Decree of the Minister for Foreign Affairs No. 90 / 1962 Coll.

Decree of the Minister for Foreign Affairs on the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property of 20 March 1883, revised in Brussels on 14 December 1900, in Washington on 2 June 1911, in The Hague on 6 November 1925, in London on 2 June 1934 and in Lisbon on 31 October 1958

Valid Effective from 04.01.1962
90
DECLARATION
Minister for Foreign Affairs
of 17 August 1962
on the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property of 20 March 1883, revised in Brussels on 14 December 1900, in Washington on 2 June 1911, in The Hague on 6 November 1925, in London on 2 June 1934 and in Lisbon on 31 October 1958
On 20 March 1883, the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property was negotiated, which was last revised in Lisbon on 31 October 1958.
On 11 August 1961, the instrument of ratification of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic to that Convention was deposited with the Swiss Government.
According to Article 18, paragraph 1, the Convention for the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic entered into force on 4 January 1962.
The Czech translation of the Convention is being announced simultaneously.
David v. r.
PARIS CONVENTION FOR THE PROTECTION OF INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY
of 20 March 1883
revised
Done at Brussels, 14 December 1900, 2 June 1911 in Washington, 6 November 1925 in The Hague, 2 June 1934 in London and 31 October 1958 in Lisbon
(1) The countries covered by this Convention shall form a Union for the protection of industrial property.
(2) The subject of industrial property protection shall be patents for inventions, utility designs, industrial designs or models, factory or trade marks, service marks, trade names and particulars of the provenance of the goods or the designation of their origin. Another task of protecting industrial property is also the suppression of unfair competition.
(3) Industrial ownership is meant in the broadest sense and applies not only to industry and trade in its own sense, but also to agricultural and mining industries and to all products artificial or natural, e.g.: wine, grain, tobacco leaves, fruit, cattle, minerals, mineral water, beer, flowers, flour.
(4) Patents for inventions include various types of industrial patents, which are permitted by the legislation of the Union countries, such as import patents, patent improvements, additional patents and additional certificates, etc.
(1) Members of each Union country shall enjoy, in respect of the protection of industrial property in all other Union countries, the same advantages granted or granted to nationals of their own State without prejudice to the rights specifically provided for in this Convention. They will therefore enjoy the same protection as those nationals and the same legal means against any infringement of their rights, subject to compliance with the conditions and formalities laid down by the legislation of their own Member States.
(2) However, members of the Union may not be required to enjoy an industrial property right if they are resident or establishment in the country where protection is sought.
(3) The legislative measures of each Union country relating to judicial and administrative proceedings and jurisdiction, as well as the choice of residence or the provisions of a representative required by industrial property laws, are expressly reserved.
The members of the Union countries shall be assimilated to those members of non-Union countries who reside in the territory of a Union country or have real (actual) establishments, industrial or commercial.
A. - (1) Who duly applies for a patent for an invention (application for an invention), for a utility model, for an industrial design or model, for a factory or trade mark in one of the Union countries, or its successor in title, will enjoy, within the time limits set below, priority rights when filing an application in other countries.
(2) Any application which is a national application under the national legislation of each Union country or under bilateral or multilateral agreements concluded between several Union countries shall be recognised as constituting a priority right.
(3) A duly submitted national application shall mean any application which is sufficient to establish the date on which it was submitted in the country concerned, whatever the fate of the application was later.
B. - Therefore, an application lodged in one of the other Union countries at a later date, but before the expiry of those time limits, shall not cease to have effect by the facts in between, such as, in particular, any other application, publication of an invention or use thereof, the sale of specimens of the model or model, the use of the mark, and shall not establish any right of third parties or any personal ownership. Rights acquired by third parties before the date of the first application on which the priority law is based shall be maintained under the internal legislation of each Union country.
C. - (1) The above priority period shall be 12 months for patents for inventions and utility designs and six months for designs or models and for factory or trade marks.
(2) These time limits shall begin to run from the date on which the first application was submitted; the date of filing of the application does not count within the deadline.
(3) If, in the country where protection is requested, the last day of the period is a lawful holiday or the day on which the Office is not open for receipt of applications, the period shall be extended to the first working day following that.
