment of Designs and the procedure of doing the same. This agreement must be in writing and contain all details regarding the transferred rights and the obligation imposed. This assignment has to be duly signed by both parties involved. It has to be registered on the application filing through Form 10 within six months from the date of execution of the assignment/instrument. Further extension of 6 months is also available. It has to accompany copies of the original transfer deed/instrument or copies duly certified.

For more information, please get in touch with Intepat.

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