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Injunctive relief made its first appearance in Italian legislative texts with the adoption of the 1939 Law on Patents, which empowered a court dealing with an infringement action to issue, on request of the interested party and, at court’s discretion, upon payment of a bond, an interim1 injunction preventing the fabrication and use of the patented invention for the time needed to reach a decision on the merits and for such decision to become final.2 For a long time, this has been the only provision mentioning injunctive relief in the Law on Patents.
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