(4) A subsequent application, the subject matter of which is identical to the subject matter of the previous first application referred to in paragraph 2, submitted in the same Union country, shall be deemed to be the first application from the date of filing, if, at the time of the subsequent application, the previous application has been withdrawn or has been refused or refused, without having been given public consultation and no rights, and if it has not yet been used as a basis for the application of the priority right. Earlier applications cannot then be used as a basis for the application of a priority right.
D. - (1) Anyone wishing to prioritise an earlier application must make a statement indicating the date and country of the application. Each country shall determine when such a declaration must be made at the latest.
(2) This information shall be provided in the publications issued by the competent authority, in particular on patents and descriptions relating thereto.
(3) The Union countries may require the person making the priority declaration to submit a copy of the application previously submitted (description, drawings, etc.). A copy of which the Office to which the application has been lodged confirms that it agrees with the original shall not be subject to any verification and may in any case be submitted free of charge at any time within 3 months of the date on which the subsequent application was submitted. It may be required to be accompanied by a certificate from that office on the date of the application and a translation.
(4) Other formalities for priority declarations may not be required at the time of filing the application. Each Union country shall determine the consequences of omission of formalities prescribed in this Article; However, such consequences shall not exceed the loss of a priority right.
(5) In addition, other licences may be required.
The person applying for the priority of an earlier application shall indicate the number of the application; the information shall be published under the conditions set out in paragraph 2 above.
E. - (1) Where an industrial design or model is registered in a country on the basis of a priority right based on an application for a utility model, only the priority period set for industrial designs or models shall apply.
(2) In addition, it is permissible to register a utility model in a country on the basis of a priority right based on a patent application and vice versa.
F. - No Union country may reject a priority or patent application on the grounds that the applicant applies multiple priorities, even if they come from different countries, or on the grounds that the application for one or more priorities contains one or more elements which were not included in the application or the applications for which the priority is applied, in both cases on the condition that the invention is uniform under the law of the country concerned.
With regard to elements not included in the application or in applications whose priority applies, a priority right under normal conditions shall be established by submitting a later application.
G. - (1) If the survey reveals that the application for a patent is comprehensive, the applicant will be able to divide the application into a certain number of partial applications, in which case it will retain as the date of each application the original application and the advantage of the priority right if applied.
(2) The applicant may also, on his own initiative, distribute the application for the patent, while maintaining as the date of each split application the date of the original application and applying the advantage of a priority right. Each Union country may lay down the conditions under which such division shall be permitted.
H. - The priority must not be denied on the grounds that certain elements of the invention for which priority is sought are not mentioned in the claims contained in the application lodged in the country of origin, if these parts are clearly evident from the summary of the annexes to the application.
(1) Patents applied for in each Union country by members of the Union will not depend on patents that have been achieved for the same invention in other countries, whether Union or non-Union.
(2) This provision must be understood without any restriction, namely that patents entered in the priority period are independent, both in terms of the reason for the invalidity and the termination of the patent and in terms of the normal duration.
(3) This provision shall apply to all patents in force at the time of their entry into force.
(4) With the accession of new countries, the same will apply to patents that are in force on both sides at the time of accession.
(5) Patents, acquired with a priority advantage, will have the same duration in each Union country as they should if they were requested or granted without priority.
The inventor has the right to be listed as the inventor in the patent.
The grant of a patent shall not be denied and the patent shall not be revoked on the grounds that the sale of a patented product or product obtained by a patented process is excluded or restricted by national legislation.
A. - (1) If the patent owner brings the patent into the country where the patent was granted, articles manufactured in a Union country will not cause the patent to fail.
(2) Any Union country may take legislative measures to grant compulsory licences in order to prevent abuse which could result from the exercise of the exclusive right of a production or commercial plant granted by a patent, for example by its non-use.
(3) The expiry of the patent may be determined only if the authorisation of compulsory licences would not be sufficient to prevent such abuse. Before the expiry of two years, beginning with the authorisation of the first compulsory licence, proceedings for the termination or revocation of the patent may not be initiated.
(4) A compulsory licence may not be applied for on grounds of non-use or lack of use before the expiry of a period of four years after the patent application or three years after the grant of the patent, whichever is the later; the compulsory licence shall be refused if the holder of the patent justifies his inactivity for proper reasons. Such a compulsory licence shall be non-exclusive and shall not be transferable, even in the form of a sub-licence, other than with a part of an undertaking or a commercial establishment using that licence.
