Welcome to our blog for Intellectual Property Law and Practice in Latin America!
¡Bienvenidos a nuestro blog de Derecho y Práctica de la Propiedad Intelectual en Latinoamérica!
Bem-vindo ao nosso blog sobre Direito e Prática de Propriedade Intelectual na América Latina!

Wednesday 23 May 2012

Patricia Covarrubia

Venezuela: new Employment law is said to be an economic model of production, but is it really?

    No comments:

This month Venezuela celebrates (or not) a new employment law (LOTT). Venezuelan employment legislation was first enacted on July 23, 1928. Successive partial reforms were noted in the years 1945, 1947, 1966, 1974, 1975 and 1983 and finally, underwent a substantial evolution in 1991, when it was granted the title of ‘Ley Organica’.

 The new employment law (LOTTT) was signed by the president of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, on April 30, and went into effect Tuesday 1st of May after its publication in the Official Gazette No. 6076. The Law is advertised as to guarantee the protection of labour as a social fact and just distribution of wealth. [please bear in mind that the word ‘social’ found in the legislation refers mainly to Socialism].

An economic model of production: 
Reading the Legislation I went straight to Chapter IV titled ‘Of Inventions, Innovations and Improvements' to see the changes: will this be a model as the Government announces?
These are my observations:
1.- Art 320 explains Invention, innovation and improvements. It starts by indicating that ‘social’ work is the fundamental source of scientific, humanistic and technological knowledge which is required for the production of goods and provision of service to society. It continues to say that inventions, innovations and improvements are the result of ‘social’ work process to meet the needs of the people, by fair distribution of wealth.
Yet, there is not definition of what in innovation, at least to what we understand and recognise in the IP world i.e. novelty, inventive step (non-obvious) and industrial application.

The following Articles refer to entitlement (there is not subtitle in the Law but as you will notice the articles refer to ownership)
2.- Art 322 classified inventions into two: ‘service inventions’ and ‘free or occasional inventions’. This classification is used in jurisdiction such as Japan and Germany when referring to the award compensation to be paid by an employer to an employee in respect of an invention made by the employee. The article continues to explain that in both cases i.e. ‘service inventions’ and/or free or occasional inventions’ the work placement facilities, procedures or methods where the invention is produced, are necessary for them to occur.

3.- Article 323 and 324 define service invention and free or occasional invention. The former is the one performed by workers under contract or workers hired by the employer in order to research/develop. The latter, is the one that comes from the effort and talent of the inventor not employed or contracted specifically for that purpose.

4.- Article 325 – a shock? The article covers Inventions, innovations and improvements in the public sector or those that are financed through public funds that result in intellectual property rights. The article very simply and plainly states: this is considered to be public domain. No ownerships as such? What does it mean? Public domain means for the use and enjoyment of everyone, right? But I guess and being familiar witch Chavez revolution it means it belongs to the Government. Yet, the article finishes by stating that the author maintains the right to be recognised as the inventor.


Oh no! another invention!!
5.- Art 326 – another shock? This time the article covers Inventions, innovations and improvements but in the private sector. According to the new law, the inventor maintains his/her rights in perpetuity and throughout the duration of each invention, innovation or improvement. Yet, the employer is authorized to exploit the work BUT only for the duration of the contract of employment or license granted by the worker to the employer. In other words, if the employee resigns and/or is fired, the invention follows the inventor.
It continues with a sensitive statement, similar to the one found in the UK Patent Act 1977 (s40) regarding compensation for employers -- employee having a statutory right to compensation, for his invention from which his employer has derived benefit when the benefit received by employee was inadequate in relation to the benefit derived by the employer.
Finally, this Article notes that “at the end of the employment relationship the employer shall have preferential rights to acquire the invention within ninety days after notification to him by the worker or through the Employment Inspector or Employment Judge." OK, but preferential right does not mean that the inventor will not seek for better offers from other business competitors – does this mean that the invention will be owned by the best bidder?

The big issue: does the new legislation promote innovation? 
There is indeed the fact that the Law is regarding Employment Law and it is advertise to protect the employee rather than the employer. But at the end of the day manufacturers need resources and as we all know monopoly rights i.e. patents, are a huge assess to some companies. In the majority of democratic jurisdiction in which I am familiar with patent law, usually an invention made by an employee belongs to his employer in circumstances such as: when the invention is made in the course of normal duties and/or if the invention is made in the course of employee’s duties and he has a special obligation. In the Venezuelan case we are seeing a situation that the invention belongs to the employee and giving a right to the employer to exploit it as longs as the employee is working for him/her.

The other point that I am wary about is when the invention is created by an employee who is working for an employer who forms part of the public sector and/or the invention is created under the sponsor of public funds, then it is understood that ownership will be for the public domain. In the latter proposition we will be looking at situations in which the private sector will not be willing to accept public funds because this implies that they will loose ownership.

Both situation of entitlement i.e. publics and private sector, do not incentive the scientific and academic sector. It appears that the law is trying to generate certain control of scientific research and development, with consequent loss of self-sufficiency in all scientific and academic sectors. This should not be a shock for the Venezuelan Industry. August last year (here) we witnessed a protest from the same sectors: academics and scientific who submitted to the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court an application for revocation (on grounds of unconstitutionality) of the reform of the Law on Science, Technology and Innovation, arguing that the instrument "dramatically slows the development of science and technology in the country." Also, in December 2009 (here) we also noted that the Government has ordered to scrutinise all pharmaceutical patents that were granted under Andean Community (CAN) Decision 311, 313, and 344. The reason was based on the fact that Venezuela withdrew from the Andean block in 2006 and the legislation in place during that period allowed the registration of pharmaceutical products and process, while the previous Venezuelan legislation, the Industrial Property Act of 1956 prohibits this type of patents. At the time there was uncertainty (still is) regarding the examination procedure that the government was going to use.

Thanks to Dr A Paolini, DAC Beachcroft for passing this info to the blog.

Source Ley Orgánica del Trabajo, los Trabajadores y las Trabajadoras (LOTTT)

Patricia Covarrubia

Patricia Covarrubia