newspaper Home | Customs change procedure for dealing with infringing Intellectual Property goods

Customs change procedure for dealing with infringing Intellectual Property goods

23 June 2009

Customs has changed, with immediate effect, the way in which they deal with goods suspected of infringing brand owners' intellectual property rights.

The changes are bad news for brand owners who now have to initiate court proceedings each and every time they wish Customs to seize a consignment of infringing goods.


The old system

If HMRC suspected that goods were infringing a brand owner's intellectual property rights, they detained the goods and sent the brand owner a sample to examine. The brand owner would then return a witness statement to Customs confirming which particular IP rights had been infringed; Customs would then seize the goods.

If the owner of the goods objected to their seizure, the onus was on him to challenge the seizure via legal proceedings.

The new system

The burden of proof now switches to the brand owner as, in accordance with the new system, it is the brand owner that must bring legal proceedings to confirm that the goods in question are infringing its intellectual property rights.

The procedure is now as follows:

An important exception to the above time limits applies when the goods in question are perishable. In such cases, the detention period within which court proceedings must be initiated will not exceed 3 working days and cannot be extended.

What does this mean?

Brand owners, in particular those who deal with perishable goods, will have to be quick off the blocks in initiating court proceedings once they have received notification of a potential infringement from Customs. Failure to do so within 10 working days (3 working days if the goods are perishable) could mean that the infringing goods are released from Customs and therefore open to be sold on the UK market. It would then prove much harder for the brand owner to track down all the goods and obtain possession of them.

What should you do?

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