(5) The previous provisions shall apply, subject to the necessary amendments, also for utility models.
B. - Protection of industrial designs and models shall not cease for use or import of objects identical to those protected.
C. - (1) If the use of a registered mark is compulsory in a country, registration may be cancelled only after a reasonable period of time and if the participant fails to justify why it did not use the mark.
(2) Where the proprietor uses factory or trade marks in a form which differs from that in which the mark is registered in a Union country, this shall not result in the deletion of the registration and shall not reduce the protection granted to the mark.
(3) The parallel use of the same mark on the same or similar products by industrial or commercial undertakings which, under the provisions of the national law of the country in which protection is applied, are considered to be co-owners of the mark shall not prevent registration or reduce the protection granted to that mark in any country of the Union if such use would not be capable of misleading the public and would not be contrary to the public interest.
D. - For the recognition of the right, there shall not be required to be any mark or mention on the product of the patent, of the utility model, of the registration of the factory or trade mark or of the registration of the model or model.
(1) In order to pay the fees provided for in respect of the maintenance of industrial property rights, at least six months' grace must be permitted, by paying a surcharge where national legislation imposes it.
(2) The Union countries may provide that patents for inventions which have expired for non-payment of fees will be returned in the previous situation.
In any Union country, the right of the holder of the patent shall not be considered to be infringed:
1. If, on ships of other Union countries, patented equipment in a body, machinery, equipment, apparatus and other accessories, such ships reach the waters of the country concerned on time or at random, provided that such items are used only for the purposes of the ship's use;
2. where patented equipment is used in the construction or operation of air or ground vehicles of other Union countries, or in the case of parts of such vehicles, if it reaches that country temporarily or accidentally.
Where a product is imported into a Union country where there is a patent protecting the production process of that product, the holder of the patent shall be responsible for the imported product with all rights which, on the basis of the patent for the procedure, confer on him the legislation of the importing country on products manufactured in that country.
Industrial models and models will be protected in all Union countries.
(1) The conditions of application and registration of factory and trade marks are laid down in each Union country by its national legislation.
(2) However, a mark applied for by a Member of a Union country in any Union country may not be rejected or revoked on the grounds that it has not been registered, registered or renewed in the country of origin.
(3) A mark duly registered in a Union country is considered to be independent of those registered in other Union countries, including the country of origin.
(1) The Union countries shall undertake, either on official responsibility, if the legislature of the country so permits, or at the request of the interested party, to refuse or revoke the registration and prohibit the use of a factory or trade mark which is a reproduction, imitation or translation which is capable of causing confusion with a mark which, according to the opinion of the competent authority of the country of registration or use, is generally known to be the mark of the person entitled to benefit from this Convention and used for the same or similar products. The same is true if a substantial part of the mark is a reproduction of such a mark generally known or a imitation capable of causing confusion with it.
(2) A period of at least 5 years from the date of registration shall be allowed to apply for the deletion of such a mark. Union countries may set a time limit within which a prohibition of use may be sought.
(3) A period shall not be fixed for the recovery or prohibition of the use of marks registered or used in a malicious manner.
(1) (a) The Union countries have agreed to refuse or revoke the registration and to prohibit, by appropriate measures, the use, without the authorisation of the relevant places, of factory or trade marks or parts of such marks, coats of arms, flags and other features of the State sovereignty of the Union countries, official testing, punch marks and guarantee marks introduced therein, as well as any imitation from a heraldic point of view.
(b) The provisions referred to in point (a) shall also apply to coats of arms, flags and other emblems, abbreviations or names of international intergovernmental organisations of which one or more Union countries are members, with the exception of coats of arms, flags and other emblems, abbreviations and names, the protection of which has already been the subject of existing international agreements.
(c) No Union country shall be obliged to apply the provisions referred to in (b) to the detriment of those who have acquired good faith rights in that country before the entry into force of this Convention. The Union countries shall not be obliged to apply those provisions if the use or registration referred to in (a) above is not of such a kind as to give the public an impression of the link between the relevant organisation and the features, flags, features of national sovereignty, abbreviations or names, or if the use or registration is not likely to be such as to mislead the public about the link between the user and the organisation.
(2) The use of official test, punch and warranty marks shall be prohibited only if the marks containing them are intended to be used on goods of the same or similar kind.
