The UK government has introduced the Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Bill 2022-23, also referred to as the 'Brexit Freedoms Bill', first announced in the Queen's Speech earlier this year. Under the Bill, all "EU-derived subordinate legislation" and "retained direct EU legislation" will be automatically revoked after the end of 2023, unless otherwise preserved. The same is true of all directly effective rights and obligations derived from EU Treaties and Directives and general principles of EU law – these will automatically lapse after 2023 unless expressly preserved.
While there is nothing to suggest that the government aims to amend UK trade mark or design related legislation under the Bill, it will need to be careful that this does not happen inadvertently. This is now an "opt in" rather than an "opt out" system. For example, the Community Design Regulation (6/2002, as amended by 1891/2006) and the Regulation on Customs Enforcement of IP Rights (608/2013) are both pieces of retained direct EU legislation. These will need to be expressly preserved to retain their application in the UK. Likewise, the Intellectual Property (Exhaustion of Rights) (EU Exit) Regulation 2019 incorporated directly effective rights into the UK that will lapse if not specifically preserved.
Caselaw will also be impacted, with the Court of Appeal and Supreme Court being given greater scope to depart from retained EU case law and certain retained domestic caselaw. Interestingly for IP practitioners, lower courts and tribunals (such as the UKIPO), where bound by retained caselaw, will be given power to refer points of law on retained caselaw to the appropriate relevant appeal court where the point is of general public importance. We might see an acceleration of the departure of UK caselaw from EU caselaw under these provisions.
We will report more on the possible implications for trade mark and design owners in the next edition of Brands Update in November. In the meantime, for more on the changes introduced by the Bill, see here.