PLANT VARIETY PROTECTION
Under the Plant Variety Protection Act of 1970
(revised 1994), an originator, developer, or owner of a variety may obtain
protection (patent) for that variety exercising one of two options:
1. The authorized
agent may sell either certified or non-certified seed of the variety, with a
label stating ÒUnauthorized propagation prohibited Ð U.S. Variety Protection
applied forÓ (or Ò.... U.S.
Protected VarietyÓ, if the certificate has been issued). Infringement of the patent is litigated
by civil action.
2. The authorized
agent may elect to utilize the provisions of Title V of the Federal Seed Act,
which stipulates that the variety may be sold by variety name only as a class
of Certified seed. The labeling is
similar to the non-certification option except for the added statement ÒTo be
sold by variety name only as a class of Certified SeedÓ. Infringement of the Patent in this case
is a violation of the Federal Seed Act and thus has advantages for enforcement
as compared with civil litigation.
NOTE 1: It is the responsibility of the seller to
publicize that the variety is protected and have it labeled properly. Some of the varieties eligible for
certification in Utah are protected, and are so designated in the current
variety list. The following logo,
when it appears on a seed bag, tag, or container, means the seed is protected
by the PVP Act.
NOTE 2: An exception to the PVP Act permits a farmer
to save and plant his own seed of a protected variety on his own farm. The 1970 PVP Act also allowed
farmer-to-farmer sales with certain limitations, but the 1994 revision
prohibits all such sales without the express permission of the variety owner or
agent.