(3) (a) In order to implement these provisions, the Union countries have agreed to notify each other, through the International Office, of the list of national sovereignty features, official test marks, punch marks and guarantee marks which they wish or wish to protect completely or with certain restrictions under this Article, and to inform each other of any subsequent changes to that list. Each Union country shall make available to the public in due course the lists notified to it.
However, as regards flags of States, such notification is not mandatory.
(b) The provisions referred to in point (b) of the first paragraph shall apply only to coats of arms, flags and other symbolic features, abbreviations or names of international intergovernmental organisations notified by those organisations to the Union countries through the International Bureau.
(4) Each Union country may, within 12 months of receipt of the lists, send any objections to the relevant country or international intergovernmental organisation via the International Bureau.
(5) In the case of flags of States, the measures referred to in paragraph 1 above shall be applied only if they have applied for stamps registered after 6 November 1925.
(6) State emblems, other than flags, for official and hallmarks of Union countries and for coats of arms, flags and other emblems, abbreviations or names of international intergovernmental organisations, shall be subject to these provisions only in respect of marks registered two months after receipt of the notification referred to in paragraph 3 above.
(7) In the event of an evil intention, countries may also have those characters deleted which were registered before November 6, 1925 and contain national characters, signs and hallmarks.
(8) Members of each country authorised to use the national characters, marks and hallmarks of their country may use them even if they are similar to those of another country.
(9) The Union countries undertake to prohibit the use in trade of the illegitimate characteristics of other Union countries where such use could lead to an error in the origin of the products.
(10) The previous provisions shall not prevent countries from applying Article 6 (3) (a). B may have refused or declared invalid marks which illegally contain coats of arms, flags and other features of national sovereignty, or the features and official hallmarks established in a Union country, as well as the distinguishing characteristics of international intergovernmental organisations referred to in paragraph 1 above.
(1) Where, under the law of a Union country, a transfer of a mark is only valid if it occurs at the same time as the transfer of an undertaking or trade to which the mark belongs, it is sufficient to allow that part of the undertaking or trade which is that country to be transferred to a legal successor with the exclusive right to produce or sell products bearing the trade mark.
(2) This provision does not require the Union countries to recognise the validity of the transfer of any mark whose use by the successor in title would in fact mislead the public, in particular as regards the origin, nature or essential qualities of the products for which the mark is used.
A. - (1) Each factory and trade mark duly registered in the country of origin shall be registered and protected in other Union countries with the reservations referred to in this Article as admitted to registration. Such countries may require the submission of a registration certificate in the country of origin issued by the competent authority before the final registration is made. No verification shall be required for this certificate.
(2) The country of origin shall be that of the Union country where the applicant has a genuine industrial or commercial establishment and, if there is no such establishment in the Union, the Union country where he is resident; if he is not resident in the Union, that is, the country of his nationality if he is a member of the Union country.
B. - Factory and trade marks referred to in this Article may be refused registration or cancelled only in the following cases:
1. If they may infringe the rights acquired by third parties in the country where protection is sought;
2. where they do not have distinctive character or are composed solely of marks or indications which may serve in trade to indicate the type, quality, quantity, destination, price, place of origin of the products or time of manufacture, or have become common in general terms or in the loyal and permanent commercial practices of the country where protection is sought;
3. if they contravene good manners or public order, and in particular can deceive the public. It is understood that a mark cannot be regarded as contrary to public policy solely because it does not comply with certain provisions of the mark law, except in the case where that provision itself concerns public order.
However, the application of Article 10 bis is reserved.
C. - (1) When assessing whether the mark may be protected, all facts must be taken into account, in particular the duration of the mark's use.
(2) In other Union countries, factory or trade marks may not be rejected only because they differ from those protected in the country of origin only in those elements which do not render them distinctive and do not affect the identity of the marks as regards the shape in which they were registered in the said country of origin.
D. - No one may rely on the benefits of this Article if the mark for which it seeks protection is not registered in the country of origin.
E. - However, in no case shall the renewal of the registration of the mark in the country of origin entail the obligation to renew the registration in the other Union countries in which the mark was registered.
F. - The advantage of the priority shall be maintained for applications for stamps made within the time limit referred to in Article 4, even if the registration in the country of origin has only occurred after that time limit has expired.
The Union countries undertake to protect signs of service. They shall not be obliged to register such stamps.
(1) Where the agent or representative of the proprietor of a mark in a Union country requests the registration of that mark in his own name in one or more of those countries without the consent of that proprietor, the owner shall be entitled to object to the registration requested and to request the deletion or, if the law of the country concerned so permits, to transfer the registration to himself, unless the agent or representative justifies his actions.
(2) Subject to paragraph 1 above, the proprietor of the mark shall be entitled to object to the use of his mark by the agent or representative, unless he has given authorisation to use it.
(3) The national legislation may provide for a fair period within which the proprietor of the mark may exercise his rights under this Article.
The nature of the product to which the factory or trade mark is to be affixed cannot in any way interfere with the registration of the mark.
(1) The Union countries undertake to accept registration and to protect the marks of the association belonging to associations whose existence does not contradict the law of the country of origin, even if those associations do not have an industrial or commercial establishment.
(2) However, each country has the will to assess under which special conditions the trade mark will be protected and may refuse protection if the mark is contrary to public interests.
(3) However, the protection of these marks cannot be refused to any association whose existence does not contradict the law of the country of origin, on the ground that the association does not have its registered office in the country where protection is sought or that it is not established under the legislation of that country.
The trade name shall be protected in all Union countries without the need for registration or registration; decide whether or not it is part of a factory or trade mark.
(1) Any product which is illegally marked with a factory or trade name or trade name shall be confiscated when imported into those Union countries in which that mark or trade name is entitled to legal protection.
(2) Confiscation shall also take place in the country where the marking was made or in the country where the product was imported.
(3) The confiscation will take place under the internal legislature of each country, either on a proposal from the prosecutor or from any other competent authority, or at the request of the interested party, whether it be a person natural or legal.
(4) The authorities are not obliged to make seizures in the case of transit.
(5) If the legislation of a country does not allow the seizure of imports, the confiscation will be replaced by an import ban or an inland seizure.
(6) If the legislation of a country does not permit the confiscation of imports, nor the prohibition of imports or the confiscation of inland goods, these measures shall be replaced by actions and means granted by that country's law to its own nationals in the same case.
(1) The provisions of the previous article shall be used in the event of direct or indirect use of a false designation of origin of the product or the identity of the manufacturer, manufacturer or trader.
(2) In any case, any person concerned shall be recognised as a natural or legal person, any producer, factory or trader involved in the extraction, manufacture or trade of the product and established in a place of false designation as the place of origin or in the area where the place of origin is situated or in a country of false designation or in a country where a false designation of origin is used.
(1) The Union countries are obliged to ensure effective protection against unfair competition for Union nationals.
(2) Unfair competition is any competitive activity that contradicts honest practices in industry or business.
(3) In particular:
1. any action which could in any way cause confusion with the undertaking, the products or the industrial or commercial activity of the competitor;
2. false data in the course of the operation of a transaction which could harm the reputation of an undertaking, product or industrial or commercial activity of a competitor;
3. Data or claims the use of which in the course of trade would be likely to mislead the public about the characteristics, method of production, characteristics, eligibility for use or quantity of goods.
(1) The Union countries undertake to provide the nationals of other Union countries with the appropriate legal means to effectively suppress all acts referred to in Articles 9, 10 and 10 bis.
(2) In addition, they undertake to take measures to allow associations and associations which represent the industrialists, producers or traders involved and whose existence is not contrary to the laws of their country to intervene in courts or administrative offices, to the extent that the law of the country in which protection is sought permits the unions and associations of that country, to take action in respect of the repression of the acts referred to in Articles 9, 10 and 10 bis.
(1) Pursuant to its internal legislation, the Union countries shall grant temporary protection in respect of products which are subject to international exhibitions of official or officially recognised and organised on the territory of one of those countries.
(2) This temporary protection shall not extend the periods referred to in Article 4. If the right of priority is requested at a later date, each country may provide that the period starts to run from the date on which the product was introduced into the exhibition.
(3) Each country may require, as evidence of the identity of the object to be issued and the date of its introduction, the documents it considers necessary.
(1) Each Union country undertakes to establish a special industrial property office and a central registration office in order to notify the public of patents for inventions, utility designs, designs or models and factory or trade marks.
(2) This office will issue a periodic official certificate. He will publish regularly:
(a) the names of the authorised persons to whom patents have been issued, together with a short indication of the patented inventions;
(b) reproduction of registered marks.
(1) The International Office established under the name of the International Industrial Property Protection Office is subject to the high authority of the Government of the Swiss Confederation, which regulates its organisation and oversees its activities.
(2)
(a) In carrying out the tasks referred to in paragraphs 3 and 5 of this Article, the International Office shall use French and English.
(b) The conferences and meetings referred to in Article 14 shall be held in French, English and Spanish.
(3) The International Bureau concentrates various reports on the protection of industrial property, organises and publishes it. It carries out general interest studies of interest to the Union and redacts, on the basis of documents provided to it by the various authorities, a periodical journal on issues relating to Union issues.
(4) The numbers of this journal, as well as all documents issued by the International Bureau, differ from the authorities of the Union countries according to the number of contribution units below. For other specimens and documents that the said authorities or companies or individuals would require in addition, it will be necessary to pay separately.
(5) The International Bureau is always to be available to EU countries to provide them with special reports on international industrial property services issues that they might need. Each year, the Director of the International Office shall draw up a report on the activities of that Office and send it to all Union countries.
(6) The proper expenditure of the International Bureau shall be borne jointly by the Union countries. Pending the new adjustment, they shall not exceed 120 000 Swiss francs per year. This amount may be increased by a unanimous decision of one of the conferences provided for in Article 14, as appropriate.
(7) Proper expenditure shall not include expenditure incurred by the work of conferences of agents or administrative conferences or expenditure which could arise from specific works or publications carried out under the decision of a conference. Such expenditure, the annual amount of which may not exceed 20 000 Swiss francs, shall be borne by the Union countries in proportion to the contributions paid to ensure the operation of the International Office under paragraph 8 below.
(8) In order to determine the share of each country in this total amount of expenditure, the Contracting States, as well as those countries which accede subsequently to the Union, shall be divided into six classes, each contributing in proportion to a certain number of units, namely:
1. class 25 units
2nd class 20 units
3. class 15 units
4. class 10 units
5. class 5 units
6th class 3 units.
These coefficients are multiplied by the number of countries in each class and the sum of the products thus obtained indicates the number of units divided by the total expenditure. The share shall indicate the amount of the expenditure unit.
(9) Each Union country shall determine the class to which it wishes to be included in its access; However, it may subsequently declare that it wishes to be classified in another class.
(10) The Government of the Swiss Confederation oversees the expenditure of the International Bureau as well as its accounts and provides the necessary advances.
(11) The annual accounts drawn up by the International Bureau are to be sent to all other offices.
(1) This Convention will be subject to periodic revisions in order to make adjustments aimed at improving the Union system.
(2) To this end, conferences of delegates of these countries will be held gradually in individual Union countries.
(3) The Office of the country where the conferences are to be held will prepare, with the assistance of the International Bureau, the work of the conference.
(4) The Director of the International Bureau will be present at conference meetings and will attend meetings without voting rights.
(5) (a) During the period between the review diplomatic conferences, the Conference of Representatives of all Union countries shall meet every three years to draw up a report on the envisaged expenditure of the International Office for the relevant future three-year period and to discuss issues relating to the proper functioning and development of the Union.
(b) Furthermore, they shall be entitled to amend the maximum annual amount of expenditure of the International Bureau on the basis of a unanimous resolution provided that they have been convened as a conference of representatives of all Union countries, on the basis of an invitation from the Government of the Swiss Confederation.
(c) In addition, the conferences referred to in (a) may be convened, including between their regular three-year meetings, at the initiative of either the Director of the International Office or the Government of the Swiss Confederation.
The Union countries reserve each other the right to negotiate, separately, specific agreements for the protection of industrial property, unless such agreements are contrary to the provisions of this Convention.
(1) Countries not participating in this Convention will be able to accede to it if they so request.

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Regulation Information

CitationDecree No. 90 / 1962 Coll., on the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property of 20 March 1883, revised in Brussels on 14 December 1900, in Washington on 2 June 1911, in The Hague on 6 November 1925, in London on 2 June 1934 and in Lisbon on 31 October 1958
Regulation Type-
Author-
CollectionCode of Laws
Date of Promulgation12.09.1962
Effective from04.01.1962
Effective until-
Status Valid
The regulation text is for informational purposes only.
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